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Chernobyl Diaries Director Getting a Little Bed Rest

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Back in July of last year, MGM grabbed a hot horror script penned by newcomer Lori Evans Taylor, and production is soon gearing up to begin on that fright flick. It’s titled Bed Rest, and today brings an update in the form of a director being hired by the studio. Who could it be?! Oh right, we kind of spoiled that in the title. But read on anyway!

Per THR, Brad Parker, who previously directed 2012’s Chernobyl Diaries, has signed on to direct Bed Rest. Chris Sparling, the scribe who wrote Sea of Trees and Buried, is attached to produce with Karen Rosenfelt and Ken Blancato.

The story centers on a pregnant woman who, due to the nature of her pregnancy, is put on bed rest. Strange things begin happening in her home, which makes her wonder if her house is haunted.

The below image has nothing to do with this movie, but it seemed appropriate!

bed rest

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Man Charged with Three Murders in Purge Killings

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Sometimes life imitates art with the deadliest of results. Such is the case for an Indianapolis man who was charged Wednesday in connection with what prosecutors are calling a four-day killing spree inspired by The Purge.

According to The Indy Channel, the Marion County Prosecutor’s Office announced 17 charges against 19-year-old Johnathan Cruz on Wednesday, including three counts of murder, two counts of robbery resulting in serious bodily injury, and one count each of armed robbery and intimidation.

Prosecutor Terry Curry accused Cruz of going on a “four-day purge” through Indianapolis.

Cruz reportedly said he had been “purging” – referencing the fictional 2013 movie “in which the United States government sanctioned an event in which all crimes to include rape, murder, arson, assault, and theft are legal from 7 p.m. to 7 a.m. the next day.

Never mind the fact that this nut is a mentally ill sociopath. Let’s blame movies instead. Queue pointless attacks at the genre in 5… 4… 3… 2…

Purge crime

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Scream Factory Details Hellhole and The Boy Who Cried Werewolf Blu-ray Releases

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Our buddies over at Scream Factory just dished the details for two of their upcoming releases, Hellhole and The Boy Who Cried Werewolf. Read on for the 411.

From the Press Release:
This July, Scream Factory presents two long-lost cult favorites on Blu-ray for the first time. Hellhole and The Boy Who Cried Werewolf debut in a Blu-ray + DVD combo pack and on Blu-ray, respectively.

Having witnessed her mother’s brutal death, Susan (Judy Landers, Dr. Alien) gets amnesia from a fall while being pursued by the killer, Silk (Ray Sharkey, The Idolmaker). Awakening in Ashland Sanitarium, she is once again terrorized by Silk, disguised as an orderly. To pry an incriminating secret from Susan’s brain, Silk forms an uneasy alliance with Dr. Fletcher (Mary Woronov, Rock ‘n’ Roll High School), a psychotic scientist who has been testing a new lobotomy technique, using helpless inmates as her guinea pigs. These vicious experiments are carried out in the “Hellhole,” a torture den awaiting Susan as its next victim.

Featuring an all-star cast of cult film stars including Marjoe Gortner (Starcrash, The Food of the Gods), Richard Cox (Cruising), Terry Moore (Mighty Joe Young), Edy Williams (Beyond the Valley of the Dolls), Robert Z’Dar (Maniac Cop), and Dyanne Thorne (Ilsa: She Wolf of the SS).

Special Features:

  • New Interview with Actress Mary Woronov
  • Original Theatrical Trailer

Hellhole

Richie Bridgestone’s parents are getting a divorce, but that’s the least of his problems at the moment. While on a visit to his father’s secluded cabin, Richie witnesses his dad being attacked by a werewolf. Much like the tale of the boy who cried wolf, no one in the town will believe Richie’s claims that his father will change into a werewolf at the next full moon.

This was the third and final pairing of actor Kerwin Mathews and cult filmmaker Nathan Juran (Attack of the 50 Foot Woman, The Brain from Planet Arous). The two had also worked together on the classic The 7th Voyage of Sinbad and Jack the Giant Killer.

The film makes its home video debut with a beautiful new high-definition transfer!

Special Features:

  • Original Theatrical Trailer
  • Still Gallery

The Boy Who Cried Werewolf

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11 Nightmarish Makeup Effects – Click if You Dare! Don’t Blame Us for Lost Sleep!

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We’ve all had those moments… you see something in a movie that haunts you long after the credits have rolled. Right now we have a look at some of the single most nightmare-inducing visages that have ever graced the screen and left you shivering.

In 1981 John Irvin created a fearsome adaptation of Peter Straub’s Ghost Story which starred Alice Krige as the devilishly departed specter Alma/Eva. Rick Baker and company created several looks for this revenge-seeking spirit, two of the most startling of which you can find below.

Ghost Story

Ghost Story

Before Insidious went on to spawn more chapters, the only image leaked online for the film was the one you see below, and at that time no one even knew what it was for. Pure nightmare fuel.

Insidious

What more could be said about Dick Smith’s stunning makeup effects in The Exorcist? Never before had a little girl been more frightening thanks to Smith’s wizardry on Linda Blair and Eileen Dietz. Strangely enough, we find Dietz’s makeup a bit more frightening in its simplicity! What say you?

The Exorcist

The Exorcist

I’ll never forget the first time I saw the blind woman Mrs. Slydes played by Leona Anderson in William Castle’s quintessential ghost story, 1959’s House on Haunted Hill. Somewhere right now in the afterlife, my mom’s ears are still ringing from my screams.

House on Haunted Hill

While we’re on the subject of classic chills, a special nod HAS to be given to 1963’s Mario Bava anthology Black Sabbath. The segment “The Drop of Water” is as nightmarish as it gets with a cleverly used corpse with a life all its own. Never steal from the dead, kids! You’ve been warned.

Black Sabbath

Other than stealing from the dead, another BIG NO NO would be shaming a gypsy. So learned poor Alison Lohman’s character in Sam Raimi’s 2009 chiller Drag Me to Hell. Played masterfully by Lorna Raver, Mrs. Ganush is not to be trifled with.

drag-me-to-hell

Sometimes all it takes to inspire a good nightmare is a corpse dressed as a bride making chittering, screeching sounds to the rhythm of voodoo drums. Don’t believe us? Check out Wes Craven’s classic The Serpent and the Rainbow. Dear god… please bury me… dead or not!

The Serpent and the Rainbow

From an online short film to the big screen, the spookiness of David F. Sandberg’s Lights Out will no doubt have you screaming, “GET THAT THING THE HELL AWAY FROM ME!

Lights Out

But is anywhere truly safe? Like, say… your bed? If you’ve seen Drew Daywalt’s Bedfellows, then you’re painfully aware that the answer is a resounding NO FUCKING WAY! Look it up, and prepare yourself for the most frightening few minutes of your life!

Bedfellows

So, what did we miss? What scares YOU? Let us know in the comments section below!

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A New Dose of Terror Is Here!

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A new episode of our acquired podcast, Dose of Terror, is here; and it’s rife with enough horror talk to make your ears bleed! Check it out!

Check out the official Dose of Terror website, follow @adoseofterror on Twitter, and “like” Dose of Terror on Facebook. Feeling really bold? You can also reach us via email at doseofterror@gmail.com or on Google Voice – 323-418-2099.

CLICK HERE TO LISTEN ON YOUR COMPUTER!

Alternately, you can listen directly here or you can find us on iTunes and Stitcher. We will soon be incorporated in the new Podcast section of Dread Central.

Enjoy!

Dose of Terror

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Brainwaves LIVE Horror and Paranormal Talk Radio BEGINS TRANSMITTING WEDNESDAY, JUNE 8TH!

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After lots of prep and a crypt full of kinks, we’re finally ready to take to the Internet airwaves with our new LIVE CALL-IN RADIO SHOW, Brainwaves!

Beginning NEXT WEDNESDAY, JUNE 8, 2016, at 9:00 PM PT both myself and Joe Knetter will be taking to the airwaves to talk about the darker things that go bump in the night, both fictitious and ghostly. Main topics of discussion will be all facets of the horror industry along with anything strange and paranormal: from hauntings to UFOs to whatever walks on the strangest side of the fence.

For many, many years my brother-from-another-mother, Joe Knetter, and I have been talking about doing a radio show. When we first discussed this endeavor, we would have had to erect (lol @ erect, btw) a huge antenna (an obvious affront to our penile sensibilities) and buy 1,000’s of dollars worth of equipment,” said Creepy. “So yeah, we waited for things to get easier and cheaper!

Brainwaves is two bald and ultra-sexy, horror-loving bastards discussing the genre and whatever crazy shit pops in our heads,” says Knetter. “You will laugh, you will cry, you may even climax. Prepare to have sweet auditory sex delivered straight to your ears.

Brainwaves will be live every Wednesday evening beginning at 9:00 PM Pacific Time (12:00 midnight Eastern Time) and will run about 3 hours per episode. While there will be a guest every now and then, the main stars of the show will be you. Knetter and I will be taking your calls LIVE and unscreened via Skype, so let your freak flags fly! Feel free to add BrainWavesTalk to your Skype account so you can reach us.

Brainwaves: Horror and Paranormal Talk Radio will be hosted live (with shows to be archived as they progress) on the Deep Talk Radio Network, the fastest growing source for all things topical and relevant.

For more information visit the Deep Talk Radio Network website, “like” Deep Talk Radio on Facebook, and follow Deep Talk Radio on Twitter.

Brainwaves-logo-l

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Dive into the Weekend with The Shallows Motion Poster

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A new “living” poster has hit the Net for one of our most anticipated movies of the summer, The Shallows, which is heading our way in just three more weeks.  Check it out courtesy of IMDb, and join us in hoping the film lives up to the promise of what we’ve seen so far.

Blake Lively stars along with Óscar Jaenada and Sedona Legge. The Shallows, directed by Jaume Collet-Serra and written by Anthony Jaswinski, arrives in theaters June 24th.

For more info visit the film’s Facebook, Instagram, and Twitter pages. #FearTheShallows

Synopsis:
Nancy (Lively) is surfing alone on a secluded beach when she is attacked by a Great White and stranded just a short distance from shore. Though she is only 200 yards from her survival, getting there proves the ultimate contest of wills. It’s Jaws for a new generation.

shallows-poster

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Exclusive First-Look Still from Animated Horror Malevolent

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The animated horror flick Malevolent met its Indiegogo goal and then some, so production is well under way; and we’re pleased to present an exclusive first-look still of what they have cooking.  The filmmakers tell us that while it’s not a horror-specific scene, it does capture one of their wonderful “shit hits the fan” moments.

Malevolent features voice work from Bill Moseley, Morena Baccarin, Ray Wise, Dani Lennon, and William Shatner. The director is Jason Axinn.

Synopsis:
A young woman (Lennon) and her siblings are summoned by their dying industrialist father (Wise) ostensibly to discuss his will. But what he has in mind is far more sinister — if he’s going down, he’s taking everyone else out with him. The wrinkle? A race of inter-dimensional gamblers, led by The Gamemaster (Baccarin), wager on the outcome — and they have the ability to manipulate time to change the playing field as they see fit. Shatner’s “Overseer” calls the match.

malevolent-hospital-corridor

Art by: Carl Frank (key art), Artie Nichols (backgrounds), Vicente Saldivar (color supervisor), and Christian Salazar (colorist).

Malevolent Image 1

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Salt and Sanctuary (Video Game)

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Salt and SanctuaryDeveloped by SKA Studios

Available on PS4 and PC

Rated M for Mature


There’s an old bit that games critic and transcendental human extraordinaire Ben “Yahtzee” Croshaw used to have about games that were “Like God of War, but…” I had mixed feelings on it at the time, as I was (and still am) a huge God of War fanboy and was at an age that lacked the necessary mental maturity to take a joke. As years pass by and clone after clone marches on, his words have begun to resonate with me in the way I expect conservative values do with adults dealing with their first estate tax. I’m not saying that I’m a bitter and cynical old racist cracker. It’s kind of the opposite.

While imitations certainly exist, we don’t really live in a gaming era where “clones” are the problem. It seems that large companies like Ubisoft and Activision have realized that cheap imitation cash-ins make gobs of money with little effort, so they cut out the middleman and just did it themselves. Where once were knock-offs are now an endless parade of piddling sequels. All that you need is an impressive trailer and a brand name, and a whole brotherhood of fans will be willing to forget your last piss-poor attempt to bring unity to a franchise, raising the black flag of the most recent syndication of your asininely beloved title.

So now we live in the awkward universe where “inspiration” is more of a badge of honor. It no longer spells mediocrity, but genuine fan appreciation. Fan projects are now free to rise to the top of sales charts, and the corporations are happy just jerking their own limp franchises until the last droplets of sweet and salty cash dribble forth long after the last virile spasm. And let’s be real, it’s better to be an honest knockoff than a blatant soulless repeat.

Speaking of soulless, Salt and Sanctuary! No, not because it’s hollow (it’s got too much ember and humanity for that), but because it literally doesn’t have “Soul” in the title. Which is important, since this is basically a Souls franchise game. Hell, the first note I found in the game said, “Welcome to Dark Salts.”

Like God of War before it, I love the Souls series like it were a puppy made out of key lime pie. Playing it has filled many of my nights, and the level of hardcore it instilled in me has defined much of my adult gaming persona. While there is a reverent position it holds in my heart, I’m not a jack off about it. It’s sacred to me, but I’m an atheist. Games don’t have to follow the exact doctrine of the canon for me to respect their gospel.

It’s quite the buildup, but consider me the preacher willing to sing the parable of Salt and Sanctuary from the mountaintop. It’s a perfect homage to Dark Souls, but more importantly it’s a great game. It pries out the core of what made Dark Souls great, puts that into the heart of its own machine, and builds around it until something familiar yet entirely new emerges.

Salt and Sanctuary

Preach!

I’ll admit, I didn’t find it exceptional from the start. I didn’t find Dark Souls to be either. Make a class with minimal information, chose one of 20 equally hideous body types, pick a vague starting bonus, and off you go into an incredibly basic tutorial area topped off with a massive unwinnable boss. You’ll start, figure out the basics of combat, lose, and begin the game proper, at which point it will still take a good 30 minutes for the game to get really challenging.

I guess I should stop blanketly saying Dark Souls, since the modern formula started with Demon’s Souls. It’s been followed pretty closely with minor variation in every game since (including Bloodborne). That in mind, each game has had its own distinct feel, which has led to endless fan infighting over which title is the “best.” It’s kind of meta-nerd minutia that only a massive fanboy loser has any real opinion on, so stay tuned for my episodic explorative novel, “Shining Light on the Dark (Souls).”

Thanks to hundreds of hours and several failed relationships dumped into the “Souls Hole,” I can confidently assess that Salt and Sanctuary most represents the original Dark Souls in design, and Bloodborne in visuals. Which is great, since as soon as everyone realizes that Dark Souls 3 was just okay, Dark Souls will once again retake its throne as the the best of the series, with Bloodborne still holding the title of most visually impressive. Although, my personal favorite is Dark Souls 2, but I long ago stopped being able to afford spare pint glasses to smash over heads in bar fights spawned by saying that, so let’s forget it.

Salt and Sanctuary

I am draped in my preferred garb, the gore of my slaughtered enemies.

I really want to drop the Dark Souls analogy here for sake of reading. If I keep it up, this whole review will be a dual analysis of S&S and DS, which there are not enough pages on earth to contain that essay. It’s a tough task, since the games are very similar. Both have incredibly vast open and interconnected worlds that initially present themselves as a much more constrained and linear experience. Both offer a number of varied play styles and loadouts that fundamentally change how you play. Both have a plethora of secrets, hard statistical calculations, and obscure items to figure out. Both present an ephemeral story, begging for analysis and fan theories to flesh out the larger picture. Both are really, really, really fucking great.

Fresh off of Dark Souls 3, what was most refreshing about Salt and Sanctuary was the difficulty. It was nice to once again have to learn attack patterns and count the number of hits it takes to stagger monstrous enemies. I actually took the time to learn the elemental weaknesses of the bosses to give me that extra edge. It reminded me that I don’t mind getting my ass kicked as long as I’m getting just a little closer to victory every time.

For a 2D game, the variety in fights was excellent. There was certainly something lost in the removal of a dimension, as now you don’t have to worry about the sweep of opponents attacks when planning your dodge. As long as you can clear their body, you can get through to their relatively safe backside and thwack away. The bosses mostly circumvent this, either through wide sweeping attacks or quick combos that swap direction too quickly to pepper in attacks. Dodging behind is still an integral part to not getting your ass kicked, but just don’t expect to follow up every dodge with a flurry of blows.

Salt and Sanctuary

This is where I wanted to upload a picture illustrating this. Fun Fact: Salt and Sanctuary doesn’t pause when you try to take/upload screenshots. So instead, you get to see the ghost bat that spawns when you die.

Take my words with a grain of salt, because there are a ton of bosses and different enemies to throw all kinds of wrenches into any sweeping generalization. There are certain base enemy types that you’ll find throughout, but overall every zone will bring new styles of enemies that are going to demand you change up your game plan. You’ll go from a towering cathedral with equally looming enemies that require a more calculated approach, to a forest full of backflipping archers and lurking slimes that require quick reflexes and rapid pursuit. S&S isn’t afraid to throw you an obstacle that your build might not be able to deal with, requiring you to come up with creative solutions or avoid it entirely until better equipped.

Speaking of builds, there are a lot of them. For a 2D game about smacking things until they turn into experience, your options are plentiful. I personally went the 2-handed greatsword route, because Ted does not have time to pretend that hybrid builds and agility specs are a thing. I like to live a life where my damage numbers climb into the high triple digits and elite mobs vaporize. I also went heavy armor, because that actually matters in Salt and Sanctuary due to a substantial knockback mechanic. You could always be staggered in Dark Souls, and even launched by certain attacks, but being smacked across the arena is a fundamental reality of S&S. A reality that Ted has no interest in. Full titan armor remedied that.

Salt and Sanctuary

I did go through an embarrassing “light armor” phase when I was in my teenage levels and lacked confidence in my rock hard body

Another big difference that sets S&S apart is that instead of bonfires, sanctuaries serve as your checkpoints and safe haven. More than just places to level, heal, and respawn, each sanctuary can be populated with up to four NPCs that provide various buffs and services. For example, blacksmiths will give you a small damage boost in that zone, but also upgrade your gear. You’ll need to control a few sanctuaries to have access to the full roster of NPCs, but some are more useful than others. And by some, I mean the one that lets you teleport. He’s my hero.

It’s a simple system made far more compelling by the various different creeds. At the start of the game, an NPC will ask which of three creeds you belong to, which initially seems like just another bit of flavorful character creation. It’ll take you a bit to realize that this creed is what dictates a number of factors, most notably how your sanctuary will function. While the first sanctuary will automatically be aligned with you, most of the sanctuaries you come across already belong to a certain creed. You can use these sanctuaries to heal, but cannot level up or add NPCs without changing the alignment to yours. This can be done with a rare consumable item, but isn’t always recommended. Even with limited function, sanctuaries of other factions offer some benefits.

Salt and Sanctuary

Huh, I wonder what this creed was inspired by.

First off, they allow you to change your creed. Each creed comes with its own pros and cons, with some being more aligned towards magic, killing NPCs, and even one for just being a greedy bastard. What items NPCs sell and what rewards they have for quests will change based on your creed. You can’t go about changing your creed too often either, as changing is considered a “sin” requiring absolution. Cleansing your sin is just cumbersome enough to make you think twice without being actually super difficult. What’s most interesting is that your creed fundamentally changes how you heal. Rather than having standard “Estus Flasks,” each creed has its own replenishable healing item. I started as a follower of The Iron Ones, which gave me rolls that would heal me slower but for larger amounts. Devra’s Light, on the other hand, has the fastest healing potion. The most interesting I found was The House of Splendor, whose flasks of wine would simultaneously heal me and build up toxin. It makes choosing your faction much more meaningful than just flavor, adding a real calculated gameplay decision.

There’s a lot of detail I could get into, because this game is pretty freaking huge. Several times I was certain I was dealing with what must be one of the final bosses only to find a new set of branching paths that led to totally different yet interconnected worlds. I put in about 25 hours before I realized I hadn’t even seen half the world yet. I assumed I’d just keep going right, but no. You will go up, down, left, right, around the world, into the clouds, across the ocean, and into the depths of hell before you are done. It’s all brought together by a series of sprawling corridors and clever wraparounds. Explore all you can, but don’t be surprised if a locked gate or odd dead end turn out to be a shortcut to some far later level.

Salt and Sanctuary

Lighting plays a big role in hiding secrets, and it will be hard to repress the urge to leap off of every ledge straight to your death.

That doesn’t mean you shouldn’t explore. There’s a ton of secrets to find, including invisible doors you have to interact with to open. The ability for players to leave notes helps a lot, but will just as often tell you that jumping to your death will lead to a secret chest. The game does some cool stuff with the 2D layering, hiding platforms and ladders behind trees that can’t be seen when looking directly upon them. Pay attention to your surroundings, and realize that not all is as it initially seems.

There are a few minor criticisms I have for S&S. First, the game desperately needs a map. I get that Dark Souls didn’t have a map, but for a 2D game with this amount of exploration, I struggled to keep it all in my brain. I’m a completion maniac, so leaving a locked door behind under the assumption that I can come back later is akin to ripping out my toenails. On top of that, there are a number of areas that you can only access with certain mobility upgrades like wall jumping or flipping fucking gravity. It’s a metroidvania approach, so give it a metroidvania map.

Secondly, there are some weapons that are too hard to find. I actually started as a hunter, a dexterity build with a whip and gun that drew me in out of love for Bloodborne. After being unable to find a single whip or gun upgrade in the first nine zones, I gave up and went with the tried and true greatswords/heavy armor combo that has faithfully carried me through every RPG since I realized that magic was for squares. I would really like to have given the hunter build a shot, but alas, it locked all of the cool weapons in the later levels, and by that time my investment into strength was irreversible.

Salt and Sanctuary

I do miss that baller hat though.

And that’s it. That’s all I can say bad about Salt and Sanctuary. It’s absolutely mind blowing that a game with this much content is being sold for $18. Visually it’s a treat for fans of the macabre bloody and brutal side of dark fantasy. It’s gameplay is spot on, perfectly combining exploration and combat to make a deep, hardcore gaming experience. It’s easy to understand, a mountain to master, and every step between the two is rewarding and fun. Buy it today. Buy it for your friends. Hell, buy it for your enemies. The world needs more games this good.

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Conjuring 2, The (2016)

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The Conjuring 2Starring Vera Farmiga, Patrick Wilson, Frances O’Connor

Directed by James Wan


It’s the late 1970s, and all-American demonologists Ed and Lorraine Warren (Wilson and Farmiga) have just come off their most challenging case yet: the Amityville Horror. We go into that house, with its all-seeing eyes, windows to its black soul, with Lorraine as our guide. She embodies the evil that dwells there in the form of Ronald “Butch” DeFeo, Jr., the man who massacred his whole family within those walls just a few years before. But the sinister spirit who orchestrated the slaughter is much, much older. Still, it’s no match for those of faith, and poof! Off it goes to the netherworld from whence it came.

Post-Amityville exorcism, Lorraine is depleted, exhausted, and yes, afraid. Even the home she shares with Ed and their daughter is haunted (which makes one wonder just how effective their spook-scaring skills could’ve been). It seems there’s no escape, and there is certainly no rest for the wicked. A capricious ghost is wreaking anarchy in the U.K., and the only hope for relief is the Warrens.

Based on actual reported events from 1977 till 1979 in Brimsdown, Enfield, England, The Conjuring 2 covers the Enfield Poltergeist Haunting, which is one of the most documented supernatural cases in history. Even so, believers are equally divided with non-believers, and the evidence shows both truth and fraud.

When divorced and down-on-her-luck mum Peggy Hodgson (O’Connor) and her four kids are plagued by a mysterious malevolent specter who haunts their hovel of a home and seizes upon 10-year-old Janet (Madison Wolfe), it’s time to call in the experts. Enter the Warrens with crosses, Bibles, and video cameras; and let the battle of good vs. evil begin.

Genuinely eerie and well-told, The Conjuring 2 is a colossal improvement over the dull, dreary British TV miniseries “The Enfield Haunting” that came out last year. Director James Wan obviously loves scaring people, and he is very good at it. In fact, it seems he has it down to a science and knows what psychological buttons to push in the human psyche so that even jaded horror junkies will have at least few white-knuckle moments. Sometimes less is more, though, and on occasion the too-loud score, whip-pans, and slinking CGI shadows feel a tad manipulative as stretched over the rinse-repeat 134-minute spin cycle.

The Conjuring 2 not only ups the ante in the scares arena, it adds more character moments for the Warrens – in fact, it’s really Ed’s show as he leads the way into the heart of darkness, which gives Patrick Wilson more to do than in the first film. As a Wan regular – Wilson is also a lead in the Insidious film franchise – it’s even more obvious here how well they work together. Ed’s charm and humor come more to the fore, along with his faith, mission, and resolve. There’s a scene showing him playing an acoustic guitar and singing an Elvis song with a sweet sneer that’s charming and organic to the tone of the era. That’s something Wan excels at: creating a cinematic mosaic that feels both vintage and brand new.

Vera Farmiga is excellent as well, and her commitment to the character is admirable. She plays Lorraine with a completely different mien than she does as, say, Norma Bates in the TV series “Bates Motel.” You might be thinking, “Well, duh. They are two totally different personalities.” But it’s actually pretty rare to see actors who aren’t in some regard imbuing their performances with their own gestures, expressions, or modulations. Farmiga has said that she met and studied Lorraine Warren to make sure she was putting across an authentic portrayal, and she nails it.

There’s no way around the problematic tropes of the haunted house genre: Why the hell doesn’t the family just leave? They do stay with neighbors for a minute, and three of the four kids do depart at one point. But in spite of so much time spent focused on the family’s plight, it’s never explained satisfactorily. It seems being homeless would be preferable to living in that home.

And there are some other head-scratchers. For instance, once the ghost is ID’d as the former resident, it’s revealed that he died in an overstuffed old easy chair that’s still in the flat. It is still his favorite place to rest his bones, even in the afterlife. Umm… Why not get rid of the damn chair?! Not that it would necessarily eradicate the irascible old rascal, but it seems worth a try! What’s more, every single person in the family continues to creep through the dark, dangerously haunted house at night to investigate strange sounds again and again.

Those shortcomings aside, The Conjuring 2 is gorgeously filmed in warm, dark, soft, and chocolatey tones; and many scenes have a throwback feel – thanks to shooting deep into the sets and using interesting camera angles, rack focus, and extreme close-ups – which adds to the feeling of value one gets in watching it. It’s obvious the filmmakers really care about each and every moment they put on the screen, and as filmgoers you will feel like you matter. That’s rare. Plus, you get two hauntings for the price of one: the Enfield poltergeist and Lorraine’s own personal demon. Win/win.

While the haunted house storyline may feel ho-hum to some, The Conjuring 2 has enough texture and story to have appeal for all kinds of horror fans.

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Shout Factory Unveils Bill & Ted’s Most Excellent Blu-ray Collection; Exclusive Action Figure!

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We realize they’re not horror films, but being huge fans, we just didn’t feel right not mentioning this slice of awesomeness. As part of their new Shout Select label, Shout! Factory will be releasing the ultimate Bill & Ted Blu-ray collection on September 20, and a special website exclusive edition is packed with must-own treats – notably, a NECA action figure of Rufus!

Read on for all the details and head over to ShoutFactory.com to pre-order your copy!

From the Press Release:
Excellent! History’s favorite time traveling duo land on September 20, 2016 in a deluxe Blu-ray box set from Shout! Factory titled Bill & Ted’s Most Excellent Collection. The bodacious set includes Bill & Ted’s Excellent Adventure, the Blu-ray debut of the sequel Bogus Journey, and is fully loaded with an entire disc of bonus features, including new interviews and commentary, deluxe packaging, a “Wyld Stallyns” branded guitar pick, vinyl stickers for both films, and previously released extras including The Original Bill & Ted, The Most Triumphant Making-Of, Air Guitar Tutorial, The Linguistic Stylings of B&T, From Scribble to Script, The Hysterical Personages of B&T, and radio spots.

Shout! Factory will also have a limited edition set complete with an exclusive lithograph and exclusive action figure of George Carlin’s character “Rufus,” available on shoutfactory.com beginning June 7. NECA, which created the figure, will also have a Bill & Ted action figure set available in July 2016.

The biggest concern for Bill S. Preston, Esq. (Alex Winter) and Ted “Theodore” Logan (Keanu Reeves), two totally excellent dudes from San Dimas, California, has been that their band, the Wyld Stallyns, “will never be a super band until we have Eddie Van Halen on guitar.” But now they’re on the verge of failing history class, and Ted’s father is threatening him with military school. To keep the Wyld Stallyns together, and save the future, they need to deliver an epic history report, so a messenger named Rufus (George Carlin) arrives in a time traveling phone booth to help them out. As they travel through history they pick up some new friends, like the “Bodacious Philosopher” Socrates, “One Very Excellent Barbarian” Genghis Khan, the “Short Dead Dude” Napoleon and “Noah’s Wife” Joan of Arc, and put on one outrageous presentation.

In the sequel Bill and Ted’s Bogus Journey, the daffy duo travel to Heaven, Hell and points in between as they meet robot versions of themselves, Albert Einstein, the Easter Bunny, and beat the Grim Reaper at a video game. Bogus Journey features an all-star cast including Keanu Reeves (The Matrix), Alex Winter, George Carlin, William Sadler (The Shawshank Redemption), and Pam Grier (Jackie Brown). At the time of its release, Roger Ebert described the film as “a riot of visual invention and weird humor that works on its chosen sub-moronic level, and on several others as well, including some fairly sophisticated ones.” In other words, not bogus at all, dudes.

The Exclusive Limited Edition Set Contains:

  • An exclusive, limited edition 8″ tall Rufus action figure by NECA
  • An exclusive, limited edition 18″ x 24″ lithograph of the newly-designed art from artist Paul Shipper (this lithograph will ship rolled, in a poster tube)
  • Two 6″ x 4″ Bill & Ted stickers
  • A Wild Stallyns guitar pick
  • Early shipping to arrive two weeks before the national street date

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The Late Marcin Wrona’s Demon Arrives in September

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Distribution label The Orchard acquired North American rights to Demon (review) out of last year’s Toronto International Film Festival, though Polish director Marcin Wrona tragically passed away shortly after the premiere. When can you see it? We’ve just gotten word that the film arrives in limited theaters on September 9.

Check out the plot crunch and trailer below.

The film stars Itay Tiran, Agnieszka Zulewska, Andrzej Grabowski, Tomasz Schuchardt, Katarzyna Herman, Adam Woronowicz, Wlodzimierz Press, Tomasz Zietek, Cezary Kosinski, and Katarzyna Gniewkowska.

Synopsis:
A young man travels to the hometown of his future wife where he knows no one. As a wedding gift from the bride’s grandfather, he receives a piece of land where the two can build a house and raise a happy family. While preparing the land to build, he finds human bones buried beneath the new property. Strange things begin to happen to change this happy couple’s life forever. Demon is a modern take on one of the most famous figures of Jewish folklore, the dybbuk, a spirit of a person not properly laid to rest that seeks to inhabit the body of a living person.

demon wrona

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Shay Mitchell Battles an Evil Entity in Cadaver

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Stunning actress Shay Mitchell, who has starred on the hit TV series “Pretty Little Liars” for seven seasons, makes the leap to the big screen with a leading role in Screen Gems’ Cadaver, and today we’re serving up everything you need to know about the upcoming horror flick. Seriously. Everything. Read on!

Per THR, Mitchell will play a disgraced ex-cop and recovering addict who takes a job in a graveyard shift at the morgue of the hospital in which she got sober. Soon after a mysterious and brutally massacred body is delivered to the morgue, the woman begins to witness terrorizing and violent murders, leading her to face off against an evil entity.

Written by Brian Sieve, Cadaver will be directed by Diederik Van Rooijen.

Sean Robins and Todd Garner produce via their Broken Road Productions banner.

More as we learn it!

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From Dusk Till Dawn Gets an Impressive List of Season 3 Directors

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Production is gearing up to begin on El Rey Network’s “From Dusk Till Dawn: The Series,” and like previous seasons, the episodes will each be directed by talented filmmakers. Notably, Robert Rodriguez and Eduardo Sanchez (The Blair Witch Project) will direct episodes, and you can read on for the complete list!

From the Press Release:
MIRAMAX® and El Rey Network released today the list of directors that will helm the 10 episodes of FROM DUSK TILL DAWN: THE SERIES season three. Additionally, Nicky Whelan (House of Lies, The Wedding Ringer) and Maurice Compte (Breaking Bad, Narcos) have joined the cast of season three. Compte will play Brassa, a mysterious Rasputin-like figure who takes on the Gecko brothers. Whelan’s character will be revealed on air.

The list of directors includes several newcomers to the series including Eagle Egilsson, who is known for his acclaimed work as a cinematographer for The Wire and CSI: Miami, for which he was also a producer. Rebecca Rodriguez, sister and frequent collaborator of Robert Rodriguez, will make her television directing debut. Additionally, Executive Producer Diego Gutierrez (Warehouse 13, Without A Trace) will join this esteemed roster after having written episodes for FROM DUSK TILL DAWN: THE SERIES season two.

Directors who will be returning from past seasons include creator and executive producer Robert Rodriguez, Dwight Little (Halloween 4: the Return of Michael Myers), Alejandro Bruges (Juan of the Dead, ABC’S of Death 2), Eduardo Sánchez (The Blair Witch Project), and Joe Menendez (Ladrón que roba a ladrón).

The specific episodes for each director are as follows:

1. Dwight Little (Halloween 4: the Return of Michael Myers)
2. Robert Rodriguez (creator and executive producer)
3. Alejandro Brugués (Juan of the Dead, ABC’S of Death 2, Personal Belongings)
4. Eagle Egilsson (Nikita, CSI Miami)
5. Eduardo Sanchez (The Blair Witch Project)
6. Rebecca Rodriguez (Spy Kids: All the Time in the World in 4D)
7. Diego Gutierrez (Warehouse 13, Without A Trace)
8. Eagle Egilsson (Nikita, CSI Miami)
9 & 10. Joe Menendez (Ladrón que roba a ladrón)

Season three continues the Gecko brothers’ saga as they fight their way through the world of culebras, the vampire-snake hybrids that control hidden empires in Texas and Mexico. Once the baddest outlaws in the land, Seth and Richie made a run for the Border two years ago to save their lives – and their fortune. They ran headlong into a bar full of bloodsuckers and bandits, facing off with the vampire goddess Santánico. The Geckos joined her cause, and they settled an old score. It won them a place in the culebra world. Now that world is about to explode, and new enemies are gathering – dark forces, hell-bent on destruction and domination. It’s up to the Geckos to stop them – but they can’t do it alone.

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Take a Peek Inside Dishonored Issue #1

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As we learned late last month, the Dishonored series is expanding beyond the world of video games with an all-new comic series and a trilogy of novels set in a world where dark magic and steampunk technology co-exist, and today we have a look at a few pages from Issue #1 of the comic plus all four covers.

The comic series from Titan, which kicks off in August (just in time for the launch of the highly anticipated Dishonored II video game later in the year), is written by Gordon Rennie (2000 AD, Doctor Who) and illustrated by Andrea Olimpieri and Marcelo Maiolo, whose art credits include Batman Beyond and Old Man Logan.

This hotly anticipated comic series comes with four covers to collect: three art covers by artists Fabio Listrani, Andrea Olimpieri, and Charles Bae and a game cover.

Below you’ll find a four-page lettered preview, all the covers, and the issue’s synopsis.

Synopsis:
The city of Dunwall: whaling capital of Gristol and industrial hub of the Empire of the Isles. Twelve years have passed since Corvo Attano scuppered the Lord Regent’s duplicitous plot against the crown and cleared his name of the Empress Jessamine’s murder. Now a little older and perhaps a little wiser, Corvo sets his sights on the future and securing an apprentice to continue his legacy. But when confronted by an impossible face from his past, the magically-gifted assassin finds himself once again drawn into a supernatural conspiracy, one that threatens to shake the very foundations of his ancient city!

Dishonored Issue #1 will be released on August 3rd.

Dishonored Preview 1 Dishonored Preview 2 Dishonored Preview 3 Dishonored Preview 4
Dishonored_01_Cover_D Game Cover

Game Cover

Dishonored_01_Cover_C Charles Bae

Cover by Charles Bae

Dishonored_01_Cover_B_ Andrea Olimpieri

Cover by Andrea Olimpieri

Dishonored_01_Cover_A

Cover by Fabio Listrani

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Stephen King’s It Casts First Member of The Losers’ Club

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Last week brought along with it the huge news that actor Bill Skarsgard will be playing horror icon Pennywise for Mama director Andy Muschietti’s two-film adaptation of Stephen King’s It, and with production getting ready to begin this summer, we can expect a whole lot more casting news in the coming weeks. Speaking of which, read on for the latest!

As reported by Movie Web, young actor Jaeden Lieberher (St. Vincent, Midnight Special) has been cast to play Bill Denbrough in the adaptation, the leader of the group known as The Losers’ Club. The role was originally played by the late Jonathan Brandis in the 1990 TV mini series.

Per THR, the cast also includes Finn Wolfhard, Jack Dylan Grazer, Wyatt Oleff, Chosen Jacobs and Jeremy Ray Taylor.

You can expect the return of Pennywise on September 8, 2017.

Book Synopsis:
It began for the Losers on a day in June of 1958, the day school let out for the summer. That was the day Henry Bowers carved the first letter of his name on Ben Hanscom’s belly and chased him into the Barrens, the day Henry and his Neanderthal friends beat up on Stuttering Bill Denbrough and Eddie Kaspbrak, the day Stuttering Bill had to save Eddie from his worst asthma attack ever by riding his bike to beat the devil. It ended in August, with seven desperate children in search of a creature of unspeakable evil in the drains beneath Derry. In search of It. And somehow it ended.

Or so they thought. Then.

On a spring night in 1985, Mike Hanlon, once one of those children, makes six calls. Stan Uris, accountant. Richie “Records” Tozier, L.A. disc jockey. Ben Hanscom, renowned architect. Beverly Rogan, dress designer. Eddie Kaspbrak, owner of a successful New York limousine company. And Bill Denbrough, bestselling writer of horror novels. Bill Denbrough, who now only stutters in his dreams.

These six men and one woman have forgotten their childhoods, have forgotten the time when they were Losers… but an unremembered promise draws them back, the present begins to rhyme dreadfully with the past, and when the Losers reunite, the wheels of fate lock together and roll them toward the ultimate terror.

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Fan Combines Freddy Glove and Phantasm Sphere into Ultimate Horror Weapon

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Every horror icon has a weapon that they call their own, and two of the most creative in the genre’s history were wielded by A Nightmare on Elm Street‘s Freddy Krueger and Phantasm‘s so-called Tall Man. Freddy, of course, wears a special glove outfitted with razor-sharp claws, while the Tall Man throws around a deadly sphere that drills directly into your head.

Not a pleasant way to go, no matter which one you meet in a dark alley.

Fans have for years been building their own prop replicas of both weapons, often staying true to the designs seen in the movies. A quick Google search will turn up fan-made Freddy gloves based on each and every installment in the franchise – yes, even that awful remake – and there are also no shortage of Phantasm spheres out there on the net. Because horror fans, well, they’re as creative as they are awesome – and they’re pretty goddamn awesome.

Presumably unable to choose which of the two weapons is his favorite, one of those creative fans recently decided to go ahead and fuse them together into one, creating what I can only describe as the ultimate horror movie weapon. Yes, it’s a Freddy glove inspired by the Tall Man’s balls spheres, and it may very well be the coolest thing I’ve ever seen.

Behold: your new favorite killing device.

If anyone knows the mad genius responsible for this, let us know so we can give him/her credit!

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7 Habits of Highly Effective Serial Killers

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So, you want to be a serial killer?

First off, let me be the first to congratulate you on this tremendous career choice! Our ever-changing professional landscape is always on the lookout for new blood, and we offer flexible dress codes, variable work hours, and the occasional surprise vacation to the psych ward!

I bet you’re already sharpening your blades and eyeballing the city streets for teenagers and prostitutes, huh?

Whoa! Easy there, young whippersnapper! Before you start slicing and dicing all willy-nilly, there are a few primary success principles you ought to master first. Listed below are seven major habits demonstrated by men who’ve made a killing at their job. Ready? Let’s begin!

“Be presentable” – Hannibal Lecter, The Silence of the Lambs

Hannibal Lecter

Sloppy work denotes a sloppy mind. If you want to make a real impression as a killer, you must always put your best foot forward. Take, for example, Dr. Lecter’s etiquette: he greets everyone with the utmost courtesy, even from behind reinforced glass; during downtime, he even assists fellow inmates curb lousy language. As if that weren’t enough, he demonstrates empathy in social exchanges (“Toughened your nipples, didn’t it?”) and always succeeds at saving face during awkward situations (i.e.—breaking out of a police station). Remember, the better your manners, the better your chance of lowering the defenses of potential victims!

“Go against the grain for shocking success” – Victor Frankenstein, Frankenstein

Victor Frankenstein

Not all advice is good advice, and true masters of their craft know when to ignore doctors, professors, and any other know-all who warns them against ambition. Although Dr. rankenstein isn’t a technically a serial killer, his headstrong attitude and determination to seek success on his own terms spawned a kick-ass monster (as well as a box office bomb: I, Frankenstein.)

“Weed out the losers” – Dexter Morgan, Dexter

Dexter Morgan

In some circles this falls under the same category as ratting out a co-worker, but believe me when I say: It’s a necessity. Dearly Darwinist Dexter ensures serial killers who leave messy, evidence-filled workspaces don’t have lasting careers, and, like any good suck-up, he’s a stickler for the rules.

“Encourage bonding experiences” – Dr. Josef Heiter, The Human Centipede

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Not only has Dr. Heiter found his niche in malpractice, but he’s a revelation in forging person-to-person connections! His 100% professionally accurate tactics have even led him to hosting private team-building seminars for groups of three or less, where ass-kissing is merely the first step in career mobility. Just a glance at his LinkedIn profile will have you hungry for his advice!

“Be a multi-hyphenate” – Sweeney Todd, Sweeney Todd

Sweeney Todd

In today’s world, it seems it’s no longer acceptable to specialize in just one thing. So why be just a killer, when you can be a killer-barber-‘bakery chain supplier’? You’ll be raking in the dough as you change up the daily grind and meet a whole new grade of customers! And if you’re afraid such professional expansion will eat up your spare time, don’t fret—Mister Todd still had leisure time for singing, choreography, and vengeance.

“Expand your world view” – Norman Bates, Psycho

Norman Bates

Even a humble hotel proprietor can demonstrate the mother of all success principles: Always seek out new perspectives. Tired of watching your prey from outside their windows? Try drilling a peephole in their bathroom wall. Sick of the same uncomfortable gender-enforcing clothing? Try on Mother’s most comfortable dress. Nothing in this world is black and white, so take a stab at seeing things from all different angles. There’s no telling what bright future you’ll find in store for you and the voices in your head!

“Allow time for leisure” – Jame Gumb, The Silence of the Lambs

Jame Gumb

After a long day of pounding pavement and bashing skulls, it’s easy to feel burnt out if you don’t take time to enjoy the little things. Lay down your tools and boogey every now and then!  Whether you’re strutting your stuff in front of a mirror or just dancing in the dark, it’s an important reminder not to take yourself too seriously, even when your creative well runs dry. Try it on for size! Will you enjoy it? Oh, you’ll enjoy it. You’ll enjoy it so hard…

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Top 10 Horror Movies that Deserve a Sequel

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Horror fans often complain about sequels, due to the endless glut of them that have a tendency to decrease in quality with each new entry.  However, every once in a while a movie comes along that calls for one, and they never come to be for various reasons.

Sometimes they don’t make enough money to justify a sequel; other times it’s because of legal reasons. Sometimes they’re neglected to the point they’re forgotten.  It’s difficult to get a movie off the ground, and sometimes our wishes don’t come true because the people with the power to grant them don’t share our enthusiasm. 

Jack Brooks

However, that doesn’t mean we can’t still dream, so here are a few movies that are calling for sequels, some of which still could happen if the stars align the right way.

Drive-Thru (2007)

Drive-Thru is a dumb teen slasher for the MTV generation.  It “borrows’’ heavily from the classics of yesteryear, and the villain is a fast-food mascot named Horny the Clown.  It’s not a good movie by any stretch of the imagination, but it is a lot of dim-witted fun – and popcorn entertainment was built on such admirable ethos.

Drive-Thru, despite its many flaws, did have some franchise potential:  In a world where Killjoy has sequels, is it such a terrible idea to give Horny at least one?  In 2010 there was reportedly one in the works, but there hasn’t been any word of it since, meaning the chances of it happening are about as likely as Ronald McDonald becoming the next great horror icon.

Jack Brooks Monster Slayer (2007)

As a child, Jack Brooks (Trevor Matthews) witnessed his family being massacred by a monster, which leads to him growing up to become a troubled plumber with serious anger issues.  In a bid to get his life on track, he takes night classes at a local community college and visits a therapist, but he just can’t find that peace of mind he needs in order to find a purpose in life.  Beleaguered by his inner demons, his problems worsen when he unleashes a curse that turns his professor (played by Robert Englund) and peers into actual demons.  Finally, Jack’s life has meaning – as a badass MONSTER SLAYER!

Unfortunately, we never got to see Jack embark on further monster-slaying adventures.  Originally, this was supposed to be the first movie in a planned trilogy, but director Jon Knautz has chosen to pursue other projects since.  Thankfully, they just happen to be as good as this gem.  Maybe one day we’ll get to see Jack fulfill his destiny, but seeing Knautz fulfill his own as a brilliant filmmaker is more likely – and satisfying.

Hobo With a Shotgun (2011)

It was a city ruled by crime and polluted with corruption.  It took a hobo and his shotgun to clean the streets of scum and filth.  All he wanted to do was cut grass, but sexual deviants, crooked cops, demonic assassins, and psychotic killers provided too much of a distraction from garden maintenance.

Hobo With a Shotgun is a masterpiece of grindhouse entertainment and a lethal cocktail for genre fans thirsty for gore, action, depravity, and unhinged madness.  It’s arguably the most entertaining starring vehicle of the legendary Rutger Hauer’s prolific career – which has included classics like The Hitcher, Blind Fury, and Split Second.   Director Jason Eisener has stated his plans for a spin-off movie about The Plague in the past, along with possible sequels with Hauer reprising his role as The Hobo.  Right now, though, it’d just be nice to see Eisener direct another feature.  However, returning to the universe of Hobo With a Shotgun someday would be a treat for us genre fans.

My Bloody Valentine (2009)

Remakes are a divisive topic among horror fans.  While many hate to see their beloved classics for new generations, or have originality take a back seat to rebooting old properties, there have been enough good ones to warrant their existence – not to mention successful box office takings.  My Bloody Valentine is one of the few that’s considered enjoyable by the majority of genre fans.  It was also a financial success, grossing over $100 million on the back of a $14 million budget.  Moreover, it ended with the killer presumed dead and escaping on the fly.  All of the ingredients for a sequel were there, but it never transpired.

My Bloody Valentine is a fun retro-inspired slasher that should have produced a slew of sequels until the franchise imploded on itself.  They could have provided annual Valentine’s Day entertainment for lovesick loners and couples tired of formulaic rom-coms, much like the Saw films did for Halloween cinemagoers.  There was a sequel in the works, but it was rumored that Lionsgate wanted to cull its association with genre films at the time; therefore, it wasn’t to be.

Evil Dead (2013)

Yes, another remake – and one that just so happens to be a retelling of one of the greatest horror films ever made.  When Sam Raimi and Bruce Campbell hand-picked Fede Alvarez to re-adapt their seminal classic for modern audiences, few were expecting him to deliver something this formidable.  Much like Raimi’s original, this was a confident debut by a young director looking to leave his mark on the horror genre, and he succeeded triumphantly.

Evil Dead is, by all accounts, a remake.  It doesn’t stray far off the path treaded before it, but it does add enough unique nuances to leave its own giant footprint.  That being said, it’s a remake that’s set in the same universe as the original, and there’s no reason why a sequel couldn’t live alongside its progenitors – or even intersect with them.  The potential crossover appeal has been acknowledged, but with the success of TV series “Ash vs Evil Dead,” any sequels that were in the works have been put on hold for now.

Killer Klowns from Outer Space (1988)

Horror fans have been waiting on a sequel to Killer Klowns from Outer Space for nearly 30 years.  At times we’ve been led to believe that it’s actually happening, and according to IMDb, Return of the Killer Klowns is planned for a 2018 release.  Given that it’s still a beloved part of pop culture with a diehard fan base, it’d be a damn shame if our favorite alien Klowns didn’t receive at least one more opportunity to cause havoc.  It’s not like there isn’t an audience for it after all these years.

But, as we all know, some things are just too good to be true in the movie business, and any news of a future sequel should be taken with a grain of salt.  Horror movies are supposed to instill us with pessimism; yet, we fans are still an optimistic bunch when a small nugget of information does enough to get our hopes up.

Dog Soldiers (2002)

Neil Marshall’s Dog Soldiers is widely regarded as one of the best werewolf movies of all time, and it’s one of the films that put British horror back on the map during a quiet period.  Supposedly a sequel was in the works to be released in 2014.  It never happened, and we were all fools to believe that it would.  That being said, that doesn’t mean it shouldn’t get a sequel.  In a list dedicated to daydreaming and pining for films that will probably never happen, Dog Soldiers deserves a spot.

Freddy vs. Jason (2003)

Despite being the two most popular icons in the history of horror cinema, the idea of putting Freddy and Jason in the same movie was a ludicrous one that should never have worked as well as it did.  It’s a rare occasion when pitting iconic characters against each other actually produces good results, but Freddy and Jason actually complemented each other surprisingly well.  The film is the Jason show for the most part, although it feels very much like an Elm Street movie through its atmosphere.  It’s much better than it has any right to be, and it is heartbreaking to think they’ll never go to war again – at least not with Robert Englund reprising his role as Freddy anyway.

Upon its release, the film was a modest critical and commercial success, and it ended with enough life left in both characters to warrant one last showdown. Unfortunately, it wasn’t to be although the idea of a sequel with Ash from the Evil Dead franchise was thrown around.  While that didn’t come into fruition in cinematic form, the story was adapted for a comic book mini-series from DC in 2007.

Bubba Ho-Tep (2002)

When the end credits of Bubba Ho-Tep jokingly told fans to keep an eye out for a sequel titled Bubba Nosferatu: Curse of the She-Vampires, that’s exactly what they did.  Following the amazing experience that was Bubba Ho-Tep, we were hungry for more Elvis Presley going up against the forces of evil.  The demand was so great that a script was completed with Paul Giamatti attached to star, in addition to championing the idea on numerous occasions.  So far it hasn’t happened, but this idea is just too good to lie around collecting dust – even though that’s probably its fate.

Deep Rising (1998)

Deep Rising is a movie that set out with a sequel in mind, but its poor performance at the box office ensured that any chance of that happening was effectively dead in the water, much like the victims claimed by the film’s giant murderous sea creature.  It ended with the survivors holed up on an island with active volcanoes and an unseen beast roaring from the jungle.  Over the years the film has amassed a cult following, but the chances of a sequel ever happening were left shipwrecked on the island with the doomed survivors.

That’s our list.  Are there any movies you feel deserve a sequel? Chime in below!

 

 

The post Top 10 Horror Movies that Deserve a Sequel appeared first on Dread Central.

Severin Bringing Zombie Holocaust AKA Doctor Butcher M.D. to Blu-ray; Includes Limited Edition Barf Bag!

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A faux sequel to Lucio Fulci’s Zombie, which was itself a faux sequel to Dawn of the Dead, Italian filmmaker Marino Girolami’s Zombie Holocaust (later released as Doctor Butcher M.D.) is something of a cult gem in the horror world, and we’re happy to report that both versions of the 1980 film are soon hitting DVD and Blu-ray on July 26, courtesy of Severin.

As an added bonus, the first 5,000 copies purchased from Severin will come with a freakin’ barf bag!

Read on for all the release details.

From the Press Release:
It sparked riots on 42nd Street, spawned a generation of gorehounds on VHS, and forever set an insane standard for Italian mad doctor/zombie/cannibal carnage worldwide: Ian McCulloch (ZOMBIE), Alexandra Delli Colli (THE NEW YORK RIPPER), Sherry Buchanan (TENTACLES) and Donald O’Brien (EMANUELLE AND THE LAST CANNIBALS) star in this blood orgy of gut-munching, eyeball-gouging and face-chopping originally known as ZOMBIE HOLOCAUST, which a notorious American distributor would then re-edit, re-title and re-release as a certified grindhouse masterpiece.

Severin Films now presents both films fully restored for the first time ever from original vault elements discovered in Manhattan and Rome, and loaded with all-new Bonus Features that finally reveal the unbelievable truth behind its bizarre history, infamous marketing and still-deviant legacy.

Disc 1 Special Features – Doctor Butcher M.D.:

  • Featurette: Butchery & Ballyhoo: Interview with Aquarius Releasing’s Terry Levine
  • Featurette: Down On The Deuce: Nostalgic Tour Of 42nd Street With Temple Of Shock’s Chris Poggiali and
    Filmmaker Roy Frumkes
  • Roy Frumkes’ Segment Of Unfinished Anthology Film – Tales That Will Tear Your Heart Out
  • Featurette: The Butcher Mobile: Interview with Gore Gazette Editor & Butcher Mobile Barker Rick Sullivan
  • Featurette: Cutting Doctor Butcher: Interview with Editor Jim Markovic
  • Illustrated Essay: Experiments With A Male Caucasian Brain (…and other memories of 42nd Street) by Gary Hertz
  • Theatrical Trailer
  • Video Release Trailer 1
  • Video Release Trailer 2

doc butcher

Disc 2 Special Features – Zombie Holocaust:

  • Featurette: Voodoo Man: Interview With Star Ian McCulloch
  • Featurette: Blood Of The Zombies: Interview With FX Master Rosario Prestopino
  • Featurette: Filmmaker Enzo Castellari Remembers His Father Director Marino Girolami
  • Featurette: Sherry Holocaust: Interview With Actress Sherryl Buchanan
  • Featurette: Neurosurgery Italian Style -Interview With FX Artist Maurizio Trani
  • Featurette: New York Filming Locations Then Vs. Now. A look at the Big Apple locales as they are today
  • Audio Bonus: Ian McCulloch Sings Down By The River
  • International Trailer
  • German Trailer

zombie holocaust

doctor butcher

The post Severin Bringing Zombie Holocaust AKA Doctor Butcher M.D. to Blu-ray; Includes Limited Edition Barf Bag! appeared first on Dread Central.

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