The Photo of Ellen Hammell
Jamie Evans shares one of the British horror moments that terrifies and thrills him the most – the infamous ghostly photo of Ellen Hammell…
Here is where you’ll find all the British horror writing that doesn’t quite fit snugly under one style. It may feature British horror films but not be explicitly about them, or it may reference a particular British horror television programme while being about something else entirely. In short, this is where the other stuff lives. And it’s really good…
Jamie Evans shares one of the British horror moments that terrifies and thrills him the most – the infamous ghostly photo of Ellen Hammell…
In the first of a new regular column looking back at the singular weirdness of the 1990s, Graham Williamson explores Roger Corman’s takeover of BBC Two from December 1994 to bring us Weird Night. Welcome to Weird ’90s…
The final of three essays by K B Morris on occult writer Dennis Wheatley explores Hammer Productions’ final ’70s horror film, To the Devil… a Daughter, loosely adapted from Wheatley’s novel…
Andy Roberts explores the hotly-anticipated full-motion video game, Ghosts – the latest project from HOST co-creator, Jed Shepherd…
Joe Howsin interviews the author Edward Parnell about his 2019 book, Ghostland, a haunting meditation on the ghost story, weird fiction in British film, television and literature, and a personal reflection on grief and loss…
Alexander J. Zawacki explores the hauntological majesty of Ghost Box Recordings, and becomes immersed in music both familiar and strange…
Chris Andrews discusses the resurgence of folk horror, its origins, and the notion of a ‘yearning for the past’ in a modern context…
The second in a series of essays by K B Morris on the occult writer Dennis Wheatley explores his novel, The Devil Rides Out, and the making of one of the truly great films in Hammer Productions’ oeuvre…
Ellis Reed interviews Ash Pryce, the Edinburgh-based mentalist and spooky magician, about horror, the festival, and his own work on stage…
Andrew Roberts revisits an old PlayStation classic from a British developer and wonders whether the dated FPS format and low poly graphics of Alien Trilogy still have the charm…