How Ari Aster built Midsommar’s gory, nightmarish world
The director explains the occult inspirations behind the year’s creepiest film – with spoilers aplenty.
The director explains the occult inspirations behind the year’s creepiest film – with spoilers aplenty.
Sweat your way through the dog days of summer with these extremely seasonal movies.
From Midsommar to Hereditary, A24 has been revitalising the horror genre over the past few years, with prestige projects that tap into our most basic fears. With the release of False Positive this Friday, the studio’s reign of terror over cinema shows no signs of slowing down.
With Ari Aster’s fluoro-frightener Midsommar in cinemas, we explore the terrifying tradition of things that go bump in the day.
A24’s Talk to Me is already being touted as the supernatural thriller of the summer. To get you in the mood, we’ve ranked the studio’s most bone-chilling prestige horrors. Click through, if you dare…
Trailer of the Week: The new chiller from the studio that brought us Hereditary and Midsommar. A wolf in sheep’s clothing? If only it was that cuddly.
London Film Festival: the Londoner is starring in the other must-watch TV drama of the season (the other being Succession) (you knew that).
The actor is unrecognisable as a tatted up, tough-talking skinhead – trying to abandon a life of hatred – in this must-watch film.
Taking stock over lockdown, the London actor and advocate has spent the last 12 months helping to provide arts education for young people in the justice system.
Call Sheet: The 16-year-old gives us the lowdown on dodgy auditions, hilarious onset moments and landing the biggest role of his career in the year’s weirdest film.
After recently being released from jail, the unique Californian rapper swiftly dropped a 33-track mixtape. He speaks to THE FACE about his new found happiness and the flaws of the US prison system.
The much-debated slasher trope has a few classic traits: pure, virginal, generally morally superior and worthy of survival. In MaXXXine, the last film in Ti West's horror trilogy, he smashes them all.