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FANGORIA
America's #1 Horror Magazine
Modern Horror, Classic Monsters Monthly Magazine from New York ,United States
Ceased publication

- First and last issue: 1979-2016
- Horror movies.
- Fango changed a lot of things when first appeared and remains today the #1 horror movie mag.
- Covers mostly commercial studio releases, without neglecting independent, low budget, films.
- Editor: Anthony Timpone
- Published 10 times a year by Starlog Group, Inc, 84 colour pages in A4 format.
- Resumed publishing in 2018.
- Published by Starlog Group
- Website: www.fangoria.com

Last updated:
7 March 2023
(see recent updates)
Special thanks for this page goes to:
Michel
Scott Matheson
Vitelloni
Garry Malvern
Debi Ziemkowski
Gary
Kevin Etheridge
Allan

COVERS FOUND & MISSING
Info from the Database

Highslide JS Listing is complete and all covers have been found.

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CONTENTS: 1979 1980 1981 1982 1983 1984 1985 1986 1987 1988 1989 1990 1991 1992 1993 1994 1995 1996 1997 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 GALLERIES: 1979 1980 1981 1982 1983 1984 1985 1986 1987 1988 1989 1990 1991 1992 1993 1994 1995 1996 1997 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 All

Issue 269
January/February 2008
GUTS
'REQUIEM' FOR A TEAM The directing brother act of Colin and Greg Strause kept those tusslin' Aliens and Predator in line.
SUCCESS IS AN 'ORPHANAGE' New Spanish director Juan Antonio Bayona crafts the year's best ghost story.
'MISSED' OPPORTUNITY? A French director tries to wring fresh chills from an American redux of Japan's 'One Missed Call.'
WANTED: 'UNDEAD OR ALIVE' If you've been hankerin' for a comedic zombie Western, saddle up for this sagebrush splatterfest.
HIGH NOTES AND SLIT THROATS The demon barber of Broadway comes to the screen as Tim Burton directs Johnny Depp in 'Sweeney Todd.'
'HATCHET' IF YOU CAN Director Adam Green traces the long road his retro slasher pic took to unrated release.
'P' STOP This entry in the Asian horror trend is as much about Thailand's night culture as it is about its spirits.
THE 'TEETH' OF THE MATTER The saga of a girl who's got extra pearly whites in a place where the sun don't shine.
BURBANK BLOODBATH Our last West Coast convention packed in so many guests and fans, it was scary.
NOTES FROM THE UNDERGROUND: MIKE WATT With partner Amy Lynn Best, he proves you can teach old vampires and zombies new tricks.
NO 'SLEEP' FOR THE WICKED On 'The Black Sleep' and other vintage B-pictures, Paul Wurtzel wrangled the genre's biggest stars.
GRAVY
ELEGY Accolades for the Ackermonster
POSTAL ZONE Mixed missives for Michael Myers
MONSTER INVASION Second rounds of 'Boogeyman' and 'White Noise'; undead again in 'Automaton' and 'Darkness'
DR. CYCLOPS Not the same old 'Boy Eats Girl' story; new 'Pumpkinhead' is tired 'Blood'
HORRORCADE They say 'Halo,' we say good buy; 'Zelda' still zesty
DVD DUNGEON A 'Flight' into flesheating fun
NIGHTMARE LIBRARY 'Mister' be another Barker winner; Lucas reveals 'All the Colors' of Mario Bava.


Issue 268
November 2007


Issue 267
October 2007


Issue 266
September 2007


Issue 265
August 2007
ELEGY Sleepers creepers
MONSTER INVASION The countdown to '30 Days' begins; 'Resident' zombies face 'Extinction'
'I KNOW' WHAT SCARES YOU And it's frightening Lindsay Lohan too in her most extreme role to date.
'STRANGERS' THAN FICTION This movie's creator says a realistic touch will make it a superior chiller.
DR. CYCLOPS Plenty of terror found in 'Abandoned'; check out what's inside 'The Kovak Box'
THE 'HUMANOIDS' FACTOR In 1980, aquatic monsters with sex drives emerged from the 'Deep' with shocking results.
'HALLOWEEN': TRICK'OR TREAT? We'd bet on the latter, since Rob Zombie's at the helm of the Michael Myers redux.
CHILLING THE WINDY CITY Monsters and music spread the fear at our 2007 Midwest 'Weekend of Horrors.'
NOBODY'S 'PERFECT'? It seemed lost for a few years, but 'Perfect Creature' is finally seeing the light of release.
CHILD'S SLAY We kid you not: 'Joshua' finds creepy new variations on the evil-little-boy concept.
FOLLOW 'THE SIGNAL' 'and find yourself in a world turned violently upside down, thanks to this startling indie film.
'1408' WORDS Three scriptwriters took on the challenge of whipping the Stephen King tale into cinematic shape.
HIS 'CHRISTMAS' STORIES A tribute interview with the late Bob Clark, who made Yuletide and military homecomings scary.
DVD DUNGEON Laughs and revelations 'Behind the Mask'; new looks at 'Caligari' and Lovecraft
THE DIGITAL 'MASTERS' The CGI demanded by Showtime's 'Horrors' was as varied as the series' storylines.
HORRORCADE Old blood in new computerized bottles
NIGHTMARE LIBRARY Evans' 'Good and Happy' is good and scary; Carey's 'Devil' worth knowing


Issue 264
July 2007
ELEGY The gathering storm.
POSTAL ZONE Why was the 'Grindhouse' empty?.
MONSTER INVASION Zombie's new 'Halloween' party; Friedkin shares his 'Bug'; Zombie hunting in 'War of the Dead: Z-E-R-O'; are you afraid of 'Big Bad Wolf'?
BACK TO THE 'HOSTEL' Eli Roth knew he had his work cut and chopped and sawed out for him when tackling the sequel.
'1408' REASONS TO SCREAM With a Stephen King source and two topnotch actors, you'll want to check out this hotel room.
DR. CYCLOPS 'Alone With Her' is a scary place to be; mixed 'Breed'.
'DAY WATCH' DAWNS The saga begun in the 'Night' continues with more vampires, demons and otherworldly beings.
GRAZING HELL Farm life just got a lot more frightening as 'Black Sheep' go on a flesheating rampage in New Zealand'.
SCARY MOO-VIE 'while over in Ireland, everyone orders de-calf when mutant cows spawn in 'Isolation.'.
'CAPTIVITY' AUDIENCE Will the controversy over its advertising mean blood money for this torture saga?.
KNB'S KURRENT KILLINGS Celebrating 20 years in the business, the FX team splatters more gore than ever before.
PET PEEVED It's not always nice to have a zombie around the house, even a domesticated one like 'Fido.'.
DVD DUNGEON Who could pass up watching 'Child'?; new 'Creepshow' a cheap show.
BLOOD ON THE PAGES If you think this magazine drips crimson, wait'll you see what awaits in our new comics line.
HORRORCADE Worship the new 'God of War,' but give up the 'Ghost Rider.'
'BLACULA' IS BEAUTIFUL A look back at one of the standouts of both blaxploitation and vampire cinema.
FORGOTTEN HORRORS: 'COLOR ME BLOOD RED' Artists' models and an exploitation partnership fell victim in this production.
NIGHTMARE LIBRARY Rave for Palahniuk's 'Rant'; Wellington's 'Bullets' hit the target


Issue 263
June 2007
ELEGY Boll busting.
MONSTER INVASION Violent past ('Pathfinder'), present ('Gangs of the Dead') and future ('Mutant Chronicles').
BLOWIN' IN THE 'WIND CHILL' Ghosts have your num-brrrrr if you venture down the wrong back-road shortcut.
FATHER OF THE '28 WEEKS' Fighting through a rage-plagued Britain is a family affair for sequel star Robert Carlyle.
DR. CYCLOPS Follow the 'Blood Trails' to real scares; 'Still Waters' run shallow.
HE DRIVES US CRAZY Fango fave Kurt Russell takes the wheel of the 'Death Proof' car in 'Grindhouse.'
THAT'S CLUCKED UP In what may be its last gasp, Troma goes to new eggs-tremes with 'Poultrygeist.'
DEEPER INTO THE 'HOSTEL' Eli Roth's sequel exposes more of the inner workings of the international house of torture.
THIRSTY DAYS OF NIGHT Love and blood are equal ingredients of the vampire drama 'The Thirst.'
BAD DOGGIES! So much for man's best friend'now they're genetically enhanced killers in 'The Breed.'
HORRORCADE 'Lunar Knights' shoot the moon; we'll bitch about 'Bullet Witch'
'DARK CORNERS' OF THE SOUL Introducing a villain so nasty he terrorizes a woman in two different realities.
HIGH VOLTAIRE With his many music, toy, comics and movie projects, the Goth guru is spreading darkness everywhere.
DVD DUNGEON Extra 'Pieces' added to slasher documentary; 'Phantasm' doesn't go balls-out.
UNSEEN SCREAMS: 'POSSESSED' We know we'd like to see an occult thriller so unsettling that Udo Kier's its good guy.
VINCENT'S PRICE How many actresses can say they survived Dracula and the 'Hills Have Eyes' bunch? Well'Virginia Vincent didn't.
JERSEY GHOULS A new venue and an extra day added up to more ghoulish fun at Fango's last East Coast convention.
NIGHTMARE LIBRARY Four times the fear in Phillips' 'Angelica'; Garton still loves the 'Night Life'
CLASSIFIED AD VAULT


Issue 262
May 2007


Issue 261
April 2007


Issue 260
March 2007
ELEGY Pioneer-ing a film series.
MONSTER INVASION 'Grindhouse' gets in gear; a DarkLot of indie terrors; Hodder cuts up as 'Ed Gein'
HORRORCADE You'll feel the 'F.E.A.R.'; growing pains for 'Death Jr. II'
DON'T BLAME 'THE MESSENGERS' They're just doing what ghosts do best when families move into their dwellings.
'THE HITCHER' RIDES ON Because young audiences still need a lesson that it's a bad idea to pick up a stranger.
THE 'HILLS' ARE STILL ALIVE Wes Craven and co. deliver more desert mutant mayhem in 'The Hills Have Eyes 2.'
DR. CYCLOPS Good sick fun with 'Mad Cowgirl'; 'The Gathering' gloomy.
FIRED UP FOR 'GHOST RIDER' Nicolas Cage is Johnny Blaze, the latest supernatural superhero to jump to the screen.
'CHOCOLATE' KISSES Young love can be troubled enough without one of the couple being a werewolf, as in 'Blood and Chocolate.'
'HANNIBAL RISING,' BODIES FALLING The new prequel explores just how young Dr. Lecter developed his taste for people.
WALKING THE 'LABYRINTH' Actor Doug Jones did it in hoofs as he enacted Guillermo del Toro's most memorable monster.
'ALONE' STRANGER If you feel like someone's watching you when no one's there, it might be the villain of 'Alone With Her.'
DVD DUNGEON More 'Godzilla' greatness; she's 'Chainsaw Sally,' hear her roar.
'GHOST' OF A CHANCE Did Lizzie Borden really do it? The 'Ghost Stories EVP' crew takes a whack at the mystery.
NOTES FROM THE UNDERGROUND: 'DIE YOU ZOMBIE BASTARDS!' That rallying cry led plenty of talent to Caleb Emerson's oddball flick.
SAW WINNERS A look behind the movies and madness celebrated at the first televised Chainsaw Awards.
NIGHTMARE LIBRARY Fingerman's 'Bottom-feeder' rises to the top; epic 'Terror' from Simmons


Issue 259
January/February 2007


Issue 258
November 2006


Issue 257
October 2006


Issue 256
September 2006


Issue 255
August 2006


Issue 254
July 2006


Issue 253
June 2006


Issue 252
May 2006


Issue 251
April 2006


Issue 250
March 2006


Issue 249
January/February 2006


Issue 248
November 2005


Issue 247
October 2005


Issue 246
September 2005


Issue 245
August 2005


Issue 244
July 2005


Issue 243
June 2005


Issue 242
May 2005


Issue 241
April 2005


Issue 240
March 2005


Issue 239
January/February 2005


Issue 238
November 2004
Elegy: Tony sez summer's shriekers were disappointments.
Postal Zone: ...and so do our readers.
Monster Invasion: They're 'The Devil's Rejects,' but Rob Zombie loves 'em; shut yourself in with 'Claustrophobia.'
'Fraid In Japan: Sarah Michelle Gellar et al. receive real culture shock when they travel overseas for 'The Grudge.'
Reaping The 'Seed': After all the years writing Chucky's lines, now Don Mancini gets to tell him how to say them.
Dr. Cyclops: A thrilling ride with 'Highwaymen'; newest CGI snake movie arrives B.O.A.
'Blade: Trinity' Looks Sharp: Sexy young fighters join Wesley Snipes' vampire killer in his latest adventure.
The Orgy Of The 'Species III': Those rapacious aliens just won't give up on making Earth their mating ground.
'Lethal' Biological Weapon: An animal-rights group finds itself in need of rescue in 'Lethal Dose.'
'Carrie' Me Back: Stephen King recalls the highlights and lowlights of the early filmizations of his work.
All Joked Up: Czech in with the latest Eurozombies as Fangoria International exposes a 'Choking Hazard.'
'Dead End' Drives You Crazy: Join Ray Wise and family for a frightening road trip into the unknown.
DVD Dungeon: Cool extras multiply on 'Deadly Spawn' disc; 'It's Alive' anew; a spirited package for 'Ghosts'
'Happy Birthday' Presents: Creative-murder fans got a bloody gift when 'Happy Birthday to Me' splattered onscreen.
'Hellbent' For Death: Hunks and horror are combined as the slasher genre meets the gay-filmmaking trend.
Getting Evil For Dad: While threatening others as 'The Sadist,' Arch Hall Jr. encountered dangerous situations of his own.
Nightmare Library: Welcome back 'From the Borderlands'; why did Little 'Resort' to old tricks?


Issue 237
October 2004


Issue 236
September 2004
Elegy: Lions Gate roars.
Postal Zone: 25th-anniversary-issue kudos.
Monster Invasion: Horror heroes' softer side comes out as 'Chucky' becomes a dad and 'Dracula' sings.
Dodging The 'Bullet': Mick Garris takes audiences on another rollercoaster ride through Stephen King territory.
New 'Resident' On The Block: Milla Jovovich and her zombie-fighting crew set off a bigger bang in 'Resident Evil: Apocalypse.'
Dr. Cyclops: 'Suburban' dysfunction at its extreme; 'Megalodon' is day-old fish.
Takashi Miike Gets Weird: If you think that's not news, check out what the prolific Japanese director is offering this year.
Period Piece: Our favorite sisters tangle with 1800s werewolves in 'Ginger Snaps Back.'
They Came, They 'Saw,' They Tortured: An Australian duo brings an unconventional approach to serial slayings.
'Alien Vs. Predator,' With A Lance: Henriksen, that is, lending his familiar face to this franchise reinvention.
The Man Who Would Be Merrin: Twice, in fact, as Stellan Skarsgard toplines both takes of 'Exorcist: The Beginning.'
DVD Dungeon: 'Lemora' is breathtakingly beautiful; more reasons to be hooked on 'Candyman'
Snake Charmer: Uncoiling 'Anacondas,' director Dwight Little is no stranger to fear fare.
Nightmare Library: Oh, 'Susannah'! King triumphs again; Suzuki's 'Spiral' sucks you in.
'Hazing' Days: College life is difficult enough without the deaths and demons of this indie feature.
When The Shark Bites: It's an occasion for 30 years of cinematic screams leading up to this month's 'Open Water.'


Issue 235
August 2004


Issue 234
July 2004
Special 100-page 25th-anniverary issue!
Elegy: Happy anniversary, Fango!
Monster Invasion: 'I'll Bury You Tomorrow' to be seen now; 'Creature Unknown' recalls monsters familiar.
25 Years Of Fangoria: Mark Voger celebrates our landmark, cartoon-style.
Fango's Top Films: 1979-1983: 'Dawn of the Dead,' 'Friday the 13th,' 'An American Werewolf in London,' 'The Thing,' 'The Evil Dead'.
Sam Raimi Swings Both Ways: He's got the wall-crawling epic 'Spider-Man 2' and a group of back-to-basics chillers on his slate.
Fango's Top Films: 1984-1988: 'A Nightmare on Elm Street,' 'Re-Animator,' 'The Fly,' 'Hellraiser,' 'The Vanishing'.
Paul Naschy Spreads The Disease: Spain's busiest horrormeister is also bringing the fear to U.S. productions.
The MVPs Of 'AVP': That's 'Alien vs. Predator,' and we talk to the referees in an exclusive set visit.
Fango's Top Films: 1989-1993: 'Henry: Portrait of a Serial Killer,' 'Jacob's Ladder,' 'The Silence of the Lambs,' 'Dead Alive,' 'Cronos'.
The 13th Annual Chainsaw Awards Winners!: Who grabbed the gory for the films of 2003?
The Big G's Big Cheese: When Godzilla battles monstrous foes, producer Shogo Tomiyama oversees the destruction.
2004's East Coast 'Weekend Of Horrors': A gallery of sights from the frights of our January convention.
Fango's Top Films: 1994-1998: 'The Crow,' 'Seven,' 'Scream,' 'Crash,' 'Ringu'.
'Last Horror,' First Lead: British actor Kevin Howarth makes a crimson splash as the star of 'The Last Horror Movie.'
DVD Dungeon: Heavenly 'Angel Heart' disc; bloody good combat in 'Starship Troopers 2'; 'In My Skin' will get under yours.
Fango's Top Films: 1999-2003: 'The Blair Witch Project,' 'American Psycho,' 'Ginger Snaps,' 'Frailty,' '28 Days Later'.
The New Future Of Fear: We present a fresh crop of faces who are all aiming to make the next 25 years scarier.


Issue 233
June 2004
Elegy: Remembering Dad.
Postal Zone: Readers greet the 'Dawn.'
Monster Invasion: Sam Raimi holds a 'Grudge'; Joe R. Lansdale celebrates 'Bubba Ho-Tep.'
Out Of The 'Darkness': At last, U.S. audiences will be able to see Jaume Balaguero's well-cast supernatural tale.
Shark Treatment: The Sundance sensation 'Open Water' will make you think twice about taking a dip in the ocean.
Dr. Cyclops: 'Serial Killing 101' at the head of the class; 'Hellbreeder' mostly breeds contempt.
Eight Arms To Kill You: Evil is a many-tentacled thing when Alfred Molina plays Dr. Octopus in 'Spider-Man 2.'
'Drive' To Succeed: Up-and-coming fear filmmakers get their shot via Fango's 'Blood Drive.'
A 'Lot' To Live Up To: The people behind TV's new 'Salem's Lot' say they've matched the frights of Stephen King's novel.
Marchin' Through 'Chronicles': Vin Diesel and filmmaker David Twohy bring back 'Riddick' for more space combat.
Monster's Master: Director Stephen Sommers sez guiding multiple creatures in 'Van Helsing' wasn't too scary a job.
Their 'Deathdream' Project: Director Bob Clark and writer Alan Ormsby made both a statement and a memorable genre film in 1972.
'Park' Stranger: The amusement ends when teens are taken on a deadly ride in this 3-D Asian spooker.
DVD Dungeon: MGM, thankyouverymuch for 'Bubba Ho-Tep'; 'Faceless' disc nearly flawless.
Road Rage: The pavement runs red when Robert Harmon pits good and evil 'Highwaymen' in vehicular battle.
Nightmare Library: Bear makes his 'Dead Lines'; Sullivan's 'Dust' blows hot and cold.


Issue 232
May 2004
Elegy: Summer screams.
Postal Zone: Pro our con; correcting the 'Club' membership.
Monster Invasion: 'Alien vs. Predator': the battle begins; 'Godzilla' and 'Maniacs' arise once more.
Hugh Jactor: His star is only getting bigger now that Hugh Jackman is toplining 'Van Helsing.'
The Van Helsing Show: A colorful look at the cinematic monster hunter.
'Helsing'-Raisers: The megamovie's hero is nothing without the support of the friends and foes portrayed by this cast.
Dr. Cyclops: Dragon out the praise for 'Komodo'; lousy slasher makes the Doc 'S.I.C.K.'
Murder In The Cards: You don't know who you're dealing with when you tangle with Dario Argento's 'Card Player.'
'Bill' Paid In Full: After half a year of waiting, Quentin Tarantino promises you'll finally see Uma Thurman 'Kill Bill.'
21st-Century Ghouls: The updated 'Dawn of the Dead' required that David Anderson's makeup FX be just as modernized.
Surviving 'Savage Island': In this low-budget discovery, the locals play for keeps when you trespass on their property.
Oh My 'Godsend': Would you trust a doctor played by Robert De Niro to clone your child without a hitch?
The Big Red One: Ron Perlman's long association with Guillermo del Toro paid off with the lead role in 'Hellboy.'
'Starship' Two-Pers: The big bugs return for 'Starship Troopers 2,' and the horror doesn't end when they kill you.
Dvd Dungeon: 'Dawn' shines brighter than ever; 'Ginger' spiced up with extras.
'Blood' Thirsty: Actress Lynn Lowry wasn't crazy about nudity, but she went insane for 'I Drink Your Blood,' 'The Crazies' and others.
Nightmare Library: 'Infernal Angel': a little more subtle Lee; you can't Beat 'Move Under Ground.'
Forgotten Horrors: 'Blood Song': Frankie Avalon went out on a limb without Annette when he played this film's psycho.


Issue 231
April 2004
Elegy: The 'Dawn' debate.
Monster Invasion: A new trip to 'Salem's Lot'; 'Something' in the way they 'Scream'; win the 'Texas Chainsaw' DVD!
Get Your 'Ju-On': Fall under the spell of a curse so powerful, it has spread through four movies and is on its way to the U.S.
Dr. Cyclops 'Blood' is addictive indeed; 'Shredder' a slasher snow job.
Penning The 'Dawn': Have no fear-screenwriter James Gunn wants the 'Dead' remake to be just as good as you do.
'VH' Won: He's not an eccentric old man any more; now 'Van Helsing' is a hunky monster hunter in a megabudgeted epic.
Forgotten Horrors: 'The Thrill Killers': Multiple maniacs invaded some of the audiences for this '60s psychochiller.
Del Toro, Del Toro, Del Toro!: Everyone will likely be singing his praises when the director's 'Hellboy' hits screens.
'Window' To A Dark Soul: 'Stir of Echoes' writer/director David Koepp tackles another literary horror, Stephen King's 'Secret Window.'
Make Mine 'Malevolence': A rural slasher, and the filmmaker guiding him, get back to basics in this accomplished indie.
'Glass' Houses Evil: When you put a 'Demon Under Glass'-or a vampire, in this case-you'd better be sure it's unbreakable.
DVD Dungeon: Positive buzz for 'Chainsaw'; Nathan's infamous on disc.
From 'Alive' To 'Dead' ...and that was just the first day of Fango's visit to last year's thrill-packed Fantasia fest.
Books Of Lots Of Blood: If you need a fix of truly gruesome terror, open the pages of author Edward Lee's work.
Byrd Is The Word: Over his decades as a makeup artist, Byrd Holland crafted plenty of low-budget ghouls and monsters.
Nightmare Library: There's more room for improvement in Chigas' 'Chamber' than in Massey's 'Corner.'


Issue 230
March 2004
Elegy: Lurking back at 2003.
Postal Zone: 'Saw' points.
Monster Invasion: 'Van Helsing' begins his hunt; the 13th Annual Chainsaw Awards ballot! 'Dawn' Syndrome: Looks like there's no more room in hell again, as the 'Dead' stalk through a new cinematic update.
This Hellboy's Life: The red demonic hero is now a big-screen presence, with Guillermo del Toro holding his reins.
Dr. Cyclops: Kill yourself to see 'Suicide Club'; 'Bone' dry.
The Gasp Resort: Welcome to 'Club Dread,' where mad slashings are played partly for shock and partly for laughs.
Bigger Fish: Plumbing 'Snakehead Terror's' depths, we find a nature-amok flick with a real-life inspiration.
Another Dash Of 'Ginger': Teen lycanthropy 'Snaps' again as the original stars return for the first of two sequels.
The 'Last Horror' On The Left: The human face of evil is at its most frightening in Fango's debut theatrical release.
The Keys To The 'Kingdom': It's scarier than an HMO-it's the 'Kingdom Hospital' Stephen King has reimagined for TV.
Tatopoulos Craft: Anticipating more 'Underworld' work, FX wiz Patrick Tatopoulos reveals the ones that got away.
DVD Dungeon: It's 'Freddy vs. Jason,' and home viewers win; a music-video extra 'Beyond' belief.
'Screaming,' Not Stripping: Actually, there is some flesh to go with the blood in E.I.'s first serious shocker, 'The Screaming Dead.'
Forgotten Horrors: 'Petey Wheatstraw': Hell hath no rhymin' like the 'Devil's Son-in-Law' portrayed by Rudy Ray Moore.
Claws For Alarm: What are little girls made of? Not sugar and spice, according to the early-'70s shocker 'Blood on Satan's Claw.'
Nightmare Library: Thompson's 'Pharos' rules; Knight hasn't 'Risen' high enough.

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