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The images were taken within 15–30 minutes of each other by an inmate inside Auschwitz-Birkenau, the extermination camp within the Auschwitz complex. Usually named only as Alex, a Jewish prisoner from Greece, the photographer was a member of the Sonderkommando , inmates forced to work in and around the gas chambers.
The film was re-titled after it was discovered that Paramount Pictures had a slasher film of the same name scheduled for release that same year. Slaughter High was given a limited theatrical release in the United States on November 14, 1986. The release expanded over the following months, and the film continued to screen through the spring of 1987.
Slaughter received negative reviews. Joshua Siebalt of Dread Central rated the film 0.5/5 stars and called it "the single most boring film I have ever seen on the big screen from any genre." [4] Dennis Harvey of Variety wrote that the film tests horror fans' patience with its long buildup, but the climax is grisly enough to satisfy them. [5]
Mary Beth McAndrews, the editor-in-chief of horror movie news site Dread Central, as well as a critic who often writes about the portrayal of women in horror, says it is a perfect genre to bring ...
In Crimson Peak, a young woman named Edith falls for a handsome man named Sir Thomas Sharpe. Edith assumes things are going well when Sharpe invites her to his mansion in the English countryside ...
As Kuchisake-onna leaves with Mika, Mika knocks her mask off, revealing the woman's disfigured face. At school, Noboru shows Kyōko a thirty-year-old photograph of a woman who looks like Kuchisake-onna. Noboru hears the voice again and traces it to a house, and he and Kyōko save a boy from Kuchisake-onna, whom Kyōko seemingly kills with a knife.
France for instance, has very strict laws against publication of such images, [3] while the British tabloid press will publish a variety of secret photography. Examples in Britain include the publication of photos of Princess Diana secretly taken in a gym, [4] and the publication of secretly taken photos of Naomi Campbell, which led to a major ...
Student Bodies is a 1981 American parody slasher comedy film [1] written and directed by Mickey Rose, with an uncredited Michael Ritchie co-directing. A spoof of slasher horror films such as Halloween, Friday the 13th and Prom Night, Student Bodies was the first film to satirize the thriving slasher film genre.