Skip to main content

Posts

Showing posts with the label Shelby Oaks

Shelby Oaks Blu-ray Review: Unearthing the Horror Beneath the Footage

Shelby Oaks is an ambitious and deeply personal horror film that wears its influences openly while still striving to carve out its own unsettling identity. Directed by Chris Stuckmann, the film arrives with a unique weight behind it, not only because of its genre aspirations but because it represents a critic turned filmmaker stepping directly into the medium he has analyzed for years. The result is a movie that feels both reverent toward horror history and intensely concerned with the emotional fallout of obsession, guilt, and belief. A particularly notable comparison is Roger Ebert, whose transition from criticism to filmmaking resulted in Beyond the Valley of the Dolls, written with Russ Meyer. While the film is wildly different in tone and intent from Shelby Oaks, it stands as a reminder that critics have occasionally made bold, unconventional leaps into creation. Ebert’s script was unapologetically excessive, satirical, and deeply aware of the cinematic landscape it was commenting...

SHELBY OAKS: Chris Stuckmann’s Anticipated Horror Debut Arrives on DVD, Blu-ray & Digital December 15

Altitude is set to bring one of next year’s most talked-about horror films straight into living rooms, with SHELBY OAKS arriving on DVD, Blu-ray, and Digital on 15 December. The film, already building a devoted following long before its wide release, marks the feature debut of filmmaker and longtime genre commentator Chris Stuckmann, whose transition from critic to creator has been watched with intense curiosity by horror fans. At the centre of the story is a woman tortured by the disappearance of her sister—an absence that has shaped her life and, increasingly, her sanity. As she digs deeper into old memories and abandoned leads, she becomes convinced that the malevolent figure they once blamed for childhood nightmares might not have been imaginary at all. What begins as a search for answers spirals into a feverish fixation, blurring the line between trauma and the supernatural. Led by performances from Camille Sullivan, Brendan Sexton III, and Michael Beach, the film has already draw...