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BoulderLight Pictures and Indie Horror Stars Team Up to Give You Dementia

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BoulderLight Pictures and Indie Horror Stars Team Up to Give You DementiaPerfectly timed with this week's home video release of Contracted, word has come that the film's DP is directing a horror flick of his own with some of the most impressive indie horror actors by his side. Read on for full details about Dementia, coming our way courtesy of BoulderLight Pictures!

From the Press Release
BoulderLight Pictures (CONTRACTED, WEEP) has tapped Contracted DP Mike Testin to direct DEMENTIA, a new horror thriller in the vein of Misery and Whatever Happened to Baby Jane.

Set to begin production in Los Angeles next week, the film's cast includes: Gene Jones (The Sacrament), A.J. Bowen (You're Next), Kristina Klebe (Proxy), Marc Senter (Red, White, and Blue), and newcomer Hassie Harrison, amongst others. The script was penned by Blood List writer Meredith Berg (FACELESS).

DEMENTIA is about an elderly war veteran who is forced by his estranged family to hire a live-in nurse after finding out he has been diagnosed with dementia, only to find that she harbors a sinister secret.

"We couldn't be more excited to be partnering with Mike on this,” said producer Raphael Margules. “We've been looking to collaborate with him since CONTRACTED and can't think of a better project in which to showcase his unique and fresh voice to the global marketplace and audiences worldwide."

Raphael Margules and J.D. Lifshitz are producing for BoulderLight Pictures. XYZ is handling North American sales with BoulderLight’s sales division looking after international.

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A Field in England Opens on Blu-ray and DVD

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A Field in England Opens on Blu-ray and DVDBen Wheatley's (Kill List) new film, A Field in England (review), is on its way to Blu-ray and DVD via Drafthouse Films, and we have the skinny on what to expect once it arrives. Read on for details.

From the Press Release
From Drafthouse Films and director Ben Wheatley comes the original horror film A Field in England, available on DVD and Blu-ray April 8.

This is the fourth feature film from writer/director Ben Wheatley, whose credits include the highly acclaimed tour-de-force thriller Kill List, the Edgar Wright-produced 2012 Cannes Film Festival selection Sightseers, and a segment in anthology horror film The ABCs of Death.

Billed as "a psychedelic trip into magic and madness," A Field in England follows a group of English Civil War soldiers in the 17th century who are captured by an alchemist and led into a vast mushroom field, where they fall victim to violent and nightmarish forces. A Field in England will be distributed on home video by Cinedigm at an SRP of $29.95 for the Blu-ray and $27.95 for the DVD.

With a new feature, the JG Ballard adaptation High Rise, currently in pre-production with Tom Hiddleston attached to star, Wheatley and producers Claire Jones and Andy Starke assembled A Field in England with financing via Film4's talent and ideas arm Film 4.0 headed up by Anna Higgs. The film stars Reece Shearsmith ("The League of Gentlemen") and Kill List's Michael Smiley and features Julian Barrett ("The Mighty Boosh") in a small role.

Wheatley's work has been lauded by both critics and moviegoers, placing him at the forefront of a new wave in contemporary cinema emerging from the festival circuit dubbed "art-house horror." Chris Hewitt of Empire Magazine has proclaimed, "In only three years, Ben Wheatley has gone from unknown to one of the UK's most exciting, hilarious, and most violently disturbing filmmakers."

Synopsis
England: 1648 AD. A small group of deserters flee from a raging battle through an overgrown field. They are captured by two men: O'Neil and Cutler. O'Neil (Michael Smiley), an alchemist, forces the group to aid him in his search to find a hidden treasure that he believes is buried in the field. Crossing a vast mushroom dowcircle, which provides their first meal, the group quickly descend into a chaos of arguments, fighting, and paranoia, and, as it becomes clear that the treasure might be something other than gold, they slowly become victim to the terrifying energies trapped inside the field. A Field in England is a psychedelic trip into magic and madness from Ben Wheatley - award-winning director of Down Terrace, Kill List, and Sightseers.

A Field in England

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New Art and Stills Found in the House of Dust

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New Art and Stills Found in the House of DustA.D. Calvo's latest film, House of Dust, is on its way to home video courtesy of Anchor Bay, and right now we have the official DVD artwork and several new stills that have been waiting to haunt you. Check 'em out!

From the Press Release
Redding House Asylum. For some, it’s a distant reminder of a time when medical treatment of the clinically insane bordered on torture. For an unsuspecting group of college students, it’s the first stop on a journey into terror!

On May 20th, Anchor Bay Entertainment unlocks House of Dust on DVD. The chilling possession shocker features a hot young cast including Inbar Lavi (Street Kings 2: Motor City, Underemployed), Steven Grayhm (Journey to the Center of the Earth), Eddie Hassell (The Kids are Alright, Jobs), Holland Roden (“Teen Wolf”), John Lee Ames (Days of Darkness), Alesandra Assante, Joy Lauren (“Desperate Housewives”), Nicole Travolta (“Two and a Half Men”) and Stephen Spinella (“24”). House of Dust is priced to own with a $19.98 SRP.

Emma (Lavi) is one of the bright new faces at Camden College. Plagued with visions and voices all her life, she’s now trying to move past her personal demons of schizophrenia, and substitute hallucinations with higher learning. Emma joins her friends when they break into the shuttered remnants of the abandoned Redding House Asylum on campus. When they accidentally shatter canisters holding the ashes of former mental patients and subsequently inhale the dust-filled air, they’re soon possessed by the souls once held within them. One of them happens to be a convicted serial killer from 1959...

Inspired by true events, House of Dust opens the door to a nightmare of murder and mayhem.

House of Dust

House of Dust

House of Dust

House of Dust

House of Dust

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Camp Dread Trailer Alive and Killing!

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Camp Dread Artwork Premiere Now TwitchingOn tap right now we have the official trailer from the upcoming flick from Harrison Smith, Camp Dread (formerly Dead.tv). Check it out along with all the latest details. We all know how much fun camping can be! Start packing!

The flick will be available on DVD April 15, 2014, from RLJ Entertainment. Eric Roberts, Danielle Harris, and Felissa Rose star.

Synopsis
The "Summer Camp" horror trilogy was one of the most popular franchises of the 1980s. However, the decade ended and so did director Julian Barrett's career. Now Barrett plans to resurrect his gory series via a modern reboot patterned after reality filmmaking.

With his former leading lady and an eclectic group of 10 young “contestants,” Barrett returns to the same locale where his old splatter-fests were filmed. When one of the campers is found savagely murdered, they realize there’s more at stake than just fame and fortune. Each of them is in a fight for their lives as they realize summer is over – forever.

Camp Dread

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Katee Sackhoff as Evil as Can Be in New Oculus Character Poster

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Stare Down Evil in this New Oculus ClipKatee Sackhoff is one of those actresses whom we simply adore around these parts, and this latest character poster for the upcoming fright fest Oculus is filled with nothing but her! We likey! We really likey! The film will haunt theaters April 11th. Dig it!

Karen Gillan ("Doctor Who,"Not Another Happy Ending), Brenton Thwaites (Maleficent, The Giver), Rory Cochrane (Argo, Parkland), and Katee Sackhoff ("Battlestar Galactica,"Riddick) star.

Oculus is directed by Mike Flanagan from a script he co-wrote with Jeff Howard, based on a short film Flanagan and Jeff Seidman made in 2005. Trevor Macy (Safe House, The Strangers, The Raven) and Marc D. Evans (Safe House, The Strangers, The Raven) produced the film, and Jason Blum, Ryan Kavanaugh, Tucker Tooley, Anil Kurian, D. Scott Lumpkin, Peter Schlessel, Dale Johnson, Glenn Murray, Julie May, and Mike Ilitch, Jr., serve as executive producers.

Synopsis
Ten years ago, tragedy struck the Russell family, leaving the lives of teenage siblings Tim and Kaylie forever changed when Tim was convicted of the brutal murder of their parents. Now in his 20s, Tim is newly released from protective custody and only wants to move on with his life; but Kaylie, still haunted by that fateful night, is convinced her parents’ deaths were caused by something else altogether: a malevolent supernatural force­­ unleashed through the Lasser Glass, an antique mirror in their childhood home. Determined to prove Tim’s innocence, Kaylie tracks down the mirror, only to learn similar deaths have befallen previous owners over the past century. With the mysterious entity now back in their hands, Tim and Kaylie soon find their hold on reality shattered by terrifying hallucinations and realize, too late, that their childhood nightmare is beginning again…

For the latest news and updates, be sure to "like"Oculus on Facebook and follow @blumhouse on Twitter.

Oculus

Oculus

Oculus

Oculus

Oculus

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SXSW 2014 Crowd Reacts to Godzilla

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New Godzilla Trailer and Stills Bring on the Beasts!Audiences at the South by Southwest Film Festival we treated to a special screening of the original Godzilla along with a special look at Legendary Pictures' upcoming entry into Big G's franchise. Check out the video proof!

In theaters May 16, 2014, an epic rebirth to Toho’s iconic Godzilla, this spectacular adventure pits the world’s most famous monster against malevolent creatures who, bolstered by humanity’s scientific arrogance, threaten our very existence.

Making his first appearance in 1954 (Gojira), Godzilla is a giant monster that lives in the sea that comes from the ocean to feed on mankind.

Visit the official Godzilla website here.







Godzilla

Godzilla

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Help Pick the Cover Art for Joy Ride 3: Road Kill

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Help Pick the Cover Art for Joy Ride 3: Road KillOur brothers in harm over at Bloody Disgusting are holding a contest which will enable you, yes YOU, to pick the key art for the upcoming flick Joy Ride 3: Road Kill! Read on for the skinny!

Joy Ride 3 Release Details
Rusty Nail, the vengeful trucker with a penchant for pain, slams terror into overdrive in this all-new UNRATED chapter of Joy Ride! Twentieth Century Fox Home Entertainment takes road rage to an all new level with JOY RIDE 3: ROAD KILL, arriving on Digital HD June 3 and on Blu-ray and DVD June 17.

This third hellish installment in the bloody series finds director Declan O’Brien (Wrong Turn 4: Bloody Beginnings, Wrong Turn 5: Bloodlines) in the driver’s seat for another deadly detour.

The nightmare begins when a group of young street racers take a desolate shortcut on their way to the Road Rally 1000. But a chance encounter with Rusty soon turns deadly as he stalks, taunts, and tortures his next victims with deranged delight. It’s a full-throttle, pedal-to-the-metal chill ride packed with killer twists and turns!

Starring Ken Kirzinger (Freddy vs. Jason) as the infamous Rusty Nail, the JOY RIDE 3: ROAD KILL Blu-ray and DVD is loaded with extra features including a variety of deleted scenes, featurettes, behind-the-scenes content, and a gruesome unrated version of the film.

Special Features

  • Pre-Vis Sequences
  • Road Rage: The Blood, Sweat and Gears of Joy Ride 3
  • Riding Shotgun with Declan: Director’s DIE-aries
  • Finding Large Marge
  • Audio Commentary

    Click on the image below to pick one of three designs over at BD.

    Joyride 3

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  • New Behind-the-Scenes Look at The Quiet Ones

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    New Behind-the-Scenes Look at The Quiet OnesBuzzfeed nailed down an exclusive behind-the-scenes featurette in support of Hammer's The Quiet Ones, and we have this special look for you right here. Dig it... and remember to keep quiet until the flick's release!

    The Quiet Ones is written and directed by John Pogue (Quarantine 2) and stars Jared Harris ("Mad Men,"The Ward), Sam Claflin (Snow White and the Huntsman, The Hunger Games: Catching Fire), Erin Richards ("Breaking In,""Being Human"), Olivia Cooke ("The Secret of Crickley Hall,""The Fuse"), and West End theatre actor Rory Fleck-Byrne.

    It's produced by James Gay-Rees (Senna, Exit Through the Gift Shop), Exclusive Media’s Tobin Armbrust, and Simon Oakes along with Steven Chester Prince and Ben Holden in association with The Traveling Picture Show Company (TPSC).

    Look for The Quiet Ones in UK theatres on April 10 and US theatres on April 25, 2014, from Lionsgate.

    Synopsis:
    The Quiet Ones (inspired by true events) tells the story of an unorthodox professor who uses controversial methods and leads his best students off the grid to take part in a dangerous experiment: to create a poltergeist. Based on the theory that paranormal activity is caused by human negative energy, the rogue scientists perform a series of tests on a young patient, pushing her to the edge of sanity. As frightening occurrences begin to take place with shocking and gruesome consequences, the group quickly realizes they have triggered a force more terrifying than they ever could have imagined.

    For more info be sure to "like"The Quiet Ones on Facebook.










    The Quiet Ones

    The Quiet Ones

    The Quiet Ones

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    New Godzilla One-Sheet Starts Tailgating!

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    New Godzilla Trailer and Stills Bring on the Beasts!A new one-sheet has arrived for Legendary Pictures Godzilla, and it focuses on Big G's least flattering sides. Check it out, and then stare at your calendar damning every single second, minute, hour, day, week until its release.

    In theaters May 16, 2014, an epic rebirth to Toho’s iconic Godzilla, this spectacular adventure pits the world’s most famous monster against malevolent creatures who, bolstered by humanity’s scientific arrogance, threaten our very existence.

    Making his first appearance in 1954 (Gojira), Godzilla is a giant monster that lives in the sea that comes from the ocean to feed on mankind.

    Visit the official Godzilla website here.




    Godzilla

    Godzilla

    Godzilla

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    NBC Gives Grimm an Early Renewal for the 2014-15 Season

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    NBC Gives Grimm an Early Renewal for the 2014-15 SeasonThis was pretty much a no-brainer given its track record, but we still think NBC's early renewal of "Grimm" is some of the best news we've gotten all week! To celebrate, we're happy to finally share the preview of Friday night's Episode 3.16, "The Show Must Go On."

    From the Press Release:
    With the renewal, “Grimm” — the popular Friday night series inspired by the classic Grimm Brothers’ fairy tales — will now head into its fourth season.

    “Grimm” is the #1 Friday series on ABC, CBS, NBC, or Fox so far this season in adults 18-49, averaging a 2.5 rating, 8 share in adults 18-49 in “most current” averages from Nielsen Media Research. This is a 4% gain versus the show’s rating at this point in the season last year, while “Grimm’s” average of 8.1 million viewers overall is up versus one year ago by 17%.

    Related Story:Monroe Joins a Wesen Carnival in these Stills from "Grimm" Episode 3.16 - "The Show Must Go On"

    David Giuntoli stars as Portland homicide detective Nick Burkhardt, who discovers he’s descended from an elite line of criminal profilers known as Grimms. He increasingly finds his responsibilities as a detective at odds with his new responsibilities as a Grimm. The series also stars Bitsie Tulloch, Russell Hornsby, Silas Weir Mitchell, Bree Turner, Reggie Lee, Sasha Roiz, and Claire Coffee.

    The series was created by David Greenwalt & Jim Kouf and Stephen Carpenter. Sean Hayes, Todd Milliner, and Norberto Barba serve as executive producers along with Greenwalt and Kouf. “Grimm” is a Universal Television and Hazy Mills production. It has been nominated for two People’s Choice Awards, two Satellite Awards, and a Saturn Award. “Grimm” was also nominated for an Emmy Award for outstanding stunt coordination.

    Congrats to all parties involved!

    "Grimm" Episode 3.16 - "The Show Must Go On" (airs 3/21/14; 9-10PM)
    A WESEN CARNIVAL COMES TO PORTLAND - A double homicide leads Nick (David Giuntoli) and Hank (Russell Hornsby) to a traveling carnival where the performers are not what they seem.

    To get a better understanding of what’s going on behind the scenes, Monroe (Silas Weir Mitchell) and Rosalee (Bree Turner) go undercover. On the wedding front, Monroe has a really important question for Nick.

    In Austria an invaluable member of the Resistance makes the ultimate sacrifice to help Adalind (Claire Coffee). Bitsie Tulloch, Sasha Roiz, and Reggie Lee also star; Sam Witwer guest stars.

    For more info visit "Grimm" on NBC.com, check out some InstaGRIMMS on Instagram, "like""Grimm" on Facebook, and follow "Grimm" on Twitter.

    Grimm on NBC

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    Vitals Interview Series Part 4: Kalex Reno

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    Vitals Interview Series Part 4: Kalex RenoVitals tells the harrowing tale of a man (Christopher Showerman) who is kidnapped while on vacation in India. He wakes up in an abandoned motel room in a tub of ice with a kidney missing. Little does he know, it’s his heart his captors want next...

    And it's only a matter of time before he discovers his wife (Charlene Amoia) in the adjacent room waiting to be the next victim to the organ-harvesting goons. Having taken the vacation to work on their failing marriage, the couple must now set their differences aside and use each other's intellects and skills to escape before their captors return.

    We sat down with Vitals producer on set one day, midway through shooting, to see what was up.

    Dread Central: So, you’re the producer. What does that mean, exactly, on this set? Seems to me like you’re doing a little bit of everything!

    Kalex Reno: It is so very ambiguous. I do whatever needs to be done. I met Marc after the screenwriting conference and he and I started talking about a different project. We got together for lunch afterwards and it wasn't something I could really take on but I was looking forward to the project about this scope and well I got a script like that and I already read the other scripts and I said let’s do it. He said do you want to read the scripts. You pitched it to me, I know what it is. I read the other script, I know you can write, so let’s go. So we got going.

    DC: Now that's one of the things that sort of the pervading theme here in my interviews is been how very well written this script is…

    KR: Well I don't, as a producer, I don't take on scripts. That's not I'm looking for. I started off as a writer myself so I got enough of my own stuff to do. I don't need to find other people's projects. I'm actually looking more for people to collaborate with. To answer your question, in the script itself you have fairly complex characters which is unusual. The fact that you have a strong female lead which is very rare, I like that. The fact that, even when you get down to, you know you have Kaliah and then you have these three henchmen. These henchmen have very distinct voices and they also have a sense of what they're back story might be and how those relationships work. You don't see that a lot in scripts to this level. You don't see that sense of a fullness of the world. That makes it a good script just from a storytelling point of view. It takes a kind of urban legend cliche but a lot of writers would say oh and yeah the twist is at the end, he gets his kidney taken out. It's where our movie opens up. That's what happens. It's like okay. It's not really about how it got there but you know it twist and turns from there. That's also, it's that sense of elevation makes it good just as a story. In terms of this project it was something that I know I could shoot in a space like this with a cast like this. It's a self-contained casters there's no extra, it's like a cast of thousands of unnecessary characters. It's a fairly self-contained show. There's maybe five locations, five six locations, in the entire piece, a lot of which is these two hotel rooms that we built, I'm like okay. We get the hotel rooms. We need half a dozen, six to eight, really great actors. I know we can get those, I know some people I can plug into it. Sending it to them you know we get Chris, we get Charlene, how we get Tim and it's a combination of those things. It's a story that comes together but it's also a story I can produce because I hear stories, like that's a good story but I can't make it. And then I also hear stories that's like okay I can make that but it's not a very good story.

    DC: Chris mentioned that he heard about Vitals while he was vacation, that you emailed him the script.

    KR: I've worked with Chris on a couple of other projects and he jumped to mind. I recommended him. Funny thing was that I hadn't worked with him in a couple of years and I literally just put him a web pilot that I was doing. So he was fresh in my mind and I'm talking to Marc, I say well hey Marc I just put Chris in this other thing you should take a look at him. Yeah the casting process in this was incredibly simple because it's such a great show. We moved very quickly once we got a cast out, we're getting calls like hey I got these people that want to be in it, we've already casted sorry. I tend to find, when a project picks up momentum like this you can feel who you're supposed to get.

    DC: What, about this story, made you want to make the movie?

    KR: Well, one of the things that I like about this show is that it, I don't work in horror. The last show I did was a thriller before that it was a comedy. I don't do a lot of horror work and what I like about this show is that it's not just about a man who gets his kidney taken out. It's about this relationship between these two people and whether or not their relationship is redeemable and I can't spoil for anybody what happens in the end. But you know it's, the twists and turns are about these two characters and their relationship. Marc and I talked early on and fairly regularly about us looking for that touch tone, that true line of what's going on. For everybody it's about love and for everybody it's about relationship. When you look at Kaliyah as the villain. We've talked to all the actors, it's like okay what you know you look at the story of the surgeon. Tim's character, his motivation by a love that was ripped from him and that to me elevates this sort of thing. It's easy to do blood. It's easy to do jump scares and to scare people but it's when you get down to the heart of who humanity really is and these characters. That's what appeals to me about this sort of thing.

    Vitals comes to us from writer/director Marc Morgenstern. Christopher Showerman, Charlene Amoia, Sachin Metha, Tim Russ, and Claudia Wells co-star. In it Showerman stars as an unassuming electrician who wakes up in an abandoned motel room in a tub of ice with his kidney missing. It’s only a matter of time before he finds his wife in the adjacent room waiting to be the next victim to a horrible organ harvesting organization. Now they must use each other’s wits and skills to escape before their captors return and their dark secrets are revealed.

    Vitals

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    Level 33 Brings to Light The Legend of the Psychotic Forest Ranger While Harold's Going Stiff

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    Level 33 Brings to Light The Legend of the Psychotic Forest Ranger While Harold's Going StiffTwo flicks we've been talking about for a long while, The Legend of the Psychotic Forest Ranger and Harold's Going Stiff, are heading to DVD; and we have your details right here.

    From the Press Release
    The critically cheered British horror “mockumentary” HAROLD’S GOING STIFF is now available on DVD from Level 33 Entertainment. Following a successful multi-platform run, the title makes a unique and worthwhile addition to the DVD collection of zombie-lovers everywhere.

    The same can be said for the bloody and hilarious 1980’s throwback horror film,THE LEGEND OF THE PSYCHOTIC FOREST RANGER. Full of laughs and gore, this film delivers the campy entertainment of slasher movies from days gone by.

    Both titles are available at Amazon.com and other fine retailers at an SRP of $14.99.

    Written and directed by Keith Wright and produced in the U.K. by Richard Guy, HAROLD’S GOING STIFF stars newcomers Stan Rowe and Sarah Spencer in performances which HorrorTalk.com has called “a real triumph.” During the movie’s theatrical run, the film’s trailer ranked #1 on iTunes Trailers.

    HAROLD’S GOING STIFF takes place in grey-skied, rural England and centers on Harold (Rowe), who is suffering from a new disease that is slowly transforming him into a zombie. A young, lonely nurse, Penny (Spencer), is sent to help ease the symptoms of Harold's frightening illness; and they quickly and unexpectedly become very close. After an experimental treatment fails, Harold's condition deteriorates rapidly, and the two end up on the run from a group of violent vigilantes seeking to rid their town of zombies.

    Written, directed, and produced in Canada by Brad Mills, THE LEGEND OF THE PSYCHOTIC FOREST RANGER was an official selection at the Atlantic Film Festival. The movie is a fun, campy throwback to those old 80’s VHS horror flicks that you would rent at your local video store.

    Full of plot holes and cheesy dialogue, THE LEGEND OF THE PSYCHOTIC FOREST RANGER is a B horror movie straight out of the 1970s and ‘80s. After taking a wrong turn down an abandoned road, the Jock, the Joker, the Blond Bimbo, and the Paranoid Brunette run out of gas and find themselves stranded in the middle of the woods. What a total bummer! What’s that noise? Why is everyone vanishing? Is it all one of Bradley's dumb practical jokes, or could the legend be true? Your compass can't help you in these woods!

    Harold's Going Stiff

    The Legend of the Psychotic Forest Ranger

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    Exclusive Chat with Ken Foree from the Set of The Divine Tragedies

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    Exclusive Chat with Ken Foree from the Set of The Divine TragediesIt’s a sunny day in Southern California. That’s not unusual. An independent movie is being shot in a quiet residential neighborhood. That’s the norm. There are a few horror icons sprinkled throughout the cast. Typical.

    What’s not so usual is that The Divine Tragedies isn’t your basic stab and slab. It’s a layered family drama which just happens to have some blood and gore. At the center of this dangerous dynamic is a cop who’s hunting a team of killer brothers – but he’s got an advantage because he’s psychic. That, and he’s played by the great Ken Foree.

    We caught up with Ken on set (and some of the other cast... stay tuned for more interviews) and asked him what it’s been like to play the eccentric detective.

    Dread Central: I know a little bit about it, that you get to play a psychic cop. Is that what made you want to take the plunge?

    Ken Foree: I thought the script was interesting. Certainly a new take on psychotic horror. Well, it’s based loosely on [real-life killers] Leopold and Loeb. So I thought that was interesting. You know, give me a true crime from that era, or any kind of mass murder, and I am right there. Very fascinating. You should read the script. It’s really good. He did put a lot of that in it... that is what impressed me. I had a meeting with Jose and we talked and he was open for collaboration and I am always looking for that. It’s always a good starting point for an actor and a director. So we worked together on a few things, and it came out real well. I thought, 'Okay, let's do this. It sounds wonderful.'

    DC: He told me he did jigger the script to make it a little more humorous for you. Was that one of your requests, or was that his idea?

    KF: I think we both came to the conclusion that we wanted it to have a little more color. You know, some more colors in the character. And certainly there are some lines there that could use a little humor so we added it and it worked. The important thing is that it works, you know, and it did. We had a meeting about a few things, we worked on a few things, he got back to me on a few things like rewrites. And I was like, 'This is great; we really have something going with this character so let's run with it. Let’s do this.' It worked well. It was done well.

    DC: I think it's great that you have the editor on set.

    KF: Yeah, it’s a good thing. It is different. I have had the opportunity to work with the director and the editor on set at the same time. It doesn’t happen often, but it is nice to have an editor on set. I think it's great to have an editor on set. I think it's great for Jose, and it's great for the film because he gets a different view instead of getting it somewhere else and then getting it prepackaged. He gets to make a suggestion here and there for cutting purposes and putting it together. That’s nice to have on your set.

    DC: So, how is the psychic detective gift manifested? Do we see visions or just him emoting like, ‘I see something’?

    KF: No, you see visions. You will see visions, you will see the actual... I don’t know how much I can give away here! [laughter] Homer is a psychic and he does touch someone, feel them, or just sense them and he sees what is going to happen.

    DC: Does everyone around him know that he is psychic, or is it something he keeps to himself?

    KF: No, most of the police department knows that he is a special cop. They consider him special because he has this talent of course. And he is a little unnerving cause most psychics, if you have ever watched them or seen them interviewed or just watched them on a show, you will find that they don’t do it long in terms of constantly seeing people. There is the Long Island Medium, she has been on for a long while, and there was John Edwards and a few others that have been on and there was this woman who had a British accent and she was on for a long time... It's very draining. Very, very draining psychologically and emotionally for them. I watched John Edwards for a while, and in the beginning of the shows, he was very fresh and energetic and engaging, but then after 8 to 10 shows you could see he looked a little haggard. So it does take a lot out of him.

    DC: Do you take that into account when you play Homer?

    KF: I did. I did. But this is happening within two days. I hope it reads well; I think it will. There are some great moments that we captured.

    DC: Who are most of your scenes with? The brothers, or do you have any with Barbara Crampton coming up?

    KF: I don’t have any scenes with her. She shoots me in the back, and we just shot that. And someone else would be standing there later when she comes on set. So I don’t have any scenes with Barbara. I think it was [similar with] Sid Haig for one of the crazy films we did, Brotherhood of Blood... who would have a film with Ken Foree and Sid Haig and not have scenes together, right? And I kind of thought about it and was like, 'Barbara and I are in the same film, and we don’t have any scenes together?' I think it works for this. It’s a little bit different though, and I think it will work for this. It would be nice to have a scene with Barbara, but it’s just not going to happen.

    DC: How does Homer find out about these criminals?

    KF: The bodies lead me to the suspects. They lead me to… I investigate where she worked, and eventually I get clues there. And I am psychic as well. And I pick up on these two characters immediately... they become my number one suspects. I begin to poke around and eventually find out they are the ones.

    DC: I heard you had kind of an intense scene with Graham [Denman] and Jon [Kondelik] in the Jumpcut Café the other day. What’s the story on that one?

    KF: It was a good scene. It was my interrogation scene. It worked well. And that is where I get my first indication that these guys... actually it's not an indication; I am almost certain at that point that these are the guys. Of course, I am involved with touching and communicating that the woman was murdered and she takes me back to the murder, to the scene in the morgue. And I have another scene we are shooting tomorrow where you will see me go back and talk to her. So she takes me back to the murder and I see who-done-it.

    Synopsis
    Based loosely on the famous Leopold and Loeb murder case, the film tells the tale of Charles Brubaker (Graham Denman, The Haunting of Whaley House) and his half-brother, Thomas Lo Bianco (Jon Kondelik, Airplane vs. Volcano), who concoct a deadly game to test their superior intelligence against the dimwitted masses. This game will eventually lead to murder, and when Genevieve, a beautiful single mother, enters their lives, they finally find the perfect girl for their first kill. But problems arise when they quickly discover that Detective Homer Gaul (Ken Foree), a cop with a very special gift, is hot on their trail.

    The Divine Tragedies

    The Divine Tragedies

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    Evil in the Time of Heroes - Head Crushing Exclusive Clip

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    Evil in the Time of Heroes - Head Crushing Exclusive ClipImpalement. Exploding heads. Crushed faces. Eviscerations. Geysers of gore. Yep, that's a whole lot to fit in less than two minutes, but it's all here! Get ready for an exclusive clip from Evil in the Time of Heroes!

    From the Press Release
    Guts and gore, brutality, blood, dark humor… and a serious helping of Billy Zane can all be found in excess in EVIL IN THE TIME OF HEROES, writer/director Yorgos Noussias’ outrageous zombie apocalypse action-horror extravaganza set in his native country Greece.

    Greece’s first-ever foray into the gnashingly popular zombie apocalypse sub-genre, EVIL IN THE TIME OF HEROES is an epic Greek action-horror-comedy zombie film that requires little introduction. An ancient evil has transformed the population of modern-day Athens into flesh-hungry undead—just as it did nearly 3,000 years earlier.

    A rag-tag group of four survivors—a taxi driver, a pair of hot-blooded soldiers, and a doctor—must shoot, stab, decapitate, vivisect, impale, and just plain bulldoze their way through swarms of insatiable zombies, not to mention a bunch of nasty, degenerate humans. They receive some unexpected help from the ancient world in the form of immortal cloaked hero Prophitis (Titanic’s Billy Zane, in an Obi-Wan Kenobi-like guest appearance!), who arrives to randomly slice and dice the zombie horde and impart the wisdom of the ages upon the surviving humans.

    EVIL IN THE TIME OF HEROES received its world premiere at the 2009 Athens Film Festival. It went on to receive accolades by horror film critics as it screened at the world’s most prominent genre film fests, including the 2010 Manchester’s Grimm Up North, 2010 Fantasia Film Festival, and 2010 Toronto After Dark Film Festival, as well as the Singapore and Edinburgh International Film Festivals.

    Filled to the bloody brim with vicious battles, gore-infused struggles, period-style mythology, and a pitch-black sense of humor a la Shaun of the Dead, EVIL IN THE TIME OF HEROES arrives on VOD for the spring thaw, so get ready to take a bite—before it takes a bloody one out of you. And don’t say we didn’t tell you to “Beware of Greeks bearing gifts!”

    Look for it on VOD beginning March 25th.

    Synopsis
    Thousands of years ago in ancient Greece, a horde of bloodthirsty zombies begin wreaking havoc on humans, and only a mysterious cloaked hero known as Prophitis (Billy Zane) and his otherworldly weapons can save them. Flash forward to modern-day Greece, where Athens is once again plagued by the carnivorous undead, and a ragtag band of human survivors—a taxi driver, a pair of hot-blooded soldiers, and a doctor—is on the run. And the elusive Prophitis is back, too. But zombies are only half the problem, as Greece has been targeted for destruction with a mega-bomb in order to contain the growing zombie virus. So now, the remaining humans must race against both zombies and time to ensure their survival!

    Evil in the Time of Heroes

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    Exclusive: Bloody New Adam K. Image Reaches Out

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    Adam K. Coming to DVD Despite Police Interruption!We told you yesterday that Joston Theney's new project Adam K. is finally on its way and even brought you the first images from the film. Know what that means? That's right! Exclusive time! Check out the goodies right here!

    Writer/director Joston "El Rey" Theney has announced that ADAM K. will soon be making its way to theaters and home video. Theney previously said, "In early fall we'll have the Los Angeles premiere, then a Bay Area showing. Some festivals have reached out to us, but we're only going to do about two or three of those."

    The film stars Brinke Stevens, Arielle Brachfeld, Kristin Wall Wheatley, Sarah Nicklin, Jessica Cameron, Graham Denman, and Dylan Hobbs. It's written, directed, and produced by Joston "El Rey" Theney.

    Synopsis:
    ADAM K. is a gory take on the tale of nature versus nurture that proves - evil wears a smile! Mild-mannered and seemingly good-natured auto insurance claims adjusters Adam Kraul sets out daily to make friends, however ends up with mutilated victims when his invitations for friendships are rejected.

    To learn more, "like"Adam K. on Facebook!

    Adam K.

    Adam K.

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    Enormous Pilot Now Live; Pre-Order Info for the Comic Tie-In

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    Enormous Pilot Now Live; Pre-Order Info for the Comic Tie-InThe day has finally arrived! No, not the first day of spring (although we're happy to see that also); what we're talking about is the debut of Machinima's live-action pilot for an adaptation of Enormous, in which the world as we know it has ended.

    The pilot/short film is based on the critically-acclaimed graphic novel of the same name. Written by Tim Daniel and drawn by Mehdi Cheggour, Enormous tells the story of a post-apocalyptic world in which massive insect-like beasts have taken over the world and humans are now the bottom of the food chain.

    The creative minds of director BenDavid Grabinski (short film Cost of Living), writer Andre Ovredal (Trollhunter), and producer Adrian Askarieh (Hitman, Agent 47) have taken Enormous from the page to the screen, and you can watch the video below.

    It stars Ceren Lee, Steven Brand, Billy Miller, Erica Gimpel, Garrett Coffey, Charles Melton, Dallas Liu, Joe Swanberg, Simon Barrett, Todd Farmer, and Nathan Moore.

    In addition, you can click here to pre-order Enormous Issue #1 from the new ongoing monthly comic book series. Featuring an exclusive poster art cover from artist Mehdi Cheggour (see that below the video), the variant Issue #1 is available exclusively from Hastings Entertainment. The release date is June 25, 2014.

    Enormous Short Film Synopsis:
    The film picks up years after E Day, the worldwide attack of massive insect-like beasts, as the remaining humans from all walks of life must band together to survive and fight back against the monstrous invaders. Viewers are introduced to Ellen (Ceren Lee), a mother who has lost her child, and watch as she prepares to play a major role in the human resistance.

    Enormous Variant Issue #1

    Enormous

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    Set Visit Coverage: Actor Bryan Cranston Talks Godzilla from the Set!

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    Set Visit Coverage: Actor Bryan Cranston Talks Godzilla from the Set!Last June we sat down on the Vancouver set of the then-shooting Godzilla with actor Bryan ‘Walter White’ Cranston to chat about the titular irradiated lizard, his lead character of ‘Joe Brody’ and more; and with the film’s embargo now lifted, here it is: Heisenberg talks the ‘Big G.’

    Part reboot and part direct sequel to director Ishiro Honda’s 1954 original of the same name, the 2014 Gareth Edwards-helmed Godzilla features actors Cranston (“Breaking Bad”), Aaron Taylor-Johnson (Kick-Ass), Juliette Binoche (The English Patient), David Strathairn (The Bourne Legacy), Elizabeth Olsen and Ken Watanabe, in a script by Max Borenstein, Dave Callaham and Frank Darabont, which pits the world’s most famous monster against malevolent creatures who, bolstered by humanity’s scientific arrogance, threaten our very existence.

    Thomas Tull, Jon Jashni, Mary Parent and Brian Rogers produce, alongside executive producers Alex Garcia, Patricia Whitcher, Yoshimitsu Banno and Kenji Okuhira.

    (Writer’s Note: Spoilers ahead, so proceed at your own discretion).

    Just prior to engaging in a lengthy interview with Godzilla director Edwards (you can read that here), Cranston, decked out in a costume familiar to fans of his role in the television series “Breaking Bad” (a HAZMAT suit), convened with us between takes and proved to be entirely and unsurprisingly engaging.

    “He’s a nuclear physicist,” stated Cranston of his outfit, and of his character ‘Joe Brody’ in Godzilla.

    “He works at this nuclear power plant as an independent contractor, who is brought in to oversee the structural significance of the building itself, and then he notices (that) there’s an anomaly to some recordings that are happening, (some) seismic activity. It’s baffling, because it’s not irregular as an earthquake would be random. This is steady and pulsating. So he starts to investigate and he’s just trying to wrap his head around it when all hell breaks loose.”

    Having just witnessed via monitor an apparently pivotal scene in which Cranston and actor Taylor-Johnson investigate the dilapidated remains of their characters’ abandoned home in Japan (Cranston portrays Aaron’s estranged father in the film), we pressed the actor for details, particularly as to whether his character was at that moment aware of the existence of the titular beast. (Note: Talent had clearly been instructed by the production’s producers to remain rather secretive of the flick’s plot.)

    “I go into my old office searching for something specific, something that’s alive,” he answered. (Note: Okay, I’ll wildly speculate that what Cranston’s character was looking for was his son’s childhood pet in an effort to ascertain the effects of radiation upon it, a pet that’s fled its aquarium, an aquarium with the name ‘Mothra’ written on it).

    As for Godzilla itself, “That’s the furthest thing from his mind right now,” stated the prolific and versatile actor, whose past credits additionally include the wholesome television series “Malcolm in the Middle,” the Oscar-winning feature Argo, and dozens more.

    “He thinks it’s a geological phenomenon, and then he comes to realize, but too late, that it’s not, and that it’s biological,” Cranston expounded.

    Given Godzilla’s lineage and the 2014 film’s old-school, 1950’s inspired set-up, we queried him in regards to what for him not only drew him to the material, but of what also contemporized it.

    “The reason I’m here is because this story is interestingly driven by strong character motivations,” answered the three-time Emmy-award winner.

    “If you saw Gareth’s movie Monsters, which is one of the things that got me involved in (initial) conversations, it was like a character-driven monster movie, and I’m much more attracted to character-driven pieces, from the ‘old school’ perhaps, where you actually want to care about and invest in the characters, and root for them or hate them or whatever, and there is a very strong father-son component to this, and my character makes huge, sweeping decisions that reverberate throughout the rest of the story, that are emotional as well, which is really what brought me here.”

    As for the narrative of Legendary’s Godzilla, the film takes place in three separate time periods; the 1950’s (in which the U.S. Navy discovers the last surviving member of an ancient radioactive amphibious species surviving under the waters near the Marshall Islands, and metes out a failed attempt to kill it with nuclear weapons), the 1990’s (in which the creature arises to smack the crap out of Japan, and in the process destroys the previously mentioned home) and in 2014, in which the appearance of creatures known as ‘M.U.T.O.’s’ (kaiju who look vaguely reminiscent of the creature at the center of the feature Cloverfield) appear, which in turn elicits the return of Godzilla from the depths of the ocean.

    At its center however is the estranged relationship between Cranston’s character, a scientist obsessed, and his son, ‘Ford,’ an explosive ordinance disposal expert in the U.S. Navy, whose lives are displaced emotionally and geographically by the appearance of Godzilla, and the ramifications of such.

    Cranston expounded on this, and on his character’s fragmented relationship with his son.

    “He’s, especially at this time, experiencing a frustrating anomaly happening in his work that he just can’t give a scientific answer (for). As a scientist you are compelled to always go back to the science of things, that there’s a logical answer for every cause, you know, and with this there doesn’t seem to be, and it’s just driving him crazy. The consequence is that he has (dived) into his work, so there is that sense of missing out on some of the upbringing of his child, and then you learn to regret it afterwards.”

    Godzilla

    Godzilla

    Godzilla

    Godzilla

    Fishing as to whether or not Cranston’s character was responsible for the kaiju threat, he was asked if he felt ‘Joe Brody’ was in any way repenting for past sins.

    “I don’t know about that, but there is regret,” he stated.

    “I think it’s very relatable, because you get to middle-age or beyond and you start evaluating how you lived your life, and you realize, like my daughter is already twenty and in college, and I can’t for the life of me know how fast that (time) went, and so you do. You look back and you go, ‘Yeah, there were sacrifices,’ so there were a lot of opportunities and great things, but then you miss a couple of things about growing up. So there is that. He is experiencing that type of regret.”

    Regarding how his character factors into the theme of ‘Man vs. Nature’ as stated by Edwards as being the core of the film, “You know, he’s a man of science, so it’s all about how science can give answers to protect man, really more than the nature of things,” answered Cranston.

    “I think that kind of contrast can exist together,” he mused, when asked how the sci-fi and human elements interact in Godzilla.

    “I always thought that when you saw a movie that had one element that they focused on and ignored the human element, I thought they were just (being) lazy. I just always do. It’s not really my thing. And if this movie didn’t have a character component to it, I wouldn’t be here. It just doesn’t interest me.”

    Questioned as to whether or not Cranston felt that Godzilla was an anti-nuclear energy film, he stated, “I think more than that. I don’t really think it’s really making a statement in that sense. Society as a given accepts the inherent dangers of nuclear power. They know that it’s always been that way. It’s fine if nothing goes wrong, but things go wrong. In my state of California, San Onofre nuclear power plant was just closed down because it’s leaking. So they closed it down completely, and these are problems. So I think more than trying to make a political statement, it’s something that immediately a wide-ranging audience can relate (to). If there’s a problem there, there’s a big problem, and it’s intensified and exacerbated to the point where it could be catastrophic.”

    “You know, one of the things I thought about is that as a man who works in the nuclear energy industry, he’s OK with that,” he offered of his character. “It’s not an issue for him. So as far as being able to come to terms with that, I think he’s fine with it. And I think that’s a prevailing thought with most people in that industry is that the gain outweighs the risk.”

    He paused dramatically.

    “Or does it?”

    As for what action is allowed his character in the script, Cranston joked, “Oh, I see some action. Oh yeah, I do, I see some action. Some ‘hot scientist’ action! Some ‘scientist on scientist’ action. You can’t miss it! Sometimes there’s some ‘three-way’ scientist action. Oh yeah.”

    And for his on-screen proximity to Godzilla himself?

    “He’s in his trailer (right now). That guy (is) such an asshole,” joked Cranston.

    “I gotta’ tell you, when he gets on the set, he delivers though, so I see why he keeps coming back to make movie after movie, because he’s good. He’s just a prick.”

    More seriously, Cranston told us of his character’s reaction to the existence of the creature, “Curiosity is insatiable. The militarist point of view is, ‘Kill it! I don’t understand it!’ But we have a different point of view which is fascinating, that is fascinating to us.”

    With Cranston called back to set, we caught up with him later in the afternoon outside the soundstage, where a gourmet ice cream truck lay in wait. It being the actor’s last day on set, he had personally not only hired the confectioners to deliver desserts to his cast and crew as a ‘thank you,’ but had gone a step further. In addition to a hand-drawn depiction of his “Breaking Bad” character of ‘Heisenberg’ (hat and all) with text thanking the production, he’d personally come up with two ice cream concoctions which he’d listed on the dry-erase board; ‘Nutzilla’ and ‘M.U.T.O.’ (Note: While we now know the latter as one of Godzilla’s adversaries in the film, producers at the time were entirely cagey regarding this character, which I’ll surmise is an acronym for ‘Mutated Underground Terrestrial Organisms).

    Like a big (and gracious) kid, Cranston joined us for ice cream, sincerely adamant that those in attendance indulged with him.

    Regarding his director, “He’s quite remarkable for a young lad,” said Cranston of Edwards.

    “You know, given the circumstances, after Monsters, and then coming to do this monster budget film, he has every right to freak out, and just break out in hives, but he’s amazingly calm; frighteningly so.”

    Godzilla

    Godzilla

    Godzilla

    Godzilla

    As for what attracted him to Gareth’s directorial style, Cranston stated, “I always look for someone who has a clear vision, and yet is malleable, so that the vision isn’t set in stone, or rigid, or a ‘my way or the highway’ kind of thing, which you do run up against sometimes. I think it would be shooting yourself in the foot, because the triumvirate of writer, actor and director is what you want. You want everybody working at that level, so by having a director who welcomes dialogue, in this case from the actor to director, ideas, input and that sort of thing, and embraces it, then it just spawns more of that. It gives actors a sense that they are valued. Not just that, ‘You know, you can do this and step here,’ but that your opinions are valued coming in.”

    “So, before I even signed on, I had two very lengthy conversations over the phone when I was still shooting 'Breaking Bad.' At first I was a little reticent, just because of the overall nature of the film, and I think I was also feeling a little bit of, ‘Oh, I have to protect this now,’ because I was coming off of a very well-written show with very compelling storytelling, that it’s going to be compared, whatever I do. Then I thought that I didn’t want to be a prude about it either. I want to be able to embrace the largesse of it, the uniqueness of it, and the fun! I don’t want to say, ‘Oh no, that’s not high-brow in any regard!’ But what won me over is the story-line and Gareth’s commitment (to it). He came after me, we talked, and I told him the initial problems I had with the script, and then we started talking some more, and then pretty soon, if you are not careful, as an actor you start to take ownership of it, and then you are sunk.”

    Having directed television, we asked him what the process was like as an actor on Godzilla.

    “I have a bad habit of inserting my ideas into shots and things,” he stated.

    “I don’t know; I don’t hold back on suggesting things, but I don’t have any connection to what actually happens, so I’ll make a suggestion on something and then just let it go. If it works, fine; and if it doesn’t, I’ll do whatever we do. I think that’s what works best in the collaborative art form, is that you just put it out there without having an attachment to the outcome.”

    “As you know, there are a lot of writers on this. I don’t know who did what, and whose sensibility was woven through. There were some minor things, just points of view. For instance there was a thing where my character assumes that my son is going to go with me on this dangerous excursion, and I just thought that was wrong. It was an easy fix. Nothing that I raised was, ‘Oh no, we have to draw the line there!’ And then I proposed a couple of things, like just more, like more (of a) broad stroke kind of sentiment. Like that song when I was a kid, ‘The Cats in the Cradle.’ You know where, ‘I’m going to grow up just like him, Dad.’ And then I pitched it, it was there, it was already there, but I suggested that we do a handshake, that I shake hands with my son when I haven’t seen him in a while, and that that also happens with his son (because) his son hasn’t seen him in a little while and he has trepidation about who this man is. So it has an effect on ‘Ford Brody’ the character like, ‘What am I doing in my life, where the people in my life I’m close to shake my hand as opposed to hug me?’ So that was kind of a theme that we got upon, and really tried to revisit every now and again. So that’s just an example of just a nice layer that’s in there that makes it more than just an epic spectacle kind of thing.”

    That said, we asked if the word ‘Godzilla’ was actually ever uttered in the film.

    “I haven’t said the word,” he said.

    “I’m not allowed to. What’s funny is that there was a lot of secrecy about the whole thing, and early on they were calling it Nautilus, so I’m going through Canadian immigration, and trying to get my paperwork, and the guy was very efficient. ‘What are you working on?’ he asked. ‘A movie,’ I said. ‘What’s the name of the movie?’ he asked. ‘Nautilus,’ I said. And that’s when his eyes went up. ‘You mean Godzilla,’ he said. And I go,’ Yeah.’ But he even he knew!”

    As for his level of excitement in appearing alongside such a cinematically famous character, and as for whether he was pleased by the design of such, “I love Godzilla!” effused Cranston.

    “Actually, the new design is basically back to an old design, I think. The scale surprised me. The extreme size of it compared to the M.U.T.O’s that they are fighting. Even that! When you see the M.U.T.O. it’s enormous, but it’s not nearly as big as Godzilla.”

    “What I loved as a boy was Godzilla more than King Kong, because he just destroyed everything without any apologies. I did. I loved it! And then later on, I heard the story about the (American producer Joseph E. Levine) who bought this Japanese film (1954’s Godzilla) and was going to release it in the States but he knew it wasn’t going to fly, so he hired writers and (actor) Raymond Burr as a reporter and they shot a bunch of stuff and just inserted him throughout the movie and they released it (as Godzilla, King of the Monsters!) in 1956, and that’s how he made his fortune.”

    Given the amount of green screen shots inherent to the film, we asked Cranston of his approach to them.

    “It’s like a laser pointer. ‘OK, see where the laser is now on the green screen?’ That’s part of an actor’s bag anyway, is just imagination,” he stated.

    “You pull out what you need if you don’t have personal experience, and imagine it. I think it was probably easier for my generation too, because we got bored easily in the back seat of a station wagon and there was nothing to do and you had to just daydream. I never thought that my extensive daydreaming catalogue would actually come in handy someday, and it really has. It’s interesting, because I wonder if this new generation that has instant entertainment at every turn will in a sense fully develop an imagination, or will it be derivative of what they see that’s hitting them all of the time, because they don’t have a chance to wonder on their own.”

    Up next? Our interview with Aaron Taylor-Johnson.




    Godzilla

    Godzilla

    Godzilla

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    Get to Know Earl and Richie in these Promos for From Dusk Till Dawn: The Series

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    Get to Know Earl and Richie in these Promos for From Dusk Till Dawn: The SeriesBeen watching the El Rey Network's "From Dusk Till Dawn: The Series"? We're finding it to be lots of fun, and if you are, too, here are a pair of new promos for you to check out that focus on characters Earl McGraw (Don Johnson) and Richard “Richie” Gecko (Zane Holtz).

    “From Dusk Till Dawn: The Series” is centered around bank robber Seth Gecko (D.J. Cotrona) and his violent, unpredictable brother, Richard “Richie” Gecko (Zane Holtz), who are wanted by the FBI and Texas Rangers Earl McGraw (Don Johnson) and Freddie Gonzalez (Jesse Garcia) after a bank heist left several people dead.

    While on the run to Mexico, Seth and Richie encounter a former pastor and his family, whom they take hostage. Using the family RV to cross the Border, chaos ensues when the group detours to a strip club that is populated by vampires. They are forced to fight until dawn in order to get out alive. The series deepens the tone of the original film, adds new characters and backstories, and expands the Mesoamerican mythology behind the creatures inside the club.

    Episode 1.03, "Mistress," directed by Eduardo Sánchez (The Blair Witch Project, Lovely Molly) and written by Juan Carlos Coto ("Nikita"), airs on Tuesday, March 25th.

    For more info keep your eyes on the show's Facebook page, the official El Rey Network website, El Rey Network on Facebook, and El Rey Network on Twitter.




    From Dusk Till Dawn: The Series

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    Country Singer Dwight Yoakam Ventures Under the Dome in Season 2

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    Country Singer Dwight Yoakam Ventures Under the Dome in Season 2Dwight Yoakam is certainly best known as a country singer, but he has several acting credits under his belt (Crank: High Voltage, Panic Room, Sling Blade, and "Wilfred" to name a few) and is about to add another.

    Per TV Guide, Yoakam has joined the cast of CBS's "Under the Dome" for Season 2 and will play Lyle Chumley, who runs Chester's Mill's barbershop, the Two Scissors.

    Lyle has a complicated history with Big Jim (Dean Norris), having once been romantically linked with his dead wife, Pauline (Sherry Stringfield). Like Pauline, Lyle has a mysterious connection to the Dome and very well may know the answer to its origins.

    Yoakam will recur in multiple episodes of the show. He joins other Season 2 newcomers Stringfield, Eddie Cahill, Grace Victoria Cox, and Karla Crome.

    "Under the Dome," which returns on Monday, June 30th, with a Stephen King-penned episode, stars Mike Vogel (Barbie), Colin Ford (Joe), Alexander Koch (Junior), Rachelle Lefevre (Julia), Natalie Martinez (Linda), Dean Norris (Big Jim), Mackenzie Lintz (Norrie), and Britt Robertson (Angie).

    For more info visit "Under the Dome" on CBS.com, "like""Under the Dome" on Facebook, and follow "Under the Dome" on Twitter (@UnderTheDomeCBS).

    Under the Dome

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    The Raid 2: Berandal - Another Bounty of Bloody Images

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    Kickin' New NSFW Clip From The Raid: Berandal!Wanna kick this day right in the ass to make way for the weekend? Good! We do too. This latest smattering of images from Gareth Evans'The Raid: Berandal should help us do just that. Read on for all the bloody goodies!

    Iko Uwais (The Raid), Julie Estelle (Macabre), Alex Abbad (Merantau), Marsha Timothy (The Forbidden Door), Mathias Muchus, Tio Pakusadewo, and Cecep Arif Rahman star.

    Synopsis
    He thought it was over. After fighting his way out of a building filled with gangsters and madmen – a fight that left the bodies of police and gangsters alike piled in the halls – rookie Jakarta cop Rama thought it was done and he could resume a normal life. He couldn’t have been more wrong.

    Formidable though they may have been, Rama’s opponents in that fateful building were nothing more than small fish swimming in a pond much larger than he ever dreamed possible. And his triumph over the small fry has attracted the attention of the predators farther up the food chain. His family at risk, Rama has only one choice to protect his infant son and wife: He must go undercover to enter the criminal underworld himself and climb through the hierarchy of competing forces until it leads him to the corrupt politicians and police pulling the strings at the top of the heap.

    And so Rama begins a new odyssey of violence, a journey that will force him to set aside his own life and history and take on a new identity as the violent offender “Yuda.” In prison he must gain the confidence of Uco – the son of a prominent gang kingpin – to join the gang himself, laying his own life on the line in a desperate all-or-nothing gambit to bring the whole rotten enterprise to an end.

    Sony Pictures Worldwide Acquisitions (SPWA) acquired the film for the United States, Spain, Latin America, and South Africa; and Sony Pictures Classics will once again release the film theatrically in the United States.

    The Raid 2 Image Gallery

    The Raid 2 Image Gallery

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    The Raid 2 Image Gallery


    The Raid 2 Image Gallery

    The Raid 2 Image Gallery

    The Raid 2 Image Gallery

    The Raid 2 Image Gallery

    The Raid 2 Image Gallery


    The Raid 2 Image Gallery

    The Raid 2 Image Gallery

    The Raid 2 Image Gallery

    The Raid 2 Image Gallery

    The Raid 2 Image Gallery


    The Raid 2 Image Gallery

    The Raid 2 Image Gallery

    The Raid 2 Image Gallery

    The Raid 2 Image Gallery

    The Raid 2 Image Gallery

    The Raid 2: Berandal

    The Raid 2: Berandal

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