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Horror Guy Keenan’s ‘Quarantine’ Review

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Earlier this week I had the chance to check out Sony Screen Gems’ Quarantine, which is now in theaters everywhere. For the first time in the eight years running this site, I found myself with a severe case of writer’s block, not because I couldn’t think of what to write, but because I felt like I had seen and reviewed the movie already. Almost exactly a year ago I saw the Spanish horror film [REC], which soon became to be the remake known as QUARANTINE. Being that the film is a shot-for-shot remake, I found it incredibly difficult to review again, although I think both films are quite effective. So, while we wait for an official review from David Harley, or Tex, inside you can check out a guest review from B-D’s Horror Guy Keenen. Write Your Own Reviews!….
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Tonight Bloody-Disgusting hosted a screening of QUARANTINE here in Orlando, Florida. David Harley and myself were on hand talking with fans of the BD podcast and getting their insight on their anticipation for the film. Most of the horror fans had already seen the film [REC] (the film QUARANTINE is a remake of) and were pretty much anticipating the same thing… only in English. The rest of the crowd showed up just wanting to get the pee scared out of them – and let me tell you, the ushers were definitely going to be working overtime tonight…

QUARANTINE follows a young reality TV show host named Angela Vidal (Jennifer Carpenter) and her cameraman Scott (Steve Harris) who are doing a show about people who work during the night while the rest of the world sleep (yeah, I wouldn’t watch it either). This particular episode takes them to the Los Angeles fire department where the crew hoping to get a fire has a pretty uneventful night, which is until a distress call comes in that takes them to an old apartment building in the city. A squad car is already on scene after getting reports that a blood-curdling scream was coming from one of the rooms. They soon learn that the old woman has been infected by something unknown and starts attacking them. After a few people are infected and the residents try to flee, they quickly find out that the building has been “quarantined” by the CDC. With the infection growing, there are few places to hide and time is running out.

Now for all you who don’t know, QUARANTINE is based on a Spanish film that was released in 2007 called [REC]. From what I am told, both of these films are pretty much scene for scene. Not wanting to spoil QUARANTINE, I made it a point not to see [REC] `til after I viewed this film.

The amazing thing about this movie is that the suspense never stops! Anywhere in this building someone can get you at any time. Even in the middle of a conversation in your bedroom something can scream and leap out of the shadows. You know this after the first half hour of the film and it frightens you till no end. The infected are not slow at all – in fact, they haul ass.

You can expect lots of shaky cam work because of the first person theme. This is one thing that kind of bugged me about the film. Don’t get me wrong, I’m all for the new handheld horror film craze that’s going around nowadays, but where [REC] used allot of wide angels to show the infected and what was going on, QUARANTINE uses way to many close ups. There are so many that a lot of them are out of focus and you cannot tell what is happening. And I get it, it’s more “realistic”, but on the big screen it does get kind of sickening after a while. I think CLOVERFIELD executed this much better than QUARANTINE.

One key element that I really enjoyed about this film was that there is no score… none whatsoever! There were no sound effects to build you up to the scares; you are just in a dark room with the characters when tragedy strikes. It’s funny reflecting on how much you rely on a score and sound effects to hold your hand through a film, but when it’s gone you almost feel helpless.

Even through all the good, some scenes are still pretty laughable, but I think they are meant to be this way to throw you off for future scares. The gore is pretty top notch from ripped muscle to bones sticking out – it’s all here.

The acting was not as bad as I thought it would be and the story is very solid. It keeps on with the excitement and scares with no end in sight. I have not seen a film in along time that has made my girlfriend almost break my hand from squeezing it so hard. It’s almost as if it’s a scare-o-meter.

It’s nice to finally see a scary film in theaters this year (I thought there was no hope for us). Though sadly, if you have already seen [REC] then you have already seen QUARANTINE. And if you have seen trailers for Quarantine, 50% of the main events that occur in the film have been spoiled for you. When will marketing learn…besides that, this film is one of the best this year.

8/10

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Home Video

‘Nightmare on Elm Street’ Collection 4K SteelBook Set Is Now Back in Stock on Amazon!

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It was almost one year ago that Warner Bros. brought the entire original A Nightmare on Elm Street franchise to 4K in one massive 7-movie collection, with the limited edition SteelBook version of the set quickly selling out and becoming highly sought after. But we’re happy to report tonight that the SteelBook set is currently back in stock over on Amazon!

While supplies last, grab the Elm Street SteelBook collection for $154.99 right now!!

Orders placed for this re-release are scheduled to begin shipping out September 15, 2026.

[Related] Freddy’s Back: New ‘A Nightmare on Elm Street’ Movie in the Works at Paramount

From New Line Cinema, the collection includes the original seven films – A Nightmare on Elm Street (1984), A Nightmare on Elm Street 2: Freddy’s Revenge (1985), A Nightmare on Elm Street 3: Dream Warriors (1987), A Nightmare on Elm Street 4: The Dream Master (1988), A Nightmare on Elm Street 5: The Dream Child (1989), Freddy’s Dead: The Final Nightmare (1991), and Wes Craven’s New Nightmare (1994) – along with the uncut versions of A Nightmare on Elm Street and The Dream Child.

Two BRAND NEW SPECIAL FEATURES for this set include:

  • Boiler Room Confessional: The king of slashers, Robert Englund, takes us on a journey through the dream world, sharing what inspired Freddy Krueger, his rise as a cultural icon, and the legacy of A Nightmare on Elm Street, plus his favorite kills, scenes, and more.
  • Freddy’s Footnotes: Robert Englund and original A Nightmare on Elm Street filmmakers revisit iconic scenes, revealing the movie magic and chaos behind our favorite nightmares. Pull back the curtain and relive epic moments through the eyes of those who made them.

Here’s the full breakdown of included Special Features for each movie…

A Nightmare on Elm Street

· Ready Freddy Focus Points

· Commentary with Wes Craven, Robert Englund, Heather Langenkamp, Ronee Blakley, Robert Shaye, and Sara Risher

· Commentary with Wes Craven, Heather Langenkamp, John Saxon, and Jacques Haitkin

· Alternate Endings – Scary Ending, Happy Ending, Freddy Ending

· The House that Freddy Built: The Legacy of New Line Horror

· Never Sleep Again: The Making of A Nightmare on Elm Street

· Night Terrors: The Origins of Wes Craven’s Nightmares

A Nightmare on Elm Street 2: Freddy’s Revenge

· Freddy on 8th Street

· Heroes and Villains

· The Male Witch

· Psychosexual Circus

A Nightmare on Elm Street 3: Dream Warriors

· Behind the Story: Burnout

· Behind the Story: Fan Mail

· Behind the Story: The House that Freddy Built

· Behind the Story: Onward Christian Soldiers

· Behind the Story: Snakes and Ladders

· Behind the Story: That’s Showbiz

· Behind the Story: Trading 8’s

· Dokken Dream Warriors Music Video

A Nightmare on Elm Street 4: The Dream Master

· The Finnish Line

· Krueger, Freddy Krueger

· Hopeless Chest

· Let’s Makeup

A Nightmare on Elm Street 5: The Dream Child

· Behind the Story: Womb Raiders

· Behind the Story: The Sticky Floor

· Behind the Story: Take the Stairs

· Behind the Story: Hopkins Directs

· Behind the Story: A Slight Miscalculation

Freddy’s Dead: The Final Nightmare

· 86’D

· Hellraiser

· Rachel’s Dream

· 3D Demise

Wes Craven’s New Nightmare

· Commentary with Wes Craven

· NEW – Boiler Room Confessional

· NEW – Freddy’s Footnotes

· Becoming a Filmmaker

· Filmmaker

· An Insane Troupe

· The Problem with Sequels

· Two Worlds

· Welcome to Prime Time: It Really Happened

· Welcome to Prime Time: A Childhood Memory

· Welcome to Prime Time: Sometime in the Early 80s

· Welcome to Prime Time: So It Began

· Welcome to Prime Time: Beauty and the Beast

· Welcome to Prime Time: Making the Glove

· Welcome to Prime Time: Shapeshifter

· Welcome to Prime Time: The Shoot

· Welcome to Prime Time: The Revolving Room

· Welcome to Prime Time: All’s Well that Ends Well

· Welcome to Prime Time: Talalay’s Tally

· Welcome to Prime Time: It Couldn’t Have Happened

· Welcome to Prime Time: Alternate Ending Version

· Conclusion: Where Gothic Plots Come From

· Conclusion: Why We Like Gothic

· Conclusion: Sadomasochism

· Conclusion: Freddy vs. Pinhead

· Conclusion: Freddy’s Manic Energy

· Conclusion: Creating Lasting Characters in Horror

· Conclusion: No More Magic Tricks

· Conclusion: Monster with Personality

· Conclusion: Freddy as Sex Machine

· Conclusion: Campfire Stories

The Elm Street collection is available in this collectible SteelBook packaging (exclusive to Amazon) and as a standard 4K collection that’s also available now over on Amazon.

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