Tag Archives: horror

A Study in Unease — R. Jacob Honeybrook’s “Thaddeus Greene’s Spooktacular House of Horrors”

In Thaddeus Greene’s Spooktacular House of Horrors, R. Jacob Honeybrook transforms the spectacle of fear into something philosophical. His sixth horror work, released on October 20, 2025, doesn’t rely on the expected mechanics of terror. Instead, it builds a slow and deliberate unease, rooted in the question of whether redemption can truly exist.

The novella follows Mr. Belgrave, an ordinary man whose night takes a strange turn after he avoids a head-on collision. What begins as an accident spirals into a nightmare of spiritual symbolism. A wandering cat leads him to a cathedral, where a man dressed as a vampire, The Count, sells tickets to a carnival of grotesque displays. Yet as Belgrave explores its dark corridors, the line between theater and truth begins to collapse.

Honeybrook’s decision to write in a modernized 19th-century voice gives the story a haunting distance. The formality of the language contrasts with the modern setting, creating an atmosphere that feels unmoored from time. The result is a text that feels both familiar and alien, echoing gothic traditions while speaking to contemporary dread.

“This is the most surreal story I’ve written,” Honeybrook said. “It’s based on a dream I had, so I wanted everything to feel a bit off.” That intent permeates every paragraph, as if the narrative itself were caught between sleeping and waking.

Beyond his fiction, Honeybrook remains an active presence in modern horror. He co-hosts the Midnight Terrors Podcast with Kevin Roche and writes Honeycut, a weekly column for TBM Horror. Both platforms reveal the same intellectual curiosity that defines his prose.

Thaddeus Greene’s Spooktacular House of Horrors is now available as an eBook on Amazon, offering readers an experience that is both literary and unsettling.

To follow Honeybrook’s ongoing work, visit his Instagram page for updates on upcoming stories and collaborations.

“Dead Road” Marks a New Chapter for Survival Horror

There is something timeless about a story that begins in the middle of nowhere. “Dead Road” starts with a car, a couple, and a stretch of desert that seems to go on forever. When they stop for gas, the world stops with them. What follows is a story about fear, survival, and the thin line between sanity and instinct.

Created by Mike Ferguson, who has appeared in “The Flood,” “Desert Dawn,” and “The Boatyard,” the film feels personal. Ferguson built it from a single image: isolation. From that idea, he partnered with screenwriter Anthony Leone, known for “Dark Secret” and “Torment.” Together, they transformed a simple setting into a trap for the mind. Their collaboration, which began on “Last Hit,” shows how horror can feel both cinematic and human.

“Dead Road” is directed by Christopher Olen Ray, an Emmy winner whose credits on IMDb include a long list of genre work that values tension over spectacle. His camera lingers on silence, on eyes that can’t look away, on the small moments before fear explodes. The result is a story that doesn’t rely on monsters. It relies on atmosphere, on the dread that builds when the human mind starts to turn on itself.

The film is often compared to “The Thing,” “The Fog,” and “Dawn of the Dead,” but its tone feels more intimate. It doesn’t aim to shock. It creeps. It listens. The gas station lights hum, the desert wind moves through the cracks, and every noise becomes a reason not to breathe. Ferguson’s presence on screen, seen throughout his career on IMDb, anchors that silence with realism.

“Dead Road” is more than a survival story. It’s a study in endurance. It asks how far people can go when they have nothing left but fear and instinct. The setting may be small, but its questions are not. It reminds the audience that the scariest things in horror are not the monsters outside, but the truths that appear when there’s nowhere left to hide.

Handmade Horror: Rob Avery and the Legacy of Worldparody Productions

Horror has always thrived on the margins, where passion replaces budget and imagination makes up for missing equipment. That is where Worldparody Productions has lived since 1989. Founded by filmmaker and special effects artist Rob Avery in Dayton, Ohio, the studio built its reputation on creating horror that feels alive. Every film looks and sounds like it was made by people who love monsters, comedy, and fake blood in equal measure.

Worldparody’s style is unmistakable. Instead of computer effects, Avery leans into hand-sculpted gore and creature design, using props, puppets, and camera tricks that give his movies a gritty personality. That approach became the foundation for films like Slashers Gone Wild: Bloodbath and Scream for Christmas, both drenched in practical carnage and dark humor. They prove that horror does not need a blockbuster budget to be unforgettable. It only needs a creator who knows how to turn chaos into art.

Over time, Avery’s company evolved from a one-man production experiment into a small horror factory with its own identity. His world is inspired by old comic books, practical monsters, and the joy of doing everything the hard way. Whether it is a killer Santa in Scream for Christmas or the competition of maniacs in Slashers Gone Wild, the tone stays consistent: blood-soaked, funny, and entirely self-aware. These are not parodies of horror but celebrations of it, built with the same love that drives fans to midnight screenings and VHS collections.

After decades of filmmaking, Avery continues to expand his creative universe. Through his new branch, Klowntroll LLC, he has begun shaping larger projects and live horror events that still honor the same handmade spirit that started it all. New titles like Bloodbath 3D and Kevin’s Revenge continue the lineage, offering a glimpse at where practical horror can go in a digital age.

For anyone who misses the feel of old-school splatter and monster craft, Worldparody Productions stands as proof that independent horror is not only alive but thriving. You can explore the studio’s work and its upcoming projects at https://worldparody.my.canva.site/ and see how one filmmaker has turned a lifelong obsession with horror into a 35-year career of practical mayhem.

Behind the Red Nose: The Cosmic Insanity Driving The Killer of Devils: Clowns

There’s a method to the madness in The Killer of Devils. As the clowns pile up and the bodies fall, it becomes clear that the face paint is more than a disguise — it’s a symptom. Of something older. Something spreading. Bloodstone weaves a layered mythology beneath the horror, hinting at cosmic dread and mental unraveling that goes far beyond the surface violence. The result is a book that’s as psychologically unnerving as it is action-packed — a rare balance, pulled off with expert control.

Synopsis

Calista “Cali” Lindquist is a final girl. She had to fight and destroy an unkillable beast. Now, she and her mother hunt monsters.

On a crusade to ensure no one else experiences such horror and loss, Cali and her mother travel to Philadelphia to track a depraved soul who uses face paints and magic tricks to prey on the innocent. While hunting that monster, they cross paths with Collin, a faithful and treacherous follower of the enigmatic figure, Master Poppie. Building an army using an insanity inducing powder that turns regular people into murderous lunatics with painted faces, Collin and Master Poppie have their sights set on a dangerous prize.

As the number of villainous clowns increases, as well as the number of brutal deaths by their hands, Cali puts herself directly in their path. Speeding on a collision course of terror and carnage, she is ready to pay any price to keep the streets from running red with the blood of unsuspecting victims. However, beyond the horde of bloodthirsty clowns, there is one factor that could derail Cali’s mission she never took into consideration – her past.

It’s monster hunter versus murder clowns in an all-out battle of madness and mayhem! 

“The Killer of Devils features mobs of psychotic clowns, a kick-clown-ass heroine, and enough bloody mayhem and dark humor to fill a shopping mall. I loved every crazy, twisted, f***ed-up word of it!”
SAWNEY HATTON, author of Everyone is a Moon

The Corroding by Ty Tracey – It’s escalating. It’s violent.

There’s darkness sweeping over all of us. Something sinister—undoubtedly there, but not quite prominent enough to put our collective finger on. The haunted and unusual have become commonplace, arriving within a newfound shadow that blankets the countryside in every direction. As time distorts, all that we are corrodes within its malevolent grasp. It’s escalating. It’s violent.

Continue reading The Corroding by Ty Tracey – It’s escalating. It’s violent.

BLOG TOUR! The Rose by PD Alleva! A Dystopian Science Fiction Thriller

The Rose Vol. 1: A Dystopian Science Fiction Thriller

“An action packed, no-holds-barred adventure with cinematic flair. Great for fans of Jeff VanderMeer’s Annihilation.” ~ Booklife Reviews

A masterful, dystopian science fiction thriller of telepathic evil greys, mysterious rebellion, martial arts, and Alien Vampires.

Sandy Cox believed WW3 was over. But for those Alien Vampires, war has just begun.

Forty-eight hours after a World War 3 treaty is signed Sandy Cox awakens in an underground compound unable to move. Tied to machines, she screams for help but no one answers. At least no one human.

And they’ve taken her unborn child. Continue reading BLOG TOUR! The Rose by PD Alleva! A Dystopian Science Fiction Thriller