The Cinema Snob celebrates the new year by finally checking out the 1980 New Years Eve horror film Terror Train, starring Jamie Lee Curtis.
The Cinema Snob checks out the first in the It's Alive series, directed by the great Larry Cohen.
The Cinema Snob reviews Larry Cohen's 1978 sequel to It's Alive, It Lives Again.
Larry Cohen's It's Alive Trilogy is complete with this 1987 sequel starring Michael Moriarty and Karen Black.
Before the release of the remake, The Cinema Snob reviews the 1989 Patrick Swayze action flick, Road House.
The Cinema Snob reviews David Lynch's 1984 adaptation of Frank Herbert's Dune.
The Cinema Snob reviews the 1978 sequel to The Omen, starring William Holden and Lee Grant.
The Cinema Snob reviews the 2009 direct to video remake of It's Alive.
Warwick Davis returns as the Leprechaun, but not in the way you think, as this time it's in a 1998 family film produced by Roger Corman! The Cinema Snob reviews this direct to video comedy.
The Cinema Snob reviews the 2008 direct to video remake of the 1986 horror comedy April Fool's Day.
It's Easter, which means time to scroll through the long list of VOD Easter themed horror movies, and this time The Cinema Snob reviews one from the company behind Winnie the Pooh: Blood and Honey.
1962 gives us the reinvention of the spy genre and ground breaking desert epics, but most importantly, the skin flicks start experimenting in other genres, and nearly every other picture literally picks a slap to the face. Join on The Cinema Snob on his journey through 1962 in Film.
In the tradition of Like Wow, now a pet shop owner can turn into animals if he wants to check out the ladies in the neighborhood.
The Cinema Snob tackles episode 11 of Tequila & Bonetti, where a corrupt reporter sets his sights on our heroes.
The Cinema Snob reviews Bob Clark's comedy Porky's, one of the biggest box office hits of 1982!
After years on the episode polls, The Cinema Snob finally reviews this 1979 romcom starring Susan Sarandon and David Steinberg.