This trio delivered horror, blood, gore and even some extreme scenarios, but only one of them was the kind of easy entertainment I need right now. Let’s find out which one.
PIG HILL (2025)

This one really threw me for a loop. At the beginning of the movie, I was totally feeling the rural town tale of a young woman obsessed with missing persons cases and the legend of hybrid pig people living in the hills. The movie has this unnerving and eerily atmospheric tone, and there are some seriously brutal scenes each time a pig person kills a victim. Pig people or goons in pig masks are so damn freaky. I prefer cute little oinking piggies with curly tails. Or big, cuddly, hairy bears who are also pigs.


The main girl has a tragic history with the husband who deserted her, along with an overprotective brother, so things get tense when a new guy comes into town and gets close to her.



Together, the main girl and the new guy begin to investigate the stories of the pig people, hoping to solve the latest missing person case.


And then…things move into a pig man’s lair and this shit gets really messed up.


There’s sodomy, rape, murder, abortion, childhood sex abuse, grooming, incest, satanism, and the pig people becoming a metaphor for everything fucked up in society, which shifts this one from horror territory to horrific territory. Eek.
DRIVE BACK (2024)

This is one of those films in which a long drive turns into an unescapable loop of horror that builds on itself each time the journey circles back to where it began. If you’re a fan of this kind of mind trip movie, you’ll find plenty to like here, from the bloody scares to the relentless stalker.


For me, the main issue was with the newly engaged straight couple. I’m so tired of movies about couples in volatile relationships. It’s always the same. Either they’re going to have to find a way to get along to survive, the horror is going to turn them against each other, or all their dirty secrets are going to be revealed…which will inevitably lead to them either forgiving each other or turning on each other.


As for this main couple, after leaving their engagement party at a house in the middle of nowhere, they begin to experience weird shit while on the road—creepy general store owner, manic hitchhiker, a roadblock, something preying on them in the woods, etc.

As the pair bickers, they both begin to experience disturbing hallucinations. Eventually they realize that they keep passing the same locations, but they never seem to have the same memories of what has already transpired. These straighties can’t agree on anything.

The events start to fold in on themselves, and the couple is forced to look into a metaphorical mirror…

That’s when a masked figure shows up and begins to terrorize them. The final act is definitely the most thrilling part, but this is absolutely one of those films in which nothing is truly what it seems. Kind of like Pig Hill. Dammit, I just need some tangible horror at this point in my life.
THE BAYOU (2025)

Aaaaand…that’s why I made this my third selection for this triple feature. The hubby and I so needed this kind of rainy Sunday afternoon killer animal flick. Especially since it has a totally mid-00s throwback vibe. Ah, the nostalgia of it all.

In a very cool visual presentation, the opener shows us exactly how the gators in the Everglades become bloodthirsty predators. Not as if gators don’t already have reason enough to eat stupid humans that enter their territory.

Next, we meet our main girl and her group of college friends. They’re heading to the swamps on a charter plane. The plane crashes into the water in a pretty intense scene, and soon after, the group discovers they are being hunted by crazed alligators.


So, why does one of the girls pull a Jurassic Park 3 and steal the eggs when she finds a gator nest? Does she have no maternal instincts? Sigh.


The movie is all about the group trying to survive in the wild while being hunted by the gators. The kill scenes are a blast, and the gators look pretty damn good. The level of dumb character decisions is perfect for keeping this movie moving, including a moment when they find an abandoned building and someone literally says “We should split up”, plus one character’s decision to just sacrifice herself as they’re getting away because—get this—she lost her foot to one of the gators and apparently can’t fathom going through life without it.

For a pretty basic killer gator action thriller, there’s actually an amazing moment that delivers a double dose of character development. One character figures out that another character is the type that will throw you under the bus—or into the gator’s mouth in this case—to save themselves and decides to do something to put a stop to that shit. It proves to be quite an educational experience for both characters.






















































































































































































I wanted to be in Smile.





























































The face every bottom has made at some point in his life.
