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Demonic Toys 2 (2010)

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‘Playtime is over’

Demonic Toys 2 – aka Demonic Toys 2: Personal Demons – is a 2010 American slasher horror film written and directed by former actor William Butler (writer of Return of the Living Dead: Necropolis and Rave to the Grave; Gingerdead Man and sequels) and produced by Charles Band.

Dr. Lorca (Michael Citrini, from Hideous!) is continuing to collect strange oddities, along with the help of Caitlin (Alli Kinzel) and her boyfriend David (Lane Compton).

They continue their search at a mysterious castle in Italy, where there have been rumours of a mysterious, ancient puppet alive and walking around…

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Reviews:

“The story descends into incoherence and all the greedy cheats and murderers end up dead. Full Moon films rarely bother too much with coherence but by Full Moon standards this film was a bit bland. It still has that camp, cheesy over the top sense of fun but this just seemed a little less amusing.” Nameless Horror

“The few scenes of the full-bodied toys on the move are done with digital effects and most of what little gore there is was achieved using cheap CGI […] While I find myself neither enjoying nor hating the return of the Demonic Toys, it was the film’s irritating, repetitive score that soured me more than anything else.” Foywonder, Dread Central

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“The original is one of the better Full Moon killer toy movies (possibly even my favorite, by default), but this is just like most of their recent offerings: lazy and dull, without any inventiveness or charm. I don’t know why it took them so long to make a true sequel after two or three spinoffs, but it certainly wasn’t worth the wait.” Brian W. Collins, Horror Movie a Day

“I can life with the purple cloud, I can live with the one dimensional characters, but I have trouble dealing with CGI gore that looks like a cartoon or a low budget Pixar. There could be cool gore here if they had went the natural route. We have a cool decapitation that gets messed up due to CGI.” Horrorphilia

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Interview:

Director William Butler talks to Rob G. for ComingSoon.net

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Elizabeth Bell

Cast and characters:

  • Alli Kinzel as Caitlin
  • Lane Compton as David
  • Selene Luna as Lilith
  • Michael Citriniti as Dr. Lorca
  • Elizabeth Bell as Lauraline
  • Billy Marquart as Eric
  • Leslie Jordan as Mr. Butterfield
  • Gage Hubbard as Personal Demon
  • Jane Wiedlin as Baby Whoopsie

Choice dialogue:

Mr. Butterfield: “It seems very nefarious to me. I will not be toyed with!”

Wikipedia | IMDb



The Slaughter of the Vampires (1962)

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The Slaughter of the Vampires – promoted as Slaughter of the Vampires – is a 1962 Italian horror film written and directed by Roberto Mauri (Night of Violence; Kong Island). The original title is La strage dei vampiri (“The Massacre of Vampires”).

A 1966 British release by E.J. Fancey was cut for an ‘X’ certificate by the BBFC but their website contains no details of the censored material.

In the United States, the film was also re-titled Curse of the Blood Ghouls in 1969 and issued on a double-bill with Bloodsuckers

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The film was a low budget production, so much so that actor Dieter Eppler (also in Castle of the Walking Dead) stated that many cast members were not paid for their work.

Cast:

In 19th Century Germany, a newly-wed couple Marquis Wolfgang (Walter Bigari) and Louise (Graziella Granata) acquire a castle. To commemorate the occasion, Louise performs a piano piece she has written during a party. Louise then feels a strange sensation and retires to her room.

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She is visited by a vampire (Dieter Eppler) who she originally sees at the party she was in and sucks her blood, leading her to desire him.

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As a result, Louise’s health declines which leads to Wolfgang seeking aid from Dr. Nietzche (Luigi Batzella). Wolfgang is too late as when the doctor arrives Louise is already dead. As the doctor diagnoses this, Wolfgang is shocked to find Louise alive as she approaches him and sucks his blood.

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The doctor later seeks out Louise’s hiding place and stakes her to death, along with the servant Corrine, who is also a vampire. Wolfgang’s hiding spot is not found as the doctor seeks another abode in the castle. Wolfgang, who is not entirely converted into a vampire, corners his adversary and stakes him with spikes of an iron grating…

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Reviews:

” … an engaging gothic tale from the golden age of Italian horror. Filled with romantic melodrama, exceptional period costumes and exquisite locations, the film is less silly than the previous vampire films Brandi starred in, and quite frankly, more entertaining.” George R. Reis, DVD Drive-In

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” …Mauri’s direction is tautly edited, with an impressive number of inventive set-ups and roving camera shots of good locations, and at just 79 minutes interest never flags. The film may be the first to offer a vampire bride whose ample, heaving bosom almost becomes a character in itself (themselves?). Granata’s low-cut dresses pre-date what became the standard at Hammer by a half-dozen years.” Stuart Galbraith IV, DVD Talk

“Some good moments can be found in this otherwise lackluster film, including a highly atmospheric early bit in which the vampire spies on Louise through bushes outside her house, and a later scene in which Louise stalks Wolfgang through a courtyard at night. Graziella Granata is quite alluring as the vampirized Louise, and makes for an extremely compelling sight.” Fright.com

“Eppler’s vampiric assaults on Granata provide a few mildly erotic moments […] Ugo Brunelli’s camera makes the most of the atmospheric sets and enhances the sense of foreboding present within a few eerie clusters of trees. Aldo Piga’s heavy-handed score seems more appropriate for a tearjerker than for a vampire flick.” Lawrence McCallum, Italian Horror Films of the 1960s

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

Cast and characters:

  • Walter Bigari as Marquis Wolfgang
  • Dieter Eppler as the vampire
  • Graziella Granata as Louise
  • Luigi Batzella as Dr. Nietzsche
  • Gena Gimmy as Corinne
  • Edda Ferronao as Nietzsche’s maid
  • Carla Foscari as Teresa
  • Maretta Procaccini as Resy
  • Alfredo Rizzo as a servant

Filming locations:

The Castle of Monte San Giovanni, Italy

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Wikipedia | IMDb

 


The Snake Woman (1960)

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‘Nothing ever struck you like…’

The Snake Woman is a 1960 British horror film directed by Sidney J. Furie (The Entity; Doctor Blood’s Coffin) from a screenplay by American Orville H. Hampton (The Alligator People; Mesa of Lost Women; Lost Continent). It stars Susan Travers (Peeping Tom), John McCarthy and Geoffrey Denton.

Over many years, a scientist in a turn of the century English village in Bellingham, Northumberland, successfully keeps his wife’s mental illness under control by injecting her with snake venom.

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When she dies giving birth to a daughter, a local witch claims that the child is pure evil and must be destroyed. The scientist is killed by an angry mob, but the baby girl is miraculously saved with the help of an understanding doctor.

Nineteen years later, several corpses are discovered on the moors, containing lethal amounts of snake poison. Fearful villagers believe the curse of the snake woman has struck, but Charles Prentice, a young Scotland Yard inspector, is sceptical of the supernatural as he begins his investigation…

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Reviews:

” …this black-and-white programmer blatantly misses all the cues that would insure even the slightest spark of box office fire. The script is clumsy, overly-talkative and there is practically no action to alleviate the plodding pace.” Video Confidential

” …a competent enough B-movie programmer, entertaining in its own way and enjoyable enough to fit into the ‘cosy horror’ subgenre.” BritMovie

“Amateurishly directed, the film fails on all levels.” The Aurum Film Encyclopedia: Horror

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Cast and characters:

  • Susan Travers as Atheris
  • John McCarthy as Charles Prentice
  • Geoffrey Denton as Colonel Clyde Wynborn
  • Elsie Wagstaff as Aggie Harker
  • Arnold Marlé as Dr. Murton
  • Michael Logan as Barkis
  • Stevenson Lang as Shepherd
  • John Cazabon as Dr. Horace Adderson
  • Dorothy Frere as Martha Adderson
  • Hugh Moxey as Inspector
  • Frances Bennett as Polly, the barmaid
  • Jack Cunningham as Constable Alfie

Choice dialogue:

Aggie Harker, the midwife: “It is evil! It has the eye! It is the Devil’s offspring!”

Plot keywords:

snake | venom | scientist | pregnant | midwife | police constable | pub | landlord | village | angry mob | Northumberland | cobra | Scotland Yard | inspector

Wikipedia | IMDb | Thanks: The Dwrayger Dungeon

 


Clowntergeist (2016)

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‘The reason you’re afraid of clowns’

Clowntergeist is a 2016 American horror film written, co-produced, edited and directed by Aaron Mirtes (Bring Them Home), based on a story by Brad Belemjian. It stars Brittany Belland (The Sleeper), Monica Baker, Burt Culver (Bastard) and Eric Corbin (House of Darkness).

Emma, a college student with a crippling fear of clowns, must come face to face with her worst fear when an evil spirit in the body of a clown is summoned terrorising the town she calls home.

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One by one, Emma and her friends receive a balloon with the exact time and date of when it will appear to kill them written on it. After receiving her balloon, Emma realizes that she has two days left to live, and must fight against the clock to find a way to survive…

The film is being distributed by High Octane Pictures but a release date has yet to be announced.

IMDb


Countrycide (2017)

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Countrycide is a 2017 Canadian survival horror film directed by Brett Kelly (Ghastlies; My Fair ZombieJurassic Shark).

A woman is lost, alone in the woods with a bear trap on her leg. It is a matter of survival as she must combat the elements, her pain and predators of both the two and four legged variety…

The film stars Robin Hodge, Joel Elliott, Peter Whittaker and Andrew Galligan. It will be promoted on the festival circuit this summer.

IMDb


B-Movie Baggage: Filmmaker versus Distributor in a Fight for Survival – article by Bret McCormick

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I suppose it’s best to start out explaining to readers how I came to be writing this piece for Horrorpedia. In case you don’t know, I’m a former schlockmeister. It could be that there’s no such thing as a former schlockmeister. Perhaps, it’s like alcoholism. In which case, ‘Hi, I’m Bret. I’m a recovering schlockmeister. Schlockless for twenty years now’.

At my last birthday party, on October 1, 2016, my partner Patrice and I had folks over for a barbecue. On the guest list were Glen Coburn and E.R. Bills. I’d just finished co-editing an anthology of horror tales with E.R. called Road Kill: Texas Horror by Texas Writers (Eakin Press.)

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Buy: Amazon.com | Amazon.co.uk

Glen’s an old friend from the mid-80s, when we both directed super cheap movies in Dallas, Texas. (Glen’s famous for Bloodsuckers from Outer Space.) As the guys drank beer, E.R. quizzed us about our filmmaking days. He insisted that the stories we were telling should become a book. He’s a more accomplished author than myself, so I take his opinions somewhat seriously.

Before I knew it, I’d committed to the project which I’m calling (at least for now) Texas Schlock: B-Movie Sci-Fi and Horror from the Lone Star State. The book’s getting some nice encouragement on a variety of behind-the- scenes fronts. So, I am moving forward with confidence.

The second week of January 2017, I was working on a chapter about my old friend, Tom Moore, director of Mark of the Witch (1970.) Though I knew Tom back in the early 90s, I had never seen his directorial debut film. I bought a DVD on Amazon and began reading what others had written about the film on the internet. I stumbled onto Horrorpedia.com. While I was there I searched for my 1986 film, The Abomination.

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I took a liking to the site. So, this is where young people go to learn about specific horror films? I mused. In my day, we had Michael J. Weldon’s Psychotronic Encyclopedia of Film and whatever fanzines were up and running at the moment. Coverage of horror films in any sort of serious way that would be helpful to a researching writer, was largely neglected.

Well, I reasoned, I’m writing a book about the cheesy little horror and sci-fi pics from my region. If I want readers to know my book even exists, I’d best start making contact with sites that attract the same readership. I reached out to the owner of Horrorpedia, Adrian, and offered to write entries about my films.

Fortunately, he responded promptly. No, he didn’t want me writing reviews of my own films. Hmmm. I wonder why. He did, however, ask me to do a piece on the trials of the indie filmmaker in the early days of home video, specifically as regards my experiences with distributors. Piece of cake. That’s something I know a great deal about.

I graduated from Brooks Institute in 1980 and moved from California back to Texas because I wanted a family, but did not want to raise kids in L.A. It took me a few years to arrange funding for my first feature, Tabloid! We were so happy about making a movie! Hey, check us out! We’re filmmakers! We didn’t look into distribution as carefully as we should’ve. Instead, we thought we’d make the film and worry about that distribution thing later. Which is exactly the sort of thinking that keeps shyster distributors in business.

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There have always been crooks in every facet of the film industry, but always more in the distribution racket. Why? Because, if you can get a desperate filmmaker to sign up, you milk their program for whatever it’s worth. Sometimes that’s a little, sometimes it’s a lot. Whatever it is, chances are you will pocket all of it. It’s just too easy to operate with a lack of transparency.

Those guys have no incentive to be honest with you. By the time you’ve figured out they’re crooked, they’ve signed two more eager young film makers. Ripping off the indie film maker has always been the rule, not the exception. When I hear stories about honest distributors actually paying film makers I always wonder, what’s the missing piece of information? Does the filmmaker have an uncle in the mob? Does the filmmaker have leverage of some sort over the distributor?

The home video boom changed the way the world accesses and watches movies. Ardent film fans watched one or two a week back before home video. Once VHS found its way into people’s homes, the serious film addict could watch ten movies in a weekend. Probably, in the first year or so of the boom, distributors were more likely to pay film makers. So, much money was being made, why not? As market saturation began to set in, it was every man for himself.

I started out wanting to make horror films. None of the distributors we communicated with in the mid-80s wanted horror films. Why? Because cheesy distributors are a bit like short men. They suffer from an inferiority complex. These distributors do not (with rare exceptions) want to be thought of as the cheap movie guys. In the world of disrespected cinema, only one category is lower than horror and that’s adult movies. Most of the distributors who would even return our calls wanted a mediocre action film over a competent, original (but cheap) horror film.

Our first film, Tabloid! was intended to be an off-beat, cult sort of picture. Maybe midnight movie fare. But, we didn’t have the balls to really produce the sort of outrageous film that would’ve raised eyebrows, ala’ John Waters. It was an anthology piece with three stories told by three different writer/directors. My piece was a quirky bit called ‘Barbecue of the Dead’ in which some corpses return from the grave for one final cook out. So, the overall film couldn’t be horror? My piece damn well was going to be!

We talked to everyone in Los Angeles. We started at the top and worked our way down. Ultimately, nobody wanted the film. We eventually signed with an outfit calling themselves Pacific Video. This was basically a couple of salesmen in a converted house, who’d worked for bigger, successful video labels and thought they could strike it rich on their own. They took Tabloid! (no money up front) and promptly stopped returning our calls.

In a bold move, my partner went to their duplication facility in LA, pretending to be a courier working for Pacific and stole our master back. We wasted months on a deal that did not net us a penny. On the positive side, we licensed the Japanese video rights to JVC for $10,000 and appeared in their catalog right next to a big-budget Star Trek picture. Woohoo! Tabloid! had cost us $112,000.00 to produce. We’d recouped ten grand.

A lot of distributors told us they were making good bread with cheap horror pictures, like re-releases of old Herschell Gordon Lewis titles. What they didn’t tell us was that they were making money because they weren’t splitting receipts with any filmmakers. Based on the best intel we had after hawking Tabloid! unsuccessfully for over a year, we raised money to do two ultra -cheap features; The Abomination and Ozone: The Attack of the Redneck Mutants. Based on the quality of the VHS dubs of old horror films that were selling well, we reasoned there was no reason not to shoot on Super 8mm film stock. The look was right for the genre and hopefully it was cheap enough to guarantee us a profit.

the-abomination-08For The Abomination there was no real script as such, just a twenty page sheaf of notes with suggested dialog. I was taking the challenge seriously on a few levels … first I wanted it to be a business venture; there was no chance in hell it was going to win any awards, so I saw no sense in composing a real screenplay. I was trying to follow the lead of guys like H.G. Lewis.

Second, I was intent on shooting on schedule, on budget. I did. Whatever we had in the can after ten days shooting was going to be the film. Period. That’s why the film plays the way it does and has the relentless narration. No doubt I unconsciously pulled those ploys from Larry Buchanan’s It’s Alive!

The only reason I was able to have the career I did (such as it was, based in Fort Worth, Texas) was that I became known as the young guy who delivered, who finished what he started. Dozens of films start each year and never see the light of day. Its easy to conjure stories on why you were unable to pull it off. For me, rule #1 was finish the picture. That being said, when you try to do a feature for less money than they were spending on local, 30 second  car commercials at the time, you WILL inevitably make compromises.

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The Abomination was shot in ten days for $10,000. Ozone was shot in twenty-three days for slightly more. It was at this point I realised my partner would continue to take advantage of every situation. On both Tabloid! and the horror double feature, he used every excuse to go over budget and blow the schedule out of the water. I took pride in shooting my films on schedule, under budget. I decided thence forward, I did not need a partner.

With the finished films under our arms, we returned to L.A. The same people who’d told us to give them gory H.G. Lewis-style horror, now grimaced and said the films were too bloody. Things dragged on for several months and finally I split with my partner. I had raised all the money for all three features we’d produced, but to facilitate a clean split, I took all rights to Tabloid! and gave him all rights to the horror pictures.

highway-to-hell-1990Things were looking pretty dismal, but I was determined not to give up. I contacted Tom Moore at Reel Movies International and asked him point blank; “How much money will you guarantee to pay, on delivery, for a feature film if you approve the script and choose the name talent?” We finally settled on $20,000 to be paid on a film called Highway to Hell, written by Gary Kennemer (son of Russ Marker, director of The Yesterday Machine) and starring Richard Harrison.

Harrison had been a big name in Italian cinema in the 60s. Originally, Gary was going to direct the film. In the middle of filming, his wife left him. He was a wreck. One of the toughest decisions I ever made as a producer, was letting Gary go. He was too emotionally injured to work and I had no way of knowing when he’d be better. I still had a deadline to make, so I cut him loose and took over the rest of the picture myself. I will say this; it probably would’ve been a better picture overall had Gary been able to complete it.

Once we agreed on those terms, I set about shooting on weekends to produce the film for no more than $10,000. I went over budget. It cost $12,000. Still, when I handed the film over I received a check for $20,000 and pocketed an immediate profit of $8,000. Not big business, but a step in the right direction.

About this time, I began reading about Fred Olen Ray in some of the magazines. I watched some of his films and thought to myself, ‘Hey, this guy seems to be a kindred soul. He’s doing the sorts of things I want to do.” So, I contacted him. I wanted to do a horror film naturally. Fred had other ideas. He agreed to give me $18,000 to make a movie with Dan Haggerty. He wanted to call it Macon County War.

one-man-war-dan-haggertyFred spent additional money on the movie after we delivered, but his money would’ve probably been better spent if he’d given us more money for a decent sound mix and other post production items in the first place. I don’t know what he spent “fixing” the sound mix or what he paid Haggerty for three days’ work, but we did the rest for $18,000.

After delivering Macon County War (which eventually became One Man War), I continued to pester him to give me money for a horror film. For a brief time, we talked about building a movie around a clip of stock footage he had, showing John Carradine reading from a big spooky book. He was very protective of that clip! He’d only let me see it via a timecoded VHS dub with no audio! That was it, literally like a minute of footage! He wanted me to build a script around that, but it never came to be.

I had, and still have, a lot of respect for Fred. He was a sharp, hard-working guy who managed to survive in a very tough business. We had a falling out eventually, but now I feel that was more about the pressures we were both under. I had a wife and three kids to support, he had at least one child that I know about. We were both trying to make it in a world of sharks. I’m sure he had as many setbacks as I did, perhaps many more.

There’s a lot of ambivalence when you’re working on the very low end of feature film making. You’ve seen the schlock that came before and you’re not worried about matching it. You’d like to do better, but if no one’s giving you that opportunity, then at the very least you’re going to pocket what you can from the production budget. So, you make compromises. Fred was known, on those early pictures, for making a lot of cavalier compromises. So much so, that others thought he was deliberately trying to make a name for himself as a “bad” director, like Ed Wood, maybe.

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When I worked with Gunnar Hansen on Repligator, he talked about this with me. He’d worked with Fred on Hollywood Chainsaw Hookers. He’d seen some of the choices Fred had made and assumed he was building that bad film brand for himself. One day he greeted Fred with, “Morning. How’s Hollywood’s worst director today?” He meant it as a joke. A joke that he thought Fred himself would appreciate. But, it hurt the guy’s feelings. And I think I understand the whole thing very well, because his story is pretty much my story.

In ensuing years when I’d read Facebook posts in which it was made clear that Fred had been disowned by his father, that he cared very much for his own son… these things gave me a clearer picture of the man. He’s a regular guy. He’s a damn good schlockmeister. I’m glad to have worked with him.

Fred called his company A.I.P. I think it stood for American Independent Pictures. Like a lot of others, he was trading on the fame and mystique of Sam Arkoff’s old company, where Roger Corman had cut his teeth. Another guy, doing exactly the same thing, was David Winters. Once a famous choreographer, he’d moved on to producing dozens of cheapie action films and basically stealing dozens more from filmmakers who couldn’t get distribution on already-completed pictures.

armed-for-action-joe-estevez-1992David’s Action International Pictures was my next stop on my tour of the ‘new poverty row.’ I made a deal to do Armed for Action starring Joe Estevez for $30,000. We shot the movie in seven days in Poolville, Texas. I was blessed to have Randy Moore offer his services in special effects. He basically gave me a bunch of fire power I couldn’t afford to pay for. The film is an obvious cheapie, but for thirty grand and a seven-day schedule, it kicks ass. The acting’s mostly lame, but the explosions and gunfire sold the thing. I followed that up with Blood on the Badge for $40,000, again starring Joe Estevez.

David said he was going to give me a contract to do four films a year, each with a budget of $40,000. What I didn’t know was that his company was in serious trouble. Out of the blue, he asked me to come to Mobile, Alabama as producer on a fairly big ($850,000) film called Mardi Gras for the Devil, starring Robert Davi and Michael Ironside. The whole deal was bogus.

The original producer had quit because Winters wasn’t sending money when they needed it. The agents and talent were getting pissed. I was brought in to be a sort of fall guy, someone they could blame when Winters finally caught up on payments. Once I saw what was happening I just coasted. I collected my pay of $2,000 a week and made the best of it. Thblood-on-the-badge-1992ere were some really miserable people working on that crew.

An exception was the Key Grip, a guy who did a pretty good impression of Bill Murray, Thomas Fenton. Tom quizzed me about making super cheap pictures and ended up asking me to produce a movie called Striking Point. Tom directed and Chris Mitchum starred as the heavy. The budget was supposed to be $50K.

Tom showed up in Dallas with $35K. He’d been raised in a privileged family. His dad was a higher up in the Kodak company. Basically, he was a spoiled brat. He wanted the world to revolve around him. That was the only film Tom Fenton ever directed, though I understand he works for one of the studios in Hollywood these days.

When the movie Trolls 2 was being posted at Allied + WBS in Dallas, I became friends with the film’s editor, Vanio Amici. Vanio asked me if I’d like to produce a film for Fred Williamson. The next thing I knew Fred called me and came to Dallas to shoot a cheesy action flick called Steele’s Law with a crew I assembled for him. He came back again and did one called Three Days to a Kill. This one co-starred Chuck Connors, Henry Silva and Bo Svenson. By that time, he’d worn out his welcome and as far as I know he never came back to Dallas. That seemed to be his M.O. In any case, I was on to other things.

the-digital-prophet-jeffrey-combsThe guy who shot Tom’s movie Striking Point was an exceptionally talented kid named Tony Brownrigg, son of S.F. “Brownie” Brownrigg who directed Don’t Look in the Basement. Tony and a couple of friends had a company called Open Door Productions in Deep Ellum. They’d made one super cheap feature called Liar and were eager to do more. After they saw how things went on Striking Point, they asked me to produce a movie for them. I gave them a title: Cyberstalker. They wrote a pretty decent screenplay. We shot the picture with Jeffrey Combs of Re-Animator fame. It was eventually retitled The Digital Prophet.

Along the way, I was approached by others. A local martial arts enthusiast who wanted to be the next Steven Seagal, brought me a project called Takedown. Richard Lynch played the bad guy. He did a great job as always.

A used computer salesman named David Stephens approached me about production. He had a huge warehouse facility and wanted to utilize part of it as sound stages. He also had an editing suite. My first project with David was an exploitation documentary called Children of Dracula: Real Interviews with Real Vampires.

Next, we did Time Tracers and Biotech Warrior, followed by the infamous Repligator. Stephens children-of-dracula-real-interviews-with-real-vampireswas an ex-military intelligence officer and something of a neo-Nazi. He wanted to do a racist picture called Lebensborn. When I did not rush out and raise money for that, we had a falling out and he did his best to tie the films up indefinitely in legal limbo. He ended up shooting the film, but I never heard of it receiving any distribution. David was the sort of guy who’d say things like, “The only way to salvage the black race is to infuse them with white blood. They’d be unemployable if it wasn’t for McDonalds.” He was a creep.

As David and I were going separate directions, I noticed I’d done four pictures so far that year (1995.) Somewhere I’d read that Roger Corman did five films in a single year. I wanted to do one more film to top off my year. I contacted Corman and told him I was trying to squeeze out one more film for the year, because I was trying to match his record. He responded by sending me a script called Street. The original had been produced in L.A. a few years earlier and starred Christina Applegate of Married with Children fame.

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We modified the script for Fort Worth locations and shot Rumble in the Streets. This was a virtually identical situation to what Larry Buchanan had found himself in with A.I.P. back in the 60s. History repeats itself! Roger spent a day with us during production. It was a very positive experience all the way around. I think it’s my best picture, especially the never seen ‘director’s cut.’

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Roger was happy with the picture and paid me on time! Life was good! We’d done Rumble for $125,000. Roger told me he was going to give me a bigger budget, but he wanted me to shoot on 35mm this time. He offered me $150,000 to do The Protector, starring Lee Majors and Ed Marinaro. Big budget increase! Barely enough to cover the increased film expenses. But, then that’s the sort of thing Roger’s known for, eh? I was just glad to be finally working with one of my schlockmeister idols.

Between the completion of Rumble and the beginning of Protector I was expecting a reasonably good payout from Tom Moore at RMI. He’d made guarantees on several pictures I’d given him to distribute. The guarantees came due in May of 1996. In April of 1996 he filed bankruptcy, but only after building himself a very expensive home in an exclusive part of Dallas with the money that should’ve been paid to myself and other filmmakers.

It’s easy to attack the crooked distributor, and Tom Moore was certainly one of those, but I have to shoulder some of the responsibility as well. More than a year before all this went down, I had lunch with him one day. During the course of the conversation, he expressed admiration for certain family filmmakers – who shall remain nameless here – for apparently filing bankruptcy whenever they were on the verge of having to pay someone. I was forewarned that he was interested in using such underhanded methods to line his own pockets.

After busting my ass to complete five pictures in a year and having most of my money stolen, leaving me with no legal recourse, I decided it was time to bail from the movie business. My personal life was a mess at the same time and for the next couple of years everything I’d worked toward, just fell apart.

That was twenty years ago. For the longest time, I didn’t even want to talk about film. Now, I don’t think of it all as a tragedy. I think of it as an interesting part of my life. I’m glad I knew and worked with so many talented people. I see clearly that most of the indie film makers I knew ended up disappointed, just as I did. And it’s a common story. Virtually all the low-budget guys who put projects together in the 80s and early 90s got ripped off. Probably, that is still true.

I think the ones who make it are the ones who take control of as many aspects of the process as possible. I think the answer is transparency. I admire the “open source” IT gurus in the world and I think we could all take a cue from them. One of the things working against us in those days was that we were all afraid to speak out against the crooks, openly expose them. In that manner, we were complicit in our own failure. Transparency would’ve helped everyone… except the crooks.

There are more venues for creative output than ever before. The internet has rewritten media history. Whether you’re an author, musician or film maker, there are more ways to get your work to an audience than ever before. The problem is still transparency. If you want to succeed, you need to know what’s happening with your work every step of the way.

With the technology as it exists today, transparency on a moment to moment basis is completely possible. There’s really no excuse why transparent processes haven’t been implemented. All the online methods of sales, like Amazon, promise the ability to make your creations available to virtually the entire world. But everything still goes through their proprietary system.

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Buy: Amazon.com | Amazon.co.uk

I’m a writer. With the print-on-demand technology, there’s no reason why every sale of my book couldn’t be available to me as data twenty-four seven. So, why is it publishers still report only twice a year and have a ninety-day window, on top of that, in which to provide you with figures and pay you? Only one reason. Because it works in their favour.

I’d encourage young artists, of every sort, to develop ways to seize greater control over sales and distribution of the work they’ve created. Moaning about the potentially corrupt middlemen gets us nowhere. It never has. But, we’ve never been in a better position to shepherd our creations all the way down the path. Technology has provided us with a unique opportunity. Take advantage of it.

Bret McCormick, Horrorpedia © 2017

The views expressed in this article are those of the author only and may not represent the opinions of this website or its owner.

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


Garden Party Massacre (2017)

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‘Some people are the death of the party’

Garden Party Massacre is a 2017 comedy horror film written, co-produced, directed by and starring Gregory Blair (Deadly Revisions).

A gathering of friends goes seriously awry when an uninvited guest appears. With a pick-axe. And an attitude…

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Gregory Blair commented: “I love films that successfully walk that line between horror and comedy, whether it’s witty and referential like Scream or giddy low camp like Army of Darkness.”

The film is currently in post-production via Pix/See Productions.

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Main cast:

Andy Gates (My Haunted House; Haunting of Cellblock 11Zombies in the Basement), Nichole Bagby, David Leeper, Douglas Green, LeJon, Lise Hart, Art Roberts, Gregory Blair, Tiffani Fest, Marv Blauvelt, Dawna Lee Heising, Matt Weinglass,  Audrey Mitchell, Carrie Jones, Sam Ghazi, David Biber, C.J. Gilmore, Raymond Vinsik Williams, Susan Land, and Olivia Land.

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IMDb | Official site | Facebook | Twitter


Matango (1963)

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Matango (マタンゴ) – also known as Matango, Fungus of Terror and Attack of the Mushroom People – is a 1963 Japanese tokusatsu movie. It was directed by Ishirō Honda (The Human Vapour; The H-ManGodzilla) from a screenplay by Takeshi Kimura, based on the story “The Voice in the Night” by William Hope Hodgson. Eiji Tsuburaya handled the special effects.

Matango was apparently nearly banned in Japan due to some of the makeup resembling the facial disfigurements characteristic of those who survived atomic bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki.

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It was never released theatrically in the United States, but was released directly to television by American International Television (AIP-TV) in 1965 as Attack of the Mushroom People.

In the UK, the film was released with an ‘X’ certificate by Orb Films in 1969. VHS releases by JVI and Sheptonhurst/Private followed in the home video era.

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Plot:

After a yacht is damaged in a storm and its occupants become stranded on a deserted island. The passengers; a psychologist and his girlfriend, a wealthy businessman, a famous singer, a writer, a sailor and his skipper, take refuge in a mysterious fungus-covered boat.

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While using the mushrooms for sustenance they find in the ship’s journal that the mushrooms are poisonous, however some members of the shipwrecked party continue to ingest the mysterious fungi transforming them into hideous fungal monsters…

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Reviews:

With a slow-boiling tension, smart writing, convincing portrayals and some simple but effective special effects, Matango deftly explores the limits of human will and the lengths of social restraints. At the same time it directly questions the fabric of reality and the nature of happiness. And somehow, it also manages to consider life in a post-nuclear world with a rather nihilistic point of view.” Sean Kotz, Sci-fi Japan

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Buy: Amazon.com | Amazon.co.uk

“Illogical on any level except that of fantasy, where it is glaringly consistent, this is a picture that, like Honda’s Chikyu Boeigun/The Mysterians (1957), allows us to glimpse something of the nature of the dream logic that structures the monster movie scenarios.” The Aurum Film Encyclopedia: Science Fiction

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“The pace of this undeniably trippy imagery steadily gains inertia before escalating into full-blown psychedelia, with hallucinatory flashbacks of the Tokyo skyline superimposed over by seductive dancing girls as the characters descend into complete delirium at the climax.” Jasper Sharp, Midnight Eye

“Far from a piece of Grade Z schlock, it’s a good, very atmospheric, serious, fairly compelling horror / survivalist picture about the dark side of human nature and the depths some people will go to save their own ass at the expense of others. […] Shot in Tohoscope, there’s a very hazy / foggy sheen that creates a great amount of dreary atmosphere and the makeups and monster designs are effective.” The Bloody Pit of Horror

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Buy: Amazon.com

“Of course, none of it makes any sense, even in the demented world of horror films. But as a metaphoric fantasy (in the tradition of Alice in Wonderland and Gulliver’s Travels), Ishiro Honda has once again created an atmospheric, dream-like fable…” Thomas Weisser, Yuko Mihara Weisser, Japanese Cinema Encyclopedia: Horror – Fantasy – Science Fiction

“The flaws are slow pacing, poorly-shot action scenes, and the incomplete character development. But the atmosphere of grimness and mystery more than compensates. The film has a large cult following.” David Elroy Goldweber, Claws & Saucers

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

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Toho concept art for Matango (1963)

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Buy: Amazon.com | Amazon.co.uk

Cast and characters:

  • Akira Kubo as Professor Kenji Murai
  • Kumi Mizuno as Mami Sekiguchi
  • Kenji Sahara as Senzō Koyama
  • Hiroshi Tachikawa as Etsurō Yoshida
  • Yoshio Tsuchiya as Masafumi Kasai
  • Hiroshi Koizumi as Naoyuki Sakuda
  • Miki Yashiro as Akiko Sōma

Wikipedia | IMDb | Image thanks: Sci-fi Japan | VideoCollector.co.uk

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Truth or Dare (2013)

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‘It’s not just a game anymore…’

Truth or Dare is a 2013 American horror film directed by and starring Jessica Cameron (Mania) from a screenplay co-written with Jonathan Scott Higgins. It co-stars Ryan Kiser (Lillith; Red to Black; House of Manson) and Heather Dorff (Scream Queen Stream; Movie of the DeadRed Eye).

Six college friends find internet stardom when they make “Truth or Dare” videos with a violent twist. It’s all fun and games until their number one fan decides he wants to play by his own rules…

After many festival showings and awards, the film was finally released on DVD + Digital HD by Invincible Pictures on January 24, 2017 and is reportedly selling out fast.

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Buy: Amazon.com

Main cast:

Jessica Cameron, Ryan Kiser, Heather Dorff, Shelby Stehlin, Devanny Pinn, Brandon Van Vliet, Jesse Wilson, Buz Wallick, Grae Drake, Brett Wagner.

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Reviews:

“Despite some amateur performances, Truth or Dare manages to make its name as 2014’s most f*cked up film and earn plenty of accolades for visual effects. Cameron should be proud as her first foray in the directors seat has left a stamp across the horror community and will require strong stomach for anyone not used to this level of blood and guts on their screen.” BloodGuts UK Horror

” …Cameron’s themes have already been mined more effectively in films like The Den and Lucky Bastard. Her strictly B-movie script, penned with Jonathan Scott Higgins, strings one ludicrous contrivance after another, each requiring the ridiculous response of a weakly crafted character to work, all in the name of extreme gore.” Hope Maddern, Screen Relish

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“Jessica Cameron’’s first outing as director is fast-paced and tight. Though the torture is excruciating, it’s the truths of who these people are as individuals that really turns the stomach. The script, co-written with Jonathan Scott Higgins, focuses on horrifying its audience in a different way, with the truth, not the dare.” Christopher Jiminez, ComingSoon.net

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“It’s a real testament to the films script and direction that you side with this pretty horrible bunch, of course it helps that Ryan Kiser, as Derik, is such an evil psychotic bastard […] With a lot to say on the pursuit of fame (or infamy) in this YouTube-loving generation, and the price people can pay when they achieve it, Truth or Dare is most definitely a product of our time. It’s also damn good gory fun!” Phil Wheat, Nerdly

Filming locations:

Los Angeles, California, USA
Tucson, Arizona, USA

IMDb | Official site | Facebook


Bloody Bits: Shorts Compilation (2016)

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Bloody Bits is a 2016 Canadian horror compilation of seven of the best short films shown at the Blood in the Snow film festival.

The shorts are from directors Christopher Giroux (Dead All Night), Darryl Shaw (Greater Than), Jay Clarke (Lively), Navin Ramaswaran (One More For The Road), Kat Threlkeld (Seiren), Greg Kovacs (Tasha And Friends) and Alex Hatz (Uncommon Enemies).

The compilation has been released by Black Fawn Distribution and is available from them exclusively via their website. It includes:

  • Audio Commentary For “One More For The Road.”
  • Trailers

 

 

 


Wishmaster 2: Evil Never Dies (1999)

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‘Evil has been summoned… again!’

Wishmaster 2: Evil Never Dies is a 1999 American supernatural horror film written and directed by Jack Sholder (ArachnidThe Hidden; A Nightmare on Elm Street 2: Freddy’s Revenge; Alone in the Dark) based on a character created by Peter Atkins (Hellraiser sequels). It stars Andrew Divoff, Paul Johansson (Van Helsing TV series), Holly Fields (The Munsters Today) and Bokeem Woodbine.

Production designer Alfred Sole directed Communion aka Alice, Sweet Alice (1976) and slasher spoof Pandemonium (1982).

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Plot:

Evil has been summoned once again when the Djinn (Andrew Divoff) is accidentally awakened by a burglar named Morgana (Fields) during a botched art robbery.

When the Djinn deliberately takes blame for the crime, he’s sent to prison where he grants wishes to pent-up prisoners in return for their souls, to ultimately structure an army to obliterate all humanity. It’s up to Morgana to save the human race…

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Director Jack Sholder has commented: “That’s one that I have very mixed feelings about because there are parts of it that I really like, but I think, all in all, it’s a little dumb.

To tell you the truth, I haven’t seen it since I, uh, made it. When I was making it, I thought it was good. I thought a lot of it was kind of funny or clever. I definitely feel it has merit. From what I can gather, it’s one of those films that divides people. Some people don’t like it, others do.

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And, you know, it was also a sequel to a movie that I thought wasn’t a good movie at all. It’s a movie that I did, and I don’t regret doing. You know, there’s a lot of stuff that I think is pretty good from it. You know, like the scene from the casino I thought was pretty good. Maybe it comes off as being silly.” Behind the Curtain Part II (2012).

On March 28, 2017, the film is released on Blu-ray by Vestron Video/Lionsgate as part of the Wishmaster Collection:

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Buy: Amazon.com

Wishmaster Special Features:

Audio Commentaries:
Director Robert Kurtzman and screenwriter Peter Atkins
Director Robert Kurtzman and stars Andrew Divoff and Tammy Lauren
Isolated Score Selections/Audio Interview with composer Harry Manfredini

Featurettes:
“Out of the Bottle” – Interviews with director Robert Kurtzman and co-producer David Tripet
“The Magic Words” – An Interview with screenwriter Peter Atkins
“The Djinn and Alexandra” – Interviews with stars Andrew Divoff and Tammy Lauren
“Captured Visions” – An Interview with director of photography Jacques Haitkin
“Wish List” – Interviews with actors Kane Hodder and Ted Raimi
Vintage Featurette: “Making of Wishmaster”

Trailers, Spots, Galleries: Teaser & Theatrical Trailers, TV & Radio Spots, Storyboard & Still Galleries
Behind-the-Scenes Footage Compilation

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Audio Commentary with writer/director Jack Sholder
Trailer
Still Gallery

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Audio Commentary with director Chris Angel and cast members John Novak, Jason Connery, and Louisette Geiss
Vintage Featurette: “Making of Wishmaster 3: Beyond the Gates of Hell”
Trailer

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Audio Commentaries:
Director Chris Angel and cast members Michael Trucco and Jason Thompson
Director Chris Angel and actor John Novak
Featurette: “Wishmasterpiece Theatre”
Trailer

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Reviews:

“With his strong voice and devilish smile, hinting at the terrible secret his character is hiding from the world, Divoff continues the fine work he did in Wishmaster, bringing to life a dangerous character and clearly having fun in the process. In his hands, what was, for the most part, a disappointing sequel is transformed into a worthwhile experience.” DVD Infatuation

“There isn’t nearly as much gore as the first, and the lead character’s investigation and nightmares about the Djinn are all essentially remakes from the original. Still, despite the Djinn’s power seeming less grand, star Andrew Divoff seems to have a much better handle on his character, and he’s fabulous as the Djinn, who doesn’t seem as much “evil” as he is just wicked.” Beyond Hollywood

 

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“The one other thing that the first film showcased was an extraordinary display of makeup effects. The sequel only intermittently produces these – a cool effect with the Wishmaster rebirthing by emerging out of a wall, a man being squeezed through the bars of a cell – and none with the impact of the opening few minutes of Wishmaster. Worse, Jack Sholder adds silly sequences that take the film down to about the level of the average Leprechaun (1993) sequel.” Richard Scheib, Moria: The Science Fiction, Horror and Fantasy Film Review

” …Wishmaster 2 derives much of its power not from its sketchily conceived good guys but from its surprisingly effective villain. With his carefully arched eyebrows, receding hairline (not even all-powerful satanic beings are immune to the ravages of baldness), and creepy monotone speaking voice, Divoff resembles nothing so much as a lobotomized Jack Nicholson, yet his character possesses a beatific sense of calm that’s strangely unnerving.” Nathan Rabin, A.V. Club

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Wishmaster 2: Evil Never Dies has some decent moments but that’s all this film feels like – a collection of moments rather than a full blown narrative with them in. The story is bitty, the acting is pretty dire (with the exception of Divoff) and even the wishes seem to have lost their charm. It’s a fair timewaster if you were a massive fan of the original but other than that, it’s a no-brainer…” Andrew Smith, Popcorn Pictures

 

Cast and characters:

  • Holly Fields as Morgana
  • Andrew Divoff as The Djinn / Nathaniel Demerest
  • Paul Johansson as Gregory
  • Rhino Michaels as Butz
  • James Kim as James Tiger
  • Simon Kim as Simon Tiger
  • Oleg Vidov as Osip
  • Levan Uchaneishvili as Pushkin
  • Timo Flloko as Moustafa

 

Filming locations:

Los Angeles, California, USA

Wikipedia | IMDb

Plot keywords:

art | robbery | supernatural | mythology | Persian | djinn | genie | evil | malevolent | wish | gore | church | priest | prison | gangs | guards | Russian mafia | lawyer | fight | shower | Syrian | drunkenness | betting | gambling | casino | flies


Atlanta Vampire Movie (2017)

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‘We suck at this’

Atlanta Vampire Movie is a 2017 comedy horror film directed by Giles Shepherd (Ace the Zombie: The Motion Picture) from a screenplay by Wiley McCain.

Carmilla (Chelsea Howard) inadvertently infects Ron (Carl W Childers), Fang (Elena House), and Corey (Jevocas Green) with her vampirism.

While attending a support group recommended by Dr. Acula (Stan Bowman) for what is thought to be a medical condition, the three connect back with Carmilla and learn the truth of their new existence.

Cast out by Martin (Edward Solis) and the old vampires, pursued by the determined Eddie Van Helsing (John Johnson), Ron and Carmilla seek to maintain some humanity and lead their menage through the challenges of vampire life in the modern world…

The film is currently in post-production.

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IMDb | Facebook


It’s Alive! (1969)

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‘Trapped in a cave of terror!’

It’s Alive! is a 1969 American horror film written, edited, produced and directed by Larry Buchanan (The Loch Ness Horror; Zontar: The Thing from Venus; The Naked Witch).

The film’s screenplay was apparently based on ‘Being’, a 1964 script for a film production of Richard Matheson’s story of the same name. Much to AIP’s chagrin, ‘Being’ had to be shelved after lead actor Peter Lorre passed away before filming could commence. Buchanan inherited the project for one of AIP’s TV cheapies.

Plot:

A mad farmer finds a prehistoric monster hiding in a cavern on his land. To feed his critter, the demented farmer kidnaps three people who desperately try to escape…

Main cast:

Tommy Kirk, Shirley Bonne, Bill Thurman (The EvictorsKeep My Grave Open; Night Fright), Corveth Ousterhouse and Annabelle Weenick (Don’t Look in the Basement).

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Reviews:

“The monster is a guy in a rubber suit with fangs and ping-pong balls for eyes. Even a barely adequate director would have realised such a shoddy monster required the use of lightning-fast cut-aways in order to diminish its comical potential, but Buchanan presents us with lengthy head shots so that we can examine its awfulness in detail.” Richard Cross, 20/20 Movie Reviews

“Thurman’s performance aside, however, the movie is a stinker, with too many dull stretches and a particularly ill-conceived monster.  The latter uses the same outfit that Buchanan used for Creature of Destruction; it was a lousy monster suit to begin with, but at least in that movie it made a little sense. Here, it’s supposed to be a giant dinosaur, but it never once conveys any sense of real size, and it looks not the least bit dinosaurish.” Dave Sindelar, Fantastic Movie Musings and Ramblings

“The opener with the couple getting lost is mildly effective – as it’s helped by an ominous kind of Texas Chainsaw Massacre-style voiceover – but the rest is a poorly acted snoozer.” The Terror Trap

Choice dialogue:

Narrator: “There is a legend in these hills. That when it rains and sun shines at the same time, the Devil is kissing his wife.”

Filming locations:

Eureka Springs and Beaver, in Ozark Mountain area of northern Arkansas

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

Wikipedia | IMDb


78/52 (2017)

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78/52 is a 2017 American documentary film written and directed by Alexandre O. Philippe (Doc of the Dead). It looks at the iconic shower scene in Alfred Hitchcock’s Psycho, the “man behind the curtain”, and the screen murder that profoundly changed the course of world cinema.

Synopsis:

Fifty years after its initial release shocked an entire generation of unsuspicious moviegoers, Psycho remains one of the most intensely discussed and analyzed movies of all time.

78/52 explores that intangible “cinematic space” between the shots. It delves into Hitchcock’s genius in unprecedented fashion, to become the first feature-length investigation into the art, craft, and influence of a single extraordinary scene – one which forever changed the course of popular cinema, and continues to inspire some of the greatest filmmakers of our time. A 78 shot / 52 cut slice of cinematic heaven: the “shower scene”.

The film features interviews with Peter Bogdanovich, Jamie Lee Curtis, Guillermo del Toro, Danny Elfman, Bret Easton Ellis, Mick Garris, Karyn Kusama, Neil Marshall, Bob Murawski, Walter Murch, Oz Perkins, Marli Renfro, Eli Roth, Scott Spiegel, Richard Stanley, Leigh Whannell, Elijah Wood and others.

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Reviews:

“While it’s a bit disappointing that 78/52 doesn’t look beyond the shower scene to see how the total film come together, it’s ultimately not a movie about Psycho as much as it’s about the shower scene. It’s the double-edged sword of focusing on a few moments at the neglect of what surrounds those moments. Thankfully, that deep dive is such an enjoyment to watch and a thoughtful approach to Hitchcock’s direction that it’s difficult to complain that the documentary leaves us wanting more.” Matt Goldberg, Collider

” …the director would seem to disclose his base-line sympathies through the preponderance of youngish horror film makers and enthusiasts whose often manic and jargon-filled ejaculations of avidity for Psycho suggests that Hitchcock’s achievement lies less in pioneering (however unwittingly) the cultural shift signposted by 1960 and more in cracking open the door to a later generation of filmmakers to make gruesomely unrestrained horror films…” Todd McCarthy, The Hollywood Reporter

78/52 is powered by captivating stories, like the one about how Hitchcock tested out the death-cut sound of knives slashing through a hundred different varieties of melon (having decided, he finally said “casaba” with matter-of-fact authority, and left the room). Or how, amazingly, when he saw the first rough cut of Psycho, he thought that the movie played so badly that he decided to scrap the entire project and boil it down to a one-hour episode of his weekly TV series.” Owen Gleiberman, Variety

Offline reading:

Psycho in the Shower: The History of Cinema’s Most Famous Scene by Philip J. Skerry

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Buy: Amazon.comAmazon.co.uk

IMDb

 


Lavender (2016)

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‘The past won’t forget’

Lavender is a 2016 Canadian horror thriller film directed by Ed Gass-Donnelly (The Last Exorcism Part II) from a screenplay co-written with Colin Frizzell.

Jane, a photographer, is forced to come to terms with her mysterious and tragic past after a horrendous car accident robs her of her memory.

Along with her husband and daughter, Jane returns to her childhood home and reconnects with her estranged uncle. To take control of her life, Jane must confront a mysterious lurking force and grapple with a past that continues to haunt her…

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Main cast:

Abbie Cornish, Diego Klattenhoff, Dermot Mulroney, Justin Long, Lola Flanery, Sarah Abbott and Peyton Kennedy.

The film will be released exclusively on DISH on February 3, 2017, before it is released in movie theaters and VOD on March 3, 2017.

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Reviews:

“Of course, just dropping the phrase “family secrets” sort of telegraphs the big reveal (just how many different kinds of family secrets do we ever see in movies?), but the getting-there is quite skillful. Recommended for fans of moody, carefully produced supernatural thrillers…” J.B. Spins

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“If Lavender never develops in a particularly novel direction, it nonetheless benefits from the commanding presence of Cornish, who projects a measure of confidence and intelligence that’s a welcome reprieve from the usual bewildered-panicky heroine behavior found in so many likeminded supernatural sagas.” Nick Schager, Variety

“There are things in Lavender that seriously creeped me out. The entire premise deals with facing an inevitable haunting storm as the walls close around your perception of reality. That defenceless inability to find refuge is what makes this horror/thriller work in spades.” Wylie Writes

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“The actors cast all play with a reasonable conviction in their parts. The main problem with Lavender is that it feels as though it is well-rehearsed and a technically polished film but one where everything is delivered by automatic without much involvement. Ed Gass-Donnelly delivers a few scares but they are so tepid as to be instantly forgettable.” Richard Scheib, Moria

Lavender sometimes struggles with its icy pacing as shards of Jane’s discombobulated memory repeat and return. The repetitive bent to the film is more of a tease than an agent of suspense. The film is admittedly slow, and confidently so, but the strong final act redeems it.” Pat Mullen, Cinemablographer

Production companies:

South Creek Pictures
3 Legged Dog Films

IMDb | Official site | Facebook | Instagram



Jezebeth (2011)

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‘There is no God. There is only Jezebeth’

Jezebeth is a 2011 American horror film written, produced and directed by Damien Dante (Jezebeth 2: Hour of the Gun). It stars Bree Michaels (Mother’s Milk; Waterfront Nightmare), Katie Auerbach and Colleena Corrigan (Dark Hallways).

In the attic of her ancestral home, Jezebeth, at war with God, unwittingly discovers a nineteenth century diary that details the summoning of a demon.

Jezebeth succeeds in breaking a satanic code inside her hell room which creates for her two realities. Lenora Blandy (Madeline Maser), a devout Catholic, endlessly tortured at the hands of Jezebeth, has come to the end of her rope. Nowhere to run, nor hide. She’s forced to confront her demons…

Main cast:

Bree Michaels, Katie Auerbach, Colleena Corrigan, Galina Emmerich, Baby D. Frost, Amanda Jean, Kelsey Kozak, Madeline Maser, Wolf McKinney, Drake Mefestta, Jeff Swan, Adrian Willoughby.

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Buy: Amazon.com | Amazon.co.uk

Reviews:

” …the story is lost somewhere along the way when we get 5 to 10 minute segments scattered throughout the film filled with generic hard rock and gothic imagery. The acting in this film is very amateurish and very over-dramatic by the entire cast. The film tries to be serious in tone but turns into an unintentional comedy when each scene becomes laughable by how the cast acts with each other.” Blacktooth, Horror Society

“This isn’t a film. It tries to be a film by having a very thin strand of plot lacing through the guitar solos, but for the most part, this is an extended collection of bad metal music. There’s no interest in making the plot work. The film is cast with five girls with long dark hair who look almost identical, so you don’t know who is who and given that none of the characters really have personality, it doesn’t really matter.” Ambush Bug, Ain’t It Cool News

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IMDb | Official web page


Bad Ronald (1974)

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‘A disturbed teenager unleashes a night of terror’

Bad Ronald is a 1974 American TV movie directed by Buzz Kulik (Crawlspace, 1971) from a screenplay by Andrew Peter Marin. It is based on a novel by Jack Holbrook Vance, who is more famous for his science fiction and fantasy novels.

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An introverted and shy teenager, Ronald, accidentally kills a mocking peer and his mother helps him hide in a spare room in their house. Problems arise when the mother goes for an operation and dies, and the house is sold to a new family, with the teen still living inside. Ronald descends into a fantasy world and develops an unwelcome fondness for the youngest daughter of the family…

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Main cast:

Scott Jacoby, Kim Hunter, Dabney Coleman and sisters Lisa and Cindy Eilbacher.

Review:

Although Scott Jacoby who plays Ronald and Cindy Fisher who plays Babs, the object of his affections, never troubled the Academy in their subsequent careers, the acting is of a high standard; the most notable appearance in the film is by Kim Hunter who plays Ronald’s mother and is best known for playing Zira in the 70s Planet of the Apes films.

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The music for the film was composed by Fred Karlin who also scored the likes of Westworld and Chosen SurvivorsBad Ronald is considered one of the very best films made for television and sits alongside the likes of Dark Night of the Scarecrow as a film that now appears somewhat inappropriate in terms of theme and content for the small screen.

Fondly remembered since it was first broadcast and appeared as a bootleg tape for many years, Bad Ronald has recently been given the new lease of life it has long deserved in the form of an official DVD from the Warner Archive imprint.

Daz Lawrence, Horrorpedia

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Other reviews:

“Surreal, psychological, and singular, Bad Ronald is the perfect encapsulation of all that made classic TV movies great.” Andrew Todd, Birth. Movies. Death.

Bad Ronald is an effective demented little piece and deserves a thorough watch; if not just to thrill and excite horror hounds who enjoy creepy little oddities from the seventies but also for writers-to-be to study a straight narrative structure that continually paces itself soundly and also makes biting commentary on the complex dance between accidental horror, emotional scarring and psychological instability.” Lee Gambin, ComingSoon.net

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Wikipedia | IMDb


Psychos in Love (1987)

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‘Love hurts…’

Psychos in Love is a 1987 American black comedy horror film produced and directed by Gorman Bechard (Galactic Gigolo; Cemetery High; Disconnected) from a screenplay co-written with Carmine Capobianco, who provided the Casio CZ synth score and also co-stars.

The $75,000 movie was filmed on 16mm. Some scenes were improvised and the fourth wall is broken.

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Joe (Carmine Capobianco), a bartender in a strip joint, and Kate (Debi Thibeault), a manicurist, meet after trying to find a significant other for a long time. They share a hatred for grapes and are both murderers.

Before meeting Kate, Joe murdered many women after bringing them to his home. A cannibal plumber, Herman (Frank Stewart), blackmails the serial killers…

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Main cast:

Carmine Capobianco (Model HungerThe Sins of DraculaI Spill Your Guts), Debi Thibeault (Cemetery High), Cecelia Wilde, Robert Suttile, Lum Chang Pang, Danny Noyes, Herb Klinger, Wally Gribauskas, Peach Gribauskas, LeeAnne Baker (Necropolis), Michael Citriniti, Angela Nicholas (The Domicile), Ed Powers.

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Reviews:

“Although at times the pacing is sluggish and only about half the jokes are funny, it does have a zany originality […] While certainly not for the squeamish, Psychos in Love does have a certain grotesque charm and may achieve a minor sort of cult status among fans of the bizarre.” TV Guide

“This critic didn’t like this movie when he first saw it back in the late ’80s, and nothing has changed since then. He didn’t find it funny, inventive, or scary.” Bill Gibron, DVD Talk

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“There’s really not much of a plot to Psychos in Love but there is a lot to enjoy. The film’s humor hits most of its marks, never taking itself too seriously, however several running gags, such as the grape monologue, quickly wear out their welcome. The lead actor’s self awareness, that they are characters in a low budget slasher picture, also tends to cause more confusion than it does laughter.” Jason McElreath, DVD Drive-In

” …on top of being funny, gory, and, of course, sexy, it’s got a sweet and tender side. I don’t know why I’m acting all surprised; after all, the word “love” is in the freaking title. It’s just that I was genuinely moved by the film’s love story…” House of Self Indulgence

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“It’s a black comedy, obviously, that owes more than a little debt to Paul Bartel’s 1982 Eating Raoul, minus that film’s smugness. But hands down the reason it works is due to the natural chemistry of stars Carmine Capobianco and Debi Thibeault.” Mike Watt, Fervid Filmmaking: 66 Cult Pictures of Vision, Verve and No Self-Restraint

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” …does a great job of successfully combining elements of horror and comedy perfectly. A lot of horror comedies have trouble pulling this off but that wasn’t the case with Psychos in Love. The humor is actually very funny (I loved the rants that Joe and Kate both have about their hatred of grapes, the excellent musical montage, and  thought the scene at the video store was nothing short of priceless)…” Todd Martin, HorrorNews.net

“This is a really clever, funny, quick-paced, well acted indie flick that never takes itself seriously and knows exactly what kind of movie it is.” Anything Horror

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Psychos in Love is exceptionally well-made for an amateur feature too. The editing is excellent, with the pace moving quickly through the film’s many murder segments. The first clue that it’s more than just your average horror film are the very funny interview segments in black & white that seem quite prophetic in the current reality TV obsessed culture.” Silver Emulsion Film Reviews

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Choice dialogue:

“Grapes? Grapes? I hate grapes. I loath grapes, all kinds of grapes. I hate purple grapes, I hate green grapes, I hate grapes with seeds, I hate grapes without seeds, I hate them peeled and non peeled; I hate them in bunches, one at a time, or in small groups of twos and threes. I f*cking hate grapes!!”

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Release:

The film was released on VHS in 1987, distributed by Wizard Video. It was released on DVD by Shriek Show, a division of Media Blasters, in 2009. The special features include commentaries, a behind the scenes look at the film’s production, multiple beginning credits, longer scenes, the film’s trailer, a picture gallery, and parts of the 2003 stage production.

Filming locations:

Goshen, Hartford, Naugatuck, Waterbury and Watertown, Connecticut, USA

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

Wikipedia | IMDb | Official site |

Image thanks: HorrorNews.net | Silver Emulsion Film Reviews


Danur: I Can See Ghosts (2017)

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Danur: I Can See Ghosts is a 2017 Indonesian horror film directed by Awi Suryadi (Badoet). It stars Prilly Latuconsina.

Little Risa is lonely. Her father is working in a foreign country and her mother is kept busy between taking care of her sick grandmother in the hospital and her job as a public servant.

So, Little Risa is spending her school holiday mostly alone in her grandmother’s big house. When her mother misses her eighth birthday, Little Risa wishes for a friend. As soon as she blows the candle, she hears a little boy singing…

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That night, Little Risa meets three little Dutch boys playing hide-and-seek in her grandmother’s closet. They introduce themselves as Peter, William and Janshen. Her wish for a friend has been granted threefold. She doesn’t care that her mother can’t seem to see her new friends, their friendship is real to her.

Until one night her mother comes home with a paranormal and he opens her inner eye… Little Risa finally sees her friends in their true form.

The film is scheduled to be released in Indonesia on 30 March 2017.

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Source: Screen Anarchy


John Hurt – actor

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John Hurt (22 January 1940 – 25 January 2017) was an English actor whose career spanned six decades.

He came to prominence for his sympathetic role as Timothy Evans, who was hanged in real-life for murders actually committed by his landlord John Christie, in 10 Rillington Place (1971).

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His notable leading roles were as John Merrick in David Lynch’s biopic The Elephant Man (1980), Winston Smith in a version of Orwell’s Nineteen Eighty-Four (1984) and Stephen Ward in the drama depicting the Profumo affair, Scandal (1989). He is also famous for his television roles such as Quentin Crisp in The Naked Civil Servant (1975), Caligula in I, Claudius (1976) and the War Doctor in Doctor Who.

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John Hurt appeared in a number of horror and sci-fi/fantasy films including The Pied Piper (1972), The Ghoul (1975), The Shout (1978), After Darkness (1985), Roger Corman’s Frankenstein Unbound (1990), Lost Souls (2000), Hellboy and its sequel (2004), The Skeleton Key (2005), V for Vendetta (2005), Outlander (2008), Sightseers (narrator of Blake’s ‘Jerusalem’, 2012) and Only Lovers Left Alive. He was also in the 2010 TV adaptation of M.R. James inspired ghost story, Whistle and I’ll Come to You.

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Most horror fans will know Hurt for his role as Kane in Alien (1979), whose unexpectedly spectacular and gory demise shocked audiences worldwide. In fact, his casting was last minute as Jon Finch was originally due to play the part but had to drop out due to ill health.

In 1987, Mel Brooks persuaded Hurt to pay homage to his infamous Alien role in the sci-fi spoof Spaceballs.

Referring to Frankenstein Unbound (1990), Hurt commented: “Everybody’s got to work with Roger Corman. You can’t leave out that experience. I was amazed when I met him, because I was expecting to see this rather freaky character with hair all over the place – a complete crazy man. But he wasn’t. He was dressed in a tie and a suit, with very neat hair. At first, I thought he was a solicitor.”

John Hurt was quoted as saying: “We are all racing towards death. No matter how many great, intellectual conclusions we draw during our lives, we know they’re all only man-made, like God. I begin to wonder where it all leads. What can you do, except do what you can do as best you know how.”

Throughout his acting career, there can be no doubt that John Hurt gave it his best even when he appeared in a few films that were, by his own admission, “stinkers”.

Adrian J Smith, Horrorpedia

 


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