Hell Fire
Four prostitutes kidnap the Anti Christ and all hell breaks loose.
Four prostitutes kidnap the Anti Christ and all hell breaks loose.
What’s better than a red band trailer? An extended red band trailer, obviously, duh. The Last Of Us is definitely looking like one of those rare games that gives non PS3 gamers a reason to buy one. In this trailer we get an awesome and gory look at what it takes to survive in the post apocalyptic world The Last Of Us will thrust us into. Check it out past the break, and don’t forget about the games release this June exclusively on the Playstation 3.
Reviewed by Patrick Cooper
Slaughter Tales is a self-aware love letter to the bygone SOV era that’s been making sort of a comeback this year thanks to distributors like Intervision. It doesn’t aspire to be anything more than a low-grade gorefest and on that front it’s a success. That doesn’t mean it’s all that great a film though. Maybe that’s the point? I dunno. All I know is that I found myself reaching for the fast forward button more than once. Despite admiring the enthusiasm of the teenage filmmaker, there’s not much else to get out of watching Slaughter Tales.
The anthology film was written and directed by 15-year-old Johnny Dickie (who also stars) and made on a budget of $65. The film starts with Johnny snatching a VHS tape from a thrift store. Before he throws it in the VCR, he psyches himself up in the mirror by saying stuff like “Oh man, this is going to suck!” I hear ya, man. Then an apparition (played by Johnny) appears and warns him not to watch the tape. Bad shit will happen if he does. Johnny shrugs it off like the stalwart cinephile he is and presses play.
What follows is five shorts, all starring Johnny and featuring homemade special effects made from dollar bin goodies and lotsa fake blood. None of them really stick out in my mind. One of them has some fun stop-motion that made me smile, but they’re all just really shitty. In between shorts the film cuts back to Johnny, kicking back on his futon, commenting on how much this movie sucks. What I got from this frame story is that Johnny wanted to make a shitty movie, but make it look as 80′s SOV as possible.
Mission accomplished, Johnny. Slaughter Tales looks like it really was salvaged from a thrift bargain bin where it’d been collecting dust for a decade. Besides its look, it’s paced and edited like crap, much like the “best” SOV films with those too-long pauses in between cuts. These are some the aspects of “so bad it’s good” films that people get a kick out of, but they’re done in such an intentionally tongue-in-cheek manner in Slaughter Tales that it’s difficult to get any organic enjoyment out of the film.
I appreciate Johnny’s rabid enthusiasm and, let’s face it, how many of us can say we had a film released on home video when we were 15. The problem is that in deliberately making a shitty 80′s SOV throwback, he forgot to make an entertaining, watchable movie. After watching Johnny puke for the fifth time, I wanted to throw in the towel. Or maybe that was the point? I give up.
A/V
Slaughter Tales looks like the 80′s SOV films it’s paying homage to. It flips between aspect ratios at times, which is kinda distracting.
Special Features
MAKING OF AN AMERICAN NIGHTMARE (2:38): This brief behind the scenes feature takes a look at the making of one short, starring Johnny’s mom. You gotta love that his mom supports her son’s bloody interests and was willing to get killed in his movie.
THE EFFECTS OF SLAUGHTER TALES (11:00): This looks at Johnny’s homemade effects. There are lots of dollar store items used to full effect. I can’t help but admire this kid’s ingenuity.
COMMENTARY: Dan and Tim from VHShitfest join Johnny Dickie for the feature-length commentary. They talk about how much Johnny curses, how his original idea led to a full-length film, and his myriad of influences.
After a teen steals a VHS tape titled “Slaughter Tales” from a yard sale, he seals his fate by ignoring a ghostly apparition in his bath tub and watching the stolen tape. As the movie progresses, simple nightmares turn reality as evil is released from the tape.
With Wrong Turn 5: Bloodlines, director and writer Declan O’Brien (Wrong Turn 3: Left For Dead, Wrong Turn 4: Bloody Beginnings, Sharktopus) returns to helm of his third film in the franchise, with Doug Bradley (best known for his role of “Pinhead” in the Hellraiser films) in a pivotal role. Camilla Arfwedson, Roxanne McKee, Simon Ginty, Oliver Hoare, Amy Lennox, Duncan Wisbey, Kyle Redmond-Jones, Peter Brooke, Emilia Klayn, Rosie Holden and Andrew Bone round out the cast. And now we’ve got six new clips that DON’T skimp on kills! Thanks to reader FreddyKrueger13 for the heads up!
“In the next chilling chapter of ‘Wrong Turn,’ a small West Virginia town is hosting the legendary Mountain Man Festival on Halloween, where throngs of costumed partygoers gather for a wild night of music and mischief. But an inbred family of hillbilly cannibals kill all the fun when they trick and treat themselves to a group of visiting college students who are dying for a good time.”
Back in May, I visited the set in Sofia, Bulgaria so you can read Part One and Part Two of my visit if you’re so inclined.
Wrong Turn 5: Bloodlines hits DVD and Blu-ray on October 23rd. Head inside for the clips. READ MORE
Review by James A. Janisse
Jean Rollin was a legendary French filmmaker who released dozens of fantasy and horror films over a career spanning more than five decades. Many of his earlier films dealt with vampires, but 1982’s La Morte Vivante (The Living Dead Girl) features a different type of undead character in the form of Catherine Valmont, a deceased young woman brought back to life after a chemical spill in her tomb.
The Living Dead Girl’s opening scene establishes the film’s low production values. A couple of crypt robbers stumble around some underground tunnels until they find the coffins containing Catherine and her mother. An “earth tremor” knocks over a barrel containing chemicals stored nearby, causing Catherine to come back to life – violently. She claws out one guy’s eyeballs and tears out the other’s throat. The blood is bountiful even though the effects aren’t great, and clumsy editing further weakens the attack, but the graphic deaths and piercing screams still leave a lasting impression.
The film has quite a few other scenes that follow this gore-centered approach, including the intensely unsettling ending. Most of them come about because of Catherine’s childhood friend Helene, who at first doesn’t realize the undead state that Catherine is in. Once she does, though, she devotes herself entirely to sustaining Catherine’s need for human flesh. She begins to entrap victims for Catherine to murder and eat, but eventually Catherine realizes exactly what she is and tries to stop, willing to sacrifice herself if it means nobody else getting eaten. Helene is less than content with the plan and pushes Catherine to continue the carnage until she herself is murdered and eaten.
Catherine is played by the hauntingly beautiful Françoise Blanchard, able to be at once both terrifying and angelic. She has a virginal and doll-like appearance with her soft skin, long blonde hair, and continuous vacant stare, and this appearance clashes with the violence of her cannibalism – especially during the finale, in which she kills and eats Helene with an animalistic intensity. Marina Pierro, as Helene, is much less impressive and a fraction as riveting, her dull glances made even more lifeless through frequent close-ups.
Despite its short runtime, the film moves at a very slow pace. Rollin gives his shots consideration and creates compositions that are nice to look at, but he eschews any serious editing, letting his shots and scenes go on as long as they possibly can. We see characters enter and wait to watch them leave. The killing scenes are actually interspersed throughout a whole lot of melodrama, especially between Catherine and Helene, whose relationship seems to teeter between Sapphic and sisterly.
Between the occasionally poor acting and the consistently poor special effects, The Living Dead Girl can be a bit of a bore to watch, but there is something intriguing about watching Helene slowly become the true monster as Catherine grows more aware of her unnatural existence. It’s nice to look at, and the finale really is a triumph in effective horror filmmaking. It has plenty of flaws, but Jean Rollins was passionate about the films that he made. That passion shines through The Living Dead Girl and turns it into a B-level horror film worth watching.
Video: The BluRay transfer gives us a nice picture quality for this 1982 film. Even with its low budget, Rollin uses the 35mm celluloid to his advantage and creates nice composition and captures lots of bright red blood everywhere.
Sound: The mix is pretty imbalanced. Screams are turned up way too high and require a volume adjustment for every kill scene. Even dialogue between characters in the same scene is uneven. The American couple, whose scenes are already pointless and boring, suffer from this the most – Carina Barone’s lines come out like she’s talking loudly in an empty room while Mike Marshall’s utterances are barely audible.
Extras / Special Features:
Introduction from Jean Rollin (2 minutes): The aged filmmaker discusses how his first gore film was received in Europe, winning over the audience at its festival premiere. These statements are shot in grainy crimson footage, and Rollin’s heavily accented English is hard to follow. A mostly unnecessary extra.
Jean-Pierre Bouyxou on La Morte Vivante (7 minutes): French film critic Jean-Pierre Bouyxou, who was involved in the making of the film, sits on a couch and talks about his experience during the movie’s production. His speech includes some very tedious pauses whose omission would cut the interview’s runtime in half. His account is mildly interesting, and he ends the segment talking about Françoise Blanchard’s body and “shamelessness”.
The Living Dead Girl: The American Version (7 minutes): The Living Dead Girl was shot under unusual circumstances, with a French (Rollin’s) and American (Gregory Heller’s) version being shot concomitantly with the same cast and crew (only the director and the camera changed). Bouyxou gives what I imagine to be a pretty biased account of the animosity between Rollin and Heller. This footage comes from the same interview as the previous featurette’s, and Bouyxou’s speech is just as irritatingly stalled.
Music by Philippe D’ram (8 minutes): Composer Philippe D’ram talks about how he created the film’s score. D’ram’s knowledgeable about his craft and is able to convey the information easily, though he does get a little pedantic at some points. Lots of interesting stuff about the zither and the digital synthesizer he used, the DX7.
When I Was Seventeen: An Homage to Benoit Lestang (12 minutes): A featurette looking at make-up artist Benoit Lestang, who was hired by Rollin without any experience or credentials. Lestang talks about how little he knew and how awful he thought the final result was, basically apologizing for the film’s subpar effects. They were actually so bad to him that he spent the next four years in make-up school and emerged to find a newly-invigorated horror film industry in which to try out his new talents. Bouyxou pops up again to basically talk shit about Lestang and his effects, giving out plenty of backhanded compliments that seem even more out of place when you realize that Lestang died in 2008.
Jean Rollin at Fantasia (36 minutes): More than a half hour of footage of Jean Rollin at a 2007 convention. He presents one of his older films and then takes a Q&A session which offers a lot of valuable insight into his mind. He’s MUCH more articulate in his native French than he seemed speaking in broken English in the 2 minute introduction, and it’s nice to see him speaking for himself after so many featurettes discussing him second-hand. Rollin seems passionate and very aware of his status as a cult director. The best part is his response to someone asking him what he thought when audience members laughed at his films. He describes how that used to bother him, but with time, he came to accept and enjoy such a reaction because he realized it was appropriate. He’s a refreshingly honest filmmaker who seems to genuinely enjoy interacting with fans.
Excerpt of an interview with Jean Rollin by Joshua T. Gravel (3 minutes): A return to the Rollin of the introduction, in full grainy and broken English glory. He basically just describes a scene in the movie. Again, pretty pointless.
12-page booklet with an essay by Tim Lucas, editor of Video Watchdog: A really nice booklet lines the BluRay case, containing another written statement attesting to the genius of Jean Rollin.
This September, Mike Wolfer will be taking over the reigns as head writer on Stitched, originally from the twisted mind of Garth Ennis. Wolfer is well known for his work in horror comics on books such as “Lady Death” and “Night of the Living Dead”. He knows what we horror fanatics want. The new arc, which begins with issue #8, and its a perfect place to delve into the gory world that is “Stitched”. After the jump you can check out the insanely brutal set of Fernando Furukawa’s cover art for issues #8 and #9. READ MORE
Today I spoke at length with director Doug Aarniokoski about his upcoming post-apocalyptic thriller The Day and, while I’ll be sharing my full interview with him next week closer to that film’s release, I figured I’d go ahead and let you in on some juicy tidbits he dropped regarding Nurse 3D.
We’ve shown you some tantalizing imagery from the film (which stars Paz De La Huerta, Katrina Bowden, Corbin Bleu, Boris Kodjoe, Dita Von Teese, Adam Herschman, Neal McDonough, Niecy Nash and Nick Turturro), and now we have a rundown on exactly how crazy it is.
When I asked him what he was surprised to have gotten away with on the film he answered, “The amount of sexuality and combined violence. It was really [nuts]. It’s that kind of movie where you’re like, “how can I portray this and get away with it?” It was about bringing it to the screen in a way that was engaging, erotic, dangerous, scary, nasty and brutal all at the same time. That was the dance for me.”
The Day is fast approaching its release (via Anchor Bay/WWE Studios) on August 29th. Head inside for some more Nurse 3D talk (and beware of the NSFW poster)! READ MORE
I’ve been keeping tabs on the NBC television show “Grimm”, which has just begun its second season, mostly for its regular introduction to evil, murderous creatures I have never heard of before. This past Monday night’s Season 2 Episode 1 was no different to that effect. Enter now, the newest face to shred flesh to the bone and fill graves: the Mauvais Dentes.
Insane-O-Rama and director Marc Fratto (Last Rites of the Dead aka Zombies Anonymous) have resurfaced with an indie gore fest that is sure to please anyone with a thirst for blood. The film is called Hell Fire, and if you click beyond the break, you’ll get an eyeful of what can be expected with the trailer, one sheet, and six demonic stills!
“The film centers on a group of prostitutes who turn to a violent home invasion for the sake of making a big cash score. Unbeknownst to them, one of their hostages is the son of the Devil himself, and all Hell is about to break loose…”
Hell Fire should be hitting the horror film festival circuit for 2012/2013 with an inevitable DVD release to follow. Keep it here at Bloody for the forthcoming review, coming soon. READ MORE
A little while ago I tossed up an article about the sale of Black Rock at Sundance. In fact, it should be the piece right below this one.
Right after doing so I saw that Devin Faraci, one of my favorite critics, had already filed his review of the film over at Badass Digest so I headed over there to check it out. You can do the same by clicking here.
Now I’m gonna state in bold letters that I have not seen Black Rock. For all I know it could become my favorite movie of 2012. I don’t always agree with Devin (maybe 70% of the time), but he’s one of a handful of about 5 or 6 critics whose reviews are my “go-tos” when I’m deciding what films to spend my time or money on as a consumer (I don’t always see everything for free, especially non-horror stuff). Whether or not I ultimately agree with his take on something, he’s got a knack for thoroughly explaining the reasoning behind his reactions that’s in a language I can relate to.
So I was surprised to come across a couple lines in his piece on Black Rock that echoed something that’s been on my mind for sometime in regard to genre and people who think they’re slumming in it.
Hit the jump to see what I’m talking about. READ MORE
One of the best independent films of the last decade is Eli Roth’s Cabin Fever, which ages like fine wine. With a sequel already in the books (Spring Fever was directed by Ti West and released in 2009), The Indomina Group has landed franchise rights with plans on producing multiple films featuring more skin-rotting terror.
The Indomina Group has optioned the rights for two new Cabin Fever installments, which will be Cabin Fever: Patient Zero and Cabin Fever: Outbreak. The films will be shot back to back in the Dominican Republic in early Spring of 2012. Details inside. READ MORE
A must-see, refreshing surprise for horror fans, YellowBrickRoad follows its successful theatrical run with a nationwide DVD & iTunes release August 2, 2011. It will be available on various On Demand locations September 2. Click here to purchase or rent it NOW on iTunes. It is also available on Amazon and Netflix. Check with your local cable provider for video on demand (VOD) channels for YellowBrickRoad.
Released through The Collective’s home-video partnership with Vivendi Universal, YellowBrickRoad–as well as the other titles in the Bloody Disgusting series–features unrated content, bonus features and special packaging. Called “one helleva wild ride,” this is one horror flick that brings terror to a new level.
“Filmmakers Jesse Holland and Andy Mitton have given us YellowBrickRoad, the surreal story of the inescapable and terrifying insanity that accompanies getting lost.
In the fall of 1940, the entire population of Friar, New Hampshire–all 572 of them–abandoned their homes, their possessions and their lives and walked up an ancient trail, never to be seen alive again. Their fates remained a mystery for over seventy years, until a team of researchers discover the trailhead and attempt to retrace the path the doomed citizens of Friar took. A few among them believe they will find something terrible in the forest. But it is the forest that will find something terrible in them.”
YellowBrickRoad was an official Slamdance selection, and played at The Atlanta Film Festival and Screamfest to critical and audience acclaim, and won best feature at the New York Horror Film Festival.
A must-see, refreshing surprise for horror fans, YellowBrickRoad follows its successful theatrical run with a nationwide DVD & iTunes release August 2, 2011. It will be available on various On Demand locations September 2.
Released through The Collective’s home-video partnership with Vivendi Universal, YellowBrickRoad–as well as the other titles in the Bloody Disgusting series–features unrated content, bonus features and special packaging. Called “one helleva wild ride,” this is one horror flick that brings terror to a new level.
Pre-Order on iTunes here
Pre-order from Amazon here
Add to your Netflix queue here
Check with your local cable provider for video on demand (VOD) channels for YellowBrickRoad.
“Filmmakers Jesse Holland and Andy Mitton have given us YellowBrickRoad, the surreal story of the inescapable and terrifying insanity that accompanies getting lost.
In the fall of 1940, the entire population of Friar, New Hampshire–all 572 of them–abandoned their homes, their possessions and their lives and walked up an ancient trail, never to be seen alive again. Their fates remained a mystery for over seventy years, until a team of researchers discover the trailhead and attempt to retrace the path the doomed citizens of Friar took. A few among them believe they will find something terrible in the forest. But it is the forest that will find something terrible in them.”
YellowBrickRoad was an official Slamdance selection, and played at The Atlanta Film Festival and Screamfest to critical and audience acclaim, and won best feature at the New York Horror Film Festival.
Straight out of the Sitges and Slamdance Film Festivals, Bloody Disgusting Selects is proud to announce the limited release of Fernando Barreda Luna’s Spanish found footage horror Atrocious (review), which has since garnered a tide of online buzz and quick comparisons to 2008′s Paranormal Activity.
The Spanish-thriller opens at limited AMC locations on August 17 (Show times are 10PM on Wednesdays and midnight on Fridays). Please visit BloodyDisgustingSelects.com for tickets and show times or check local listings.
“ ‘Atrocious’ is a gruesome, mind-bending thriller shot in a style reminiscent of ‘The Blair Witch Project’. The horror film exceprts found footage from a film reel recovered by Spanish police, documenting a family of five discovering the truth behind a dangerous urban legend. The 37 hours of found footage follow Cristian and July Quintanilla passing time at their summer home by investigating a terrifying and mysterious urban legend. As their investigation intensifies, strange occurrences in and around the house escalate rapidly, culminating finally in unspeakable atrocities.”
Updated with official trailer! I think we got out of the gate pretty strong with the release of Rammbock (now available on DVD and VOD), but right now we’re gearing up for both Phase 7 (in theaters July 17) and what I think is one of the best movies of the year, Cold Fish, Sion Sono’s absolutely psychotic Japanese black comedy in the vein of a Takashi Miike film. I’d go on record as pretty much guaranteeing that you’re going to LOVE it (I reviewed it last September out of TIFF).
In order to keep Cold Fish UNCUT, Bloody Disgusting Selects is going out with the film UNRATED in limited arthouses beginning on August 5, which could expand if it does well enough. We’ve got those dates for you inside. For those of you not in the limited marketplace, Cold Fish will arrive on DVD and iTunes August 23, with an Amazon pre-order option now available. VOD fans (that’s me!) can catch it as it begins to spread from September 23-November 22.
Phase 7, our newest Bloody Disgusting Selects film, is being released this coming Wednesday in limited AMC Theaters — and we really want all of you guys to see it.
So, for all of you guys who are as excited about the release as we are, Bloody Disgusting is hosting another contest to give you the chance to win free tickets to see the movie, along with some other really awesome stuff!
In order to have a shot at winning, we’re going to have to know what you would stock up on to survive the apocalypse. And what would you win? A free PAIR of tickets to a showing of Phase 7, plus a copy of both Rammbock and YellowBrickRoad on DVD! Aces!
To enter, watch the displayed trailer, and then in the comments below give us your list of the top essentials you would need to outlast the apocalypse. Think hard, because maybe one day you’ll save your own life…
Get more info on the release here.
The second Bloody Disgusting Selects feature, Jesse Holland and Andy Mitton’s YellowBrickRoad, will be arriving on DVD and Digital VOD on August 2 and TV VOD on September 2.
It stars The Signal‘s Anessa Ramsey in a very noisy chiller that “begins in the Fall of 1940 where the entire population of Friar, NH abandoned their homes and walked up an ancient trail, never to be seen alive again. Their fates have remained a mystery for over 70 years, until a team of researchers discover the trailhead and attempt to track the path the doomedcitizens of Friar took.”
Inside you’ll find the DVD cover art and slew of clips.
Dig on the official website for Bloody Disgusting Selects for more.
I think we got out of the gate pretty strong with the release of Rammbock (now available on DVD and VOD), but right now we’re gearing up for both Phase 7 (in theaters July 17) and what I think is one of the best movies of the year, Cold Fish, Sion Sono’s absolutely psychotic Japanese black comedy in the vein of a Takashi Miike film. I’d go on record as pretty much guaranteeing that you’re going to LOVE it (I reviewed it last September out of TIFF).
In order to keep Cold Fish UNCUT, Bloody Disgusting Selects is going out with the film UNRATED in limited arthouses beginning on August 5, which could expand if it does well enough. We’ve got those dates for you inside. For those of you not in the limited marketplace, Cold Fish will arrive on DVD and iTunes August 23, with an Amazon pre-order option now available. VOD fans (that’s me!) can catch it as it begins to spread from September 23-November 22.
The newest horror flick Bloody Disgusting Selects is bringing to you is Phase 7, an end-of-world thriller that’s in the vein of classic John Carpenter films.
Dying to see it? Here’s your chance! Enter to win a “Night at the Movies Prize Pack”, including (1) PAIR of tickets to Phase 7 and an AMC gift card (you need some popcorn and Cherry Coke don’t ya?)!
Between July 8 and July 12, enter using your Twitter account. Tweet @BDisgusting, mention “Night at the Movies” and hashtag Phase 7 (#Phase7) for your chance to win! Winner will be notified via DM.
Phase 7 is brought to you by AMC Independent and Bloody Disgusting Selects, in local AMC Independent theaters July 13, 15, 20, & 22.
It’s escaped the big screen and is now coming for you.
Rammbock: Berlin Undead has officially been released on DVD (release info). Want a free copy of this bloodthirsty zombie flick? Bloody Disgusting is giving you the chance to win one through our partnership with GetGlue!
The social networking website GetGlue lets you “check-in” to anything entertainment – including movies, TV shows, books, websites – on your computer or mobile device through your Facebook account. “Check-ins” award the user points, which allows them to earn virtual stickers. By acquiring 20 stickers, GetGlue will mail the physical product to you for free!
Between June 19 and July 28, enter the DVD giveaway by checking-in to Rammbock: Berlin Undead on GetGlue through their app or website to unlock an exclusive sticker!
Also, make sure you check out this month’s “Night Terror” screening of Phase 7, in local AMC Independent theaters July 13, brought to you by AMC Independent and Bloody Disgusting Selects.
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The main reason we started Bloody Disgusting Selects was to find quality horror films – new and old – and bring them to you dear readers. Nothing excites me more than being THE site to actually find a way to bring you something nobody else would, which is why I’m beyond excited to reveal that we’ve acquired U.S. rights to the Kimo Stamboel and Timo Tjahjanto’s (“The Mo Brothers”) Indonesian splatterfest Macabre!!
Macabre, also known as “Darah”, is off-the-wall violent and has been called the “Indonesian Inside“.
Starring Ario Bayu, Julie Estelle, Imelda Therinne, Shareefa Daanish, Arifin Putra, “Two newlyweds, along with 4 of their best friends, interrupt their travels to pick up a troubled girl on an abandoned stretch of roadway. When they return her to her ancestral home, the night turns into a crimson-hell for the 6 friends, who find themselves trapped and hunted down by Dara and her cult-like family of deadly protégés, born and raised to systematically eliminate unsuspecting passerby for one nefarious reason.”
Macabre is the winner of “Best Actress” at the Puchon Intl Film Festival and has screened at Fantastic Fest, Sitges, ScreamFest LA, Texas Frightmare, PiFan Intl Film Festival, L’Étrange Festival France, Lisbon Intl Horror Film Festival and at the Lund Fantastisk Film.
Release info, U.S. trailer (festival footage inside), one sheet, and more goodies coming soon. Watch this spot.
How far would you go for love? Holden will soon find out the answer to that question as he reaches to the depths of insanity for that one true love. “Bloodstained Romance” is a chilling love story told through the eyes of a killer, and has been deemed “undeniably realistic and extremely creepy”.
[BD Caption Contest] Win Sopranos Site Tour of New York City & T-Shirt From Alan Robert Tours4Fun.com