Mask-wearing, immortal Jason Voorhees is cryogenically frozen in the near future, along with beautiful Rowan (Lexa Doig). When both are thawed on a spaceship 400 years later, it is up to Rowan to stop Jason from killing everyone on board. Quick Review: This is what you do when you realize your franchise is way past
Jason and the Argonauts (1963)
In order to prove the gods are on his side in a battle with the usurping King Pelias, Jason (Todd Armstrong, voice: Tim Turner) gathers the finest athletes of Greece and heads out to take the legendary golden fleece. Aided by the goddess Hera (Honor Blackman), the powerful Hercules (Nigel Green), the ship builder Argos
Jeepers Creepers (2001)
Siblings Darry and Trish Jenner (Justin Long, Gina Phillips) are run off the road by a weird armored truck on their way home from college. Later, they spot the truck by an abandoned church as well as a man in a long coat throwing body-sized packages down a pipe. Suspecting that the man might be a murderer
Jeepers Creepers II (2003)
Starting almost immediately after the events of the 2001 film, the Creeper (Jonathan Breck), who feeds on human body parts for twenty-three days every twenty-three years, has less than a day left before he goes dormant. After picking off a kid in a cornfield, he targets a bus load of high school students returning from a
Ju-On 1 & 2 (2000)
A series of interrelated vignettes of horrible deaths, Ju-On slowly reveals why ghosts are killing the living, and why it will never end. Quick Review: Ju-On is part of the Japanese new wave of horror started by Ringu. The films in the movement tend to be more frightening than almost any other movies, and also
Ju-On: The Grudge (2003)
Kibakichi (2003)
Kibakichi (Ryuuji Harada), a yokai (beastman-demon) samurai, stumbles upon a village of yokai who masquerade as humans and feed off yakuza and other criminals who enter their gambling den. The residents have made a deal with some local humans: if they help the humans take over their clan, they will be given land where they can
Kill, Baby… Kill! “Operazione paura” (1966)
Dr Paul Eswai (Giacomo Rossi-Stuart) is summoned to a remote village to perform an autopsy as part of a murder investigation. The deeply superstitious and frightened populous is hostile to the doctor and his modern ways, relying on the local witch (Fabienne Dali) for safety from a force few are willing to speak of. Only
Killer Party (1986)
Three college girls, Jennifer, Vivia, and Phoebe (Joanna Johnson, Sherry Willis-Burch, and Elaine Wilkes), are pledging a sorority together and going through the normal hazing rituals, the last of which puts them in a spooky house where a pledge was killed years ago. It looks like things are going smoothly, but Jennifer is afraid they
King Kong (1933)
Egomaniacal filmmaker Carl Denham (Robert Armstrong) plans to make his next picture on a mysterious island. When no actress will take such a dangerous job, Denham picks homeless Ann Darrow (Fay Wray) off the street, and the next day they are at sea. The island is home to a degenerate tribe that lives behind a
King Kong Lives (1986)
Beauty didn’t kill the beast, she only broke his heart. After a year in a coma, grumpy, ape-heart surgeon Amy Franklin (Linda Hamilton) is ready to replace King Kong’s damaged pump with an artificial one, but needs plasma. Coincidently, adventurer Hank Mitchell (Brian Kerwin) finds a giant female gorilla in Borneo, and soon the recuperating Kong
King Kong vs. Godzilla (1962)
A nuclear sub crashes into an iceberg, freeing Godzilla, who heads to Tokyo. Meanwhile, a buffoonish pharmaceutical executive sends two agents to a tropical island where they discover King Kong. When Kong drugs himself on narcotic berry juice, the nitwits decide to bring him back to Japan (just assuming that the drug will keep him