News
Top Five New Year’s Eve Horror Movies to Ring in the Apocalypse
New Year’s Eve has always had a creepy vibe to it. The concept of moving on from our mistakes and starting anew has always felt a bit too clean for the darkness of winter. Today, we have cultivated a list of horror films that remind us that we can’t outrun our problems forever.
5. Terror Train (1980)

New Year’s Eve on a train. This already feels like a bad sign, doesn’t it? Then you add a masked killer, some college kids with a messed-up past, and Jamie Lee Curtis being all final-girl awesome. It’s a slasher that gets that timing is everything. I mean, who doesn’t love Jamie Lee Curtis, right?
Terror Train is all about being trapped and knowing something bad is gonna happen. You can’t just get off, can’t escape the countdown, and you can’t outrun what happened before. As midnight gets closer, it’s a reminder that some parties are just cursed from the start. Just think of Terror Train as the work-related New Year’s Eve event that you desperately want to get out of, but just can’t.
Bloody New Year (1987)

Okay, so Bloody New Year is one of the wilder entries on the list. Teens get stuck and find shelter, but then it’s all time-bending weirdness, ghost visions, and some seriously strange deaths from the ’80s slasher scene. Honestly, if you haven’t seen it, Bloody New Year is worth it for the laughs alone.
This movie feels like it’s falling apart as you watch it. Reality goes all wonky as the new year comes. It’s messy, weird, and totally unapologetic. There is a special place for cinema that does whatever it wants without regard to the audience. That place is normally the trash can, but still.
New Year, New You (2018)

This one’s from Hulu’s Into the Dark series, and it’s not about masked killers. It’s about emotional warfare. Old friends get together for New Year’s Eve, but all the old grudges and buried stuff turn the night way more dangerous than just being nostalgic.
It’s psychological horror at its best. The scariest thing about a new year isn’t the unknown. It’s having to face who you used to be and who your friends think you still are. Anyone who has tried to make any actual change in their life can recognize the anxiety of trying to bring that new you into their old life. Except your event hopefully doesn’t involve weird torture.
The Signal (2007)

When a weird signal takes over the TVs at midnight, the new year doesn’t bring hope. It brings madness. The Signal breaks into three parts, and each one shows a different part of society collapsing as people turn violent.
The movie is set on New Year’s Eve and manages to blend real scares with comedic elements. This one is a bit more indie but still packs a wallop for those who can look past the production value.
Ghostbusters II (1989)

Yeah, Ghostbusters II totally belongs here. It’s horror-comedy, but it gets that collective fear and belief are powerful on New Year’s Eve. When the clock strikes twelve, Vigo’s plan works, and New York’s emotions become a weapon.
The movie captures that weird hope that’s part of New Year’s Eve: that people can survive together. It’s lighter than the others, but it fits. Sometimes you need humor, unity, and, uh, supernatural help to face the end of the world.
News
ShoStak Opens the Door for Filmmakers to Build and Own Their Stories
A new player is stepping into the space, but ShoStak is making one thing clear right away.
It is not trying to be the next Netflix. It is not chasing TikTok.
“Cinema does not need another platform. It needs a new model.”
That idea sits at the core of what ShoStak is building. Not just a place to watch content, but a system where creators and audiences connect in a way that feels very different from what we are used to.

The First 150 Competition Is Already Underway
ShoStak is kicking things off with its First 150 Competition, giving filmmakers a chance to present their story worlds and compete for the opportunity to move into production.
Projects are introduced as series concepts or pilots, then advance through multiple stages. Audience voting plays a role, but it is only part of the process.
Selections are ultimately shaped by a mix of audience engagement, creative execution, and overall project readiness. It is not just about popularity. It is about building something that can actually move forward.
For creators, it is a rare chance to get in front of both an audience and a structured development path at the same time.
One Platform, Built Around a New Model
Everything now lives under ShoStak.tv, where both creators and audiences come together.
Creators can sign up, develop their projects, and begin building their audience. Viewers can discover new series, follow story worlds, and engage with projects as they evolve.
ShoStak describes this as a cinematic ecosystem. Stories are not treated as disposable content designed to spike and disappear. They are built to grow over time.
And that growth happens in public.

Ownership Without Losing Structure
One of ShoStak’s core ideas is giving creators more control over what they build.
Filmmakers are positioned to:
- Retain ownership of their intellectual property
- Build direct relationships with their audience
- Grow projects based on real engagement
At the same time, this is not a free-for-all.
There is still structure. Projects are evaluated, developed, and refined through a process that blends audience input with creative and strategic decision-making.
Instead of removing the system entirely, ShoStak is reshaping how creators move through it.
Development Happens in Public
This is where things start to separate from the traditional model.
Instead of developing behind closed doors, ShoStak allows projects to evolve in front of an audience.
Creators introduce their ideas, build a following, and expand their worlds over time. As engagement grows, so does the project.
It is less about waiting for approval and more about proving momentum.
Over time, that turns the platform into something larger than a development program. It becomes an open ecosystem where creators and audiences push stories forward together.

More Than Just Testing Ideas
Micro-series are a big part of ShoStak’s approach, but they are not just a testing ground.
They can be the final product.
The format allows creators to:
- Tell complete stories in shorter form
- Build long-term story worlds
- Expand into larger projects when it makes sense
It is not about proving an idea and moving on. It is about giving that idea room to grow in whatever direction fits.
Why This Matters for Horror
Horror has always thrived outside the system.
Some of the most memorable films in the genre came from creators taking risks, working with limited resources, and finding their audience without waiting for permission.
ShoStak’s model fits naturally into that mindset.
It gives horror creators a space to:
- Build original story worlds
- Connect directly with fans
- Grow projects without losing control
And with early content like Civilian and Liminal already rolling out, it is clear the platform is aiming for more than just quick-hit content.
A Different Path Forward
ShoStak is not trying to compete by doing the same thing better.
It is trying to change how stories are created, developed, and sustained.
By combining creator ownership, audience engagement, and a structured development path, it offers something that feels closer to a creative ecosystem than a traditional platform.
Whether it works long-term is still unknown.
But for filmmakers looking for a new way in, it is opening a door that has been closed for a long time.
News
The Clayface Teaser Just Made October Feel Very Far Away
Clayface is a character whose face changes. Or rather, he is a man whose body can transform into whatever is required in the moment. He primarily uses this skill to land acting jobs and murder people. Fun Guy.
Tom Rhys Harries plays Matt Hagen, an actor whose face gets destroyed in a gangster attack. Naomi Ackie is the scientist who hands him something that fixes the problem by making it considerably worse. Bandages. Blood. Then a face that begins to melt. You know where this ends.
Who Made This

The director is James Watkins, who made Speak No Evil in 2024 and before that Eden Lake, which is one of the more quietly devastating horror films of the last twenty years. Watkins does not make comfortable films. He makes films that stay in the room with you after you leave the theater and this one is about a DC villain whose body does not hold its shape anymore.
The script is from Mike Flanagan and Hossein Amini. Flanagan built the language of prestige horror television with The Haunting of Hill House and Midnight Mass before moving back into features with The Life of Chuck. He writes characters who are being destroyed from the inside and the outside simultaneously.
The October Play

Clayface opens October 23, which puts it squarely in Halloween season and makes it the first DC film that actually belongs there. The project is likely rated R. The trailer confirms why.
There is a face melting off.
Watch the teaser. Then clear your calendar for October 23.
News
‘Behind the Mask 2’ Slays Kickstarter
If you are hardwired into the horror community there is no doubt you heard the gasp around the internet earlier this month when Behind the Mask II: The Return of Leslie Vernon was announced. The announcement of the long anticipated sequel came at a screening of the original at American Cinematheque in Los Angeles.
That same evening we also learned that Behind the Mask’s director Scott Glosserman as well as writer David J. Stieve will be returning to the film. Furthermore, cast members Nathan Baesel, Angela Goethals, and Robert Englund will be reprising their roles from the original.

A Kick into Overdrive
While the sequel is happening one way or another, a Kickstarter campaign was established. The money pledged would allow the filmmakers to create a movie that goes above and beyond their original budget.
As the campaign’s page states;
“The film is happening, that’s no-take-backs. If we hit these goals, it makes it possible to do it bigger, bloodier, and bolder.”
The campaign goes on, saying;
“This is not a “save the movie” campaign. The movie is happening. Kickstarter is how we make it our way. “
Roughly two weeks after the sequel’s announcement, the campaign launched with a modest day one goal of $20,000. To say that fans crushed this number is an understatement. In 9 minutes they reached their goal. In less than 24 hours the amount of backers climbed to over 300, and the pledges donated totaled more than $100,000!
Get to the Good Stuff!
For pledging, the moviemakers have included incentives that are truly in line with what the horror community wants.
The rewards begin at $25 with a digital streaming link of Behind the Mask II: The Return of Leslie Vernon. Tiers continue on as the pledge amounts increase. T-shirts, posters, Blu Rays and scripts are just some of the middle tier goodies. The larger donation amounts are rewarded with on screen “Special Thank You”s and various producer credits.

It is the ‘Exclusive Add Ons’ where things get really interesting. Once a backer has already pledged, they can add on additional perks. These additions include
“accessories, autographs, props, and truly unique, fan forward in-person experiences… all intended to complement your chosen reward tier!”
One of the unique add on perks includes VHS tapes of the original Behind the Mask or the sequel, your choice! Given the fact the first movie was created right on the heels of when VHS was truly dead, older horror fans will especially find this perk an exciting addition to their vintage collection.
The reward add-ons also have the horror prop collectors in mind. You can purchase Leslie Vernon’s weapon of choice, a scythe, as well as his mask. Both of these are signed by actor Nathan Baesel.

For more personal experiences, you can add on a visit to the Behind the Mask II set during filming! You can also choose a cast and crew screening in LA or New York, complete with an after party. Finally, for the crème de la crème; you can be killed onscreen by Leslie Vernon himself!
Powered by the Fans
Behind the Mask II: The Return of Leslie Vernon is the little slasher movie that could!
For two decades the creators tried to find ways to make Leslie’s legacy continue. A failed first Kickstarter, rumors, teases, and false starts all led to the delay of a dream.
For twenty years the movie’s cult gathering slowly formed, cultivated, and grew louder and louder. Too loud to be ignored.

As soon as the campaign went live, horror fans donated their hard earned money. And let’s face it; we are currently living in a time where the dollar doesn’t stretch as far. The fact that the long awaited sequel gained so much traction and backing, so quickly, really demonstrates the community’s love, support, and anticipation for Behind the Mask II: The Return of Leslie Vernon.
It looks like Leslie Vernon will finally be returning!
-
News3 days agoThe Evil Dead Burn Trailer Is Here and It Is Everything
-
News6 days agoThis Week in Horror: CinemaCon Delivered, Nicolas Cage Is Coming Back, and Someone Let Ti West Near a Christmas Story
-
News4 days agoThe Practical Magic 2 Teaser Trailer Is Finally Here
-
News3 days agoThe Evil Dead Universe Now Includes a Mummy Film
-
Lists4 days ago10 Horror, Thriller, and True Crime Series to Watch This Spring
-
News4 days agoThe HUNGRY Red Band Trailer Is Here and We Need to Stop Laughing at the Hippo
-
Trailers2 days ago“It’s My Era. I’m a Rockstar Now.” The Official ‘The Vampire Lestat’ Trailer Is Here
-
Editorial6 days ago‘Behind The Mask’ is a Love Letter to Slashers


You must be logged in to post a comment Login