A collection of Halloween-themed videotapes unleashes a series of twisted, blood-soaked tales, turning trick-or-treat into a struggle for survival.
Director: Anna Zlokovic, Paco Plaza, Casper Kelly, Alex Ross Perry, Bryan M. Ferguson, R.H. Norman
Cast: Samantha Cochran, Natalia Montgomery Fernandez, Teo Planell, María Romanillos, Lawson Greyson, Riley Nottingham, Jenna Hogan, Jake Ellsworth, Stephen Gurewitz, Carl William Garrison, Jeff Harms, Noah Diamond, Sarah Nicklin
Release Date: October 3, 2025
Genre: Horror
Unrated
Runtime: 1h 55m
Review:
The eighth installment of the V/H/S franchise opts for Halloween specific theme which should be a perfect fit for the anthology, but the shorts are mostly underwhelming and undercooked.
The wrap around device, Diet Phantasma, written and directed by Bryan M. Ferguson has a fun 80s aesthetic which works in its favor until each sequence becomes increasingly repetitive as the film goes on.
The first short, Coochie Coochie Coo, written and directed by Anna Zlokovic is a solid start by using a well worn haunted house trope and setting up funhouse of gross outs and jump scares. It may not be groundbreaking, but its effectively constructed story makes it feel like one of the more well rounded entries in the film.
Ut Supra Sic Infra directed by Paco Plaza of [Rec] fame offers an intriguing set up but plays out in a surprisingly paint by the numbers set up and payoff. It doesn't help that the characters are all logically challenged as they place themselves willingly in situations that result in fatal situations. Paco Plaza is one of the most established directors in this volume which makes this short rather underwhelming and disappointing.
Fun Size, written and directed by Casper Kelly, is one of the goofiest entries here which delivers a handful of gory laughs thanks to the zany set up and murderous mascots that pursue our hapless quartet of drunken trick or treaters. This entry would have benefited from a bit more world building to flesh out the concept of Fun Size's world since there's painfully little offered up.
Kidprint, written and directed by Alex Ross Perry, is far and away the darkest and nastiest short in this volume as it deals with a child serial killer in the 90's. Taking some real life inspiration from Blockbuster's Kidprint which was supposed to serve as real life footage of your child in case they were abducted or went missing. This short takes that concept down a dark path with little held back in terms of violence against children and gore. There's a solid kernel of an idea, but it moves too quickly through the reveal with the back half just being relentless gore before its cynically ironic ending.
The final entry, Home Haunt, written and directed by Micheline Pitt-Norman and R.H. Norman offers initial promise with its retro aesthetic that's quickly jettisoned once it moves to the present day. The story is fairly straightforward with things playing out in a fairly predictable manner. There are some fun, over the top moments but ultimately it doesn't leave much of a mark.
Overall V/H/S Halloween feels like a rushed, step down from the previous entry V/H/S Beyond which was far more consistent than this entry which is a real shame.
C
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