Looking back at one of the most brilliantly subversive horror films of the 1930s.

Looking back at one of the most brilliantly subversive horror films of the 1930s.
A deliciously ghoulish album from the golden age of trading cards and sticker collections.
A collection of frightful TV Guide ads for spooky specials, creepy cartoons and monstrous movie all-niters.
In the outlandish and fantastical world of the superhero comic, it should come as no surprise that little is off-limits, even a foray into gothic and literary horror.
The short-lived effort by the British censors to give “morbid and horrible” films their own restrictive adults-only category.
Looking back at one of the great lost figures of classic horror cinema.
Your Reprobate editor’s first encounter with the great man while filming a Wicker Man documentary.
In its centenary year, we take a critical look back at the first Dracula film and the movie that kickstarted gothic horror as we know it.
The kerfuffle over the famous comedian’s return to UK TV.
For easy reference, here is a handy checklist of all of our Hammer movie features. Dig in and enjoy this series of hot takes, rambling discussions and sensational photo galleries about the classic films from the legendary British studio.
Our Hammer Films retrospective continues with a look at a classic vinyl horror story, with Christopher Lee making his final Dracula appearance for the company.
A remarkably low-rent toy series aimed at horror-obsessed Seventies kids.