USA TODAY US Edition

Video sites pack screams

More picks to stream horror flicks,

- Mike Snider

“Cord-cutting, in general, is about preference. People want the content they want and nothing else.”

Chris Brantner, Cut Cable Today

Some lesser-known horror movie streaming video sites await viewers who want to get into the spirit of Halloween.

Sure, Amazon, Netflix and Hulu are stocked with scary movies, but die-hard horror film lovers may need to expand their video hunting grounds for new cinematic blood.

Several such sites foreboding­ly loom online.

“Horror movies, in particular, seem to have cult followings, no pun intended, so a niche service for them makes sense,” says Chris Brantner, who runs the Cut Cable Today website and offered to give me a tour of some of his haunts.

Our first stop, horror film site Shudder (shudder.com), is actually a product of The Walking Dead parent network AMC. The subscripti­on streaming service, which is available in browsers, Android and iOS devices and on Roku, has more than 260 films and a live-streaming channel of non-stop horror movies. In addition to Night of the Liv

ing Dead, there’s the original 1922 vampire film Nosferatu and Werner Herzog ’s 1979 remake. “Content is obviously chosen by horror fans,” says Brantner, who considers this the best niche horror site. It’s easy to navigate, the interface “looks great” and, he says, the selection goes beyond classics to also include “indie films you’ve never heard of.”

You can search movies alphabetic­ally or by genre; examples include monsters, psychos and madmen and alien intruders.

New customers get a 14-day free trial, before being charged the $4.99 monthly subscripti­on (or $49.99 annual fee).

Another site, Screambox (screambox.com, $3.99 monthly, also on iPad and Android tablets, Roku and other devices), may have a few more movies, but isn’t as snazzy as Shudder.

“But this is definitely the second-best option out there,” Brantner says. “And with a free 30-day trial, it can take you right through Halloween.”

Among the movies I recognized from Screambox’s collection were Hellraiser, The Hills

Have Eyes and Stephen King ’s Children of the Corn.

Don’t want to pay to get your horror fix? Try FrightPix (frightpix.com), a free ad-supported site with hundreds of movies from Screen Media Ventures, the company behind free movie and TV streaming app PopcornFli­x. (In addition to the browser site, FrightPix films can be found in the PopcornFli­x app on iOS and Android devices, and other devices including Roku and Kindle.)

I didn’t recognize many titles, but found The Attic, starring Elizabeth Moss ( Mad

Men), and a 1986 TV movie version of The Murders in the Rue

Morgue, starring George C. Scott, Val Kilmer, Rebecca De Mornay and Ian McShane. FrightPix has a “good selection for being free, but

not what you’ll get with a paid service like” Shudder and Screambox, Brantner says.

These services that cater to horror film fans could grow. “With low-budget movies like Saw regularly making tons of money, and the No. 1 show on TV being The Walk

ing Dead, I think that the horror streaming services are looking to pull in the casual viewers as well,” says Brantner, who recently created an online guide to streaming The Walking Dead, which returned to AMC for its sixth season Sunday.

“Cord-cutting, in general, is about preference,” he says. “People want the content they want and nothing else.”

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SHUDDER
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SHUDDER The Shudder streaming service has more than 260 films and a channel of non-stop movies.

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