This week’s Creepshow delivers karmic justice to a pair of spoiled rotten characters – in the most horrific ways possible.
Author: Michael Cook
“Doctor Who: Once and Future” comes to an end with a pair of thrilling episodes – ones that finally make use of the series’ central premise.
Season four of Creepshow continues with a collection of darkly absurd, viscerally upsetting, and wholly horrific stories. Chillingly perfect.
“Gallifrey: War Room: Manoeuvres” is a thrilling listen that’s packed with tension, intrigue, and plenty of backstabbing deception.
“Creepshow” returns with a duo of stories all about the pains of grief and regret. They’re horrific, absurd, and wholly delightful.
Doctor Who’s multimedia event, Doom’s Day, comes to an end with “Dying Hours”. It’s an enjoyable enough anthology with uneven execution.
Terry Miles’ “The Quiet Room” is a tense, mind-bending, page-turner of a mystery that’s equal parts thrilling and frustrating.
In season three of “Chucky”, Chucky sets his sights on the White House in a season full of mystery, tension, and utter absurdity.
Season two of SYFY’s “SurrealEstate” gets started with a bang. Bigger, scarier, and more focused than ever before. A perfect Halloween watch.
James Tynion IV and Michael Avon Oeming’s “Blue Book: 1961” faithfully retells Betty and Barney Hill’s story.