This was a mostly satisfying marathon of movies loaded with big teeth and wild monster eyes. Just turn off your brain and enjoy the bites and blood.
FRENZY MOON (2025)

The current state of everything—from how it’s affecting everyone’s existence in general to how it has affected my personal life—is so tumultuous these days that I’m living for this kind of hokey horror throwback with monster suits, buckets of blood, and rubber body parts.


We meet a werewolf immediately in an opening kill scene, plus we get a fake severed hand. Yay!


Another series of kills introduces us to a hunter dude in the woods trying to warn anyone he can of a creature that awaits them if they don’t turn back. Unfortunately, he is hit by a car belonging to a couple on their way to a cabin in the woods to meet some friends.


So, yeah. They don’t get the message, and they don’t turn back. Instead, they take the wounded, unconscious guy with them to the cabin, and while he takes his time waking up to warn them of what’s going on, more werewolf attacks ensue. Awesome.


This one delivers all the werewolf action, 80s creature feature vibes, and misty woods atmosphere I could ask for.

THE FIANCE (2016)

This little indie definitely offers a unique take on the Bigfoot legend—Bigfoot is basically a lycanthrope, because when it bites you, you become infected and start transforming. The issue with the film is the narrative flow.


We begin with a barrage of radio, television, and internet reports and shows letting us know there have been multiple Bigfoot reports. We also meet a rich dude and learn he has had some sort of shady dealings with a Russian crime syndicate.


He puts that aside to travel to a cabin in the woods, where he plans to propose to his girlfriend. Unfortunately, they take the trip separately. When the girlfriend arrives at night, she is immediately attacked by Bigfoot (who looks cool in silhouette), transforms into a feral creature herself, and enters the cabin and attacks her boyfriend.


The horror action and the girlfriend’s monstrous look are quite satisfying. Problem is, the movie is ridiculously repetitive. She busts into the cabin, bites some part of the boyfriend, he fights her off, and she runs back out. Over and over and over. Question is, why did she transform immediately and he doesn’t? And why doesn’t he just create a blockade in front of the door she keeps coming through?

Also filling the time are flashback scenes of both the couple’s relationship and the trouble the rich guy got in with the Russians. None of it is interesting enough to entertain considering we’ve been presented with the major horror right from the start.

There are a few more characters in the woods, but they don’t raise the body count that much, because it’s all about the girlfriend attacking the boyfriend. The film goes so hard on the horror elements that it simply needed to mix things up and deliver different action, more suspenseful segments, and more kills. Definitely sit through the credits, because there are a few more scenes sprinkled throughout it.
BAIT (2025)

This is one you watch when you need comfort horror—the most basic premise filled with familiar creature feature scenarios. My only complaint here is that the opening kill scene is like a snapshot of the whole premise of the movie, giving away everything, including a full view of the creature.


Next, we meet a dad, mom, son, and daughter on a road trip to visit extended family. They get into a really bad car accident…and wake up chained up in a basement.

Also chained up in the basement is the creature. A guy in a gas mask comes in occasionally to bring in other victims to feed it. He also gives the family a difficult ultimatum.


Meanwhile, the extended family is concerned that the main family hasn’t arrived yet, so one of them goes searching for them. Not a totally necessary side story, and it doesn’t add much to the plot, but it does break up the monster moments in the basement so we don’t get burnout.

It’s never a good sign when there are signs…
The actors rise to the performance levels necessary for people trapped in their situation, the monster is awesome, the attack scenes are gruesome, and the gore is all practical effects. The final battle is pretty hardcore as well. This is a fun popcorn movie and a good one to play if you want to add some background screaming ambience to a Halloween party.

































































































































I wanted to be in Smile.





























































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

















































