Since the late 1980s, Full Moon Productions, led by Charles Band, has been delivering shocking straight-to-video movies. Many contemporary lovers of horror spent their formative years renting their films since they were mainstays on video retail shelves. Remarkably, Full Moon has continued to make slimy and entertaining horror movies despite the DVD business collapse.

Their contemporary work mostly consists of important series installments, with a significant emphasis on hippie humor and skimpily dressed women. However, when they were at their best, the studio produced a lot of intriguing and even some ridiculous horror films. With a small budget, the production team produced important horror films, some of which are still thought of as masterpieces. So let’s take a closer look at a few of the best fool moon movies that people would still be excited to watch today.

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8 Head Of The Family (1996)

     The Kushner-Locke Company  

Perhaps among the oddest movies that viewers are likely to see in their lifetime is Head of the Family. It centers on a down-and-out southern pair who plan to kidnap a household of misfits led by a huge freak head riding on a wheelchair. If folks thought that synopsis was strange, just see the movie. What follows is a perplexing, frequently disgusting, and thoroughly intriguing experience. It is a fun horror comedy with a few oddball situations, making it a decent choice for viewers.

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7 Puppet Master (1989)

     Full Moon Features  

Puppet Master is admired, feared, despised, scorned, and treasured simultaneously. Despite its torturous, absurd, and incomprehensible narrative, it is indeed a terrific little movie. As one of the clairvoyants has figured out where Toulon’s puppet is hidden and the mystery surrounding Toulon and his odd puppets, a bunch of psychics, each with their own distinctive take on the paranormal, come together. The film is a monument to the excellence of horror, and it is unquestionably one of the underrated horror movies that all horror enthusiasts should see.

6 Subspecies (1991)

     Full Moon Features (USA) / Castel Film Studios (Romania)  

Ted Nikolaou’s Subspecies is a gloomy movie of passion and barbarity and is among the best vampire movies ever made. The film follows three students drawn into the conflict between a noble vampire and his wicked brother in the hills of Transylvania. The portrayal of Radu Vladislas, a scorned vampire, by Anders Hove, is tragic and eerie. In the movie, Hove uses facial modifications that give him a monster appearance while preserving his humanity. It allows a whole gamut of emotions to flow through his outstanding performance. Fans of realistic special effects, exquisite production design, and medieval horror films should not miss Subspecies, as it’s among some of the best vampire movies.

5 Dark Angel: The Ascent (1994)

Even if the movie’s conclusion felt more like a compilation of incidents than a cohesive story, Dark Angel: The Ascent is a remarkable oddball blend of religious beliefs, romance, humor, horror, and even a little vigilante justice. Although interesting, the movie has several flaws. In it, a woman who was meant for freedom succeeds in escaping from hell. She decides to smite the wicked when she emerges from the gutters of Earth. However, she didn’t anticipate finding love. It is highly ambitious from a narrative standpoint and uses some fascinating concepts.

4 Puppet Master III: Toulon’s Revenge

     Full Moon Entertainment  

The first installment of a franchise is often regarded as the finest, although this is not always the case. It is supported by Puppet Master III: Toulon’s Revenge, which is among some of the scariest horror movies. The predecessor, Toulon’s Revenge, shifts the narrative from California’s Bodega Cove Inn in the 1980s to Berlin in 1941. Toulon embarks on his revenge mission after the Gestapo murders his wife. Guy Rolfe, a well-known actor, gives a standout performance as the master puppeteer Aundre Toulon, juggling the showman’s whimsy with the Toulon’s unrestrained desire for vengeance. Unquestionably, it is among the finest Full Moon features.

3 The Pit And The Pendulum (1991)

     American International Pictures  

The story of The Pit and the Pendulum, featuring murder, trickery, infidelity, and innate madness is unsettling and quite grim. The film follows Francis Barnard as he travels to Spain after learning of his sister’s passing. Francis learns that his sister’s spouse mistreated her. The castle in Medina suddenly begins to experience strange events. The brief Poe epic about bloodshed in sixteenth-century Spain is expanded upon in this work. The end result is a visually stunning and creatively shot horror movie that, despite being overly cliché in many places, makes for terrific exploitation.

2 Castle Freak (1995)

     RLJE Films  

This gory tale, directed by Stuart Gordon, centers on John Reilly and his family as they relocate to an Italian castle only to learn that a terrifying monster is still imprisoned in the crypt. The movie is as elegant as brutal, as the beast eventually breaks free and wreaks mayhem on John and others. Castle Freak seems to be a modest story of survival and atonement that is profoundly unsettling and clever in its presentation. It is a movie that is certain to stay with audiences for quite a while.

1 Trancers (1984)

     Empire Pictures  

Perhaps among the most intriguing, cleverest, and smartest cheap ones ever produced is Trancers, Charles Bond’s masterwork. To confront a wicked cult head who has also chosen this path and is executing the forebears of city leaders who are subsequently killed out of reality, the psyche of a police officer is transported back into history to inhabit the corpse of his forefather, Phil Dethston. Despite the fact that many people would find it absurd, the film is nonetheless considered, to be one of the greatest full moon films ever made.