When you sit down for a Ju-On story, you usually know what you're going to get. The pale creepy ghosts, the hunched kids in the corner, stringy black hair of doom, the cat cries, and a lot of horrific tales about the real-life violence behind the cursed creepy specters. Since Takashi Shimizu's original 1998 shorts, through the feature films, sequels, American remakes, sequels to those remakes, this year's reboot Grudge, and heck, even a 2009 video game simulator, the hallmarks of that visual language and tonal focus remained consistent. Netflix's new series spin on …
The American version of Juon: The Grudge has recently been given a reboot, and while manages to do something well, is better than the original?
The Grudge (2020) is coming to delight fans of the horror genre. Before you jump into it, here are ten facts about the Japanese franchise Ju-On!
The Grudge may be one of the most famous horror franchises on the planet, but here's 10 things you probably don't know about this terrifying series.
This new Grudge movie is directly connected to both the Japanese Ju-On film series and the American Grudge movies, which director Nicolas Pesce is treating as one shared canon.