
As the subgenre expands, though, topping the horrors of a particularly boring Zoom meeting at work may remain too great a task. But don’t tell that to U.K.-based horror filmmaker Rob Savage, who recently staged a guerrilla horror movie prank on his friends over Zoom. Jeffrey Dean Morgan, Katie Aselton, William Sadler and Cary Elwes bring a sinister energy to this adaptation of James Herbert’s Shine, in which a small town is rocked by a series of. Host is just the latest horror film to take place entirely on computer screens after movies like 2014's Unfriended and 2013's The Den, though given how well this particular project seems to have worked out despite coronavirus production shutdowns, one can only assume many more like it will be on the way. Not only was the film produced during the pandemic, but it incorporates the coronavirus crisis into its plot, and writes that it's "nice to see that the first horror movie to specifically address our present hellish circumstances is as unpretentious and tidy as it is." Host currently holds a 100 percent approval rating on Rotten Tomatoes based on 14 reviews, with The New York Times saying Savage "finds a surprising amount of ingenuity" in the premise, while Pajiba says that it's a "satisfyingly scary picture," The Guardian says it's a "genuinely effective little chiller," and the Austin Chronicle dubs it "one of the most brutally innovative horrors of the last few years." Be careful what you join.Directed by Matthew LandfordWritten by Sarah DavidsonComing April 29thPortfolio Site.

With this incredibly fast timeline in mind, critics say the end result works surprisingly well.
