Plugging For Horror

Plugging For Horror Welcome to Plugging for Horror, where we aim to help open the door for horror filmmakers, journalists and fans & welcome you all to share to your output.

Okay, horror fans. A cracking, no-holds-barred review of the new Terror Tales of Chaos anthology has just landed. Review...
27/01/2026

Okay, horror fans. A cracking, no-holds-barred review of the new Terror Tales of Chaos anthology has just landed. Reviewer Ben Unsworth breaks down stories from Stephen Volk, Simon Clark, and more, and doesn't pull punches, not even for family! Want to know if this monster-filled collection lives up to the hype? The link to the full article is in the comments below. Go on, get spooked.

Review: Does Terror Tales of Chaos Deliver the Frights? Terror Tales of Chaos Edited by Paul Finch, the Terror Tales series is – and this isn’t because I wish to rub my age in anyone’s faces – only 6 years younger than me, having been published since 2011. Even when Gray Friar … Review: Do...

The real-world horrors of hate and fascism meet their match. "Horror Not Hate," a stunning new comic anthology and art b...
26/01/2026

The real-world horrors of hate and fascism meet their match. "Horror Not Hate," a stunning new comic anthology and art book, is live on Kickstarter. This isn't just a collection of scary stories—it's a direct-action tool, with all profits supporting Lambda Legal and CHIRLA. An all-star creative team is taking a stand. Want to see how? The full story and the link to back the project are waiting for you in the comments.

Remember the eerie fog, the radio static, the dread of the original Silent Hill games? Director Christophe Gans just dra...
26/01/2026

Remember the eerie fog, the radio static, the dread of the original Silent Hill games? Director Christophe Gans just dragged the franchise back to the big screen after 20 years. But does "Return to Silent Hill" capture that old magic, or is it a one-way trip to disappointment? Our deep-dive review is live. 👇

(Link to the full article will be in the first comment!)

Southern horror has never looked, or felt, quite like this. Yah Yah Scholfield's debut, On Sundays She Picked Flowers, i...
26/01/2026

Southern horror has never looked, or felt, quite like this. Yah Yah Scholfield's debut, On Sundays She Picked Flowers, is a brutally lyrical dive into generational trauma, sapphic desire, and the ghosts we can't outrun. It's equal parts haunting and cathartic. Our full, deep-dive review is live now. Link in the comments!

Alan Baxter is dragging us back into the hungry, weird streets of Gulpepper. Is The Rise: Tales From The Gulp 3 worth th...
23/01/2026

Alan Baxter is dragging us back into the hungry, weird streets of Gulpepper. Is The Rise: Tales From The Gulp 3 worth the return trip into cosmic horror? Our full review is live now. We break down the new terrors, the expanding mythos, and why this town just won't let go. Link in the comments!

Review: The Rise by Alan Baxter – The Gulp Swallows Readers Whole Again The truly...

So a Rush song basically ghostwrote a horror novel. I’m not even joking. The link to a wild piece about how “Working The...
23/01/2026

So a Rush song basically ghostwrote a horror novel. I’m not even joking. The link to a wild piece about how “Working Them Angels” inspired a full-on supernatural thriller is waiting in the comments. The story behind the story is almost as good as the book itself.

It hits you in the oddest moments. A familiar Rush song playing, and suddenly your...

Ever felt a phantom itch? Just a random one, right? Probably nothing. Gemma Amor’s new novel, ITCH!, ruins that innocenc...
19/01/2026

Ever felt a phantom itch? Just a random one, right? Probably nothing. Gemma Amor’s new novel, ITCH!, ruins that innocence forever. For Josie, a scratch is the starting point. An archaeology.

She’s back in her creepy hometown near the Forest of Dean, fresh from a bad relationship, and she finds a body. A body crawling with ants. Things… escalate. The horror here is brilliantly twofold: a masked predator in the woods, and the trauma burrowing under Josie’s own skin. It’s folk horror with a vicious, modern bite. Amor writes pure somatic unease. Your nerves will crackle.

This isn’t just a scary story. It’s an infection. Masterful.

Full review link is waiting for you in the comments. Go on, but don’t say I didn’t warn you.

She’s not just telling scary stories; she’s writing works of unease. She understands that the...

Ryan Prows's new film, NIGHT PATROL, is one hell of a thing. It's a vampire movie where the monsters wear badges, a soci...
19/01/2026

Ryan Prows's new film, NIGHT PATROL, is one hell of a thing. It's a vampire movie where the monsters wear badges, a social horror dressed as a gritty cop thriller. My head is still spinning from its wild blend of genres, fierce performances, and unflinching commentary. A messy, must-see cult classic in the making? Full review is live — link is in the comments below.

Night Patrol Release date: 16 January 2026 Director: Ryan Prows Running time: 1h 44m Producers: Josh Goldbloom, James Harris, Keith Levine, David...

Ever wonder why the Hellraiser sequels never hurt as good as the original? We got thinking. It’s not about the hooks. It...
15/01/2026

Ever wonder why the Hellraiser sequels never hurt as good as the original? We got thinking. It’s not about the hooks. It’s about the heart. Or the lack of one.

Turns out, the real secret ingredient to a Hellraiser isn’t gore—it’s a specific kind of love. A messed-up, transcendent, skin-peeling love. The bad sequels forgot that. The 2022 version? It kinda missed the point too.

We wrote a thing. It goes deep on Cenobites as monks of limit-experiences, the tragedy of the "Hellbound heart," and why Pinhead should never be sassy. Link to the full article is in the comments below. Open at your own risk.

Just when you thought the rage virus was the worst of it, along comes Sir Jimmy Crystal. Nia DaCosta's '28 Years Later: ...
15/01/2026

Just when you thought the rage virus was the worst of it, along comes Sir Jimmy Crystal. Nia DaCosta's '28 Years Later: The Bone Temple' is a diabolically good, unflinching sequel that dives deep into cults, bromances, and the true nature of evil. My full review is live—link in the comments!

Just finished a book that feels like a 1950s horror film crashed into a Gaelic folklore bestiary. Raven Dane's 'Bailfire...
12/01/2026

Just finished a book that feels like a 1950s horror film crashed into a Gaelic folklore bestiary. Raven Dane's 'Bailfire and Brimstone' is grimdark fantasy that doesn't pull its punches—think revenge, dark magic, and monsters that'll properly unsettle you. Not your average historical fantasy. A seriously gritty, atmospheric read.

Wanna know if it's your cup of yea? Full review is in the comments 👇

Honestly, you don't see a Bodach Glas every day. Or a Sidh, for that matter....

Ever notice how movie reboots are like finding your old high school jeans? You insist they'll fit, that the vibe is stil...
06/01/2026

Ever notice how movie reboots are like finding your old high school jeans? You insist they'll fit, that the vibe is still there. Then you actually try and, well. It’s a whole thing.

This new Anaconda flick with Black and Rudd? Yeah. Our two critics went down the river on it and came back with... wildly different souvenirs. One’s kinda shrugging, the other is absolutely pitching a fit. It’s a whole situation.

Wanna see who thought it was a harmless giggle and who wanted to feed the script to an actual snake? Our take is live. Link’s in the comments, obviously. Go on, prove one of them wrong.

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