Spencer's

B.L.U.D. Bloodthirsty Lifeforms Unleashing Death

We've been huge fans of C.H.U.D. mix that up with films like Escape from New York to Cherry 2000— and you get Battle for B.L.U.D. city—the grime, the chaos, the feeling like anything can tear out of the shadows at any second. That's the energy that drives B.L.U.D.. In a labyrinth of decaying tunnels, grotesque lifeforms breed and hunt. A battle-hardened robot and ex-military operatives are sent to wipe them out—but down there, survival isn't guaranteed, and trust is just a word.

If you've ever wanted to see the best of '80s underground horror collide with dystopian action, this is it.

Director attached: David Hartman

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The Hellaweenies - In their world, you're the weird one!

Forget everything you know about the neighborhood. Bonk, Skrixx, and Dr. Fang aren't just surviving in East LA—they're thriving. From another dimension, these three chaotic misfits are making the neighborhood their playground, terrorizing barbecues, summoning twisted meat monsters, and turning everyday life into a grindhouse freakshow. With a mix of cosmic weirdness and street-level grit, The Hellaweenies bring their own brand of carnage to every block party and back alley they haunt. With practical effects, animatronics and puppetry inspired by the darker side of Henson's, The Hellaweenies brings live-action cartoon madness with a subversive edge.

If you've ever craved something Henson-inspired but darker, weirder, more grotesque, and left to rot in the streets, this is it!

The Hellaweenies poster

Unplugged - Blood on the screen. Gore in the wires.

When analog-obsessed collector Miles steals a forbidden VHS tape, it infects him with a cursed signal—transforming him into TV Head, a fusion of flesh, wires and gore. Now hunted by cyberpunk bounty hunters from another dimension, Miles becomes a living broadcast of analog terror. The cursed signal is spreading... and it won't stop until every screen is infected. We are very Inspired by the gritty, analog chaos of the film Hardware (1990) and the industrial nightmare of Tetsuo: The Iron Man, Unplugged cranks up the body horror to a static stained hellscape where the signal never dies.

If you've ever wanted to see horror with a bit of sci-fi cranked to eleven— blood soaked and fried with body horror, this is it, with a 90's vibe.

Director attached: Stephen Wu

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