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Creep Street is a very colorful and fun brand of clothing that’s heavily inspired by both the ’80s and the horror genre. With their neon colors and flamboyant monster designs, the clothing is just as outspoken and attention-grabbing as Creep Street’s creators, Boris and Chip.

In the overtly gender-specified culture we live in, regrettably, growing up as a male didn’t offer this particular writer many options with regard to the enjoyment of stuffed animals. Granted, there was the occasional My Pet Monster or Gremlin/Gizmo plaything, but by and large, cotton-crammed ponies, puppies and even teddy bears are primarily geared toward girls.

It’s not often that products marketed toward young children prominently feature actual monsters, so Andi Green’s WorryWoo Monsters is definitely something to celebrate. Parents and children alike can find much to love in this series of books and their accompanying plush monster dolls.

Kudos to vault raider Michael Schlesinger and others at Sony Pictures Home Entertainment for digging up six lesser-known features from the fabled fright factory Hammer Films, out now on DVD for the first time in this above-average three-disc collection. Though best known for their Gothic horror reworkings—CURSE OF FRANKENSTEIN, HORROR OF DRACULA, THE MUMMY, CURSE OF THE WEREWOLF, et al.—the British studio (1935-1978) produced a wide variety of films, from ribald comedies to period swashbucklers.

Author/screenwriter Andrew Klavan’s supernatural thriller-horror screenplay BURY THE DEAD has been optioned by ShoulderHill Films, a subsidiary of ShoulderHill Entertainment.

Sideshow Collectibles has announced its latest horrific figure: Jason Voorhees: The Terror of Crystal Lake, the latest depiction of the FRIDAY THE 13TH horror icon. We’ve got some images to go with the details.

Neal H. Moritz (pictured), producer of genre fare ranging from the youth-centric I KNOW WHAT YOU DID LAST SUMMER and URBAN LEGEND films to the epic I AM LEGEND, recently spoke about the development of three projects that are of some interest to horror fans: the ESCAPE FROM NEW YORK remake, PREACHER and MAN-WITCH.

In our second post today about the NIGHTMARE ON ELM STREET remake, three new TV spots have hit the web for you to enjoy—or gripe about! Have a look at ’em below the jump.

Horror specialist ChiZine Publications has launched a special photo contest to tie in with the release of the short story collection CITIES OF NIGHT by Fango scribe Philip Nutman. The object is for fans to provide a photo of their city-or any city-after dark that captures an eerie or evocative mood.

The director of THE REFLECTING SKIN and THE PASSION OF DARKLY NOON has a new supernatural horror film, HEARTLESS, about real demons terrorizing London. The second trailer has now hit the web.

You may not know of Bill Bennett, but he’s worked with Sandra Bullock (TWO IF BY SEA) and Eric Bana (the 2002 comedy THE NUGGET). In his latest film, UNINHABITED, a young couple’s deserted island paradise getaway becomes a living hell.

If you’ve ever wondered what a SAW film would look like if Jigsaw were more contemplative than bloodthirsty, you’ll definitely want to check out AFTER.LIFE, in which Liam Neeson plays a mortician who can speak to the dead, and lecture them about how they never used their time on this Earth to truly live. Or can he?

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