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Kyle Logan

Tomatometer-approved critic
Biography:

Kyle Logan is a film and television critic and general pop culture writer who has written for Alternative Press, Cultured Vultures, Fangoria, Screen Anarchy, and more. Kyle is particularly interested in horror and animation, as well as genre films written and directed by queer people and women. Along with writing, Kyle organizes a Queer Film Challenge on Letterboxd.

Reviews

Movies TV Shows
Children of Men (2006) 92% EDIT “A science fiction retelling of the Nativity story that engages with that story’s themes of hope and salvation through a child.” – Cultured Vultures Feb 26, 2026 Full Review In Bruges (2008) 84% EDIT “A remarkably lighthearted black comedy for most of its runtime, often irreverent in a way that may be off-putting to some, but never malicious.” – Cultured Vultures Feb 26, 2026 Full Review The Night of the Hunter (1955) 93% EDIT “Charles Laughton’s only film as director has become a classic...for many reasons: Robert Mitchum’s iconic performance, the film’s genre mixture of noir, horror, and fairy tale elements, and the gorgeous black and white cinematography.” – Cultured Vultures Feb 26, 2026 Full Review Inside (2007) 88% EDIT “The mention of the riots highlight the expected violence faced by the immigrant communities in opposition to the unexpected violence being perpetrated against Sarah in her wealthy suburban home.” – Cultured Vultures Feb 26, 2026 Full Review The Curse of the Cat People (1944) 88% EDIT “Play[s] on the familiar Christmas themes of loneliness and the importance of finding community, as well as the theme of finding hope in a child.” – Cultured Vultures Feb 26, 2026 Full Review Thelma (2017) 92% EDIT “A romance with touches of horror throughout that never veer into anything gratuitous, but are still incredibly effective. In fact, it’s this grounded style that makes Thelma such a great film.” – Cultured Vultures Feb 19, 2026 Full Review The Witch (2015) 91% EDIT “A modern classic” – Cultured Vultures Feb 19, 2026 Full Review Spring (2014) 85% EDIT “A "romantic body horror film," a genre it likely inhabits alone, but what really makes it stick out is that we meet Louise...centuries, into living her life as this different type of human...self-assured, knowing exactly what is going on with her body.” – Cultured Vultures Feb 19, 2026 Full Review Teeth (2007) 80% EDIT “A fantastic coming-of-age story caked in camp.” – Cultured Vultures Feb 19, 2026 Full Review Ginger Snaps (2000) 90% EDIT “Notable for...its practical effects, the obvious parallels between puberty and becoming a werewolf, the peak 2000s...soundtrack, but what’s most memorable is that the fundamental relationship in the film is between [sisters] Brigitte and Ginger. ” – Cultured Vultures Feb 18, 2026 Full Review Carrie (1976) 94% EDIT “Carrie may be the first movie that showed that horror and coming-of-age stories are a match made in heaven (or hell, as it may be).” – Cultured Vultures Feb 18, 2026 Full Review Scream of Fear (1961) 100% EDIT “[The] twists and turns...create more and more anxiety and dread in the viewer as we desperately want to know what’s really going on.” – Cultured Vultures Feb 18, 2026 Full Review Curse of the Demon (1957) 100% EDIT “Jacques Tourneur who successfully helmed a number of horror films and the noir classic Out of the Past in the previous decade...brilliantly bring[s] the two together in Night of the Demon.” – Cultured Vultures Feb 18, 2026 Full Review The Hitch-Hiker (1953) 94% EDIT “Uses both claustrophobic space and wide open space to create fear and emphasize the inescapability of the horror that the characters find themselves in.” – Cultured Vultures Feb 18, 2026 Full Review My Name Is Julia Ross (1945) 93% EDIT “[Creates] a dread inducing despair in [Julia] and the viewer as the film goes on.” – Cultured Vultures Feb 18, 2026 Full Review The Seventh Victim (1943) 96% EDIT “Gorgeously shot...the deep blacks of hallways and alleys put the audience on edge, always expecting something scary to be just around the corner.” – Cultured Vultures Feb 18, 2026 Full Review Luz (2018) 88% EDIT “A fascinatingly staged possession horror movie that plays a Brechtian game with its setting and storytelling.” – Cultured Vultures Feb 17, 2026 Full Review Under the Shadow (2016) 99% EDIT “The horror of the film moves deftly between classic spectral horror, difficulty discerning reality from hallucinations, and the all too real horror of living in a warzone to create a feeling of inescapable dread.” – Cultured Vultures Feb 17, 2026 Full Review All the Boys Love Mandy Lane (2006) 47% EDIT “Along with its Texas Chainsaw Massacre inspired visuals and surprisingly extreme violence, it’s actually smart.” – Cultured Vultures Feb 17, 2026 Full Review Them (2006) 63% EDIT “One of the most nerve shredding horror films ever made.” – Cultured Vultures Feb 17, 2026 Full Review Gozu (2003) 72% EDIT “One of the most simultaneously off-putting and fascinating films ever made.” – Cultured Vultures Feb 17, 2026 Full Review Dark Waters (1993) 71% EDIT “Gorgeously shot and beautifully mixes the colors that Italian horror became famous for in the 1970s and ’80s with an all encompassing atmosphere of horror.” – Cultured Vultures Feb 16, 2026 Full Review Def by Temptation (1990) 78% EDIT “A great choice for anyone who wants their horror movies to be more colorful, both cast wise and lighting wise, and is interested in a horror movie that centers on a friendship between black men.” – Cultured Vultures Feb 16, 2026 Full Review Society (1989) 69% EDIT “A must watch for any body horror fans who haven’t ventured beyond Cronenberg or The Thing and a fun horror comedy for anyone who likes to laugh while they’re scared and/or...disgusted.” – Cultured Vultures Feb 16, 2026 Full Review The Zombies of Sugar Hill (1974) 70% EDIT “A unique horror twist on a standard revenge story, and gets extra points for placing a woman at the center of that story as well.” – Cultured Vultures Feb 16, 2026 Full Review
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