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The Official Trailer for Reel Evil Unspools!

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The official trailer is now online for the found-footage feature Reel Evil, written by Shane Bitterling and directed by Danny Draven for Full Moon. The film releases to DVD and VOD on December 4th.

Synopsis:
Reel Evil follows struggling filmmakers Kennedy, Cory and James, who finally catch the break they are looking for when they are hired to shoot a behind-the-scenes documentary for a major studio production. But their dream job quickly turns into a nightmare when they explore the legendary haunted location and find something far worse than anything Hollywood could create. Terror becomes reality for the filmmakers as they uncover the malevolent secrets of the hospital and the sinister doctor who once ran it.

Jamie Bernadette, Jessica Morris, Kaiwi Lyman, Jim Tavaré, Kyle Morris, Christian Edsall, Sandra Hinojosa, Michael Cline, Jeffrey Adler and Lino Dumont star. Director Draven edits with cinematography handled by Terrance Ryker.

Related Story: Exclusive: Jamie Bernadette Talks Full Moon's Reel Evil; Teaser Trailer and Photos Released

For more info on the flick, "like" Reel Evil on Facebook, visit the official Full Moon website, "like" Full Moon on Facebook, and follow Full Moon on Twitter.

The Official Trailer for Reel Evil Unspools!

The Official Trailer for Reel Evil Unspools!

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Toronto After Dark 2012 Announces Winners; Cockneys vs. Zombies Wins Gold; American Mary Continues to Dominate

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With one of the longest lists of award winners we've ever seen, the 2012 Toronto After Dark Film Festival has announced who brought home the gold, silver, bronze, and more from this year's event.

From the Press Release:
Toronto After Dark Film Festival is thrilled to announce the Award Winners of its 7th Annual Edition! As is tradition at Toronto After Dark, the Jury were the fans themselves with over 4,000 votes cast this year by festival-goers to determine the best new horror, sci-fi, action and cult movies from around the world!

Genre comedies won audiences over at Toronto After Dark 2012 with the crowd-pleasing British gangsters meets zombies action comedy COCKNEYS VS ZOMBIES winning the festival’s Top Prize, the Audience Choice Award for Best Feature Film, GOLD. Close behind, DEAD SUSHI the latest splatter comedy from Japanese cult director Noboru Iguchi, gobbled up the SILVER, while A FANTASTIC FEAR OF EVERYTHING, a wildly eccentric British fantasy comedy starring fan favourite Simon Pegg, snuck away with the BRONZE.

In the Specialty Categories, the big winners were the stylish surgical horror thriller AMERICAN MARY from the Soska Twins, which won 6 Awards including Best Director, Best Actress and Best Canadian Feature; the subversive cabin in the woods horror movie RESOLUTION, which won 4 Awards including Best Screenplay and Most Innovative Film; and the terrifying tower block horror thriller CITADEL, which snagged 3 wins including Best Horror Film and Scariest Film.

In the short-format category, the Best Canadian Short GOLD went to splatterific action comedy BIO COP from fan favourite group Astron-6’s Steven Kostanski, while the GOLD for International Short went to the stunningly animated sci-fi film HENRI. And the inaugural winner of a new award category, Best Independent Video Game: GOLD, was the ultraviolent retro-throwbrack HOTLINE MIAMI.

Here's the complete list of award-winners from Toronto After Dark 2012. Congratulations all around!

AUDIENCE CHOICE AWARDS, BEST FEATURE FILM
1. GOLD: COCKNEYS VS ZOMBIES
2. SILVER: DEAD SUSHI
3. BRONZE: A FANTASTIC FEAR OF EVERYTHING

AUDIENCE CHOICE AWARDS, BEST CANADIAN SHORT FILM
1. GOLD: BIO-COP
2. SILVER: A PRETTY FUNNY STORY
3. BRONZE: FROST

AUDIENCE CHOICE AWARDS, BEST INTERNATIONAL SHORT FILM
1. GOLD: HENRI
2. SILVER: VICKI
3. BRONZE: NUMBERS

AUDIENCE CHOICE AWARDS, BEST INDEPENDENT VIDEO GAME
1. GOLD: HOTLINE MIAMI
2. SILVER: TALES FROM SPACE: MUTANT BLOB ATTACKS
3. BRONZE: McPIXEL

SPECIALTY CATEGORY WINNERS - AS VOTED BY FANS

GENRE & TECHNICAL CATEGORIES

BEST HORROR FILM
Citadel

BEST SCI-FI FILM:
Doomsday Book

BEST ACTION FILM
Universal Soldier: Day of Reckoning

BEST COMEDY
Cockneys vs Zombies

BEST DIRECTOR
American Mary (Jen & Sylvia Soska)

BEST SCREENPLAY
Resolution (Justin Benson)

BEST CANADIAN FEATURE FILM
American Mary

BEST LEADING ACTOR
A Fantastic Fear Of Everything (Simon Pegg)

BEST LEADING ACTRESS
American Mary (Katherine Isabelle)

BEST ENSEMBLE CAST
Cockneys Vs Zombies

BEST MAKE-UP
[Rec] 3: Genesis

BEST SPECIAL EFFECTS
Dead Sushi

BEST SOUNDTRACK
Sushi Girl

BEST CINEMATOGRAPHY
American Mary

BEST EDITING
Crave

BEST TRAILER
Dead Sushi

BEST POSTER
[Rec] 3: Genesis

BEST TITLE SEQUENCE
Crave (Closing Credits)

FUN CATEGORIES

BEST FILM TO WATCH WITH A CROWD
Dead Sushi

FILM MOST LIKE TO SEE A SEQUEL TO
Cockneys Vs Zombies

BEST VILLAIN
Lloyd The Conqueror (Derek the Unholy, played by Mike Smith)

BEST HERO
[Rec] 3: Genesis (Clara the Bride, played by Leticia Dolera)

BEST ANTIHERO
American Mary (Mary Mason, played by Katherine Isabelle)

BEST KILL
Inbred (Shotgun to the head)

BEST FIGHT
Universal Soldier: Day Of Reckoning (Sports store fight featuring Scott Adkins and Andrei Arlovski)

GORIEST FILM
Inbred

SCARIEST FILM
Citadel

MOST INNOVATIVE FILM
Resolution

MOST DISTURBING FILM
American Mary

MOST THRILLING FILM
Citadel

BEST FILM INTRO
Resolution

BEST AUDIENCE Q&A
Resolution

Toronto After Dark 2012 Announces Winners; Cockneys vs. Zombies Wins Gold; American Mary Continues to Dominate

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New Trailer and Poster Art for West of Memphis Documentary

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West of Memphis opens on Christmas Day, and Sony Pictures Classics has unveiled new poster art and another trailer for the documentary that tells the story behind an extraordinary and desperate fight to bring the truth to light. It's powerful stuff, and we especially like the music used in the trailer!

West of Memphis was written and directed by Academy Award-nominated filmmaker Amy Berg (Deliver Us From Evil) and produced by first-time filmmakers Damien Echols and Lorri Davis, in collaboration with the multiple Academy Award winning team of Peter Jackson and Fran Walsh.

Synopsis
Starting with a searing examination of the police investigation into the 1993 murders of three, eight-year-old boys - Christopher Byers, Steven Branch, and Michael Moore - in the small town of West Memphis, Arkansas, the film reveals the story from the inside. West of Memphis uncovers new evidence surrounding the arrest and conviction of the other three victims of this shocking crime – Damien Echols, Jason Baldwin, and Jessie Misskelley, all three of whom were teenagers at the time of their arrests and all three of whom were imprisoned for crimes they did not commit.

New Trailer and Poster Art for West of Memphis Documentary

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Check Out Bill Oberst Jr. in Lord Bateman... Does This Guy Ever Sleep?

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With a work schedule that rivals that of the proverbial one-legged man in a butt-kicking contest, Bill Oberst, Jr., is becoming the male version of Debbie Rochon. He's now added one more project: upcoming horror flick Lord Bateman. Read on for an early look at the production.

Lord Bateman is being created by Dismal Productions. Producers are Seth Metoyer and Bill Oberst, Jr. For more info visit the official Dismal Productions website and "like" Dismal Productions on Facebook.

From the Press Release
Lord Bateman is slated for a 2014 release, and the film stars Bill Oberst, Jr. (Abraham Lincoln vs. Zombies). Oberst, Jr. plays Bateman, a noble who sees himself more as a demon than a mortal. He stalks Europe in search of ever more victims to act out his devilish ways. Early production has involved a photo shoot with actresses Anna Pullig and Alice Orozco participating. Make-up artist Mark Andrews (Kaboom) has lent his talents and liters of blood to the shoot as well. His work can be seen in the photos below. And these stills have been brought together in a short video, which shows the film’s dark tone and proficiency in the creation of demonic makeup. This is truly an evil production.

Actor Oberst Jr. has something to say of the film’s story. Lord Bateman is set during the 16th Century in Europe, where Bateman seeks out and dismembers his victims. Is Lord Bateman a demon with evil powers or merely a mortal caught in delusion? Actor Oberst Jr. says of the film’s evil and of his character: "I believe in Satan…and I know from personal experience that he is a liar and a thief." Decide Bateman’s fate and conscience with this short production video, which is waiting below!

Synopsis
Lord Bateman is a man of royal lineage who is plagued by visions of himself as a demon. He comes to believe that he actually is a demon, cursed to live a human existence as punishment for some infraction down below. The question is whether he is right...or delusional. Of course, to his victims it matters little.

Check Out Bill Oberst Jr. in Lord Bateman... Does This Guy Ever Sleep?

Check Out Bill Oberst Jr. in Lord Bateman... Does This Guy Ever Sleep?

Check Out Bill Oberst Jr. in Lord Bateman... Does This Guy Ever Sleep?

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New Trailers, Posters, and Set Photos for Chuck Conry's Morbid

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Movie blogger Chuck Conry’s directorial debut, Morbid, has wrapped shooting and is in post-production with an expected early 2013 release. He's sent over both the NSFW trailer as well the general trailer, new posters, and set photos for the film.

The film stars Ryan Grooms, Olivia Hiers, Richard Chilton, Brandon Magouirk, Jessi Grissom, and Kelly Carver.




Synopsis
A small town becomes the playground to a masked killer stalking and killing the locals for no apparent reason. With the town’s sheriff and locals still more worried about a high school football game than getting to the bottom of what’s going on, one detective from out of town must rush to save the lives of a group of teens tossing a party in the middle of all the chaos. But as we soon learn, these teens have some complicated issues of their own.

For more info visit Zombies DON'T Run and follow Chuck Conry on Twitter (@chuckconry).

New Trailers, Posters, and Set Photos for Chuck Conry's Morbid

New Trailers, Posters, and Set Photos for Chuck Conry's Morbid

New Trailers, Posters, and Set Photos for Chuck Conry's Morbid

New Trailers, Posters, and Set Photos for Chuck Conry's Morbid

New Trailers, Posters, and Set Photos for Chuck Conry's Morbid

New Trailers, Posters, and Set Photos for Chuck Conry's Morbid

New Trailers, Posters, and Set Photos for Chuck Conry's Morbid

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James D'Arcy Joins A&E's Those Who Kill as Male Lead

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James D'Arcy Joins A&E's Those Who Kill as Male LeadA few days ago we got word that Chloe Sevigny would be one of the stars of A&E's pilot "Those Who Kill," and now we know with whom she'll be sharing a majority of her screen time as British actor James D’Arcy has been set as the male lead.

The project, an adaptation of a Danish crime series based on the books by Elsebeth Egholm, revolves around police detective Catherine Jensen (Sevigny) and forensic profiler Thomas Schaffer (D’Arcy), who possess a deep understanding of the serial killers they hunt. Thomas is described as a handsome and intellectual college psychology teacher with a PhD who focuses on serial killer behavior. D’Arcy can currently be seen in Cloud Atlas and Hitchcock, in which he plays Anthony Perkins.

Joe Carnahan (Narc, The Grey) is directing "Those Who Kill" from a script by Glen Morgan ("The X-Files," "Millennium," Final Destination). Imagine Television and Fox 21 produce with Morgan, Carnahan, Brian Grazer, Francie Calfo, Peter Bose, and Jonas Allen executive producing.

Look for more soon!

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Nacho Vigalondo's Open Windows Starring Elijah Wood and Sasha Grey Begins Filming in Madrid

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Nacho Vigalondo's Open Windows Starring Elijah Wood and Sasha Grey Begins Filming in MadridIt seems like every other day we're writing about Elijah Wood starring in or producing some new project, and today we learned he has joined Spanish filmmaker Nacho Vigalondo’s first English-language picture, Open Windows. And filming has already begun in Madrid!

Open Windows, an innovative, high-tech suspense thriller unfolding on the screen of a laptop connected to the Internet, is Vigalondo’s third feature after the 2008 time-traveling tale Timecrimes and Extraterrestrial, a hit on the fantasy film festival circuit over the past 12 months.

Per Screen Daily, Wild Bunch, which is co-producing the Spanish-French picture with Madrid-based Enrique López Lavigne and Belen Ateinza’s Apaches Entertainment and Antena 3 Film, is launching sales on the film at the currently running AFM. Elijah Wood’s production company Woodshed, Basque broadcaster ETB, and Canal Plus are associated partners.

“Open Windows develops in real time, delivering 90 minutes of suspense in a tense, fast-paced, high-tech thriller with action and terror, updating the key elements of 70s paranoid thrillers through today’s computer and online environment,” said Wild Bunch sales chief Vincent Maraval.

The plot revolves around a desperate search by Wood’s character for an actress, played by The Girlfriend Experience lead Sasha Grey, who has been abducted by vicious villain Chord, played by British actor Neil Maskell.

The director began developing the picture three years ago with Apaches Entertainment and his own production company Sayaka. “Just as in Brian De Palma’s Blow Out, the girl is captured. The hero will have to use every means at his disposal to discover where she is and rescue her from the villain before its too late,” said Vigalondo. “The action will be followed on the screen of a laptop connected to the Internet – an approach that has excited us all from the outset. Something like this means going beyond high concept films like Paranormal Activity, Cloverfield or Chronicle,” he continued. “Instead of simulating a home video camera, we will be representing a computer desktop. The movie screen becomes a computer screen, and the spectator becomes the protagonist of this adventure.”

Spanish producer Lavigne revealed the production would use 12 different types of camera, including webcams, head cameras, tablets, mobile phones, 3D mapping cameras as well as security and satellite cameras to shoot the multi-format picture. “Open Windows is full of twists, but it’s essentially a 90-minute chase, a continuous climax with unrelenting tension… it is also a powerful viral tool, with a wide potential for different audiences,” he said.

Vigalondo approached Wood to play the lead after a chance meeting at the Fantastic Fest in Austin in 2011. “I’ve wanted to work with Nacho since I first saw Timecrimes and his incredible short films,” said Wood. “We got to know one another at Fantastic Fest in Austin, and when he approached me with this project, truly one of the most unique and exciting films I’ve ever encountered, I leapt at the chance to be a part of it.”

Comparisons to Blow Out? We're sold! Look for more soon.

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AFM 2012: Sales Under Way on Supernatural Thriller The Wait

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AFM 2012: Sales Under Way on Supernatural Thriller The WaitM. Blash's The Wait, starring Chloe Sevigny and Jena Malone, is now in post-production, and Ryan Kampe’s Visit Films has acquired world sales rights for the film at the currently running American Film Market.

Per Screen Daily, Kampe is showing footage at the AFM and has closed a deal with Regency Media for Australian and New Zealand.

The Wait charts what happens when a mysterious phone call from a psychic plunges a family into a state of suspended disbelief while waiting for their recently deceased mother to be resurrected. Luke Grimes also stars.

Neil Kopp, Ryan Crisman, Riel Roch Decter, and David Guy Levy produced, and Olympus Pictures served as executive producer on the film, which is expected to be ready early next year.

“I love when a director can take strong talent and drama and infuse it with the supernatural,” said Kampe. “These are the films that audiences remember and stand out in the marketplace. Blash’s eye and his use of Jena and Chloe add to the allure of this project.”

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AFM 2012: Twisted Fairy Tale The Witch of New-Canaan Woode Filming in Spring/Summer 2013

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AFM 2012: Sales Under Way on Supernatural Thriller The WaitWord of another new project we may or may not ever see is coming out of the American Film Market, this one being The Witch of New-Canaan Woode, a horror film set in 17th century New England, where a farming family is tormented by an evil witch.

Screen Daily reports that K5 International has boarded international sales for Robert Eggers’ film being produced by Jay Van Hoy and Lars Knudsen’s Parts & Labor with Jodi Redmond of Red Code Productions and Daniel Bekerman of Canada’s Scythia Film. Eggers is a theatre veteran who has worked on Palehorse Productions’ Othello in New York. The shoot is planned for spring/summer 2013.

Oliver Simon and Daniel Baur, co-founders of K5, said: “Robert has a brilliantly obsessive eye for detail and imagery, and his background in production design makes him perfect for this. If anyone can scare us out of our wits in darkest 17th century New England, it’s him. This film is refreshingly unique, transporting us to the root of what has long terrified our culture. The Witch is powerfully tangible, human, and will shake audiences to their core.”

Carl Clifton, K5 Partner – Sales & Marketing, added: “What’s especially scary and disturbing about this project is the horribly dark, twisted fairy-tale element, literally the witch with the rotten apple. It’s a script that gives you nightmares after reading it.”

Look for more hopefully soon!

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The Lines Are Blurred in New Poster for In Their Skin

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In Their Skin (formerly Replicas) is now available on IFC Midnight Cable VOD and Digital Outlets, and in honor of the film's limited theatrical run beginning November 9th, a new poster has arrived.

Jeremy Power Regimbal directs. Selma Blair, Josh Close, James D'Arcy, and Rachel Miner star.

The Lines Are Blurred in New Poster for In Their Skin

Synopsis
Following a tragic incident, the Hughes (Selma Blair and Joshua Close) escape their busy upscale suburban life in order to spend some quality family time at their isolated country home. An evening with friendly neighbors is suddenly interrupted when one man’s obsession with perfection escalates into a violent struggle, forcing all to go beyond anything they ever thought they were capable of, in order to survive.

A New Look at the Replicas In Their Skin

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AFM 2012: XLrator Media Acquires US Rights to Horror Comedy Inbred; Amber Heard to Star in Toby Wilkins' Dead Sand Creature Feature

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InbredSince these appear to be the last two stories from Day 3 of AFM, we're combining them into one. We have US distro news on Alex Chandon's Inbred and word of a new creature feature from Toby Wilkins.

Per Variety, XLrator Media has acquired all US rights to Chandon's horror comedy Inbred (review here), starring Jo Hartley, James Doherty, Seamus O'Neill and James Burrows. The film, written by Chandon and Paul Shrimpton, follows four young urban offenders and their care workers as they embark on a community service weekend in the strange, remote Yorkshire village. A minor incident with some local inbred youths rapidly escalates into a nightmare for all involved.

Next, per Bloody Disgusting, Stealth Media is getting behind "Teen Wolf" and Splinter director Toby Wilkins' latest creature feature, Dead Sand, which will star Amber Heard (Machete Kills, Zombieland, and Drive Angry) . The story involves "two humvees [that] tear across a desert. Soldiers escort a captured terrorist leader, Gabir. During a “pit stop” Gabir escapes into a nearby abandoned industrial complex. The sodliers chase, but before they find Gabir…an inhuman creature finds them. A frightful radio transmission is all that remains of their final mission…

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A Sneak Peek of Supernatural Episode 8.06 - Southern Comfort

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Supernatural Season 8"Supernatural" has had quite a few memorable guest stars over the years, and one of them returns on November 7th, when we'll see DJ Qualls as the hunter Garth once again in Episode 8.06, "Southern Comfort." Check out a new clip that features him and Dean sharing a moment.

Episode 8.06 - "Southern Comfort" (airs 11/7/12, 9-10 pm)
GARTH RETURNS TO HELP SAM AND DEAN ON A CASE — Sam (Jared Padalecki) and Dean (Jensen Ackles) investigate a murder and find Garth (guest star DJ Qualls) is already on the case. Dean is not happy to learn that Garth has assumed Bobby’s duties, but Garth points out that both Sam and Dean have been missing for the last year and someone needed to do it.

The guys discover an “avenging ghost” is responsible for the murders, and they need to find the source before the killings starts again. Tim Andrew directed the episode written by Adam Glass.

"Supernatural" is from Warner Bros. Television in association with Wonderland Sound and Vision, with executive producers McG (Charlie’s Angels, “The O.C.”), Robert Singer (“Midnight Caller”), Jeremy Carver (“Being Human”), and Phil Sgriccia.

For more info visit "Supernatural" on cwtv.com, "like" "Supernatural on Facebook, and follow @CW_network on Twitter.




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Preview of and First Clip from The Vampire Diaries Episode 4.05 - The Killer

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The Vampire Diaries Season 4Something new in Mystic Falls this week... a hostage crisis with the Salvatores fighting about how to solve it! I kid, but "The Vampire Diaries" is feeling a bit recycled. Will Episode 4.05, "The Killer," be able to reverse the trend? Here are a preview and clip that offer some clues.

"The Vampire Diaries" Episode 4.05, "The Killer" (11/8/12 airdate)
THE HUNTER’S MARK — Stefan (Paul Wesley) and Klaus (Joseph Morgan) form an uneasy alliance to try and contain the danger that Connor (guest star Todd Williams) has unleashed on the town. When Connor takes Jeremy (Steven R. McQueen), Matt (Zach Roerig), and April (guest star Grace Phipps) hostage at the Grill, Stefan and Damon (Ian Somerhalder) have a serious disagreement about the best course of action, and Elena (Nina Dobrev) is again caught between the two brothers. The situation quickly turns violent when Klaus sends one of his hybrids, Dean (guest star Blake Hood, “The Young and the Restless”), to stand up to Connor.

Caroline (Candice Accola) is surprised to find Hayley (guest star Phoebe Tonkin) at the Lockwood mansion. Meanwhile Professor Shane (guest star David Alpay) works with Bonnie (Kat Graham) to help her get past her fear and guilt. Chris Grismer directed the episode written by Michael Narducci.

Related Story: Image Gallery for The Vampire Diaries Episode 4.05 - The Killer

For more check out "The Vampire Diaries" on CWTV.com, "like" "The Vampire Diaries" on Facebook, and follow "The Vampire Diaries" on Twitter.




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Apocalypse - The First Episode of Zombie Web Series Chronicles of the Dead - Now Available

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We've been following the progress of zombie web series Chronicles of the Dead for a while now, and the first episode, entitled "Apocalypse," is now available. You can watch it in its entirety right here!

The project is directed by Brian Hernandez, who co-wrote it with Younger Robbins. Chronicles of the Dead stars Erin Cathcart, Younger Robbins, Justin Braun, Anastasia Leddick, Brian Hernandez, and Jenna Johnson.

For more visit the official Chronicles of the Dead website, "like" Chronicles of the Dead on Facebook, and follow 3N Films on Twitter (@3NFilms).

Synopsis
Chronicles of the Dead documents the experiences of several friends who are caught off guard by a zombie apocalypse. Using their film and literary zombie knowledge, this tight-knit group do what they can to survive in this gruesome nightmare of a world.

Apocalypse - The First Episode of Zombie Web Series Chronicles of the Dead - Now Available

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Exclusive: Kether Donohue Talks The Bay, Working with Barry Levinson, the Power of Media, and More

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Exclusive: Kether Donohue Talks The Bay, Working with Barry Levinson, the Power of Media, and MoreIf the horror offerings that came out before Halloween didn't live up to your expectations, then take note that The Bay (review) hits VOD and limited theatres staring today, November 2nd, and in honor of the occasion we had a chance to speak with one of the film's stars, Kether Donohue.

In our chat Kether shared her experiences working with the film's iconic director, Barry Levinson; told us how her part in The Bay was a real "dream come true"; talked about the found footage sub-genre as a whole; and lots more. Read on for the highlights!

When did you film The Bay? Am I correct in thinking it was completed some time ago but is only just now finally getting released?

Kether Donohue: Yes! It feels like just yesterday, but I filmed The Bay in September and October of 2010.

How did you first come on board the project?

KD: Funny enough, I find that I book a lot of film work during the summertime in New York City. I was in NY that summer, and it was really just an audition like any other day. My manger sent me an email with an audition for the project, which was initially entitled, "Isopod," and the interesting thing was at first I was supposed to audition for the role of Stephanie, played beautifully by Kristen Connolly. Two nights before the audition I had a dream that I was a news reporter in an animation (the animation part is the irrelevant part; that was just part of the dream), and the next day my manager called me and said, "Casting also wants you to audition for the role of the reporter, Donna Thompson." My jaw dropped, and I was like, "Russell, I had a DREAM last night that I was a news reporter!" And of course he thought it was hocus pocus, so he kind of brushed it off and was like, "Oh cool, all right, gotta go." Then, the day after I auditioned, when I found out I booked the role of Donna, my manager was like, "Wait, didn't you have a dream you were a reporter?" and I was like, "Yep, you gotta listen to these dreams I'm having more often."

Ellen Chenoweth's office cast the film, and they did such a terrific job with me in the audition room. Amelia, who works in the office, put me on tape for Barry [Levinson], and the memo they sent out prior to the audition said, "Tell Kether very natural acting...everyone is being too dramatic, so go natural, real, that is the way to go." Amelia made me feel very comfortable in the audition room, and we did a few takes until we got it just right after she encouraged me to improvise and do everything I could to make it as realistic as possible. The very next day, my agent called and said that Barry watched all the audition tapes and loved mine, and I got the job! Before that, I was so used to going on so many callbacks and tests and producer sessions before actually booking a role that it was amazing to book the role after one audition and never meeting Barry. I learned very quickly through the filming process that this is a testament to Barry's genius; he knows exactly what he wants and is able to make the right decisions very quickly because he has such a clear vision. He's also so open to the fluidity of the creative process. The writer, Michael Wallach, told me that originally Donna was written as a more seasoned reporter in her 30's, but after seeing my audition tape, Barry altered the character to make Donna a younger college student at American University interning at a local news station, trying to mimic what she thinks a professional reporter would be like. His instincts were right on, because it definitely adds humor to the character and the tone of the film.

Speaking of Barry, it must have been a pretty big thrill to work with someone who's made so many classic films and Oscar winners. Was it intimidating at all? With how intimate the film feels, I imagine you worked pretty up-close and personal together. How much input did you have on your character?

KD: I was definitely intimidated when I first found out I landed the role, but as soon as I spoke with him (once on the phone before shooting) and then met him on set, his warm presence immediately put me at ease. He is so collaborative and actually is extremely open to input from everyone on set, from the writer to the cinematographer to the actors. The fact that he altered the role of Donna once he saw my audition tape is a testament to this. He was interested in bringing my personal essence to the character because that's what's going to bring truth to the character. One of my actor friends, Richie Portnow, had worked with Barry before, and when he found out I was going to be working with Barry, he said, "Be prepared to put your improv shoes on! Barry loves improv!" He was right. In my phone conversation with Barry, he told me this idea he had about making Donna an amateur reporter and told me to start thinking about creative ways to bring that essence and character backstory into my acting.

The first day on set, he sat down at the lunch table where I was eating to chat and get to know me. I told him a funny story about how I got my first speeding ticket after learning how to drive in one week in NYC before coming to LA, and he laughed hysterically and then said, "After lunch, I want you to tell that story as your character in your scene! Think of more funny stories like that and find spontaneous ways to incorporate them into the storyline." It was truly riveting and a very creatively fulfilling shooting process because along the way we made so many discoveries and created all these layers to the character through improvisation. At one point there was this great moment in the film where, as Donna, I felt torn between feeling emotionally compassionate when interviewing someone vs. trying to hide the emotion for the sake of being a "professional objective reporter" who has an obligation to stick to the facts without letting emotion get in the way. This became a theme for my character through the story and is actually a very interesting concept to contemplate when thinking about real-life news reporters. Where do you draw the line between showing your humanity as a reporter and getting too emotionally involved in a story? Should reporters have more permission to show their emotion? It's frowned upon in the professional world of reporting, but perhaps it should be celebrated.

Also, Barry said something during the shooting of the narration that always stuck with me. I did a complete take of the narration from beginning to end and threw in some improvisation, and when I was finished, Barry gave me some notes about what he wanted for the next take, and after he told me certain improv to take out for the next take he said, "But it was great; that's what happens when we play - we find things that work and don't work." It was very magical to hear him use the word "play," because as artists that's what we do for a living and it's an organic part of the creative process to "fail" or "fall on your face" before you find something that works. In order to have a "stroke of genius," you can't censor yourself or judge the creative process or be concerned with logic when trying things out.

Related Story: Exclusive: Oscar Winning Director Barry Levinson Talks Horror on a Small Scale in The Bay

It sounds like a good balance between scripted vs. improv. You seem so natural – everyone in the film does, really – and organic. What was the shooting process like? With so many interweaving storylines, I imagine you probably didn't see, or even meet, many of your co-stars.

KD: I will say the only reason I felt so comfortable improvising is because Michael Wallach had such a solid, tight, well-structured screenplay. I heard a famous actor (I forget who) say once that the only time you can improvise is if you know the structure of a scene and have a clear idea of the beginning, middle, and end points that need to be made. Because Michael's script provided that framework, it was easy to have a playground to "play" in within the confines of the structure.

I really only acted with one person on set: Frank Deal, who plays Mayor Stockman. He is a truly gifted actor. He's the nicest human being in the world and is so convincing at playing the villain. We had a lot of fun improvising together! Other than than, I met Kristen Connolly and Will Rogers on the plane ride home to New York but never acted with them. They were both very sweet as well.

While a film like The Bay definitely proves found footage still has a lot of life left to it, there has been a bit of a backlash against the sub-genre lately. Were you concerned about that going into the project, or could you tell from the script what a fresh feeling it brings to what some describe as an increasingly tired approach to filmmaking?

KD: I was not concerned at all. With all the brilliant talent involved, I knew there was going to be a fresh take on the sub-genre. I'm a huge fan of the Paranormal Activity series, and knowing that it was the same producers, combined with Barry's directing and a compelling script by Michael, I was so sucked into the storyline that I actually forgot we were making a "found footage" film. I don't know who said the quote, but my fiance's favorite quote (and I may be paraphrasing) is that "editing is the invisible art. When you're watching a movie with a brilliant editing job, you don't even notice it's edited because it's so fluid and serves the story." The same goes for any art, and in this case the writing and directing is so brilliant that you don't label the film or put it in a box when you read the script or when you watch the film because you're truly sucked into the characters and the story and the message being conveyed. The film really transcends the category. I think I read in an interview that Barry didn't go into the production conscious of the fact that it was even considered "found footage." The cameras that the story is told through are there for such a specific purpose and make such logical sense as tools for moving the story forward rather than it feeling forced that the cameras are there for the sake of making a "found footage" movie.

The idea that something like what transpires in The Bay could fairly easily happen in “real life” is what makes the film so terrifying. Did you guys talk about that while filming, and did it affect you in any way personally? Any nightmares or fears of going swimming? For me, I definitely thought twice the first time I had sushi after watching it!

KD: Barry and I didn't discuss the reality that the film was based on until we shot my narration, which served me well as an actor because in the parts of the film where I'm not narrating, my character genuinely has no clue why this disaster is occurring. Once we discussed the fact that isopods are in fact real and that these deathly consequences could happen in real life, the heaviness of the situation started to truly seep into my body and was translated into the performance. Before shooting the narration, I researched a lot of video interviews of young women with PTSD and connected with that sense of shock and survival tactic to be removed from your feelings because it's sometimes too painful to relive. My father is a Vietnam War veteran with a severe case of PTSD so I am very familiar with the emotional effects of it and felt that my character absolutely experienced the same effect. I am so proud to be part of a film that is not only entertaining, but can be used as an agent of social change. My major at Fordham University was Communications and Media Studies, and my professor, Dr. Gwenyth Jackaway, had a profound effect on the way I perceive media. The media are true gifts as they have the power to reach millions of people, and when you have a story that can touch people on an emotional level and also raise awareness about an issue that affects everyone on the planet and can create social change, it's a beautiful, powerful thing. Everything we read, see, and hear in magazines, television, films, books, radios, etc., is information that we absorb and influences what we think about and how we think about it. It's refreshing when there's a piece of media that can satisfy guilty pleasures and have a positive message in there, too!

The Bay is your first horror film; would you like to do more? Are you a fan of the genre? If so, what are some of your favorites?

KD: I would absolutely love to do more! When I choose projects to act in, I'm not so concerned with the genre as I am my connection to the character and story so if that's in place, it can really be any genre. I am a fan of the genre. I love the Paranormal Activity series, and I'm not just saying that because it's the same producers that did The Bay. *laughs* I also love the Scream series.

With The Bay now finding its audience, what's next for you? Do you have some completed projects coming out? Anything you're just getting started on?

KD: I am VERY fortunately to have another film in theatres right now called Pitch Perfect! It was such a blessing that these films came out back to back. My fiance, Nick Gaglia, and I also produced a film together that he wrote and directed and I star in called Altered States of Plaine. It is currently playing all over Latin America and will be coming to the U.S. soon. I will keep you posted! I also enjoyed doing a fun cameo in the pilot episode of "The Mindy Project".

Anything else we might have left out? We heard your birthday was Halloween- how did you celebrate?

KD: Actually, The Bay coming out today is THE BEST BIRTHDAY PRESENT EVER! I was unable to celebrate my birthday on Halloween because I was so busy with work so I decided the best way to celebrate would be to have dinner with friends and then go with a huge group to see The Bay tonight!! It's perfect; this is the last interview question I'm answering before I have to start getting ready in 5 minutes for this evening's festivities! The only other thing I would say is THANK YOU to all the fans and people who are seeing the film this weekend and for the duration of its theatrical and VOD run! It was an honor and a pleasure to answer your questions.

And it was our pleasure speaking with Kether. Make sure to head out to see The Bay this weekend if it's playing anywhere near you. It's worth the drive! Click here for the full list of the theatres where it's playing.

Exclusive: Oscar Winning Director Barry Levinson Talks Horror on a Small Scale in The Bay

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Check Out Three Pages from the IDW/Dark Horse Crossover Criminal Macabre: Final Night - The 30 Days of Night Crossover #1

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Check Out Three Pages from the IDW/Dark Horse Crossover Criminal Macabre: Final Night - The 30 Days of Night Crossover #1Some of Steve Niles’ greatest characters come together in a final showdown in Criminal Macabre: Final Night - The 30 Days of Night Crossover. We have the cover art and three pages from Issue #1 to share.

Synopsis:
Cal McDonald only wanted a beer, but what he got was a jaded federal agent and a story about vampires up in Barrow, Alaska. There’s a new vamp in LA, and he’s hellbent on escalating his attacks.

When Mo’Lock’s sometimes ghoul-friend is murdered, Cal’s on the hunt ... for Eben—the longtime protagonist/antagonist of 30 Days of Night.

Criminal Macabre: Final Night - The 30 Days of Night Crossover Issue #1 (of 4) with artwork by Christopher Mitten and covers by poster artist Justin Erickson (Rue Morgue) is on sale December 12, 2012. You won't want to miss this once-in-a-lifetime crossover from Dark Horse Comics and IDW Publishing.

Check Out Three Pages from the IDW/Dark Horse Crossover Criminal Macabre: Final Night - The 30 Days of Night Crossover #1

Check Out Three Pages from the IDW/Dark Horse Crossover Criminal Macabre: Final Night - The 30 Days of Night Crossover #1

Check Out Three Pages from the IDW/Dark Horse Crossover Criminal Macabre: Final Night - The 30 Days of Night Crossover #1

Check Out Three Pages from the IDW/Dark Horse Crossover Criminal Macabre: Final Night - The 30 Days of Night Crossover #1

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AFM 2012: Sales Art and Casting News for Asif Akbar's Beautiful Evil

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Along with the horror comedy Bristled:The Howl Chronicles announced earlier in the week, Fleur De Lis Film Studios has unveiled yet another film on its growing production slate - horror thriller Beautiful Evil - and we have some casting news as well as the film's artwork.

From the Press Release:
Beautiful Evil revolves around a celebrity photographer, Steve "Flash" Turner, who discovers that a wealthy, beautiful baroness - someone he'd do anything to get on film - might be a homicidal monster.

Veteran actor Robert Loggia (Scarface, TV's "The Sopranos"), Yasmine Bleeth (TV's "Baywatch"), and Gary Daniels (The Expendables, Tekken) will headline the Hollywood Hills-set creature feature announced at AFM this week. Genre vets Tommy "Tiny" Lister, Jr (Dracula 3000), Christopher Showerman (The Land That Time Forgot), Tim Thomerson (Trancers), and Andrew Lawrence (TV's "Bones") have supporting roles in the film; Beautiful Evil is written by BJ and Julia Davis and directed by Asif Akbar.

Synopsis:
Get a taste of immortality in Beautiful Evil as the Hollywood Hills are littered with the bodies of Sunset Strip prostitutes. The ladies of the night are decapitated; no remnants or traces of blood remain in their lifeless bodies. The LAPD are perplexed, and Steve “Flash" Turner, a down and out paparazzi photographer, is hoping his luck is about to change when he captures Beverly Hills socialite Baroness Von Siepold at a star-studded event. Flash gets the shot, but the image of the Baroness does not transfer to the digital picture. No one will believe this sure-shot photographer missed a photo op as the body count continues to rise when the sun sets.

Look for more soon!

AFM 2012: Sales Art and Casting News for Asif Akbar's Beautiful Evil

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Horror Icon Tom Holland Talks Ship of Fear, Twisted Tales, The Ten O'Clock People, and More

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Tom Holland Set to Start Killing FrankWhen you talk about horror legends, one name that has to be included is Tom Holland. From Fright Night to Child's Play, Tom has had a hand in some of the most memorable horror films of all time. He recently sat down with Dread Central to talk about his projects past, present and future.

Holland will spend the next year helping to organize and host Ship of Fear, a horror convention cruise sponsored by Chiller that will set sail on October 28, 2013. Between now and then Holland and his team will create the most intense festival they can imagine... and then ship it out to sea. "The idea came about because I've been watching the horror convention circuit grow more professional," Holland said. "I've only done two in my entire life where I had to leave LA, and one was in Franklin, Indiana, which is about half an hour from where my father was born, so that was doing it for the home team. And only one other than that, and that was a Fright Night reunion. And at first it felt like a cottage industry where a bunch of horror fans would get together and say, 'Hey, let's have a convention.' And a lot of them were sort of fly-by-night operations and not terribly well organized. But as the fans base has grown, they obviously have become very, very professional."

So just how exactly did Holland get the idea to put a horror convention on a cruise? "I'd been talking with my music supervisor, a fellow named David Chackler. David has been my musical supervisor since Fright Night," Holland said. "He's the one who put together the soundtrack album. He had the great idea in Fright Night to do the songs so the needle drops were oriented with what was happening in the movie, which at the time was rather innovative. So David has a smooth jazz catalogue, and they were doing smooth jazz cruises. He didn't know anything about horror conventions, but he knew about cruises and I didn't. So I've been talking to him about how interesting I've found some of the horror conventions because they've been growing more intelligent all the time. The panels are interesting, a lot of the stuff they had for sale when it went more toward the arts just became more interesting. And he (David) was the one who made the leap and said, 'Why don't we take a horror convention and put it on the ocean?'"

And right from the get-go Holland loved the concept. "I thought it was just a terrific idea and that's what we're doing and that's where the idea came from," Holland said. "And it came about because David already had a relationship established with Time Life and Carnival Cruises. They were used to doing the themed cruises. And I've known they've tried to do horror cruises before, but I don't know that they've ever had the same level of professionalism before because this is a large undertaking. It takes a lot of coordination from a lot of different levels, and so far the response has been very encouraging."

Horror Icon Tom Holland Talks Ship of Fear, Twisted Tales, The Ten O'Clock People, and More

And who better to bring in heavy-hitting horror celebrity guests than an icon like Tom Holland? And the planning of his Ship of Fear cruise definitely reflects that. "I know so many people. The directors scheduled to appear are people I've known for a long time, and I respect all of them," Holland said. "They're talented people and I like them. Some I'm closer to than others. I've known Mick Garris it seems like all my life. Since 'Amazing Stories.' I did an 'Amazing Story,' and he was one of the writers. I think they're all just great. Joe Dante, Mary Lambert, Don Coscarelli. Those people I went to directly because I have a relationship with them. Then I tried to find actors that had appeared in their movies. And we're going to continue to add to the list of horror celebrities. I wanted to put together a cruise where during the day we could have multiple panels where the directors could discuss their films with the actors that had been in them. I think that's interesting. It elevates them. It's about the art of filmmaking and the art of making horror films, and a lot of these people did really seminal works."

In addition to horror celebs, Holland has plans to add music and some other fun to the cruise. Alice Cooper and Dee Snider are already scheduled to appear. "The horror conventions I've been to, on Saturday nights they'll have the thrash metal bands and you can feel people really liking to party so we got some great acts for that," Holland said. "But what I'm hoping for is that we're going to have some great discussions about film and make-up and the art of sculpting during the day, and then I'm hoping at night we can all get totally trashed and dance our brains out and have a great time. You don’t have very far to go to get home. You don't have to get in the car. All you have to do is make sure you don't fall off the boat and you can stagger your way back to the cabin."

If this sounds like a fun vacation to you, the dates are set and you can secure your reservation now. "Ship of Fear will set sail next Halloween, October 28 through November 2, 2013," Holland said. "We're going to be adding celebrity guests and laying it all out. We're going to be doing a Halloween Ball with full-on costumes. We've got make-up artists that will work with the contest winners for the Halloween Ball. We've got the Screech at the Beach because we have our own private island. We're going to mingle for five days and the celebrities will mingle with the guests…and I think a lot of the fun will be had at the various bars."

Holland is a lover of horror art, and that will certainly be evident when the Ship of Fear sets sail. "I've gotten into what Eliot Brodsky is doing with Monsterpalooza because that's an emphasis on horror art and sculpting," Holland said. "I'm very familiar with that because I've almost always done in-camera F/X. I'm a big fan of the artwork that goes into it and also of storyboards because I've been dealing with that. I just like the horror art."

The Ship of Fear will certainly be a thrilling event for every level of horror fan, from the casual observer to the die-hard fanatic. "I would like to make it a five-day immersive experience where it goes beyond any individual and the whole thing works together and you have a variety of experiences that take in every facet of making a horror movie," Holland said. "We haven't gotten them all yet, but we're hoping to have the big people that do the in-camera F/X. I'm inviting the people that create the make-up. You'll have the actors… I'm trying to do the stuff they do at the traditional horror conventions. You'll have the monsters, you'll have Kane Hodder and Tony Todd and Chucky, and I'd like to have panels that can have serious film discussions at the same time. I want to put up sort of our own Hollywood maze, sort of a haunted corridor, that kind of thing. We'll have a wide range of things that appeal to all horror fans from the surface fan to the hardcore fans that want to know how the films get made."

In addition to organizing the whopping undertaking that is the Ship of Fear, Holland has a laundry list of other projects going on. He recently set up an online store where fans can go to get some authentic props, memorabilia and horror art. Be sure to check out Tom Holland's Twisted Curios for an opportunity to own some amazingly horrific items. "I've set up a store called Tom Holland's Twisted Curios for the fans because over the years I've been getting requests for signed autographed pictures, so they are there," Holland said. "But what I'm hoping to do is bring in more horror artists. Now I've got Clint Carney on there, and I've just signed someone else to come on. So I'm hoping I can provide a place for people who are into horror art and turn it into a place where you can go and look at a wide variety of artists who are echoing the themes and characters that we've all come to hate and fear and love."

Horror Icon Tom Holland Talks Ship of Fear, Twisted Tales, The Ten O'Clock People, and More

CONTINUE TO PAGE 2 FOR MORE!

Horror Icon Tom Holland Talks Ship of Fear, Twisted Tales, The Ten O'Clock People, and MoreWith Tom Holland's Twisted Curios, Holland is really hoping to provide a venue where horror artists can show and sell their works. "I’m hoping that as the site becomes more credible, I'll be able to add more horror artists," Holland said. "And I'm going to take the props from 'Twisted Tales' and put them up on the site, too."

And, of course, the "Twisted Tales" Holland is referring to is "Tom Holland's Twisted Tales," an anthology-style television show produced by his and Chackler's Dead Rabbit Films company that will be premiering on FEARnet next year. "I've been very fortunate," Holland said. "I got some terrific performances there. A lot of friends coming together to help. Angela Bettis is wonderful. Ray Wise is wonderful. William Forsythe, Danielle Harris…it's just an endless list."

Describing what fans can expect from "Tom Holland's Twisted Tales," Holland said, "We're going to put it out as 10 episodes. It's an anthology series. They go from short to half-hour and hour programs. It's a mix. I'm sure the people are going to like some episodes more than others, but conceptually, creatively, it's very interesting. We had very little money to work with, but I know all these actors from over the years, and they came down and made it affordable for me to work with them. I got some really great performances. I'll compete with anything out there on television in terms of the acting. I'm very enthusiastic about the actors. You've got Amber Benson; you've got James Duvall and Angela Bettis in one episode. I mean, that's a helluva cast. William Forsythe and Danielle Harris going at each other. Yeah, I'll watch that."

Additionally, Holland will again collaborate with Stephen King to bring the short story "The Ten O'Clock People" to the big screen. "They're in negotiations right now with the cast," Holland said. "We've got Rachel Nichols for the heroine, but we're in negotiations for the male lead. We're hoping to be shooting by the first week in December in Providence, Rhode Island. I think everyone knows it's a Stephen King short story, I'm very excited about it."

Asked whether it sticks close to the original story or ventures off, Holland said, "Oh, we venture off a lot."

With a lifetime of experience, we asked Holland what kind of big changes he's seen since his early years in horror through today. If you want a crash course in horror, pay attention when you read this: "Digital has crushed the cost of production and it's given rise to found footage, which has become an incredibly inexpensive way of making movies," Holland said. "Blair Witch was 13 or 14 years ago, and that was the first time anyone saw it as a genre and they tried for 10 years to do something commercial with it and failed, failed, failed. But then, because of the advances in technology, because of the hi-def cameras getting better and cheaper and because they started to become prevalent in the household with the security cameras and the cams to watch the baby, they made it possible to take the found footage genre and advance it to where it was second nature in the house, and that became Paranormal Activity. That's one example of technology working with horror to reflect what's going on in our daily lives. So all of a sudden the baby camera becomes one of the most frightening things you can imagine."

Finally, Holland spoke about his love and respect for the horror genre. "Horror is the most consistently remunerative of the genres,"Holland said. "By that I mean you have the best chance for making some money on your investment, traditionally speaking, in horror. Because horror is comparatively cheap to produce, you can make horror movies quicker and get them out there quicker, and they reflect the anxieties that we're dealing with in our society. So horror represents what's happening socially and politically quicker and better than mainstream movies ever will. The other thing is the mainstream movies, the $100 million movies, are about taking risk out of the financial bet. Whereas horror costs comparatively little to make and is more often than not about the risk the filmmakers take. It's also, in terms of film technique, the genre that's quickest to advance, whether it be the shaky cam or the handheld or the 'you are there' which leads to cinema verite, which is what you get in Traffic. It's probably the conduit that certainly stylistically influences major films both in editing and how the film is shot. It comes first through horror, and horror is the first not only to adopt the technological change, but also to reflect what's happening in terms of our social consciousness. It's the most vibrant. If you didn't have horror out there, God only knows what mainstream films would look like. They'd still be making Stanley Kramer films from 1957."

Horror Icon Tom Holland Talks Ship of Fear, Twisted Tales, The Ten O'Clock People, and More

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B-Sides: Dr. Pepper Was Afraid to Love Godzilla

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Fifty-eight years ago today, on November 3, 1954, the King of the Monsters first rose up from the depths many stories high breathing fire into the sky on movie screens across Japan. Probably should have come up with a better way to honor Godzilla’s anniversary than with this embarrassing B-Sides.

The 16th movie in the Godzilla series marked the King of the Monsters' return to the big screen after a decade long hiatus and was designed to both reboot the series with updated 1984 special effects while also serving as a direct sequel to the 1954 original. New World Pictures imported the film to the United States a year later under the title Godzilla 1985 and with the inclusion of some very American product placement courtesy of a sponsorship deal with Dr. Pepper.

If you listen to the lyrics to “I Was Afraid to Love You,” it becomes quickly apparent the song is a love song about the human desire to accept Dr. Pepper into one’s heart as an alternative to Coke or Pepsi. To this day I’m not aware of the performers of the song ever being properly credited, and thankfully, the number does not appear anywhere in the movie itself. That didn’t stop it from spawning a music video that is nothing but scenes from Godzilla 1985, including scenes from the movie containing Dr. Pepper product placement, as well as footage from a pair of campy commercials running on television at the time that featured a Godzilla-like monster whose attack on Japan could only be stopped with the thirst-quenching taste of Diet Dr. Pepper.

To recap: “I Was Afraid to Love You” is a product jingle touted as a theme song for a movie in which it is never heard used in a music video to promote the movie that is actually a commercial for the product-boasting scenes from other commercial tie-ins for the product inserted into the movie footage.

This reality was clearly not lost on the people running MTV given how the video only aired once the day Godzilla 1985 premiered in American theaters. Someone more scholarly in all things Godzilla can probably clarify whether that was due to Dr. Pepper and New World only buying the airtime for a single broadcast or because both the song and the video are so embarrassing MTV wanted nothing more to do with it. The video aired only one other time on MTV as a joke during a 1986 Elvira, Mistress of the Dark Halloween special. Since then it has been relegated to being nothing more than an amusing low point in the annals of Godzilla fandom.

Happy 58th birthday, Godzilla! I’m so sorry this is my present to you. At least I was never afraid to love you.

B-Sides: Dr. Pepper Was Afraid to Love Godzilla

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Scream Factory's Takeover of the Scanners Sequels Will Require You to Place a New Order

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Scream Factory has been exciting horror fans every Friday by announcing more cult horror titles that they will be releasing on DVD and (possibly) Blu-ray next year. Not a whole lot of excitement this week, though, with their announcement of a pair of early Nineties direct-to-video Scanners sequels.

I’m sure there are a few people out there thrilled to hear that Scanners II: The New Order and Scanners III: The Takeover will be coming to DVD (and possibly Blu-ray) for the first time next year, but the fact that even Scream Factory’s own Facebook announcement begins with an apology for not being able to get the rights to give David Cronenberg’s original 1980 Scanners a much overdue Blu-ray release speaks volumes as to how unlikely this news is to make any heads explode from excitement. This is probably the first time a Scream Factory announcement has been worded to sound like a consolation prize.

The okay 1991 direct-to-video sequel Scanners II: The New Order starred David Hewlett of future “Stargate” TV fame and Deborah Raffin (Death Wish 3) in a tale about a mild-mannered scanner mixed up in a government conspiracy involving evil Scanners plotting a coup. Its lesser 1992 follow-up Scanners III: The Takeover starred no one in particular and dealt with a sibling rivalry between good and evil scanners. Both films were directed by Christian Duguay, who would soon go on to direct the 1993 science fiction horror flick Screamers, a movie more deserving of the Scream Factory treatment than either of these two films.

On the plus side, the release of these two Scanners sequels gets us even closer to the prospect of one day seeing Scanner Cop movies on Blu-ray. Now that would make my head explode.

For more visit the official The Scream Factory website, and "like"The Scream Factory on Facebook.

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