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Paramount+ Peak Screaming: Here’s All the Horror You Can Watch on Paramount+ This Halloween

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The Paramount+ Peak Screaming collection returns to the service today with a broad and popular lineup of chills and thrills for audiences to enjoy this Halloween season.

The updated collection features more than 400 fan-favorite horror movies, series and episodes. The seasonal spooktacular also will include the debut of BARGAIN (Thursday, October 5), a festival award-winning South Korean dystopian thriller series; the premiere of PET SEMATARY: BLOODLINES (Friday, October 6), a horror film based on the never-before-told chapter from the novel Pet Sematary; and the release of MONSTER HIGH 2 (Thursday, October 5), the sequel to the hit musical film inspired by the beloved children’s toy line.

The Halloween-themed content on Paramount+ can be streamed here

From child-sized scares to pulse-pounding terrors, the Peak Screaming collection connects each member of the household with bespoke frights from more than 25 expertly curated carousels. New and returning subgenres include “Flash Frights: 90 Minutes or Less,” “True & Terrifying,” “ExtraTerrorestrial,” “Based on BOOks” and more, such as the following:

  • Big Screen’s Big Screams: Blockbuster hits, such as Scream VISmileParanormal ActivityMother! and Orphan: First Kill
  • Slash Hits: Spine-chilling slashers, such as Pearl*Halloween VI: The Curse of Michael Myers*X* and Scream (1995)
  • Horror Heroines: Iconic films and series, featuring scream queens, such as A Quiet PlaceA Quiet Place Part II, YELLOWJACKETS* and 10 Cloverfield Lane
  • Supernatural Scares: Otherworldly oddities with The Ring (2002), The Grudge (2004), The Blair Witch Project and Pet Sematary (2019)
  • Family Fright Night: Family favorites and kids titles, such as The Addams Family (1991 and 2019), Monster High: The MovieLemony Snicket’s A Series of Unfortunate Events and A Really Haunted Loud House, which debuts on the service within collection on Thursday, September 28
  • Coming of Rage: High-school horrors like TEEN WOLF: THE MOVIE, WOLF PACK, SCHOOL SPIRITS, Teeth*, Firestarter and My Dead Ex  
  • Critically Acclaimed: Praised scares, such as Arrival, District 9Rosemary’s Baby*, Annihilation and Suspiria (1977)*
  • Creature Features: Monsters take center stage in iconic films, such as King Kong (1976), Cloverfield*, Crawl and Congo*
  • A24 Horror: Peak A24 thrillers, such as Midsommar*Bodies Bodies Bodies*, The Killing of a Sacred Deer* and Men*
  • Costume Goals: Cosplay contenders, such as Dungeons & Dragons: Honor Among Thieves, Transformers: Rise of the Beasts, Top Gun: Maverick, Sonic 2, STAR TREK: STRANGE NEW WORLDS, TEENAGE MUTANT NINJA TURTLES: MUTANT MAYHEM and Babylon 
  • Halloween Nickstalgia: Nostalgic episodes from Nickelodeon favorites, including SpongeBob SquarePants, Hey Arnold!, Rugrats (1991), iCarly (2007) and Aaahh!!! Real Monsters
  • Suspenseful Series: Darkly captivating seasons of EVIL, Criminal Minds, The Twilight Zone, DEXTER* and TWIN PEAKS: THE RETURN*
  • International Horror: Terrors from around the globe with Train to Busan*, The Host*, Death’s Roulette and Curandero

Paramount+ also will be the streaming home to CBS’ seasonal content, including the first-ever Big Brother primetime Halloween episode on October 31**; a wrestling-themed Halloween episode on The Price Is Right on October 31**; and a spooky celebration on Let’s Make a Deal on October 31**. 

This season, the Peak Screaming offering will come to life with the first-ever Paramount+ Peak Screaming-themed celebration at the Javits Center Saturday, October 14, from 8 p.m. – 11 p.m., exclusively to New York Comic Con badge holders.

In addition, Paramount+ will present The Haunted Lodge, an immersive, pop-up Halloween experience, riddled with some of the scariest films and series from Paramount+. Visitors can step inside their favorite shows and movies, from SpongeBob SquarePants to YELLOWJACKETS to PET SEMATARY: BLOODLINES at The Haunted Lodge inside the Westfield Century City mall from October 27-29.

The Peak Screaming collection is available to stream now!

* Title is available to Paramount+ with SHOWTIME plan subscribers.

**All Paramount+ with SHOWTIME subscribers can live stream CBS titles via the live feed on Paramount+. Those titles will be available on demand to all subscribers the day after they air live.

Writer in the horror community since 2008. Editor in Chief of Bloody Disgusting. Owns Eli Roth's prop corpse from Piranha 3D. Has four awesome cats. Still plays with toys.

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‘Cemetery Man’ 4K Ultra HD Review – 1990s Italian Horror Gem Shines in New Severin Release

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Despite being hailed by Martin Scorsese as one of the best Italian films of the 1990s, Cemetery Man is criminally underseen. Also known as Dellamorte Dellamore, the 1994 cult classic has been hard to come by in the US since Anchor Bay’s 2006 DVD went out of print, but Severin Films has revived it with a 4K Ultra HD + Blu-ray edition.

Dario Argento protégé Michele Soavi directs from a script by Gianni Romoli, based on the 1991 novel Dellamorte Dellamore by Tiziano Sclavi itself a precursor to Sclavi’s influential Italian horror comic Dylan Dog. Rupert Everett (My Best Friend’s Wedding), on whom the Dylan Dog character was visually based, takes on the lead role as Francesco Dellamorte.

As he explains in the noir-esque opening narration, Dellamorte is the watchman for a small town cemetery wherein “some people, on the seventh night after their death, come back to life.” He and his slow-witted but genial assistant, Gnaghi (François Hadji-Lazaro), are tasked with stopping the so-called returners by splitting open their heads.

While there is somewhat of an overarching narrative involving Dellamorte’s enamorment with a mourning widow (Anna Falchi), the manner in which subplots are introduced and resolved give the film an episodic structure. The collection of ghoulish misadventures range from undead boy scouts, bikers and nuns to a murderous descent into madness.

Soavi clearly took heed of Argento’s visual acumen while serving under the master of horror on the likes of Tenebrae, Phenomena, and Opera. Working with cinematographer Mauro Marchetti, production designer Massimo Antonello Geleng (Cannibal Holocaust, City of the Living Dead), and special effects artist Sergio Stivaletti (Phenomena, Demons), Soavi marries the beautiful and the macabre in every stylish frame.

Comedy is the other predominant factor in the equation. Dellamorte possesses Army of Darkness-era Ash swagger as he disposes of not-quite-zombies, but Soavi’s European sense of humor is more dry than Sam Raimi’s signature style. Soavi is not above splatstick, but it never undercuts the carefully crafted Gothic atmosphere. The blend of horror, comedy, and romance is as masterful as Shaun of the Dead, but it’s decidedly hornier. A hint of nightmarish surreality akin to Phantasm helps to balance the tonal tightrope act.

Cemetery Man has been scanned in 4K from the Cinecittà Studios negative, approved by Soavi, with Dolby Vision. It features English Dolby Atmos, 5.1, and Stereo sound options, in addition to a Stereo Italian dub. Severin’s transcendent efforts are apparent from the FBI warning that precedes the disc menu, which is interrupted by the film’s floating balls of light. The picture is ravishing no matter the format, but the restoration is so clear that previously imperceptible strings used to puppet some of the effects are now visible.

Soavi, Everett, and Falchi sit down for new interviews totaling nearly 80 minutes. They’re not meandering, career-spanning conversations; each key player offers a deep dive into the film. Soavi details the film’s origin, capturing its unique atmosphere, and how the poetic conclusion came to be at the last minute. Everett recalls his excitement to take on the role and work in Italian cinema and expresses his pride in the film. Falchi details her three roles in the film, including the extensive makeup process.

A thorough, archival audio commentary by Soavi and Romoli is presented in Italian with English subtitles. The creatives examine how they got involved in the project, adapting the source material, how they pulled off in-camera effects, and budgetary limitations, among other topics. An archival making-of featurette, featuring some great behind-the-scenes effects footage along with cast and crew interviews, rounds out the extras.

For the mega-fan, Severin Films offers a limited edition set that includes an additional Blu-ray disc with eight more interviews (Romoli, Marchetti, Stivaletti, actors Fabiana Formica and Stefano Masciarelli, composer Riccardo Biseo, set designer Antonello Geleng, and film historian Alan Jones) and trailers, a soundtrack CD, a booklet written by horror scholar Claire Donner, and an exclusive slipcase.

Despite his horror output being limited to a mere four films (although he remains active in Italian television), Soavi is worthy of being in conversation with Italian maestros like Argento, Lucio Fulci, and Mario Bava. His auspicious earlier efforts 1987’s StageFright, 1989’s The Church, and 1991’s The Sect built toward Cemetery Man, a crowning achievement that continues to endure after 30 years.

Cemetery Man is available on 4K UHD + Blu-ray now.

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