Synopsis
A mysterious projectionist in abandoned movie house plays host to a young intruder and offers him the chance to watch four spine-tingling tales of terror on the big screen.
A mysterious projectionist in abandoned movie house plays host to a young intruder and offers him the chance to watch four spine-tingling tales of terror on the big screen.
The special effects throughout are quite good and the acting always gets the job done. If I were to criticize one thing about the whole it would be the runtime because two-and-a-half hours is a large commitment it cannot sustain.
Is there anything better than low-budget horror?
I mean, sure, the studios get things right on occasion. There's a few franchises that have captured my heart. I've been slashed to ecstacy, thrilled to chills, and absolutely horrified by the big budget folks once in a while.
But, seriously. There's nothing I love more than sitting down with a good old-fashioned low-budget, indie spirited project and letting it absolutely take me away.
This is what happens with Tom Ryan's latest indie horror anthology Return to the Theatre of Horror, a four-short horror anthology that captivates, creeps, chills, and makes me anxiously giggle my way through 2-1/2 hours of all the stuff I really love about horror.
In the anthology, Ryan himself…