More Halloween friendly movies for your enjoyment – here’s Part 2 of our 2025 reviews!

Color Out Of Space (2019)
Based on the H.P. Lovecraft short story The Color Out of Space, this film attempts to create an authentic retelling in modern times. While it’s not totally derived from the source material, it makes a decent job of reimagining it for a new audience.
Nicholas Cage plays Nathan Gardner, who has relocated with his family from the city to his father’s farm in a remote New England area. One night, a mysterious meteorite falls from the sky, bathing everything in a strange, indescribable colour.
Very soon afterwards, things start to get weird for the Gardner family. Unusual plants and insects begin to appear, electronic devices go haywire, and the family begin to lose the plot. And with daughter Lavinia playing around with the dreaded book, the Necronomicon, things can only get worse…
I can’t decide if Color Out of Space is just “good” or really excellent. As events spiral out of control, the film goes from unsettling to downright grotesque. Cage’s performance is vintage Cage, crashing into an unhinged state.
But the sound design, music score and glorious photography make this film an unnerving experience. Add in some nods to Lovecraft’s existential cosmic horror and you get a very disturbing, nihilistic film. You’ll either love this film or be completely unmoved by it. I loved it.
8.5/10
Scooby Doo (2002)
After the warped intensity of Lovecraft, it’s time for a change of pace! And what could be better than some Scooby Doo? The old Hanna Barbera cartoon was a childhood gateway to all things spooky for me and many, many others – so Scoob and the gang are totally appropriate Halloween viewing.
This live action film sees the animation come vividly to life. Though the human characters are actors, Scooby Doo is CGI so everything feels like the cartoon transposed into the real world.
Tensions are high within Mystery Inc, leading to the gang going their separate ways. Shaggy (perfectly played by Matthew Lillard) is still paired with Scoob, and they find themselves invited to a tropical resort to solve a mystery. Their erstwhile comrades have also been asked to attend, so slowly Fred (Freddie Prinze Jr.), Daphne (Sarah Michelle Gellar) and Velma (Linda Cardellini) find themselves working together again.
The casting is spot on for this film, though some of the character’s foibles have been exaggerated from the original cartoon depictions. The Scooby Doo film is silly, but its great fun for kids of all ages – if the older “kids” can just go with the flow and enjoy it.
7/10