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‘Studio 666’ is a Raucous Rock and Roll Horror Comedy You Have to See!

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Studio 666

Studio 666, the new horror-comedy starring the Foo Fighters is set to hit theaters in a limited release this weekend, and it might just be the most fun you’ll have watching a movie this year.

As the film gets underway, we see the band discussing their upcoming tenth album. They want to do something different, something epic, that will blow their fans away. When a shifty music exec suggests they use a creepy old mansion as a recording space, they reluctantly (at first) agree. The house has a dark musical past, however, that soon takes over front man Dave Grohl. The rest is horror comedy gold.

The film is directed by BJ McDonnell (Hatchet III) from a script written by Jeff Buhler (Pet Sematary) and Rebecca Hughes (Cracking Up). Dave Grohl wrote the story on which the film is based.

I wasn’t really sure what to expect when I sat down to watchย Studio 666. Rock and roll horror films have a checkered history at best. Most take themselves far too seriously, and don’t spend nearly enough time on developing the story. We end up with a semi-horror film that has a band inserted into the plot. The almost two-hour run time was another red flag. I mean, did they really think they can sustain the schtick for that long?

Yes, yes they can, and although the second ending–yes, there are two–feels a little tacked on, the film manages to earn every minute of its run time.

Grohl, Pat Smear, Taylor Hawkins, Rami Jaffee, Nate Mendel, and Chris Shiflett jump into this film with both feet, playing caricatures of themselves and musicians at large. They are temperamental, misunderstood, geeky, and often painfully awkward with each other. Band dynamics are turned up to eleven, especially as Grohl succumbs to the house’s influence. In short, they act their butts off, and even when the acting is bad, it feels intentional whether it is or not.

Moreover, the film surrounds the band with an impressive cast of character actors who amplify the energy the band brings to every scene.

Leslie Grossman somehow manages to play every single one of herย American Horror Story characters throughout the course of the film as the real estate agent who sets the band up in the house. Jeff Garlin (The Goldbergs) plays the heavy-handed music exec to the hilt. Whitney Cummings shines as a somewhat oversexed, mysterious neighbor who has a thing for Rami and knows more about the house’s history than she’s letting on.

Then there’s Marti Matulis (Evil). The actor takes on the role of the sinister spirit who haunts the grounds with ferocity. His insidious presence is palpable, bringing the horror half of the horror-comedy to the foreground.

Horror fans are also treated to a guest appearance by John Carpenter. In pre-production, Grohl reached out to the legendary horror director/musician and asked if he’d make a cameo. Carpenter replied that his son’s band had toured with Foo Fighters before and the band had treated them really well. He agreed to be in the filmย and to write the theme for the film’s score.

Ultimately,ย Studio 666 is a well-crafted gorefest that manages to be a love letter to horror movies and Foo Fighters fans alike. The kills are innovative. The music is killer, and the film takes itself just seriously enough to be a blast. Check out the trailer below, and see it ASAP!

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Movie Reviews

‘ZombieCON Vol. 1’ Gets the Con Right. The Zombies Arrive When They Want To.

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ZombieCON Vol. 1 follows Rocket’s Rockets, a cosplay crew who are three-time regional anime convention champions, two of whom also wrote the film alongside their director, and it delivers a genuinely heartfelt love letter to nerd culture.

Just think Knights of Badassdom, a horror film that needs you to understand why these people care about what they care about before it can ask you to care about them. Although, I think the whole “Cosplay is lame”! Thing died out a long time ago.

The Comedy

ZombieCon: Vol. 1

The practical makeup effects look like the work of actual cosplayers competing, not Hollywood’s approximation of cosplayers competing, and the distinction is the difference between a film that is looking at this world from the outside and one that has been living in it.

The characters carry the specific mixture of expertise and softness that comes from living inside a somewhat shunned culture. However, ZombieCON Vol. 1 leans into that culture in a loving, non judgemental way.

The Scott Pilgrim energy in the fight staging earns its references rather than just pointing at them. The anime visual grammar is sincere, not ironic, which is the only register in which this kind of thing is actually funny. The film borrows inspiration from just about everyone but somehow manages to do it respectfully.

The Cast

Punkie Johnson came to this from Saturday Night Live, and the gap between her and the rest of the ensemble is perceptible in every scene they share. She finds the timing on lines that are still looking for their timing, lands the joke at the exact moment before the scene needs to move on, and the effect is that everything around her becomes more controlled in her presence.

Erin รine as Claire carries the film’s stranger turns without explaining them. The character is asked to move from one kind of story into another, several times, in ways the film does not prepare you for, and รine moves with it without telegraphing the transition or breaking register. Manny Luke’s Rocket is calibrated to produce friction from the opening scene, and Luke commits to it without softening it or winking at the audience about it.

What It Is

ZombieCON Vol. 1 has a first act that takes thirty-one minutes to produce its first zombie, a budget that shapes what the horror can do once the horror arrives, and a cast that makes both of those things survivable.

The audience for this kind of film has been burned before by entries that treat cosplay culture as the setup for a punchline. This one does not do that. It lives inside the culture rather than observing it, and the result is a horror comedy that earns the affection it is asking for even when the seams are showing.

ZombieCON Vol. 1 is free on Tubi.

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‘Donโ€™t Die’ Is a Good Friday Night Horror Film And That Is Enough.

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Donโ€™t Die hits UK digital April 27 via Miracle Media. Benjamin Stark wrote and directed it. It played Panic Fest 2024 and spent the better part of two years making the quiet festival rounds, waiting for the right audience to find it. That audience is you.


What Happens

Jenks, played by Theodus Crane, needs medication he cannot afford. He breaks into a small-town pharmacy after hours. This was supposed to be clean. Nobody was supposed to be there. The pharmacist, Julia, played by Virginia Newcomb, was working late. She gets shot. Not knowing what else to do, Jenks takes her exactly where she tells him to take her.

This turns out to be a remote cabin run by a small collective quietly distributing medication to people who cannot access it through legal channels. The Robin Hood framing is warm, and the film offers it genuinely before slowly removing the warmth.

The Turn

The group running the cabin is not irrational. They believe what they are doing matters. They believe the math is simple. People need blood and organs, medication costs money, two strangers showed up and nobody outside knows where they are. Jenks figures out what that math adds up to about two minutes before the film shows it explicitly, and Crane plays the moment of comprehension exactly right. Quiet. Still. The kind of fear that does not move.

Stark earns the horror here because the people doing terrible things are not doing them out of cruelty. They have a system. They have a purpose. No villain monologue. No sadistic speech. They are calm and businesslike about it. That calm is what makes the third act work. Horror is rarely as effective as when the threat makes a kind of sense.

The Cast

Crane carries it. He plays Jenks as a man who keeps choosing decency as the available options narrow, and that consistency is what makes the back half hit as hard as it does. The performance never reaches for sympathy. It does not need to.

Newcomb as Julia is the other weight-bearing wall. She has the harder job. Her character moves from victim to something more complicated without the script telegraphing the shift. She handles it without calling attention to the handling.

Joshua Burge rounds out the central trio as Randy, the friend who shows up when needed and clocks the situation faster than any reasonable person should. If you don’t have a Randy in your life, make sure to get one.

What It Is and Is Not

Donโ€™t Die was marketed as horror. It earns the label by the end, but it arrives there through crime thriller territory, and the patience of the first two acts is deliberate and correct. The tension builds quietly. When the horror finally arrives it lands harder because of the time spent getting there.

The budget limitations are present and real. Small locations, a tight cast, minimal spectacle. Stark works within them rather than against them, and for the most part it does not show. The pacing stumbles in the back half, running about five minutes longer than it should in the wrong places. There are moments where the momentum stalls. Neither is fatal.

It does not have much to say about healthcare beyond using it as a mechanism for the plot. That is fine. Not every film needs a thesis. This one tells a good story, maintains tension across most of its runtime, delivers a few genuine scares, and knows exactly what it is. Most low-budget horror manages one of those things.

Donโ€™t Die is on UK digital now. Good Friday night film.

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Movie Reviews

Content Is Now on Digital. Watch It Twice.

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Content, Adam Meilechโ€™s screenlife horror satire, arrives on UK digital April 27 via GrimmVision following a strong festival run that included Grimmfest 2025. The whole film plays out across phones and laptop screens. It opens on a sham. It ends somewhere you did not expect to go.

What It Is

Content Still 1

The opening scene drops you inside Therapals, a fake online therapy platform where the therapists are just untrained people trying to earn a paycheck. The first patient our protagonist connects with has the energy of an angry Ryan Reynolds and, with complete calm, tells her he is thinking about killing his neighbor.

From there Meilech begins stacking story on top of story in a way that will either lose you or thrill you, and which one depends entirely on your tolerance for the extremely meta. At the center is AJ, played by Meilech himself: actor, writer, director, stalker, kidnapper, psychopath.

While there is a clear line to be drawn from Content and Milk & Serial, Meilech provides a wonderful villain. His polite swagger and genuine enthusiasm make one of the most powerfuly wicked online personas I have seen in a while.

The Cast and the Method

Comntent still 2

The cast is Megan Boehmcke, Alex Mills, and Vaune Suitt alongside Meilech, operating under conditions that range from unpleasant to genuinely alarming. AJ records himself playing therapist to himself and plays the recordings back. He pays a stranger to pose as a mentor figure for his male actor, who believes he is in on a bit the whole time. He performs takes over and over in the Kubrick tradition until he gets what he wants. Eventually he just moves his lead into his apartment.

To get a real reaction during a shoot, he shows up and actually hits the actor. The poor actor, still in the scene, asks if they can reshoot. This dude is so desperate for a part, he is willing to show he can make his pain more entertaining.

Where It Sits

Content Still 3

The several story arcs running at once can be genuinely hard to follow and Content is not interested in making things easier. That is a feature, not a flaw. The bad guy is normal looking. He lives in a shared apartment. He does not signal his intentions in any way that would help you see it coming. There is real secondhand cringe to watching private moments captured without the subjects knowing, which is the filmโ€™s most effective trick, and Meilech commits to it completely.

It lands somewhere between Milk and Serial and Creep in the first half, and ends up closer to Funny Games meets Better Watch Out by the final act. That is an unusual place to land. It is also exactly the right one. Content is available now on UK digital via GrimmVision.

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