Quantcast
Channel: Dread Central
Viewing all 24913 articles
Browse latest View live

New Beautiful Creatures Quad Home to Lots of Character

$
0
0

Who's up for an eyeful of Beautiful Creatures? Well, ready or not that's exactly what you're going to get with the following quad one-sheet. Check it out and look for more on this latest adaptation soon!

Alden Ehrenreich and Alice Englert star as Ethan and Lena, teenage lovers who uncover dark secrets about their families, their history, and their town. Margo Martindale plays Lena's Aunt Del, who helps to protect her from the family's dark side. Zoey Deutch portrays Emily Asher, Ethan's ex-girlfriend and the ringleader of the high school's popular clique that conspires against Lena. The film co-stars Jeremy Irons, Viola Davis, Emma Thompson, Emmy Rossum, Kyle Gallner, and Project X star Thomas Mann.

Look for Beautiful Creatures in theaters on February 13, 2013.

New Beautiful Creatures Quad Home to Lots of Character

Beautiful Creatures

VISIT THE EVILSHOP @ AMAZON!
Got news? Click hereto submit it!
Be beautiful in the comments section below!

More Promo Videos and a Provocative New Poster for Fox's The Following

$
0
0

With the holidays rapidly approaching, the TV networks are looking ahead to mid-season, when they'll be rolling out some new shows, and one we can't wait to see is "The Following." Fox has unveiled a striking poster for the new series from Kevin Williamson along with a few promo videos.

You'll find three of the videos here; one more, which is basically the same trailer as the first video below but rated "Intense," is located on Fox's "The Following" website.

"The Following" will premiere on Monday, January 21st, at 9/8c.

Fox TV's The Following

Synopsis:
THE FBI estimates there are currently over 300 active serial killers in the United States. What would happen if these killers had a way of communicating and connecting with each other? What if they were able to work together and form alliances across the country? What if one brilliant psychotic serial killer was able to bring them all together and activate a following? Welcome to THE FOLLOWING, the terrifying new thriller from creator/executive producer Kevin Williamson (“The Vampire Diaries,” “Dawson’s Creek,” the Scream franchise) and director Marcos Siega (“The Vampire Diaries,” “Dexter”).

When notorious serial killer JOE CARROLL (James Purefoy, “Rome”) escapes from death row and embarks on a new killing spree, the FBI calls former agent RYAN HARDY (Emmy-nominated actor Kevin Bacon, X-Men: First Class) to consult on the case. Having since withdrawn from the public eye, Hardy was responsible for Carroll’s capture nine years ago, after Carroll murdered 14 female students on the Virginia college campus where he taught literature. Hardy is a walking textbook of all-things Carroll. He knows him better than anyone; he is perhaps Carroll’s only psychological and intellectual match. But the Ryan Hardy who broke the Carroll case years ago isn’t the same man today. Wounded both physically and mentally by his previous pursuit of this serial killer, it’s been a long time since Hardy has been in the field. This investigation is his redemption, his call to action. In contrast to nine years ago, Hardy isn’t calling the shots on this case. He works closely with an FBI team, which includes all-business and tough-as-nails JENNIFER MASON (Jeananne Goossen, The Vow, "Alcatraz") and young, razor-sharp MIKE WESTON (Shawn Ashmore, X-Men).

Related Story: Highlights from The Following's San Diego Comic-Con 2012 Roundtable Interviews

The team considers Hardy to be more of a liability than an asset. But Hardy proves his worth when he uncovers that Carroll was covertly communicating with a network of killers in the outside world. It quickly becomes obvious that he has more planned than just a prison escape, and there’s no telling how many additional killers are out there. The FBI’s investigation leads Hardy to CLAIRE MATTHEWS (Natalie Zea, “Justified”), Carroll’s ex-wife and mother of the criminal’s 10-year-old son, JOEY (newcomer Kyle Catlett). Close during Hardy’s initial investigation, Hardy turns to Claire for insight into Carroll’s next move. The tension rises when Carroll’s accomplices kidnap his intended last victim from nine years ago. Hardy becomes ever more determined to end Carroll’s game when he realizes that this psychopath intends to finish what he started. The thriller will follow Hardy and the FBI as they are challenged with the ever-growing web of murder around them, masterminded by the devious Carroll, who dreams of writing a novel with Hardy as his protagonist. The reinvigorated Hardy will get a second chance to capture Carroll, as he’s faced with not one but a cult of serial killers.

For more info visit "The Following" on Facebook.

Fox TV's The Following







Fox TV's The Following

VISIT THE EVILSHOP @ AMAZON!
Got news? Click hereto submit it!
Follow us into the comments section below.

Hell's Kitty Creator Nicholas Tana Chats About a Possessed Pussy

$
0
0

Hell's Kitty Creator Nicholas Tana Chats About a Possessed PussyKeeping our horror/comedy web series coverage rolling (see today's earlier update on Zombie Family here), this writer chatted with Hell’s Kitty creator Nicholas Tana in order to get the lowdown on his possessed pussy project. Read on for info, stills and Episode 1!

Revolving around a Hollywood writer (portrayed by Tana) whose domesticated feline Angel turns his life into a living hell, Hell’s Kitty was created by producer Denise Acosta and actor, producer, composer, writer and director Tana. Filmed in Hollywood, CA (more specifically, in Tana’s 1920’s Hollywood apartment, utilizing LA Film School students and equipment and Tana’s actual cat ‘Angel’), the duo’s purpose in producing Hell’s Kitty was to combine their mutual zeal for horror with their love for animals, in order to promote non-profit charities such as Fixnation, Much Love Animal Rescue, and Actors and Others for Animals.

A noble idea, and one which has attracted the talents of some notable horror celebrities.

“Lee Meriwether (“Batman”), Nina Hartley (Boogie Nights) and Michael Berryman (The Hills Have Eyes) have made guest appearances,” Tana told us of some of the talent which appear in the first eight episodes of the planned thirteen of Hell’s Kitty, which are now on-line at YouTube (see the first episode, “Cujo Cat,” below).

As for who horror fans can expect in the final five episodes of season one, Hostel and Hostel: Part II’s Barbara Nedeljakova and The Human Centipede’s Ashley C. Williams make appearances as well.

Synopsis:
Hell’s Kitty is a comedy-horror web series based on true-life events surrounding Nick, a Hollywood writer, whose love life is jeopardized by his hellacious cat named Angel. People believe Angel is a devil. Even Nick’s best friend and neighbor, Adam (movie extra and slacker), is convinced that Angel needs to be exorcised. But Nick adores his cat and defends her despite all the obvious and ominous warnings. There are other problems besides Nick’s possessed pussy. Nick never gets any sleep because the downstairs neighbor, a nameless recluse and horror movie makeup artist, stays up all night making strange noises and leaving traces of blood in the hallway. Worse, Angel scratches Nick’s neighbor, Lisa, a girl Nick once dated, and Lisa is threatening to sue. But as strange supernatural events take place and people start disappearing, Nick must do something to prevent further catastrophes before his life becomes a living hell.

Chatting with Tana, he told us of his inspiration for Hell’s Kitty, “True events! Elements of the series are reenactments of many dates that I had with different women who all fell prey to my cat's often demonic possessiveness. I thought it would be funny to make a web series about it, after talking to other cat owners who have shared similar experiences. I also thought it would be fun to have a show about a cat. There isn't anything out there quite like Hell's Kitty, and as far as I know there never has been. So I loved that it was so original of an idea. Lastly, I thought if I'm doing this, let me combine my love of animals with my passion to make entertaining shows, and use it as a way to help promote animal organizations that I care about.”

As for producing a series with a cat as its star, we couldn’t help but ask Tana how easy it is to work with the animal.

"Surprisingly, it was easy at first,” he replied.

“She would take her mark when needed, and there's certainly no problem getting her to scratch people, especially if they get too close to me,” Tana expounded. “However, it can be challenging, too. I look at Angel in much the same way I might view a major diva actress; she wants what she wants, and when it comes to directing her, I take what I can get. I'm just glad Lee Meriwether, who played ‘Catwoman’ in the original “Batman” series, didn't sue me after Angel made her bleed while doing a scene with her. Instead, being the real professional that she is, she played through it, wiping her blood on a collector's edition Catwoman comic book, which we used for her scene. We hope to auction that comic off to raise money for some of our non-profit partners.”

"The way the show keeps attracting quality talent from our production team to our producing team to the many talented actors has been really satisfying,” Tana continued. “Everyone jumping on board to become a part of the magic that has become Hell's Kitty simply because they realize that we have a good thing going. Robert Altman's son, Robert Reed Altman, shot our last episode! Our crew and those who jump on board are like family. Our sound designer was a fan of the show before joining our team; he lives in Germany! So, we expect Hell's Kitty to continue to resonate around the world. It's exciting to see the episodes keep getting better, too. And the opportunity to parody lots of horror movies, and even better, to get the stars from those films to do special guest appearances! It's an honor and a fantasy to get to pick my favorite classic films and go after the talent from them and actually have them as part of the series. The series is sexy, too. Cats are sexy. The women on the show are sexy. Ashley C. Williams and Barbara Nedeljakova are set to appear in a threesome gone bad because of Angel, everyone's favorite killer feline and the real star of Hell's Kitty, in the last scene of the first season. It's going to be a bloody good one."

As for the future of Hell’s Kitty, “I am just now shopping it around to key people in entertainment,” said Tana. “I think it would make a great TV show. I had a great meeting with Andy Shapiro from Machinima just last Monday. Soon I plan to start taking it to some of the networks. I think Comedy Central and FOX are just a few that might take a real interest. The potential to take this series in many directions is almost limitless yet economical, as most of the action takes place in a ‘haunted house’ type apartment complex. What people don't realize just yet is that the characters have many layers, and that there are quite a number of plot twists still to come to keep viewers watching. It's really a comedy horror mystery series; we want to know if the cat is truly possessed, and of course that begs the question, ‘If so, then by whom?’”

Watch the first eight episodes of Hell’s Kittyhere. For more visit the official Hell's Kitty website, and ‘like’ Hell's Kitty on Facebook.

Hell's Kitty Creator Nicholas Tana Chats About a Possessed Pussy

Hell's Kitty Creator Nicholas Tana Chats About a Possessed Pussy

Hell's Kitty Creator Nicholas Tana Chats About a Possessed Pussy

Hell's Kitty Creator Nicholas Tana Chats About a Possessed Pussy

VISIT THE EVILSHOP @ AMAZON!
Got news? Click hereto submit it!
Exorcise your pussy in the comments section below!

Adam Green Talks Holliston, Hatchet III, Killer Pizza and more!

$
0
0

Adam Green Talks Holliston, Hatchet III, Killer Pizza and more!It seems like just yesterday that Adam Green's artful use of Internet marketing heralded the arrival of Hatchet, its mock trailer offering the promise of a back-to-basics slasher trumpeted as the return of 'old school American horror' with some of the genre's most respected icons.

Jump forward six years to present day, and a hungry Hatchet fan base are looking forward to the imminent release of the third chapter, testament to the widespread appeal of Victor Crowley, Green's gloriously old school, axe-wielding creation. Foregoing some much needed sleep to speak with us, the filmmaker gracefully sat down to talk of the second season of his and fellow genre director Joe Lynch’s horror comedy sitcom "Holliston" (Blu-ray / DVD review here), his producing gig on Hatchet III, and his scribe duties on the upcoming Chris Columbus-produced kids’ monster-fantasy Killer Pizza. Last but not least, he even dropped us a few pointers on getting your own independent horror opus out there and seen by the right people…

Dread Central: For those not in the know, tell us about "Holliston"…

Adam Green: "Holliston" is a traditional multi-camera sitcom just like "Friends" or "Seinfeld", only it's about two guys that are trying to be horror movie filmmakers, and so with that comes all kinds of weird things that you wouldn’t normally see in a traditional sitcom, like an imaginary alien that lives in a closet, lots of gore and blood and guts… things that a regular network show would never do; and I think that's why it resonated with horror fans so much. Normally I wouldn’t watch shows like that… they're just not really for me. I can’t relate to it. This is one that feels as broad and normal as one of those shows, but then it’s got that something else for us.

Dread Central: How did the idea come to be?

Adam Green: The show was actually in development for thirteen years and there were several times over those years where it was at different networks, and then they would always neuter it to make it like everything else on TV and it would get away from me. For some reason or another the show wouldn’t end up actually getting shot. Usually based on a merger between two networks, the development would end up getting lost. When we knew that the show was actually gonna happen with FEARnet, the very first person I went to was Dave Brockie, who plays Oderus in GWAR. I've been a GWAR fan my whole life; and I was like, if we could actually have him, that would be hilarious! What’s been interesting is that there’s so many mainstream fans of "Holliston" now that have no idea he's in a band and have no idea what GWAR is and now they’re finding that. They look him up and are like, “Wait a minute; this guy's actually a character in a band!?!” I don’t know that GWAR is necessarily for those people, like my mom for instance. She’s like, “That guy’s hilarious,” and I'm like, that’s a real thing that he does, and she looks him up and she's horrified! He's just the nicest guy in the world. I've been very, very lucky that in this career path all the people that I was a fan of growing up have surpassed every expectation that I could have forced upon them as a fan. People say how shady this business is and how many assholes there are, which is true to some extent, but I sort of found the opposite. Ninety-nine percent of the people I've met have been the nicest, greatest people and were so excited to work on this stuff. It's just awesome.

It funnels down from me and my producing partners and the fact that I’ve used the same crew for about thirteen years now. There's a lot of movies where there's a director that took the job because it was gonna pay them and it's like, fine I'll do this one, and I think in the case with me because I've been able to navigate outside the studio system... [But] to be clear, I still do plenty of studio writing assignments for money. I don’t want people to think I'm this renegade that refuses to do this stuff. That's the stuff where you really get paid a lot of money so I still do it, I just don’t really talk about it. My own projects, which are the ones that everyone sees that come out, I'm so happy to be there and I'm so excited about it that it sort of becomes contagious for the whole crew. We've rarely had a set that wasn’t extremely fun.

It actually started back in high school. I had a high school that was very fortunate because we had a morning radio show. It was an after school radio programme. It was just this 10-watt station that really only reached the town. I did the morning show with my friend Steve; it was called "Coffee and Donuts". Every morning we would go to school at four in the morning, which right there sort of shows my psychotic motivation for this stuff because I don’t know many high school kids that would do that (laughs). It was good because we had a captive audience. The kids who had shows in the evening, you’re competing with TV shows and life and other things people do, but at six o’ clock in the morning when your alarm clock goes off, you have no other choice! I also had my first girlfriend, who I met when I was fourteen years old, and we dated forever. In college we broke up and it was the worst thing I ever went through… I think anybody can relate to that because your first love, that heartbreak, sometimes it sticks with you forever… so when I first actually attempted to make a movie, the movie was called Coffee and Donuts. I made it for four hundred dollars… I wrote it, directed it, shot it, edited it, scored it, started it. I didn’t know what was gonna happen with it but it wound up winning a film festival and then being sold as a TV series that never happened. "Holliston" is really Coffee and Donuts only now it’s not about two guys on the radio, it’s really close to my life because it’s about the struggles at the time when I was still trying to become a horror filmmaker. The most rewarding thing about this aside from the success of it blowing up so fast and the fact that we're in production on a second season is mind-blowing, but the fact that the fan mail is very different from any other fan mail I get. With Frozen or Hatchet it's always just like, oh I love the movie or the movie kicks ass; but this, it’s heartfelt letters from people who are like, I've finally seen myself portrayed up on the screen or I'm going through that now and it’s giving me hope and it’s inspiring me, telling me I should keep going… that’s really what the show's about.

Holliston Panel Blows Away Rock and Shock Audience!

The message really is if you really don’t let the negativity of everybody stop you or even worse than that, disenchant you and turn you into a bitter sour person -- which is a lot of the people in this industry. You go to a Friday morning matinee in LA and all it is, is out of work writers and they sit there and they watch the trailers and go, “Are you serious?! Are you serious?!” What do you think is gonna happen for you if you do that? You can’t do that. You just gotta worry about you and if something happened for somebody else, then good for them! That's really what this show is about, not giving up. Awful things happen to the characters on the show. They all have big dreams and they never really seem to pan out, but that’s really life, and we keep fighting. Hopefully the audience keeps fighting, too.

On Spiral and Frozen

Adam Green: Spiral was really the movie that helped make Frozen happen. When I made the first Hatchet I actually made Spiral before I was done with post-production on Hatchet. If you make something and it does well, you get pigeon-holed in that. Everybody assumes that’s all you can do. I didn’t take a paycheck on Spiral because we wanted to keep all the money on-screen, but it was a great opportunity to do something that was more in the vein of Hitchcock, who is one of my biggest heroes. I know people don’t wanna hear this – I don’t wanna make slasher films! (laughs)

I wanted to make Hatchet because that was close to my heart. I came up with it when I was eight years old. The reason I made Hatchet II was that it was planned before the first one, so I had to see it come full circle, and the second reason was that the only reason I have the career I have, that I can make movies like Frozen and Spiral and have my own production company, was because of how successful Hatchet was. I felt like I had an obligation to the fans to give them the sequel and not just hand it over to other people. I needed to oversee it myself and do it. Even with Hatchet III, I'm not taking the directing credit, but I still wrote it, produced it. I’m the one who cast it. I was there every day making sure things were right. It's more of an action movie than the other two.

BJ McDonnell, who had been my camera operator on Hatchet and Spiral and so many other things that I had done… he was the right choice because he is very visual. The first Hatchet had seven on-screen kills, part two had seventeen and this one is upwards of thirty! (laughs)

Dread Central: Can you tell us a little about Killer Pizza?

Adam Green: It’s called Killer Pizza and it's based on a children’s book by Greg Taylor. The script is actually nothing like the book, besides the title and maybe some of the character names. It was written for eight-year-olds. In the book it’s about a kid who gets a summer job at a pizza place and then finds out it’s a monster hunting organization, and they’re after this one monster. In my version it’s a whole world of monsters that they’re after and it’s all monsters that you’ve never seen before. It’s not zombies and werewolves, typical stuff, it’s all completely new things that I've made up. The beauty of that project is that the reason why I became a screenwriter was because of Chris Columbus, who wrote Gremlins and Goonies. When I was a kid I was so impressed with the Goonies because these kids actually spoke how I spoke. Normally when you’re a kid and you go to see a kids’ movie, it feels like an adult wrote their version of how they think kids speak. Chris was so influential on me and I’ve loved every single movie he's ever made. I mean Home Alone, Harry Potter– the guy can do no wrong. When they called and said, “Chris would like to meet you, and we want you to read this book and see what you think”, I was overjoyed! It really feels like an Amblin movie. It feels like one of those summer kids’ movies like Gremlins or Goonies or even Back to the Future in some ways. Ghostbusters actually most of all, in terms of tone because it's a very fun movie. This is a little bit more violent and scary, but we'll see how it actually turns out. MGM is making the movie now. The reason I didn’t sleep before this interview is because I just turned in the latest draft about two and a half hours ago. It’s crazy, man, doing this studio writing thing. You spend like a month, two months, doing your first draft and you turn it in… There's seventeen people telling you what to do. You have to sort of take all of that and make something of it, try to please everybody… that's where movies end up going wrong. It’s when people who are not writers or filmmakers are trying to tell you how to make a movie. In this case the guy in charge of all of it is actually one of the greatest filmmakers of all time and he's got my back. Every note that I get on this, even from the studio, from everybody, it’s been very smart. It’s made the script better. It’s really evolved into something a little bit more adult, a little bit more edgy. They really pushed me to make it a little more violent and scary... this latest draft I'm turning in is such a hard R.

Dread Central: How did production go on Hatchet III compared to the other chapters?

Adam Green: This time we shot in the New Orleans swamp for the whole thing... so for this one we're in a real swamp. If I could show you the bug bites all over my body… just the mud and the heat and how awful it was! The shoot was really, really hard. This was supposed to be my victory lap. I was down to oversee it, make sure things kept on track and help BJ when he needed it. There were seven movies shooting in New Orleans when we were there, some of them had huge budgets, and then there was us. Some of the crew we got, we couldn’t use my usual crew who were the greatest people in the world, so we had people who were used to doing things their way, which was a little bit slower with a little bit of attitude... That was very, very hard. Some of the personalities we were up against…

The movie is so ambitious. I can't really talk about what exactly happens; but it's very big, its obviously very violent, there’s a lot of action and the ending is really gonna be something for the fans. I didn’t wanna direct another Hatchet movie, I did two of them and I couldn’t do it again. With Killer Pizza and "Holliston" and five other projects that I can't even talk about yet, to just stop everything to go direct another Hatchet movie… I would have only been doing it to do it. That’s not the right reason to do it. It almost felt like I got to direct from another step up. Like I was pulling the strings. I'm like, you’ll use this actor, you'll do it this way and the fact that I still got to write it and dictate everything that was gonna happen, every kill… I think it will still feel like one of my movies, but it really is in BJ's visual style, which is incredible. It just looks so much bigger than the other two. I think people are really gonna be happy with it.

A Halloween Treat from Dark Sky Films: The First Photos from Hatchet III

On production of the firstHatchet

Adam Green: I tell these stories about how I did it on the commentaries, on the special features. We're very honest with all of it and we explain how we did it, how we put these movies together. Don’t try to be me – you’ve got to try to be you! Hatchet 1, the way we were able to attract private equity financing was by making a mock trailer. We weren’t the first people to ever do that, but we were one of the first who really did it right and made it work. That mock trailer went everywhere and had all the Internet buzzing, and that made it a little bit easier for us when we found a private equity investor who liked the script, who was looking to do a genre movie. We could say go home and Google Hatchet tonight and see what comes up, and they see all these websites talking about it and how excited they are… now I have all these aspiring filmmakers who write to me who say, “I did the same thing; I made a mock trailer and put it on YouTube, and nothing happened…” Everyone does that every day now! Think of something else, think of your thing, how you’re gonna draw attention to it!

Dread Central: Any advice for those attempting to follow in your footsteps?

Adam Green: You have to shoot all the time. There's no excuse anymore! When I was starting, I had to get a job at a cable company and steal their equipment at night to make short films because I couldn’t afford a camera. Now, your iPhone can shoot HD! You can find a way to do this stuff! Don’t just think the first thing you're gonna shoot is gonna be it. It won’t. My first short film is terrible but I learned from it. I got better and even now to this day I have a lot to learn. Short films really are the way. Challenge yourself and keep writing, especially if you wanna be a director. Most importantly, be a good person. If you're James Cameron, fine -- you can afford to walk around the set and yell at people and do whatever you gotta do, but nobody else can. If want good people to work with you and work on your low budget things and throw down and give you favours, let you use their steadi-cam for free, they’ve got to like you… and my one piece of advice for what not to do – don’t just blindly try and solicit filmmakers you like on Twitter or Facebook and ask will you watch my short or will you read my script. We get it all day long. It’s never gonna work, you're never gonna get someone to go “OK, I'm gonna watch it and write to you and say you're a genius, how can I help make your movie?” Sending your stuff to another writer and another director is not the way to go. You need to try to get yourself in front of people who finance things, people with money and producers who find money. That’s who you’re after. So, festivals, getting festival awards, going to them and networking. Networking isn’t showing your business card and talking for five minutes and now there's a relationship there. That’s not networking. Networking is making short films with the same people, meeting them. Get a job as an assistant at a talent agency or a management company. You will learn so much and meet every single person out there and make real friends that two years later will be studio executives and they know you, who will read your script and take it seriously. I'm so offended when I'm on Facebook and someone is like, “I wrote a script, will you read it?” I'm like, “That’s not how I did it!” I get it -- you're trying everything you can, but not that! Do something, make everybody notice you. I remember some of the people at autograph signings tried to shove their scripts in my face and I've gotten angry. Don’t let everyone get you down. Everybody’s gonna tell you the odds. Everyone's gonna tell you no. Everyone's gonna tell you it’s probably not gonna happen.

If you think that’s bad, wait till you actually make the thing, and then there’s all these websites run by jackasses in their Mom's basement who have never even kissed a girl and they can't spell anything right and get all the facts wrong about the movie… you can’t argue with these people, everyone's got a voice online. The more negative you are, the more of a reaction you get. If you’re positive, nobody really cares. If you’re negative and a dick, especially if you make it personal... like when I read a review that says, “I hated the movie so much that I hate Adam Green so much that I hope he gets cancer and his children die”. Has it really come to this? It's a fucking movie!

VISIT THE EVILSHOP @ AMAZON!
Got news? Click hereto submit it!
Update us on YOUR projects in the comments section below!

Guest Interview: Writer/Artist David Lapham on The Strain, Ferals, Self-Publishing, 'Weird' Tweeting, and More

$
0
0

Dark Horse Comics Editor-in-Chief Scott Allie had an in-depth chat with the Eisner Award-winning writer/artist David Lapham on a wide range of topics including his adaptation of The Strain, the upcoming Ferals, the ups and downs of the comics world, blowing off steam on Twitter, and lots more.

Scott Allie: After breaking into superhero comics, you really made a name for yourself with Stray Bullets, which did two things: It (1) established you as a brilliant crime cartoonist and (2) marked a pinnacle of self-publishing, creator-owned success. Lately you've been a lot busier on licensed books. What's different about the industry now, as opposed to the late Nineties?

David Lapham: Thanks! I'll start by talking about the mid-Nineties, which is when we started Stray Bullets, and the movement of self-publishing, small press, and just independent-driven comics. For the record, I personally was never a self-publisher. Maria, my wife and business partner, and I jointly owned our El Capitan imprint, and she did 100 percent of the publishing and promotion, and I did Stray Bullets and some other works. We both did a lot of scheming, packing, shipping, and running around like crazy people to make our business work. That said, there was an explosion of creators at that time that all seemed to hit together: myself, Paul Pope, Shannon Wheeler, Jeff Smith, Evan Dorkin and Sarah Dyer, Jay Stephens, Terry Moore, etc. I'm sure I'm leaving out tons of people. It was a very creative time independently for comics at a time when I believe the mainstream was extremely weak. Unfortunately, a weak mainstream ends up hurting the independent market by eroding the fan base, or the "movement" would have sustained longer… but we won't get into that.

Eventually, in my personal life, my wife and I started growing our family, and we didn't have that time to be all about comics 24/7 so I began doing freelance work, starting with Batman and going wherever the freelance market took me—which was a lot of interesting places—and yes, today has me doing a lot of horror and licensed along with some superheroes.

Guest Interview: Writer/Artist David Lapham on The Strain, Ferals, Self-Publishing, 'Weird' Tweeting, and More

SA: I self-published a horror comic called Sick Smiles in the mid-Nineties, before and then overlapping with my job at Dark Horse. There was a real feeling of camaraderie and achievement and support among that crew. One of those guys, John Roshell, who did Waste L.A., works for Comicraft now. What was that feeling of teamwork like for you after coming out of Valiant?

DL: The funny thing is that I had a strong feeling of teamwork at a certain point at Valiant. We all worked very hard there to make that company work, and when things began to turn and swing upwards, there was a great feeling we were doing something special. Maybe that's because I started there and was a bit naive, but it lasted about ten minutes; then the wolves came in and ripped the whole thing apart. There was definitely a feeling of mutual support amongst the creators at the Spirits of Independence events. Everyone was rooting for everyone and drawing inspiration from each other. Small Press Expo is still going strong, I think. There are a lot of elements at that time that are strong in comics today. A good portion of my friendships in comics come from that time.

Compared to the late Nineties… Y'know, the overwhelming feeling I have about the industry today is that the overall talent level is drastically superior to the late Nineties. Before everyone loses an eyeball, a lot of the talent today are guys from the Nineties. I just mean across the board. From my own experience, I think a lot of talent today are people who read a lot of the indie stuff in the Nineties, and you see them now doing superheroes at Marvel and also doing their own independent work at places like Dark Horse, IDW, and elsewhere. I think there's a lot of well-rounded talent. On the art side, the guys today blow me away. One artist is better than the last. What the heck are some of these guys doing in comics? They're that good. They must love it because, surely, they can make tons more money elsewhere!

The sad thing today is that the industry is still smaller than it needs to be and has never recovered from the mid-Nineties bust when the mainstream stripped the fan base with poor-quality books, gimmicks, and false collectibles. Today you still see a lot of gimmicks, crossovers, etc., designed to force you to buy more from the mainstream, but I really believe it's not one tenth as bad, and also it comes more from a desperation to survive rather than pure greed.

Just so I don't end this answer on a down note, I'll say this: We're all still here, doing our thing.

SA: Do you miss doing straight-up superheroes?

DL: Well, no. I'm not opposed to them. I love superheroes, but I think more about the project than the genre. However, I am currently writing Age of Apocalypse for Marvel, which is superheroes.

SA: You've done a fair amount of video game spinoff stuff. What do you like about turning video game stories into comics?

DL: Honestly, nothing in particular. I love video games. I was big into horror games like Resident Evil, Silent Hill, etc. But those jobs, like Modern Warfare and Driver, came about through opportunity. They were concepts that I thought I could do a good job with, and the licensors were very open to doing different things with their properties. It's always a "hold your breath" situation when you take a licensed job. Most licensors know that a comic book can be its own thing apart from the original, that you can be creative and still be true to the project, but sometimes you get someone who is fixated on making the comic be exactly like what it is in the other medium. That can be tough.

SA: What about adapting a novel to comics? What's been the hardest thing about adapting The Strain to comics?

DL: By far it's being true to the novel while you're both changing it to adapt to a different medium and also bringing something of yourself to it. There's a reality that a novel can be and usually is something far more massive than a comic book series—even one that can run ten to twelve issues like we have for the Strain novels. So you have to decide what to cut and what to leave. Scenes have to be reimagined both because of space issues and because of things that work in one medium and not in another. A novel can at any point just tell you things like histories and feelings of a character or setting. A comic can do some of that through narration, but specifically on The Strain I decided not to have internal monologues so that information has to be conveyed in other ways. Also the sheer volume of words in a novel cannot be duplicated in a comic. Try taking a simple conversation in a novel and typing it into a comic book strip. You'll find that something you needed to take three panels just ate three pages.

The point is you have to analyze each scene and find the intent of the scene: What were Guillermo del Toro and Chuck Hogan getting at with this scene? How does it play into the larger story? Can the same point be made within another scene? Do I really need this scene? My overall thought is to approach adapting the novel the same way I believe del Toro would approach adapting his own novel if he were to make it into a film. He would have to reimagine it. The same story but reinterpreted for a different medium and perspective.

The other thing that's tough, especially with a project like The Strain where you admire and respect the person who made the original so much, is that you want them to like what you do, have confidence in what you do, and respect what you're doing to their work. On that note, Guillermo has been amazingly supportive and open to what I've done in the writing and Mike Huddleston has done with the art. Both he and Chuck "get it."

Guest Interview: Writer/Artist David Lapham on The Strain, Ferals, Self-Publishing, 'Weird' Tweeting, and MoreGuest Interview: Writer/Artist David Lapham on The Strain, Ferals, Self-Publishing, 'Weird' Tweeting, and More

SA: When I saw Guillermo at San Diego [Comic-Con], it was really gratifying to see how happy he is with the book. He's very happy with the whole team, each piece, individually. You say that your job is figuring out how Guillermo would adapt his own novel if he were to make it into a film. Do you think he'd do it differently if he could draw a comic himself?

DL: I'm certain he would. How could he not? Give the same plot to ten writers, and you'll get ten completely different scripts. Give the same script to ten artists, and you'll get ten completely different comics.

SA: When I was tackling Conan back in 2003 or so, the way I looked at it was to ask myself, 'If Robert E. Howard were a brilliant cartoonist—if he were as accomplished a cartoonist as he was a pulp writer—how would he do this?' I think that's the trick to doing derivative or licensed work, and it sounds like you're looking at The Strain the same way. For someone who's done great original works, do you feel like you're doing less than your best when you're beholden to someone else's vision?

DL: It's actually less about me trying to figure out how he would adapt it than figuring out how I would adapt it. I want to bring his book to life, but I have to make choices along the way which are part of bringing myself to it. Same with Huddleston on his part. I know Guillermo is happy with what we're doing, and hopefully part of that is that he's surprised seeing his own story in a new way for the first time.

When I did the Kull stuff for Dark Horse, I tried to take that approach. Howard has such a raw feeling to his writing, all I could think was, 'How can I convey that?' A guy like Howard, though, presents a new problem. Guillermo and Chuck wrote some great books with a great story, characters, and ideas. Howard has the added element of being an artist with words—like Hemingway, Hammett, Faulkner, etc. He's not just giving a story and a plot; his phrasing and dialogue are like a painter's brushstrokes. This came into play in the second Kull series we did, which was an adaptation of "The Cat and the Skull." When I presented a scene that was like the one in the story, I found that once I started using pieces of Howard's dialogue, I couldn't escape it. Even when it was redundant in spots, it has such a flow that to change it was like some giant game of Jenga. I was afraid if I took out or changed too much it would collapse.

It's a tricky question to ask if I'm doing less than my best. The answer is no. I'm absolutely doing my best. By the same token I feel that the very best thing I do is being 100 percent me—creating, writing, and drawing. I think it would be silly to say that I don't think Stray Bullets or Young Liars were my best work. I guess that's different than doing your best.

SA: Speaking of your own original visions—you've got another serious horror book at Avatar called Ferals. What made you want to do a werewolf comic?

DL: That project started with Avatar owner William Christensen saying he wanted to do a werewolf book, and would I be interested. He had a couple things about it, which I don't want to say—for risk of spoiling something—but I'll just say he had an epic quality to where he wanted to see the book go. From there I was just able to invent this whole world, which I hope is a new and different take on werewolves, but really I'm just trying to make a book I like. The first thing that made me want to do it was the idea of creating this credible society within society, and second was when I came up with the Dale Chesnutt character. I really felt I hit on a guy that could carry the book and would be fun to write.

SA: Vampires and werewolves are both sort of all the rage, thanks to Twilight. What you're doing takes a very different approach. Is there any sense that what you're doing is a response to the current trends?

DL: The joke is that our vampires aren't sparkly; our werewolves aren't sappy. The great thing about classic myths is that they're so basic to core human nature that they hold up to an insanely wide range of interpretation. For me I'm definitely not doing anything in response to anything else. I'm just writing stories I like how I see 'em.

Guest Interview: Writer/Artist David Lapham on The Strain, Ferals, Self-Publishing, 'Weird' Tweeting, and More

MORE on the NEXT PAGE

SA: As we were looking at our fall lineup of horror comics, we noticed a theme—a lot of characters who act as detectives, either literally, as in Steve Niles'Criminal Macabre or Dale in Ferals, or in the more modern sense, where other occupations stand in for detectives, like a doctor from the CDC—like Eph in The Strain. How do you see the connection between crime or detective stories and horror stories?

DL: A big part of horror is mystery—the unexpected happening. Detectives, cops, and even the CDC in The Strain are people that go looking into mystery. They're also natural action characters. We live in an environment where we all grew up on many different genres and have a wide range of influences. I think a blending of genres is natural. Hell, look at society; we live in an age where we blend everything. In the past different eras have had very distinct fashion trends, but is anything really out of place today? We can instantly watch shows and movies from any era. Listen to music from any time. People are blended, lifestyles are blended, writing is blended. To me genres are blended to the point where I personally don't make a distinction. It's all just fiction.

SA: One of the things I'm hung up about is the challenge of making comics actually scary. With both The Strain and Ferals, what's the reaction you're trying to get out of the reader? Are you trying to scare?

DL: Absolutely. It's tough, though. A movie has the advantage of being in complete control of the pace. They control the timing of how they scare you, the timing of an information reveal till payoff. In a novel it's all words. Literally you have to read to reveal. Meaning, until you read it, you don't know what's going to happen. In a comic it's very easy to see the picture in the next panel out of the corner of your eye and lose the shock or suspense.

SA: What do you think are the challenges of scaring your audience in a comic?

DL: You can give a quick scare by just the subject. If your book is about spiders, there's a certain amount of people who are just scared of spiders. Ultimately, to really scare, you have to draw the reader into your story, get them invested with your characters and what they're going through. If you can do that, then when you throw something at them, it's going to affect the reader.

Guest Interview: Writer/Artist David Lapham on The Strain, Ferals, Self-Publishing, 'Weird' Tweeting, and More

SA: With both books you're writing scripts for another artist—Mike Huddleston on The Strain, and Gabriel Andrade on Ferals. What's the hardest part to get across to the artist in a script?

DL: First off, you hope that the artist is sharp and also invested in the book and the story. If they are, then not only will they convey what's supposed to be conveyed, but they'll add to the story with a detail or a facial expression or a shadow. The hardest thing as a writer to convey is to make sure you don't assume the artist knows what's in your head. You try and write where each panel has one main point that it's trying to convey. You want to make sure the artist knows what that is. That way if they make some different interpretations in their storytelling approach, they at least know what you're doing and why so they can hit those beats in a different way.

SA: You recently contributed to Creepy with a story you wrote and drew. Were there things you felt you could do there that you couldn't do in a story you were just writing?

DL: Writing and drawing is so different than just writing. Writing for someone else is exciting because often you get stuff back that's different and better than you could have imagined. Still, drawing your own story feels more like being an author. This is mine. I'm showing you all of me. Oddly, when you put on the artist hat and go to work, you often get those same unexpected changes as working with a different artist.

SA: All of your horror work is fairly disturbing in an emotional way, but is the goriest of the bunch. Are there pros and cons to gore, or do you just do as much as you can get away with?

DL: Despite being known for brutal storytelling, when I did Stray Bullets, I used gore very sparingly. Most of the devastation was emotional. Other guys, from Alan Moore (The Saga of Swamp Thing, V for Vendetta) to Garth Ennis (Preacher, Crossed) to even guys like Geof Darrow (Shaolin Cowboy), use extreme gore to great effect. Comics lack movement and sound. Visually extreme gore can definitely have an impact beyond just being salacious. One key here is that, as a freelancer, you work for different companies. Avatar has a certain brand. I call it "The X Games of Comics." I have a ton of creative freedom at Avatar, but it's also my responsibility within that to present an Avatar book.

SA: What about the mix of sexuality and gore? With The Strain any sexuality is generally used in a disturbing way; whereas, in Ferals there's some titillating stuff mixed with the gore. What's the difference there?

DL: I always try to not be gratuitous for its own sake. When I worked on Garth Ennis's Crossed, I was very gory and sexual and gratuitous. There, though, the whole point of the book was to be as horrible as possible so the only way to be gratuitous would be to not be. Ha! Ferals is more raw than The Strain. There is a definite tone to Ferals and the Avatar books, which go into this titillating area. That's the brand. I try to, and believe I do, tie that into the basic fabric of the concept and story.

SA: Was Stray Bullets influenced by the old EC crime comics?

DL: No. I love the EC stuff, but when I made Stray Bullets, I had worked at Valiant Comics on superheroes. I worked at Defiant Comics on superheroes. I did a job for DC that was Robot Superman. I did a Harlan Ellison short for Dark Horse. My creative "god" was Frank Miller. Stray Bullets was based entirely on my absolute need to do something of my own and channel feelings that were going on in my life at that time.

SA: Who was your favorite artist from those books? I'd guess Johnny Craig (The Crypt of Terror).

DL: Craig is great. Who wasn't great from their lineup? I always liked Bill Elder (Frontline Combat). Just always thought he nailed everything in a story. I really am not a genre lover. I've read more crime novels and seen more crime films since doing Stray Bullets than I did before. I love classic noir, but I love classic screwball comedies more. I like old musicals, too. Bringing Up Baby goes in the head and comes out the hand as Stray Bullets or Young Liars.

SA: What's your favorite period of horror comics?

DL: I'm a bad person to ask here. I just don't have a context for the history of horror comics. Film, too. I've seen a lot of horror films, but I'm by no means a connoisseur. The most impactful stuff on me personally would have to be Alan Moore's Swamp Thing. I also love when Gilbert Hernandez (Love & Rockets) uses horror. He can do a one- or two-page story relating a myth or urban legend that has real tangible creep and horror to it.

SA: Your work is firmly rooted in the traditions of comics, but outside of comics would you say your storytelling is more influenced by film or prose? With Stray Bullets I would have said film, but now I'm not sure.

DL: Film. I've done a lot of comics and used a lot of different approaches. My favorite way is still to keep a simple grid layout, limit captions to time and location, and use simple dialogue and camera shots to tell the story. I really think that's what keeps the eye moving and sucks you into the comic. That said, when I've done things with captions and internal monologues, I did that because I thought it was the best way to tell the story. I spent many years being obsessed with Kurosawa, Capra, Hawks, Ford, Welles, Peckinpah, Lynch, etc. That's how I see storytelling in my head, and I adapt what I think works to comics.

SA: I always loved the directness of the grid in Stray Bullets, and it did lead to movie-screen-shaped panels. I think you've used that elsewhere since. I like that the grid forces the reader to solely focus on what's inside the panel, rather than the shape of the panels or the way the panel borders interact with each other.

DL: I'm a huge fan of the grid. I did it on Stray Bullets and also on Young Liars and the Silverfish graphic novel I did for Vertigo. I did a form of it on the Creepy story. Basically, I just don't have the head for designing a complicated page layout. I just think of the shots. Grids suck you into the story. I like the eight-panel grid because, especially when I'm writing, it lets me do all the little details like a hand gesture or an extra close-up. Obviously most all the early Marvel books— the Kirby and Ditko books—are all in a grid. The famous John Byrne run on X-Men, that everyone remembers as being so exciting and full of power and punch, is all six-panel grid. Still, some people, and even editors, are afraid of it so I don't generally do it on other people's scripts. Maybe if I were a regular artist on something, I'd talk with the writer about it. I understand why a lot of artists wouldn't like it because it sounds confining, but I'm surprised more writers don't call for it because it makes writing easier—knowing what kind of room you have to call shots and fill story.

SA: What can comics creators learn from prose that they can't learn from film?

DL: That's tough. What film? I think a lot of film is garbage that no one should learn anything from or can learn anything from except what not to do to tell a story. I think a lot of classic film is a great teacher of storytelling and takes a lot from prose, using pictures the same way a good writer uses prose to make clear statements to convey ideas. The way they structure a sentence, or in film or comic art, the way they frame a shot or make a transition between panels or shots is where the artfulness comes in. I think it's less about prose or film and more about learning from things that are good, things of quality, and things that work. If you like something, examine it, learn why it works, and see if you can take those ideas and apply them to your own work. There's probably a whole roundtable discussion that can be had about this, but this is what's coming to me right now. Learn from great things. All you can get from crap is an easy path to crap.

SA: Are there storytelling devices that work well in other media that you wouldn't try in comics?

DL: Hmm… Sound? I think there are a lot of small things that have to be approached differently. Film can do montages that work. I've done those in comics, but I don't think they work particularly well… hmmm… I don't know; name some, and I'll tell you if I would use them.

SA: How about the unreliable narrator, like Edgar Allan Poe's "Tell-Tale Heart," where the whole story is shaped for you by someone giving you "facts" that are mostly inaccurate? Would it be too much of a betrayal to the reader if you lied through pictures for a long stretch of pages?

DL: I did that one! That's Young Liars. All unreliable narrator.

Guest Interview: Writer/Artist David Lapham on The Strain, Ferals, Self-Publishing, 'Weird' Tweeting, and More

SA: Right! I've seen it done in a page here or there, but that's a rare example of an extended use of it in comics.

DL: It was one of the greatest and most fun things I ever did. I don't know if it's a betrayal to the readers. Young Liars was a surreal series and was all about feelings and impressions of the main character so the more unreliable the narrator was, the more he was revealing his own struggle. At least that's the way it was to me. I think if you were doing a straight-up mystery story, then all of a sudden revealed you were lying and this is the real story and that's the killer—that would be a big cheat, but like any rule, in the right context you can break it.

SA: What about car chases? Shootouts?

DL: I like those things. Car chases are tougher than shootouts because they eat up so much space, which is what you're dealing with in comics. Speed down the block, foot hits brake, car skids around corner, hand on shift stick, tires peel, reset wide shot as car speeds down block... that's at least one page already and nothing much has happened. That Bullitt car chase would be, like, forty pages!

Anyway, both those things require solid, solid storytelling to pull off. You need an artist who's willing to set an environment and move characters around in that environment and not be afraid to draw all those backgrounds and follow progressions from one panel to the next. Dave Gibbons (Watchmen) is a master at that. You can't have guys who drop backgrounds and just have characters moving in an imaginary space, or it won't work.

SA: What do you think about switching point of view in comics, like As I Lay Dying, where every few pages William Faulkner hops to a different character?

DL: I haven't done that one yet. It sounds fun. But anytime you do that, you're making it a tougher read. When I was a teenager and read Elektra: Assassin, there was a lot of jumping around with captions to different characters, and it was a bit tough to figure out at times, at least as a kid. I think you have to be careful. I see a lot of writers today just assume the "thought caption" is such a standard that they can use it willy-nilly for any character at any time in the story. So all of a sudden there are these captions and you're wondering who the hell they're for because that particular character has never had thought captions before, then has them for three pages, then never again. I might be going off on a tangent here…

SA: What appeals to you more—psychological horror or supernatural horror?

DL: Psychological is always more appealing to me. But the fun of telling stories and doing comics is you also want to do that in the context of something fantastically visual. Sometimes you imagine a thriller about guys in suits, and sometimes those suits need to become spacesuits.

SA: I ask because crime stories sync up more naturally with psychological horror, but you've dealt a lot with supernatural stuff.

DL: I would just say this goes back to the blending of genres I was talking about earlier. You can do both. My own stuff that I write and draw tends to stay more real world. Even when I have a lot of insane and surreal elements like in Young Liars, it's grounded in real world psychology. I'm always trying to get at something I think is truthful about the emotions and experiences of the characters. Characters who are interesting to me, of course.

SA: What's the scariest thing you've ever pulled off in a comic?

DL: A reader would probably have to tell me that, but one that comes right to mind is way back in Stray Bullets #2, which is about kids and ends very tragically. I've had a lot of people tell me they had chills and couldn't stop turning pages. An instance of where I was able to take control of some readers at least. I did a run of Crossed stories in first person narration from the point of view of a serial killer. It's extremely brutal and graphic, but I think the internal monologue is more chilling in the very clear logical progression the killer makes with each step, which allows him to torture and kill his friends. A lot of the things I did in Young Liars, particularly the last issue, #18, I personally find very isolating and scary.

SA: I follow you on Twitter (check out @DavidALapham), and you're generally pretty amusing on there, but sometimes you go on a tear where I worry you've lost your mind. Do you drink and tweet a lot?

DL: No one reads these things, right? So this is practically just between you and me. I haven't been drunk in… probably since the late Nineties. Once you're past your mid-twenties there's this thing called a hangover, and it's very unpleasant. Anyway, don't worry about me. Sometimes I just need to be weird. I'm a husband and a dad and try and be very normal most of the time. Sometimes I'm just compelled to come out with some nonsense. Sometimes the nonsense makes sense to me. I used to just annoy my wife and kids with it, but now I can spare them and type some crazy to my twelve fans and a few thousand spambots. I liked my old iPhone, too. My new iPhone has a good camera. My old iPhone had a crappy camera so I could go around taking blurry pictures of, say, the carpet and there'd be a shape there that looked like an ear and I could tweet about the ear, or Satan who lived in the ear… Good times. Twitter's fun, though. Fans can let me know when I have books coming out. Sometimes I go on rants if something cheeses me off. I did, like, thirty tweets in a row on the Avengers movie. That was just for fun, though. Plus it wasn't a good movie. I don't know how some people tweet so often and still get work done. Or have families. Maybe they don't. Maybe they just invent them. Families. Who would know? Maybe I'm a robot and everyone is real. Or the opposite of that. No, I'm not drinking.


Our thanks to both Scott Allie and David Lapham for their time! For more be sure to visit the official Dark Horse Comics website.

VISIT THE EVILSHOP @ AMAZON!
Got news? Click hereto submit it!
Add some color to the comments section below.

B-Sides: She’s a Real Spitfire

$
0
0

Once touted as “the next Mary Lou Retton”, world-class gymnast Kristie Phillips may not have ever achieved that level of Olympic fame, but can Mary Lou Retton claim to have ever starred in a spy flick from the director of Cyborg and Brain Smasher… A Love Story?

Kristie Phillips' one and only acting role was as the heroine of Albert Pyun’s 1995 direct-to-video homage to classic spy movies of the 1960’s: Spitfire. Why Spitfire? Because she had fiery red hair, I suppose. Phillips’ character was that of – What else? – a world championship gymnast, the daughter of the world’s greatest spy, recruited into his world of international espionage after being targeted by a diabolical arch-criminal looking to get her hands on some Russian nuclear codes.

Phillips defeated bad guys with her own special brand of gymkata. Lance Henriksen got to ham it up wearing a tuxedo and a jet pack as her James Bond-ian father. Tim Thomerson also got to camp it up as the secret agent mentor prepping her for her new job with the CIA. Superman II villainess Sarah Douglas had some fun playing yet another evil lady threatening the fate of democracy on Earth.

Like any good James Bond-wannabe flick, the opening credits boast a theme song titled after the movie set to stylized imagery of scantily-clad women posing with guns, a generic James Bond stand-in with a gun and a jet pack, and a silhouette of a pony-tailed gymnast tumbling across the screen repeatedly.

With the newest James Bond flick opening this weekend, I felt now’s as good a time as ever to showcase the campy opening to Albert Pyun’s Spitfire. The song, like the movie, is not half bad but also not all that good, yet still kind of catchy.

VIDEO -

B-Sides: She’s a Real Spitfire

VISIT THE EVILSHOP @ AMAZON!
Got news? Click hereto submit it!
Rock out in the comments section below.

Preview of and Several Stills from Grimm Episode 2.12 - Season of the Hexenbiest

$
0
0

It's already time for the "Fall Finale" of "Grimm," which means Episode 2.12, "Season of the Hexenbiest," is the last we'll see of our Portland friends until next year. While we wait for NBC to release a few clips, check out the preview and several stills that hint at what's to come.

Episode 2.12 - "Season of the Hexenbiest" (airing 11/16/12; 9:00-10:00 pm)
Adalind (Claire Coffee) returns to wreak havoc in everyone’s lives and avenge her mother’s brutal death. She has her eyes set on Nick (David Giuntoli) and those closest to him – especially Hank (Russell Hornsby) and Juliette (Bitsie Tulloch). Elsewhere, Captain Renard’s (Sasha Roiz) obsession continues to escalate. Meanwhile a surprise visit at the spice shop gives Monroe (Silas Weir Mitchell) more than he ever bargained for. Reggie Lee also stars.

The series is produced by Universal Television with Hazy Mills Prods. and GK Prods. Sean Hayes, Todd Milliner, David Greenwalt, Jim Kouf, Naren Shankar, and Norberto Barba are executive producers.

For more be sure to check out "Grimm" on NBC.com (where full episodes are available for viewing), "like""Grimm" on Facebook, and follow "Grimm" on Twitter.

Grimm on NBC

VISIT THE EVILSHOP @ AMAZON!
Got news? Click hereto submit it!
Keep a grimm outlook in the comments section below!

Tune In to the Retro New Poster for Dead.tv

$
0
0

After getting a glimpse at several behind-the-scenes stills for Harrison Smith's Dead.tv, starring Danielle Harris, Eric Roberts, and Felissa Rose, the first poster for the flick has arrived. It's subtle, yet striking and was designed by "Monster" Mark Kosobucki.

Using the same retro style he employed for the Corey Feldman horror film 6 Degrees of Hell, Kosokucki wanted a touch of Sleepaway Camp and Friday the 13th to come through. Dead.tv is in post-production with a planned 2013 release.

For more info check out those aforementioned behind-the-scenes stills here, visit the official Dead.tv website, and follow @deadtvmovie on Twitter.

Synopsis
Shot in Northeast Pennsylvania, Dead.tv focuses on Eric Roberts' character, Julian Barrett, a former 80s horror director whose career hit the skids and who is attempting a reboot of his faded horror franchise. A group of young adults are hand-picked to star in a reality show pilot based on the plots of all three of Barrett's former films. Syfy Channel's "Monster Man," Cleve Hall, designed and supervised the makeup effects.

First Cut of Dead.tv With Danielle Harris and Eric Roberts is Complete, Check Out Behind the Scenes Stills

VISIT THE EVILSHOP @ AMAZON!
Got news? Click hereto submit it!
Hit the skids in the comments section below!

Joston Theney Makes His Move in New Still from Axeman at Cutter's Creek

$
0
0

A second still from writer/director Joston Theney's Axeman at Cutter's Creek has come in, and this one features Theney in front of the camera in the role of "Darren," who is finally ready to make his move. But is it as a hero or a villain?

Christopher Otiko, the film's executive producer, says of the scene, "[It's] where two characters make their motivations known. The film's sense of whodunit, or rather who's-doing-it, will have you guessing who the good guys and bad guys really are."

Axeman at Cutter's Creek is an 80’s style slasher film about nine vacationing twenty-somethings who are hunted down by an axe-wielding local legend.

The film stars Elissa Dowling, Tiffany Shepis, Brinke Stevens, Ray Trickitt, and Arielle Brachfeld. Rounding out the cast are Chantelle Albers, Jamie Bernadette, ERIN MARIE HOGAN, Eliza Kiss, Dylan Hobbs, Stephen Eith, J. Scott, Carlos Javier Castillo, Paula Tracey Wilson, Dave Hernandez, and NBA superstar Scot Pollard as the Axeman.

Axeman

Axeman

Axeman

VISIT THE EVILSHOP @ AMAZON!
Got news? Click hereto submit it!
Get the axe in the comments section below!

Photo Gallery for American Horror Story: Asylum - Episode 5: I Am Anne Frank - Part 2

$
0
0

So far reactions to Chapter 2 of "American Horror Story" are split right down the middle. Our own staff is about 50/50. But I'm one who's enjoying this season's "kitchen sink" approach; if you agree, check out these photos from upcoming Episode 5, "I Am Anne Frank - Part 2."

"American Horror Story: Asylum - Episode 5: “I Am Anne Frank” - Part 2 (airing November 14th at 10:00 pm e/p)
Sister Jude (Jessica Lange) employs a renowned Nazi hunter to gather evidence against Arden (James Cromwell). Kit (Evan Peters) makes a surprising confession. Bloody Face is unmasked. Written by Brad Falchuck; directed by Alfonso Gomez-Rejon.

For more visit the show's Facebook page along with "American Horror Story" on FX.

American Horror Story: Asylum

VISIT THE EVILSHOP @ AMAZON!
Got news? Click hereto submit it!
Enter the asylum known as the comments section below!

Lots of Eye Candy from Supernatural Episode 8.07 - A Little Slice of Kevin

$
0
0

Supernatural Season 8With Sam and Dean so out of sync in this season of "Supernatural," we thank the gods for the great supporting players we've seen so far, and one of our favorites - Castiel - returns in Episode 8.07, "A Little Slice of Kevin." Have a look at over a dozen stills from the ep.

"Supernatural" Episode 8.07 - "A Little Slice of Kevin" (airs 11/14/12, 9-10 pm)
CASTIEL ESCAPES PURGATORY - Sam and Dean (Jared Padalecki and Jensen Ackles) are stunned when Castiel (Misha Collins) suddenly appears back on Earth with no memory of how he escaped from Purgatory. Meanwhile, Mrs. Tran (Lauren Tom) enlists a witch (guest star Cyrina Fiallo) to concoct a demon bomb, but the witch double crosses Mrs. Tran and turns her and Kevin (Osric Chau) over to Crowley (Mark Sheppard).

Written by Eugenie Ross-Leming and Brad Buckner; directed by Charlie Carner.

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



VISIT THE EVILSHOP @ AMAZON!
Got news? Click hereto submit it!
Concoct a demon bomb in the comments section below!

Theatrical Poster Unveiled for Horror Comedy My Fair Zombie

$
0
0

The theatrical poster has been revealed for director Brett Kelly's horror comedy My Fair Zombie, and he promises to have a trailer done soon as well. In the meantime he's tinkering with the sound in post, fielding festival offers, and plans to premiere the film somewhere in Canada this summer.

About My Fair Zombie
My Fair Zombie is a horror comedy directed by Brett Kelly. Based on George Bernard Shaw's Pygmalion, the story concerns a professor of phonetics (Lawrence Evenchick) who attempts to teach a zombie woman (Sacha Gabriel) to be a proper English lady. Colonel Pickering is being portrayed by Barry Caiger, and Mrs. Pearce is played by Jennifer Vallance. The script is by Kelly and frequent collaborator Trevor Payer (She-Rex).

For more visit MyFairZombieMovie.com.

My Fair Zombie Wraps; Gearing Up for Festival Run

VISIT THE EVILSHOP @ AMAZON!
Got news? Click hereto submit it!
Be a proper lady in the comments section below!

Go Crazy for These Images from The Vampire Diaries Episode 4.06 - We All Go a Little Mad Sometimes

$
0
0

The Vampire Diaries Season 4One thing "The Vampire Diaries" does extremely well is expand on its mythos, and this new storyline about some sort of connection between hunters and vamps definitely has our attention, as do these image from Episode 4.06, "We All Go a Little Mad Sometimes."

"The Vampire Diaries" Episode 4.06 - "We All Go a Little Mad Sometimes" (airs 11/15/12, 9-10 pm)
ELENA'S NEW NIGHTMARE — Terrifying hallucinations leave Elena shaken and confused, causing her to make a dangerous mistake. After giving Stefan some very disturbing news about Elena, Klaus takes matters into his own hands.

Professor Shane reveals a story of ancient witchcraft to Damon and Bonnie. With help from Klaus and Stefan, Jeremy begins a new chapter in his life.

Finally, Elena makes a painful personal confession to Stefan, and Matt gives Damon startling new information about Professor Shane.

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




VISIT THE EVILSHOP @ AMAZON!
Got news? Click hereto submit it!
Take matters into your own hands in the comments section below!

Four New Teaser Videos for Fox's The Following

$
0
0

Fox is promoting the hell out of its upcoming new series from the wonderfully twisted mind of Kevin Williamson, "The Following"; and here are four teasers they've just released titled "Dog,""Wife,""Alone," and "Tattoo," which really want you to visit the show's website.

"The Following" will premiere on Monday, January 21st, at 9/8c.

Synopsis:
THE FBI estimates there are currently over 300 active serial killers in the United States. What would happen if these killers had a way of communicating and connecting with each other? What if they were able to work together and form alliances across the country? What if one brilliant psychotic serial killer was able to bring them all together and activate a following? Welcome to THE FOLLOWING, the terrifying new thriller from creator/executive producer Kevin Williamson (“The Vampire Diaries,” “Dawson’s Creek,” the Scream franchise) and director Marcos Siega (“The Vampire Diaries,” “Dexter”).

When notorious serial killer JOE CARROLL (James Purefoy, “Rome”) escapes from death row and embarks on a new killing spree, the FBI calls former agent RYAN HARDY (Emmy-nominated actor Kevin Bacon, X-Men: First Class) to consult on the case. Having since withdrawn from the public eye, Hardy was responsible for Carroll’s capture nine years ago, after Carroll murdered 14 female students on the Virginia college campus where he taught literature. Hardy is a walking textbook of all-things Carroll. He knows him better than anyone; he is perhaps Carroll’s only psychological and intellectual match. But the Ryan Hardy who broke the Carroll case years ago isn’t the same man today. Wounded both physically and mentally by his previous pursuit of this serial killer, it’s been a long time since Hardy has been in the field. This investigation is his redemption, his call to action. In contrast to nine years ago, Hardy isn’t calling the shots on this case. He works closely with an FBI team, which includes all-business and tough-as-nails JENNIFER MASON (Jeananne Goossen, The Vow, "Alcatraz") and young, razor-sharp MIKE WESTON (Shawn Ashmore, X-Men).

Related Story: Highlights from The Following's San Diego Comic-Con 2012 Roundtable Interviews

The team considers Hardy to be more of a liability than an asset. But Hardy proves his worth when he uncovers that Carroll was covertly communicating with a network of killers in the outside world. It quickly becomes obvious that he has more planned than just a prison escape, and there’s no telling how many additional killers are out there. The FBI’s investigation leads Hardy to CLAIRE MATTHEWS (Natalie Zea, “Justified”), Carroll’s ex-wife and mother of the criminal’s 10-year-old son, JOEY (newcomer Kyle Catlett). Close during Hardy’s initial investigation, Hardy turns to Claire for insight into Carroll’s next move. The tension rises when Carroll’s accomplices kidnap his intended last victim from nine years ago. Hardy becomes ever more determined to end Carroll’s game when he realizes that this psychopath intends to finish what he started. The thriller will follow Hardy and the FBI as they are challenged with the ever-growing web of murder around them, masterminded by the devious Carroll, who dreams of writing a novel with Hardy as his protagonist. The reinvigorated Hardy will get a second chance to capture Carroll, as he’s faced with not one but a cult of serial killers.

For more info visit "The Following" website and "The Following" on Facebook.










Fox TV's The Following

Fox TV's The Following

VISIT THE EVILSHOP @ AMAZON!
Got news? Click hereto submit it!
Follow us into the comments section below.

Scream Factory Hopes You’ll Invite The Vagrant over to Watch The Horror Show

$
0
0

Another Friday has passed and that means two titles never before released on DVD have been announced by the Scream Factory. You may not remember The Vagrant but odds are you remember The Horror Show and have been wondering if it would ever see the light of day again.

The big title of this week’s Scream Factory announcement is unquestionably The Horror Show, or as it is known in some foreign circles, House III. I never understood how anyone came to the conclusion that film could be released as a third installment of the House franchise, but then I also have never understood how a movie about killer radioactive tree roots could be marketed as Troll 3.

In much the same way Hollywood gave us dueling volcano films (Volcano and Dante’s Peak) and dueling celestial doomsday flicks (Armageddon and Deep Impact), 1989 saw the release of dueling fright flicks about electric chair-executed serial killers returning as supernatural specters out for revenge against the people that put them away. Wes Craven’s Shocker got the bigger release but The Horror Show has also amassed a cult following over the years.

The directorial debut of the late James Isaac (Jason X, Skinwalkers) - after My Grandpa is a Vampire director David Blythe got fired from the film mid-way, and written by that ultimate purveyor of high quality Hollywood projects, Allan Smithee, The Horror Show starred the late Brion James as meat cleaver-connossieur serial killer Max Jenke back from his grave seeking vengeance against the cop that sent him to death row (the great Lance Henriksen) and his family (which includes Michelle’s sister, Dedee Pfeiffer).

The second title announced is lesser known despite having a far more noteworthy cast. Bill Paxton (Aliens, Twister), Michael Ironside (Scanners, Total Recall), Marshall Bell (Total Recall, Starship Troopers), (“Mitzi Kapture (“Silk Stalkings”, “Baywatch”), Colleen Camp (Police Academy 2 & 4, Clue), Patrika Darbo (Hatchet, Spaced Invaders), Marc McClure (Superman 1-4, Back to the Future III), and Stuart Pankin (Congo, “Dinosaurs”) headlined the cast of the 1992 horror comedy The Vagrant.

Graham is content! He has a just purchased a new house which he can afford due to his successful well okay job which also comes closer to him with a swell chance of picking up a great girlfriend as a bonus feature. Of course he is something of a suck up yuppie and his potential companion Judy Dansig is sex-crazed real estate agent. However his new home has unwanted guest, a disgraced destitute shrink, who sees a chance to carry on the mind games that led him to his current situation. As Graham starts finding pieces of those around him turning up in places like his fridge and with him getting the blame by the law. Graham struggles hard not to lose it, but that isn't easy as the deaths continue and he starts to even doubt his very own sanity!

From the director of The Fly II and the screenwriter of Cold Creek Manor, this is one of those movies if you’re of the right age probably saw on video store shelves all the time and whether you ever rented it or not odds are you had completely forgotten it even existed until just now.

From the sounds of Scream Factory’s Facebook announcement it looks these two will only be getting DVD releases only, no Blu-ray. More to come on these two releases in 2013.

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

VISIT THE EVILSHOP @ AMAZON!
Got news? Click hereto submit it!
Meet the cleaver in the comments section below!

Hansel & Gretel Warriors of Witchcraft and Ghoul Bring the Youthful Horror to DVD this January

$
0
0

A ravenous ghoul terrorizes a cast member of “Modern Family”. A Twilight wolfman and his real-life sister go hunting for supernatural evil. Younger horror fans get to start the new year off with Ghoul and Hansel & Gretel: Warriors of Witchcraft on DVD.

Who would have ever thought Hansel & Gretel: Witch Hunters would inspire so many b-movie knock-offs? Sure, we’re only talking two, but that’s still two more than I would have expected.

While The Asylum’s Hansel & Gretel name-only mockbuster takes a more modern horror approach, Lionsgate has one that looks to be more of a tweener-friendly version of the R-rated big screen version. Hansel & Gretel: Witch Hunters, allow me to introduce you to Hansel & Gretel: Warriors of Witchcraft.

JONAH AND ELLA MAZER (Hansel and Gretel) were happy, normal teenagers–sent to an elite boarding school. The Headmaster, SEBASTIAN, seems to know more about the brother and sister than they know about themselves. As both get to know their high school classmates, strange and frightening things begin to happen. When their new friends explain that they are all descended from powerful witches, and they’ve been waiting for Hansel and Gretel to join them and complete a new generation of the Coven, both refuse to believe them. But it’s not until Hansel discovers a message from his mother in an old leather-bound book of spells hidden in the school library that he understands their true and dangerous destiny – slaying witches.

Twilight wolfpacker Booboo Stewart and his real-life sister Fivel Stewart (according to IMDB, “Fivel” is a nickname; her real name is Trent - what’s with the naming in the Stewart family?) star as the titular sibling warriors of witchcraft. Vanessa Angel (“Weird Science: The Series”) and the prolific Eric Roberts co-star in the PG-13 fantasy-horror-adventure flick from even more prolific b-moviemaker David Decoteau.

Hansel & Gretel: Warriors of Witchcraft begin their quest when Lionsgate releases the film to DVD on January 22nd.

Kudos to whoever crafted the DVD artwork; looks like something straight out of the young adult fantasy book section.

An even younger protagonist finds himself in peril in Ghoul. If you didn’t see the feature film version of Brian Keene’s novel when it premiered on the Chiller Network earlier this year, you’ll get another chance when Image Entertainment releases the film to DVD on January 8th.

Something ghastly haunts Golgotha Cemetery – an entity of unspeakable evil…and insatiable hunger. It is the summer of 1984, a time that should be full of lazy, carefree days for 12-year-old Timmy (Modern Family’s Nolan Gould) and his two best friends, Doug and Barry. But when a teenaged couple goes missing among the gravestones of the local cemetery, the bloodcurdling legend of a horrific ghoul begins to seem more like reality than myth. As the body count rises, Timmy and his friends are forced to confront their worst fears when they unearth long-buried secrets and unleash not only their personal demons…but also the one lurking underground! Based on the novel by Brian Keene comes GHOUL, a tale of terror about the convergence of monstrous inhumanity and a ravenous, inhuman monster.

VISIT THE EVILSHOP @ AMAZON!
Got news? Click hereto submit it!
Be youthful in the comments section below!

New Artwork Emerges as Bunyan Prepares to Swing His Axe for the First Time at Shockfest

$
0
0

We’ve been following the progress of the new folklore-inspired horror flick Bunyan. If you’re at Shockfest in Hollywood next weekend you’ll be the first to get a chance to see the giant lumberjack chop up some campers.

I’ll let the press release fill you in:

BUNYAN, the new horror/creature feature from director Gary Jones (BOOGEYMAN 3) and producer Jeff Miller, will have its World Premiere on November 17 at the Shockfest Film Festival in Hollywood.

“We think it’s pretty cool to be a part of Shockfest,” says writer/producer Miller. “They have great things planned. No one’s done this character before in horror, and we think horror fans will enjoy it.”

BUNYAN is a dark, contemporary take on the tall tale of lumberjack Paul Bunyan. Kids at a first-offenders’ boot camp discover that the legend of Paul Bunyan is real, but is much more horrifying than they could have imagined. They incur the wrath of the 15-foot monstrous giant, who was banished from town 100 years ago and thought dead.

The movie stars genre vet Joe Estevez, Dan Haggerty (TV's “Grizzly Adams”), Tom Downey (SyFy's WAR OF THE WORLDS), and Tim Lovelace (MOSQUITO). Amber Connor, Jesse Kove, Kristina Kopf, Clifton Williams, Victoria Ramos, Jill Evyn, and former WWF wrestler Chris Hahn round out the cast. This is the first major role for Kove, son of veteran actor Martin Kove (THE KARATE KID 1-3, RAMBO).

Shockfest, in its sixth year, will be held at Raleigh Studios in Hollywood, across from Paramount Pictures. BUNYAN has the coveted “closing nightmare” slot. It has already secured five festival nominations, including Best Picture, Best Actor (Estevez), Best Writing, Best Monster, and Best Special Effects. Filming on BUNYAN encompassed many locations over three states – California, Ohio, and Michigan.

Miller (BALLISTICA, HELLBLOCK 13) and Jones produced through their company, Kinetic Filmworks, along with newcomer Jason Ancona. Robert Kurtzman's Creature Corps handled the bulk of makeup FX, with Kurtzman (creator of FROM DUSK TILL DAWN) and Philip R. Garret (HORRORS OF WAR) joining the team as co-producers.

The Bunyan Trailer Starts Swinging!

VISIT THE EVILSHOP @ AMAZON!
Got news? Click hereto submit it!
Tell tall tales in the comments section below!

First Slient Night Clip Lights Up the Interwebs

$
0
0

The very first clip from Steven C. Miller's Silent Night, a quasi-remake of the yuletide classic Silent Night, Deadly Night, is here and it's messier than finding coal in your stocking. Check it out, you naughty kids, you!

On November 30th, Anchor Bay Films presents Silent Night on screen in ten major U.S. metropolitan areas. The Blu-ray/DVD combo and DVD will be available to unwrap nationwide on December 4th. Bonus features include “SILENT NIGHT: Behind The Scenes” featurette and deleted scenes.

For more info "like"Silent Night on Facebook and follow Silent Night on Twitter.

Related Story:Exclusive: Steven C. Miller Prepares Dread Central for a Silent Night on November 30th

Synopsis:
In 1984 the slasher classic Silent Night, Deadly Night stunned audiences, was banned across America, and remains the most notorious Christmas movie in history. Now, Santa is back, and he’s got a brand new bag of tricks. As their small midwestern town prepares for its annual Christmas Eve parade, the sheriff (Malcolm McDowell) and his deputy (Jaime King) discover that a maniac in a Santa suit is murdering those he judges as “naughty.” Their sins? Porn, adultery, greed... And he will make sure they rest in heavenly pieces. Donal Logue, Ellen Wong, Lisa Marie, and Brendan Fehr co-star in this brutal and darkly humorous tale of Christmas gone bad directed by Steven C. Miller.

First Slient Night Clip Lights Up the Interwebs

First Slient Night Clip Lights Up the Interwebs

VISIT THE EVILSHOP @ AMAZON!
Got news? Click hereto submit it!
Be silent in the comments section below!

Bootlegged First Clip from Hatchet III Slices its way Online

$
0
0

With FEARnet showing a host of Adam Green films today, the network also managed to sneak in the very first clip from Hatchet III, which a DC reader bootlegged and sent in. Dig it and look for the high-res version soon!

Hatchet III will continue the saga of Victor Crowley, the "Bayou Butcher," who first made his gruesome mark in 2007's groundbreaking Hatchet. Adam Green's Hatchet II sequel became the first unrated independent horror film to be exhibited by a major chain (AMC Theatres) in more than 25 years when it opened.

Related Story:San Diego Comic-Con 2012: Adam Green and BJ McDonnell Talk Hatchet III

The movie is written and executive produced by series creator Adam Green, who also directed the first two films in the series. Veteran camera operator BJ McDonnell (Abraham Lincoln: Vampire Hunter, Project X, Easy A, Hatchet 2) makes his directing debut on Hatchet III.

Hatchet II stars Danielle Harris and Kane Hodder return in Hatchet III and are joined by Derek Mears (Friday the 13th 2009), Caroline Williams (Texas Chainsaw Massacre 2), Sean Whalen (The People Under the Stairs), and others.

Bootlegged First Clip from Hatchet III Slices its way Online

VISIT THE EVILSHOP @ AMAZON!
Got news? Click hereto submit it!
Raise your Hatchet high the comments section below.

Maria Bello Joins the Prisoners

$
0
0

More casting news has arrived for Alcon Entertainment's Prisoners starring Hugh Jackman, Melissa Leo, Jake Gyllenhaal, and Paul Dano. Read on for the skinny on the next person who will be in violent pursuit of their freedom!

According to Deadline, Maria Bello (A History of Violence) has signed on to play Grace, the wife of Hugh Jackman’s Keller character in the movie.

Denis Villeneuve (Incendies) directs. Written by Aaron Guzikowski (Contraband), the story revolves around a small-town carpenter named Keller (Jackman) whose young daughter and her best friend are kidnapped. After the cops fail to find them, Keller takes the law into his own hands but in the process runs up against Detective Loki (Gyllenhaal), a hotshot cop with confidence to burn, assigned to the case.

Maria Bello Joins the Prisoners

VISIT THE EVILSHOP @ AMAZON!
Got news? Click hereto submit it!
Be imprisoned in the comments section below!
Viewing all 24913 articles
Browse latest View live




Latest Images