Halloween Horror Cult Classics Now Available on Time Warner Cable Movies On Demand
Time Warner Cable is offering digital customers a variety of On Demand programming perfect for a frightful movie marathon on Halloween night.
Time Warner Cable is offering digital customers a variety of On Demand programming perfect for a frightful movie marathon on Halloween night.
An assortment of not-so-scary movies for kids of all ages STAMFORD, Conn., Oct. 11, 2013 /PRNewswire/ — Nothing makes Halloween more fun than watching movies that are just a little bit scary. Charter’s On Demand Kid’s Collection features Halloween favorites for the entire family to enjoy.
The current trend in studio movies is all about superheroes and action stars. Hollywood releases these “tentpoles” (called that because they hold up the studios with all the money they make) on a regular basis during the summer and holiday seasons.
Recommended As genre fans, we’ve had to endure our own tale of horror throughout the years. We were teased with many of our beloved franchises on Blu-ray, but like any dope smoking teenager that gets laid on film, they inevitably got the axe. Freddy, Jason and Chucky all met an untimely end, and how
You wouldn’t know it by the fact that there is but a single major horror film in theaters this month (Carrie on October 18th), but this is of course October and thus the month of Halloween and thus the prime time to discuss “scary movies”. As such, I’ve decided to run down the top-17 biggest grossing “scary” movies of all time. Why 17?
King Vidor’s 1925 silent wartime drama
We could debate the question of “are old movies more creative than new ones?†for hours. Everyone has their preference
Reese Witherspoon has been making hit movies for more than 20 years, but it wasn’t until she had her children that the Oscar winner said she became a better, more mature woman.
With ‘The Wizard of Oz’ making its gorgeous Blu-ray debut nearly five years ago as part of its 70th anniversary celebration, Warner Bros. had to come up with a new way to mark (and market) next year’s 75th anniversary. The solution?
