1999
Issue 179
January/February 1999
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<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Postal zone</FONT>: "Halloween H20": trick or treat?<bR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Monster invasion</FONT>: "Carrie" on; new life for the "Living Dead."<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Little girl found</FONT>: Danielle Harris survived two "Halloween" sequels only to meet her end in "Urban Legend."<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>The devil movie made 'em do it</FONT>: When Satan left Regan at the end of "The Exorcist," he flew into a host of imitators.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Re-Bates</FONT>: Can a new version of the all-time killer classic succeed? The people behind the '98 "Psycho" think so.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Cannon Fodder</FONT>: He turned down the original, but "I Still Know What You Did Last Summer" hooked director Danny Cannon.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Weird science class</FONT>: With Robert Rodriguez and Kevin Williamson on board, "The Faculty' ought to make the grade.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Laser & DVD spotlight</FONT>: Some "Thing" great; a good hit of "Ganja."<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>"Mighty Joe Young" at heart</FONT>: The big ape gets a '90s makeover, headed by director Ron ("Tremors") Underwood.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Dr. Cyclops</FONT>: "Phantasm: Oblivion" throws curve balls; gushing over "Bleeders."<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>As "The Crow" flies again</FONT>: On TV, martial-arts actor Mark Dacascos earns his wings taking over for Brandon Lee.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Ex-boyfriend of the Bride of Chucky</FONT>: He has been a killer and a victim, and in this follow-up, Alexis Arquette is both.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Raising "Progeny"</FONT>: This Brian Yuzna film finds aliens invading not our society, but one woman's body.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Terrifying and "Tender"</FONT>: Veteran character actor Aldo Sanbrell put the fear in a pair of Jess Franco flicks.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Nightmare library</FONT>: Bats over "Vespers"; it's got a "Big Rock Beat," but you can't dance to it.
Issue 180
March 1999
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<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Monster invasion</FONT>: "Ravenous": You are what he eats.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>The Bates of his existence</FONT>: For nearly 40 years, "Psycho" and "The Outer Limits" have been part of screenwriter Joseph Stefano's life.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Laser & DVD spotlight</FONT>: The Redemption of Eurohorror; freshly minted "Document".<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Let's slay together</FONT>: A tight-knit, enthusiastic crew takes us step by step through "Buffy the Vampire Slayer".<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>"In Dreams" I stalk</FONT>: Robert Downey Jr.'s more disturbed than usual in director's Neil Jordan psychothriller.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Dr Cyclops</FONT>: Here comes an "Eighteenth" story breakdown; flat "Aberration".<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>This show blows</FONT>: Killer winds and unending snow are just a tiny part of the problems in Stephen King's "Storm of the Century".<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>The night walker</FONT>: In "8MM", the writer of "Se7en" plunges into the nightmarish world of snuff filmmaking.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Dying in a box</FONT>: There's death in every corner when six characters enter the nightmare world of "Cube".<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Screams to be hurd</FONT>: She's handled Aliens and giant worms, so a "Virus" was no problem for producer Gale Anne Hurd.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Be grue to your school</FONT>: Director Robert Rodriguez tackles his second straight fear film with "The Faculty." <BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>"Texas Blood Money" talks</FONT>: There'll be no daytime heists for the vampire robbers in this "From Dusk Till Dawn" sequel.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Satan through the '80s</FONT>: Even after the debacle of "Exorcist II," devil movies continued to raise their ugly heads.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Nightmare library</FONT>: Wonderfully warped Wilson; dive into "Faces Under Water."<BR>
Also Letters, Video reviews, games, books and more.
Issue 181
April 1999
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Issue 182
May 1999
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<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Monster invasion</FONT>: "Monster Fighters" take no prisoners.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Dean Koontz</FONT> is making sure the new screen versions of his books are done right.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>The Mummy</FONT>: Universal ups the action and spectacle as they revive a classic for the 1990s.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>When "Talos" Walks</FONT>: Russell Mulcahy enters Egyptian evil derby with a film that homages Hammer.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>"The Eternal" never dies</FONT>: An unconventional mummy movie from Michael Almereyda puts the ire in Ireland.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Dr. Cyclops</FONT>: Foreign and domestic vampires; lightweight "Dark Angel".<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>An eye for "I, Zombie"</FONT>: The new Fangoria Home Video line debuts with a personal tale of ghoulish transformation.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>"Hands" - on director</FONT>: Returning to features from TV, Rodman Flender didn't stint on the R-rated aspects of "Idle Hands."<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>"Rage" on the page</FONT>: Sequel scripter Rafael Moreu had to "Carrie" on through a change in directors.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>The Mighty Peking Man</FONT>: As the giant ape storms U.S. theaters, Hong Kong director Ho Meng-Hua recalls taming him and other animals.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>I Stand Alone</FONT>: In this French psychodrama, there's nothing more horrifying than the human condition.
Issue 183
June 1999
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<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Monster invasion</FONT>: The biggest "Haunting" yet.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Wicked weekend</FONT>: Fear film favorites converged at the New York Fango convention.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Dr Cyclops</FONT>: Send out "The Clown"; "Cather" in the wrong.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Laser & DVD spotlight</FONT>: "Bride" earns a bouquet; the truth about "Legend".<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Twins, terror & trouble</FONT>: Throughout his career, director John Hough crafted chillers under adverse circumstances.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Vampz n the hood</FONT>: When "Modern Vampires" infest LA, a new Van Helsing enlists street gangs to fight evil for a change.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Shockin' and Rollin</FONT>: Jean Rollin's lyrical, erotic and often bloody vampire films were unlike any others.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Hooked for more</FONT>: What better time for Candyman to make a reappearance than on the "Day of the Dead"?<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Vosloo's villain</FONT>: His name is Arnold, he plays a time displaced killer, but his "Mummy" role is a unique one.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>The Mummy wars</FONT>: Getting the Universal remake to the screen was almost as complex a task as excavating King Tut's tomb.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Anything but "Idle"</FONT>: These young performers are all on the rise thanks to their funny/scary work in "Idle Hands."<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>A killer career</FONT>: Across three decades, asian actor Danny Lee has tackled gunmen, bun men and "Mighty Peking Man."<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Visions of eXistenZ</FONT>: When you enter this chilling VR realm, you're seeing Carol Spier's handiwork.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Counting on terror</FONT>: "99.9" is a lucky number for genre fans, thanks to Spanish director Agustin Villaronga.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Nightmare library</FONT>: Dreamy "Incubus" and "Screams & Nightmares."
Issue 184
July 1999
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<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Monster invasion</FONT>: A ghost story to cause a "Stir".<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>A-"Haunting" we will go</FONT>: The house, the FX and the expectations are bigger in this lavish remake.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>20 years of Fangoria</FONT>: Comic artist Mark Voger helps us celebrate.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Macabre milestones</FONT>: A special gatefold honoring two decades of horror history.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Shark treatment</FONT>: Renny Harlin's "Deep Blue Sea" pits suffering scientists against super-smart sharks.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Dr. Cyclops</FONT>: "Carnival" goes sour; "Black Circle Boys" a success.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>A thorny problem</FONT>: "Stigmata" and other religious afflictions torment Patricia Arquette - who the devil is responsible?<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Beyond bandages</FONT>: Makeup FX master Nick Dudman helped create "Mummy" unlike any seen on screen before<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>The 8th Annual Chainsaw Awards Winners</FONT>: Did your favorites make the cut?<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Frights of the rising sun</FONT>: Swords, sorcery and monsters highlight Japanese director Keita Amemiya's work.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Laser & DVD spotlight</FONT>: At last, "The Evil Dead"; a packed "Progeny"; "Cat" disc fever.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>United we escape</FONT>: Four ambitious genre fans take shot-on-video horror to new levels with "The Dividing Hour."<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>The Blair Facts</FONT>: From the wilds of Maryland comes the year's most frightening film: "The Blair Witch Project."<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>"Silent" but deadly</FONT>: It's rattlers on the rampage in the made-for-cable chiller "Silent Predators."<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Armand hammers</FONT>: For two decades, director Armand Mastroianni has been plugging away at genre fare.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>The best "Parts"</FONT>: The 1972 cult classic "Private Parts" is kinkier than anything Howard Stern could dream up.
Issue 185
August 1999
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<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Monster invasion</FONT>: Talkin' 'bout "Generation aX."<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>No Gidding around</FONT>: The scripter of 1963's "The Haunting," Nelson Gidding, wrote of terrors you couldn't see.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Crocodile Rock</FONT>: If Steve Miner has his way, "Lake Placid" will now be known for more than the Olympics.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Harlin fishing</FONT>: Director Renny Harlin returns to his horror roots in the cinematic sharker "Deep Blue Sea."<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Shell-bent for destruction</FONT>: The new improved monster turtle continues his rampage in "Gamera 3."<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Bitez n the hood</FONT>: A gigantic, mutated "King Cobra" is slithering its way onto the genre scene.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Dragon race</FONT>: "Komodo" finds the world's largest lizards developing one heck of a mean streak.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Dr. Cyclops</FONT>: "Dentists 2" mouths off; political incorectness in "Terror 2000."<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Ghost wrangler</FONT>: Despite its updated FX, Jan De Bont insists his new "Haunting" is still more scary than flashy.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Kiss-ing up</FONT>: With a revival of his music and new movie, Gene Simmons keeps on shocking and rolling.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Laser & DVD spotlight</FONT>: Throw away your bootlegs: "The Johnsons" and "Night of the Hunted" come to disc.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Nightmare library</FONT>: "The Descent" rises to the top; seven schlocky "Sins."<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Anime agony</FONT>: The best new psycho film isn't a teen pic; it's the Japanimation thriller "Perfect Blue."<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>"Stanley" screamer</FONT>: Filmmaker William Grefe unleased lethal nature to darken the Sunshine State.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Unhappy campers</FONT>: "The Blair Witch Project" is the first film to scare its cast as much as its audiences.
Issue 186
September 1999
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<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Monster invasion</FONT>: A new "House," without Castle; the definitive "Halloween" DVD; dark Ryder in "Lost Souls."<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>"Early" to dread</FONT>: Only two decades after his death could an Ed Wood script attract a cast like that of "I Woke Up Early the Day I Died."<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Ghost on the brain</FONT>: When Kevin Bacon undergoes hypnosis to open his mind, the result is an unsettling "Stir of Echoes."<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Shock-it man</FONT>: Just because "The astronaut's Wife" is paranoid doesn't mean her husband isn't out to get her.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>To Nell and back</FONT>: Indie-film queen Lili Taylor takes a plunge into megamovie territory with "The Haunting."<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Dr. Cyclops</FONT>: "Eternal" endures; half-decent "Moon"; an infectious "Tainted."<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Croc addicts</FONT>: Stan Winston and company submerged themselves in natural research to create the beast of "Lake Placid."<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>"Placid" bytes</FONT>: CGI stood for Crocodile-Generating Ingenuity for the folks at Digital Domain.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Fishmasters</FONT>: When the sharks bite in "Deep Blue Sea," it's done through a combination of special FX techniques.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Makeup FX lab: "Wishmaster 2"</FONT>: This team fulfilled their desire to give the murderous Djinn a scary new look.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>"Lady ": Killer</FONT>: For over half a decade, filmmaker Maurice Deveraux was committed to his "Lady of the Lake."<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>DVD/Laser spotlight</FONT>: A classic series ("Alien"), a remake of a classic ("Psycho") and a maker of classics ("Gods and Monsters").<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>"The X Files" Sixth Season Episode Guide</FONT>: Perhaps Mulder and Scully should investigate why this batch was so uneven.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Fear in training</FONT>: Spain's Eugenio Martin made several chillers, but none tracked better than "Horror Express."<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Nightmare library</FONT>: You'll eat up "Hannibal" and adore "Dark Sister."
Issue 187
October 1999
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<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Monster invasion</FONT>: Arnold vs. Udo in "End of Days"; Tim Burton's "Sleepy Hollow" awakens.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Bit players</FONT>: Little fish meant a lot when New World's superior "Piranha" swarm into theaters.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Review: "Stir of Echoes"</FONT>: Kevin's haunting brings home the bacon for ghost-film fans<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>This new "House"</FONT>: Director William Malone, Geoffrey Rush and others welcome you to their "House of Haunted Hill."<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Saving "Lost Souls"</FONT>: How the devil can believer Winona Ryder convince an atheist that Satan is after him?<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Dr. Cyclops</FONT>: "Killer Tongue" leaves a bad taste; "Some Nudity" bares pretension.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>How "Sixth Sense" became #1</FONT>: Even director M.Night Shyamalan couldn't have predicted the success of his moody ghost story.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Spells Trouble</FONT>: "Warlock: The End of Innocence" pairs a new sorcerer and an ambitious young director.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>"Kolobos" cuts up</FONT>: Housebound horrors await the victims in this gruesome low-budgeter.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Death after graduation</FONT>: The team behind "Buffy the Vampire Slayer" previews the new season and introduces the "Angel" series.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>The other Argento</FONT>: On shockers like "Phantom of the Opera," Dario's brother Claudio keeps the production fear-free.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>DVD/Laser spotlight</FONT>: "Ghosts" busts out all over; fun extras drive "Space Truckers."<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Jack of all 'fraids</FONT>: "Wishmaster 2" sees Jack Sholder return to the director's chair on a fright feature.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Cross-country terror</FONT>: Beware-it's Fangoria's last haunted house report of the millennium!<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Nightmare library</FONT>: A "Marriage" worth attending; "Unhallowed" proves uneven.
Issue 188
November 1999
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<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Monster invasion</FONT>: One last "Scream"; "A Better Place" shows youth at its worst.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Slayer's way</FONT>: There's a lot to look forward to on the new season of "Buffy," according to Sarah Michelle Gellar.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>"Sleepy," Heads</FONT>: Travel back to a "Hollow" of horror with Tim Burton, Johnny Depp and a murderous Horseman.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>The "End" of Arnold?</FONT>: On the eve of the Millennium, Schwarzenegger battles to stop a satanic takeover.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>"Broadcast" news</FONT>: It's a mock-documentary about evil in the woods - and it came before the one you're thinking of.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Dr. Cyclops</FONT>: Driven to praise by "Roadkiller"; an unfulfilling "Wishmaster 2."<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Driving you "Bats"</FONT>: A new and hungry animal menace is flying into theaters, courtesy of director Louis Morneau.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>His new "House"</FONT>: Filmmaker William Malone follows in the footsteps of another William-Castle-to "Haunted Hill."<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>"Phantom" Menace</FONT>: For the first time, Italian legend Dario Argento tackles a classic horror character.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Tales of resurrection</FONT>: Russell Mulcahy returns to terror with a vengeance in a pair of new releases.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Tromadical Maniac</FONT>: A killer stalks the schlockmeisters of "Terror Firmer"-but where does reality end and the movie begin?<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>DVD/Laser spotlight</FONT>: You 've got "Brain Damage" if you miss this one; '70s cult favorites return on disc.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Boardwalk Vampires</FONT>: a seaside town finds an extra chill in the air thanks to the bloodsuckers of "Cold Hearts."<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Nightmare library</FONT>: "Me X" hits the spot; screams of a "Winter Knight."
2000
Issue 189
January/February 2000
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<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Monster invasion</FONT>: Air and space travel prove unsafe in "Flight 180" and "Pitch Black."<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Grue Danish</FONT>: European vampires rise and bite in "Angel Of The Night," coming from Fango Home Video.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Terminating his past</FONT>: It's an Arnold Schwarzenegger like you 've never seen before battling evil in "End Of Days."<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Scream you, "Scream 3"</FONT>: What new terrors is Wes Craven springing on Neve Campbell and company this time?<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Dr. Cyclops</FONT>: "Open Your Eyes" and challenge your mind; tiny results from King-inspired sequels.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>The "Hollow" man</FONT>: For all the weirdness of his resume, Tim Burton has never made a film as flat-out scary as "Sleepy."<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>"Gate" crashing</FONT>: Three decades after "Rosemary's Baby," Roman Polanski returns with a new tale of deviltry.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>"Green" with envy</FONT>... is what other filmmakers might be if this Frank Darabont/Stephen King movie lives up to its promise.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>"Supernova" explodes</FONT>: Get ready to (finally) experience this long-delayed excursion into extraterrestrial fear.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Do the monster smash</FONT>: His name's "Matthew Blackheart," and he's making the TV world unsafe for evil.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>"House" guests</FONT>: A star-filled cast explains why they took up residence on "Haunted Hill."<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Aured menace</FONT>: Working with Paul Naschy, this director brought to life ghouls, mummies and "Psychotic Women."<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>DVD/Laser spotlight</FONT>: Hail to the new "Halloween"; you 'll be sated by "Ravenous."<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>The Dalton gang</FONT>: In the '50s and '60s, Audrey Dalton was the beauty facing beasts both human and otherwise.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Nightmare library</FONT>: Craven takes to the page with "Fountain Society"; King delves into the past with "Hearts in Atlantis."
Issue 190
March 2000
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<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Monster invasion</FONT>: Swing into "Hangman's Daughter"; sex, thugs and "Rock 'N' Roll Frankenstein."<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>"Others" in arms</FONT>: TV's latest paranormal drama has some heavy genre hitters behind it.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Dr. Cyclops</FONT>: Wild and winning Asian fare; "Warlock"; the end of innovation.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Ready Kruger</FONT>: A new screenwriter tackles the satoric terrors of "Scream 3."<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>"Destination": Fear</FONT>: In this chiller, a group of students discover that the one thing they can't cheat is death.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Here's the "Pitch"</FONT>: It's a planet where night falls every 23 years - and horrible things emerge when it does.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>"Super" Man</FONT>: Action veteran Walter Hill found "Supernova" fraught with challenge on both sides of the camera.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Talent to Byrne</FONT>: That's Gabriel Byrne, the suave, sardonic Satan scaring Schwarzenegger in "End of Days."<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Noggin on Kevin's door</FONT>: Replaced as director on "Sleepy Hollow," FX wixard Kevin Yagher still kept his head.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>"Living" La Vida Muerto</FONT>: You won't want to be caught alive in Full Moon's "The Dead Hate The Living."<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Running "The Green Mile"</FONT>: Frank Darabont went directly back to jail without passing Go for his second Stephen King film.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>"Organ" exposed</FONT>: Inside a Japanese shocker that cuts to the heart (and stomach and intestines) of the matter.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>The spirit of youth</FONT>: "Believe" spins the touching story of a boy and his not-necessarily-friendly ghost.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>DVD/Laser spotlight</FONT>: "Nightmare" set a dream come true; the "Blair" facts; an "Army" of extras.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Nightmare library</FONT>: Monteleone's latest to reckon with; a book "Worse Than Death."
Issue 191
April 2000
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Issue 192
May 2000
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Issue 193
June 2000
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Issue 194
July 2000
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<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Elegy</FONT>: Screams of she season.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Postal zone</FONT>: ''Psycho'' supporters; huffy about ''Buffy.''<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Monster invasion</FONT>: ''Yonggary'' roars back; ''Destination'': the cutting room floor.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>I blood NY</FONT>: Celebs from films big and small sliced up the Big Apple at Fango's last con.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>A little bit of ''Sole''</FONT>: Another Dean Koontz book gets the TV-movie treatment, with Billy Zane headlining.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>The ''Nameless'' game</FONT>: Spain's latest acclaimed cinematic horror exports also boasts a top literary source.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Dr. Cyclops</FONT>: ''Minus Man'' is the only plus in this lineup of crazies.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>See-Through psycho</FONT>: You won't believe your eyes - even when you don't see anything - in Paul Verhoeven's ''Hollow Man.''<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Funny ''Scary''</FONT>: The Wayans brothers help Dimension mock the films that fed them with the outrageous ''Scary Movie.''<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>''Spiders'' sense</FONT>: A giant-bug veteran spins a new tale of oversized eight-legged attackers.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Pass the roach</FONT>: The hungry vermin of the cable creeper ''They Nest'' have moved on from just eating dead things.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>From saws to jaws</FONT>: Tobe Hooper unleashes a monstrous ''Crocodile'' to terrorize a remote lake...<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Let's go blood surfin'...</FONT> while James Hickox presents a salt-water specimen of the lethal reptile.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Doctored ''Octopus''</FONT>: There's nothing like atomic mutation to make a seabound predator even more dangerous.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Dragon tales</FONT>: Specializing in scaled scares, scripter Hans (''Anaconda'') Bauer takes a trip to ''Komodo.''<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Shelley shocked</FONT>: Among other roles she felt the bite of ''Dracula'' and rocked her co-stars as ''The Gorgon.''<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>DVD dungeon</FONT>: Extra rooms in the ''House''; a deeper ''Deep Red'' highlights new Euro titles.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Nightmare library</FONT>: Seek out ''Lost Girls''; wicked Westerns in ''Skull Full of Spurs.''
Issue 195
August 2000
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<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Monster invasion</FONT>: Popping "Cherry Falls"; a bit of the old "Ultraviolet"<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Life's a "Beach"</FONT>: And then you die if you wind up in the campy exploitation homage "Psycho Beach Party."<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Hard "Cell"</FONT>: When is a serial killer movie not a serial killer movie? When it breaks the mold like this one.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Telling "Lies"</FONT>: This year's A-list ghost story will reveal to audiences "What Lies Beneath."<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Child's pray</FONT>: Kim Basinger battles the forces of dark religion in Chuck Russell's new chiller "Bless the Child."<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Dr. Cyclops</FONT>: Spanish-language standouts; hop to "Frogs."<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Kevin Bacon's vanishing act</FONT>: Even though he's not on screen much, "Hollow Man" was a challenge for the actor.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Millenium monster master</FONT>: "Godzilla 2000" director Takao Okawara explores his reinvention of the Big G.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>"The In Crowd"</FONT>: The scheming teens of Mary Lambert's thriller hope that when they're bad, the movie's very good.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>DVD Dungeon</FONT>: "Sleepy Hollow" filled with extras; Bava and Luci lead a Eurohorror flood.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Notes from the underground: Ron Ford</FONT>: He has breath new life into traditional terrors and video franchises.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Nightmare library</FONT>: "Defilers" best for de fans of Lumley; an "Affinity" for spirits.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>"Anybody" for terrors?</FONT>: Take another frightful trip to Spain, where chaos reigns and "Nobody Knows Anybody."<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>You are getting creepy</FONT>: With "The Hypnotic Eye," William Read Woodfield created a shocker ahead of its time.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Hyp to be scared</FONT>: "The Hypnotist" and "Paradise Eve" mark the arrival of a new force in Japanese horror.
Issue 196
September 2000
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<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Elegy</FONT>: Taking stock of televised terror.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Postal zone</FONT>: More DVD praise.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Monster invasion</FONT>: First bite of ''Hannibal''; who will be the ''Soul Survivors''?<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Witch came first</FONT>: ''The St. Francisville Experiment'' tests how closely one can duplicate a previous horror hit.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>''Cell'' game</FONT>: Hot genre screenwriter Mark Protosevich talks up his serial thriller and projects in the works.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Virgin territory</FONT>: The sex=death equation gets inverted in the superior psychochiller ''Cherry Falls.''<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>''Legends'' of the fallen</FONT>: In the sequel ''Urban Legends: Final Cut,'' making movies is a deadly business.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>''School's Out'' forever!</FONT>: It truly is time for finals for the characters in Fango Video's German slasher import.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Dr. Cyclops</FONT>: Giant ape worth ''Peking'' at; a ghost story to ''Believe'' in.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Watching the watchers</FONT>: Anthony Stewart Head and Alexis Denisof provide voices of reason on ''Buffy'' and ''Angel.''<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>DVD dungeon</FONT>: Romero's biter and hikers; an ''Interview'' with more no say.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>''The X Files'' seventh season episode guide</FONT>: It won't be the last year for the long-running series - but should it have been?<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Taylor 'Fraid</FONT>: A long career in Spanish horror confronted actor JackTaylor with vampires, werewolves and low budgets.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Unseen screams</FONT>: ''A Gun For Jennifer'': Fango's new semiregular section on ''lost'' films debuts with a gory feminist shocker.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Nightmare library</FONT>: Straub's latest is ''Magic'' indeed.
Issue 197
October 2000
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<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Monster invasion</FONT>: Through "The Doorway" and into "Witchouse 2"; Ninth Annual Chainsaw Awards winners & Fango #200 poll!<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Regan revisited</FONT>: William Friedkin and William Peter Blatty reveal what the new edition of "The Exorcist" possesses.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Shock-you drama</FONT>: The true story that started it all is finally dramatized as Showtime unveils "Possessed."<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>"Lost" no more</FONT>: After a year's delay, director Janusz Kaminski sez he's exorcized the problems from "Lost Souls."<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Oh "Ricky"!</FONT>: The only thing than Satan is a murderous real-life believer, as presented in "Ricky 6."<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Dr. Cyclops</FONT>: Flushing "Komodo"; check out of "Apartment Complex"; not-so-awful "Orloff."<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>More "Blair Witch"-craft</FONT>: We're not out of the woods yet as the sequel "Book of Shadows" prepares to open.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>The Site Stuff</FONT>: Fox's new series "FreakyLinks" marries terror TV and web weirdness. Plus: previewing "Night Visions"!<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>"Urban" renewal</FONT>: Director John Ottman believed in the project enough to tackle a fresh batch of "Legends."<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Fear is the drug</FONT>: The "Requiem for a Dream" team create a nightmarish addiction drama you can't stop watching.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>DVD Dungeon</FONT>: Slashers old and new; "Gate" rates; maneaters ("Jaws" & "Cannibal") revisited.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Busy as A B</FONT>: Undaunted by low budgets and tight schedules, director David DeCoteau keeps scaring away.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Spook's tour</FONT>: The Halloween biz has never been bigger, and neither have the haunted attractions that celebrate it.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>"Cell" mate</FONT>: None of the bad guys Vincent D'Onofrio has played before match his surrealistic serial killer.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Send in the Klowns</FONT>: As their own cult classic in reissued, the Chiodo Brothers continue making monster magic.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Nightmare library</FONT>: Early Matheson, from "Hunger"; "Dead Times," good times from Navarro.
Issue 198
November 2000
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<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Monster invasion</FONT>: Come on down to Rob Zombie's ''House'': jump to ''Bones.''<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Chasing ''Shadows''</FONT>: A new group of up-and-coming actors braves the Maryland woods in ''Blair Witch 2.''<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Oh ''Hell,'' another sequel</FONT>: But the duo behind ''Hellraiser: Inferno'' took a different approach.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Biting on the set</FONT>: ''Shadow of the Vampire'' imagines a real bloodsucker starring in the original ''Nosferatu.''<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Dr. Cyclops</FONT>: ''Kill Me Tomorrow'' and terrors of yesterday.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Shrieks for the sweet</FONT>: Candy Clark has learned the ABCs of horror: ''Amityville,'' ''Blob'' and now ''Cherry Falls.''<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Getting medieval</FONT>: The ancient poem ''Beowulf'' spawns a sort-of-futuristic monster flick with Christopher Lambert.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Digging Douglas</FONT> Clegg, that is, one of horror literature's strongest recent talents.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Notes from the underground: ''Dawn of the D.M.F's''</FONT>: From Australia comes a raucous tale of heroes, aliens and general splattery craziness.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>DVD Dungeon</FONT>: Heavy metal reissues of ''Evil Dead II'' and ''T2''; discs with Universal appeal; further Franco.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Funny/Scary lady</FONT>: Vintage comic shockers gave actress Elaine DuPont reasons to scream with fear and laughter.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Unseen screams: ''Urban Ghost Story''</FONT>: This British spooker proves that atmosphere and character are cheaper - and better - than FX.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Nightmare library</FONT>: More vampires via Bergstrom, Hamilton and Yarbro.
2001
Issue 199
January/February 2001
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<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Elegy</FONT>: Lost ''Cherry''<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Postal zone</FONT>: Convention salutes and video rebukes.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Monster invasion</FONT>: ''Rocky Horror'' retakes the stage; a bloody ''Valentine''<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Texas Gothic</FONT>: Crossing and blending genres, author Joe R. Lansdale always keeps things disturhing.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Zombie's zoo</FONT>: Harking back to the days when horror was horror, Rob Zombie unveils his ''Hoose of 1000 Corpses''<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Beebe steps</FONT>: For Dick Beebe,writing ''Blair Witch 2'' meant delivering more of the same, only different.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Dr. Cyclops</FONT>: ''Doorway'' to cliches; ''Lantern'' not so bright.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>I think I'm a clone now</FONT>: So says Arnold Schwarzenegger in his new sci-fi thriller ''The 6th Day.''<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Present tense</FONT>: Sam Raimi merges his skills as terror and drama in the psychic suspense film ''The Gift.''<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>The count gets current</FONT>: Wes Craven's ''Dracula 2000'' puts the bite on the first year of the new millennium.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Yes, another ''Buffy'' story</FONT>: Joss Whedon promises still more surprises for fans of hisTV double-threat.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Schreck'a appeal</FONT>: Adopting the face of the ''Nosferatu'' star Willem Dafoe casts a ''Shadow of the Vampire.''<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>For creep's sake</FONT>: It's a highway so hell for anyone who encounters the fast-driving bloodsuckers of ''The Forsaken.''<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>The nightbird</FONT>: Flying into play the latest ''Crow'' heroine is busy young actress Kirsten Dunst.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Nightmare library</FONT>: ''Merrick'' is nice Rice; Campbell's ''Things'' are ''Grisly'' indeed; ''Clickers'' clicks<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>DVD dungeon</FONT>: A special edition ''Beyond'' expectations; box of good ''Omen.''<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>The ''Soul'' truth</FONT>: Youth horror gets a surreal, metaphysical twist in Steve Carpenter's ''Soul Survivors.''
Issue 200
March 2001
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<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Welcome from John Carpenter</FONT>: Why the veteran director thinks screen screams will never die.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>History of horror: The '90s</FONT>: It wasn't all lousy sequels, tame teen terror and direct-to-video dreck.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Blood-red reunion</FONT>: A roundtable chat with the actors who portrayed modern movies' most memorable maniacs.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>200 issues of Fangoria</FONT>: Cartoonist Mark Voger joins the celebration.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Clive alive</FONT>: Now a multimedia mogul, Clive Barker continues to explore new worlds of fear and fantasy.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>''Hannibal'' lecture</FONT>: It's the most-awaited chiller sequel in ages, and director Ridley Scott promises you'll eat it up.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Makeup call</FONT>: Despite the advent of CGI, Hollywood's top creature creators aren't abandoning the old-fashioned ways.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Bruisin' and schmoozin'</FONT>: With a new movie (fianally!) on the way, George Romero takes stock of his place in the genre.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Keep repeating: It's only an interview</FONT>: Wes Craven and Sean Cunningham reteam to discuss filmic frights.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Raving & drooling</FONT>: Author/columnist David J. Schow makes a return to Fango's pages.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Reflections on horror, Part 1</FONT>: Mick Garris and Tobe Hooper on the genre they've both served for over 20 years.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Reflections on horror, Part 2</FONT>: Cutting remarks from veteran shock satirists Joe Dante and john Landis.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Love hurts</FONT>: And it can even kill, as ''Valentine'' puts a grown-up face on the slasher trend.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>The future of fear</FONT>: These 13 talented artists from all over the world promise to scare us well into the 2000s.
Issue 201
April 2001
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<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Elegy 2000</FONT>: The year in fear.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Postal zone</FONT>: Coming out for ''Shadows''; more on Gore.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Monster invasion</FONT>: The real violent world of ''Series 7''; a Dario documentary; the 10th Annual Chainsaw Awards ballot!<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Baring her ''Soul''</FONT>: Eliza (''Buffy'') Dushku brings her bad-girl act to the big screen for ''Soul Survivors.''<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Angel in the killing field</FONT>: For ''Angel'' star David Boreanaz, the tortured romance at ''Valentine'' is nothing new.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>The awful ''Truth''</FONT>: You'll believe in ''Demons'' too when you see the latest shocker from Down Under.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Dr. Cyclops</FONT>: An ''lnvasion'' of comic thrills; tepid terrors from the deep.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Dino phobias</FONT>: Producer Dino De Laurentiis caps a fear-decade fear career by shepherding ''Hannibal'' to the screen.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>The gruesome gang</FONT>: Part 2 of our horror hero roundtable finds the group discussing how terror times have changed.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Makeup FX lab: 'Shadow Of The Vampire''</FONT>: Or, how to turn an actor into a vampire playing an actor playing a vampire.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Cruisin' for a...</FONT>: Step inside a revenge-warped mind behind the scenes of George A. Romero's ''Bruiser.''<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Shocks and yocks</FONT>: These screams and laughs coming from Montreal were the result of 2000's Fant-Asia festival.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Their darkest ''Visions''</FONT>: Veteran anthologists Billy Brown and Dan Angel aim to make the ''Night'' a little scarier.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>DVD dungeon</FONT>: A disc with lots of ''Cell''-ing points; ''Hollow'' triumph.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Ramsey Campbell's personal terrors</FONT>: A troubled life led to a brilliant career for this genre author.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Nightmare library</FONT>: Run don't ''Walk'' for Little's latest; Koontz's ''Eye'' doesn't have it.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>The Fangoria index</FONT>: 2000 lf it scared you last year, you'll find it here.
Issue 202
May 2001
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<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Elegy</FONT>: A ''House'' abandoned. (House of 1000 Corpses)<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Postal zone</FONT>: Does ''Hannibal'' really bite?<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Monster invasion</FONT>: Attention: ''Chopper''; you'll be wild about ''Harry''; finally, the 10th Annual Chainsaw Awards ballot.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Mummy fearest?</FONT>: When ''The Mummy Returns,'' the burning question is whether he'll do it with a straight face.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Dash from ''Ginger''</FONT>: Forget ''Teen Wolf'' - here's what would really happen if a high-schooler became lycanthropic. (Ginger Snaps)<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Ravishing ''Wilderness''</FONT>: Fango Video presents another femme fatale who hears the call of the very wild.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Dr. Cyclops</FONT>: Truly hellish ''Inferno''; ''Shriek If You'' have to sit through this horror parody.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Death drivers</FONT>: The ''Forsaken'' cast kept their eyes on the road - when they weren't killing each other.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Fear is a many-legged thing</FONT>: Especially when Gary Jones wrangles giant ''Spiders'' and a killer ''Crocodile.''<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>The rent will kill you</FONT>: Spain's Alex de la Iglesia invites you into ''La Comunidad'' and previews his new ''Fu Manchu.''<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Marriage made in hell</FONT>: French vampire veteran Jean Rollin oversees the nuptials for ''La Fiancee de Dracula.''<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Zaillian resurrection</FONT>: An Oscar-winning scriptwriter helped bring Hannibal Lecter back to the big screen.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>DVD dungeon</FONT>: ''Fiend Without A Face'' is still well-spoken; duo of discs of the devil.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Making the ''Cut''</FONT>: Slasher filmmakers get a taste of their own murder in a gruesome Australian import.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Little big monsters</FONT>: Diminutive actor Phil Fondacaro has proven that terror can come in all sizes.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Petrified in Pasadena</FONT>: A gallery of ghouls and girls from last year's CA Fango con.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Deep inside their ''Subconscious''</FONT>: There's plenty of ''Cruelty'' to go around in this taboo-shattering shocker. (Subconscious Cruelty)<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Nightmare library</FONT>: New masterworks from Carroll, Mieville and Clegg; ''AntiCrist'' is second to nun.
Issue 203
June 2001
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<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Elegy</FONT>: Rising sun, rising scares.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Postal zone</FONT>: Zombie followers unite!<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Monster invasion</FONT>: Godzilla rampages again; another walk in ''Jurassic Park''; from Winter, catch ''Fever.''<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>''Ring'' my hell</FONT>: Japan's terrifying franchise reaches the prequel stage with a new director and star.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Pretty and pyrokinetic</FONT>: ''Gamera'' helmer Shusuke Kaneko introduces a really hot heroine in ''Cross Fire.''<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>The ''Cure'' thing</FONT>: The first of Asias's hypnosis thrillers highlights filmmaker Kiyoshi Kurosawa's resume.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>When anime attacks</FONT>: A look at the best of the Japanimation that would make Walt Disney spin in - or rise from - his grave.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>''Sakuya'' slays</FONT>: If you thought ''Crouching Tiger'' would've been even better with lotsa monsters, have we got a film for you.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>''Zero'' tolerance</FONT>: Even its director doesn't want you to take the zombie rock opus ''Wild Zero'' seriously.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Die to ''Tell''</FONT>: A highly praised chiller from Korea combines exploration of the human condition with body parts galore.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Dr. Cyclops</FONT>: ''Pulgasari'' and ''Dragon Blue'': beasts from the east; no ''Salvation'' for ''Crow'' series.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Mummy's daddy</FONT>: How could ''Mummy Returns'' be bigger than the original? Writer/director Stephen Sommers found a way.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>On the ''Faust'' track</FONT>: The dark superhero slashes his way out of the comics via producer/director Brian Yuzna.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>DVD dungeon</FONT>: Get into a ''Frenzy'' and give ''Book'' a second look.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Doctor Shocked 'er</FONT>: Will UPN have the patients to let the hospital horror series ''All Souls'' thrive?<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Nightmare library</FONT>: King loses his grip in ''Dreamcatcher''; Farris' formidable ''Fury''.
Issue 204
July 2001
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Issue 205
August 2001
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<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Elegy</FONT>: Messing with your mind.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Postal zone</FONT>: Our Far East coverage was far out<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Monster invasion</FONT>: We know Jack about ''From Hell''; more McFarlane mania; look into the ''AfterImage.''<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Red planet scars</FONT>: The ''Ghosts Of Mars'' are after human blood in the latest from John Carpenter.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Road rage</FONT>: There's no driving away from the malefic marauder of Victor Salva's ''Jeepers Creepers.''<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>''Session 9,'' People 0</FONT>: When a group of men enter a long-abandoned asylum, will they or their sanity survive?<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Holey terror</FONT>: Go down ''The Hole'' with a Brit director anxious to upgrade the youth-horror subgenre.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Dr. Cyclops</FONT>: ''Guardian'' worth a hire; stay out of ''Cabin By The Lake''.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>''Apes'' of wrath</FONT>: Rick Baker returns to the beasts he does best as he makes up Tim Burton's ''Planet Of The Apes.''<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Jurassic Joe</FONT>: Will a new director bring fresh fear to the latest walk in the ''Park''?<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>To live and un-die in L.A.</FONT>: The Goth scene takes a deadly serious turn in ''Hollywood Vampyr.''<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Static in ''The Attic''</FONT>: Join Jeffrey Combs and friends on ''Expedition'' into severly damaged minds.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>''Fantasy'' die-land</FONT>: A monstrous, fully computer-generated invasion threatens Earth in the ''Final Fantasy'' movie.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>''Sleep'' no more</FONT>: Michael Walker's ''Chasing Sleep'' proves vanished spouses are still good for sublime chills.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>DVD dungeon</FONT>: A ''Requiem'' to remember; new quality ''Shining'' through.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Devil's play</FONT>: Whether acting good or evil, Patrick Bergin enjoys exploring the dark side.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Hello, Newman</FONT>: Meet the British author who blends real and imaginary figures with a heaping helping of horror.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Nightmare library</FONT>: Invest in ''The Company''; ''Six Inch'' comes up short.
Issue 206
September 2001
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<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Elegy</FONT>: Celebrating spaghetti splatter.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Postal zone</FONT>: Cutting down killer chillers.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Monster invasion</FONT>: Michael Myers makes his ''Homecoming''; terror on the range in ''Trigon''; ''Hannibal'' contests and the Chainsaw Awards winners.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Creating ''Creepers''</FONT>: A monster of many parts marks makeup FX artist Brian Penikas' step into the big leagues.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>His big Breck</FONT>: The actor (Jonathan Breck) behind the ''Jeepers Creepers'' fiend speaks out.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Dr. Cyclops</FONT>: Fulci's nasty habits in ''Demonia''; an ''Instinct'' to avoid.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Some thing or ''Others''</FONT>: Prepare to get spooked by the English-language debut of Spanish sensation Alejandro Amenabar. (The Others)<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>John Carpenter spaces out</FONT>: The director travels to another world with familiar themes in ''Ghosts of Mars.''<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Sam Neil's Parking problems</FONT>: The genre-vet actor returns to prehistoric terror in ''Jurassic III.''<BR>
<TABLE border=1>
<TR>
<TD>
<CENTER>Special Section: Splat's Italian!</CENTER>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>The Gruesome 13</FONT>: Douglas E. Winter surveys the greatest and grisliest of the country's unique horror output.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>''Sleepless'' and slaughtered</FONT>: When baroque murders plague Italy, you know Dario Argento is back behind the camera. (Non Ho Sonno)<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>''Quest'' for blood</FONT>: Director Pupi Avati creates his own ''Knights'' tale and promises that he will shock you. (Knights Of The Quest)<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Morghen shriek</FONT>: Recalling his days in the likes of ''Cannibal Ferox'' gives this actor (John Morghen aka Giovanni Lombardo) plenty to chew on.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Pumped for horror</FONT>: Muscleman Gordon Mitchell moved from showing off his body to working with dead ones in Italian genre fare.<BR>
</TD>
</TR>
</TABLE>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Life with ''Dead Creatures''</FONT>: The next Fango Video release is our second from zombie-drama specialist Andrew Parkinson.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>DVD dungeon</FONT>: A brilliant Bava trio and a pair of revisionist vampires.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Make mine Miike</FONT>: Takashi (''Audition'') Miike may be Japan's busiest filmmaker - and its most uncompromising.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Nightmare library</FONT>: Gaiman, ''Gods'' and greatness; Strieber's ''Last Vampire'' not quite first-rate.
Issue 207
October 2001
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Issue 208
November 2001
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2003
Issue 219
January/February 2003
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House' of a thousand delays: Rob Zombie tells us why it took so long for his gore epic to reach our screens.<BR>
'Spider' web: David Cronenberg tones down the perversity but is no less disturbing in his latest film.<BR>
Not so 'Final' after all: Since Death never, er, dies, it's only natural that he's back for 'Final Destination 2.'<BR>
The Whole Tooth: You won't want a visit from the Tooth Fairy that haunts the new chiller 'Darkness Falls.'
Issue 220
March 2003
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<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Elegy</FONT>: PG-13 terror.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Postal zone</FONT>: A happy ending for a horror-loving dad and daughter.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Monster invasion</FONT>: Jeepers! The Creeper's back; Stephen King's ''Dreamcatcher'' set to grab you; ''Nikos The Impaler'' cuts up in NYC.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>''Tremors'' shakes up TV</FONT>: Now you can get a dose of graboids, shriekers and their ilk every week.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Do the body hop</FONT>: The murderous-multiple-possessee gambit gets a Japanese twist in Fango Video's ''Another Heaven.''<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Dr. Cyclops</FONT>: ''Dog'' is anything but; ''Hellseeker'' best if you're not seeking Pinhead.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Swamp things</FONT>: The folks behind the indie film ''Bog Creatures'' dig up old-fashioned frights.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Emma rises</FONT>: Best known as a demon on ''Buffy,'' Emma Caulfield confronts one in ''Darkness Falls.''<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>What's cook in?</FONT>: A whole bunch of fright films, and now actress A.J. Cook takes on ''Final Destination 2.''<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>''May'' of the dead</FONT>: Even the outcast heroine of this black-comic shocker can make friends - if she has the right parts.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Chopping Mallory</FONT>: Hailing from France, ''Bloody Mallory'' proves you can destroy evil and look great doing it.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>DVD dungeon</FONT>: Classic critters trump ''Eight Legged Freaks''; big supplements on low budgets.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Crystal fear</FONT>: That's crystal meth, which may or may not be behind the scary visions suffered by ''Cookers''.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Garage macabre</FONT>: Underground car parks are always scary in movies, but ''Subterano'' may be the first film entirely set in one.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>''Contamination'' man</FONT>: Lifelong genre fan Luigi Cozzi poured his love of fright features into a string of offbeat films.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Nightmare library</FONT>: Piccirilli's ''Night Class'' passes; ''Blooming'' but not blooding in Yarbro's latest.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Fright'em, cowboy</FONT>: The ambitious ''Legend Of The Phantom Rider'' ropes together the horror and western genres.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>All fired up</FONT>: Bulgaria might not sound too exciting - unless you're filming a low-budget creature feature like ''Dragon Fighter'' there.
Issue 221
April 2003
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<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Elegy</FONT>: The British are coming! <BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Postal zone</FONT>: They loved New York. <BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Monster invasion</FONT>: The bout of the year: 'Freddy vs. Jason'; '28 Days Later' gets closer; the 12th Annual Chainsaw Awards ballot! <BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Butt seriously</FONT>: The Stephen King film 'Dreamcatcher' boasts critters that out-gross the 'Alien' chestburster. <BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Dr. Cyclops</FONT>: 'Rats' have bite, 'Python' doesn't; Cyclops likes 'Psyclops' <BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Where there's a 'Willard'</FONT>... There's a swarm of hungry rodents doing his bidding, now updated for the 2000s. <BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Killers in the 'House'</FONT>: Bill Moseley, Sid Haig and Karen Black are the creepiest family in recent cinema history. <BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Grue 'Identity'</FONT>: They're not calling it a slasher film 'cause it's got big stars doing the dying. <BR>
<CENTER><FONT COLOR='#008080'>Special section: Bloody olde England! </FONT></CENTER>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Trance macabre</FONT>: There's something 'Hypnotic' about this combination of crime thriller and occult chiller. <BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Lay it on the 'Line'</FONT>: Two genre stars and a first-time director took a memorable trip on the 'Death Line.' <BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>The hook of 'Revelation'</FONT>: If the plot doesn't intrigue you, the casting of Terence Stamp and Udo Kier will. <BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>'Nine Lives' to die</FONT>: A pair of filmmakers with the independent spirit present a feature about a murderous one.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Scared of 'Deathwatch'</FONT>: Supernatural evil plagues a group of WWI soldiers in this wartime chiller... <BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>'Bunker' down</FONT> ...while another presents the horrors of WWII from the German point of view. <BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Death to critics!</FONT>: So said Vincent Price in one of his most memorable movies, 'Theater of Blood.' <BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>DVD dungeon</FONT>: Unfriendly visitors from other planets ('Signs,' 'Contamination') and countries ('Deathmaker,' 'Jack the Ripper') <BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Scarecrow's feat</FONT>: Once again, he's not staying up on the cross any more. <BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Nightmare library</FONT>: 'Birds and the Bees' doesn't fly; 'Fury' sequel lacks 'Power'
Issue 222
May 2003
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<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Elegy</FONT>: 2002, where were you?<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Postal zone</FONT>: PG-13 horror is Pretty Ghastly.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Monster invasion</FONT>: Supernatural war arises in ''Underworld''; ''Queen Kong'' goes ape for feminism.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>''Bubba Ho-Tep'' leaves the building</FONT>: And we hope Don Coscarelli's Elvis-vs.-mummy opus arrives in theaters soon.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Dr. Cyclops</FONT>: ''Infested'' will draw flies; ''Bog Creatures'' rises above the muck.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Way-Out West</FONT>: ''Beyond Re-Animator'' finds a jailed Herbert up to the gory antics that put him there in the first place.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>''Dream'' Weaver</FONT>: Screenwriter William Goldman sez adapting Stephen King isn't as scary as Hollywood self-deception.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Hugo this way, we go that way</FONT>: Villainous Hugo Weaving returns to bedevil the inhabitants of ''The Matrix.''<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Forgotten horrors: ''Terror Train''</FONT>: A look back at an '80s slasher in need of modern video revival.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>One man's ''Junk''</FONT>: is a gore fan's treasure as Atsushi Muroga's Japanese zombiefest invades America.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Grave ''Digging''</FONT>: Dialogue isn't necessary to convey the chills in J.T. Petty's indie discovery ''Soft for Digging.''<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Ratmen's Notebooks</FONT>: Updating ''Willard,'' Glen Morgan and James Wong gave the rats and the humans more to do.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Life-Robbin' ''Leeches''</FONT>: They're out of the water and much bigger (of course), sliming through David DeCoteau's latest.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>''Darkwof'' howls</FONT>: In a switch, Kane Hodder plays only the human form of the monster in this low-budget shocker.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Death frm Down Under</FONT>: A slew of fright films, some of them cult faves, bear the name of Australian producer Antony I. Ginnane.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>DVD dungeon</FONT>: One good ''Ring'' deserves the original; ''Happiness'' is a packed disc.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Every rose has its gore</FONT>: ''Sleepaway Camp'' star Felissa Rose returns in ''Nikos'' and more new fear features.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Nightmare library</FONT>: Gruber's hot ''Tropic''; Ketchum's ''Kingdom'' kills.
Issue 223
June 2003
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<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Elegy</FONT>: Summer screams.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Postal zone</FONT>: Foreign affairs.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Monster invasion</FONT>: Return to the bad old days with 'Exorcist: The Beginning' and 'Gacy.'<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>One 'Wrong Turn'</FONT> ...leads Eliza Dushku and friends to a confrontation with backwoods killers.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Dr. Cyclops</FONT>: Eye sickles in ''Flashback'' and ''Scarecrow''; howl with laughter at ''DarkWolf'' .<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>'28 Days' And counting bodies</FONT>: The living not-quite-dead rampage through Danny Boyle's truly scary Brit chiller.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>'T3' connection</FONT>: When there's a ''Rise of the Machines'' afoot, you know the Terminator will be at the forefront.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>'Eye' scream</FONT>: Dead people with a difference haunt the heroine of a new Asian sensation.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Santa 'Sangre'</FONT>: Chile claims a stake in the horror genre via the Fango Video vampire release 'Sangre Eterna.'<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Green machine</FONT>: 'How come Fango run 'Hulk' article 16 pages after Arnold article? Hulk smash!'<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Cult hit: The 'Nightstalker'?</FONT>: This Sundance discovery is the latest serial-killer film to transcend the subgenre.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>DVD dungeon</FONT>: Let the ''Sunshine'' in your DVD player; ''Stepfather'' surprises.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Hell-evator</FONT> Dutch director Dick Maas is talkin' about his new film ''The Shaft'' and we can dig it.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Working the 'Bugs' out</FONT>: That's one of a pair of creepy-crawling flicks (along with ''Webs'') infesting the Sci Fi Channel.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>LA gory</FONT> It was scary how many genre celebrities turned up at our last West Coast convention.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Nightmare library</FONT>: Suzuki's ''Ring'' novel translates well; unique hauntings in Moloney's ''Dwelling''.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Jerry Gross-Outs</FONT> The maverick distributor brought some of the '70s/'80s most shocking films to the screen.
Issue 224
July 2003
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<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Elegy</FONT>: The Fango Kids.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Postal zone</FONT>: Talking up the ''House.''<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Monster invasion</FONT>: Keeping Count with ''Dracula II''; the 12th Annual Chainsaw Awards winners!<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Glove match</FONT>: After all these years, ''Freddy vs. Jason'' is finally upon us, and may the beast man win. <BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>''28 Days'' of the dead</FONT>: ''Trainspotting'' director Danny Boyle goes from drugs to sickness in his new breakout shocker. <BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Dr. Cyclops</FONT>: A little bit nuts about ''Maniacts''; CGI takes bite out of ''Sabretooth'' <BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Extraordinarily ugly gentleman</FONT>: It took multiple artists to give actor Jason Flemyng the dual personality of Jekyll & Hyde. <BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Cyborg training ground</FONT>: ''Terminator 3'' marked a leap to the really big leagues for director Jonathan Mostow. <BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>All you bleed is ''Love Object''</FONT>: Romance has a heart of darkness in Robert Parigi's chilling directorial debut. <BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Forgotten horrors: ''Blood Freak''</FONT>: If it looks like a turkey, walks like a turkey and gobbles like a turkey... <BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>No cure for ''Cabin Fever''</FONT>: SARS has nothing on what afflicts the young leads of Eli Roth's '70s/'80s horror homage. <BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>''Midnight Mass'' murders</FONT>: Enter a world overrun by ghouls via a hard-working indie crew adapting F. Paul Wilson. <BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Love sucks</FONT>: This ''Vampire Resurrection'' is inspired by pangs of ardor, not a thirst for blood. <BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>''Sangre'' management</FONT>: Things get chillier in Chile when rising FX talents vamp for the Fango Video release. <BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>South of the gore-der</FONT>: Down Mexico way, Rene Cardona Sr. & Jr. pursued careers in varied fear filmmaking. <BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>DVD dungeon</FONT>: ''Dr. Z'' gets an A; ''Dare'' to watch these indie discs. <BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>We shriek for Chriqui</FONT>: That's Emmanuelle Chriqui, one of the ill-fated youths making a ''Wrong Turn.''<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Nightmare library</FONT>: Vampires are Golden in ''Dark''; Joe Bob Briggs more ''Profound'' than you'd expect.
Issue 225
August 2003
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<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Elegy</FONT>: A farewell to ''Buffy''<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Postal zone</FONT>: A good ''Turn'' and a bad ''Dream''<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Monster invasion</FONT>: ''Hunting Humans'' and ''The Curse'' prove you can teach old horror standards new tricks. <BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Freddy's Farewell</FONT>: His battle with Jason proves a fitting end to Robert Englund's career as the dream slayer.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Dr. Cyclops</FONT>: ''Dracula II: Ascension'' and ''The Shaft'' rise above the rest. <BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Re-Animating The Genre</FONT>: That's the aim of Brian Yuzna as he launches ''Beyond Re-Animator'' and future frights.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Crowning ''King Of The Ants''</FONT>: The only difference between Stuart Gordon's latest and his past films is that here, the decapitated stay dead.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Notes From The Underground: Brett Piper</FONT>: The B-veteran discovered that a studio doesn't have to be major to be meddlesome.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Forgotten Horrors: ''Appointment With Fear''</FONT>: This ambitious 1985 production had an unfortunate date with the cutting room.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>''JC'' Resurrected</FONT>: More money, more makeup FX, more potential victims: The Creeper is back in ''Jeepers Creepers 2.''<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>''Stacy'' Goes To The Maul</FONT>: When there's no more room in high school, Japanese living dead girls will walk the Earth.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Big G Vs. Big MG</FONT>: Humanity fights fire with metal as an updated ''Godzilla Against Mechagodzilla'' busts out.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Gross ''Anatomy''</FONT>: In the new German sequel and its predecessor, med-schoolers find the competition to be killer.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>DVD dungeon</FONT>: Park yourself in front of ''Road Games''; serial killers real (''Gacy'') and imaginary (''Hatred of a Minute'') <BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Who Do The Voodoo?</FONT>: Star William Wellman Jr. recalls how the '50s schlocker ''Macumba Love'' worked box-office magic.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Poetic Injustices</FONT>: Creating fear through verse is just one of author Tom Piccirilli's multitalents. <BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Nightmare library</FONT>: Fox's ''Fat White'' must reading; Campbell and co.'s ''Gathering'' of great fiction.
Issue 226
September 2003
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<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Elegy</FONT>: Fango effluvia.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Postal zone</FONT>: Opinions now about '28 Days Later.'<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Monster invasion</FONT>: South African tear-apart in 'Slash'; a shout-out to 'Unspeakable'<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>'Jeepers' Creepees</FONT>: Victims and victors recall their days fleeing and fighting in the scary sequel. <BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Campbell's Scoop</FONT>: Bruce Campbell explains why an indie film like 'Bubba Ho-Tep' is always preferable to big-studio work. <BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Dr. Cyclops</FONT>: 'Experiment' a success; high-flying 'Vampire Hunters'<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>'House' Warning</FONT>: When the vidgame-based 'House of the Dead' opens, anyone can become a zombie - even a Fango editor! <BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>'Cabin' Mates</FONT>: Despite harsh conditions, the cast of 'Cabin Fever' never got sick of each other.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>'Underworld' Arises</FONT>: Two breeds of monster become locked in mortal combat, and look damn stylish doing it.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Forgotten Horrors: 'Rabid'</FONT>: Everyone from Marilyn Chambers to Martin Scorsese talks up this early David Cronenberg shocker.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Freddy And Jason's Excised Adventures</FONT>: A special report reveals the potential screen matchups that didn't make the cut.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Follow 'The Order'</FONT>: And you'll find an ancient theological being called a sin eater manifesting in the present day.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>DVD dungeon</FONT>: New special edition worth 'Howling' about; no doubt that 'May' is a keeper.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Digging Up 'Corpses'</FONT>: Wayne Toth explains how to make up a 'House' full of ghouls. Plus: Rob Zombie on the DVD and sequel!<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Can't Bug 'Em</FONT>: When little critters get large, FX artists Jeffrey S. Farley and Christopher Bergschneider can still create them on small budgets.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Nightmare library</FONT>: Singing the praises of Piccirilli's 'Choir'; sit out Stine's latest.
Issue 227
October 2003
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<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Elegy</FONT>: Packin' the pumpkin<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Monster invasion</FONT>: Spend 'Halloween' at a major reunion.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>'Texas Chainsaw' Massacred?</FONT>: Not if this team fulfills their ambition to craft a worthy and scary remake.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Berry Scary</FONT>: Oscar winner Halle Berry found a real monsters' ball when she took part in 'Gothika.'
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>'Kill Bill' Will Thrill</FONT>: Quentin Tarantino makes the epic Asian action homage he-and countless fans-have long wanted to see.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Living It Up In The 'Underworld'</FONT>: The creature cast discusses wirework, vampire urine, erectile fangs and more.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Dr. Cyclops</FONT>: 'Killer Me' will slay you; 'Double Vision' singularly derivative<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>'Undead' Alive</FONT>: There's more to the latest indie Australian shocker than traditional zombie chills. Plus: the new 'Dawn of the Dead'!<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>'Flesh' It Out</FONT>: You'll love the sexy succubi of 'Flesh for the Beast' until they tear your guts out.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Notes From The Underground: Brian Clement</FONT>: After shopping twice at the 'Meat Market,' he's got more spending money for 'Exhumed.' <BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Bill's Kills</FONT> That's Bill Terezakis, the suddenly ubiquitous FX wiz behind 'House of the Dead' and 'Freddy vs. Jason.'<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Cutting And Pasting</FONT> The 'Freddy vs. Jason' development finally ended when a fresh approach was begun.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>DVD dungeon</FONT>: Worms ('Squirm') and rats ('Of Unknown Origin') and snakes ('Venom') 'oh my!<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Hammer And Beyond</FONT>: Christopher Lee wants you to know that there's more to him than British-accented monsters.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Hack To 'School'</FONT>: Paul Naschy leaves lycanthropy behind to jump on the slaughtered-youth bandwagon.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Nightmare library</FONT>: Wilson's 'Dangerous' worth the risk; a poor crop in Nicholson's 'Harvest.'
Issue 228
November 2003
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<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Elegy</FONT>: Fretting over 'Freddy vs. Jason'<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Postal zone</FONT>: Dueling views on dueling slashers.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Monster invasion</FONT>: Fleshing out 'In My Skin'.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Gotta get 'Gothika'</FONT>: So said French director Mathieu Kassovitz when he was offered the new Dark Castle shocker.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>The 'Texas Chainsaw' Massacred</FONT>: The remake's fresh-faced cast insist they don't stay that way for long.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Dr. Cyclops</FONT>: Don't ignore 'Shunned House'; 'Killer Buzz' is B-grade.
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Unwelcome 'Visitors'</FONT>: Richard Franklin's latest strands a woman on the ocean with seafaring spooks and spiders.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>'Animation' of mortality</FONT>: A man finds his life may be 'Suspended' when he's kidnapped by cannibal women.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Kill-N-Bill</FONT>: KNB EFX gores up Quentin Tarantino's latest and prepares to forge ahead without one of its founders.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Notes from the underground</FONT>: Glen Baisley: It takes a series of movies for him to explore all the dark sides of a town without pity.
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Spanish flights of fear</FONT>: The good, the bad and the unclothed were celebrated at the San Sebastiαn film fest.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Lost 'Lemora' no more</FONT>: An in-depth look at the haunting early-'70s vampire fable soon to be reborn on DVD.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>DVD dungeon</FONT>: 'The Hills Have' plenty to offer; 'Leatherface' cuts deep into the vault.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Fu, Franco and other frights</FONT>: Christopher Lee discusses less celebrated roles in the second part of our exclusive interview.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Nightmare library</FONT>: Eeriness found in Straub's 'lost boy lost girl'; honestly, Little's nearly-best 'Policy'.
2004
Issue 229
January/February 2004
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<FONT COLOR=#ff0000>Elegy</FONT>: Tune in, turn on, gross out.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Postal Zone</FONT>: Thank you very much, 'Bubba'; not everyone's into the 'Cabin'.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Monster Invasion</FONT>: Guillermo del Toro unleashes 'Hellboy'; 'Freddy vs. Jason' DVD contest!<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>'Butterfly' Is Freaky</FONT>: Not stranded in the '70s, Ashton Kutcher visits a couple of different decades in this paranormal thriller.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>New 'Angel,' More Devils</FONT>: This season's approach to the vampire series involves an even wider variety of supernatural foes.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Dr. Cyclops</FONT>: Let 'Visitors' into your home; a sense of disappointment with 'The Eye'<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>'Return'? He Never Left</FONT>: If it's December, it must be time to chat with Peter Jackson about the latest 'Lord of the Rings.'<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Repent At Leisure</FONT>: The feisty publisher has moved beyond its cheesy beginnings to showcase the best in written fear.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>'Battle' Scars</FONT>: A look behind the scenes-and the controversy-of the brutal 'Battle Royale' movies.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Watery Graves</FONT>: The Japanese team behind 'Ringu' now flood an apartment house with ghosts and 'Dark Water.'<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>DVD Dungeon</FONT>: '80s 'Escape'-ist fare revisited; remarkable new life for 'Corpse'<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>'Lucky,' Stiffs</FONT>: What happens when a 'good boy' goes bad? Find out in this very black-comic chiller.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Sota Pops</FONT>: The longtime FX company is busting out all over the genre scene, in movies, music videos and more.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>'Undertaker' And His Pals</FONT>: Friends and collaborators of the late Joe Spinell reveal the story behind his last, long-lost feature.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Welcome To His 'World'</FONT>: Veteran producer Alex Gordon got his start with this postapocalyptic mutant tale.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Nightmare Library</FONT>: Eeriness found in Straub's 'lost boy' (for real this time!); 'Dating Secrets' worth following.
Issue 230
March 2004
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<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Elegy</FONT>: Lurking back at 2003.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Postal Zone</FONT>: 'Saw' points.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Monster Invasion</FONT>: 'Van Helsing' begins his hunt; the 13th Annual Chainsaw Awards ballot!
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>'Dawn' Syndrome</FONT>: Looks like there's no more room in hell again, as the 'Dead' stalk through a new cinematic update.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>This Hellboy's Life</FONT>: The red demonic hero is now a big-screen presence, with Guillermo del Toro holding his reins.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Dr. Cyclops</FONT>: Kill yourself to see 'Suicide Club'; 'Bone' dry.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>The Gasp Resort</FONT>: Welcome to 'Club Dread,' where mad slashings are played partly for shock and partly for laughs.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Bigger Fish</FONT>: Plumbing 'Snakehead Terror's' depths, we find a nature-amok flick with a real-life inspiration.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Another Dash Of 'Ginger'</FONT>: Teen lycanthropy 'Snaps' again as the original stars return for the first of two sequels.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>The 'Last Horror' On The Left</FONT>: The human face of evil is at its most frightening in Fango's debut theatrical release.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>The Keys To The 'Kingdom'</FONT>: It's scarier than an HMO-it's the 'Kingdom Hospital' Stephen King has reimagined for TV.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Tatopoulos Craft</FONT>: Anticipating more 'Underworld' work, FX wiz Patrick Tatopoulos reveals the ones that got away.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>DVD Dungeon</FONT>: It's 'Freddy vs. Jason,' and home viewers win; a music-video extra 'Beyond' belief.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>'Screaming,' Not Stripping</FONT>: Actually, there is some flesh to go with the blood in E.I.'s first serious shocker, 'The Screaming Dead.'<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Forgotten Horrors: 'Petey Wheatstraw'</FONT>: Hell hath no rhymin' like the 'Devil's Son-in-Law' portrayed by Rudy Ray Moore.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Claws For Alarm</FONT>: What are little girls made of? Not sugar and spice, according to the early-'70s shocker 'Blood on Satan's Claw.'<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Nightmare Library</FONT>: Thompson's 'Pharos' rules; Knight hasn't 'Risen' high enough.
Issue 231
April 2004
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<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Elegy</FONT>: The 'Dawn' debate.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Monster Invasion</FONT>: A new trip to 'Salem's Lot'; 'Something' in the way they 'Scream'; win the 'Texas Chainsaw' DVD!<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Get Your 'Ju-On'</FONT>: Fall under the spell of a curse so powerful, it has spread through four movies and is on its way to the U.S.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Dr. Cyclops</FONT> 'Blood' is addictive indeed; 'Shredder' a slasher snow job.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Penning The 'Dawn'</FONT>: Have no fear-screenwriter James Gunn wants the 'Dead' remake to be just as good as you do.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>'VH' Won</FONT>: He's not an eccentric old man any more; now 'Van Helsing' is a hunky monster hunter in a megabudgeted epic.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Forgotten Horrors: 'The Thrill Killers'</FONT>: Multiple maniacs invaded some of the audiences for this '60s psychochiller.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Del Toro, Del Toro, Del Toro!</FONT>: Everyone will likely be singing his praises when the director's 'Hellboy' hits screens.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>'Window' To A Dark Soul</FONT>: 'Stir of Echoes' writer/director David Koepp tackles another literary horror, Stephen King's 'Secret Window.'<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Make Mine 'Malevolence'</FONT>: A rural slasher, and the filmmaker guiding him, get back to basics in this accomplished indie.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>'Glass' Houses Evil</FONT>: When you put a 'Demon Under Glass'-or a vampire, in this case-you'd better be sure it's unbreakable.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>DVD Dungeon</FONT>: Positive buzz for 'Chainsaw'; Nathan's infamous on disc.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>From 'Alive' To 'Dead'</FONT> ...and that was just the first day of Fango's visit to last year's thrill-packed Fantasia fest.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Books Of Lots Of Blood</FONT>: If you need a fix of truly gruesome terror, open the pages of author Edward Lee's work.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Byrd Is The Word</FONT>: Over his decades as a makeup artist, Byrd Holland crafted plenty of low-budget ghouls and monsters.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Nightmare Library</FONT>: There's more room for improvement in Chigas' 'Chamber' than in Massey's 'Corner.'
Issue 232
May 2004
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<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Elegy</FONT>: Summer screams.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Postal Zone</FONT>: Pro our con; correcting the 'Club' membership.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Monster Invasion</FONT>: 'Alien vs. Predator': the battle begins; 'Godzilla' and 'Maniacs' arise once more.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Hugh Jactor</FONT>: His star is only getting bigger now that Hugh Jackman is toplining 'Van Helsing.'<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>The Van Helsing Show</FONT>: A colorful look at the cinematic monster hunter.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>'Helsing'-Raisers</FONT>: The megamovie's hero is nothing without the support of the friends and foes portrayed by this cast.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Dr. Cyclops</FONT>: Dragon out the praise for 'Komodo'; lousy slasher makes the Doc 'S.I.C.K.'<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Murder In The Cards</FONT>: You don't know who you're dealing with when you tangle with Dario Argento's 'Card Player.'<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>'Bill' Paid In Full</FONT>: After half a year of waiting, Quentin Tarantino promises you'll finally see Uma Thurman 'Kill Bill.'<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>21st-Century Ghouls</FONT>: The updated 'Dawn of the Dead' required that David Anderson's makeup FX be just as modernized.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Surviving 'Savage Island'</FONT>: In this low-budget discovery, the locals play for keeps when you trespass on their property.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Oh My 'Godsend'</FONT>: Would you trust a doctor played by Robert De Niro to clone your child without a hitch?<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>The Big Red One</FONT>: Ron Perlman's long association with Guillermo del Toro paid off with the lead role in 'Hellboy.'<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>'Starship' Two-Pers</FONT>: The big bugs return for 'Starship Troopers 2,' and the horror doesn't end when they kill you.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Dvd Dungeon</FONT>: 'Dawn' shines brighter than ever; 'Ginger' spiced up with extras.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>'Blood' Thirsty</FONT>: Actress Lynn Lowry wasn't crazy about nudity, but she went insane for 'I Drink Your Blood,' 'The Crazies' and others.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Nightmare Library</FONT>: 'Infernal Angel': a little more subtle Lee; you can't Beat 'Move Under Ground.'<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Forgotten Horrors: 'Blood Song'</FONT>: Frankie Avalon went out on a limb without Annette when he played this film's psycho.
Issue 233
June 2004
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<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Elegy</FONT>: Remembering Dad.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Postal Zone</FONT>: Readers greet the 'Dawn.'<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Monster Invasion</FONT>: Sam Raimi holds a 'Grudge'; Joe R. Lansdale celebrates 'Bubba Ho-Tep.'<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Out Of The 'Darkness'</FONT>: At last, U.S. audiences will be able to see Jaume Balaguero's well-cast supernatural tale.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Shark Treatment</FONT>: The Sundance sensation 'Open Water' will make you think twice about taking a dip in the ocean.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Dr. Cyclops</FONT>: 'Serial Killing 101' at the head of the class; 'Hellbreeder' mostly breeds contempt.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Eight Arms To Kill You</FONT>: Evil is a many-tentacled thing when Alfred Molina plays Dr. Octopus in 'Spider-Man 2.'<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>'Drive' To Succeed</FONT>: Up-and-coming fear filmmakers get their shot via Fango's 'Blood Drive.'<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>A 'Lot' To Live Up To</FONT>: The people behind TV's new 'Salem's Lot' say they've matched the frights of Stephen King's novel.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Marchin' Through 'Chronicles'</FONT>: Vin Diesel and filmmaker David Twohy bring back 'Riddick' for more space combat.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Monster's Master</FONT>: Director Stephen Sommers sez guiding multiple creatures in 'Van Helsing' wasn't too scary a job.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Their 'Deathdream' Project</FONT>: Director Bob Clark and writer Alan Ormsby made both a statement and a memorable genre film in 1972.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>'Park' Stranger</FONT>: The amusement ends when teens are taken on a deadly ride in this 3-D Asian spooker.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>DVD Dungeon</FONT>: MGM, thankyouverymuch for 'Bubba Ho-Tep'; 'Faceless' disc nearly flawless.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Road Rage</FONT>: The pavement runs red when Robert Harmon pits good and evil 'Highwaymen' in vehicular battle.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Nightmare Library</FONT>: Bear makes his 'Dead Lines'; Sullivan's 'Dust' blows hot and cold.
Issue 234
July 2004
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<center><FONT COLOR='#008080'>Special 100-page 25th-anniverary issue!</FONT></CENTER>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Elegy</FONT>: Happy anniversary, Fango!<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Monster Invasion</FONT>: 'I'll Bury You Tomorrow' to be seen now; 'Creature Unknown' recalls monsters familiar.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>25 Years Of Fangoria</FONT>: Mark Voger celebrates our landmark, cartoon-style.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Fango's Top Films: 1979-1983</FONT>: 'Dawn of the Dead,' 'Friday the 13th,' 'An American Werewolf in London,' 'The Thing,' 'The Evil Dead'.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Sam Raimi Swings Both Ways</FONT>: He's got the wall-crawling epic 'Spider-Man 2' and a group of back-to-basics chillers on his slate.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Fango's Top Films: 1984-1988</FONT>: 'A Nightmare on Elm Street,' 'Re-Animator,' 'The Fly,' 'Hellraiser,' 'The Vanishing'.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Paul Naschy Spreads The Disease</FONT>: Spain's busiest horrormeister is also bringing the fear to U.S. productions.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>The MVPs Of 'AVP'</FONT>: That's 'Alien vs. Predator,' and we talk to the referees in an exclusive set visit.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Fango's Top Films: 1989-1993</FONT>: 'Henry: Portrait of a Serial Killer,' 'Jacob's Ladder,' 'The Silence of the Lambs,' 'Dead Alive,' 'Cronos'.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>The 13th Annual Chainsaw Awards Winners!</FONT>: Who grabbed the gory for the films of 2003?<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>The Big G's Big Cheese</FONT>: When Godzilla battles monstrous foes, producer Shogo Tomiyama oversees the destruction.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>2004's East Coast 'Weekend Of Horrors'</FONT>: A gallery of sights from the frights of our January convention.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Fango's Top Films: 1994-1998</FONT>: 'The Crow,' 'Seven,' 'Scream,' 'Crash,' 'Ringu'.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>'Last Horror,' First Lead</FONT>: British actor Kevin Howarth makes a crimson splash as the star of 'The Last Horror Movie.'<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>DVD Dungeon</FONT>: Heavenly 'Angel Heart' disc; bloody good combat in 'Starship Troopers 2'; 'In My Skin' will get under yours.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Fango's Top Films: 1999-2003</FONT>: 'The Blair Witch Project,' 'American Psycho,' 'Ginger Snaps,' 'Frailty,' '28 Days Later'.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>The New Future Of Fear</FONT>: We present a fresh crop of faces who are all aiming to make the next 25 years scarier.
Issue 235
August 2004
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Issue 236
September 2004
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<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Elegy</FONT>: Lions Gate roars.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Postal Zone</FONT>: 25th-anniversary-issue kudos.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Monster Invasion</FONT>: Horror heroes' softer side comes out as 'Chucky' becomes a dad and 'Dracula' sings.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Dodging The 'Bullet'</FONT>: Mick Garris takes audiences on another rollercoaster ride through Stephen King territory.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>New 'Resident' On The Block</FONT>: Milla Jovovich and her zombie-fighting crew set off a bigger bang in 'Resident Evil: Apocalypse.'<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Dr. Cyclops</FONT>: 'Suburban' dysfunction at its extreme; 'Megalodon' is day-old fish.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Takashi Miike Gets Weird</FONT>: If you think that's not news, check out what the prolific Japanese director is offering this year.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Period Piece</FONT>: Our favorite sisters tangle with 1800s werewolves in 'Ginger Snaps Back.'<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>They Came, They 'Saw,' They Tortured</FONT>: An Australian duo brings an unconventional approach to serial slayings.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>'Alien Vs. Predator,' With A Lance</FONT>: Henriksen, that is, lending his familiar face to this franchise reinvention.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>The Man Who Would Be Merrin</FONT>: Twice, in fact, as Stellan Skarsgard toplines both takes of 'Exorcist: The Beginning.'<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>DVD Dungeon</FONT>: 'Lemora' is breathtakingly beautiful; more reasons to be hooked on 'Candyman'<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Snake Charmer</FONT>: Uncoiling 'Anacondas,' director Dwight Little is no stranger to fear fare.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Nightmare Library</FONT>: Oh, 'Susannah'! King triumphs again; Suzuki's 'Spiral' sucks you in.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>'Hazing' Days</FONT>: College life is difficult enough without the deaths and demons of this indie feature.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>When The Shark Bites</FONT>: It's an occasion for 30 years of cinematic screams leading up to this month's 'Open Water.'
Issue 237
October 2004
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Issue 238
November 2004
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<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Elegy</FONT>: Tony sez summer's shriekers were disappointments.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Postal Zone</FONT>: ...and so do our readers.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Monster Invasion</FONT>: They're 'The Devil's Rejects,' but Rob Zombie loves 'em; shut yourself in with 'Claustrophobia.'<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>'Fraid In Japan</FONT>: Sarah Michelle Gellar et al. receive real culture shock when they travel overseas for 'The Grudge.'<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Reaping The 'Seed'</FONT>: After all the years writing Chucky's lines, now Don Mancini gets to tell him how to say them.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Dr. Cyclops</FONT>: A thrilling ride with 'Highwaymen'; newest CGI snake movie arrives B.O.A.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>'Blade: Trinity' Looks Sharp</FONT>: Sexy young fighters join Wesley Snipes' vampire killer in his latest adventure.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>The Orgy Of The 'Species III'</FONT>: Those rapacious aliens just won't give up on making Earth their mating ground.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>'Lethal' Biological Weapon</FONT>: An animal-rights group finds itself in need of rescue in 'Lethal Dose.'<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>'Carrie' Me Back</FONT>: Stephen King recalls the highlights and lowlights of the early filmizations of his work.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>All Joked Up</FONT>: Czech in with the latest Eurozombies as Fangoria International exposes a 'Choking Hazard.'<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>'Dead End' Drives You Crazy</FONT>: Join Ray Wise and family for a frightening road trip into the unknown.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>DVD Dungeon</FONT>: Cool extras multiply on 'Deadly Spawn' disc; 'It's Alive' anew; a spirited package for 'Ghosts' <BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>'Happy Birthday' Presents</FONT>: Creative-murder fans got a bloody gift when 'Happy Birthday to Me' splattered onscreen.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>'Hellbent' For Death</FONT>: Hunks and horror are combined as the slasher genre meets the gay-filmmaking trend.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Getting Evil For Dad</FONT>: While threatening others as 'The Sadist,' Arch Hall Jr. encountered dangerous situations of his own.<BR>
<FONT COLOR='#ff0000'>Nightmare Library</FONT>: Welcome back 'From the Borderlands'; why did Little 'Resort' to old tricks?
2007
Issue 259
January/February 2007
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Issue 260
March 2007
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ELEGY Pioneer-ing a film series.<br>
MONSTER INVASION 'Grindhouse' gets in gear; a DarkLot of indie terrors; Hodder cuts up as 'Ed Gein'<br>
HORRORCADE You'll feel the 'F.E.A.R.'; growing pains for 'Death Jr. II'<br>
DON'T BLAME 'THE MESSENGERS' They're just doing what ghosts do best when families move into their dwellings.<br>
'THE HITCHER' RIDES ON Because young audiences still need a lesson that it's a bad idea to pick up a stranger.<br>
THE 'HILLS' ARE STILL ALIVE Wes Craven and co. deliver more desert mutant mayhem in 'The Hills Have Eyes 2.'<br>
DR. CYCLOPS Good sick fun with 'Mad Cowgirl'; 'The Gathering' gloomy.<br>
FIRED UP FOR 'GHOST RIDER' Nicolas Cage is Johnny Blaze, the latest supernatural superhero to jump to the screen.<br>
'CHOCOLATE' KISSES Young love can be troubled enough without one of the couple being a werewolf, as in 'Blood and Chocolate.'<br>
'HANNIBAL RISING,' BODIES FALLING The new prequel explores just how young Dr. Lecter developed his taste for people.<br>
WALKING THE 'LABYRINTH' Actor Doug Jones did it in hoofs as he enacted Guillermo del Toro's most memorable monster.<br>
'ALONE' STRANGER If you feel like someone's watching you when no one's there, it might be the villain of 'Alone With Her.'<br>
DVD DUNGEON More 'Godzilla' greatness; she's 'Chainsaw Sally,' hear her roar.<br>
'GHOST' OF A CHANCE Did Lizzie Borden really do it? The 'Ghost Stories EVP' crew takes a whack at the mystery.<br>
NOTES FROM THE UNDERGROUND: 'DIE YOU ZOMBIE BASTARDS!' That rallying cry led plenty of talent to Caleb Emerson's oddball flick.<br>
SAW WINNERS A look behind the movies and madness celebrated at the first televised Chainsaw Awards.<br>
NIGHTMARE LIBRARY Fingerman's 'Bottom-feeder' rises to the top; epic 'Terror' from Simmons
Issue 261
April 2007
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Issue 262
May 2007
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Issue 263
June 2007
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ELEGY Boll busting.<br>
MONSTER INVASION Violent past ('Pathfinder'), present ('Gangs of the Dead') and future ('Mutant Chronicles').<br>
BLOWIN' IN THE 'WIND CHILL' Ghosts have your num-brrrrr if you venture down the wrong back-road shortcut.<br>
FATHER OF THE '28 WEEKS' Fighting through a rage-plagued Britain is a family affair for sequel star Robert Carlyle.<br>
DR. CYCLOPS Follow the 'Blood Trails' to real scares; 'Still Waters' run shallow.<br>
HE DRIVES US CRAZY Fango fave Kurt Russell takes the wheel of the 'Death Proof' car in 'Grindhouse.'<br>
THAT'S CLUCKED UP In what may be its last gasp, Troma goes to new eggs-tremes with 'Poultrygeist.'<br>
DEEPER INTO THE 'HOSTEL' Eli Roth's sequel exposes more of the inner workings of the international house of torture.<br>
THIRSTY DAYS OF NIGHT Love and blood are equal ingredients of the vampire drama 'The Thirst.'<br>
BAD DOGGIES! So much for man's best friend'now they're genetically enhanced killers in 'The Breed.'<br>
HORRORCADE 'Lunar Knights' shoot the moon; we'll bitch about 'Bullet Witch'<br>
'DARK CORNERS' OF THE SOUL Introducing a villain so nasty he terrorizes a woman in two different realities.<br>
HIGH VOLTAIRE With his many music, toy, comics and movie projects, the Goth guru is spreading darkness everywhere.<br>
DVD DUNGEON Extra 'Pieces' added to slasher documentary; 'Phantasm' doesn't go balls-out.<br>
UNSEEN SCREAMS: 'POSSESSED' We know we'd like to see an occult thriller so unsettling that Udo Kier's its good guy.<br>
VINCENT'S PRICE How many actresses can say they survived Dracula and the 'Hills Have Eyes' bunch? Well'Virginia Vincent didn't.<br>
JERSEY GHOULS A new venue and an extra day added up to more ghoulish fun at Fango's last East Coast convention.<br>
NIGHTMARE LIBRARY Four times the fear in Phillips' 'Angelica'; Garton still loves the 'Night Life'<br>
CLASSIFIED AD VAULT
Issue 264
July 2007
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ELEGY The gathering storm.<br>
POSTAL ZONE Why was the 'Grindhouse' empty?.<br>
MONSTER INVASION Zombie's new 'Halloween' party; Friedkin shares his 'Bug'; Zombie hunting in 'War of the Dead: Z-E-R-O'; are you afraid of 'Big Bad Wolf'?<br>
BACK TO THE 'HOSTEL' Eli Roth knew he had his work cut and chopped and sawed out for him when tackling the sequel.<br>
'1408' REASONS TO SCREAM With a Stephen King source and two topnotch actors, you'll want to check out this hotel room.<br>
DR. CYCLOPS 'Alone With Her' is a scary place to be; mixed 'Breed'.<br>
'DAY WATCH' DAWNS The saga begun in the 'Night' continues with more vampires, demons and otherworldly beings.<br>
GRAZING HELL Farm life just got a lot more frightening as 'Black Sheep' go on a flesheating rampage in New Zealand'.<br>
SCARY MOO-VIE 'while over in Ireland, everyone orders de-calf when mutant cows spawn in 'Isolation.'.<br>
'CAPTIVITY' AUDIENCE Will the controversy over its advertising mean blood money for this torture saga?.<br>
KNB'S KURRENT KILLINGS Celebrating 20 years in the business, the FX team splatters more gore than ever before.<br>
PET PEEVED It's not always nice to have a zombie around the house, even a domesticated one like 'Fido.'.<br>
DVD DUNGEON Who could pass up watching 'Child'?; new 'Creepshow' a cheap show.<br>
BLOOD ON THE PAGES If you think this magazine drips crimson, wait'll you see what awaits in our new comics line.<br>
HORRORCADE Worship the new 'God of War,' but give up the 'Ghost Rider.'<br>
'BLACULA' IS BEAUTIFUL A look back at one of the standouts of both blaxploitation and vampire cinema.<br>
FORGOTTEN HORRORS: 'COLOR ME BLOOD RED' Artists' models and an exploitation partnership fell victim in this production.<br>
NIGHTMARE LIBRARY Rave for Palahniuk's 'Rant'; Wellington's 'Bullets' hit the target
Issue 265
August 2007
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ELEGY Sleepers creepers<br>
MONSTER INVASION The countdown to '30 Days' begins; 'Resident' zombies face 'Extinction'<br>
'I KNOW' WHAT SCARES YOU And it's frightening Lindsay Lohan too in her most extreme role to date.<br>
'STRANGERS' THAN FICTION This movie's creator says a realistic touch will make it a superior chiller.<br>
DR. CYCLOPS Plenty of terror found in 'Abandoned'; check out what's inside 'The Kovak Box'<br>
THE 'HUMANOIDS' FACTOR In 1980, aquatic monsters with sex drives emerged from the 'Deep' with shocking results.<br>
'HALLOWEEN': TRICK'OR TREAT? We'd bet on the latter, since Rob Zombie's at the helm of the Michael Myers redux.<br>
CHILLING THE WINDY CITY Monsters and music spread the fear at our 2007 Midwest 'Weekend of Horrors.'<br>
NOBODY'S 'PERFECT'? It seemed lost for a few years, but 'Perfect Creature' is finally seeing the light of release.<br>
CHILD'S SLAY We kid you not: 'Joshua' finds creepy new variations on the evil-little-boy concept.<br>
FOLLOW 'THE SIGNAL' 'and find yourself in a world turned violently upside down, thanks to this startling indie film.<br>
'1408' WORDS Three scriptwriters took on the challenge of whipping the Stephen King tale into cinematic shape.<br>
HIS 'CHRISTMAS' STORIES A tribute interview with the late Bob Clark, who made Yuletide and military homecomings scary.<br>
DVD DUNGEON Laughs and revelations 'Behind the Mask'; new looks at 'Caligari' and Lovecraft<br>
THE DIGITAL 'MASTERS' The CGI demanded by Showtime's 'Horrors' was as varied as the series' storylines.<br>
HORRORCADE Old blood in new computerized bottles<br>
NIGHTMARE LIBRARY Evans' 'Good and Happy' is good and scary; Carey's 'Devil' worth knowing
Issue 266
September 2007
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Issue 267
October 2007
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Issue 268
November 2007
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2008
Issue 269
January/February 2008
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GUTS <br>
'REQUIEM' FOR A TEAM The directing brother act of Colin and Greg Strause kept those tusslin' Aliens and Predator in line. <br>
SUCCESS IS AN 'ORPHANAGE' New Spanish director Juan Antonio Bayona crafts the year's best ghost story. <br>
'MISSED' OPPORTUNITY? A French director tries to wring fresh chills from an American redux of Japan's 'One Missed Call.' <br>
WANTED: 'UNDEAD OR ALIVE' If you've been hankerin' for a comedic zombie Western, saddle up for this sagebrush splatterfest. <br>
HIGH NOTES AND SLIT THROATS The demon barber of Broadway comes to the screen as Tim Burton directs Johnny Depp in 'Sweeney Todd.' <br>
'HATCHET' IF YOU CAN Director Adam Green traces the long road his retro slasher pic took to unrated release. <br>
'P' STOP This entry in the Asian horror trend is as much about Thailand's night culture as it is about its spirits. <br>
THE 'TEETH' OF THE MATTER The saga of a girl who's got extra pearly whites in a place where the sun don't shine. <br>
BURBANK BLOODBATH Our last West Coast convention packed in so many guests and fans, it was scary. <br>
NOTES FROM THE UNDERGROUND: MIKE WATT With partner Amy Lynn Best, he proves you can teach old vampires and zombies new tricks. <br>
NO 'SLEEP' FOR THE WICKED On 'The Black Sleep' and other vintage B-pictures, Paul Wurtzel wrangled the genre's biggest stars. <br>
GRAVY<br>
ELEGY Accolades for the Ackermonster<br>
POSTAL ZONE Mixed missives for Michael Myers<br>
MONSTER INVASION Second rounds of 'Boogeyman' and 'White Noise'; undead again in 'Automaton' and 'Darkness'<br>
DR. CYCLOPS Not the same old 'Boy Eats Girl' story; new 'Pumpkinhead' is tired 'Blood'<br>
HORRORCADE They say 'Halo,' we say good buy; 'Zelda' still zesty<br>
DVD DUNGEON A 'Flight' into flesheating fun<br>
NIGHTMARE LIBRARY 'Mister' be another Barker winner; Lucas reveals 'All the Colors' of Mario Bava.
Issue 270
March 2008
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DIARY OF THE DEAD, MOTHER OF TEARS, THE EYE, CLOVERFIELD and more!
Issue 271
April 2008
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Issue 272
May 2008
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Issue 273
June 2008
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GUTS<br>
'COTTAGE' INDUSTRY There's nothing quite like the mix of biting horror and black humor that this Brit flick aims for.<br>
MOCKUMENTARY 'MASSACRE' 'Malevolence' maker Stevan Mena explores the 'Brutal' yet lighter side of fear filmmaking.<br>
'KNOCK KNOCK' IS NO JOKE Serious bloodshed results when a maniac targets teens in this New York-lensed indie.<br>
ASIA ARGENTO EXPOSED The actress bares her feelings on 'Mother of Tears' and her other controversial movies.<br>
FORGOTTEN HORRORS: 'RETRIBUTION' Possession was 9/10 of the terror where this unsung late-'80s shocker was concerned.<br>
LAST STOP ON 'THE MIDNIGHT MEAT TRAIN' One of Clive Barker's best-ever short stories now becomes one of his grisliest films.<br>
'DEATH NOTE' WORTHY In this Japanese smash, the power to decide who lives and who dies is as simple as a signature.<br>
GROWLING IN 'CLOVERFIELD' Making a giant creature both vιritι and very terrifying was a particular challenge.<br>
SOUTHLAND TERROR TALES A gang of up-and-coming frightmeisters unleash murder and monsters below the Mason-Dixon Line.<br>
VACATION IN 'RUINS' It was no relaxing trip for young actresses Jena Malone and Laura Ramsey. DIMENSION OF FEAR A look back at the B-movie distributor that sent 'Spiders,' 'Dr. Black' and others to the drive-ins.<br>
GRAVY<br>
ELEGY Method acting<br>
MONSTER INVASION Steve Niles turns Batman scary; an ill-fated 'Sιance'; moral terror makes an 'Entrance'<br>
DR. CYCLOPS We see a 'Dead Moon Rising,' and we like it; super 'Nanny'<br>
HORRORCADE 'Devil' is still a hell of a game, but not so the latest 'Turok' and 'Aliens.'<br>
DVD DUNGEON A fascinating look 'Inside' French splatter; 'Trigger Man' has good aim<br>
NIGHTMARE LIBRARY We like Hall's fiction 'Raw'; Farris' 'Fury' fizzles<br>
CLASSIFIED AD VAULT
Issue 274
July 2008
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FEAR' OF THE YEAR The masters of horror assault network TV with an all-new butcher's dozen evil episodes.<br>
WHAT'S 'HAPPENING'? Good question, but M. Night Shyamalan has a few hints of what to expect from his very first R-rated film.
'STUCK' IN THE MIDDLE WITH GRUE Truth is stranger than fiction'unless Stuart Gordon is the one turning it into a feature.<br>
THE 'BOY' IS BACK IN TOWN And he's bringing all his old friends to battle new foes in 'Hellboy II: The Golden Army.'<br>
'GIRL' WITH SOMETHING EXTRA She's got a deadly 'Machine' gun hand in this Japanese killfest.<br>
'CHAIR' MEN OF THE GORED A trio of Canadian filmmakers aren't letting a low budget stand in the way of shocking you.<br>
HIS ART OF DARKNESS Whatever kind of screen creature you ask for, Aaron ('Incredible Hulk') Sims can design.<br>
THE NEED FOR SPEEDMAN The 'Underworld' actor has been in demand lately for psycho chillers like 'The Strangers.' A 'GALAXY' SCAR, SCAR AWAY Once upon a time, a Roger Corman crew made space travel fatal with 'Galaxy of Terror.'<br>
GRAVY<br>
ELEGY Summer shrieks<br>
MONSTER INVASION 'Otis' has a date with revenge; 'Lost Boys' bite the comics pages; the myth of multiple 'Organizm'<br>
DR. CYCLOPS 'Botched' gets everything right; French home invasion continues with 'Malefique' and 'Frontier(s)'<br>
HORRORCADE 'Condemned 2' video-game classic status; back inside the 'House of the Dead'<br>
DVD DUNGEON 'Orphanage' well worth visiting; Argento slaughterfests sharper than ever<br>
NIGHTMARE LIBRARY Piccirilli hits just the right 'Spot'; Ketchum's talent burns through 'Old Flames'<br>
CLASSIFIED AD VAULT
Issue 275
August 2008
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GUTS<br>
'HELL' OF A FILMMAKER With the battle of 'Hellboy II' completed, Guillermo del Toro looks toward a fantastic future.<br>
'X FILES' X-HUMED Mulder and Scully are back on the case, and we 'Want to Believe' their new movie will justify the revival.<br>
TRAVELS WITH YOUR 'MUMMY' A journey to a new locale means a bigger star in the title role of the adventure/horror franchise.<br>
BAD MAGIC FROM 'WIZARD OF GORE' Harry Potter he's not-his tricks are deadly for his unfortunate volunteers.<br>
FORGOTTEN HORRORS: 'INVASION OF THE BEE GIRLS' It was a hive of sex and violence-so how did a man of the cloth become involved?<br>
DONE IN WITH 'MIRRORS' Alexandre ('Hills Have Eyes') Aja tries to break the curse on foreign directors remaking Asian chillers.<br>
BUHLER, ANYONE? He's a rising talent on the fright scene with 'Midnight Meat Train' and 'Insanitarium' coming out.<br>
SEEKING 'ASYLUM' You should think twice before exploring this one, haunted by a very mad and ghostly doctor.<br>
'STUCK' IN THE GENRE? Versatile actor Stephen Rea actually has no problems with venturing into fear fare like Stuart Gordon's latest.<br>
THEY ONCE WERE 'LOST' But now the 'Boys' are found-on the beach-in the long-awaited, direct-to-DVD sequel.<br>
'GENE' SLICING There's a science to the slaughter as someone with 'The Killing Gene' conducts torturous games.<br>
CHILLS IN CHICAGO Frightmeisters old and new blew in for our biggest Windy City convention yet.<br>
GRAVY<br>
ELEGY The fall of New Line<br>
MONSTER INVASION Bashing more bugs with 'Starship Troopers 3'; Charles Band plays on; relationships are murder in 'Baghead'<br>
DR. CYCLOPS Get with the 'Zombies Anonymous' program; double dose of 'Jekyll' dual personalities<br>
HORRORCADE Celebrating the 'Obscure'; 'Baroque' can't be fixed<br>
DVD DUNGEON 'Rogue' is croc full of goodies; yuck it up with 'Brutal Massacre'<br>
NIGHTMARE LIBRARY Possession and 'Pandemonium' in Gregory's compelling tale; Hamilton's hot but tired 'Blood'<br>
CLASSIFIED AD VAULT
Issue 276
September 2008
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Issue 277
October 2008
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Issue 278
November 2008
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Issue 279
December 2008
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GUTS<br>
"UNBORN" TO BE WILD Under writer/director David S. Goyer, this ain't your typical possession picture.<br>
"EDEN" ALIVE But not for long if you visit a British "Lake" that's swimming with violent youths.<br>
"VALENTINE" IN YOUR FACE If you could pick one '80s slasher to redux in 3-D, why not the mine-set "My Bloody Valentine"?<br>
JUMPSTARTING JASON The masked one enjoys a fresh origin and a new rampage courtesy of the much-anticipated "Friday the 13th" remake.<br>
"DYING" FOR AUSSIE HORROR? Then these Down Under filmmakers and cast have a cannibalistic "Breed" you'll eat up.<br>
CHILLS "FROM WITHIN" A small Christian town is plagued by a population hellbent on offing themselves.<br>
"BR?KEN" PSYCHE Lena Headey from TV's "Terminator" faces a different kind of double trouble in this UK psychothriller.<br>
UNDER THE "AUTOPSY" KNIFE The operating room gets good and bloody when evil medicos play doctor with helpless teens.<br>
"14" IS THE NEW 13 Unlucky for its characters, "Perkins' 14" was a fortunate break for its fans-turned-creators.<br>
NO "COUNTRY" FOR OLD DOGS Werewolves learn new tricks in a "Wild" and bloody shocker from Scotland.<br>
"THE ALPHABET" SCOOP Eliza Dushku is all grown up in this "Killer" flick, and so is its take on murder and madness.<br>
GRAVY<br>
ELEGY Lurking ahead<br>
MONSTER INVASION A new "Wolfman" howls; "Midnight Movie" slays its audience; "Resident Evil" reanimates and animates the dead<br>
DR. CYCLOPS Something to "Shiver" about from Spain; "Conjurer" casts a weak spell<br>
DVD DUNGEON In-depth special features rule this "Domain"; the extras are livelier than "Zombie Diaries"<br>
COMIC SCREAMS "The Dracula War" on terror hits the four-color pages<br>
NIGHTMARE LIBRARY Tune in and listen close to Gout's "Ghost Radio"; Bradbury tries on different "Masks"<br>
HORRORCADE "Silent Hill" worth coming home to; "Vampire Rain" clouded by glitches<br>
CLASSIFIED AD VAULT
2009
Issue 280
January/February 2009
Main Cover
Issue 281
March 2009
Main Cover
"KNOWING" SCARES The director of "The Crow" and "Dark City" now unveils a paranormal threat to our more recognizable world.<br>
"BAD BIOLOGY," TWISTED ANATOMY Frank Henenlotter, maestro of grassroots gore, composes a concerto for oversized organ.<br>
PRAY FOR THE "MARTYRS" Two young women embark on a journey of madness and mutilation that dares you to watch.<br>
"HOME" SCHOOLED IN FEAR A verite "Movie" uncovers the very dark undercurrents beneath a family's facade.<br>
THINGS ARE BLACK IN "PLAGUE TOWN" Beware the children after night falls in an isolated Irish village.<br>
COUNT ON DRAC To projects big ("Watchmen") and small, this FX house brings years of experience and expertise.<br>
"RED SANDS" STORMS IN A real war on terror heats up when soldiers unleash a supernatural evil in the Middle East.<br>
THE LAST WEEKEND In New Jersey, at least, as Fango's annual East Coast convention prepares for its move to Manhattan.<br>
NOTES FROM THE UNDERGROUND: JOE ZASO & RAINE BROWN The "Barricade" and "Beast" stars have learned how screaming sounds in different languages.<br>
THE FENADY CONSPIRACIES This veteran producer plotted to cast his '70s flicks with big names and bigger frights.<br>
ELEGY Going to extremes<br>
MONSTER INVASION First visit to the "Last House"; the filmmaking alchemy of "Crowley"; "Resident Evil" expands anew<br>
HORRORCADE There'll be plenty of players "Left 4 Dead"; "Castlevania" still sturdy<br>
DR. CYCLOPS Surrender to "Dorothy Mills"; Steven Seagal battles "Against the Dark" and the dreck<br>
DVD DUNGEON Stay up late with "Midnight Movie"; eye-opening extras aboard "The Midnight Meat Train"<br>
NIGHTMARE LIBRARY Matheson is "Legend," and an inspiration; a fateful trip with Keene's "Castaways"<br>
CLASSIFIED AD VAULT.
Issue 282
April 2009
Main Cover
THE "REST" OF THE GORY How do you build a better slasher flick? You start with a better slasher like ChromeSkull.<br>
THE FUTURE'S "SALVATION" There's just no stopping those pesky Terminators as they try to squash mankind.<br>
THIS NEW "HOUSE" The remakers of "LAST HOUSE ON THE LEFT" aimed to establish a solid foundation of tension and terror.<br>
KEEPERS OF THE "MUTANT CHRONICLES" Tenacity and ambition pay off as the long-mooted sci-fi shocker finally blasts onto screens.<br>
"BURROWERS" GIVE BACK DEATH The Wild West becomes a lot wilder when subterranean flesheating creatures surface.<br>
PEELING THE "VINYAN" You'll find many layers when you take this trip into the depths of the jungle-and the psyche.<br>
THE "100" CLUB It's led by filmmaker Eric Red and stars Famke Janssen and Michael Pare with their new "Feet"-ure.<br>
FORGIVE IT ITS "TRESPASS" Or the alien Ghota will make ooze out of you in a homage to the B-features of the '50s.<br>
FORGOTTEN HORRORS: "ALIEN ZONE" You won't find anything spacey in this Oklahoma-lensed entry in the anthology stakes.<br>
NOTES FROM THE UNDERGROUND: JASON PAUL COLLUM It wasn't always happy and gay creating his alternative-lifestyle fear fare.<br>
ELEGY Fango fans made good<br>
MONSTER INVASION Small-screen slayings on "Harper's Island"; still holding a "Grudge"; wrap your mind around "Timecrimes"; the 2009 Chainsaw Awards ballot!<br>
DR. CYCLOPS "Cremator" is hot stuff; not enough tricks in the "Walled"<br>
DVD DUNGEON "Let the Right One" into your permanent collection; good and bad luck with "Friday the 13th" extras<br>
HORRORCADE "Resistance" to the second in the series is futile; the pleasures of "Lux-Pain"<br>
NIGHTMARE LIBRARY Evenson's "Last Days" is first-rate; Moody becomes a player with "Hater"<br>
CLASSIFIED AD VAULT.
Issue 283
May 2009
Main Cover
NOTHING TO KEEP "MUM" ABOUT There's plenty of screaming going on at the house where "Mum & Dad" live.<br>
"SCAR" ISSUES Angela Bettis is no stranger to confronting madness and murder, but this time she's doing it in 3-D.<br>
DRAWING THE "LINE" Maurice Devereaux was determined to get his subway shocker "End of the Line" produced and released his way.<br>
WHAT A "DRAG"? Not for stars Alison Lohman and Justin Long as they throw themselves into Sam Raimi's "Hell."<br>
"SALVATION" AT HAND We traveled into the violent future of the latest "Terminator" and survived to tell you about it.<br>
MASTER OF "MUTANT" For writer/director Simon Hunter, the quest to film "Chronicles" was as grueling as that of his characters.<br>
ABOVE PARe Soon to be seen (sort of) in "100 Feet," actor Michael Pare explores highlights of his genre career.<br>
THE GORY GIFT OF GAB "Pontypool" offers a unique vision of the undead as creatures who do as much talking as stalking.<br>
ECHO OF THE BUNNYMAN Strange new sights haunt "S. Darko" in the sequel to one of this decade's biggest cult sensations.<br>
"LAKE" SUPERIOR? We'll find out when the indie stalker flick "Sam's Lake" makes its splash on DVD.<br>
ELEGY Winter roundup<br>
MONSTER INVASION An "Objective" look at battlefield terrors; genre favorites open "The Devil's Tomb"; "The Poker Club" deals in death; Erica Leerhsen comforts "Lonely Joe"<br>
DR. CYCLOPS Religious fears emanate "From Within"; newest "Butterfly Effect" flies higher<br>
HORRORCADE Let this classroom chiller "Lit" the way on the Wii; a second dose of "F.E.A.R."<br>
DVD DUNGEON Sacrifice yourself to "Martyrs"; "Perkins" and "Autopsy" are choice cuts among the 8 Films<br>
NIGHTMARE LIBRARY Sick of overly serious zombie stories? Maberry's "Patient Zero" has the cure; Thurman indulges his "Deathwish"<br>
CLASSIFIED AD VAULT.
Issue 284
June 2009
Main Cover
ELEGY Death is the new 30.<br>
FANGORIA FAMILY: TOM DeFEO.<br>
THE FANGORIA HALL OF FAME Comments by and/or about every one of the frightful 50, as voted by our readers.<br>
WALKING THE UNDEAD If it wasn't for George A. Romero, the world of horror would be a very, very different place.<br>
FANGORIA FRIENDS: EDGAR WRIGHT.<br>
CRAVEN IMAGES Even as Wes Craven has overseen some of the best recent remakes, he's still forging ahead with original projects.<br>
A "HELL" OF A COMEBACK After a long vacation from the genre, Sam Raimi sez returning to terror territory was no DRAG.<br>
FANGORIA FAMILY: KERRY O'QUINN.<br>
TURN ON, TUNE IN, FREAK OUT Many different voices of fear have spoken, screamed and sung during the first three years of FANGORIA RADIO.<br>
HIS MANY ARTS OF DARKNESS Clive Barker has contributed so much to the realm of the macabre-and is still finding new worlds to conquer.<br>
FANGORIA FAMILY: ED NAHA.<br>
FANGORIA FRIENDS: GILBERT GOTTFRIED.<br>
DECADES OF WEEKENDS If they had something significant to do with our favorite genre, they probably showed up for at least one of our conventions.<br>
FANGORIA'S COVER GHOULS Not just another bunch of pretty faces.<br>
THE LOST TERROR TELETYPE These projects aren't coming soon to a theater or DVD store near you.<br>
CAVALCADE OF CREATURES A nine-page minimural in which Pete Von Sholly presents an illustrated history of monsters!<br>
RAVING & DROOLING David J. Schow is back-and as out for blood as he ever was.<br>
FANGORIA ON SCREEN We've appeared in a bunch of movies and TV shows-so where's our IMDb listing?<br>
LEAVING THEIR BIGFOOTPRINTS Zombie chronicler Max Brooks reveals the Sasquatch scare flicks that left the deepest impressions on his psyche.<br>
FANGORIA FAMILY: W.R. MOHALLEY & DAVID McDONNELL.<br>
FANGORIA FAMILY: ROBERT GREENBERGER.<br>
FANGORIA FRIENDS: FRANK IERO.<br>
FANGORIA OFFSPRING Our printed legacy extends far beyond the 300 issues of the original mag.<br>
FANGORIA FAMILY: BOB MARTIN.<br>
FANGORIA MOVIES We've had our name on a variety of scare fare.
FANGORIA FAMILY: MICHAEL GINGOLD.<br>
CLASSIFIED AD VAULT.<br>
FANGORIA FAMILY: BRIAN O'TOOLE
Issue 285
July 2009
Main Cover
"ORPHAN" OF THE GORE The results of this child's play are decidedly unsuitable for young viewers.<br>
FRESH VEIN OF "TRUE BLOOD" As the second season commences, some vampires get along better with humans than others.<br>
THE DIMENSIONAL "DESTINATION" What's worse than learning you can't cheat death? Finding it's coming for you in 3-D.<br>
MICHAEL MYERS NEVER TIRES Part one of an exclusive set visit unmasks the new terrors of Rob Zombie's "H2."<br>
"SNOW" KIDDING The wintry zombies of Norway's "Dead Snow" will make you laugh till you puke up your guts.<br>
A SCARY KIND OF "HUSH" If you're planning a road trip this summer, you might think twice after seeing this flick.<br>
EYE ON "SURVEILLANCE" Under Jennifer Lynch's direction, Bill Pullman and others take multiple points of view of murder.<br>
"CHAOS" THEORIES The villain of "The Chaos Experiment" wants to prove his global-warming beliefs in the worst way.<br>
THIS OLD "HOUSE OF SEVEN CORPSES" For every body, there's more than one great story about the making of this '70s chiller.<br>
ELEGY Alternative choices<br>
MONSTER INVASION First visit to "Zombieland"; flesh and "Blood: The Last Vampire"; good taste takes a "Header"; the 2009 FANGORIA Chainsaw Awards winners!<br>
HORRORCADE Latest "Resident Evil" skimps on the scares; "Onechanbara" and "Rising" zombies return<br>
DR. CYCLOPS' DUNGEON OF DISCS Our newly combined DVD/Blu-ray review section starts off by recommending a trip to the "End of the Line."<br>
COMICS SCREAMS Something "Creepy" is coming back on the page to give you new nightmares.<br>
NIGHTMARE LIBRARY Fahy's "Fragment" is a hunk o' superb monster madness; Wellington's "23 Hours" well worth your time.<br>
CLASSIFIED AD VAULT
Issue 286
August 2009
Main Cover
GUTS<br>
THE NEW FACES OF "HALLOWEEN" Part two of our sequel set visit brings us closer to Michael Myers and the men who made his mask-and victims.<br>
SCARE CRAFT "CARRIERS" Imagine being one of the few left alive after a deadly pandemic-and there are still people trying to kill you.<br>
"DISTRICT 9": ALIEN ZONE "Non-humans" learn just how hostile Earth can be in this ambitious sci-fi thriller.<br>
"PANDORUM" PANIC Even scarier than being stranded alone in outer space is discovering you're not alone.<br>
"JENNIFER'S BODY" SHOTS Lots of guys are just dying to get with Megan Fox-and here, that's just what happens.<br>
BY THE "GRACE" OF BLOOD A true miracle of birth becomes a nightmare for everyone around this movie's heroine.<br>
"DEADGIRL" POWER It's not your typical chiller: The "zombie" is the victim and one of the "heroes" is the monster.<br>
"I SELL THE DEAD," YOU BUY THE FARM When you're dealing with the deceased, it helps if they actually stay that way.<br>
"EVILUTION" OF THE SPECIES This time, it's an alien organism turning humans into rampageous, slavering ghouls.<br>
PLUNDERING "NATURE'S GRAVE" From Australia comes a cautionary tale about how tampering with the environment can put you six feet down under.<br>
GRAVY<br>
ELEGY A salute to STARLOG<br>
MONSTER INVASION Take a "Perfect Getaway" from safety and learn "How to Be a Serial Killer"; stalking "The Wild Man of the Navidad"<br>
HORRORCADE It's a good good good "MadWorld"; feel the "Burn, Zombie, Burn!"<br>
DR. CYCLOPS' DUNGEON OF DISCS "Combat Shock" comes home stronger than ever; "Wyvern"? 'Cause it's a better-than-average Sci Fi flick!<br>
NIGHTMARE LIBRARY You'll have a "Cabal" with Howard's "Necromancer"; your "Worst Nightmares" may include Briant's schlocker.<br>
CLASSIFIED AD VAULT
Issue 287
September 2009
Main Cover
GUTS<br>
DYING TO PLEDGE "SORORITY ROW" Hazing has nothing on what six "sisters" face in the latest '80s-slasher remake.<br>
"STEP" RIGHT UP... And see if the new version of "The Stepfather" can match the depth and tension of its predecessor.<br>
A TICKET TO "ZOMBIELAND" Join Woody Harrelson and friends on a scary/funny ride though an America overrun by the living dead.<br>
BLOOD FOR "JENNIFER" Sexy screen siren Megan Fox unleashes her dark side as the boy-hungry antiheroine of "Jennifer's Body."<br>
PASS THE "WHITEOUT" "Underworld" vamp Kate Beckinsale battled biting cold and other perils on this Antarctic thriller.<br>
A NIGHT AT THE "HOUSE OF THE DEVIL" Can you survive it when your "hosts" are Tom Noonan and Mary Woronov?<br>
"THE HILLS RUN RED," YOU RUN SCREAMING Some horror flicks make you sweat; here's the story of one that makes you bleed.<br>
SUFFER "THE CHILDREN"? Nope-it's the adults who are tormented in this chilling saga of malevolent moppets.<br>
"DARK COUNTRY" TUNES Genre stalwart Thomas Jane directs and stars in a road trip that really goes to hell.<br>
"BOOK" YOUR FRIGHT Travel once more into the mind of Clive Barker via his latest screen adaptation, "Book of Blood."<br>
GRAVY<br>
ELEGY Halloween hurrahs<br>
MONSTER INVASION "Dexter" and "Vampire Diaries" terrorize the tube; bad guys take the latest "Wrong Turn"; a new trip into "Dead Space"<br>
HORRORCADE "Prototype" sets a high standard; have fun slamming spirits with the "Ghostbusters"<br>
DR. CYCLOPS' DUNGEON OF DISCS Go "Wild Man" with the monster mockumentary; a healthy amount of transgression in "Sick Girl"; "Ripper" carves in again<br>
NIGHTMARE LIBRARY A hell of a time with Kadrey's "Sandman"; more zombies "Recorded" by Brooks<br>
CLASSIFIED AD VAULT
Issue 288
October/November 2009
Main Cover
GUTS:<br>
WHEN "HALLOWEEN II" FIRST FELL Twenty-eight years ago, Michael Myers made his initial stab at franchise-hood.<br>
"BOX" YOUR FEARS Would you make the deadly bargain this film offers? And how would you deal with the aftermath? <br>
THE "SAW VI" FACTORY If it's Halloween, it must be time for Jigsaw's legacy of evil to claim a bunch of fresh victims. <br>
"NEW MOON," NEW MONSTERS Love triangles can be scary, but hopefully the second "Twilight" film will offer more to frighten us. <br>
"CIRQUE DU FREAK" SHOW At a carnival where a boy becomes "The Vampire's Assistant," the main acts truly suck.<br>
"ANTICHRIST" ALMIGHTY Actually, Satan sits out Lars von Trier's newest provocation, which examines the darkness of very human souls.<br>
THE REPEATING "ECHO" Filipino director Yam Laranas took full advantage of the opportunity to redo his original hit in English.<br>
VERY SCARY "MARY" On the "Blood Night" before Halloween, high-schoolers learn not to mess with "The Legend of Mary Hatchet."<br>
GOOD KNIGHT'S WORK Before traveling to "2001," actor Gary Lockwood had a monstrous medieval adventure wielding "The Magic Sword."<br>
TORTURE "TRAIN" All aboard for a ride that's gonna be a one-way trip for its young passengers.<br>
GRAVY<br>
ELEGY Horror: not just a boys' town<br>
MONSTER INVASION Zombies take over the "Dead Air"; Biblical terror's name is "Legion"; Tim Thomerson takes on Live Evil"<br>
HORRORCADE "Wolfenstein" howls just as loud on new platforms; take the plunge into "Shadow Complex"<br>
DR. CYCLOPS' DUNGEON OF DISCS Press Play with "The Children"; "I Can See You," you should see this; "Sauna" is hot stuff<br>
NIGHTMARE LIBRARY Dare to open Langan's "Audrey's Door"; thanks to Wong, you won't mind knowing "John Dies at the End"<br>
CLASSIFIED AD VAULT
Issue 289
December 2009
Main Cover
<li>THEIR NAME IS "LEGION" Angels shed their wings and take up arms for a heavenly and hellish war on Earth.</li>
<li>"PIG" OUT And hungry too, which means those who embark on a "Pig Hunt" are in for an unpleasant surprise.</li>
<li>"DREAD" HEADS In the latest Clive Barker feature, those who experiment with fear are inevitably unhappy about the results.</li>
<li>"GRAVES" SITUATIONS Two beautiful sisters, one maniacal reverend and a spooky ghost town sound like a perfect recipe to us.</li>
<li>NIGHT CREATURES AND "DAYBREAKERS" In a world where vampires have taken over, it's only (super)natural that they'd fight among themselves.</li>
<li>WHAT SCARES STEPHEN KING? The modern horror master tells us in the first of an exclusive two-part essay.</li>
<li>DO "LESBIAN VAMPIRE KILLERS" REALLY BITE? No doubt there are a lot of guys out there who'd love to find out.</li>
<li>FOR WHOM THE BELL TROLLS When Italian exploitation veterans met fledgling U.S. actors, the result was the memorably bizarre "Troll 2."</li>
<li>NOTES FROM THE UNDERGROUND: "GOD OF VAMPIRES" Writer/director Rob Fitz staged multicultural mayhem for minimal money.</li>
</ul>
<span style="text-decoration: underline;"><strong>GRAVY</strong></span><br>
<ul>
<li>ELEGY Ghoulish grab bag</li>
<li>MONSTER INVASION First visit among "The Crazies"; "Hansel and Gretel" a grim scary tale; "Demonic Toys" come out to play again</li>
<li>HORRORCADE Hop on the "Demon's Soul's" train; now, you can hold your own "Grudge"</li>
<li>DR. CYCLOPS' DUNGEON OF DISCS Go "Not Quite Hollywood"; big bugs and big entertainment in "Infestation"; Asian invasions of zombies and "Blood" suckers</li>
<li>NIGHTMARE LIBRARY "Lilja's Library" collection fit for a King; Gischler's "Vampire a Go-Go" away</li>
<li>CLASSIFIED AD VAULT</li>
2010
Issue 290
January/February 2010
Main Cover
- The Wolf Man<br>
- The Crazies<br>
- Cabin Fever 2<br>
<br>
PLUS: Shutter Island, Daybreakers... and more!
Issue 291
March 2010
Main Cover
<b>GUTS</b></span><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family: 'Trebuchet MS',sans-serif;"><o:p></o:p></span></div>
<div class="MsoNormal">
<span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family: 'Trebuchet MS',sans-serif;">FAST TRAIN TO "CRAZIES" TOWN There's more insanity in store
as we continue our exclusive location coverage.</span><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family: 'Trebuchet MS',sans-serif;"><o:p></o:p></span></div>
<div class="MsoNormal">
<span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family: 'Trebuchet MS',sans-serif;">"FROZEN" STIFFS Adam ("Hatchet") Green relocates from the
Louisiana swamps to a wintry mountainside for his new bone-chiller.</span><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family: 'Trebuchet MS',sans-serif;"><o:p></o:p></span></div>
<div class="MsoNormal">
<span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family: 'Trebuchet MS',sans-serif;">METHODS TO MADNESS Up-and-coming actor Noah Segan adopts
multiple mental states in a string of new fright films, starting with "Cabin
Fever 2."</span><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family: 'Trebuchet MS',sans-serif;"><o:p></o:p></span></div>
<div class="MsoNormal">
<span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family: 'Trebuchet MS',sans-serif;">"DEMONS" DO-OVER The cast names are bigger in the "Night of
the Demons" remake, and its makers hope the frights-and laughs-are too.</span><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family: 'Trebuchet MS',sans-serif;"><o:p></o:p></span></div>
<div class="MsoNormal">
<span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family: 'Trebuchet MS',sans-serif;">MABERRY SCARE YOU? Writing of zombies, wolfmen and more,
Jonathan Maberry is making quite the literary splash.</span><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family: 'Trebuchet MS',sans-serif;"><o:p></o:p></span></div>
<div class="MsoNormal">
<span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family: 'Trebuchet MS',sans-serif;">STALKING THE "SLITHIS" It lurked in the waterways of LA but
terrorized drive-ins nationwide in the late 1970s.</span><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family: 'Trebuchet MS',sans-serif;"><o:p></o:p></span></div>
<div class="MsoNormal">
<span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family: 'Trebuchet MS',sans-serif;">THE "WOLFMAN" PACK Benicio Del Toro et al. talk up their
roles in the megabudget monster movie.</span><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family: 'Trebuchet MS',sans-serif;"><o:p></o:p></span></div>
<div class="MsoNormal">
<span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family: 'Trebuchet MS',sans-serif;">MAKEUP FX LAB: "THE WOLFMAN" For the first time, a
step-by-step look at how Rick Baker makes a monster!</span><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family: 'Trebuchet MS',sans-serif;"><o:p></o:p></span></div>
<div class="MsoNormal">
<span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family: 'Trebuchet MS',sans-serif;">STRONG "SANGRE" Paul Naschy has passed on, but he still has
one crazy film yet to assault his U.S. fans. Plus: the Spanish star remembered.</span><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family: 'Trebuchet MS',sans-serif;"><o:p></o:p></span></div>
<div class="MsoNormal">
<br></div>
<div class="MsoNormal">
<span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family: 'Trebuchet MS',sans-serif;"><b>GRAVY</b></span><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family: 'Trebuchet MS',sans-serif;"><o:p></o:p></span></div>
<div class="MsoNormal">
<span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family: 'Trebuchet MS',sans-serif;">ELEGY American Fear Market 2009: Part II</span><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family: 'Trebuchet MS',sans-serif;"><o:p></o:p></span></div>
<div class="MsoNormal">
<span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family: 'Trebuchet MS',sans-serif;">MONSTER INVASION Who's hungrier-the "Survival of the Dead"
ghouls or the 3-D "Piranha"?; get ready for the new Freddy; the 2010 Chainsaw
Awards ballot!</span><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family: 'Trebuchet MS',sans-serif;"><o:p></o:p></span></div>
<div class="MsoNormal">
<span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family: 'Trebuchet MS',sans-serif;">DR. CYCLOPS' DUNGEON OF DISCS "Kingdom of the Spiders"
crawls to the top; "House of the Devil" worth a long visit; "Bad Biology"
bonuses have great chemistry</span><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family: 'Trebuchet MS',sans-serif;"><o:p></o:p></span></div>
<div class="MsoNormal">
<span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family: 'Trebuchet MS',sans-serif;">HORRORCADE Thanks for the "Memories" from new "Silent Hill";
another trip into the "Borderlands"</span><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family: 'Trebuchet MS',sans-serif;"><o:p></o:p></span></div>
<div class="MsoNormal">
<span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family: 'Trebuchet MS',sans-serif;">NIGHTMARE LIBRARY Huston's latest will leave you "Sleepless";
Straub makes the "Dark Matter"</span><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family: 'Trebuchet MS',sans-serif;"><o:p></o:p></span></div>
<span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family: 'Trebuchet MS',sans-serif;">CLASSIFIED
AD VAULT</span>
Issue 292
April 2010
Main Cover
<strong>GUTS</strong>
<p class="MsoNormal">CRAVIN' NEW "NIGHTMARE"? Whether you are or not, here comes an updated "Elm Street" with a brand new Freddy.
<p class="MsoNormal">"REPO MEN" CUT IN There's no music but plenty of mayhem in this saga of organ transplants and their reverse.
<p class="MsoNormal">MUST BE THE "SEASON OF THE WITCH" It is when Nicolas Cage and Ron Perlman confront sorcery and other scary stuff in the 14th century.
<p class="MsoNormal">"SURVIVAL" OF THE GORIEST Don't worry, ghoul fans-George A. Romero's latest "Dead" opus proves he isn't mellowing with age.
<script src="/plugins/editors/tinymce/jscripts/tiny_mce/themes/advanced/langs/en.js" type="text/javascript"></script>
<p class="MsoNormal">"ZOMBI 3," ACTORS 0 The bloodshed wasn't all in front of the camera during the making of this Italian gruefest.
<p class="MsoNormal">WHAT COMES "AFTER.LIFE"? Liam Neeson finds out thanks to a dead-or is she?-girl played by Christina Ricci.
<p class="MsoNormal">TOTAL "ECLIPSE" OF THE HEART Memories of loved ones aren't the only things haunting this supernatural drama's protagonists.
<p class="MsoNormal">DIARY OF THE DEB: "SLIME CITY MASSACRE" "Fango Radio" host Debbie Rochon reveals how indie horror filmmaking can be a fluid experience.
<p class="MsoNormal"><strong>GRAVY</strong>
<p class="MsoNormal">ELEGY <em>Adios</em><span style="font-style: normal;">, Paul Naschy</span>
<p class="MsoNormal">MONSTER INVASION Don't you dare forget "Mother's Day"; Hammer Films bangs out new features; "Vindication" is sweet-and shocking
<p class="MsoNormal">DR. CYCLOPS' DUNGEON OF DISCS "Triangle" floats your boat; you won't get sick of "Cabin Fever" the second time around; lots to chew on with flesheater flick "Dead Snow"
<p class="MsoNormal">HORRORCADE Happy to be stuck with "Bayonetta"; first-rate Horseman in "Darksiders"
<p class="MsoNormal">NIGHTMARE LIBRARY Go to "Hellblazer: Pandemonium" for a hot time; "Blood Pressure" won't get your pulse rising
<p class="MsoNormal">CLASSIFIED AD VAULT
Issue 293
May 2010
Main Cover
<strong>GUTS</strong>
<p class="MsoNormal"><strong>ON SET: "THE DESCENT: PART 2"</strong> Back into the caves for the eagerly awaited sequel with the original star, a new director and others.
<p class="MsoNormal"><strong>FEATURE: TOY FAIR TERRORS</strong> Photos and comments on the hottest horrific items from this year's event.
<p class="MsoNormal"><strong>PREVIEW: "MEADOWOODS"</strong> Director Scott Phillips discusses his verite-style chiller about kids who kill just because they can.
<p class="MsoNormal"><strong>ON SET: "SURVIVAL OF THE DEAD"</strong> Observations from the location of George A. Romero's new undead epic. Plus: Dressing the Dead with costume designer Alex Kavanagh, and Romero on Romero!
<p class="MsoNormal"><strong>ON SET: "CREATURE OF DARKNESS"</strong> Take a trek to the desert with a group of off-roaders and the otherworldly monster terrorizing them.
<p class="MsoNormal"><strong>INTERVIEWS: THE "ELM STREET" KIDS, PART ONE</strong> Chats with the young actors who faced Freddy in the original film series.
<p class="MsoNormal"><strong>PREVIEW: "THE DISAPPEARED"</strong> A new and acclaimed British fright feature is explored with director/co-writer Johnny Kevorkian.
<p class="MsoNormal"><strong>PREVIEW: "THE NEW DAUGHTER"</strong> Inside the Kevin Costner-starrer with director Luis Berdejo and the creature creators.
<p class="MsoNormal"><strong>GRAVY</strong>
<p class="MsoNormal"><strong>ELEGY</strong> The incoming and outgoing editors speak
<p class="MsoNormal"><strong>MONSTER INVASION</strong> Previews of "The Revenant," "Job," "The Black Waters of Echo's Pond," hot new horror fiction and more
<p class="MsoNormal"><strong>TRASH COMPACTOR</strong> Digging up "Burial Ground"
<p class="MsoNormal"><strong>MONSTER OF THE MONTH</strong> Mr. Barlow from "Salem's Lot"
<p class="MsoNormal"><strong>DR. CYCLOPS' DUNGEON OF DISCS</strong> Reviews of all 8 Films to Die For from Lionsgate and After Dark, "I Sell the Dead," "The Sadist With Red Teeth," "Vampyres" on Blu-ray and more
<p class="MsoNormal"><strong>NIGHTMARE LIBRARY</strong> Reviews of Dan Wells' "I Am Not a Serial Killer," A.E. Moorat's "Queen Victoria: Demon Hunter," Rio Youers' "Old Man Scratch," etc.
<p class="MsoNormal"><strong>HORRORCADE</strong> Reviews of "Dante's Inferno," "Deadly Premonition," "Aliens vs. Predator" and "BioShock 2"
<p class="MsoNormal"><strong>SOUND SHOCK</strong> Denny Zeitlin on the music of 1978's "Invasion of the Body Snatchers"
<p class="MsoNormal"><strong>CLASSIFIED AD VAULT</strong>
Issue 294
June 2010
Main Cover
<strong>GUTS</strong><br>
<p class="MsoNormal"><strong>INTERVIEW: TERRANCE ZDUNICH</strong> The man who sang of graverobbing in "Repo!" talks the future shocks of his "Molting" comic.<br>
<p class="MsoNormal"><strong>PREVIEW: "ALL ABOUT EVIL"</strong> A host of San Francisco and Hollywood talent came together for this outrageous horror/comedy.<br>
<p class="MsoNormal"><strong>INTERVIEWS: THE "ECLIPSE" VAMPIRES</strong> Cameron Bright and Jackson Rathbone discuss the "Twilight" sequel and scarier stuff.<br>
<p class="MsoNormal"><strong>INTERVIEW: GIOVANNI LOMBARDO RADICE</strong> Known to many as John Morghen, he suffered through "City of the Living Dead" and other Italian shockers. Plus: Lucio Fulci's Grossest Hits!<br>
<p class="MsoNormal"><strong>ON SET: "SPLICE"</strong> Director Vincenzo Natali explains the birth, care and raising of a genetic mutation, and Delphine Chaneac recalls playing the lovely but deadly result.<br>
<p class="MsoNormal"><strong>PREVIEW: "TELL TALE"</strong> This contemporary Edgar Allan Poe update was a work of heart for director Miguel Arteta and star Josh Lucas.<br>
<p class="MsoNormal"><strong>PREVIEW: "SOMEONE'S KNOCKING AT THE DOOR"</strong> In this boundary-pushing flick, filmmaker Chad Ferrin and actor Noah Segan revel in sex, drugs and shock.<br>
<p class="MsoNormal"><strong>DIARY OF THE DEB: "GAME OVER"</strong> Was there more pain on screen or behind the scenes of this German indie? Debbie Rochon knows her answer.<br>
<p class="MsoNormal"><strong>ON SET: "ANIMALS"</strong> John Skipp and Craig Spector's novel of romance, jealousy and werewolves howls to screen life.<br>
<p class="MsoNormal"><strong>INTERVIEW: JESS FRANCO</strong> Still sleazin' after all these years, he doubles the pleasure with "Paula-Paula."<br>
<p class="MsoNormal"><strong>INTERVIEWS: THE "ELM STREET" KIDS, PART TWO</strong> More past sequel stars tell us why "Nightmare" was a dream job.<br>
<p class="MsoNormal"><strong>GRAVY</strong><br>
<p class="MsoNormal"><strong>FIRST RITES</strong> Oh baby, what a horror<br>
<p class="MsoNormal"><strong>MONSTER INVASION</strong> Previews of "Predators," "Jonah Hex," Rob Zombie's latest comic, "The Horseman," "Women's Studies" and more<br>
<p class="MsoNormal"><strong>MONSTER OF THE MONTH</strong> Trickster from "Brainscan"<br>
<p class="MsoNormal"><strong>TRASH COMPACTOR</strong> The icky extraterrestrials of "Xtro"<br>
<p class="MsoNormal"><strong>DR. CYCLOPS' DUNGEON OF DISCS</strong> Reviews of "City of the Living Dead" on Blu-ray, "Gamera, the Giant Monster," "Trailers from Hell! Volume One" and many more<br>
<p class="MsoNormal"><strong>NIGHTMARE LIBRARY</strong> Reviews of David Moody's "Dog Blood," Ryan Brown's "Play Dead," Gemma Files' "A Book of Tongues" and others<br>
<p class="MsoNormal"><strong>HORRORCADE</strong> Reviews of "God of War III," "Fragile Dreams," "Calling" and "White Knight Chronicles"<br>
<p class="MsoNormal"><strong>SOUND SHOCK</strong> Fabio Frizzi's music for the walking dead to eat you by<br>
<p class="MsoNormal"><strong>CLASSIFIED AD VAULT</strong>
Issue 295
July 2010
Main Cover
<strong>GUTS</strong><br>
<strong>PREVIEW: "2001 MANIACS: FIELD OF SCREAMS"</strong> Tim Sullivan reveals how he took his lunatics on the road. Plus: a chat with co-star Kevin Ogilvie, a.k.a. Nivek Ogre!<br>
<strong>INTERVIEW: JAUME BALAGUERO</strong> The Spanish director owns this summer with "[REC] 2" and the FANGORIA FrightFest release "Fragile."<br>
<strong>ON SET: "PREDATORS"</strong> The forest looks similar but the story and characters are different in the franchise reboot.<br>
<strong>PREVIEW: "SPLATTERHOUSE"</strong> The classic video game is back, and much bloodier than before. Plus: a horror-game history!<br>
<strong>ON SET: "SALVAGE"</strong> Terror arrives next door in a monster-amok picture with some very current concerns.<br>
<strong>ON SET: "TRUE BLOOD"</strong> The creators and stars promise that the third season of the vampire hit will only literally suck.<br>
<strong>ON SET: "PARASOMNIA"</strong> Director William Malone invites you into his unique and scary dream world. Plus: Malone's past monsters.<br>
<strong>PREVIEW: SUSHI TYPHOON</strong> Details on a tasty selection of over-the-top splatter fare coming from Japan.<br>
<strong>ON SET: "DEATH KAPPA"</strong> This is one shoot where our journalist gets to see the monster live and up close.<br>
<strong>PREVIEW: "AMERICAN GRINDHOUSE"</strong> The best sleaze from decades past is celebrated in a new documentary. Plus: shockers from the art house!<br>
<strong>INTERVIEW: LYNN LOWRY</strong> The actress from both takes on "The Crazies" is loving the second wind of her fright career.<br>
<strong>PREVIEW: "A SERBIAN FILM"</strong> From a country not known for its genre fare comes a movie that's hard to ignore.<br>
<strong>GRAVY</strong><br>
<strong>FIRST RITES</strong> Horror: it's not just a game<br>
<strong>MONSTER INVASION</strong> Previews of "The Dead Matter," "Chain Letter," Fango FrightFest's "Road Kill" and more, plus the 2010 Chainsaw Awards winners!<br>
<strong>TERROR TUBE</strong> The "Bobby" segment of Dan Curtis' "Dead of Night"<br>
<strong>TRASH COMPACTOR</strong> Grisly marital arts in Andrzej Zulawski's "Possession"<br>
<strong>DR. CYCLOPS' DUNGEON OF DISCS</strong> Reviews of "The Horseman," "Salvage," "Horror Hospital," "Legion," "Burning Inside" and others<br>
<strong>HORRORCADE</strong> Reviews of "Monster Hunter Tri," "Dead to Rights: Retribution," "Just Cause 2" and "Samurai Showdown Sen"<br>
<strong>NIGHTMARE LIBRARY</strong> Reviews of Justin Cronin's "The Passage," John Connolly's "The Whisperers," Michael Koryta's "So Cold the River" and more<br>
<strong>SOUND SHOCK</strong> The unheard "Hellraiser" music by Coil<br>
<strong>CLASSIFIED AD VAULT</strong><br>
<strong>MONSTER OF THE MONTH</strong> Reverend Lowe from "Silver Bullet"<br>
Issue 296
August 2010
Main Cover
<strong>GUTS</strong>
<p><strong>PREVIEW: "ENTER THE VOID"</strong> French provocateur Gaspar Noe delivers his most bizarre cinematic experience yet.
<p class="MsoNormal"><strong>PREVIEW: "THE LAST EXORCISM"</strong> How do you make devil-purging scary again? Do it documentary-style.
<p class="MsoNormal"><strong>INTERVIEW: BOB BURNS</strong> On a "Dark and Stormy Night," he revived his classic Kogar the Gorilla character.
<p class="MsoNormal"><strong>PREVIEW: "THE HAUNTING"</strong> No, it's not another remake; FANGORIA FrightFest presents a unique tale of Spanish ghosts.
<p class="MsoNormal"><strong>FEATURE: 3-D HORRORS</strong> For nearly 60 years now, monsters and madmen have been leaping into audiences' laps.
<p class="MsoNormal"><strong>INTERVIEW: TONY ANTHONY</strong> Back in the '80s, he was the first to have the action "Comin' at Ya!" off the screen.
<p class="MsoNormal"><strong>ON SET: "RESIDENT EVIL: AFTERLIFE"</strong> Paul W.S. Anderson adds a fresh dimension to his zombie-film franchise.
<p class="MsoNormal"><strong>ON SET: "PIRANHA 3D"</strong> It may have the best-looking cast of any fright feature this year-until the flesheating fish get to them.
<p class="MsoNormal"><strong>PREVIEW: "SAW VII"</strong> A look at how the franchise's gore will really be in your face this October.
<p class="MsoNormal"><strong>INTERVIEW: ROGER CORMAN</strong> The B-movie godfather recalls the original "Piranha" and "Humanoids from the Deep." Plus: "Piranha" starlet Belinda Balaski and "Mega Piranha"!
<p class="MsoNormal"><strong>INTERVIEW: JERRY LACY</strong> He took vampires and others to Trask as the righteous reverend of TV's "Dark Shadows."
<p class="MsoNormal"><strong>ON SET: "DORIAN GRAY"</strong> The antihero is better-looking than ever in this new adaptation, but his picture (and deeds) are worse.
<p class="MsoNormal"><strong>INTERVIEW: LUIGI COZZI</strong> Thirty years ago, he was responsible for a very messy "Contamination."
<p class="MsoNormal"><strong>DIARY OF THE DEB: "SATAN HATES YOU"</strong> But you'll love what this tribute to religious scare flicks has to offer.
<p class="MsoNormal"><strong>GRAVY</strong>
<p class="MsoNormal"><strong>FIRST RITES</strong> Childhood's first glasses
<p class="MsoNormal"><strong>MONSTER INVASION</strong> Previews of "Machete," "Sweatshop," "Sea of Dust" and horrors on the printed page!
<p class="MsoNormal"><strong>THE TERROR TUBE</strong> Dennis Hopper in the "He's Alive" episode of "The Twilight Zone"
<p class="MsoNormal"><strong>THE PIT AND THE PEN OF BERT I. GORDON</strong> Premiere of the new column by the B-movie veteran!
<p class="MsoNormal"><strong>TRASH COMPACTOR</strong> Christopher Coppola on "Dracula's Widow."
<p class="MsoNormal"><strong>DR. CYCLOPS' DUNGEON OF DISCS</strong> Reviews of "Piranha," "Easter Bunny, Kill! Kill!", "Open House," "The Uninvited," "Death Kappa" and others
<p class="MsoNormal"><strong>NIGHTMARE LIBRARY</strong> Reviews of the "Living Dead 2" anthology, Martin Millar's "Curse of the Wolf Girl," Jonathan L. Howard's "Johannes Cabal the Detective" and more
<p class="MsoNormal"><strong>HORRORCADE</strong> Reviews of "Lost Planet 2," "Alan Wake" and "Dante's Inferno" for the PSP
<p class="MsoNormal"><strong>SOUND SHOCK</strong> "True Blood" and "The Last Exorcism" composer Nathan Barr
<p class="MsoNormal"><strong>CLASSIFIED AD VAULT</strong>
<p class="MsoNormal"><strong>MONSTER OF THE MONTH</strong> Rhoda Penmark from "The Bad Seed"
Issue 297
September 2010
Main Cover
<p>INTERVIEW: NICKY HENSON Hopping on a hog, he delivered "Psychomania" in the early-'70s cult pic.
<p class="MsoNormal">PREVIEW: "THE WALKING DEAD" Has there ever been a more exciting-sounding TV show than Frank Darabont's adaptation of the zombie-comics favorite?
<p class="MsoNormal">INTERVIEW: DARIN SCOTT He opened a "Dark House" that has become one of the key flicks in the Fangoria FrightFest collection.
<p class="MsoNormal">PREVIEW: "SUCK" Vampires, rock 'n' roll and Malcolm McDowell-what more could you ask for?
<p class="MsoNormal">PREVIEW: "RED WHITE & BLUE" The first of those colors runs all over the heart of Texas in this savage new horror/drama.
<p class="MsoNormal">INTERVIEW: BARBARA SHELLEY Part one of our lengthy chat with the actress who put the glamour in the movies of Hammer.
<p class="MsoNormal">PREVIEW: "LET ME IN" They let the right team in to rework the Swedish vampire favorite. Plus: Simon Oakes on the new Hammer's new directions
<p class="MsoNormal">PREVIEW: "DEVIL" Going down...to hell? That's where an elevator's headed in this M. Night Shyamalan-produced chiller.
<p class="MsoNormal">PREVIEW: "HATCHET II" Victor Crowley's back, and writer/director Adam Green's given him more people to kill.
<p class="MsoNormal">PREVIEW: "SAW 3D" Jigsaw's torturous traps take on a whole new level in director Kevin Greutert's latest franchise entry.
<p class="MsoNormal">PREVIEW: "I SPIT ON YOUR GRAVE" It was up to the remake crew to assure fans of the original wouldn't feel violated.
<p class="MsoNormal">INTERVIEW: WILLIAM LUSTIG He made a "Maniac" who's still scaring us three decades later. Plus: the making of another early-'80s "Madman"
<p class="MsoNormal">PREVIEW: AFTER DARK ORIGINALS Terrors of every type fill an all-new lineup of eight fearsome films.
<p class="MsoNormal">INTERVIEW: JOSHUA HOFFINE His lens captures some of the freakiest sights in the art-photography world.
<p class="MsoNormal">INTERVIEW: SARAH KARLOFF Life was a "Thriller" for the daughter of Boris.
<p class="MsoNormal">DIARY OF THE DEB: "SCREAM QUEENS" The reality show's second season gave Debbie Rochon the chance to share her wisdom.
<p class="MsoNormal"><strong>GRAVY</strong>
<p class="MsoNormal">FIRST RITES "Walking" in big shoes
<p class="MsoNormal">MONSTER INVASION Previews of John Carpenter's "The Ward," the "Let Me In" comic and the DVD reissue of "Mad Ron's Prevues from Hell"
<p class="MsoNormal">TRASH COMPACTOR Boris Karloff in "Die, Monster, Die!"
<p class="MsoNormal">THE TERROR TUBE The infamous British broadcast "Ghostwatch"
<p class="MsoNormal">DR. CYCLOPS' DUNGEON OF DISCS Reviews of "The Dead Matter," "Burning Bright," two from Larry Blamire, "Growth," "Under the Mountain" and more
<p class="MsoNormal">NIGHTMARE LIBRARY Reviews of Bob Fingerman's "Pariah," Guillermo del Toro and Chuck Hogan's "The Fall," David Moody's "Autumn" and others
<p class="MsoNormal">HORRORCADE Reviews of "Naughty Bear," "Singularity" and "Crackdown 2"
<p class="MsoNormal">SOUND SHOCK David A. Hughes on his "C.H.U.D." score
<p class="MsoNormal">CLASSIFIED AD VAULT
<p class="MsoNormal">MONSTER OF THE MONTH Trash from "The Return of the Living Dead"
Issue 298
October/November 2010
Main Cover
GUTS<br>
<br>
INTERVIEW: HILTON A. GREEN He was by Alfred Hitchcock's side when the Master of Suspense went "Psycho." Plus: a look at "The Psycho Legacy"<br>
<br>
INTERVIEW: ADAM GREEN PT. 2 The writer/ director needed a new leading lady to confront Victor Crowley in "Hatchet II."<br>
<br>
INTERVIEW: WES CRAVEN "My Soul to Take" allowed him to explore original terror-tory for the first time in years.<br>
<br>
PREVIEW: "ELVIRA'S MOVIE MACABRE" Everyone's favorite Mistress of the Dark is making a return to the boob tube.<br>
<br>
NOTES FROM THE UNDERGROUND: "COLIN" Marc Price had to have a lot of guts to attempt a zombie feature on a double-digit budget. Plus: more bargain ghouls in "Zombie Nightmare"<br>
<br>
PREVIEW: "AMER" The year's most visually striking shocker takes its cues from Italian terrors of the past.<br>
<br>
INTERVIEW: GENE SIMMONS Kiss' rock monster brought a longtime love of the macabre to his legendary persona. Plus: Tim Sullivan and Paul Stanley on their Kiss-tories<br>
<br>
INTERVIEW: BARBARA SHELLEY PT. 2 The queen of Hammer horror recalls tangling with Dracula, Martians and more.<br>
<br>
ON SET: "HELLDRIVER" When splattermeister Yoshihiro Nishimura raises the dead, it ain't your typical zombiefest.<br>
<br>
ON SET: "VAMPIRE GIRL VS. FRANKENSTEIN GIRL" Here's a Japanese high-school love triangle that draws an awful lot of blood.<br>
<br>
INTERVIEW: NOBUHIKO OBAYASHI His 1977 "House" has been attracting a whole new crowd of appreciative visitors.<br>
<br>
PREVIEW: "MONSTERS" With a small cast and budget and plenty of digital ingenuity, Gareth Edwards built a better creature feature.<br>
<br>
GRAVY<br>
<br>
FIRST RITES That first Kiss of obsession<br>
<br>
MONSTER INVASION Previews of "Hisss" and "Zombie Girl: The Movie"; "Grimm Love" director talks<br>
<br>
THE PIT AND THE PEN OF BERT I. GORDON How to populate a "Village of the Giants"<br>
<br>
TRASH COMPACTOR "Kiss Meets the Phantom of the Park"<br>
<br>
DR. CYCLOPS' DUNGEON OF DISCS Reviews of "Colin," "Night of the Living Dead: Reanimated," "Closet Space," "Gamera" double features, "Carnies" and more<br>
<br>
NIGHTMARE LIBRARY Reviews of David Wellington's "Overwinter," John Ajvide Lindqvist's "Handling the Undead," Steve Alten's "Grim Reaper" and others<br>
<br>
HORRORCADE Reviews of "Limbo," "Mafia II," "Castlevania: Harmony of Despair" and "Clash of the Titans"<br>
<br>
SOUND SHOCK John Harrison on his "Creepshow" score
Issue 299
December 2010
Main Cover
<strong>FEATURE: "VAMPIRE CIRCUS"</strong> As staged by Hammer Films and now restored on disc, this carnival is far from family-friendly.
<p class="MsoNormal"><strong>ON SET: "STAKE LAND"</strong> The "Mulberry Street" gang leave the city for a terrifying trek across a vampire-plagued America. Plus: more words from heroine Danielle Harris.
<p class="MsoNormal"><strong>INTERVIEW: HARRY KuMEL</strong> He introduced audiences to the sultry suckers known as the "Daughters of Darkness."
<p class="MsoNormal"><strong>PREVIEW: "DEAD SPACE 2"</strong> The Necromorphs are back and their killing ground is bigger in the video-game sequel. Plus: a special review of "Dead Rising 2."
<p class="MsoNormal"><strong>INTERVIEW: TOBY SELLS</strong> He started as a monster-loving kid, and now he's a makeup maestro marching with "The Walking Dead."
<p class="MsoNormal"><strong>INTERVIEW: JEFF LIEBERMAN</strong> The man who made you "Squirm" looks back at his horrifying and subversive screen resume. Plus: Blue Sunshine-the venue!
<p class="MsoNormal"><strong>FEATURE: GRINDHOUSE RELEASING</strong> The old fleapits may be gone, but the movies they showcased are still seeing the light of projectors.
<p class="MsoNormal"><strong>INTERVIEW: JEAN ROLLIN</strong> After four decades in the cinematic trenches, the French auteur hasn't lost his edge.
<p class="MsoNormal"><strong>PREVIEW: "BLACK SWAN"</strong> Under Darren Aronofsky's guidance, Natalie Portman dances her way into insanity. Plus: the cringe-inducing FX!
<p class="MsoNormal"><strong>INTERVIEW: CHERIE CURRIE</strong> Transitioning from the Runaways to acting, she learned that some "Parasite"s really bite.
<p class="MsoNormal"><strong>MINIFEATURE: GORECAKES</strong> These grisly pastries are more than just desserts.
<p class="MsoNormal"><strong>DIARY OF THE DEB: "VOODOO COWBOYS"</strong> Down South, there was good and bad mojo in front of the cameras and behind the scenes.
<p class="MsoNormal"><strong>INTERVIEW: BENJAMIN PERCY</strong> The savagery of this up-and-coming author's prose leaps like a wolf off the page. Plus: Thom Carnell bares his "Flesh."
<p class="MsoNormal"><strong>INTERVIEW: CONSTANCE TOWERS</strong> The actress willingly followed Samuel Fuller down a "Shock Corridor."
<p class="MsoNormal"><strong>MINIFEATURE: THE NEW "CREEPY"</strong> The modern reinvention of the classic '60s-'80s comics mag is scaring a new generation.
<p class="MsoNormal"><strong>INTERVIEW: GWAR</strong> Bow before the intergalactic lords of monstrous music who have come to Earth to rock and shock you! Plus: Fango shoots a video with the scumdogs.
<p class="MsoNormal"><strong><span style="text-decoration: underline;">GRAVY</span></strong>
<p class="MsoNormal"><strong>FIRST RITES</strong> Darren Aronofsky: master of horror
<p class="MsoNormal"><strong>POSTAL ZONE</strong> An issue with good Genes
<p class="MsoNormal"><strong>MONSTER INVASION</strong> Previews of "Bitter Feast," "Rare Exports," "The Captured Bird" and "The Taken"
<p class="MsoNormal"><strong>THE TERROR TUBE</strong> The "Magic Shop" episode of "Alfred Hitchcock Presents"
<p class="MsoNormal"><strong>THE TRASH COMPACTOR</strong> John Waters dishes on B-movie veteran Ted V. Mikels
<p class="MsoNormal"><strong>DR. CYCLOPS' DUNGEON OF DISCS</strong> Reviews of the Criterion Collection's "Cronos," "Psychomania," "Cannibal Girls," "Zombie Girl: The Movie" and others
<p class="MsoNormal"><strong>NIGHTMARE LIBRARY</strong> Reviews of the Ellen Datlow/ Nick Mamatas-edited "Haunted Legends," Richard Kadrey's "Kill the Dead," Dan Wells' "Mr. Monster" and more
<p class="MsoNormal"><strong>COMIC CASKET</strong> Our new column devoted to illustrated fear debuts with the other "Walking Dead"
<p class="MsoNormal"><strong>HORRORCADE</strong> Reviews of "Enslaved," "Castlevania: Lords of Shadow" and "Saw II: Flesh & Blood"
<p class="MsoNormal"><strong>SOUND SHOCK</strong> James Kenelm Clarke on "Vampyres"
<p class="MsoNormal"><strong>CLASSIFIED AD VAULT</strong>
<p class="MsoNormal"><strong>MONSTER OF THE MONTH</strong> Jane O'Flynn from "Survival of the Dead"