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Shut In (2016)

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Shut In is a 2016 English-language French psychological thriller film directed by Farren Blackburn from a screenplay by Christina Hodson. It was produced by Luc Besson for Lava Bear Films and EuropaCorp.

The film is set to be released theatrically in the US on November 11, 2016.

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Main cast:

Naomi Watts (Funny GamesKing Kong; The Ring and sequel), Oliver Platt (The Master Cleanse; Lake Placid); Flatliners), Charlie Heaton (Stranger Things), David Cubitt and Jacob Tremblay (Before I Wake).

Plot:

A widowed child psychologist (Watts) lives an isolated existence in rural New England. Caught in a deadly winter storm, she must find a way to rescue a young boy before he disappears forever…

 

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Filming locations:

Sutton, Quebec, Canada
Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada

Wikipedia | IMDb

 



The History of Metal and Horror – documentary

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Artwork by Brian Allen

The History of Metal and Horror is a forthcoming American documentary written, co-produced, edited and directed by Mike Schiff.

The film is co-produced by Robert L. Lucas (One For The Fire: The Legacy of Night of the Living DeadMore Brains! A Return to the Living Dead; The Theatre Bizarre). Executive producer Brian Slagel runs Metal Blade Records.

The production team have just released the new promo for The History of Metal and Horror to tie-in with their second fund-raising round via Indiegogo

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The documentary explores the histories of heavy metal music and horror films, and explores how the two genres have merged together over time. Various metal artists share their greatest fears, favorite horror films, their influences, and much more. Horror film icons also discuss how their films have influenced the horror genre, their connections to metal artists, and why metal and horror work together.

The many artists and icons interviewed so far include Doug Bradley (Hellraiser), Alice Cooper, John Carpenter, Kirk Hammett (Metallica), Gunnar Hansen, GWAR, Kane Hodder, Bela Lugosi Jr., Dave Mustaine (Megadeth), Bill Moseley (Texas Chainsaw Massacre 2, The Devil’s Rejects), Claudio Simonetti (Goblin), Corey Taylor (Slipknot, Stone Sour), Sid Haig and Tom Savini.

 

Official website

Metal on Horrorpedia: All Nightmare Long by Metallica | Army of the DamnedBlack WidowBrainscanCannibal Corpse | Cannabis CorpseDead Banging aka Metalca | Day of the BeastDemonsDemons 2 | DerangedThe DungeonmasterElectric FrankensteinGhost B.C.Goatwhore | GWAR | Hack ‘O’ Lantern aka Halloween Night | Hellbilly Zombie Invasion | Hopkins (The Witchfinder General) by CathedralHymen Holocaust by NecromanceKilled by Death by Motörhead | KISS Meets the Phantom of the Park | Queen of the DamnedRepulsion | Rock ‘n’ Roll Nightmare aka The Edge of Hell | Slayer |SlipknotThe Spanish Chainsaw Massacre | Trick or TreatTurbulence 3: Heavy Metal | Zombie Nightmare


Daughter of the Mind (1969)

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Daughter of the Mind is a made-for-television American horror suspense film directed by Walter Grauman (Are You in the House Alone?; Crowhaven Farm) from a screenplay by Luther Davis (Arsenic and Old Lace; Lady in a Cage).

The film was first broadcast on ABC on December 9, 1969 as the ABC Movie of the Week. It has never been released officially on VHS or DVD, although a number of pirate versions have circulated over the years.

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Main cast:

Don Murray (The Stepford ChildrenConquest of the Planet of the Apes), Ray Milland, Gene Tierney, Edward Asner and Pamelyn Ferdin (The Toolbox Murders).

Plot:

At the request of a colleague (George Macready), psychologist and ESP researcher Alex Lauder (Don Murray) investigates leading cybernetic expert Dr. Samuel Constable’s report that he has seen and spoken with his young daughter, Mary (Pamelyn Ferdin) — who died thirteen weeks previously. Keeping an open mind, Lauder decides to take the case and see wherever it may lead…

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Review:

Daughter of the Mind, based on Paul Gallico’s 1964 novel, The Hand of Mary Constable, is not only one of the earliest offerings from the classic ABC Movie of the Week program, but it’s also one of the earliest made-for-TV examples of what has become a pop-culture stalwart: the “scientific” paranormal investigator. ABC was beaten to that conceptual punch, though, when NBC aired only ten months before, in March of 1969, Fear No Evil, starring Louis Jourdan as Dr. David Sorell, a psychiatrist turned occult researcher.

However, where the Jourdan vehicle spawned a sequel, Daughter of the Mind did not; but, unlike Fear No Evil, this ABC production became part of a more enduring TV legacy by prepping the network’s viewers for a more abiding supernatural detective legacy.

Ray Milland guest stars as Samuel Constable, the cyber expert whose work is being syphoned off by the military for use in weapons development; only weeks before, his daughter, Mary (Pamelyn Ferdin), died in a car accident, leaving Samuel distraught, confused, and easily manipulated. Looking for answers, Dr. Frank Ferguson (George Macready), a friend of Constable’s, asks for the assistance of his colleague in paranormal investigation, Dr. Alex Lauder (Don Murray), who occupies virtually the same fictional space as Dr., Sorell from Fear No Evil. Lauder arrives at Constable’s house asking questions of the occupants and gently probing for possible material explanations of the supernatural events while engaging in tempered debate over the origin and legitimacy of paranormal experiences.

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Though relatively open-minded on the subject, Dr. Lauder comes off as a more determined skeptic than other occult researches of the time; his focus is objectivity, his goal is the truth, regardless of where that leads, and he won’t stop his line of materialist inquiry until a detached conclusion has been reached, all of which gives him a slightly more scrupulous persona than his later heirs tend to have.

His skepticism becomes bruised, however, when he hears Mary’s voice and sees her ghostly image for himself while staying at Constable’s house for investigative purposes. After Constable is awakened in the middle of the night by Mary’s plaintive calls, Constable arouses Lauder via radio, telling him that his daughter is back and calling for him again; in the deeply shadowed hallway, they hear her voice, but this time it’s coming from the room Constable’s wife, Lenore (Gene Tierney), used for sculpting before her hands became too arthritic for such work. Once inside, they watch Mary’s floating image as she tells Constable that an unnamed “they” on the other side say that his “war work” is wrong, and “they” won’t let her come back to visit him if he doesn’t stop. Both Constable and Lauder are speechless as she gives them this oddly pacifist warning before vanishing.

It’s at this point that the viewer begins to feel a twinge of the inauthentic; are we being played? Is all this being staged, perhaps by Lenore who may want Constable to end his work and pay more attention to her? Later on, more encounters follow, sprinkled in between scenes involving cold war machinations associated with near nervous breakdowns, Lauder’s race to discover what’s really going on, and more claims from an apparitional Mary that the mysterious “they” on the other side desperately want her daddy to stop all this “war work”.

Cinematographer, Jack Woolf, expertly keeps the visuals murky and the shadows ubiquitous, and, at times, even partially shades the actor’s faces; this reinforces the mysterious tone of the film, causing the viewer to subconsciously wonder whether all of this ghost talk is legit or not while simultaneously experiencing a distinct chill factor.

Director Walter Grauman, no slouch when it comes to high-quality TV production, turns in a fine directorial effort once again, pulling out a nice, even pacing and competent performances from the cast, especially the two leads, Don Murray, who’s character exudes soft edges but an uncompromising mind, and Ray Milland, who brings his lifetime of solid acting experience into a role that could have easily been clunky; Milland’s sincere delivery of lines about an alligator, a teddy bear, a turkey, and a stuffed squirrel are emotionally real and earnest without being cloying and silly. Pamelyn Ferdin’s turn as Mary Constable is natural and heart-felt, expressing a longing and sadness one would expect from a forlorn ghost, although Milland does seem to be a bit too old to be her father.

Luther Davis, another highly capable and long-standing hand in the entertainment business, contributes a thoroughly solid script based on Gallico’s book. While the plot from the novel is necessarily truncated, Davis gives the characters enough room to breathe while keeping the uncertainty prominent, the tension building, and the unease prevalent.

The one let-down of the film is the ending; while satisfying for some who don’t buy into the creep-factor and like their ghost stories nicely cleaned-up and put to bed at the end, it winds up being a major disappointment for those who prefer their paranormal investigations with a little more shivery bite. Fortunately, it’s worth it to ignore the finale as if it never happened, and enjoy the rest of the movie for the top-notch genre entertainment that it is.

Ben Spurling, Horrorpedia.com

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Other reviews:

“On its somewhat flat made-for-TV surface, Daughter of the Mind is simply a cold war mystery with a paranormal twist but Ray Milland’s sensitive portrayal of a grieving parent gives it an unexpected poignancy. At one point Tierney’s character describes her husband as a man who “wants so badly for the dead not to be dead” and over the course of the film you become keenly aware that she quietly shares his pain. At its core, this a movie about the complex ways in which we mourn and our inability to abandon the ones we love, even after death.” Kimberly Lindbergs, Movie Morlocks

“It makes sense to me that many of those who saw this flick in their youth have zero recollection of the whole “world peace hangs in the balance” espionage sub-plot that makes off with the movie like a thief in the night. The supposed supernatural elements, the seances, the visions of that little girl lost in an unexplainable other world are truly haunting and linger long after the scientific explanations fade away.” Kindertrauma

“The ending is not what it should have been, but I remember getting the shivers when first watching it.” Michael Karol, The ABC Movie of the Week Companion

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Buy: Amazon.com | Amazon.co.uk

Cast and characters:

Wikipedia | IMDb | Image credits: Movie Morlocks


Van Helsing – TV series (2016)

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‘Resurrection is a bitch’

Van Helsing is a 2016 American television action sci-fi horror series created by Neil LaBute (The Wicker Man remake). Aside from LaBute, the writing team are Simon Barry, Jackie May, Jonathan Walker, Jeremy Smith, Matt Venables, Karen Lam, Shevon Singh, and Gorrman Lee.

The Nomadic Pictures show is set to premiere on September 23, 2016.

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Main cast:

Kelly Overton (True Blood; The Ring Two), Jonathan Scarfe (Grimm; Vipers; Poltergeist: The Legacy), Christopher Heyerdahl (The Twilight Saga: New Moon; Masters of Horror; Twists of Terror), Rukiya Bernard, Paul Johansson, David Cubitt (Shut In; Bates Motel; Possessing Piper Rose), Vincent Gale, Hilary Jardine, Trezzo Mahoro, Aleks Paunovic, Alison Wandzura, Laura Mennell.

Plot:

Vanessa “Van” Helsing, the daughter of Abraham Van Helsing, is resurrected in a post-apocalyptic world, five years in the future, to lead a resistance against the vampires that plague it…

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WikipediaIMDb | Twitter


Zombie-Opoly – board game

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‘This game is rotten!’

Zombie-Opoly is a 2013 American board game created by games manufacturer Late for the Sky of Cincinnati, Ohio. It is based upon the classic capitalist board game Monopoly.

The game includes six silver player pieces consisting of a shovel, a severed ear, a femur bone, a hammer, a zombie boy and a human remnant.

Gameplay:

You are trying to collect the four different spaces that are labelled: VooDoo, Virus Outbreak, Pandemic, and Mad Science. Players purchase favourite zombies and increase the rent by buying Boxes of Flesh and trading them in for a Screaming Human.

It’s all fun and games until someone gets sent to ‘Buried’ and is under ground and clawing their way to the surface for three turns! Choose your token and shamble to RRrrrrrr! You may soon be re-animated… or you may just be blood spewed and bitten.

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Buy: Amazon.com | Amazon.co.uk


Amityville Dollhouse (1996)

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‘Home is where the Horror is…’

Amityville Dollhouse is a 1996 American supernatural horror film co-produced and directed by Steve White (executive producer of Screen Shot 2016-09-02 at 21.30.53Amityville: A New Generation; It’s About Time and The Evil Escapes) from a screenplay by Joshua Michael Stern (Nightworld: Survivor; Skeletons). It is the eighth film in the Amityville franchise.

Main cast:

Robin Thomas, Starr Andreeff, (Syngenor; Dance of the Damned), Allen Cutler, Rachel Duncan, Lenore Kasdorf, Jarrett Lennon, Clayton Murray, Franc Ross and Lisa Robin Kelly.

Plot:

In California, newlyweds Bill and Claire Martin move their family into a new house constructed by Bill himself. Soon after, Bill finds a doll house (a replica of 112 Ocean Avenue) in the shed. He decides to give it to his young daughter Jessica on her birthday.

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At her birthday party, young Jessica likes the pretty dollhouse. Examining it in front of the guests, she discovers a chest, filled with handmade dolls. Tobias and his wife exchange worried glances and obviously recognize the dolls as something dangerous…

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Buy: Amazon.co.uk

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Reviews:

“Joshua Michael Stern’s plot borrows freely from Poltergeist and Pet Sematary and contains some scary stuff involving wasps and an attempt at characterization. The rest is familiar special effects, capably done and arguably no worse than the original.” Mike Mayo, The Horror Show Guide

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Buy: Amazon.com | Amazon.co.uk | Amazon.ca

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“I’ve accused other entries in this franchise of being twisted into sequels that were never meant to be, but this one goes beyond that into a realm … Watching Amityville Dollhouse, you get the distinct impression that the people involved in making it weren’t on speaking terms with one another.” and you call yourself a scientist!?

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” … somehow manages to be the weakest entry in a very underwhelming series. Most telling is that most of the scares in the first act revolve around a light turning on by itself inside the dollhouse, and none are ever as creepy as the moment where the same thing happens at the end of Dream Warriors … No wonder it killed the franchise for 8 years or so.” Brian W. Collins, Horror Movie a Day

Amityville

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Choice dialogue:

Todd: “This family’s so fucked up!”

Jimmy’s father: “They’re coming for you Bill.”

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Cast and characters:

Filming Locations:

Santa Clarita, California, USA

Wikipedia | IMDb


Grimmfest 2016 – film festival

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Grimmfest is an annual festival of horror, cult, and fantastic films based in the city of Manchester, Northern England. Here is the official press release info:

Odeon Printworks will once again be under siege by blood-soaked hordes of horror enthusiasts and film freaks, as the Grimm Team unleash their latest and greatest lineup of dark, dangerous, wild, weird, witty, thrilling, chilling, blood-spilling movies, every one of them a premiere of one kind or another.

Grimmfest 2016 runs 6th – 9th October, 2016. Click here for the schedule and Click here for full festival and day passes.

 

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Highlights include:

Pre-Festival Preview Night (September 23rd)

As a suitably bloody taster for this year’s festival, we present a special preview of one of the most hotly-anticipated horror films of the moment, a remastered classic, and a new UK short film. The sure-to-prove controversial new film from Rob Zombie, the neo-grindhouse gorefest 31 – a cornucopia of carnage, chainsaw-wielding clowns, cult movie stars, and Nazi dwarves – is our spotlight feature. Then we have THE HILLS HAVE EYES, often considered Wes Craven’s classic above his later, more commercial efforts. We will be hosting a pre-release screening of the 4K remastered version from Arrow. We will also be premiering the new uproarious splatter-farce half-hour short THE CORPSE SERIES.

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Very Special Guest Ken Foree

We’ll be announcing all our guests as we move closer to the festival; however, we do have one very special guest already in place this year. Ken Foree, of DAWN OF THE DEAD fame and many, many other classic horror movies, will be with us on Sunday 9th October for a UK Premiere screening of his new sci-fi/horror movie, THE RIFT. We can’t wait to welcome him to Grimmfest!

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Programming Strands
As ever, Grimmfest promises you premieres, guests galore, and all manner of movie mayhem. And, also as ever, there is method in our madness. This year we have a number of themes and strands for you to explore:

Southern Gothic

Enter a world of God, grits, and moonshine, of twisted family secrets and bloody revenge. We’ve the Regional Premiere of Sean Brosnan’s brutal and oddly lyrical tale MY FATHER, DIE; Marilyn Manson appears as an implacable killer in the UK Premiere of the metaphysical country noir LET ME MAKE YOU A MARTYR; and “ENTOURAGE’s” Adrien Grenier faces down a whole bunch of guilty family secrets in the UK Premiere of TRASH FIRE, the outrageous new film from Richard Bates, Jr., director of previous Grimmfest favourites EXCISION and SUBURBAN GOTHIC.

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Nordic Horror

We’ve teamed up with the Nordic genre invasion team to bring you new Nordic delights! From Denmark we have the zombie apocalypse from a domestic suburban perspective in the Regional Premiere of WHAT WE BECOME and the disturbing and strange SUNKEN CONVENT. From Norway comes a waste-clearing mission gone toxic in the UK Premiere of the claustrophobic VILLMARK ASYLUM.

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Asia Extreme

This year the TRAIN TO BUSAN comes roaring out of the East, all pistons pumping. We offer the Regional Premiere of this visceral, no-holds-barred zombies-on-a-train actioner We also have the UK Premiere of Taiwan-set THE TAG-ALONG, an old-school flesh-creeper about a young couple plagued by a “hungry ghost.”

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Bad Relationships

The sex war is very often precisely that: a pitched battle. This year we take a look at some of the casualties. Care worker Morjana Alaoui (MARTYRS) finds herself increasingly overwhelmed by her embittered new patient in the grueling psychological thriller BROKEN, and local boy Dominic Monaghan bites off rather more than he can chew in the twisted morality tale PET.

Paranoia Can Annoy Ya…

But where would cinema be without it as a theme? We have a brace of troubling psychological thrillers guaranteed to get right under your skin. Ashley Lauren Carter struggles to come to terms with her own dark past in a building with an even darker one in DARLING, and a grief-stricken private investigator finds himself increasingly losing control of his latest case in the voyeuristic OBSERVANCE.

British Horror

The UK has a long and proud tradition of genre cinema, dating right the way back to the silent era. Grimmfest actually began in part out of a desire to showcase new British independent genre work, and this year is no exception. We’ve white-knuckle tension galore in the claustrophobic THE CHAMBER and a deft socio-political spin on the zombie sub-genre with THE REZORT.

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Independent and Offbeat

Grimmfest has always prided itself on seeking films that push at the edges of the genre, that offer something a little more… left-field. This year we’ve home invasion as comedy of manners in ANOTHER EVIL, video games gone bad in retro-80s shocker BEYOND THE GATES, and motormouth master-magician Penn Jillette’s savage satire on directorial hubris in DIRECTOR’S CUT.

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There’s body horror and social alienation in THE UNSEEN (a UK premiere) and the World Premiere of the suggestively-titled TONIGHT SHE COMES, which spins such classic genre tropes as a summer camping trip, a cabin in the woods, creepy inbred hillbillies, and rural magic.

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Classic Horror

This year’s Grimmfest classic is a genuine (and very gory) slice of cinema history – THE BURNING! This infamous summer camp slasher marked the cinematic debut of Holly Hunter, Fisher Stevens, and Jason Alexander. Oft-banned, much-reviled, and almost invariably cut to ribbons, this lurid little shocker has stood the test of time to become a cult classic, now reissued in a beautifully-restored, remastered edition from those fine folk at Arrow.

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Short Sharp Shocks

As ever, the shorts programme has something for everyone. We’ve ugly urban legends, grim(m) fairy tales galore, and the World Premiere of the disturbing morality tale NSFW from locally-based filmmaker C.A. Wallace.


Werewolf Bitches from Outer Space (2016)

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Werewolf Bitches from Outer Space

Werewolf Bitches from Outer Space is a 2016 comedy science fiction horror film directed by Troma alum Dylan Greenberg (Amityville: Vanishing Point; Dark Prism) and Reverend Jen Miller.

Shot over a four year period, the independent low-budget film stars Janeane Garofalo, Dave Hill, King Missile’s John S. Hall, and Troma’s own Lloyd Kaufman.

Plot:

Three werewolf women from Uranus, (Reverend Jen, Paige Flash, and Scooter Pie) are sent to Earth by their Chihuahua Queen to rid the planet of all douchebags.

On their quest, they must face off against pretentious art critics (Janeane Garofalo and Dave Hill), the Westboro Baptist Church, Goldman Sachs executives, (John S. Hall and Todd Seavey) and Freegans. Hot on their trail are bumbling officers Fremulum (Faceboy) and Hymen (Darryl Lavare), and Hymen’s daughter Candy (Rachel Trachtenburg) who wants to write an article about the werewolves for her school paper.

Meanwhile, a crazed liquor store employee (Robert Prichard) grows obsessed with the werewolves as the end of the world appears to draw closer…

IMDb | Image credit: Fangoria



Slime City (1988)

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‘A horror film with guts’

Slime City is a 1988 American comedy-horror splatter film written and directed by Greg Lamberson (Killer Rack; Dry Bones). The Psychotronic Video Guide has suggested that the budget was $50,000.

The film stars Robert Sabin (Naked Fear; Undying Love; I Was a Teenage Zombie), Mary Hunter (Undying Love; Ghoul School), TJ Merrick, Dick Biel, Jane Reibel, Bunny Levine and Allen Rickman.

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In 2008, Lamberson wrote a book about his filmmaking experiences on this movie and his oeuvre, Cheap Scares! Low Budget Horror Filmmakers Share Their Secrets, published by McFarland.

In 2009, Lamberson directed a belated sequel, Slime City Massacre, starring Robert Sabin and Scream Queen Debbie Rochon.

 

Plot:

Artist Alex and his girlfriend are looking for a cheap New York City apartment to move into and eventually find one. However, their gothic new neighbor seduces Alex while his girlfriend is away.

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Following the incident, Alex begins to turn into an angry, melting monster. He finds that the only way he can return to normal is to commit murder. His girlfriend must learn the cult secret of the apartment and the brutal massacre that took place centuries ago…

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Buy: Amazon.com

Reviews:

“Despite the fact that the whole narrative is rather scattered it still works for the most part. All in all it nicely falls into the late night movie scene in New York City in 42nd Street theatres from the late 1980s. Director Gregory Lamberson did a good job with the inadequate resources he more than likely had access to. The lead male actor, Roberty C. Sabin is solid in his role. He does bring an element of sadness near the end as the unstoppable slime overtakes him.” HorrorNews.net

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” … the strange thing is that this movie is incredibly entertaining, whether intentionally or otherwise. The makeup effects on Alex as he undergoes his transformations are well-beyond the standard set forth by the rest of the movie (not shocking given the SFX team also worked on Toxic Avenger and Street Trash). Also, while I did call out one laughable gore effect, most (unintentionally funny or not) are surprisingly ambitious.”James Lasome, Horrorfreak News

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“Frequently gory, imaginative and full of wonderful slimy horror, Slime City more than lives up to its name. Fun, cheesy and surprisingly resilient considering the age it now boasts, whilst it is not a film without faults.” Daryl Hobson. Blood Soaked Horror Reviews

” … a film that not only sports vaginal doorways, but vaginal stomachs as well (Alex’s cunt-tummy eats the arm of a mugger in an alleyway) to fill a large chafing-dish. This gam anxiety is best observed during the film’s wonderfully disgusting finale, where Lori’s legs, and, not to mention, her winsome feet, come lower extremity-to-lower extremity with torrents of yellow arterial spray and clumps of sausagey entrails.” House of Self Indulgence

Previous releases:

Slime City was released on VHS in the United States by Camp Video in 1989.

The film was released in the United Kingdom under the title The Slime in 1993 by VIPCO.

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The film was released on a special edition DVD by Shock-O-Rama Horror Cinema in 2005. The uncut DVD was re-released in July 2009, with Lamberson’s other features, Undying Love and Naked Fear, under the title Greg Lamberson’s Slime City Grindhouse Collection.

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Wikipedia | IMDb | Image credits: House of Self Indulgence


Braindead aka Dead Alive (1992)

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Braindead – also known as Dead Alive in North America – is a 1992 New Zealand splatstick zombie film directed by Peter Jackson (King KongMeet the Feebles; Bad Taste) from a screenplay co-written with Fran Walsh and Stephen Sinclair.

The film stars Timothy Balme, Diana Peñalver, Elizabeth Moody and Ian Watkin.

Braindead has received acclaim from contemporary critics, with many filmmakers and critics calling it the goriest “splatter film” in history. Although a bomb financially at the time of its release, the film since gained a cult following, with even more attention after Jackson’s success with The Lord of the Rings trilogy.

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Plot:

The Sumatran Rat-Monkey is a hybrid creature that resulted from the rape of tree monkeys on Skull Island by plague-carrying rats. In 1957, explorer Stewart McAlden (Bill Ralston), leads his team out of the island with a captured Sumatran Rat-Monkey which is then shipped to Wellington Zoo in New Zealand.

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Lionel Cosgrove (Timothy Balme) lives with his domineering mother, Vera (Elizabeth Moody). To Vera’s dismay, Lionel falls in love with a shopkeeper’s daughter, Paquita María Sánchez (Diana Peñalver).

While snooping on the two during a visit to the zoo, Vera is bitten by the rat-monkey. The animal’s bite turns her into a ravenous zombie. Lionel tries keeping her locked in the basement while simultaneously trying to maintain his relationship with the oblivious Paquita. Vera escapes and is hit by a tram.

As the townspeople assume she is dead, Lionel tranquilizes her to keep her still for the funeral. After she is buried, he returns to the graveyard to administer more anesthetic, but encounters a gang of hoodlums. Vera bursts from her grave, and kills the hoodlums, creating more zombies…

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Reviews:

“Technically, this is Jackson’s best to date, with state of the art creature and gore effects by Richard Taylor and prosthetics design by Bob McCarron. There’s any amount of dismemberment, disembowelling, beheading, and the like, all of it handled with bloody conviction. Cult audiences should delight in this basically harmless schlock, and the film should quickly generate a worldwide rep. It’s perhaps a shade too long, but the aficionados won’t mind that.” David Stratton, Variety

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” … one of the most relentlessly, gleefully nasty movies ever released, incorporating mutant monkeys, zombie flesh-eaters, death by lawnmower, kung-fu priests and jokes about ‘The Archers’. It also contains the queasiest dinner scene since La Grande Bouffe, involving spurting blood, dissolving flesh, human ears and bowls of claggy rice pudding.” Tom Huddleston, Time Out

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“Like Evil Dead and Re-Animator, the film establishes an unhinged logic, then, having set its grotesque wheels in motion, it charges forward relentlessly breaking new boundaries of bad taste wherever it goes. The slapstick guts and gore are so excessive that they are no longer disgusting. Required viewing for fans of the strong stuff.” Mike Mayo, The Horror Show Guide

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Buy: Amazon.com | Amazon.co.uk | Amazon.ca

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Cast and characters:

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Buy: Amazon.com

Release:

The film was released in a number of different versions:

  • In some nations, such as the United Kingdom and Australia, the 104-minute film was shown in full.
  • In countries where the censors balked at the extreme gore, the film was initially banned or left unrated before being heavily cut. In Germany, a 94-minute version was seen with major cuts to some of the film’s grislier scenes, but was widely ignored. A FSK 16 rated version was released in Germany under the American title Dead Alive, omitting almost the entirety of the violence. The uncut version is banned in Germany, though it is still widely available, also under the American title Dead Alive.
  • In the United States, where the film was released as Dead Alive (because of another film with rights to the practically identical title Brain Dead), the R-rated version is only 85 minutes with most of the gore scenes removed, while the unrated cut is 97 minutes with the gore scenes mostly intact. The US 97-minute version is apparently Jackson’s preferred version, as he was given the opportunity to “apply some additional spit and polish” to it.

Wikipedia | IMDb


Gnawbone (2016)

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‘Sometimes the things you fear are in your head… and sometimes they’re in the woods!

Gnawbone is a 2016 American horror film directed by Darrin Means and James Thompson from a screenplay co-written with Trent Persinger.

The film was partly funded by an online Kickstarter campaign.

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Main cast:

Tony Bartele (Asylum: The Lost Footage), Charlie Bruce, Katie Harbridge, Derek Kunzman, Katy O’Brian, and Ransom Pugh.

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Plot:

It is the story about a boy that witnesses something that takes the life of his grandfather. Thinking that the traumatic event created a false memory, a psychologist wants the now twenty one year old young man to face his fears by trekking into the woods. With the help of friends, he might be able to process these memories and come to terms with that scared little boy. Or is that memory actually the truth…

IMDb | Facebook


Skinned Deep (2004)

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‘A new icon of terror for a new generation of fear, meet the Surgeon General’

Skinned Deep is a 2004 American horror film written, produced and directed by special effects and makeup artist Gabe [Gabriel] Bartalos. In some territories it was released as Berserker.

The film’s music score was composed by David Davidson (Blood Surf; SleepStalker) and, oddly, Captain Sensible of punk-goth-psychedelic band The Damned.

Main cast:

Les Pollack, Aaron Sims, Kurt Carley, Linda Weinrib, Forrest J Ackerman (Braindead; Scalps; Queen of Blood; editor of Famous Monsters of Filmland), Eric Bennett and Warwick Davis (Leprechaun series).

1056289__111124805Plot:

While taking a family trip, the Rockwell family become lost on the highway. When their car gets a flat, father Phil (Eric Bennett) goes to a convenience store to find help and a strange old woman invites them to stay with her while one of her sons fixes their car.

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The old woman introduces the family to her strange sons: Plates (Warwick Davis), Brain (Jason Dugre), and one whom the woman calls “Surgeon General” (Kurt Carley). When Mrs. Rockwell takes a picture of Surgeon General, he kills her. Plates starts throwing plates at Phil, who is then murdered by Surgeon General. The Rockwell children, Tina and Matthew, escape through a window and are pursued by Surgeon General and Plates…

Reviews:

“There’s simply no grey area with Skinned Deep — either you love it or you hate it. I, for one, adore the movie, and am quick to recommend it to those with like-minded sensibilities. Those of you who can overlook Bartalos’ shaky direction, the plethora of crumby performances, and outrageously stupid script will be presented with a strangely Lynchian gorefest that doesn’t going one toke over the line.” Todd, Killerflix

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“There is nothing in the film remotely resembling a real situation or person, the action is edited together in an annoyingly disjointed manner and the director could hardly keep still, combining an array of awful shots in a haphazard way. It is horribly bad but never scares or thrills and the attempts at comedy are incredibly childish. The only decent actor in the film is Warwick Davis and they made him wear a backpack full of plates and gave him a monologue about his plate obsession” Eat Horror

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“Bartalos is clearly more interested in disturbing the viewer through the sheer weirdness of the proceedings, and throws in scenes which are memorable rather than shocking. There is a fair amount of blood, and some good special effects, made all the more impressive by the obviously low budget, although most of the gore is either played for laughs or is simply too odd to cause offence.” James Mudge, Beyond Hollywood

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“Now, Gabe Bartalos is a perfectly talented makeup artist. His artistic creations have often been the only good thing about some otherwise perfectly shitty movies, including some of the latter entries into the Leprechaun series. Sadly, at some point ol’ Gabe got in into his gin-soaked head that knowing how to make an oozing stomach wound out of latex made him a qualified writer and director. For the record, it did not.” Ben Platt, Something Awful

Cast and characters:

  • Forrest J Ackerman as Forrey
  • Eric Bennett as Phil Rockwell
  • Jason Dugre as Brain
  • Warwick Davis as Plates
  • Karoline Brandt as Tina Rockwell
  • Peter Iasillo, Jr. as Petey
  • Kurt Carley as Surgeon General
  • Bill Butts as Graine
  • Neil Dooley as Pig Pen
  • Joel Harlow as Octobaby

Wikipedia | IMDb


Killjoy’s Psycho Circus (2016)

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‘Welcome, my friends. To the show that never ends.’

Killjoy’s Psycho Circus is a 2016 American supernatural horror film written and directed by John Lechago (Feast of Fear; Killjoy Goes to Hell; Blood Gnome) for Full Moon Features.

The film was partly funded by an Indiegogo campaign – alongside Evil Bong High-5 – and is now completed. It will be released in October 2016.

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Main cast:

Trent Haaga (Tales of HalloweenStarry Eyes, Psycho Holocaust), Raylin Joy, Maria Olsen, Victoria De Mare (Killjoy series; Aliens vs. Avatars; Werewolf in a Women’s Prison), Rob Vardaro, Victoria Levine (Prom RideDracula: The Impaler), Robin Sydney (Evil Bong series; The Gingerdead Man), Jim Tavaré, Tommy Pistol, Victoria Levine, Alan Maxson, Al Burke, Noel Jason Scott, Lauren Nash, Marc Hawes, Tian Wang.

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Plot:

Killjoy, the demon of vengeance, trickster god and killer clown has finally made it to Earth! Along with his gruesome crew Freakshow, Punchy and the sexy/psychotic Batty Boop, Killjoy is free to terrorize mortals in new and excruciating ways.

But two years down the road Killjoy discovers that life on Earth is a drag, filled with inconveniences such as eating, breathing, taxes and immigration issues. His crew has left for other jobs, and Batty Boop has gone her own way after a bitter lover’s quarrel. Not to mention that Killjoy is now semi-mortal!

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Back in Hell, Beelzebub is on trial for letting Killjoy escape. The only way that Beelzebub can redeem himself is to trap Killjoy’s spirit and bring it back in a box. For this mission he is granted a monumental spaceship capable of destroying entire cities!

Meanwhile, Killjoy has finally settled in, starring in his own web series called Psycho Circus, as well as running a movie and merchandise company with the notorious Hambo the Ranch Hand.

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The challenges of being a producer are nothing compared to the challenges of staying alive after Beelzebub’s assassins appear to kill the demon clown and capture his spirit. Killjoy will have to find a way to reunite his gang of clowns in order to defeat Beelzebub and his minions…

IMDb | Related: Killjoy – film series | Image thanks: Dread Central


Evil Bong High-5 (2016)

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‘A cinematic masterpiece – if you’re high!’

Evil Bong High-5 – aka Evil Bong High-5! – is a 2016 American comedy horror fantasy film directed by Charles Band from a screenplay by Kent Roudebush, based on Band’s storyline.

The Full Moon Features production was partly financed by an online IndieGoGo campaign and released on April 20, 2016.

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Main cast:

Sonny Carl Davis (Evil Bong 420; From Dusk Till Dawn: The Series; Butcher Boys), Robin Sydney (Killjoy’s Psycho Circus; Gingerdead Man Vs. Evil Bong; The Haunted Casino), Amy Paffrath (Hauntsville; The Purge: Anarchy; Zombies Vs. Strippers), John Patrick Jordan (Stan Against Evil; Evil Bong and sequels; The Wailer), Chance A. Rearden (Ooga Booga), Mindy Robinson, Rorie Moon,  Jacob Witkin, Jonathan Katz, David DeCoteau [as himself], David Del Valle [as himself].

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Screen Shot 2016-09-06 at 11.32.20Plot:

Learning from her previous mistakes, EeBee the Evil Bong is back and she’s stoner… er… stronger than ever. With Larnell, Sarah Leigh, Rabbit, Velicity and a lobotomized Gingerdead Man trapped in her dastardly web of weed, The Bong World, for good, she once more sets about her plan of world domination.

This time, one toke at a time. EeBee has outsmarted everybody who has outsmarted her. There’s no way out for our hesher heroes, so she teleports them to insane locations, where they enlist a bevy of baked soldiers (Ooga Booga, Killjoy and tons of surprises), to sell her magic ganja in a bid for guerilla weedfare. It’s up to our dopes to figure out Eebee’s new rules and stop her before humanity goes up in smoke…

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Reviews:

“This time we actually get a story that follows the cast doing something more than smoking pot.  It was fun and broke up the monotony of the original films. Finally, the fifth installment is no different than the others and offer up no blood and gore. Just pot, pot, and more pot with a large amount of humor tossed in.  Overall, Evil Bong: High-5 is another great installment in a series meant for laughs.” Blacktooth, Horror Society

” … the tricking of stoners to smoke from the bong and then be transported away to another world and be killed was at least more along the lines of what Full Moon usually does with horror. This has just become a comedy now. It is more a less a teen stoner comedy without the teens. This has to have some audience out there or they’d not have made five of them and from the looks of the ending, six is coming as well. I just don’t know who the crowd is unless it is the stoner or teens demographic.” Chuck Conry, Zombies Don’t Run

“Sadly there is nothing redeeming about this film, its not a horror film its a sad attempt at appealing to the lowest common denominator, stoners. With terrible effects and writing from a company that used to pride itself on great effects, puppetry and using its low budget to do its best work … When you reach the point where even the worst stuff from Troma is good in comparison to your company’s best director’s recent works you have to stop.” Cody Rapp, IMDb

IMDb | Facebook


Daughters of Darkness (1971)

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‘The ice cold terror of death’

Daughters of Darkness is a 1971 Belgian-French-German erotic vampire horror film (with dialogue in English), directed by Harry Kümel (Malpertuis) from a screenplay co-written with Pierre Drouot.

In France, the film’s title is Les Lèvres rouges, and in Belgium, Le Rouge aux lèvres, both literally translated as The Red Lips.

Director Kumel, interviewed by Mark Gatiss for the BBC documentary Horror Europa said that he deliberately styled Delphine Seyrig’s character after Marlene Dietrich and Andrea Rau’s after Louise Brooks to deepen the filmic resonance of his own movie. Because the vampire character of Elizabeth Bathory is also a demagogue, Kumel dressed her in the Nazi colours of black, white and red.

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Commenting on both the film’s mordant sense of humour, and the director’s painterly eye in the composition of several scenes, Gatiss drew forth the comment from Kumel that he considers the film very Belgian, especially due to the influence of Surrealism and Expressionism.

Main cast:

Delphine Seyrig, Danielle Ouimet, John Karlen (Impulse; Dark Shadows TV series and films), Andrea Rau, Paul Esser, Georges Jamin, Joris Collet, Fons Rademakers.

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Plot:

A recently married young couple, Stefan (John Karlen) and Valerie (Danielle Ouimet), are on their honeymoon. They check into a grand hotel on the Ostend seafront in Belgium, intending to catch the cross-channel ferry to England, though Stefan seems oddly unenthused at the prospect of introducing his new bride to his mother. It is off-season, so the couple are initially alone in the hotel.

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The sun sets and a mysterious Hungarian countess, Elizabeth Báthory (Delphine Seyrig), arrives in a vintage Bristol car driven by her “secretary” Ilona (Andrea Rau). The middle-aged concierge at the hotel swears that he saw the Countess at the same hotel when he was a little boy. The pair may have a connection to three separate gruesome murders of young girls that occurred in Bruges the previous week. On a day trip, Stefan and Valerie witness the aftermath of a fourth.

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At the Ostend hotel, the countess quickly becomes obsessed with the newlyweds, and the resulting interaction of the four people leads to sadism and murder…

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Buy: Amazon.com | Amazon.co.uk

Reviews:

“Director Harry Kumel put a lot of effort in evoking a certain tone to the film, there’s a quiet, sensual, yet dangerous aura to Daughters of Darkness. The film is beautiful to the eyes, but the characters can suddenly turn twisted and dangerous and drain you of all your blood.” The Film Connoisseur

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“Of course, a bisexual female vampire with a taste for BDSM isn’t an entirely uncommon entity in the realms of horror fiction. The true wild card in Kümel’s film lies in the character of Stefan, the secretive husband prone to fits of violent rage. His rather prurient interest in sexual sadism becomes apparent when he recounts the legend of the bloodthirsty Countess Báthory, writhing with erotic pleasure as he describes the tortures inflicted upon her victims.” Lady Lazarus

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“Red, white, and black are prominent throughout the film, symbolic of blood, life, and death, respectively. And the music. Outstanding. The film opens with an amazing theme that sounds like something out of a Euro-crime film, but with an undeniably sinister horror vibe. The score is consistently great from beginning to end, building tension when necessary and adding a nightmarish mood to the overall product.” Aaron, The Death Rattle

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“This is an intense, trippy European art-house film taking “bloody Countess” Bathory as its cue, light on substance but heavy on style. Some viewers dismiss it as pretentious, but it’s clearly not taking itself too seriously. Strange and atmospheric, filled with lush colors and teasing imagery, and with a sort of mod Gothic New Wave soundtrack, Daughters of Darkness feels ten years ahead of its time.” David Elroy Goldweber, Claws & Saucers

“With art direction by Françoise Hardy, the picture combines eerie poetry with elements of camp parody, skillfully avoiding a collapse into either option and produces an unsettingingly intelligent film that sadly wasn’t well received by any of the audiences for art cinema, horror or camp movies.” The Aurum Film Encyclopedia: Horror

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“Without question, this is the most erotic lesbian vampire movie ever made … The level of sexual uncertainty among the quartet rises steadily and largely without the expected conventions. The film is beautifully written and acted on a curiously conversational level.” Mike Mayo, The Horror Show Guide

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Buy: Amazon.com | Amazon.co.uk | Amazon.ca

The vampires are shown to be the evils of high-society, the excesses of Western aristocracy turned into blood rituals. Countess Bathory isn’t depicted as deviant because she’s a lesbian but rather because she manipulates and corrupts the youth of the world for her own use. Ilona isn’t her friend but her slave, and Valerie isn’t a love interest but a prize to be won. It’s a strange, troubling, and thought-provoking movie.” Kyle Anderson, Nerdist

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Choice dialogue:

Valerie: “I like the seaside in winter.”

Elizabeth Báthory: “Aren’t those crimes horrifying? And yet, so fascinating.”

Retired policeman: “Ah, madam, those Bruges murders are rather special. One might say classic. The kinds of things you read about in medieval manuscripts. You know, silly tales about ghouls chased away by garlic. And vampires shrinking from crosses. And running water. And daylight.”

Valerie (to Elizabeth): “I despise you. You’re disgusting!”

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Filming locations:

Ostend and Bruges, Belgium

Interview:

Chris Alexander talks to Danielle Ouimet for ComingSoon.net

Wikipedia | IMDb



Garden of the Dead (1972)

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‘Death was the only living thing…’

Garden of the Dead is a 1972 American zombie horror film directed by film John Hayes (End of the World; Grave of the Vampire) from a screenplay by Jack Matcha. It was also released as Tomb of the Undead.

The film stars Duncan McLeod, Lee Frost (director of The Thing with Two Heads; Love Camp 7, House on Bare Mountain) and Susan Charney.

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Plot:

At the Hoover work camp of the Windsor County Department of Correction, a place where formaldehyde is produced, the warden, whose methods are cruel and outdated, realizes that his career is over. The camp soon will be closed.

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Among the prisoners, there is a faction that has become addicted to the fumes of formaldehyde. Encouraged by their ringleader, Braddock, these men frequently indulge in an orgy of breathing fumes and dousing themselves with the liquid. Later, they make an initially successful escape but are then nearly all shot in the ensuing chase.

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As guards dig the graves, barrels of formaldehyde that have been riddled by gunfire leak onto the corpses and into the graves. The corpses then come alive, some pushing their way out of the dirt, and kill the gravediggers. Taking shovels, an axe and other weapons, the zombies proceed toward camp, chanting: “We will destroy the living!”

Reviews:

“The zombie make-up is at once ineffectual and yet also overdone. Because they’ve dead only a matter of hours they can’t be decomposing but instead wear stark black and white make-up that makes them look more like members of the KISS Army than the walking dead. Although this is by no measure a good film it is at least fun (occasionally hilarious). It fails in what it sets out to do, but it’s stupidity, combined with its brevity, make it a decent way to kill an hour.” The Zombie Site

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“As a movie, it’s cheap and careless, with an awkward pace and ridiculously mismatched canned 1950s jazz score … But some of the convict actors seem to be having fun. If not for the slow pacing and dark lighting, the camp value would be higher.” David Elroy Goldweber, Claws & Saucers

“This scruffy low-budget production anticipates the pointless and depressing amateur zombie movies of the early ’90s by almost twenty years.” Peter Dendle, The Zombie Movie Encyclopedia

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Buy: Amazon.comAmazon.co.uk

Garden of the Dead really has very little going for it. At just an hour or so it is surprisingly slow moving, and even the rare gory bits manage to be low octane. But I quite liked it – the 60s feel, perhaps, or the corniness of Carol in her flimsy nightdress, or the agricultural feel of the dirt-caked zombies armed with their crude tools.” Prison Movies

“It’s all incredibly silly, campy stuff.” Glenn Kay, Zombie Movies: The Ultimate Guide

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Cast and characters:

  • Philip Kenneally
  • Duncan McLeod
  • John Dullaghan as Sgt. Burns
  • John Dennis
  • Susan Charney
  • Marland Proctor as Paul Johnson
  • Tony Vorno
  • Jerome Guardino
  • Lee Frost
  • Eric Stern
  • Virgil Frye
  • Phil Hoover

Wikipedia | IMDb | AFI | Image thanks: The Zombie Site


The Gathering (2002)

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‘The horror is real. The terror is eternal.’

The Gathering is a 2002 horror thriller film directed by Brian Gilbert (Wilde) from a screenplay by author Anthony Horowitz (Edge: Horowitz Graphic HorrorThe Power of Five aka The Gatekeepers series; Groosham Grange).

Released internationally, the $18 million movie sat on the shelf until 2007 for a US DVD release.

Main cast:

Christina Ricci (CursedSleepy Hollow; The Addams Family and sequel), Ioan Gruffudd, Kerry Fox, Stephen Dillane, Simon Russell Beale, Robert Hardy (Dark Places; Demons of the Mind; Psychomania), Jessica Mann, Harry Forrester, Peter McNamara, Steven Mustoe. Mackenzie Crook (Pirates of the Caribbean) has a minor role as one of the gatherers.

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Plot:

American Cassie Grant (Christina Ricci) is wandering through England on foot. On her way to Ashby Wake, Cassie is hit by a car. The driver of the car, Mrs Marion Kirkman (Kerry Fox), takes her to hospital but Cassie merely has scratches and temporarily lost her memory due to the accident. Marion invites Cassie to stay at her house, as feels guilty and responsible.

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While recovering, Cassie encounters a man named Dan Blakely (Ioan Gruffudd), whom she believes she knows, but with no idea from where. Cassie becomes attached to Marion Kirkman’s son, Michael (Harry Forrester) and becomes acquainted with her husband Simon (Stephen Dillane), an art historian, who is examining a church from Early Christianity (built near Glastonbury during the first century AD) after the arrival of Joseph of Arimathea.

This buried church was recently discovered by two visitors to the Glastonbury Festival who died after falling down a hole through the open roof. In the church there is a relief made of stone, which illustrates the crucifixion of Jesus Christ. Also depicted are many curious onlookers who appear to be observing the gruesome scene…

Reviews:

” … an occult thriller so dull, dreary and dangerously dry it boggles the mind. Who exactly is the target audience for a horror movie with no horror, a thriller with no thrills, and a movie with no clear focus on what it wants to say?” Scott Weinberg, DVD Talk

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” … you can ruin a story with editing, but you can’t ruin what was always a bunch of terrible performances, Ricci’s key among them. Here, she’s lumbering and inept, offering the worst performance of her career. She seems openly disinterested in the whole mess, barreling through her dialogue with no regard to the character, just so long as she can wrap things up before dinner.” David Cornelius, eFilmCritic.com

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“It all sounds rather creepy, and the premise is good, but this film fails on so many levels. There are no scares, zero tension and even bizarre incidents like Ricci being chased through the town whilst being stared at by locals don’t create any sense of panic or confusion.” Matt Wavish, Horror Cult Films

“Director Brian Gilbert overuses a few simple tricks for scares. Throughout, the writing and acting are pedestrian. British locations are used to good effect. The big surprise ending is really screwy.” Mike Mayo, The Horror Show Guide

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Buy: Amazon.com | Amazon.co.uk | Amazon.ca

Filming locations:

Isle of Man
Northleach, Gloucestershire
Penshurst Place, Penshurst, Kent
Wells Cathedral, Wells, Somerset

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Versions:

There are two different versions of the film. In the USA, the United Kingdom and in Germany only an abridged version was published on DVD, which is 13 minutes shorter than the original. A sex scene and dialogue was edited out. This abridged version lasts exactly 83:31 (PAL-DVD). The unabridged TV version, shown on ZDF in Germany and on BBC in the UK, and released on DVD in France, Poland and Japan, lasts approx. 97 minutes (PAL) and 101 minutes (NTSC).

Wikipedia | IMDb | Image credits: Horror Cult Films


The Fappening (2015)

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‘How far would you go for fame?’

The Fappening is a 2015 American horror film written, produced and directed by Sean Weathers (The New York Butcher; Maniac Too!; House of the Damned).

Main cast:

Lloyd Kaufman, Amoni B., Tina Krause (She Wolf RisingPsycho Sisters; Vampire Vixens), Sybelle Silverphoenix, Rachael Robbins, Joel M. Reed (director of Night of the ZombiesBlood Sucking Freaks), Tamar Warner, Erika Smith.

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screen-shot-2016-09-08-at-00-14-50Plot:

Alan Smithee (Sean Weathers) is a struggling filmmaker that has had sex with countless actresses that were trying to break into the business.

One day his cellphone gets hacked and naked pictures and sex videos of these women are leaked online, destroying their lives and careers.

Trying to do damage control on his own career he finds himself pushed to the limit and must make a decision that could prove fatal for everyone around him…

Interview with Sean Weathers by Thomas Swan at Classicalite

Filming locations:

Brooklyn, New York

IMDb


Another WolfCop (2016)

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Another WolfCop is a 2016 Canadian comedy horror film written and directed by Lowell Dean and a sequel to his WolfCop (2014). It was filmed as WolfCop II.

The film will make its worldwide premiere at the 2016 Fantastic Fest in Austin, Texas, this month (date to be confirmed).

Main cast:

Leo Fafard (returning as Lou Garou from the first movie), Amy Matysio (Vampire Dog; The Risen), Jonathan Cherry (House of the Dead; Final Destination 2; They), Yannick Bisson (My Pet Monster), Devery Jacobs (The Dead Zone TV series), Laura Abramsen, Serena Miller, Michael Cleland, Jessica Hinkson, Joel Mamchur, Jennifer Thorp, Kevin Allardyce, Andrea Solski.

Plot:

 

After saving Woodhaven from a gang of evil reptilian shapeshifters, alcoholic werewolf cop Lou Garou is finding it hard to keep a low profile. Instead, he roams the street at night, gleefully and violently disposing of criminals and stealing boxes of Liquor Donuts causing all sorts of problems for his former-partner-turned-Chief of Police Tina.

Things begin to look up for the loser residents of Woodhaven when a billionaire businessman announces he’s reopening the local brewery to produce Chicken Milk Stout, as well as gifting the town with its very own hockey team, the Darkstars.

However, the unexpected return of an old friend (who now sports a large foul-mouthed mustachioed phallus) and a strip joint bloodbath alert Garou to the rise of something evil to the town…

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Production companies:

The Coup Company
Vortex Words Pictures

IMDb


Dracula’s Guest and Other Weird Stories – short stories by Bram Stoker

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Dracula’s Guest and Other Weird Stories is a collection of short stories by Bram Stoker, first published in 1914 by George Routledge and Sons, two years after the author’s death. The stories are:

Dracula’s Guest; The Judge’s House; The Squaw; The Secret of the Growing Gold; A Gipsy Prophecy; The Coming of Abel Behenna; The Burial of the Rats; A Dream of Red Hands; Crooken Sands

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Origin:

It is widely believed that “Dracula’s Guest” is actually the deleted first chapter from the original Dracula manuscript, which the publisher felt was superfluous to the story. In the preface to the original edition, Stoker’s widow Florence wrote:

“To his original list of stories in this book, I have added an hitherto unpublished episode from Dracula. It was originally excised owing to the length of the book, and may prove of interest to the many readers of what is considered my husband’s most remarkable work.”

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Buy: Amazon.co.uk | Amazon.com

Plot:

“Dracula’s Guest” follows an Englishman (whose name is never mentioned but is presumed to be Jonathan Harker) on a visit to Munich before leaving for Transylvania. It is Walpurgis Night, and in spite of the hotelier’s warning to not be late back, the young man later leaves his carriage and wanders toward the direction of an abandoned “unholy” village. As the carriage departs with the frightened and superstitious driver, a tall and thin stranger scares the horses at the crest of a hill.

After a few hours, as he reaches a desolate valley, it begins to snow; as a dark storm gathers intensity, the Englishman takes shelter in a grove of cypress and yew trees. The Englishman’s location is soon illuminated by moonlight to be a cemetery, and he finds himself before a marble tomb with a large iron stake driven through the roof, the inscription reads: Countess Dolingen of Gratz / in Styria / sought and found death / 1801. Inscribed on the back of the tomb “graven in great Russian letters” is: ‘The dead travel fast.’ which was an ode to the fable Lenore.

The Englishman is disturbed to be in such a place on such a night and as the storm breaks anew, he is forced by pelting hail to shelter in the doorway of the tomb. As he does so, the bronze door of the tomb opens under his weight and a flash of forked lightning shows the interior – and a “beautiful woman with rounded cheeks and red lips, seemingly sleeping on a bier”. The force of the following thunder peal throws the Englishman from the doorway (experienced as “being grasped as by the hand of a giant”) as another lightning bolt strikes the iron spike, destroying the tomb and the now screaming woman inside.

The Englishman’s troubles are not quite over, as he painfully regains his senses from the ordeal, he is repulsed by a feeling of loathing which he connects to a warm feeling in his chest and a licking at this throat. The Englishman summons courage to peek through his eyelashes and discovers a gigantic wolf with flaming eyes is attending him.

Military horsemen are the next to wake the semi-conscious man, chasing the wolf away with torches and guns. Some horsemen return to the main party and Harker after the chase, reporting that they had not found ‘him’ and that the Englishman’s animal is “a wolf – and yet not a wolf”. They also note that blood is on the ruined tomb, yet the Englishman’s neck is unbloodied. “See comrades, the wolf has been lying on him and keeping his blood warm”. Later, the Englishman finds his neck pained when a horseman comments on it.

When the Englishman is taken back to his hotel by the men, he is informed that it is none other than his expectant host Dracula that has alerted his employees, the horsemen, of “dangers from snow and wolves and night” in a telegram received by the hotel during the time the Englishman was away.

Full text at Wikisource

Public domain audiobook at Librivox

 

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Film, TV and other adaptations:

  • David O. Selznick bought the film rights to “Dracula’s Guest” and later re-sold them to Universal Studios. Universal’s film Dracula’s Daughter (1936) was ostensibly based on the story, although it uses nothing from the plot.
  • Vampyros Lesbos (1971), an erotic horror film directed by Jesús Franco, was “inspired” by Bram Stoker’s short story.
  • A radio drama adaptation of “Dracula’s Guest” was produced in 1999 by the Radio Tales series for National Public Radio.
  • Best Sellers Illustrated released “Dracula’s Guest” (with accompanying illustrations by comic veteran Dick Giordano) along with seven other Stoker stories in 2006.
  • Bram Stoker’s Dracula’s Curse (2006), a film by The Asylum, takes its title from the alternate name for “Dracula’s Guest” but bears very little resemblance to the actual story by Bram Stoker.
  • Bram Stoker’s Dracula’s Guest (2008), is a low budget film that, other than sharing the same title, has nothing in common with Stoker’s tale.

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  • Dracula was adapted as a five-part comic book miniseries from Dynamite Entertainment. The miniseries, titled The Complete Dracula (2009), incorporates “Dracula’s Guest” into the story.
  • Robot Comics published a comic book adaptation by Stephen Antczak, James Bassett, and Steven Sanders in 2010.
  • Textbook Stuff published an unabridged audio reading of the story in 2010, alongside “The Judge’s House” and “A Gypsy Prophecy”. It was read by Peter Guinness.

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Buy DVD: Amazon.com | Amazon.co.uk

“The Burial of the Rats” was adapted in 1995 as a movie of the same title by Roger Corman’s film company and as a comic book by Jerry Prosser and Francisco Solano Lopez.

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