Tag Archives: horror

We’re Alive

By: Daniel Kendle

*Note: The following story is a work of horror. It contains graphic imagery, and depictions of violence including self harm.

Vines coiled. Leaves flitted. The world was at pause, yet the jungle roared in praise at its newest creation: the very thing I watched in horror from across the garden sanctum.

It was tall, with the body shape of an average man, yet constructed from what looked like peat and various flora mashed together in an unholy amalgamation of death, one that looked an astral god in the eyes with malice. It was slightly bent, the bark and mud groaning from their new roles. It was a monster. It was alive.

My clothes, no longer splendid and clean from the garden’s chaotic innards, looked like rags compared to the creature’s rake-like claws. Huge and strong, they were the type of things one would expect out of an extinct animal, something ancient in look and primal in sound. Yet here we were, watching one another from opposite ends of the glass facility. What was once a folk story was real, breathing, eyes twitching. It was silent, but internally I could feel it screaming, hissing in a rage that could only emanate from a beast burdened by the eventual stroll of time.

It took a step forward. Plants rattled and shuffled, the flytraps adorning its left shoulder – or what could be seen as one – contorted ever so slightly. They were the creatures voices, part of a hive mind.

I was in a state of paradoxical stasis. I was afraid, like I imagined anyone would’ve been, yet I was also entranced. Delusioned, yes, but nonetheless intrigued by the immortal shape that skulked towards me. It was halfway across the garden’s square by now, its chrysalis now resembling a broken egg.

It reached me. Spores danced like angels in the aether. We stood, only feet away from each other, trying to make out what the other’s intentions were. Mine were of fearful lust. Their intentions, meanwhile, were something beyond this world’s mortal coil. Something beyond my stupid brain of a mangy ape.

I finally stepped back, then ran.

I didn’t leave my apartment for a couple of weeks. My fridge was full, but my stomach wasn’t. I couldn’t think straight, talk right, move like the hedonistic wretch I used to be a month ago. The monster plagued my mind. It was as if a demon had burrowed into my throat, then my stomach, and then my lungs. I wanted it out.

But even after a few hours, the feeling wasn’t gone, that emotion that called from inside me like a bat rising out of Hell. The fictitious demon continued to coil around me, its snaking body squeezing my neck like a python. I wanted to vomit in retort, but my lame throat forbade it. I curled up on the couch, breathing heavily. I finally tried to sleep.

In my trance of anguish, I found again that sensual desire from my encounter with the creature. I was stunned at this rediscovery, and blushed. For the first time since that fateful night I smiled, bashful. I imagined the creature, now not under the umbrella of fear, but under one of compassion. This umbrella was one of lust, of an attraction towards this false human.

Just before entering my tired paralysis, I toyed with the creature and I like dolls in a house. I could imagine their thick vines and bark claws raking across my face. Embraced in celestial love, I dreamed of us together. I wanted, needed their touch. Why, in that moment I could almost picture the pair of us in their nighttime world again, vines allaying my worries as they ensnared my naked skin…

My world was slowly becoming one of flora and fungi. My cat was slowly morphing into a tiger; a beast that wanted to eat me alive. Its cries rang out through my concrete jungle, thick and drenched with sweat.

My mind was blotted with an incurable smog. The end was before me. Time was no longer on my side.

Days later, my fingernails were on the bathroom floor. Blood was shed, as were tears. They reminded me of its eyes: apricot, with hints of deep coral pink littered around the edges. The difference was red strewn about my hands – and the wall.

I wanted to scream. This apparition lurking inside me hadn’t left. The thing in the garden was the only thing keeping me sane, though at this point my love for it had blossomed, for lack of a better term. A name had been endowed onto it. I didn’t just crave it anymore; my faith in it had reached its climax. It was now less of a physical want, but instead a psychological fix that festered in me.

A parasite.

I bashed my head against the wall. My cat scratched at the door in a desperate attempt to calm me. It was an intrusion, and in response I continued bashing. Bashing and crashing and bashing until…

Red.
Blood.
Relief.
I was panting, smiling. For a moment, the parasite left me, abandoning my vessel that had become polluted with the deranged clouds of the deceased. Smoke filled my lungs. Acid filled my gullet. My brain was like a hurricane that had subsided, only to return in a new form.

The cat was becoming a distraction.

Desire balled up inside me. That longing for demise, that need for the creature ate me alive like animals to rancid meat. I was that meat. I needed to die by their hand.

My hands were laughing at me, snickering at me, jackals basking in the glow of a kill. My knife joined them. My blood joined them. My cat joined them.

The garden was my fix. My mind couldn’t take it anymore; I needed to return. By crawling across my apartment to the door, grabbing my coat and wrapping it loosely around my ragged body. I stood up, bent at the knees, joints knocked together, and left my home.

The walk was quick, even though it took a half hour. I couldn’t remember much after; my blurred vision made seeing difficult, memory impossible. Humans and humans walked past me, some staring, others more direct in their traveling. I was like a lost ship at sea, until I found my lighthouse.

The park where I’d found the garden was just ahead of me, who was flailing in desperation at the sight. I sprinted – or “hobbled,” to be accurate – towards a thicket near the eastern quadrant of the fields. There it was: a bramble of shrubbery that stretched high above the oak and aspen trees, a cloud of doom. My sanctuary.

I tore through the vegetation. My stumps of hands bled out once again, but at this point my mind was dulled enough to barely notice. My brain, burdened with evolution, was escaping its chains and about to be set free.

Breaking through the final wall of foliage revealed the garden once again. The same chain-link fence, derelict gate…it all came back to me. I ran into the sanctum a moment later.

It was relatively-simple finding my way through the garden again. A left, right, two lefts, then straight. The dead architects had done well in the maze’s design.

Finally I ran into the square. It was night again; the sky’s complexion was almost identical to the fateful night weeks before – just like the monster’s.

It rose. Bark snapped against other bark; vines knotted around other vines. An air of dread was exhaled by its green, meat-hungry servants. The beauty ascended, slathered in a coat of moss and love. I felt weak. The monster was awake.

My hands were fighting at my sides. I couldn’t take it anymore. I rushed towards it, tears streaming down my cheeks, demons roaring in raucous excitement. I leapt towards it, hands outstretched, body wide.

As my life was sucked away, I began to resist. The vines around me began to prick my skin, and the leaves sliced through flesh. I struggled a bit, my mind free. The parasite was gone, only now, I was too. I began to scream; the forest as well. For once, the monster let out a cry of anger, of rage. It shrieked, desperate for me as I was once for it. We struggled for a moment, a cage of bones starting to encircle me. Now that I was with it again, the world had changed. The body of a human gave way to a thinly-veiled structure of mud and dirt. Thinking jaws of flytraps wilted, alongside the rest of its body.

The pair of us were sinking, down, down, into the soil below. I yelled, hoping someone special would hear and be my ally. In the moment, I felt that recollection of consciousness. My vision sharpened, and my trance was broken. I was alive again, the monster dead.

Embraced in eternal love and death, the plants and I sank into the Earth, silent as the forest night.

‘Frozen’ (2010) movie review

By: Sophia Elmstrom & Lily Sheldon

*Warning: this review contains spoilers

This title may sound misleading, but this is not what you think this is. The movie ‘Frozen’ is a psychological horror made in 2010. It was directed by Adam Green, and stars Shawn Ashmore, Kevin Zegers, and Emma Bell. ‘Frozen’ is rated R and is very violent. This movie would not be suitable for young people or if you get grossed out easily.

Here’s a rundown of the plot. ‘Frozen’ features two young men, Dan and Joe, and a young woman, Parker. Parker and Dan are dating and Joe and Dan are best friends. The three decide to go to a ski resort to enjoy a day on the slopes. On the night of their last day, the friends convince the ski lift operator to let them on the lift for one last run down the mountain. The operator went on break and a new guy came to take his place. The operator told the new guy that there were still 3 skiers who needed to come down. The second operator mistakes 3 mingling skiers for Dan, Parker, and Joe and he shuts down the chairlift, leaving the 3 friends trapped. To make matters worse, the ski resort was closed for the whole weekend.

The friends start to get worried and realize they will be there for the whole night if not the whole weekend. The 3 call out for help, and they see a snow plow arrive under them, but it fails to notice the stranded group on the lift. The group realizes they are going to have to find a way down the mountain.

Dan jumps off the lift in an attempt to get help, and breaks his legs once he realizes how far down it really was. With Dan now unable to move, Parker and Joe try to find a way down to help him. A pack of wolves soon arrive and Joe and Parker are unable to help him, so they have to listen helplessly as their friend gets torn apart by the wolves.

The next morning, Joe tries climbing on the chairlift cable to find a way down. He makes it to the support pole and climbs down. The wolves come back but he fights them off with a ski pole. Joe slides down the mountain on Dan’s snowboard, but the wolves follow.

Now Parker is alone on the ski lift, and she tries to escape by getting to the support pole. As she stands up on the chair, the bolts disconnect and the lift falls a little, and now is hanging on by a single wire. Parker jumps off and is able to take the fall, but the lift then falls on her ankle. Parker pries the chair off her foot, and crawls down the mountain to find help. She gets to the street and flags down a car to take her to the hospital. Parker is relieved to finally be rescued and to get home safely.

This movie received a 63% from Rotten Tomatoes and a 6.5/10 from IMDB. We believe this is way too high of a rating and think that this movie was truly very bad. Many people say it reminds them of a movie they have seen before, ‘Fall’. We have seen this movie and agree that it is very similar, almost like they copied the plot of ‘Fall’ which follows two girls who get stuck on a telephone pole. Many other reviewers rate this movie 5 stars out of 5 and say they loved the movie. This movie was too gory for our liking and was just a bad plot line. Although it was very psychological and kept us wondering the entire movie we just do not get why people gave it such high ratings.

Overall, we rate this movie a 2/10 because the plot was boring and way too violent with many scenes involving very descriptive noises and images. We disagree with all of these ratings and we do not understand why people liked this movie so much. You can watch ‘Frozen’ on Prime Video.

The upcoming ‘Re:animal’ game

By: Julia Yang

Warning: This game will contain extreme gore, discomfort, breaking bones, bodies moving in unnatural ways, disturbing noises, and a variety of horror elements. This is a horror game being created for mature audiences.

Some may know about the ‘Little Nightmares’ franchise, but what if I told you that the same company was planning to make an even more terrifying, gory, unsettling, horrifying game?

This game I’m talking about is called ‘Re:animal’. Not much is known about this game as it just began its pre-alpha phase in August, but everyone who knows about it is absolutely psyched. ‘Re:animal’ takes the scary factors of ‘Little Nightmares’ and enhances them ten fold. ‘Little Nightmares’ was targeted to teens, so gore and terrifying stuff like that wasn’t really allowed, but ‘Re:animal’ is targeted to more mature audiences who are able to take that kind of horror.

In ‘Re:animal’ you play as a little girl— or a little boy! This game is co-op! You can be scared out of your mind with a friend, how thoughtful of them.

The story we know so far about the game is that you reside in an orphanage with all of your friends, but the orphanage— and overall world it seems like, is populated by monstrous animals. Animals like pigs with their guts hanging out, sheep with unnaturally long necks and legs like a spider, even possibly humanoids with animals for heads! Your goal seems to be to escape this dreadful area with all of your friends and make it out alive.

As I said before, this game isn’t holding back, unlike ‘Little Nightmares’. If you’re looking for a gory and disturbing game to look forward to, then ‘Re:animal’ is the game you’re looking for!

This game has not gotten any more news besides what I have said in this article, including the release date. Like I said, this game is still in its pre-alpha phase, so it will be a long while before it’s released to the public officially!

Soon, you’ll find it on the PlayStation 5, Microsoft Windows, Xbox Series X and Series S.

Announcement Trailer:

https://youtu.be/mUymvhAXOnM?si=BmJI_LInL4rkwOPn

10 minutes of Pre-alpha gameplay:

https://youtu.be/ou9THu2g3I4?si=jYJFABAppG2cJjKp

Halloween movie/show recommendations

By: Beverly Stinson


My favorite holiday of the year is coming up and I’d love to share some of my favorite horror/Halloween movies and shows to binge-watch on Halloween or during October.

I’m someone who struggles to find good horror media to watch so I find things like this useful when I need something to watch.


  1. The Scream Franchise

The Scream Franchise is one of the most popular horror series ever. I’d say most people have seen at least one of the movies before. I didn’t become a fan until early 2023 and I became obsessed very quickly.

The franchise is good to watch if you love a continuous story and if you love Horror comedies. It’s also good for people like me who love a good slasher but without a ton of gore.

But even though it’s a good series to watch in full I’d recommend specifically ‘Scream’ (the original), ‘Scream 5’ (also labeled as just ‘Scream’) and ‘Scream 6’. You don’t really need all the lore from the other 3 movies to understand the plot of ‘Scream 5’ and 6 as they focus more on new characters.

‘Scream 6’ is my favorite movie, and compared to all the other movies there are more gory scenes but not too bad. There’s also ‘Scream’ the TV series which is not the same as the movies at all and it’s also incredibly gory. So, if you like gore then the show is where you wanna go.

Where you can watch:

‘Scream’ 1-4 (R): Max

‘Scream’ 5-6 (R): Paramount+

‘Scream’ show (Mature): you can rent it on YouTube or Amazon Prime


  1. ‘The Boy’

‘The Boy’ (PG-13) is a very underrated movie but it’s one of my favorites. I do feel like it takes a certain type of person to like it. It’s a very slow-paced movie which is something that usually draws people away, but to me, the slow aspect of it makes the ending even more unsettling.

In my opinion, it’s not very scary, it’s more just suspenseful. It doesn’t have any gore or really any blood. The storyline is so interesting and to me it’s unique. And since a lot of people probably haven’t heard about it, I’ll give a short summary.

It’s about an American woman traveling to the UK to babysit a boy from a rich family, but when she gets to the house, she learns that the child she’s babysitting is actually a lifesize porcelain doll.

Again, it’s one of my favorite movies, though I knew the twist before watching it so it wasn’t much of a surprise.

Where to watch: Hulu & Paramount+


  1. ‘Totally Killer’

‘Totally Killer’ (R) is a fairly new movie to the slasher scene so most likely a lot of you haven’t seen it. When I heard about this movie I expected to like it and I really did.

It’s a horror comedy but to me it’s more just a comedy.

It’s about a girl in 2023 who goes back in time to the ’80s to stop a series of killings and save her mother. It’s such a fun movie honestly; it references other slasher movies including ‘Scream’.

There is one part of the movie that annoys me which is the main character trying to make the characters understand things that people in the ’80s don’t understand; it’s just a little pet peeve throughout the movie.

I love the plot so much, it’s literally ‘Back to the Future’ mixed with a slasher, but another thing I don’t like is the ending. I feel like it was so unnecessary.

But anyway, it has a good amount of gore for a slasher and will definitely make you laugh.

Where to watch: Prime


  1. ‘Lisa Frankenstein’

‘Lisa Frankenstein’ (R) was a movie I was looking forward to when it was announced, I already knew it would be something I like.

It’s a Horror comedy as well as a romance. It’s about a teenage girl who accidentally raises a man from the dead and they begin to collect body parts to piece the man back together all while Lisa is trying to gain the attention of a boy she likes.

It’s such a good movie all the way through, it’s so hilarious and has a good ending. It has a small amount of gore as there’s dismembered body parts shown but it’s not really bad. I really love the ‘Frankenstein’ take on a slasher movie; I’d say it’s a pretty unique movie. It also is a pretty good love story.

Where to watch: Amazon Prime


  1. ‘Supernatural’

‘Supernatural’ (TV-14) is a pretty popular show I’d say; it has 15 seasons so it’s definitely not a watch it in one day kind of show.

It’s about two brothers who are demon hunters and they go around doing just that. The first two seasons are mostly different plots for every episode but then it starts to have a main thing going on around the 3rd season.

It showcases a lot of different monsters, demons, and ghosts throughout the entire show. I’d say it’s not that gory for most of the episodes but there are some bad ones.

It’s also mainly a horror/comedy I think.

Where to watch: Netflix


  1. ‘Buffy The Vampire Slayer’

‘Buffy the Vampire Slayer’ (TV-14) is another one I’d say is pretty popular or was more popular when it was streaming. It’s one of my favorite shows, especially because it’s mainly about vampires.

It’s about a girl who has been chosen to be a “Slayer” which basically means she has this supernatural strength to use to fight monsters, especially vampires. It’s another show that has a different plot every episode with different monsters but it also has a main plot pretty much every season, in which there are 7.

It’s a drama but it definitely gives a Horror/comedy feeling, which obviously I love Horror/comedy if you couldn’t tell.

And this show gives me the most Halloween feeling out of all the recommendations.

Where to watch: Hulu


Some other good things to watch would be:

  1. The X trilogy
  2. ‘The Vampire Diaries’/’The Originals’
  3. ‘The Winchesters’ (Spin-off of ‘Supernatural’)
  4. ‘My Babysitters a Vampire’
  5. ‘Beetlejuice’
  6. ‘The Craft’

Those are all my recommendations. I really love all the movies and shows in this article and I hope it gives you a sense of some things to watch during the Halloween season.

  • Beverly

‘Lethal Company’: Probably the best co-op game to date

By: Julia Yang

Warning: this game includes spiders, jumpscares, creepy sounds, and many other horror elements.

Fun fact: ‘Lethal Company’ is one of the most positively rated games on Steam. It’s currently in the top 24 of most positively rated, and was the top rated new release game of 2023.

‘Lethal Company’ is a game where you and your chosen buddies are hired by a pretty hazardous company— some might even say lethal— where you’re tasked to land on a variety of moons in outer space to collect scrap for money to meet the assigned quota. Upon entering the main building containing said scraps, little did they tell you that the moons are infested with monsters, creatures, and creepy crawlers that will almost never hesitate to kill you on sight. You’ll encounter a variety of beings like large spiders, a nutcracker with a shotgun, a totally innocent butler, and even deadly blue goo!

Fail to collect the money needed to meet the given quota, and you’ll be blasted off into space. Do whatever it takes to get the scraps you need. Or don’t. I’m not here to tell you how to play the game.

This game truly is the best horror game to play with your friends and family — if you’re not too scared of course. Despite how the game graphics look, ‘Lethal Company’ delivers some of the most terrifying scares of all time.

This game includes voice proximity, meaning if two players are close then you’ll hear each other, but the further away, the quieter you are. Proximity chat makes any game immediately 10x funnier and scarier with the right moments. You’ll be collecting scraps for the quota and then you’ll hear your friend screaming for their lives in the background, it’s hilarious.

What makes ‘Lethal Company’ so good I believe is the overall multiplayer horror factor and the hilarious moments that come out of it. You see, ‘Lethal Company’ is so terrifying that your friends can’t help but laugh at your demise. I will say, this game may not be the best of games to help bond, but man does it get your adrenaline going.

Yet again, another factor that makes this game so awesome really doesn’t come from the game itself, but its fans. Mods. The mods made for ‘Lethal Company’ are so fun, one of my personal favorites is the “Skinwalker” mod.

This mod basically takes voice snippets of you and every other active player and makes it so the monsters can use you or other players’ voices to lure players to their doom. You don’t understand true fear until you hear a dead player’s voice call out to you.

There are an unbelievable amount of mods to make ‘Lethal Company’ even better than it already is which immediately bumps up the rating once again.

The title may look to be biased, but I haven’t actually played the game myself and many across the globe can agree with it. Honestly, if you want to find out what the hype about this game is because I can’t explain what makes it so good that well, then be my guest; the game is $9.99, only found on Steam.

One last fact: This game is completely made up, developed, coded, modeled, and sound designed by one person.