Add Yahoo as a preferred source to see more of our stories on Google. SPOILER ALERT: This feature contains spoilers for “The Girl With the Needle,” “Immaculate,” “The First Omen,” “Apartment 7A,” ...
Women have profoundly shaped the horror genre with their visionary works, crafting films that rank among the most iconic and influential in cinema history. In the past decade, indie filmmakers like ...
"Horror is a critique of society - but you do it with zombies." Shudder has unveiled the official trailer for a horror documentary film titled 1000 Women in Horror, an exciting look back at horror ...
Alexandra Heller-Nicholas‘ book 1000 Women in Horror has been turned into a documentary by Shudder, and now we have an official trailer ahead of the doc’s March 20, 2026, release, thanks to Fangoria.
It is an exciting time to be a woman in horror. The past decade has seen women directing sleeper hits and big-budget studio films. The Substance was nominated for five Academy Awards last year, ...
"You children are such darlings... ripe enough to eat." Whoa! Universal has revealed a second trailer for the extra creepy horror movie The Woman in the Yard, arriving in theaters to watch at the end ...
The Danielle Deadwyler horror thriller The Woman in the Yard has made its debut on digital streaming. The Woman in The Yard was released in theaters on March 28. The summary for the film reads, “A ...
All products featured here are independently selected by our editors and writers. If you buy something through links on our site, Mashable may earn an affiliate commission. Okwui Okpokwasili in "The ...
I get sad when I see lists of horror directors going around Twitter. The default is often predominantly (if not all) white men, and the few times people specifically ask for horror movies by women, ...
On April 4, 2024, the Mellon Sawyer Seminar hosted the session “Remake, Resist, Rewind: Surviving the Horror Film,” organized and moderated by Brandon Callender (Assistant Professor of English, ...
Keep these traits in check the next time you find yourself in a horror film scenario: curiosity—the genre’s original sin—and dissatisfaction, its slipperier cousin. Corralling the former is as easy as ...