This week, The Divide gets a limited theatrical release, while foreign horror films like Death Bell: Bloody Camp and Gurozuka hit home video.
The Divide
Nine strangers -- all tenants of a New York high-rise apartment -- escape a nuclear attack by hiding out in the building's bunker-like basement. Trapped for days underground with no hope for rescue and only unspeakable horrors awaiting them on the other side of the bunker door, the group begins to descend into madness, each turning on one another with physical and psycho-sexual torment.
Death Bell: Bloody Camp
In this Korean slasher sequel, more honors students are held captive in a school by a mystery killer, this time demanding they determine who's responsible for the death of a school swim star.
The Figurine
In this Nigerian thriller, a pair of friends find a mystical sculpture that supposedly brings seven years of good luck, but no one mentioned what happens after that seven years is up.
Gurozuka
In this Japanese slasher, a group of teenage students head to a remote home and are stalked by a masked killer who may be related to a deadly incident years earlier.
Kenneyville
Two private investigators uncover something sinister after being hired to look into the disappearance of a woman in the small town of Kenneyville.
Psychotica
A group of heroin addicts holed up in an isolated farmhouse don't realize that their stash is in fact made up of experimental drugs that turn users into psychopaths.
Trailer (NSFW)
Shriek of the Sasquatch
This modern monster movie fare about a couple who run afoul of Bigfoot was shot to look like a vintage grindhouse flick from the '70s.
The Summer of Massacre
This horror anthology presents five stories featuring eight killers and a reported death toll of more than 150 bodies.











