It's a tv-series, not a movie. I thought the best story was Lab Rats, that reminded me the most of classic stories from King or Dahl. The first story, Ultimate Sacrifice, had a nice premise too, but I felt more could have been done with it.
I thought the series had the right vibe, but it lacked originality in the stories - the stories were not that special. But when you look at the classic movies from Amicus, it's often not that the stories or plots are all that special: they were just beautifully filmed and had great actors who managed to make them fun.
The right vibe for these kind of stories often lies with the same basic subjects and emotions: murder, greed, adultery, insanity/split personalities. And then the usual horror tropes, like witchcraft/voodoo, vampires or zombies. But because of the short length writers are much more limited with what they can do with them. And to give them enough punch the stories have to be relatively simple and straight-forward - if they require too much thinking from the viewer they don't have the right effect. I thought that's what the show did great: the stories were very easy to understand, they just lacked originality mostly. Also they weren't filmed in a striking way (there was enough opportunity to film them in a more exciting way, but it was all kept rather flat) and the actors were okay but none particularly stood out. And although there was not a lot of gore, what there was, was very poorly done.
It's great though that they still make anthology series like this. I thought the opening scene with the bus was great, it's just too bad it didn't really have a conclusion of where the passengers were taken.