Team FC
The Menu is a pitch-black comedy that’s equal parts delectable and disturbing. Part of the fun is that at no point will you be able to predict what deranged delights it will serve up next.
A meet-cute that takes on a sinister undertone, an actor facing #MeToo allegations, a house bought in the Eighties that shelters horrific secrets these three stories dovetail in terrific, terrifying ways in one of the most original horror features in recent memory.
This prequel to the Predator franchise switches up the formula by having its titular alien fight not Armymen and scientists, as it’s done before, but a teenage girl (Amber Midthunder) belonging to the indigenous Comanche tribe.
Unfolding as a flashback, this adaptation of the 1963 French movie Symphonie Pour Un Massacre opens with an unidentified man being shot and then traces the complex circumstances leading up to that moment.
Guillermo del Toro returns to his theme of ‘humans are the real monsters!’, weaving a taut narrative of deception, deceit and double-crossing in Forties New York.
It’s easy to think of Eega as a fantasy action movie — this is, after all, a film in which the protagonist (Sudeepa) is a CGI fly.
See How They Run is cheeky and often light-hearted, but the old-school murder mystery at its core is solidly structured.
Told over the course of a week, Ugly follows a struggling actor (Rahul Bhat) whose daughter (Anshika Shrivastava) goes missing.
The Night House is a horror movie that unravels like a gripping mystery, asking one existential question at its core — can we ever really know the people we love?
Six strangers check in to the El Royale hotel located along California–Nevada border — and as the night unfolds, the secret connections, frayed connections and deceptive alliances between them are revealed.
Time is running out. These must-watch HBO movies and web series that will leave Disney+ Hotstar on March 31