Halloween (2018) full movie watch & download online free
Halloween (2018) full movie watch & download online free
The week before Halloween is basically an excuse to get together with a few hundred like-minded people and watch as many scary movies as you can – and Toronto’s repertory cinemas are more than happy to oblige. A mix of beloved favourites and lost treasures will be showing all around the city. Some will have live performances before, during or after the movie – some will have running commentaries, drunken or otherwise. And some will just scare the crap out of you.
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Drake Hotel trivia host Jeromy Lloyd takes over the Beaches cinema for two hours of horror-movie trivia. Teams of up to four are welcome, and hopefully there’ll be at least one question about the origins of the pseudonym John Carpenter used to write Prince Of Darkness.
Ladies of Burlesque: Picnic At Hanging Rock
I don’t really understand how you tie a burlesque performance to Peter Weir’s evocative, unnerving 1975 drama about a group of Australian schoolgirls who vanish during an outing in 1900, but Loretta Jean is going for it. Anyway, the movie’s a classic.
Drunk Feminist Films: I Know What You Did Last Summer
Resh Brown, Bee Quammie and DeAnn Smith assemble to tackle the post-Scream slasher, in which privileged teens Jennifer Love Hewitt, Ryan Philippe, Freddie Prinze Jr. and Sarah Michelle Gellar cover up a hit-and-run only to find themselves stalked by a taunting killer a year later.
Army Of Darkness
The conclusion to Sam Raimi’s Evil Dead trilogy finds Bruce Campbell’s heroic doofus Ash battling Deadites in the 13th century, trying to save the past so he can return to the present. It’s all just an excuse for Campbell, Raimi and producer Robert Tapert to make the movie they always dreamed of making when they were kids in high school: a berserk horror-comedy that mixes splatterific violence with Three Stooges eye-boinks. It’s not exactly scary, but it’s an awful lot of fun.
Night Of The Living Dead: 50th Anniversary
George A. Romero’s horror classic gave us the zombie movie as we know it, and its subtextual racial politics have only grown more relevant as the decades go by. Newly restored in 4K by The Film Foundation and the Museum Of Modern Art, it looks as good as it ever has – a relentless black-and-white apocalypse, where the desperation and arrogance of strangers proves far more dangerous than the undead horde. Have fun with it!
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