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Monstrous Remote Viewing Concept Art Makes Us Itchy!

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On tap right now we have a bit of concept art from creature FX designer Jordu Schell’s (Men in Black, Avatar, Galaxy Quest, Edward Scissorhands, and many more) directorial debut, Remote Viewing, and these little critters have us itching! Check them out!

Good news, kids! The project is around three quarters of the way to being fully funded, so do your part and kick in!

Remote Viewing

Remote Viewing

“It has always been my dream to make my own movie and give people those same terrifying chills that I had all those years ago, to create the kind of film that would stick with people forever,” said Schell via the Remote Viewing Indiegogo site. “Now, working with some of the amazingly talented people I have met along the way in conjunction with newly formed Wolfpack Studios, I am finally able to make my directorial debut.

Eerie, strange, and disturbing, with convincing performances and shocking effects—this is what you will get by supporting this campaign for Remote Viewing,” promises Schell, and all we can say is sign us the hell up like yesterday.

Visit the Remote Viewing Indiegogo site for details on perks and much more!

Remote Viewing

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Campaign Extended to Bring Don’t Kill It to Theaters

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We told you a few weeks ago that you could help get the new film from director Mike Mendez entitled Don’t Kill It (reviews here and here) the theatrical release it deserves! Now that campaign to do so has been extended!

If you haven’t done so already, head on over to the Indiegogo page and do your part to make this happen while collecting some sweet, sweet swag!

Written by Dan Berk and Robert Olsen, the film stars Dolph Lundgren, Kristina Klebe, Michael Aaron Milligan, and Miles Doleac.

Synopsis:
An ancient evil is unleashed in a small Alaskan town, leaving a trail of death and destruction as it passes from host to host. The only hope of survival lies with a grizzled demon hunter (Lundgren) who has faced this terror before. Together with a reluctant FBI agent he has to figure out how to destroy a demon with the ability to possess its killer.

don't kill it poster

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Alice Returns in New Resident Evil: The Final Chapter Featurette

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The Resident Evil: The Final Chapter hype wheel keeps right on rolling as another new featurette is here, this time featuring Milla Jovovich herself, who looks back at the character of Alice and her journey so far.

Look for Resident Evil: The Final Chapter on January 27, 2017.

The film was written and directed by Paul W.S. Anderson and stars series regulars Milla Jovovich, Iain Glen, Ali Larter, and Shawn Roberts in addition to newcomers Lee Joon-gi, Rola, William Levy, and Ruby Rose.

Synopsis:
Picking up immediately after the events in Resident Evil: Retribution, humanity is on its last legs after Alice is betrayed by Wesker in Washington, D.C. As the only survivor of what was meant to be humanity’s final stand against the undead hordes, Alice must return to where the nightmare began – Raccoon City, where the Umbrella Corporation is gathering its forces for a final strike against the only remaining survivors of the apocalypse.

In a race against time, Alice will join forces with old friends and an unlikely ally in an action-packed battle with undead hordes and new mutant monsters. Between losing her superhuman abilities and Umbrella’s impending attack, this will be Alice’s most difficult adventure as she fights to save humanity, which is on the brink of oblivion.

Resident Evil Final Chapter

Resident Evil: The Final Chapter

Resident Evil: The Final Chapter

Resident Evil: The Final Chapter

The post Alice Returns in New Resident Evil: The Final Chapter Featurette appeared first on Dread Central.

The Eyes of My Mother Focus on Blu-ray and DVD

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The Eyes of My Mother is available on VOD right now, and today Magnolia has announced that the film will be hitting Blu-ray, DVD, and Digital HD on March 7, 2017!

The Eyes of My Mother (review), from writer/director Nicolas Pesce, stars Kika Magalhães, Will Brill, Flora Diaz, Paul Nazak, Clara Wong, Diana Agostini, and Olivia Bond. You can watch it now on Amazon and all the usual VOD/MOD outlets.

Synopsis:
In their secluded farmhouse, a mother, formerly a surgeon in Portugal, teaches her daughter, Francisca, to understand anatomy and be unfazed by death. One afternoon, a mysterious visitor shatters the idyll of Francisca’s family life, deeply traumatizing the young girl, but also awakening unique curiosities. Though she clings to her increasingly reticent father, Francisca’s loneliness and scarred nature converge years later when her longing to connect with the world around her takes on a dark form.

Shot in crisp black and white, the haunting visual compositions evoke its protagonist’s isolation and illuminate her deeply unbalanced worldview. Genre-inflected, but so strikingly unique as to defy categorization, writer/director Nicolas Pesce’s feature debut allows only an elliptical presence in Francisca’s world, guiding our imaginations to follow her into peculiar, secret places.

The Eyes of My Mother

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I Was a Teenage Wereskunk (2017)

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Starring Scott Monahan, Shey Lyn Zanotti, Charlie Farrell, Amy Heidt, Sean Cork, Melanie Minichino

Written and directed by Neal McLaughlin


Take an homage to 1950’s monster movies, a dash of John Waters’ Hairspray, sprinkle in some silly Zucker Bros.-style comedy, and you get the hilarious cinematic oddity that is I Was a Teenage Wereskunk.

I’d also say toss in a smidge of My Demon Lover, but we’re all better off forgetting that Eighties horror comedy. Just forget I even brought it up.

I readily admit that my expectations were not particularly high going into a 1950’s drive-in movie parody about a teenager transforming into a murderous half-man/half-skunk whenever he feels sexually aroused. Not just because of the loopy premise; I’ve seen so many of these retro creature features, and while they may have been made by people with their hearts in the right place, typically, what they’ve made tends to be so beholden to the tropes of the genre they suffer from being too dry, too talky, not particularly witty, and strain to stretch razor-thin material out to feature length.

When I talked some b-movie-loving friends into watching this one with me, they were also quite skeptical at what I was about to subject them to. Ninety minutes later, we were all pleasantly surprised – kinda shocked, actually, not just that this wereskunk didn’t stink, that we all laughed our asses off as much as we did.

I Was a Teenage Wereskunk defies the trend by becoming its own creature. Whereas most similar stylized flicks are tongue-in-cheek love letters that don’t have a lot of appeal to anyone outside of hardcore fans of atomic age b-movies, writer-director Neal McLaughlin has smartly crafted a horror comedy that hits all the notes, plays off all the tropes, but is as much in the vein of a broad comedy along the lines of Scary Movie as it is a comical recreation a la The Lost Skeleton of Cadavra.

Curtis Albright (Scott Monahan) is your stereotypical early 1960’s teenager forever adorned in his letterman jacket and with more raging hormones than common sense. He tends to take what people say a bit too literally, often with comical results. He’s also far too eager to convince the local beatnik that he’s a cool cat and not a “Clyde.” This also gets him into more misadventures that ultimately lead to stinky terror.

Just as so many teen-centric sci-fi horror movies of the 1950’s were metaphors for teenage sexuality, most notably I Was a Teenage Werewolf, the wereskunk takes that metaphor to literal and ridiculous extremes.

You see, Curtis is in love with the kindly, yet equally dimwitted Mary Beth (Shey Lyn Zanotti) but isn’t particularly good at expressing how he really feels about her. He needs the prodding of a beatnik whose lingo may as well be an alien language to get in touch with his true feelings for his roller skating lady love who thinks a blowjob actually means breathing really hard on a guy’s pants. But before he can give in to his animal urges, sexually repressed Curtis gets sprayed by a skunk while peeping in a woman’s window as she undresses. Now he finds himself cursed by “the one who squirts,” forever doomed to transform into a killer wereskunk whenever feeling the urge.

The Teen Wolf-inspired look of the wereskunk is, for lack of any other work, inspired, even if you can see the painted string keeping the skunk snout in place on the actor’s face. That string becomes the subject of a joke seen during an outtake during the closing credits. This is one where you need to watch all the way to the very end. Again, what could have been a straightforward parody of the genre frequently veers off into downright quirky and uproariously unexpected areas thanks to a witty script loaded with double entrendres and an assortment of zany characters.

A deputy keeps making anachronistic references that don’t exist yet in the film’s early 1960’s setting, leading to a truly out of left field revelation that caused a friend to nearly fall on the floor laughing.

Another is the overeager, easily grossed out, motor-mouthed, and always wrong but never willing to admit it Deputy Gary, clearly played by a woman in a mustache – just because.

It’s actually amazing any crime ever gets solved in this town what with Curtis’ father, the Sheriff, seeming more concerned with rifling through his secret stash of nudie magazines or clowning around (literally!) with his ever-horny wife; that is, when she’s not cooking up colossal stacks of pancakes big enough to play ultimate Frisbee with.
Say, Mrs. Albright bears a disturbing resemblance to Deputy Gary. You don’t suppose…?

Throughout the film we’re treated to a variety of parodies of Fifties pop rock songs, my personal favorite being the one that plays off all those insipidly peppy malt shop pop songs of the era about sugary candy by including the ever-looming threat of diabetes.

There’s even a brief movie-within-a-movie when Curtis attends a 3D screening of that classic sci-fi shocker It Came from Uranus that’s primarily an excuse to make a series of jokes about exactly what you’d expect from the title.

Yes, some of those jokes are quite puerile. Some will make you roll your eyes. Some are intended to make you roll your eyes. A few miss the mark altogether. Overall, I Was a Teenage Wereskunk succeeds at being a loving spoof of the genre that’s a little raunchy but never outright dirty and gorier than you’d expect from this type of homage but not a bloodbath. McLaughlin’s inventive script and his committed cast hit this one out of the park.

Speaking of which, that baseball death scene… Even in a movie where a teenage wereskunk blasts debilitating clouds of putrid stink out of his posterior upon sexual arousal, that death by baseball was a whole other level of WTF.

I want to give I Was a Teenage Wereskunk four stars, but I’m afraid I might be overselling it. Eh, screw it! There’s a sight gag revolving around how a character acquires a cigarette that had us all laughing so hard it alone earns the four-star rating.

The post I Was a Teenage Wereskunk (2017) appeared first on Dread Central.

New Footage: Paranormal Activity: The Lost Soul

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It kills me that the Paranormal Activity franchise went out with such a depressing whimper. Hopefully the new VR game Paranormal Activity: The Lost Soul can right some of the horrendous wrongs of the film… even though it has nothing to do with the franchise itself, at the very least it can be spooky!

Coming to us via the official Paranormal Activity: The Lost Soul Twitter page is a brief snippet of new footage which you can watch below.

While no exact release date has been given, VRWerx has stated that the game will be here in early 2017.

Paranormal Activity: The Lost Soul

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Furbies Get Their Own Horror Game with Tattletail

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Fucking Furbies. Those damn talking soft toys were the stuff of nightmares. As a kid, I remember that even my dog would bark like crazy whenever one of those demonic little things opened its beak and said, in its creepy, evil voice “I love you”.

If the toys themselves didn’t have enough fuel for your nightmares, then you might be interested in the new game Tattletail, which is now available on Steam. Yup, the Furbies have now got their very own horror game, but obviously they can’t be referred to as Furbies due to copyright reasons. I also suggest that you don’t look directly into their eyes for too long, because in the immortal words of Sam Loomis, what lives behind those eyes is “purely and simply evil”.

And I can guarantee that the trailer below, which resembles an early ’90s  toy commercial, will give you the shits.

Who remembers Talking Tattletail? It was SO creepy, right??
There’s not much reference online but the original version, Mama Tattletail, was recalled years earlier… and I’m pretty sure I know why.

Tattletail is a short, story-driven first person horror game about everyone’s favorite talking toy from the 90’s. You opened your Tattletail before Christmas, and now he won’t stay in his box. Can you keep him out of trouble until Christmas day? Or will Mama Tattletail find her baby and hunt you down first? I heard she was recalled after she ate a kid’s eyes out. Just a rumor.

Obey Tattletail’s mischevious demands.

Feed, Brush, and Recharge Tattletail… or he’ll never shut up.

Shake your flashlight to charge it… but be careful. Someone might hear.

Do not wake up Mama Tattletail

DO NOT MAKE LOUD NOISES NEAR MAMA TATTLETAIL

This is our first game as Waygetter Electronics. We’d love to hear your feedback!!

Please report all sightings of Mama Tattletail to Waygetter Electronics

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Nightmare Presents: Loneliness Is in Your Blood by Cadwell Turnbull

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Happy New Year to one and all!  The first 2017 entry in our monthly short story feature presented in conjunction with Nightmare Magazine is “Loneliness Is in Your Blood” by Cadwell Turnbull from the publication’s January issue. You can also listen to a podcast version.

We hope you enjoy it!

 

LONELINESS IS IN YOUR BLOOD
by
Cadwell Turnbull

This is how you live forever.

You cup your fingers under your chin, dig your nails into the soft meat and peel your skin away. First up and over your head, letting it fall on your back like a hood, and then sliding your fingers beneath the skin on your clavicle and slipping the lifted layers of tissue over the curve of your shoulders.

You squirm and shimmy and writhe, curling your skin away from the sticky braids of muscle on your arms, your ribs, your stomach, your hips, your thighs. You let the wet membrane fall in a heap, stepping out of it like clothes. You hide it somewhere dark, somewhere difficult to find.

Your prey can’t see you without your skin, can’t hear you shuffle into their resting places. They sleep quietly as you unlatch your tongue and stab its tapered edge into the throbbing vein of their necks. They won’t make a sound as you gorge yourself on their blood. You float from house to house, drinking your fill, until your tongue is fat in your mouth and your puckered lips cannot close around it.

When you go home you slide into your expectant skin, careful to check for salt. You always check for salt. Others don’t want to see you live forever. Eternity is a coveted thing, even if it’s lonely.

• • • •

This is what they know of you.

“She does suck blood,” they say. “We have stories from the old land.”

The slaves will see the bruised flesh on their necks and know what you are. Sukunyoa. Sukunyante. Old heg. They use many names.

“Nonsense,” the pale men say.

The pale men will not listen. They believe the cold continent invented monsters. You don’t mind their arrogance. You take your fill of them, too.

As they sleep, you hide your sting among mosquito bites. They scratch at the little purple wound when you finish. You watch them through lidless eyes. You smile a lipless smile.

Sometimes you go into their nurseries and kiss the sleeping babies. You stab through their doughy flesh, find their spindly veins. You take just enough. No more.

It’s so sweet. Like sugarcane and tamarind stew. Like mango pulp. Rich enough to last you for days. When you fold your skin back over your tangle of muscle and fat you will see the glow. They are wrong about you, you think to yourself. You are beautiful. You will always be beautiful.

• • • •

This is how you quell your hunger.

You keep lovers.

You enter their wattle and daub slave huts in the dark of night, and they are alarmed at first. But then they see you. They see how you glow. They see your full lips and roll their eyes along your curves as you stand naked before them, and they cannot help themselves. They are under your spell. They touch you, marvel at your smoothness, at how your body gives under their touch.

The men are easy. They are weak in this way. You see the blood move from their eyes straight to their groins. They allow you to have them right away. You straddle them until they cannot bear it. It is over too quickly.

The women are more difficult. But once you have them they remember you. They wait for you to come to them and they unfold themselves at your pleasure. You kiss them, run your hands along their bodies, leave tongue trails on their flesh.

But you remain unfulfilled. The loneliness swells with each encounter.

“Where you from?” your lovers ask when they are lying peacefully in your arms.

“Same place as you,” you say. “I came ’cross the salt sea, smuggled away on a ship.”

“But you’re free,” they say. “How?”

You stroke their hair. “I escaped,” you say.

“How?” they ask again.

You don’t answer that question. You don’t tell them that you can remove your skin. “You can be free too,” you say instead. “The pale men so few. Ah-you so many.”

Later, when the slaves are freed, you find your lovers in downtown Charlotte Amalie, drinking rum until they cannot stand, and it will be even easier. The men will finish far too quickly and the single women will take you home with them. The married women will follow you down to the beach and they will make love to you on the rocks in the moonlight, the waves applauding like a million small hands.

As you leave one of your lovers on Emerald Beach, her body naked and trembling in ecstasy, you finally see it. Your glow is fading. Panic presses in quickly, making you gasp for breath. Has this always been happening, this quiet loss of light?

Time answers you.

One day you look at your hands and you see a blotch of aged skin. Over several years it spreads up your arm and crawls its way across you like a stain. When you undress your skin, you find that the defined ridges of your muscles are growing smooth, blending together. Strands of gray hair start falling out. Your skin becomes an ashen husk, stretched and sagging, its elasticity lost. The blacks of your eyes spread, swallowing everything.

No amount of baby’s blood helps.

The women abandon you first. They don’t like the feel of you, how you grate against them like sand. And then the men, their weakness gone. Not even the drunkards will touch you. Everyone looks upon you like a stranger.

“Old higue,” they say. “Succouyant.” “Wangla lady.” They have so many names.

You don’t need lovers, you tell yourself. Only the blood. You can still live forever. You retreat back to your shanty deep in the bush. You only come out for the blood. You gorge yourself on it, more than you ever did before. Because you are thirsty, so thirsty. And worse, the loneliness has taken you and won’t let go.

• • • •

This is how you learn how you were born.

It happens over a century later. The houses are different, larger, harder to get into. People stay up all night staring at blinking screens, their faces aglow with shimmering light.

You wait for them to sleep and you slip through a window, your muscles smooth like glass. You find them, a man and a woman, lying in bed. They are beautiful and young. Their skin soft, so soft. You touch them and your envy is bitter in your mouth. You want them. You love them. When you kiss the man, he moans. When you stroke the woman’s hair, she eases into you. You unlatch your tongue and stab the man’s neck, and the blood is so sweet you have to steady yourself on your feet. Sweeter than cane juice. Than coconut tart. Than first love.

You start out slow, but then you lose yourself in the blood, in your loneliness. You’ve been alone for so long that your heart is a shriveled thing, and the only thing that will make it right is to fill it up with something fresh and powerful and alive.

When you realize what you’ve done, you are too blood drunk to care. You straddle the woman and plunge your swollen tongue into her and you pull her into you, all of her, as ravenously as you once satisfied your lovers. When you are done, they are empty and you are full, your belly pregnant with their blood. They lie together like mummified remains, their skin clinging to their bones.

You leave through the front door, drunkenly fumbling with new-fangled locks and then you are out into the night air. You speed through the streets and through the bush, almost flying; the blood has made you terribly fast. When you reach your shanty, you drape your stretched skin over yourself, the gray husk hanging off you like rags.

In the morning, you find that your belly is still full—

And kicking.

• • • •

This is how you become shed skin.

She is a normal girl as far as you can tell. Your ruined breasts produce milk for her, and she drinks from them. When she is old enough to eat real food, you hang your skin up and slip from house to house, gathering food and clothes. You don’t drink of the blood. Fear stays your tongue.

While you sleep, she slips through the bush, down winding roads and small alleyways. She returns with scarred steel forks, worn copper keys, and glossy photographs of smiling people frozen in time. She tells you stories about big houses with windows—oh how she loves windows, and how they gleam in the sun and how she can see her glowing face in them.

“People call me bush girl,” she tells you. “They try to catch me.”

You’ve heard worse names. “Don’t go out on your own,” you tell her. “Stay here with me.”

She folds her arms and glares at you. “This place ugly,” she tells you. “You ugly.”

Your shanty is made of wattle and daub, like those old slave huts from the days when you were most beautiful. It is falling apart in places and the roof leaks.

You spend days repairing it because this is all you can do, because you cannot repair yourself.

“It still ugly,” she says.

“What can I do, love?” You try to stroke her hair and she recoils.

“Live like other people.”

“I’m not like other people,” you tell her. She screams at you, hits you with her fists. Your skin crinkles like old paper, pieces of you flaking away.

“I am lonely,” she tells you, and you understand. That you are not human enough to be a companion. That loneliness is in your blood, and now in hers.

You remember a memory you’d chosen to forget: a woman from a long time ago, from across the wide ocean, who wore her skin like a withered cape, and you realize who she was and what you are and what eternity truly means.

One day the girl asks for the blood. She opens her mouth and her tongue uncoils like a snake, its edge needle-sharp.

“So this is where I eat myself,” you whisper to no one.

You teach her how to peel her skin away. You show her where to place her fingers, how to hide the soft pink shell that she leaves behind. You advise her to check for salt on her return, to always check for salt.

“You’ll burn up,” you warn.

You take her for her first blood. You show her where to place her bite, right into the pulsing vein of a little boy’s neck. The boy is not much younger than she is.

She drinks much too fast and she staggers back. You tell her that she doesn’t have to take all of it. She doesn’t require another’s life, only the blood. She nods, but you know that eternity is long and she will someday forget, when her loneliness is too much to bear.

Watching her ecstasy, you feel that old unbearable hunger, the loneliness biting at you, and you give into it, plunging your sharp tongue into the boy’s neck. You take in a gulp of blood and you reel back, gasping in pain, the blood bitter and burning in your mouth.

“What’s wrong?” the girl says absently, still swimming in the blood.

“Nothing,” you say. “I am nothing at all.”

• • • •

This is how you remind yourself you’re still alive.

One night, when the girl is out gorging herself on blood, you hurl off your husk, letting it fall wherever it may.

You go down to the beach, breathing in the salt, feeling it burn in your mouth and sizzle in the slits of your nose. You walk to where the sand is wet and write out your entire life along the shore with your fingers. You confess to everything, holding nothing back, watching the salty tide come in as you do.

When you are finished, you walk to the water’s edge and wade in. You swim until there’s nothing left.

ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Cadwell Turnbull is a recent graduate from the North Carolina State University’s Creative Writing MFA in Fiction and English MA in Linguistics. He was the winner of the 2014 NCSU Prize for Short Fiction for his story “Ears” and attended Clarion West 2016. Currently he is working on a novel set in near-future U.S. Virgin Islands after a benevolent alien colonization. His day job entails making linguistics podcasts for people that like listening to linguists talk about linguistics for some reason.

ABOUT NIGHTMARE
Nightmare Magazine is edited by bestselling anthology editor John Joseph Adams (Wastelands, The Living Dead). This month’s issue also contains fiction from Lilliam Rivera, Carrie Vaughn, and Ashok Banker. We also have the latest installment of our column on horror, “The H Word,” and of course we’ll have author spotlights with our authors, plus a feature interview with Seanan McGuire (a/k/a Mira Grant) and an assortment of other nonfiction.

You can wait for (most of) the rest of this month’s contents to be serialized online, or you can buy the whole issue right now in convenient eBook format for just $2.99. You can also subscribe and get each issue delivered to you automatically every month, for the discounted price of just $1.99 per issue. This month’s issue is a great one, so be sure to check it out. And while you’re at it, tell a friend about Nightmare!

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Watch Me Die On DVD

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Referred to in its Indiegogo campaign as “the most hardcore horror movie ever”, the found footage film Watch Me Die from director Thomas Banuelos has finally made its way onto DVD, and you can order yours on Amazon. It stars Jon-Paul Vertuccio, Arielle Brachfeld, and Laura Colquhoun.

Watch Me Die is presented entirely from the perspective of the nameless serial killer’s video camera as he goes about his murderous business, similar to how to Maniac remake was presented through Frank’s eyes. So it sounds like we’re in for one hell of a nasty and unforgiving flick.

Synopsis:
In this found-footage horror movie, a nameless serial killer prowls the sets of sleazy exploitation movies in search of his latest female victim. Each gruesome act of torture and murder that follows is captured up-close, on the killer’s video camera — the blood-soaked footage of a psychopath’s snuff film. As the killer finds himself tormented by increasingly complex feelings towards the sexy women he murders, the lines begin to blur between killer and victim, viewer and viewed, reality and illusion. What is real and what is fake? Nothing is certain until the blood starts to flow.

The post Watch Me Die On DVD appeared first on Dread Central.

Bill Oberst Jr. Will Stay Up After Hours

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We love Bill Oberst Jr. round these parts, so we’re psyched about the fact that he’s starring in the new short After Hours, which has dropped a pretty creepy trailer. Directed by Michael Aguiar and also starring Gabriel Lee and Tracy Decresie, you can learn more about the film on IMDb and its official Facebook page.

Synopsis:
This is the first collaboration between Michael Aguiar, of Bravestar Productions and Writer Adam Weber. The story centers on Lauren Deakin, a human resources employee of a local store who finds herself being stalked by someone or something after hours.

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Judge Dredd Gets Cursed with Lycanthropy in March

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I’ll admit, I always preferred the British Judge Dredd comics to the American ones because I felt that they were never quite able to replicate that quintessential British humor, but I’ll still be picking up IDW’s Judge Dredd: Deviations, which hits stores in March.

Taking an approach similar to Marvel’s What If comics, Deviations comes from writer and artist John McCrea and will examine what would have happened had Dredd’s lycanthropy from the Cry of the Werewolf series never been cured. So yeah, he may be the law, by he also turns into a bloodthirsty beast whenever there’s a full moon. I guess that would give criminals an incentive to stay at home on such a night. I mean, getting arrested or hit with a baton is one thing, but being eaten by something with razor-sharp fangs is something else.

You can learn more about Deviations on IDW’s official website. The original Cry of the Werewolf series, which both Judge Dredd creator John Wagner and recently departed artist Steve Dillon both worked on, can be purchased here.

Judge Dredd: Deviations—SPOTLIGHT

John McCrea (w & a & c)

In a world where Judge Dredd turned into a werewolf… and stayed that way! The legendary creator of Dogwelder, John McCrea, takes a sideways look at one of the more celebrated Dredd stories, “Cry of the Werewolf” by John Wagner & Alan Grant and the late, great Steve Dillon. Brace yourself for… “Howl of the Wolf!”

FC • 40 pages • $4.99

Judge Dredd: Deviations —Mash-Up Variant

John McCrea (w & a) • Andrew Currie (c)

Bullet points:

Check out the Mash-up variant!
Find out what happens in a world… where Judge Dredd turned into a werewolf—and stayed that way!
Part of IDW’s Deviations five-week event! Variant cover by Ryan Brown!

The post Judge Dredd Gets Cursed with Lycanthropy in March appeared first on Dread Central.

Stray (2016)

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Starring Gabrielle Stone, Dan McGlaughlin, Samantha Fairfield Walsh

Directed by Nena Eskridge


Director Nena Eskridge’s maiden voyage into filmmaking waters is Stray, a dramatic-thriller that employs some dark doses of mind-altering techniques to give the viewer something to ponder during its runtime, and aside from some slow pacing and extremely thematic delivery, it still serves as a decent watch for those who like their white-knucklers with a little Lifetime Movie network tossed in.

Dee Wallace Stone’s daughter Gabrielle excels here in her portrayal of Jennifer, a woman who appears to be running from some heavy trauma in her life. We catch a cut-shot of her fleeing from a man’s van deep in the woods after she’s shanked him in order to beat-feet, and after a quick jump, we see she’s now knocked up and residing in a sleepy-town called Chestnut Hill. Her allegation that the baby’s father-to-be (McGlaughlin), the owner of a local bar, isn’t exactly sitting well with his fiancee, Sarah (Walsh) – more importantly, the wedge has been driven between the two, and we’re all left to sit among the fallout, and WOW, is it gonna be bad. After the baby has been born, Jennifer’s attitude begins to take a very disturbing shift, and her once sweet demeanor dissolves into deceitful tactics and vengeful motives…hey, nobody ever said a love triangle didn’t come without its downsides!

Stone’s performance here is what holds this film together, as she pulls off the 180-degree turn to completely smack your gray matter into thinking one thing about her character, then promptly delivering an overhand-right to sway your decision once again – strong and convincing, to say the least. Also a huge bouquet of “well-done” roses should be delivered to Eskridge for pulling off this film on a moderately small budget, all the while keeping it looking real and not losing any emotion and conveyance of such to the tiny allocation. Tempo, you say? Okay, now we’ve got a bit of an issue: if you’re not down with the whole “soap-opera-like” format of the film, then this one might not be your cup of tea, but stay the course, evil-doers: there’s enough dark-deception and underlying terror to keep an audience hooked, and I could surely offer this up as a one-timer – give it a peek when it crosses your path.

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First Look at the Bornless Ones

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Ready to raise a little hell? Then this latest demonfest could be right up your alley! Read on for your first look at Bornless Ones.

From the Press Release:
In the tradition of The Evil Dead and starring “The Newsroom’s” Margaret Judson and “Teen Wolf’s” Michael Johnston, writer/director Alexander Babaev’s Bornless Ones comes to theaters and VOD February 10, 2017.

Having just moved to a remote home near an institution to better care for her brother, Zach, Emily invites a few friends over to help her unpack. They soon discover strange symbols etched into the boards on the windows. In an effort to clean the house, they clear them away, soon realizing the gravity of their mistake as they one by one become possessed by an evil force.

Margaret Judson, Devin Goodsell, Michael Johnston, Mark Furze, Bobby T, and David Banks star in an “atmospheric and demon-filled fright-fest” in theaters and On Demand beginning February 10th.

The Bornless Ones The Bornless Ones The Bornless Ones The Bornless Ones The Bornless Ones The Bornless Ones The Bornless Ones The Bornless Ones

The Bornless Ones

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Split Image Gallery Materializes to Dominate Your Wednesday

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It’s already hump day, and to make sure you’re keeping the upcoming film Split on your radar, Universal Pictures has released a gallery’s worth of new images, including a few behind-the-scenes shots with M. Night Shyamalan.

Split Release Details:
Writer/director/producer M. Night Shyamalan returns to the captivating grip of The Sixth Sense, Unbreakable, and Signs with Split (review), an original thriller that delves into the mysterious recesses of one man’s fractured, gifted mind. Following last year’s breakout hit The Visit, Shyamalan reunites with producer Jason Blum (The Purge and Insidious series, The Gift) for the film, which Universal Pictures is releasing on January 20th.

While the mental divisions of those with dissociative identity disorder have long fascinated and eluded science, it is believed that some can also manifest unique physical attributes for each personality, a cognitive and physiological prism within a single being.

For Split, Shyamalan and Blum reassemble their core team from The Visit, the No. 1-grossing horror film of 2015. Their fellow collaborators include producer Marc Bienstock and executive producers Ashwin Rajan and Steven Schneider.

Synopsis:
Though Kevin (James McAvoy) has evidenced 23 personalities to his trusted psychiatrist, Dr. Fletcher (Betty Buckley), there remains one still submerged who is set to materialize and dominate all the others. Compelled to abduct three teenage girls led by the willful, observant Casey (Anya Taylor-Joy), Kevin reaches a war for survival among all of those contained within him—as well as everyone around him—as the walls between his compartments shatter apart.

Split

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See an Exclusive Sneak Peek of Ghosts in the Hood Episode 1.01 – Scared Straight Outta Compton

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Right before Halloween last year, WE tv announced the new paranormal series “Ghosts in the Hood” would be arriving on January 5th, and now that we’re just a day away from the premiere, we have an exclusive sneak peek to share.

And that’s not all… if you head over to wetv.com, you can watch the first episode in its entirety! In this ep, titled “Scared Straight Outta Compton,” the O.P.O. takes to the streets of Compton to investigate Adam’s Mortuary, a drive-thru funeral home, which is losing business due to rumors of its hauntings. The next case takes the group to Hollywood to investigate a hoarder’s home where something cursed is causing strange dreams. Can the O.P.O. work together to fight through their own fear in order to exorcise the evil? Will the team be able to bring peace of mind to those haunted?

About “Ghosts in the Hood”:
WE tv’s new paranormal docu-series “Ghosts in the Hood” blends humor with the supernatural and follows a group of diverse ghost hunters as they investigate unexplained phenomena across Los Angeles. Premiering on Thursday, January 5, 2017, on WE tv, the show follows the ghost-hunting team of O.P.O. (Official Paranormal Operations), who go where other ghost hunters typically don’t – from the LBC to Altadena – bringing their signature humor along with them. WE tv has produced six hour-long episodes of the series.

In each episode O.P.O. responds to two different clients in distress. Whether they live in a haunted home or run a business plagued by spirits, O.P.O. has a strong track record of resolving unexplained issues for their clients, by either proving or disproving that something paranormal is plaguing them.

“Ghosts in the Hood” is produced for WE tv by Gurney Productions and executive produced by Scott Gurney and Deirdre Gurney. Mike Odair and Todd Hurvitz also executive produce. In-house executive producers for WE tv are Lauren Gellert, David Stefanou, and Sitarah Pendelton-Eaglin.

Meet O.P.O.:

  • Defecio Stoglin – The CEO of O.P.O., Defecio was compelled by his passion for the paranormal and founded and created Official Paranormal Operations to help out everyday people who are dealing problems of the supernatural kind. With his keen and eager eye for investigating, Defecio tries to bring peace of mind to his clients.
  • Jasmine Orpilla – A verified medium, Jasmine comes to speak to the departed spirits that inhabit the haunted sites investigated by O.P.O. Jasmine has been communicating with spirits for quite a number of years and as a result has honed and developed her contact skills to the other side.
  • Dave Purdy – The technical expert for O.P.O., Dave has a passion for all things technical and a knack for building his own gear. He builds and creates the gear used to collect evidence of paranormal activity for clients, and he is the lead on revealing the found evidence once the investigation is over. His love for the paranormal and talent for creating innovative technologies makes him the perfect tech expert for O.P.O.
  • Matty Richards – A family friend of Defecio from New York, Matty is also a budding comedian and actor, providing much needed comic relief for the group, as well as being O.P.O.’s resident scaredy cat. Although he has no previous ghost-hunting skills, he is currently learning the ins and outs to help O.P.O. any way he can.
  • Maunda Oyin – As the group’s chief researcher, Maunda does anything she can to supply context for the frightening situations the crew is about to head into. Using her naturally inquisitive mind, Maunda digs into the history of every haunting, going to libraries, records offices, even traveling door-to-door in the neighborhoods where they’re investigating, to maximize O.P.O.’s chances of discovering information useful to their case.

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The Girl With All The Gifts Arrives on VOD; New Trailer

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Coming at us via Saban Films is the adaptation of M.R. Carey’s same-named novel, Colm McCarthy’s infection flick The Girl with All the Gifts. It will premiere exclusively on DirecTV on January 26 before hitting theaters and VOD on February 24. Check out the new trailer below.

The post-apocalyptic thriller stars Gemma Arterton (Hansel & Gretel: Witch Hunters, Clash of the Titans), Paddy Considine (The Bourne Ultimatum, Hot Fuzz), six-time Academy Award nominee Glenn Close (Guardians of the Galaxy, Albert Nobbs, Dangerous Liaisons), and Sennia Nanua, in her breakthrough performance.

The Girl with All the Gifts is set in a dystopian world where a seemingly normal and very intelligent little girl lives in an underground army bunker with other children her age. They are all experimental cases being examined by scientists – led by Dr. Caldwell (Close) – to find a cure for a fungal spore that has infected the planet.

Carey has adapted his novel into a film with an unmatched level of cataclysm,” said Saban Films’ Bill Bromiley. “The Girl with All the Gifts is a sophisticated movie, with McCarthy’s vision and this dynamic cast, and we know that our audiences will be hooked from start to finish.”

The BFI (British Film Institute) and Creative England financed the film, which was produced by Camille Gatin and Angus Lamont. Bill Bromiley and Ness Saban negotiated the deal on behalf of Saban Films with Altitude’s Mike Runagall representing the filmmakers. Altitude Film Sales is handling ROW sales. Warner Bros. UK will release the film in the UK.

the girl with all 1

the girl with all 2

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New Split Clip Introduces Hedwig

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Get ready to meet Hedwig. He has red socks, ya know. Don’t believe us? Check out this latest clip from M. Night Shayamalan’s upcoming film Split.

Split Release Details:
Writer/director/producer M. Night Shyamalan returns to the captivating grip of The Sixth Sense, Unbreakable, and Signs with Split (review), an original thriller that delves into the mysterious recesses of one man’s fractured, gifted mind. Following last year’s breakout hit The Visit, Shyamalan reunites with producer Jason Blum (The Purge and Insidious series, The Gift) for the film, which Universal Pictures is releasing on January 20th.

While the mental divisions of those with dissociative identity disorder have long fascinated and eluded science, it is believed that some can also manifest unique physical attributes for each personality, a cognitive and physiological prism within a single being.

For Split, Shyamalan and Blum reassemble their core team from The Visit, the No. 1-grossing horror film of 2015. Their fellow collaborators include producer Marc Bienstock and executive producers Ashwin Rajan and Steven Schneider.

Synopsis:
Though Kevin (James McAvoy) has evidenced 23 personalities to his trusted psychiatrist, Dr. Fletcher (Betty Buckley), there remains one still submerged who is set to materialize and dominate all the others. Compelled to abduct three teenage girls led by the willful, observant Casey (Anya Taylor-Joy), Kevin reaches a war for survival among all of those contained within him—as well as everyone around him—as the walls between his compartments shatter apart.

Split

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XLrator Media Captures the Drifter

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There’s nothing more dangerous than outlaws with nothing left to lose. Except maybe a town filled with psycho cannibals. Yep, psycho cannibals totally trumps outlaws. Enter the Drifter.

From the Press Release:
XLrator Media has acquired North American distribution rights to the post-apocalyptic horror-thriller DRIFTER and will release the film in theaters on February 24 and on VOD and iTunes February 28.

DRIFTER was directed and produced by Chris von Hoffmann in his feature film debut and co-written by von Hoffmann (based on his story) and Aria Emory. The film stars Drew Harwood, Aria Emory, James McCabe, Monique Rosario, Rebecca Fraiser and Anthony Ficco. Chris von Hoffmann previously directed several short films, including Fuel Junkie, White Trash and Vodka 7, which have won awards at various film festivals.

The film follows a pair of outlaw brothers (Drew Harwood and Aria Emory) who seek temporary refuge in a desolate town inhabited by a family of psychotic cannibalistic lunatics.

“DRIFTER is a stylish and wicked thriller infusing bloodthirsty cannibals with a Mad Max aesthetic that heralds Chris von Hoffmann as a young director to watch. We’re excited to bring genre fans his feature film debut and see what he does next,” said XLrator Media CEO Barry Gordon.

The deal was negotiated by XLrator Media’s Barry Gordon and Mike Radiloff with Lotus Entertainment’s Daniel Brandt on behalf of the filmmakers. Chris von Hoffmann is represented by Grandview and Creative Artists Agency.

Drifter

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Slender Man Headed to the Big Screen

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Creepypastas have been ruling the horror roost lately and the grand daddy of ’em all is finally getting the big screen treatment. According to Deadline Sylvain White has been set to direct Slender Man, the Screen Gems thriller that will begin production by the spring.

White made his feature directing debut with Screen Gems on the sleeper hit Stomp the Yard, and also directed The Losers. Scripted by David Birke, Slender Man revolves around a tall, thin horrifying figure with unnaturally long arms and a featureless fact, who is reputed to be responsible for the haunting and disappearance of countless children and teens.

It was hatched as a multi-platform property, and Screen Gems last year acquired the screen rights from Mythology Entertainment, Madhouse Entertainment, and No Dream Entertainment. Bradley Fischer, James Vanderbilt and William Sherak are producing for Mythology, along with Madhouse’s Robyn Meisinger and No Dream’s Sarah Snow. Tracey Nyberg is exec producing with Louis Sallerson, Adam Kolbrenner and Ryan Cunningham.

SLENDER MAN

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TONIGHT! #Brainwaves Episode 28 – Paranormal Investigator Sean Austin

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We’re baaaa-aaaack! And we’re bringing the spooky with us! The first 2017 episode of Brainwaves: Horror and Paranormal Talk Radio is upon us, and we plan on providing plenty of shivers to kick off the new year!

Joining us live will be paranormal investigator Sean Austin (“The Demon Files”), and this dude has stories to tell along with some chilling EVPs. Bring your nightlights, and tune in TONIGHT at 9:00PM PT/12:00 ET for all the scary.

It’s radio without a safety net, kids. It’s Brainwaves: Horror and Paranormal Talk Radio.

PLEASE SUPPORT BRAINWAVES: HORROR AND PARANORMAL TALK RADIO ON PATREON!

Sean Austin Brainwaves

Listen to Stitcher

Brainwaves: Horror and Paranormal Talk Radio is available to subscribe to on iTunes. Not an iTunes user?  You can also listen right here on the site.

Also you can hit Dread Central on Facebook on most Wednesday nights to watch a live stream of the show as it happens.

Spooky, funny, touching, honest, offensive, and at times completely random, Brainwaves airs live every Wednesday evening beginning at 9:00 PM Pacific Time (12:00 midnight Eastern Time) and runs about 3 hours per episode.

Knetter and Creepy 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, or call in from a landline or cellphone – 858 480 7789. The duo also take questions via Twitter; you can reach us at @BrainwavesRadio or @UncleCreepy and @JoeKnetter using the hashtag #BrainWaves.

Have a ghost story or a paranormal story but can’t call in? Feel free to email it to me directly at UncleCreepy@dreadcentral.com with “Brainwaves Story” in your subject line. You can now become a fan of the show via the official… BRAINWAVES FACEBOOK PAGE!

Brainwaves: Horror and Paranormal Talk Radio is hosted live (with shows to be archived as they progress) right here on Dread Central. You can tune in and listen via the FREE TuneIn Radio app or listen to TuneIn right through the website!

For more information and to listen live independent of TuneIn, visit the Deep Talk Radio Network website, “like” Deep Talk Radio on Facebook, and follow Deep Talk Radio on Twitter. And don’t forget to subscribe to Brainwaves on iTunes.

How to Contact Brainwaves

Scared to Call

Brainwaves-logo-l

The post TONIGHT! #Brainwaves Episode 28 – Paranormal Investigator Sean Austin appeared first on Dread Central.

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