“The Strangers: Chapter Three” (**1/2 out of four) was a sufficiently creepy sequel about the continuing misadventures of Maya (Madelaine Petch) who comes face-to-face with the masked killers and finds that the only way to truly escape them is to become one of them. Director Renny Harlin tells his story with a lushly gloomy sense of doom but after a while its plodding pace starts to wear you down. Worth watching for series completists and makes eerie use of Moody Blues’ “Knights In One Satin” in one key scene.

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“Pretty Girls Kill” (*1/2 out of four) was a pretty dumb grindhouse B-movie melodrama about a woman (Isabel Ann) who witnesses her friend’s murder and then 20 years later she has to confront the killers (Brooke Aura, Crystal Beharry, and others) who have returned in demonic form. Gorgeous cast help keep this watchable for at least a little while but it gradually devolves into monotonous sleaze and sludge. For anyone who stays with it, film just stops without ending but you won’t be complaining.

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“Wrong Number” (*1/2 out of four) was an aptly titled timewaster about a woman (Shamere Reid) struggling with bipolar disorder who receives a wrong number phone call which sets off a series of suspicions in her mind that her lover (Samuel Alston) is cheating on her and plunges all of them into a whirlpool of jealousy and deception leading them all to question reality. Ill-conceived mix of suspense melodrama and mental health drama is more exploitative than explorative. Reid does what she can in the lead role but “Wrong Choice” would be a better title for this one.

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“Amityville Chupacabra” (* out of four) was an unendurable horror show about a team of “cryptozoologists” (Julie Anne Prescott, Will Collazo Jr., Michael Ochotorena) who capture the title creature in a remote facility but (naturally) it soon escapes causing all Hell to break loose. Latest film to cash in on the “Amityville” name but actually the film it rips off most is “Dawn Of The Dead” and it bears little (if any) resemblance to the 1979 original “The Amityville Horror.” Collazo, Jr. also wrote co-wrote and directed and bears most of the blame for this amateurish mess.

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“Sharks In Da Hood” (* out of four) was an absolutely dreadful horror comedy about a flooding in Compton that unleashes a ravenous group of bloodthirsty sharks and many of the locals (Dustin Ferguson, Omar Gooding, Jennifer Moriarty, and others) unite to try and flush them out. With a title like that, you obviously know not to expect Oscar fare but film isn’t even fun on a tacky level. Packed with terrible acting and shoddy special effects that really need to be seen to be believed. Film makes the awful “Jaws IV” look like “Citizen Kane” by comparison.

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“Curious” (** out of four) was a lurid melodrama about a husband-and-wife (Anthony Applewhite and Terri Arcelia) who meet a new woman (Lindsay Diann) and they all enter into a dangerous sexual triangle together that challenges all of their sense of sexual security and sanctuary and eventually leads them all into danger. In 2011- David Cronenberg told virtually this same story far more skillfully and vividly in “A Dangerous Method”; film is attractively shot and made but carries little in the way of traction or lasting charge.

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“Who Hurt Me?” (*1/2 out of four) was a disjointed suspense psychodrama about a woman (Ciera Angelia) who awakens from a coma and relies on her best friend (Ebony Tates) for help but soon comes to suspect and realize that her best friend and others are trying to make her go insane and try and twist her reality inside-and-out. By the end of this garish clunker, you’ll understand (all-too-well) how she feels. Film derives (i.e. rips off) elements from “Memento” and “Shattered” without any of their originality or passion and winds up a waste of time. Angelia is a knockout in the lead but you’ll still most likely be “hurt” by the film itself.

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“Deadbolt” (*1/2 out of four) was a banal procession of half-hearted horror-movie cliches about a young woman (Rebecca Liddiard) seeking a fresh start who moves into a new house when (yawn) she notices strange occurrences keep happening that affect her sleep and eventually her sanity. More fun and more scares may have ensued if she had asked her doctor for a prescription for ambien instead; she certainly could have watched the movie for help with sleep. Liddiard’s sincere performance is one of film’s only virtues.

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“The Raven” (** out of four) was a languid retelling of the classic Edgar Allen Poe horror story about a grieving man (Kristos Andrews) haunted by the death of his wife who has recurring visits from a raven and soon finds himself spiraling into madness and insanity as the line between the supernatural and the sane is blurred and he finds himself longing for death. Good production values and stark cinematography from Will Barratt fail to enliven or enrich this tired story. About on par with the 2012 John Cusack adaptation but neither are much to “rave” about.

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