There are plenty of horror movies, but here are four you will almost certainly never see.
Horror
The second movie by would-be visionary writer/director Dante Tomaselli is a definite step up from Desecration. It shifts even further away from consensus reality to tell us the story of a bunch of kids escaped from drug rehab crossing paths with religious fanatics, undead hypnotists, hordes of zombies, satantic goats, and others of much ilk. The visuals and soundtrack are often stunning; the script and acting are definitely not. Overall it's like a pretty good lost Italian horror flick from the '70s, except it was made in New York in 2001-2002.
Shatter Dead
The dead walk, but don't seem terribly dangerous. The living mess things up for everyone. Dodgy religious imagery abounds, along with some startling sexual explicitness. With more resources and (much) better acting this could have been a great movie, but the 2c budget doesn't cut it. Writer/director Scooter McCrae could develop into a filmmaker to watch, if anyone lets him.
My Sweet Satan
Jim Van Bebber's 20-minute account of the true-life saga of teenage satanist Ricky Cowen bests his earlier Deadbeat At Dawn in every way. Van Bebber changes names, shifts the location from Long Island to Ohio and ups the amount of gore, but otherwise sticks to the facts pretty well. The acting is top notch, especially Van Bebber himself as Ricky. It's on the Deadbeat dvd.
Dellamorte Dellamore
This may be the best zombie movie made since Romero finished his trilogy. Rupert Everett stars as a cemetary caretaker who, as part of his everyday routine, kills the dead when they rise from the grave seven days after death. There's plenty of political satire and Peter Jackson-style gore comedy in this weird and wonderful movie. Everett is great as the cynical, complaining antihero. Anna Falchi plays three roles. You'll never forget François Hadji-Lazaro as Gnaghi.