
Sorority House Massacre
Hospitalized Beth (Angela O'Neill) faces another massacre in the same house where her family was slain.

Hospitalized Beth (Angela O'Neill) faces another massacre in the same house where her family was slain.

A coed (Joanna Canton) and a former mental patient (Adrienne Barbeau) battle Satanists who slaughter and transform students into evil undead creatures.

Someone with a power drill shows up uninvited to Trish's (Michele Michaels) high-school pajama party.

While attending a dinner party at his former house, a man starts to believe that his ex-wife and her new husband have sinister plans for the guests.

An English baby sitter (Susan George) is terrorized by her friend's (Honor Blackman) ex-husband (Ian Bannen), escaped from an asylum.

With a hearse as his escape vehicle, Mike (A. Michael Baldwin) flees from the Tall Man (Angus Scrimm), who wants to enslave him as an undead servant. Along the way, he investigates the origins of his enemy. Elsewhere, Mike's friend Reggie (Reggie Bannister) searches for him in a variety of dimensions, all the while battling mysterious spheres, including the ones he's discovered in the breasts of his beautiful undead companion. The friends must stop the Tall Man before he destroys them all.

Baron Frankenstein (Joseph Cotten) is hard at work trying to reanimate human tissue when his daughter, Tania (Rosalba Neri), comes home from university with a medical degree and announces that it has always been her intention to carry on her father's work. The baron is thrilled, but no sooner does he successfully reanimate his creature than it kills him and stalks off. Shocked but undaunted, Tania vows to create an even greater monster to destroy the first in revenge.

A young man unwittingly releases dark magic on a group of people in a photo and struggles to reverse the curse.

An ex-con finds himself fighting for his life after taking a job with a seemingly mild-mannered pet store owner.

Cinematic and socially conscious, a horror showcase that lodges into your psyche.

Cinematic and socially conscious, a horror showcase that lodges into your psyche.

An office worker (Fran Kranz) springs into action after learning that his colleague (Pedro Pascal) is a scheming vampire.

In 1968, the military levels a facility after a lethal bacteria is released. In present day, a patient on an outing from a mental institution finds an old vacuum tube, which -- when it is opened -- releases bacteria turning people into zombies.

During a routine nighttime training mission in the Scottish Highlands, a small squad of British soldiers expected to rendezvous with a special ops unit instead find a bloody massacre with a sole survivor. The savage attackers of the special ops team return, and the men are rescued by Megan (Emma Cleasby), a zoologist who identifies what hunts them as werewolves. Without transport or communications, the group is forced to retreat to a farmhouse to wait for the full moon to disappear at dawn.

A man awakes-- without memory -- in a pit full of bodies and must figure out if the people who rescued him are the killers, or if he is the murderer.

Small-town friends Reggie (Reggie Bannister), Mike (A. Michael Baldwin), and Jody (Bill Thornbury) continue in their quest to stop the evil, dimension-hopping schemes of The Tall Man (Angus Scrimm) and his armada of killer Sentinel Spheres. This time, the fight becomes a multi-dimensional battle across multiple timelines, alien planets and altered realities, where no less than the fate of Earth is on the line.

An ax killer stalks a lawyer and his girlfriend in a house that used to be an asylum.

An out-of-control car takes a man and his wife to a cottage in the woods, with terrifying conequences.

The gruesome legend of a Carpathian countess seems to come to life when a series of men are killed.

Spooky Halloween tricks: "Last Words" by Teal Greyhavens and Nikolai von Keller, "Special Day" by Teal Greyhavens, "7 Minutes in Hell" by Justin Reager and Shane Spiegel, "Play Me" by Caleb Phillips, and "The Rule Of Three" by Elwood Quincy Walker.