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Skinned Deep (2004)

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‘A new icon of terror for a new generation of fear, meet the Surgeon General’

Skinned Deep is a 2004 American horror film written, produced and directed by special effects and makeup artist Gabe [Gabriel] Bartalos. In some territories it was released as Berserker.

The film’s music score was composed by David Davidson (Blood Surf; SleepStalker) and, oddly, Captain Sensible of punk-goth-psychedelic band The Damned.

Main cast:

Les Pollack, Aaron Sims, Kurt Carley, Linda Weinrib, Forrest J Ackerman (Braindead; Scalps; Queen of Blood; editor of Famous Monsters of Filmland), Eric Bennett and Warwick Davis (Leprechaun series).

1056289__111124805Plot:

While taking a family trip, the Rockwell family become lost on the highway. When their car gets a flat, father Phil (Eric Bennett) goes to a convenience store to find help and a strange old woman invites them to stay with her while one of her sons fixes their car.

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The old woman introduces the family to her strange sons: Plates (Warwick Davis), Brain (Jason Dugre), and one whom the woman calls “Surgeon General” (Kurt Carley). When Mrs. Rockwell takes a picture of Surgeon General, he kills her. Plates starts throwing plates at Phil, who is then murdered by Surgeon General. The Rockwell children, Tina and Matthew, escape through a window and are pursued by Surgeon General and Plates…

Reviews:

“There’s simply no grey area with Skinned Deep — either you love it or you hate it. I, for one, adore the movie, and am quick to recommend it to those with like-minded sensibilities. Those of you who can overlook Bartalos’ shaky direction, the plethora of crumby performances, and outrageously stupid script will be presented with a strangely Lynchian gorefest that doesn’t going one toke over the line.” Todd, Killerflix

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“There is nothing in the film remotely resembling a real situation or person, the action is edited together in an annoyingly disjointed manner and the director could hardly keep still, combining an array of awful shots in a haphazard way. It is horribly bad but never scares or thrills and the attempts at comedy are incredibly childish. The only decent actor in the film is Warwick Davis and they made him wear a backpack full of plates and gave him a monologue about his plate obsession” Eat Horror

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“Bartalos is clearly more interested in disturbing the viewer through the sheer weirdness of the proceedings, and throws in scenes which are memorable rather than shocking. There is a fair amount of blood, and some good special effects, made all the more impressive by the obviously low budget, although most of the gore is either played for laughs or is simply too odd to cause offence.” James Mudge, Beyond Hollywood

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“Now, Gabe Bartalos is a perfectly talented makeup artist. His artistic creations have often been the only good thing about some otherwise perfectly shitty movies, including some of the latter entries into the Leprechaun series. Sadly, at some point ol’ Gabe got in into his gin-soaked head that knowing how to make an oozing stomach wound out of latex made him a qualified writer and director. For the record, it did not.” Ben Platt, Something Awful

Cast and characters:

  • Forrest J Ackerman as Forrey
  • Eric Bennett as Phil Rockwell
  • Jason Dugre as Brain
  • Warwick Davis as Plates
  • Karoline Brandt as Tina Rockwell
  • Peter Iasillo, Jr. as Petey
  • Kurt Carley as Surgeon General
  • Bill Butts as Graine
  • Neil Dooley as Pig Pen
  • Joel Harlow as Octobaby

Wikipedia | IMDb



The Gathering (2002)

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‘The horror is real. The terror is eternal.’

The Gathering is a 2002 horror thriller film directed by Brian Gilbert (Wilde) from a screenplay by author Anthony Horowitz (Edge: Horowitz Graphic HorrorThe Power of Five aka The Gatekeepers series; Groosham Grange).

Released internationally, the $18 million movie sat on the shelf until 2007 for a US DVD release.

Main cast:

Christina Ricci (CursedSleepy Hollow; The Addams Family and sequel), Ioan Gruffudd, Kerry Fox, Stephen Dillane, Simon Russell Beale, Robert Hardy (Dark Places; Demons of the Mind; Psychomania), Jessica Mann, Harry Forrester, Peter McNamara, Steven Mustoe. Mackenzie Crook (Pirates of the Caribbean) has a minor role as one of the gatherers.

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Plot:

American Cassie Grant (Christina Ricci) is wandering through England on foot. On her way to Ashby Wake, Cassie is hit by a car. The driver of the car, Mrs Marion Kirkman (Kerry Fox), takes her to hospital but Cassie merely has scratches and temporarily lost her memory due to the accident. Marion invites Cassie to stay at her house, as feels guilty and responsible.

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While recovering, Cassie encounters a man named Dan Blakely (Ioan Gruffudd), whom she believes she knows, but with no idea from where. Cassie becomes attached to Marion Kirkman’s son, Michael (Harry Forrester) and becomes acquainted with her husband Simon (Stephen Dillane), an art historian, who is examining a church from Early Christianity (built near Glastonbury during the first century AD) after the arrival of Joseph of Arimathea.

This buried church was recently discovered by two visitors to the Glastonbury Festival who died after falling down a hole through the open roof. In the church there is a relief made of stone, which illustrates the crucifixion of Jesus Christ. Also depicted are many curious onlookers who appear to be observing the gruesome scene…

Reviews:

” … an occult thriller so dull, dreary and dangerously dry it boggles the mind. Who exactly is the target audience for a horror movie with no horror, a thriller with no thrills, and a movie with no clear focus on what it wants to say?” Scott Weinberg, DVD Talk

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” … you can ruin a story with editing, but you can’t ruin what was always a bunch of terrible performances, Ricci’s key among them. Here, she’s lumbering and inept, offering the worst performance of her career. She seems openly disinterested in the whole mess, barreling through her dialogue with no regard to the character, just so long as she can wrap things up before dinner.” David Cornelius, eFilmCritic.com

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“It all sounds rather creepy, and the premise is good, but this film fails on so many levels. There are no scares, zero tension and even bizarre incidents like Ricci being chased through the town whilst being stared at by locals don’t create any sense of panic or confusion.” Matt Wavish, Horror Cult Films

“Director Brian Gilbert overuses a few simple tricks for scares. Throughout, the writing and acting are pedestrian. British locations are used to good effect. The big surprise ending is really screwy.” Mike Mayo, The Horror Show Guide

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Buy: Amazon.com | Amazon.co.uk | Amazon.ca

Filming locations:

Isle of Man
Northleach, Gloucestershire
Penshurst Place, Penshurst, Kent
Wells Cathedral, Wells, Somerset

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Versions:

There are two different versions of the film. In the USA, the United Kingdom and in Germany only an abridged version was published on DVD, which is 13 minutes shorter than the original. A sex scene and dialogue was edited out. This abridged version lasts exactly 83:31 (PAL-DVD). The unabridged TV version, shown on ZDF in Germany and on BBC in the UK, and released on DVD in France, Poland and Japan, lasts approx. 97 minutes (PAL) and 101 minutes (NTSC).

Wikipedia | IMDb | Image credits: Horror Cult Films


Monkey Man of New Delhi – urban myth

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In this artist's rendition from the Indian daily the Hindustan Times, two versions are seen Wednesday May 16, 2001 of the "monkey man" which allegedly attacked over 50 people Monday.  Police are blaming a band of men in masks for what they call hysteria among residents of New Delhi, who claim a mysterious "monkey man" has been attacking people late at night. (AP Photo/Hindustan Times)

The Monkey Man of New Delhi is a monster that was reported roaming Delhi, India, in mid-2001.

In May 2001, reports began to circulate in the Indian capital New Delhi of a strange monkey-like creature that was appearing at night and attacking people. Eyewitness accounts were often inconsistent, but tended to describe the creature as about four feet (120 cm) tall, covered in thick black hair, with a metal helmet, metal claws, glowing red eyes and three buttons on its chest; others, however, described the Monkey Man as having a more vulpine snout, and being up to eight feet tall, and muscular; it would leap from building to building like a parkour enthusiast.

Still others described it as a bandaged figure or as a helmeted thing. Theories on the nature of the Monkey Man ranged from an Avatar of the Hindu god Hanuman, to an Indian version of Bigfoot.

Many people reported being scratched, and two (by some reports, three) people even died when they leapt from the tops of buildings or fell down stairwells in a panic caused by what they thought was the attacker. At one point, exasperated police even issued artist’s impression drawings (see above) in an attempt to catch the creature.

Further sightings were reported in Kanpur in February 2002 and New Delhi in July 2002, the latter describing a monkey-like machine that sparkled red and blue lights

The entire incident has been described as an example of mass hysteria.

Wikipedia | Thanks to Blumhouse.com for inspiring this post


Dracula 2000 (2000)

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Dracula 2000, also known internationally as Dracula 2001, is a 2000 American horror film written and directed by Patrick Lussier (Drive AngryMy Bloody Valentine 3D; Dracula II and III) from a screenplay by Joel Soisson. The promotional title was Wes Craven Presents: Dracula 2000 as he was a co-executive producer.

Composer Marco Beltrami and a slew of nu-metal bands provided the soundtrack.

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The Miramax film was a critical and commercial disappointment – it cost a whopping $54 million but took just $47 million theatrically. On its initial video release, it grossed an additional $32 million in the US and Canada alone so two direct-to-video sequels were produced.

Main cast: 

Gerard Butler, Christopher Plummer (Vampire in Venice; Murder By Decree; The Pyx), Jonny Lee Miller, Justine Waddell, Omar Epps, Colleen Fitzpatrick, Jeri Ryan, and Jennifer Esposito.

Opening plot:

Matthew Van Helsing (Christopher Plummer), the alleged descendant of the famed 19th century Dutch medical doctor, Abraham Van Helsing, owns an antique shop in London in 2000.

One night with Van Helsing upstairs, his secretary, Solina (Jennifer Esposito), allows a group of thieves (Danny Masterson, Lochlyn Munro, Sean Patrick Thomas), led by her boyfriend, Marcus (Omar Epps), into the shop. The thieves infiltrate the shop’s underground high-security vault and find a sealed silver coffin which they escape with and flee to New Orleans, Louisiana.

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Aboard the plane, one of the thieves manages to open the coffin, revealing Count Dracula (Gerard Butler) who awakens and attacks the thieves, causing the plane to crash in the Louisiana swamps.

Dracula survives the crash and travels to New Orleans where college students Mary Heller (Justine Waddell) and Lucy Westerman (Colleen Ann Fitzpatrick) are living. Mary is estranged from her family and has recently been plagued by dreams of a strange, terrifying man…

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Reviews:

“There are some very good moments, most of them featuring the frail Van Helsing as he attempts to battle the fast and deadly vampires. Also, I appreciated the background given to Dracula’s aversion to silver, crosses, and God, as well as Dracula’s “true” origins. Not bad work, but it could have been much better.” Nix, Beyond Hollywood

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“With its corny one-liners punctuated by gore (“Never cross an antiques dealer!”—splat), standard heavy-metal soundtrack, and religious mumbo jumbo (Dracula turns out to be Judas Iscariot!), this film could have been a real hunk o’ junk. But Lussier’s brisk direction combines with Carol Spier’s stylish production design and Peter Pau’s feverish camera work to make it totally watchable.” Steve Newton, Ear of Newt

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“The formulaic big budget production is energetic and kind of fun in a curious way. The main reason is Plummer who’s able to deliver the silliest drivel with some conviction and make it sound good. The big effects are all right, and the stuff involving leeches and eyeballs really is nasty.” Mike Mayo, The Horror Show Guide

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Buy: Amazon.com | Amazon.co.uk | Amazon.ca

Dracula 2000 may not be rich in horror or story, but it’s entertaining genre fodder that you can sit back and amuse yourself with … Surely it’s not the best Dracula film ever injected in to the genre, but it’s a fun and solid vampire film that is a very apt reflection of the late nineties with a slew of stars either on their way out of the public consciousness or just about rise to fame.” Felix Vasquez, Cinema Crazed

“Dracula may stay undead in the new millennium, but there’s not a sign of life — oh, that bloodless acting — in this sorry mess.” Peter Travers, Rolling Stone

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Cast and characters:

Choice dialogue:

Dracula: “I don’t drink… coffee.”

“Never, ever, f*ck with an antiques dealer!”

Wikipedia | IMDb


The Ring (2002)

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The Ring is a 2002 American supernatural horror film directed by Gore Verbinski (Pirates of the Caribbean films) from a screenplay by Ehren Kruger (Dream House; The Skeleton Key; Scream 3). It is a remake of the 1998 Japanese horror film Ring, which was based on the novel Ring by Koji Suzuki.

screen-shot-2016-09-11-at-20-05-39The film was a major success, taking $249.3 million at the box office against a budget of $48 million. A sequel, The Ring Two, followed in 2005. In 2016, a belated prequel, Rings, is released on October 28th.

Main cast:

Naomi Watts (Shut In; King Kong), Martin Henderson (Devil’s Knot), Brian Cox (ANNATrick ‘r TreatManhunter)

Plot:

High school students Katie Embry and her friend Becca are bored at a sleepover and eventually discuss about an urban legend centering around a cursed videotape that supposedly kills the viewer seven days after initially viewing it.

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Katie later confesses to Becca that she watched the cursed videotape with her boyfriend and two other friends last week but Becca doesn’t believe her. At 10 PM, Katie goes downstairs only to witness several supernatural occurrences conspire. Frightened, she rushes upstairs and notices water leaking out of her bedroom. She sees an image of a well on her TV screen as an unseen force rushes towards her and kills her. Becca witnesses her death, leaving her traumatized and ultimately institutionalized.

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At Katie’s funeral, her aunt Rachel Keller, a troubled Seattle journalist, is asked by her mother to investigate the cause of Katie’s death. Her mother reveals to her that she found Katie’s gruesomely distorted corpse inside a closet and how the local doctors she consulted couldn’t find the exact cause of her mysterious death and simply stated that she died of a heart attack despite Katie being a healthy teenager.

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Rachel’s son Aidan is also shown to have seemingly predicted her death a week earlier, much to the concern of his teacher. Rachel also discovers that Katie’s boyfriend and her two other friends who watched the cursed videotape all died on the same date at 10 PM when Katie was killed…

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Reviews:

“The filmmakers have wisely stayed close to the original’s mood, which is somber and flat, with quick (near-subliminal) inserts and a soundtrack full of watery-grave groans and murmurs. They’ve also come up with a killer dead-horse motif. The movie is meant to get into you like a virus, and it does.” David Edelstein, Slate

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Buy: Amazon.co.uk

The Ring is a great remake of a cult horror flick, that happens to come from a major Hollywood studio while not falling into the same, annoying, plot devices that other recent horror films did.” Jeremy Conrad, IGN

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“… The Ring features a heroine several cuts above the average scream queen: Watts, whose worldly façade is chipped away as the film progresses, revealing an expression of ashen dread. Viewers made callous by too many cheap horror films may experience a similar reaction.” Keith Phipps, A.V. Club

“Enormous craft has been put into the movie, which looks just great, but the story goes beyond contrivance into the dizzy realms of the absurd … the movie’s ending explains and explains and explains, until finally you’d rather just give it a pass than sit through one more tedious flashback.” Roger Ebert

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“Atmosphere is a key factor in creating the experience that is The Ring. Almost every scene is shot in a washed-out, drab style that casts an effective pall of fear, dread, and foreboding over the entire film. Inserted shots of “The Ring” as “the last thing you see” tend to create in the viewer a feeling that you’re not actually watching the movie but rather the tape itself made into a feature film.” Mike, HorrorFreakNews

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Cast and characters:

Wikipedia | IMDb

 


The Mummy Returns (2001)

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The Mummy Returns is a 2001 American action-adventure horror film written and directed by Stephen Sommers and a sequel to his 1999 film The Mummy.

The film took $433 million at the box office worldwide against a reported budget of $98 million.

The 2002 prequel film The Scorpion King, which is set 5,000 years prior, was introduced in this film. It was followed by the 2008 sequel The Mummy: Tomb of the Dragon Emperor.

Main cast:

Brendan Fraser, Rachel Weisz, John Hannah, Arnold Vosloo, Oded Fehr, Patricia Velásquez, Dwayne “The Rock” Johnson, Alun Armstrong (Penny DreadfulVan Helsing; Sleepy Hollow).

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Plot:

In 3067 BC, the Scorpion King leads his army on a campaign to conquer the world. After fighting for seven years, his army is defeated while attacking Thebes and exiled to the desert of Ahm Shere, where his men die of heat exhaustion. After vowing to give Anubis his soul for the power to defeat his enemies, an oasis forms to hide the Scorpion King’s pyramid and he is given a legion of jackal warriors in return. The Army of Anubis sweeps across Egypt, but once their task is finished, Anubis claims the Scorpion King’s soul and his army.

In 1933, Rick and Evelyn O’Connell explore a ruined mortuary temple in ancient Thebes with their son, Alex, where they find the Bracelet of Anubis. In London, the bracelet locks onto Alex, showing him a vision directing him to Ahm Shere. Alex has seven days to reach the oasis, or the bracelet will kill him when the sun’s rays shine on the Scorpion King’s pyramid.

Evelyn is captured by an Egyptian cult who resurrect Imhotep; they wish to use his power to defeat the Scorpion King, giving him command of Anubis’ army to take over the world. The cult, led by Baltus Hafez, the British Museum’s curator, includes a warrior named Lock-Nah and Meela Nais, the reincarnation of Imhotep’s love interest Anck-su-namun. Rick sets out to rescue Evelyn, accompanied by her brother Jonathan and the Medjai Ardeth Bay…

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Reviews:

“In one or two sequences, Sommers goes in for the smash-and-grab editing and herky-jerky action of Gladiator, and quite often the computerized beasts are as flatly unreal as the now-quaint-looking latex and light shows of the Indy series. But Sommers also stages several peerless bits: a chase aboard a double-decker bus pursued by Imhotep’s fearsome guards; a run-in with vicious pygmy mummies gleefully ripped off from Jurassic Park and Gremlins; the final three-way throwdown between Rick, Imhotep, and the Scorpion King…” Rob Gonsalves, e-FilmCritic.com

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“Yes, many of the visual effects are stunning, but others are downright cheesy — especially an attempt to fuse the Rock’s head onto a scorpion’s body. It looks as if it was pasted on by a first-grader. The action sequences are just as uneven and repetitious.” Rita Kempley, Washington Post

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“The ads give the Rock, the World Wrestling Federation star, equal billing with Fraser. This is bait-and-switch. To call his appearance a “cameo” would be stretching it. He appears briefly at the beginning of the movie, is transmuted into a kind of transparent skeletal wraith and disappears until the end of the film, when he comes back as the dreaded Scorpion King. I am not sure, at the end, if we see the real Rock or merely his face, connected to computer-generated effects…” RogerEbert.com

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Cast and characters:

Filming locations:

Egypt
Heath & Reach, Bedfordshire, England
Petra, Jordan (Hijaz railway scene)
Mentmore Towers, Mentmore, Buckinghamshire, England
Morocco
Old Royal Naval College, Greenwich, London, England
Pinewood Studios, Iver Heath, Buckinghamshire, England
Shepperton Studios, Shepperton, Surrey, England
Tower Bridge, London, England
University College London, Bloomsbury, London, England (“British Museum”, exteriors)

Wikipedia | IMDb

 


Herschell Gordon Lewis – filmmaker

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Herschell Gordon Lewis (June 15, 1929 – September 26, 2016) was an American filmmaker, best known for creating the “splatter” subgenre of horror films.

He is often referred to as the “Godfather of Gore”, though his film career has included works in a range of exploitation film genres including juvenile delinquent films, nudie-cuties, two children’s films and at least one rural comedy.

Herschell Gordon Lewis was born in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania in 1929. His father died when he was six years old. His mother never remarried; and his family then moved to Chicago.

After graduating from high school, Lewis received a master’s degree in Journalism at Northwestern University in Evanston, Illinois. A few years later, he became a professor of English literature at Mississippi State University.

In 1953, Lewis began working for a friend’s advertising agency in Chicago while teaching graduate advertising courses at night at Roosevelt University. He began directing TV commercial advertisements.

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Lewis served as producer on his first film venture, The Prime Time (1959). He would assume directing duties on nearly all of his films from then on. His first in a lengthy series of collaborations with exploitation producer David F. Friedman, Living Venus (1961), was a fictitious account based on the story of Hugh Hefner and the beginnings of Playboy.

The two continued with a series of erotic films in the early 1960s. Typical of these nudies were the comedies Boin-n-g! (1963) and The Adventures of Lucky Pierre (1961).

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With the nudie market beginning to wane, Lewis and Friedman entered into uncharted territory with 1963’s seminal Blood Feast, considered by most critics to be the first “gore” film.

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Incredibly cheap and cheesy, the film nonetheless stunning audiences with the jaw-dropping gore on display. They formed queues at drive-ins to see it. The splatter sub-genre was born!

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The far superior Two Thousand Maniacs! (1964) followed, with a whole town getting in on the mayhem. And this one included great singalong ditty ‘The South’s Gonna Rise Again’

Color Me Blood Red (1965) followed the same formula but was about a deranged artist and more low key. Still, the full-color gore on display in these films caused a sensation, with horror film-makers throughout the world gradually saturating their productions with similarly shocking visual effects.

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Outside the gore sub-genre, Lewis pursued a wide gamut of other exploitation avenues. Some of the subjects he explored include juvenile delinquency (Just for the Hell of It, 1968), wife swapping (Suburban Roulette, 1968), the corruption of the music industry (Blast-Off Girls, 1967), and birth control (The Girl, the Body, and the Pill, 1967).

He was also not above tapping the children’s market, as with Jimmy the Boy Wonder (1966) and The Magic Land of Mother Goose (1967), which were padded out to feature film length by incorporating long foreign-made cartoons.

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Lewis financed and produced nearly all of his own movies with funds he made from his successful advertising firm based in Chicago. Always resourceful despite the low budgets he worked with, Lewis purchased the rights to an unfinished Bill Rebane film and completed it himself, re-titling the film Monster a Go-Go (1965). This approach demonstrated Lewis’s business savvy; by owning the rights to both features, he knew he would not get fleeced by theaters juggling the box office returns, a common practice at that time.

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Lewis’s third gore phase served to push the genre into even more outrageous shock territory. Starting with The Gruesome Twosome (1967), he went onto The Wizard of Gore (1968, released 1970) featured a stage magician who would mutilate his volunteers severely through a series of merciless routines.

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By The Gore Gore Girls (1972) he had begun to lampoon himself and this last dark comedy would mark his semi-retirement from film altogether. He decided to leave the filmmaking industry to work in copywriting and direct marketing, a subject on which he published several books in the 1980s.

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Meanwhile, throughout the 1980s and 1990s, interest in his splatter movies continued to grow as more and more horror fans began to appreciate the naive charm of his outlandish oeuvre. Sequels to Two Thousand Maniacs! and a remake of The Wizard of Gore proved that Lewis’ lasting influence on the horror genre had been firmly established.

In 2002, Lewis himself was finally drawn back into the film world, released his first film in thirty years, Blood Feast 2: All U Can Eat, a sequel to the first film. It featured a cameo appearance by John Waters, a devotee of Lewis’ work.

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In 2016, he proved to still be a draw as Canadian anthology movie Herschell Gordon Lewis’ BloodMania was filmed with his name as part of the title. The same year, Blood Feast was remade in France with a small cameo role for Lewis. He was still enjoying being the Godfather of Gore!

Wikipedia | IMdb | Official website

Posted in tribute to Herschell Gordon Lewis, who died today.


Razortooth (2007)

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‘A grip your seat creature feature’

Razortooth is a 2007 American horror film directed by Patricia Harrington (a Roger Corman alumnus: writer of To Sleep with a Vampire; actress in Carnosaur; electrician on Sorority House Massacre II.

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The film includes a brief clip from Corman’s The Little Shop of Horrors. Meanwhile, the local bar is named Kormann’s and includes a flashing neon sign: “cheap”). The film’s working title was apparently Sssslither.

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The screenplay was by Jack Monroe (he has a cameo as the ‘chubby deputy’) and Matt Holly.

Main cast:

Douglas Swander, Kathleen LaGue, Simon Page, Tim Colceri, Kate Gersten, Brandon Breault, Josh Gad, Matt Holly, Adam McCrory, Max Rhyser

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Reviews:

Mildly amusing dialogue during the first hour is agreeable and we’re in monster movie cliche central, which is fine as long as we’re all board. Alas, from then on, there’s simply not enough CGI eel attacks – or even a convincingly nasty critter on show – to make this one a winner. It’s a shame, because with a little more beastie action this could have been a contender like Frankenfish rather than a loser like Snakehead Terror.

Adrian Smith, Horrorpedia

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Choice dialogue:

“Where the hell’s that little panty sniffer?”

“Dude, someone lost their canoe!”

“We’re talking about a giant eel here, Ruth. A mutant. One of Doctor Frankenstein’s monsters.”

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IMDb | Image credits: IMCDb:

Plot keywords:

eel | escaped convicts | rats | missing dog | swamp | vigilantes



Virus Undead aka Beast Within (2008)

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Virus Undead – also known as Beast Within – is a 2008 German science fiction horror film directed by Wolf Wolff and Ohmuthi from a screenplay by co-producer Wolf Jahnke.

Main cast:

Philipp Danne, Birthe Wolter, Anna Breuer, Nikolas Jürgens, and Marvin Gronen.

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Plot:

Professor Bergen, a famous medical researcher, discovers a vaccine to an H5N1-like viral pandemic. However, his research indicates that the virus has mutated and caused increased aggression in the local birds. While researching this phenomenon, he is attacked and killed by his test subjects, a flock of violent birds.

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After missing the funeral, Robert, a medical student, returns to his childhood home to settle his grandfather’s affairs. He takes two friends along with him, fellow medical students Eugen and Patrick, who have an antagonistic relationship. When they arrive, Robert’s ex-girlfriend, Marlene, confronts him and demands to know why he dumped her and left town. As Robert and Marlene talk, Eugen and Patrick flirt with Marlene’s friend, Vanessa. Patrick invites the women to a party later that night.

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Later, the trio are harassed in turn by Bollman, the town bully, and Lieutenant Lehmann, an unfriendly cop. When they finally arrive at Professor Bergen’s mansion, they discover the place is in near ruins…

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Reviews:

“The makeup effects are high quality and the visual style of the film is superb. The muted colors and shadows work very well with the impressive locations. The house of Robert’s grandfather is especially apt. It looks like just the place for twisted experiments and unspeakable acts. The performances are good, aside from the above mentioned halting quality which rises up now and again. The characters are distinct, and realistic, not the cardboard cutouts that are standard for this type of film.” Jeremy Biltz, DVD Talk

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“It sort of reminded me of Dead Snow a bit, in that it’s actually structured very much like a slasher movie … and then all of a sudden, I’m waiting for killer birds to show up, and BAM! some zombies are biting our heroes and trying to invade the house where they are holed up. Then the birds do show up on top of that. I mean, it’s not a particularly great movie, but the largely successful combination of genres was a nice surprise.” Brian W Collins, Horror Movie a Day

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” … the zombies have surrounded the mansion, trapping the partying kids inside and blahblahblah, tepid sex scenes, predictable deaths, Cabin Fever meets The Birds meets Night of the Living Dead, but despite all of its lofty ambitions, it still manages to be one of the stupider and more boring zombie films I’ve sat through since I made the mistake of ‘flixing Platoon of the Dead last summer.”Annie Riordan, Brutal As Hell

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“It’s a cut above your usual low-budget zombie affair, with professional pyrotechnics and CGI. But the characters are over-written and unconvincing, and anyway it’s always odd to watch these movies set in Germany but with the actors speaking in English.” Peter Dendle, The Zombie Movie Encyclopedia

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Beast Within isn’t anything spectacular nor does it aspire to be. It is a decent time though when there isn’t anything on the tube. I’m not sure I agree with the films’ final edit, with a little tweaking it may have turned out to be a stronger film. It was fun at times and frustrating at others but Mr. Wolf Wolff is a talented director with an eye for the macabre and a future in the biz. Not a great film but it’s worth a view.” Corey Danna, HorrorNews.net

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Cast and characters:

  • Philipp Danne as Robert Hansen
  • Birthe Wolter as Marlene Vogt
  • Anna Breuer as Vanessa Lux
  • Nikolas Jürgens as Eugen Friedrich
  • Marvin Gronen as Patrick Schubert
  • Ski as Bollmann
  • Axel Strothmann as Polizist Lehmann
  • Joost Siedhoff as Professor Bergen

Filming locations:

Berlin and Wandlitz, Brandenburg

Wikipedia | IMDb


Ted V. Mikels – filmmaker

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Ted V. Mikels (born Theodore Mikacevich; April 29, 1929 – October 16, 2016) was an American independent filmmaker primarily known for his horror movies such as The Astro-Zombies and The Corpse Grinders, although he also directed cult action-exploitation movies such as Girl in Gold Boots (1968) and The Doll Squad (1973).

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During his grade school years, he was an amateur photographer who developed his own film in his bathtub. By the age of 15, he was a regular stage performer and developed an interest in filmmaking when he attempted to shoot his performances.

In the 1950s, Mikels moved to Bend, Oregon and founded his own film production company. Soon, he began producing both educational documentaries, and short dramatic features. Additionally, as horseman, archery expert, Indian and stuntman, he contributed to the production of several Hollywood films made in the area.

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Although his late ’60s and early ’70s horror output was decidedly low-budget, the movies he created had an undeniable quirkiness and charm that gave them a cinematic lifespan that eventually led to cult status, belated sequels and, in the case of The Corpse Eaters, a remake.

In 1993, Mikels began running run TVM Studios, a film and video production studio based in Las Vegas, Nevada.

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In 2010, he released the third installment in his Astro-Zombies franchise, Astro-Zombies M3: Cloned, followed two years later by Astro-Zombies M4: Invaders from Cyberspace.

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Select filmography:

1963: Strike Me Deadly

1964: Dr. Sex

1965: One Shocking Moment

1968: Girl in Gold Boots

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1968: The Astro-Zombies

1971: The Corpse Grinders

1973: Blood Orgy of the She-Devils

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1973: Children Shouldn’t Play with Dead Things (co-executive producer)

1973: The Doll Squad

1977: The Worm Eaters (producer)

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1982: The Aftermath

1982: 10 Violent Women

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1998: Dimensions in Fear

2002: The Corpse Grinders 2

2003: Chimera (short)

2004: Cauldron: Baptism of Blood

2004: Mark of the Astro-Zombies

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2008: The Wild World of Ted V. Mikels (documentary)

2009: Demon Haunt

2010: Astro-Zombies M3: Cloned

2012: Astro-Zombies M4: Invaders from Cyberspace

2015: Paranormal Extremes: Text Messages from the Dead

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2016: The Corpse Grinders (executive producer and cameo role)

Wikipedia | IMDb


The House of the Devil (2009)

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‘Talk on the phone. Finish your homework. Watch TV. Die.

The House of the Devil is a 2009 American horror film written, directed, and edited by Ti West (The Sacrament; V/H/S ‘Second Honeymoon’; The ABCs of Death ‘M is for Miscarriage’; The Innkeepers; Cabin Fever 2: Spring Fever; The Roost).

The plot concerns a young college student (Donahue) who is hired as a babysitter at an isolated house and is soon caught up in bizarre and dangerous events as she fights for her life. The film combines elements of both the slasher film and haunted house subgenres while using the “satanic panic” of the 1980s as a central plot element.

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Main cast:

Jocelin Donahue (All the Creatures Were Stirring; Dead Awake; Insidious Chapter 2), Tom Noonan (Late Phases; The RoostWolfen), Mary Woronov (The Devil’s Rejects; Frog-g-g!; Night of the Comet), Greta Gerwig, AJ Bowen (The GuestThe Sacrament; You’re Next), Dee Wallace, Heather Robb, Darryl Nau, Brenda Cooney, Danielle Noe.

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Plot:

In the 1980s, after her landlady (Dee Wallace) gives her an extension on the deposit for her new apartment, college student Samantha Hughes (Jocelin Donahue) takes on a babysitting job for Mr. Ulman (Tom Noonan) and his wife (Mary Woronov).

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Ulman asks to meet her but stands her up, later apologizing and offering to pay double the original salary. Samantha accepts and gets a ride to the remote mansion from her best friend, Megan (Greta Gerwig), who expresses her distrust.

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At the house, Mr. Ulman pulls her aside and reveals that he does not have any children to be monitored; the babysitting job is to attend to his wife’s ailing mother. Samantha balks but finally agrees, if he will pay her $400, a significant increase in her pay. Megan immediately leaves, citing Ulman’s lies and peculiar behavior, but she reluctantly promises to pick up Samantha later. Samantha stays, after accepting the money…

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Reviews:

“…if there’s anything scarier than haunted house, it’s a possibly haunted house. The film may provide an introduction for some audience members to the Hitchcockian definition of suspense: It’s the anticipation, not the happening, that’s the fun.” RogerEbert.com

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“Sure, Halloween made people realize that suburbia isn’t as safe as it pretends to be, but this makes it scary to trust anyone. I just can’t give Ti West more praise for doing what he’s done here. Clearly he knows the genre inside and out. Every aspect of filmmaking is flawless.” Kevin Sommerfield, Slasher Studios

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” …the bulk of its runtime is taken up by Donahue tiptoeing through the shadows of an empty house to a soundtrack of creaking doors and peculiar thuds. And even if we might titter at our heroine’s high-waisted stonewash jeans and orange, sponge-eared headphones propped over a Farrah Fawcett ’do, the film’s nostalgic design is subtle enough not to dampen the seriously sinister atmospherics.” David Jenkins, Time Out

” …an 80s-style shocker which promises much at first – particularly with a pastiche-grindhouse credit sequence that Tarantino himself might admire. But things quickly get silly and unscary … Inevitably, the eerie atmosphere of the deserted house is far creepier than the subsequent grossout action.” Peter Bradshaw, The Guardian

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“…Ti West’s latest mimics ’80s horror flicks with a straight face. Its rhythms, dialogue, and period detail are so finely attuned to the style of its chosen era that, were it not for a technical dexterity generally absent from its predecessors, the film might pass as an exhumed relic.” Matt Noller, Slant Magazine

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“… you start to suspect that the movie is all build-up. Still, it’s great build-up — both an authentically scary turn of the screw and a stunningly meticulous retro homage.” The Telegraph

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“The production is an achievement for the genre in its discipline and restraint, keeping 5/6 of the ride (relatively) bloodless and air-taught, manipulating the audience to a dreadful conclusion that builds from the film’s first five minutes and detonates without mercy. You may not be able to watch this twice, but you’ll certainly remember it forever.” Sean Edgar, Paste magazine

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Cast and characters:

Wikipedia | IMDb


Wilderness (2006)

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‘Don’t go down to the woods today’

Wilderness is a 2006 British-Irish horror film directed by Michael J. Bassett (Ash vs Evil DeadSilent Hill: Revelation 3DDeathwatch) from a screenplay by Dario Poloni (Black Death).

Main cast:

Sean Pertwee (Howl; The Seasoning House; Dog Soldiers), Alex Reid (The Facility; ArachnidThe Descent), Toby Kebbell (Kong: Skull Island; A Monster Calls; Dawn of the Planet of the Apes), Stephen Wright, Karly Greene, Lenora Crichlow (Being Human; Doctor Who), Luke Neal, Ben McKay (Hot Fuzz), Richie Campbell (The Frankenstein Chronicles).

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Plot:

Following the suicide of a young offender, the other teenage prisoners are sent on a character-building adventure trip to a remote island. On arrival, they are soon picked off one by one by a mysterious man lurking in the woods…

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Reviews:

“The graphic and expertly executed gore effects are the standout aspect of the film, elevating this fairly derivative, if well told, story into a gorehound’s all you can puke buffet. We’re treated to dismemberment, beheadings, torture, and a particularly “sucks to be you” moment involving not one, but two, bear traps.” Jon Condit, Dread Central

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“Taut and visceral, Wilderness is a marked improvement on director Michael J Bassett’s muddled debut feature, Deathwatch, thanks, one suspects, to Dario Poloni’s bleak, misanthropic script. But this is also the film’s Achilles heel: some may find it hard to care about the fate of these selfish, hateful toe-rags.” Nigel Floyd, Time Out London

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“It’s a violent affair, very like Dog Soldiers in which hard-as-nails Sergeant Sean Pertwee led a band of threatened squaddies on a doom-laden military exercise in Scotland, and somewhat arbitrary in its sense of what constitutes rough justice.” Philip French, The Guardian

“Tight, by-the-book script, credited to Dario Poloni, moves the action at a predictable clip, and knows when to pause for a tension-breaking wisecrack from one of the ensemble or a quieter spooky moment.” Leslie Felperin, Variety

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” …street tuff dialogue sounds as though it was lifted off the last Dizzee Rascal album. Meanwhile, atrocious editing and hapless direction stifle interest long before the preposterous identity of the killer is exposed.” Jamie Russell, BBC

“Michael J Bassett’s horror film is lurid, wildly improbable and not especially well made, but it is also entertaining in its own B-movie way … There are lots of gruesome touches – heads impaled on sticks, bodies ripped to pieces – and some incongruously comic ones (for instance, the kids are reduced to eating barbecued dog).” Geoffrey Macnab, The Guardian

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“This over-literal, fright-free slasher is strictly for completist gorehounds and Home Secretaries seeking radical solutions to the high number of youth offenders.” Anton Bitel, Film4

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Cast and characters:

Sean Pertwee as Jed
Alex Reid as Louise
Toby Kebbell as Callum
Stephen Wight as Steve
Luke Neal as Lewis
Ben McKay as Lindsay
Lenora Crichlow as Mandy
Karly Greene as Jo
Adam Deacon as Blue
Richie Campbell as Jethro

Filming locations:

Scotland
Northern Ireland
Republic of Ireland

Wikipedia | IMDb


Behind the Mask: The Rise of Leslie Vernon (2006)

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‘Freddy, Jason, Michael. We all need someone to look up to.’

Behind the Mask: The Rise of Leslie Vernon is a 2006 American mockumentary black comedy horror film directed by Scott Glosserman. It stars Nathan Baesel, Angela Goethals and Robert Englund. It follows a journalist and her film crew that is documenting an aspiring serial killer who models himself according to slasher film conventions.

The film features cameos from Zelda Rubinstein (Poltergeist franchise) and Kane Hodder (Friday the 13th).

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Plot:

A female journalist named Taylor Gentry and her two cameramen, Doug and Todd, document the preparations of Leslie Vernon as he prepares to join the ranks of other slasher villains. Leslie takes his identity from an urban legend about a boy who killed his family and was cast into a river by angry townsfolk.

He initially claims to be the vengeful spirit of the slain boy but soon admits that he is an ordinary man named Leslie Mancuso who must rely on conventional tactics rather than supernatural powers. Taylor and her crew film Leslie’s meticulous preparations to slaughter a number of teenagers in an abandoned house and then be confronted by a virginal “survivor girl”, Kelly. Taylor and her crew come to share Leslie’s enthusiasm for his project, but their consciences catch up with them on the night of the murders…

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Reviews:

screen-shot-2016-11-01-at-20-15-31“The movie has more cleverness than violence, and its breakdown of cliches is vivid and witty. Baesel is an extraordinary presence, holding the film together with his mesmerizing performance, charm and openness, and Goethals measures up to him.” Stephen Hunter, The Washington Post

“It’s a brilliant, twisted love letter to the genre that also develops an unexpected stylistic change right when you think you know where things are headed. It’s one of the most creative horror B movies of the 2000’s without a doubt.” Jim Vorel, Paste magazine

 

” …the movie morphs into exactly the sort of slashing it was previously mocking, is so hopelessly by the numbers that one couldn’t possibly care less about the outcome. There’s little doubt that the idea behind Behind the Mask: The Rise of Leslie Vernon is relatively sound (i.e. highlighting the cliches inherent in this genre), but it’s ultimately the underwhelming execution that confirms the movie’s place as an almost total misfire.” David Nusair, Reel Film Reviews

“Compared to this, Scream is pure child’s play, a wannabe that states the obvious. Behind the Mask is a pure horror film masterpiece, and slasher fans would be best to acknowledge it.” Felix Vasquez Jr., Cinema Crazed

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” …it’s Glosserman’s snarky pandering that’s most damning. Desperately overcompensating for the fact that most horror films are already parodies of themselves, Behind the Mask takes a bite out of the dumb Screamfranchise before devouring its own tail, proving that you are what you eat.” Ed Gonzalez, The Village Voice

“The script’s laughs are too widely spaced. Even before the plot takes a third-act turn into the land of kill-by-the-numbers slasher movies, the jokes drip when they should be gushing.” Kyle Smith, New York Post

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Cast and characters:

Filming locations:

Largely in Portland, Oregon and the outlying towns of Troutdale, Banks, St. Helens, Estacada, and Sauvie Island. The establishing shots of Glen Echo were filmed on Main Street in downtown Troutdale.

Wikipedia | IMDb


The Descent (2005)

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‘Face your deepest fear’

The Descent is a 2005 British horror film written and directed by Neil Marshall (Tales of HalloweenDog Soldiers).

The plot follows six women who, having entered an unmapped cave system, become trapped and are hunted by blood-thirsty human hybrids lurking within.

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The film took $57.1 million at the box office against a reported budget of £3.5 million. A sequel, titled The Descent Part 2, was released in 2009.

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The skull of women motif used in some advertising material is based on Philippe Halsman‘s In Voluptas Mors photograph.

The film’s marketing campaign in the UK was disrupted by the London bombings in July 2005. Adverts on London’s transport system (including the bus that had exploded) had included posters that carried the quote, “Outright terror… bold and brilliant”, and depicted a terrified woman screaming in a tunnel.

The film’s distributor in the UK, Pathé, recalled the posters and reworked the campaign to exclude the word “terror” from advertised reviews of The Descent. Pathé also distributed the new versions to TV and radio stations. The distributor’s marketing chief, Anna Butler, said of the new approach, “We changed tack to concentrate on the women involved all standing together and fighting back. That seemed to chime with the prevailing mood of defiance that set in the weekend after the bombs.”

The Descent was released in North America with approximately a minute cut from the end. In the American theatrical cut, Sarah escapes from the cave and sees Juno, but the film does not cut back to the cave.

In the 4 August 2006 issue of Entertainment Weekly, it was stated that the ending was trimmed because American viewers did not like its “uber-hopeless finale”. Lionsgate marketing chief Tim Palen said, “It’s a visceral ride, and by the time you get to the ending you’re drained. [Director Neil] Marshall had a number of endings in mind when he shot the film, so he was open [to making a switch].” Marshall compared the change to the ending of The Texas Chain Saw Massacre, saying, “Just because she gets away, does that make it a happy ending?” The North American Unrated DVD includes the original ending.

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Plot:

A year after the tragic death of her husband and young daughter on the drive back from an adventure holiday, Sarah (Shauna Macdonald) and her adventurous girlfriends, Juno (Natalie Mendoza), Beth (Alex Reid, Arachnid) , Sam (MyAnna Buring, Kill List) and Rebecca (Saskia Mulder) are reunited at a cabin in the Appalachian Mountains of North Carolina (admirably portrayed by the wilds of Scotland and Buckinghamshire). Holly (Nora-Jane Noone), Juno’s new friend, is introduced.

Whilst Sarah begins to imagine the time she had with her family just twelve months prior, she is whisked along to a potholing jamboree in a cave-system kept as a surprise by Juno. Alas, no sooner have they begun to explore, than the passageway collapses behind them, shutting them in what, Juno now admits, is a completely unmapped labyrinth of tunnels and caverns. Despite the group’s previous disastrous holiday, no-one thought to inform anyone where they were going.

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As the unhappy group progress through the gloom, they find evidence of previous explorers and, more pertinently, cave drawings describing a second exit from the cave, towards which, they hopefully advance. No sooner have they set off than Holly falls and suffers a pleasingly graphic compound fracture of her leg; Sarah applies a splint, though you imagine the entire group is relived it happened to the most annoying of their number.

Whilst collecting their thoughts, Sarah fleetingly spies a figure in the murk, the others essentially patting her on the head, assuming she’s still suffering mental trauma. Exasperated and frightened, Sarah is proved right as the girls find that indeed they are not alone and something humanoid is hunting them down, like lions in the savannah, attacking the weakest (Holly) and ripping out her throat. In the melee of pickaxes and claws, Juno accidentally plunges her rock climbing equipment into Beth, a fact she is not too happy about but does little to resolve.

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Briefly the group are separated but Juno locates Sam and Rebecca, dispatching another of the ever-increasing number of troglodytes before further casualties are inflicted. She convinces the duo to continue on with her towards the exit, despite Sarah being missing. Fearing for their lives and owing something of a debt of gratitude, they relent.

Meanwhile, Sarah is still alive, slightly more-so than Beth who is more blood than flesh but still manages to inform her friend that not only had Juno done her a mischief but had also been having an affair with Sarah’s dead husband, which she proves by producing a pendant she snatched from the increasingly unpopular ‘friend’. Now in a clouded rage, she mercy-kills Beth and slays a family of the pale creatures en-route to find the others.

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Most of the ladies have by now realised the creatures are blind, a result of their evolution underground, though have excellent hearing. This knowledge is ultimately redundant, as the creatures mastery of their domain means that escape is almost impossible, First to demonstrate this are Rebecca and Sam, leaving only Juno and Sarah to fend off their attackers and seek salvation. They’ve come so far but is Sarah in the mood for forgiveness, and even if she is, is there any chance to escape?

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Review:

After the huge critical and commercial success of Neil Marshall’s debut effort, 2002’s Dog Soldiers, everybody waited expectantly to give him a polite ripple of applause for his follow-up but not to push his luck. Much eating of head-wear followed when it was clear that Marshall had at least equalled his efforts and had pushed himself and his team yet further, filming a low-budget horror film with a small cast in a near to pitch-black environment. In fact, no caves were harmed during the making of this movie, the immersive and believable sets being made at Pinewood.

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The Descent has, aside from the creatures and a brief appearance by Sarah’s husband, an all female cast, an intentional device but one which is somewhat nailed-on and for the most part, glaring. The film doesn’t suffer as such, the group still has an alpha female, a brash annoyance and a baddie but it’s an unnecessary ‘first’ and not the only example of the film-maker perhaps trying a little too hard, when their storytelling skill and understanding of what it means to be frightened were already sound.The actresses all do a sterling job both emotionally and physically, their rock-climbing exertions regularly being wince-inducing for the audience. Helpfully, they are given different accents, a huge help in distinguishing who’s who in the necessarily dark filming environment.

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It’s frustrating to watch a film which feasts on such raw human fears – the dark, being lost, claustrophobia, loneliness, things going bump in the dark  – knowing that if every horror film director tapped into such universal emotions, we’d be left with far less chaff. The dark is dealt with bravely and skilfully, the only light being of provided sources, torches, helmets, watch displays and the like. The creatures, known retrospectively as crawlers, are well-devised in many respects, pale and pathetic on one level, possessed of cunning and finely-honed senses on the other.

There are niggling gaps – their excellent hearing makes up for lack of sight but whispering is apparently fine (take heed of the zombies of the Blind Dead series, able to hear even the beating of your heart!) and one might think that a sense of touch would also be similarly keen but their ability to sense the heat of flaming torches and indeed the trapped party’s body-heat is lacking. Curmudgeonly sorts may point to their similarity to Gollum of Tolkein fame.

Though an effective score is provided by David Julyan (The Cabin in the Woods), the traditional musical stingers designed to make the audience jump, are instead easily facilitated by the rasping crawlers appearing out of nowhere.

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As is many a film’s wont, despite the presence of the crawlers, the human participants pose at least the equal amount of physical and psychological danger. The film just about stays the sensible side of the 2000’s version of the 80’s trapping of ‘it was all a dream’, fortunate – although it was felt a statement had to be made beyond the basic plight of the cavers, it would be refreshing to have a horror film that didn’t fall back on ulterior factors, as if to suggest just being a horror film wasn’t enough.

The crawlers themselves, humanoid enough to clarify that they have evolved from Earth not from Mars, are the work of Paul Hyett (HowlThe Facility, Eden Lake) and his team, the prosthetics being anatomically sensible but still repulsive, their appearance being hidden from the actresses until filming started, ramping up the tension yet further. The film spawned one, ill-advised, sequel, whilst Marshall has yet to recapture his early vigour and invention on the big screen.

Daz Lawrence, Horrorpedia

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Other reviews:

” …Marshall delivers what amounts to a feature-length exploitation of viewer phobias — distressingly claustrophobic and shot so vertiginously that it feels as though you’re dangling in the cave with the women. The generously gelatinous gore isn’t without metaphorical purpose either. As the cave gets wormier and wetter, tighter and more terrifying, it feels like a womb thick with amniotic fluid.” Nick Rogers, The Film Yap

“Its no hyperbole to call Neil Marshall’s second feature a masterpiece. It succeeds brilliantly on technical and artistic level and it achieves the basic aim of any horror film. It is as scary as hell.” MJ Simpson, Urban Terrors: New British Horror Cinema 1997 – 2008

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” …carefully establishes the psychological relationships among the women, then squanders this calibrated and generally plausible setup with a series of crude, implausible, and scattershot horror effects. The two strains are supposed to merge but mix like oil and water as the narrative grows increasingly incoherent (the fact that so much of it transpires in darkness doesn’t help). 

“Marshall could very well be the Caravaggio of the B-movie. Working in complete darkness, he playfully uses the cavers’ equipment as his paintbrush … As for a “deeper meaning,” Marshall covers that, too. What is most haunting about this film is Sarah’s own descent into feral madness. In one close-up, her blue eyes pierce the blood that covers her face, and we realize that she might have transformed into a creature herself.” Sarah Lilleyman, Time

“The watery cavern is as scary as the nasty critters who show up about an hour in. Some of the human complications are not as effective and Marshall overuses one flashback device. Ecen so, this works well enough.” Mike Mayo, The Horror Show Guide

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“One of the scariest films of this or any decade… Ultimately, The Descent is the purest kind of horror film – ruthless, unforgiving, showing no mercy.” Bloody Disgusting

Cast and characters:

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Wikipedia | IMDb


The Exorcism of Emily Rose (2005)

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‘Based on a true story’

The Exorcism of Emily Rose is a 2005 American legal drama horror film directed by Scott Derrickson (Deliver Us from Evil; Sinister; Hellraiser: Inferno) from a screenplay co-written with Paul Harris Boardman (Deliver Us from Evil; Urban Legends: Final Cut).

The film is loosely based on the story of Anneliese Michel and follows a self-proclaimed agnostic who acts as defense counsel (Linney) representing a parish priest (Wilkinson), accused by the state of negligent homicide after he performed an exorcism.

The film’s budget was $19.3 million and it took $144.2 million at the box office.

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Main cast:

Laura Linney, Tom Wilkinson, Campbell Scott, Colm Feore, Jennifer Carpenter, Mary Beth Hurt, Henry Czerny, Shohreh Aghdashloo.

Plot:

A 19-year-old girl named Emily Rose dies, attributed to self-inflicted wounds and malnutrition. After news of it spreads across town, a Catholic priest named Father Richard Moore is arrested and sent to court. The archdiocese wishes for Father Moore to plead guilty, in order for publicity of the incident to be minimized. A lawyer named Erin Bruner is provided to Father Moore to negotiate a plea deal, but Father Moore insists on pleading not guilty. Bruner takes the case, believing it will elevate her to senior partner at her law firm. Father Moore agrees to let her defend him only if he is allowed to tell Emily’s story.

The trial begins with the calling of several medical experts by the prosecutor Ethan Thomas, and Judge Brewster presiding. One expert testifies that Emily was suffering from both epilepsy and psychosis. The defense contests that she may have actually been possessed but Bruner explains that Emily was suffering from something that neither medicine nor psychology could explain, and that Father Moore as well as her family realized this and tried to help in another way…

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Reviews:

“Somehow the movie really never takes off into the riveting fascination we expect in the opening scenes. Maybe it cannot; maybe it is too faithful to the issues it raises to exploit them. A movie like The Exorcist is a better film because it’s a more limited one, which accepts demons and exorcists lock, stock and barrel, as its starting point. Certainly they’re good showbiz.” RogerEbert.com

” …high-octane schlock that occasionally works your nerves, thanks to a committed performance from Jennifer Carpenter as Emily herself. Though it attempts to sell itself as a debate between law and religion, it’s clear from the first shot of Em growling Latin which side we are supposed to root for. A classy “boo!” movie for those who like their horror polite.” Paul Arendt, BBC

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“It’s all generic stuff, though the dialogue is well handled by the cast and the arguments are laid out in an accessible way. (Sometimes too accessibly, with Erin repeatedly saying, “By that, you mean…”) It’s the juxtaposition of that part of the screenplay with the horror material that gives pic its special tension and flavor.” Derek Elley, Variety

” …the film finds a way to justify its existence despite the inevitable comparisons to the classic in whose shadow it will inevitably stand, and it actually manages to work on a level very similar to The Exorcist, without being slavishly imitative. In fact, it is far more faithful to the spirit of that film than most of the Exorcist sequels have been.” Steve Biodrowski, Cinefantastique

Cast and characters:

Wikipedia | IMDb



Robert Vaughn (actor)

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Buried Alive (1990) Directed by Gérard Kikoïne Shown: Robert Vaughn

Robert Francis Vaughn (November 22, 1932 – November 11, 2016) was an American actor. His best-known TV roles include suave spy Napoleon Solo in the 1960s series The Man from U.N.C.L.E. and wealthy detective Harry Rule in the 1970s series The Protectors.

In more recent times, as grifter and card sharp Albert Stroller, Vaughn appeared in all but one of the 48 episodes of the British television drama series Hustle (2004–2012).

In film, he portrayed skittish gunman Lee in The Magnificent Seven, the voice of Proteus IV, the computer villain of Demon Seed, racist Walter Chalmers in Bullitt, and Ross Webster in Superman III.

After initial appearances in a swathe of TV series, one of Vaughn’s first notable movie roles was as a very verbal “questioning” and “wondering” post-apocalypse caveman in Roger Corman’s 1958 production Teenage Cave Man, a film that clearly ponders conformity and religious repression.

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Originally titled Prehistoric World, distributors AIP changed the film’s moniker to reflect the 50s vogue for youth orientated drive-in fare. Clearly, Vaughn was no teen. And his clean cut image and slicked back hair was hardly the look of a cave dweller. Yet, his sardonic performance in this low-budget prehistoric philosophical romp already showed that this was an assertive actor destined for many notable roles to follow.

Horror and sci-fi fans may recall the ever-busy actor in the following roles:

Selected filmography:

Starship Invaders (1978)

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Doctor Franken (TV movie, 1980)

Battle Beyond the Stars (1980)

Killing Birds (1987)

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C.H.U.D. II: Bud the Chud (1988)

Transylvania Twist (1989)

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Buried Alive (1990)

Witch Academy (1995)

The Sender (1998)

Wikipedia | IMDb


Bubba Ho-Tep (2002)

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‘You know the legends… Now learn the truth.’

Bubba Ho-Tep is a 2002 American comedy horror film written, co-produced and directed by Don Coscarelli (John Dies at the EndPhantasm and sequels).

It stars Bruce Campbell as Elvis Presley — now a resident in a nursing home. Ossie Davis plays Jack, a black man who claims to be John F. Kennedy, explaining that he was patched up after the assassination, dyed black, and abandoned.

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The film is based on the homonymous novella by Joe R. Lansdale. Originally the film was “roadshowed” by the director across the country. Only 32 prints were made and circulated around various film festivals, though these garnered critical success. By the time it was released on DVD, it had already achieved cult status due to positive reviews, lack of access, and inclusion of (and similar on-the-road hard work by) Campbell.

A sequel, Bubba Nosferatu: Curse of the She-Vampires, was mooted in the end credits but has been in development hell ever since. Meanwhile, the original has been issued by Shout! Factory as a Collector’s Edition Blu-ray:

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Buy: Amazon.com

 

  • New Audio Commentary with author Joe R. Lansdale
  • New “All Is Well” – an interview with writer/director Don Coscarelli
  • New “The King Lives!” – an interview with star Bruce Campbell
  • New “Mummies and Make-up” – an interview with special effects artist Robert Kurtzman
  • Audio Commentary by Don Coscarelli and Bruce Campbell
  • Audio Commentary by “The King”
  • Deleted Scenes with optional commentary by Don Coscarelli and Bruce Campbell
  • “The Making of Bubba Ho-Tep” featurette
  • “To Make a Mummy” – Makeup and Effects
  • “Fit for A King” – Elvis Costuming
  • “Rock Like an Egyptian” – Featurette about the Music of Bubba Ho-Tep
  • Joe R. Lansdale Reads from Bubba Ho-Tep
  • Archival Bruce Campbell interviews
  • Music Video
  • Theatrical Trailer
  • TV Spot
  • Still Gallery

Plot:

An elderly man at The Shady Rest Retirement Home in East Texas is known to the staff as Sebastian Haff, but claims to be Elvis. He explains that during the 1970s, Elvis Presley (Bruce Campbell) grew tired of the demands of his fame and switched places with an Elvis impersonator named Sebastian Haff (also Campbell). He claims it was Haff who eventually died in 1977, while he, the real Elvis, lived in quiet, happy anonymity and made a living pretending to be himself. After a propane explosion destroyed documentation which was the only proof that he was actually Elvis, he was unable to return to his old lifestyle.

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Twenty years later and living at the retirement home as the film opens, he is contemplating his age, frailty, loss of dignity, impotence, and “A growth on [his] pecker”. Elvis’s only friend is a black man named Jack (Ossie Davis) who insists he is President John F. Kennedy, claiming to have been dyed black after an assassination attempt, and abandoned by Lyndon Johnson in a nursing home.

Eventually, Elvis and Jack face off against a re-animated ancient Egyptian mummy that was stolen during a U.S. museum tour, and then lost during a severe storm when the thieves’ bus veered into a river near the nursing home. The mummy strangely takes on the garb of a cowboy and feeds on the souls of the residents of the home. It is dubbed ‘Bubba Ho-Tep’ by Elvis, who is given a telepathic flashback of the mummy’s life and death when he looks into its eyes…

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Reviews:

“It has the damnedest ingratiating way of making us sit there and grin at its harebrained audacity, laugh at its outhouse humor, and be somewhat moved (not deeply, but somewhat) at the poignancy of these two old men and their situation.” Roger Ebert, RogerEbert.com

Coscarelli’s horror dramedy is a wonderful balance of sweet characterization, well done performances, great special effects and an original story that’s both bittersweet and creepy. Bubba Ho-Tep is an original horror movie worthy of your attention; original horror movies are hard to come by these days.” Felix Vasquez, Cinema Crazed

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“A clever idea remains funny for a while but is done in by some supernatural mumbo-jumbo in Bubba Ho-Tep, a mismatched marriage of offbeat character study and unimaginative horror riffs. Most compelling element by far is Bruce Campbell’s inspired performance as a nursing home patient who insists he is the real Elvis Presley.” Todd McCarthy, Variety

“Despite having a fascinating set-up and an excellent turn from Bruce Campbell, Bubba Ho-Tep becomes a missed opportunity due to director/writer Don Coscarelli’s inability to take advantage of the bizarre premise.” Jeff Beck, The Blu Spot

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Cast and characters:

Wikipedia | IMDb


Bloodmyth (2005)

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‘And this too has been one of the dark places of earth.’

Bloodmyth is a 2005 British horror thriller written, produced, photographed, co-edited and directed by John Rackham. The reported budget was just £3,000.

The film was released on DVD in North America in May 2010 by Seminal Films.

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Main cast:

screen-shot-2016-11-13-at-22-39-54Ian Attfield, Natalie Clayton, Henry Dunn, Keith Eyles, Jane Gull, Shelley Halstead, James Payton, John Rackham, Ben Shockley (Left for Dead, Ten Dead Men), Robert Harley Wainwright.

Cast:

Juliet Corman, instructor for a survival training company invites her sister Holly along to the first course in a new centre in Kent woodland, unaware that waiting for them is a killer experimenting with ancient Celtic methods of human sacrifice…

Reviews:

Bloodmyth doesn’t take advantage of its cheapness and that is to its detriment. But not hugely so. Not significantly so. Not enough to stop the excellent script and sterling performances from shining through in what is certainly one of the most interesting and enjoyable films I have watched this year.” MJ Simpson, Cult films and the people who make them

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“If I hear the orchestral background music loop one more time, I will go insane! It plays nearly constantly in the background on seemingly endless loop with the only exception being the occasional addition of timpani drums and/or a slightly faster pace. Most of the elements of this movie are terrible: acting, character development, weak plot, script, and special effects.” Maria Fahlsing, IMDb

Filming locations:

Ruckinge and Shadoxhurst, Kent, England, UK

IMDb

 


Book of Shadows: Blair Witch 2 (2000)

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‘You can’t go forward until you go back…’

Book of Shadows: Blair Witch 2 (also known as Blair Witch 2: Book of Shadows) is a 2000 American psychological horror film directed and co-written by Joe Berlinger.

Main cast:

Jeffrey Donovan, Kim Director, Tristine Skyler and Erica Leerhsen.

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The film was immediately greenlit upon pitch due to the surprising success of its predecessor, the 1999 film The Blair Witch Project. Stylistically different from the first film, the story revolves around a group of people fascinated by the mythology surrounding The Blair Witch Project movie; they go into the Black Hills where the film was shot, and we witness their subsequent psychological unraveling.

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Originally conceived as a psychological thriller and meditation on mass hysteria, Artisan Entertainment re-cut Berlinger’s film, altering the soundtrack as well as making editing changes. The footage of the main characters murdering the foreign tourists was shot just weeks prior to the release date, and was incorporated in the film to add more visual violence.

Book of Shadows: Blair Witch 2 was released to largely negative reviews from critics and audiences; it was, however, a financial success, grossing $47 million worldwide against its $15 million budget.

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Contemporary reviews:

Book of Shadows: Blair Witch 2 is a not a very lucid piece of filmmaking (and contains no Book of Shadows). I suppose it seems clear enough to Berlinger, who co-wrote it and helped edit it, but one viewing is not enough to make the material clear, and the material is not intriguing enough, alas, to inspire a second viewing.” Roger Ebert, RogerEbert.com

Book of Shadows might almost be the sequel to the website; it tramples on suggestiveness, on any hint that supernatural mischief can’t be known. The real demon, the film says, is us. Actually, the only thing vaguely demonic here is the ease with which a movie as scary and original as The Blair Witch Project can be downloaded into oblivion and compressed into this week’s product.” Owen Gleiberman, Entertainment Weekly

“Even when Book of Shadows isn’t patting itself on the back, it’s displaying its paucity of imagination with easy allusions to past horror flicks: The Omen, The Exorcist and Night of the Living Dead. Eeesh. That tendency to cannibalize and sample from other horror flicks, made popular by the “Scream” series, is worse than dull. It’s parasitic.” Edward Guthmann, San Francisco Chronicle

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Recent reviews:

“In Book of Shadows, Berlinger took his hatred of the first movie’s dishonesty and made an entire film out of it, commenting on the danger of blurring the line between fiction and reality. Had Artisan stayed out of the edit bay and let the man do his job, perhaps Book of Shadows could have been something truly special.” Brendan Morrow, Bloody Disgusting (May 2016)

“It was the Artisan reshoots that added an inexplicable framing device of sorts involving Jeff’s history in a torture-prone mental hospital. Even with this nonsense, one can see interesting ideas about possession, filmmaking, and belief littered throughout, but the narrative is overworked to the point that no concept or storyline really gains much momentum.” Chris Cabin, Collider

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Blair Witch 2 was a controversial sequel to a film that already sparked enough controversy on its own. Book of Shadows, if for nothing else, takes an interesting path for a franchise that could just have as easily turned down Straight-To-DVD-Rehash Boulevard, but it tried something a little different, putting the character in a world where The Blair Witch Project actually exists.” Jeremy Kirk, Film School Rejects

Cast and characters:

Heather Donahue, Michael C. Williams and Joshua Leonard appear in archival footage as fictionalised versions of themselves.

Wikipedia | IMDb


Final Destination (2000)

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‘I’ll see you soon’

Final Destination is a 2000 American supernatural horror film directed by James Wong (Final Destination 3; writer on American Horror Story; Rosemary’s Baby). The screenplay was written by James Wong, Glen Morgan (Black X-mas; Willard) and Jeffrey Reddick, based on a story by Reddick (Dead Awake; Day of the Dead).

The film began as a spec script written by Reddick for an episode of The X-Files, in order for Reddick to get a TV agent, however, he never submitted it after a colleague at New Line Cinema persuaded him to write it as a feature-length film. Later, Wong and Morgan, The X-Files writing partners, became interested in the script and agreed to rewrite and direct the film, marking Wong’s film directing debut.

James Wong: “One thing we were all in agreement on from the start is that we didn’t want to do a slasher movie. We didn’t want a guy in a dark cloak or some kind of monster chasing after these kids. That’s been done again and again. I became very excited when we decided to make the world at large, in the service of death, our antagonist. Everyday objects and occurrences then take on ominous proportions and it becomes less about whether or not our characters are going to die and more about how they will die and how they can delay their deaths. The entertainment value is in the ‘ride’ not in the outcome, and by placing the premise of the film on the inevitability of death, we play a certain philosophical note”.

Budgeted at $23 million, it took $112.9 million at the box office. The film’s success spawned a media franchise, encompassing four additional movies, as well as a series of novels and comic books.

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Buy: Amazon.com

Main cast:

Devon Sawa (The Exorcism of Molly Hartley; 388 Arletta Avenue; Idle Hands), Ali Larter (Resident Evil: The Final Chapter and Afterlife; Final Destination 2), Kerr Smith (My Bloody Valentine; The Forsaken), Kristen Cloke (Black X-mas; Willard), Daniel Roebuck (Bubba Ho-Tep; short: The Vampire Hunters Club), Roger Guenveur Smith, Chad E. Donella, Seann William Scott, Tony Todd (Zombies; Army of the Damned; Candyman).

Opening plot:

High school student Alex Browning boards Volée Airlines Flight 180 with his classmates for their senior trip to Paris, France. Before take-off, Alex has a premonition that the plane will suffer a catastrophic engine failure, causing the plane to explode in mid-air, and killing everyone on board.

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When the events from his vision begin to repeat themselves in reality, he panics and a fight breaks out between Alex and his rival, Carter Horton. This leads to several passengers being removed from the plane. None of the passengers, except for his girlfriend Clear, believe Alex about his vision until the plane explodes on take-off, killing the remaining passengers on board.

Afterwards, the survivors are interrogated by two FBI agents, who believe that Alex had something to do with the explosion…

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Buy: Amazon.com | Amazon.co.uk

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Reviews:

“At least one death is an exhilaratingly shocking, out-of-nowhere surprise. More often, though, Wong likes to toy with audience expectations, mercilessly extending sequences in which one thing leads to another, like interlocking pieces of a Rube Goldberg device, and somebody winds up garroted or decapitated or even worse.” Joe Leydon, Variety

” …even by the crude standards of teenage horror, Final Destination is dramatically flat. Mr. Sawa’s teenage clairvoyant is colorless and charisma-free. And Ali Larter is equally pallid as the empathetic girlfriend who feels his pain. The movie is so busy rigging its stunts that it forgets its teenagers aren’t just sitting ducks; they’re people, too.” Stephen Holden, New York Times

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” …the characters are paper-thin, and many of the plot’s contrivances are just plain silly. A word of advice to horror buffs-turned-filmmakers: Don’t name all of your characters after classic horror directors and actors — Browning, Dreyer, Waggner, Lewton, Schreck, Murnau, Chaney, Wiene et al. — unless you’re dead sure your work compares favorably to theirs.” Maitland McDonagh, TV Guide

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Cast and characters:

Wikipedia | IMDb


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