mine-games

Mine Games

The story revolves around a group of young friends who make a shocking discovery in an abandoned mine while on vacation.

With time looping back on itself, the group soon becomes aware that one of them will be responsible for the death of the rest of them.

Sales Trailer and Art For ‘Mine Games’, Starring Briana Evigan and Julianna Guill!

Richard Gray’s Mine Games is now in post-production after quietly filming this past year.

The cast includes Burning Bright and Mother’s Day‘s Briana Evigan, Friday the 13th and The Apparition‘s Julianna Guill, alongside Joseph Cross, Ethan Peck, Alex Meraz, Rafi Gavron and Rebecca Da Costa.

The story revolves around a group of young friends who make a shocking discovery in an abandoned mine while on vacation. With time looping back on itself, the group soon becomes aware that one of them will be responsible for the death of the rest of them.

Check out some sales art and trailer inside. READ MORE

THE APPARITION

‘The Apparition’ Haunts Home Video

Warner Home Video has announced DVD ($28.98) and Blu-ray/DVD Combo ($29.98) releases of The Apparition which stars Ashley Greene, Sebastian Stan, and Tom Felton. DVD Active reports that wach will be available to own on November 27th. The only extra material on the DVD release will be a featurette (“The Apparition: A Cinematic Specter”). The Blu-ray/DVD Combo release will also include an UltraViolet digital copy of the film.

When frightening events start to occur in their home, young couple Kelly (Ashley Greene) and Ben (Sebastian Stan) discover they are being haunted by a presence that was accidentally conjured during a university parapsychology experiment. The horrifying apparition feeds on their fear and torments them no matter where they try to run. Their last hope is an expert in the supernatural (Tom Felton), but even with his help they may already be too late to save themselves from this terrifying force…READ MORE

THE APPARITION

[BD Review] ‘The Apparition’ Unfocused and Overdeveloped

Now in theaters everywhere from Warner Bros. Pictures is Todd Lincoln’s The Apparition, a supernatural horror with Found Footage elements, and the cast of Ashley Greene, Sebastian Stan, Luke Pasqualino, Julianna Guill and Tom Felton.

[The movie] opens with not one, but two fantastic sequences that set the table for what should be the premiere haunter of the year. Unfortunately, the rest of the film is bogged down with heavy exposition, lack of rules, and a lackluster performance from Sebastian Stan.

The biggest problem with The Apparition is that the story behind haunting is way, way, wayyyyy more interesting than the relationship between [Stan and Green’s characters).

In the end it just feels like Apparition is unfocused and overdeveloped.

You’ll find the entire review by clicking above. Return this weekend and write your own review to tell all of Bloody what YOU thought.

[BD Review] ‘The Apparition’ Unfocused and Overdeveloped

Todd Lincoln’s The Apparition wastes no time spooking audiences. The supernatural horror from Warner Bros. opens with not one, but two fantastic sequences that set the table for what should be the premiere haunter of the year. Unfortunately, the rest of the film is bogged down with heavy exposition, lack of rules, and a lackluster performance from Sebastian Stan.

Apparition opens Found Footage-style with a look back to the 1970’s when an experiment resurrects a recently deceased scientific team member. The result is a shaky table and a photo with a black figure standing in the back. It then cuts to present day where another group of scientists hope to recreate the experiment, and take it a step further (with the use of modern technology). The footage cuts when that super hottie from Friday the 13th (Julianna Guill) is sucked into blackness.

Post title card, everything quickly stumbles downhill as we’re introduced to Kelly (Ashley Greene) and Ben (Sebastian Stan), who go shopping at Costco and stuff. It’s super interesting (but not really). They move into a new house owned by Kelly’s parents, and almost immediately are in the middle of various supernatural events (like tables moving by themselves).

The biggest problem with The Apparition is that the story behind haunting is way, way, wayyyyy more interesting than the relationship between Kelly and Ben, who, sad to say, could both die for all I care. The entire Found Footage angle was visually more appealing, and more so, it was frightening.

Speaking of Ben and Kelly… While I was surprisingly impressed with Greene’s performance, Stan was awkwardly miscast. It also didn’t help that I felt like neither of them were ever in any real danger. Lincoln makes a noble attempt to explain why the duo remain in such an obvious haunted house, and even forces them into a hotel stay, but ultimately none of it felt “real” because of their passé attitude about the situation. What really dragged down the tension and scares was that there appeared to be no rules for the demon. In fact, Lincoln fills the meat of the film with exposition to tell the viewer just that. There’s literally a scene where Ben and Kelly hear a recording of Patrick (Tom Felton) – explaining that there are no rules or pattern for the demon, which is a complete copout.

The same issue arises when he attempts to explain why there‘s a “Grudge”-esque ghost and other unexplained oddities – Lincoln has a character state that, when haunted, one “can’t tell what’s real and what’s fake.” That’s one way to qualify putting anything you want in a film with no rhyme, reason *or* explanation.

I really wanted to like The Apparition, and think Lincoln had some really good ideas hiding within. His directing style was appealing, especially in those earlier sequences, and he got quite the performance out of both Greene and Felton (I kept wishing the entire movie was about his character). If anything, the final product feels a bit tampered with (like there were a million hands all over the film).

In the end it just feels like Apparition is unfocused and overdeveloped (it’s obvious they even tacked on an extra ending). While there were some fantastic scares (especially the shower scene), most of the pic was deluded with unnecessary exposition and a dreadfully uninteresting arc between Ben and Kelly. It will forever and ever bother me wondering what a movie about the actual scientists might have been like.

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The Apparition

When frightening events start to occur in their home, young couple Kelly (Ashley Greene) and Ben (Sebastian Stan) discover they are being haunted by a presence that was accidentally conjured during a university parapsychology experiment. The horrifying apparition feeds on their fear and torments them no matter where they try to run. Their last hope is an expert in the supernatural (Tom Felton), but even with his help they may already be too late to save themselves from this terrifying force…

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Contests

Win Passes To See ‘The Apparition’ In Orlando

Judging from the trailer, if you’re into American J-Horror and have been feeling pangs of pain since the trend fell off the grid a few years ago, you should be looking forward to Todd Lincoln’s The Apparition. If you’re scratching your head and wondering what the hell I’m talking about, don’t feel bad; the marketing is practically non-existent.

Warner Bros. has provided us with fifty passes – good for two people each – to an early screening at Regal Winter Park on Thursday, August 23rd at 8:00 pm. To win, all you have to do is show up. We’ll be waiting in front of the theater starting at 6:30 pm, and will give out the passes on a first come, first served basis.

When frightening events start to occur in their home, young couple Kelly (Ashley Greene) and Ben (Sebastian Stan) discover they are being haunted by a presence that was accidentally conjured during a university parapsychology experiment. The horrifying apparition feeds on their fear and torments them no matter where they try to run. Their last hope is an expert in the supernatural (Tom Felton), but even with his help they may already be too late to save themselves from this terrifying force… READ MORE

THE APPARITION

Massive Hi-Res Image Gallery For Warner Bros.’ ‘The Apparition’

Warner Bros. Pictures’ The Apparition, the Todd Lincoln-directed haunter with an incredible trailer, now has a whopping 24 hi-res image gallery!

Starring Ashley Greene, Sebastian Stan, Luke Pasqualino, Julianna Guill and Tom Felton, the PG-13 supernatural horror resurrects the dead on August 24, 2012.

When frightening events start to occur in their home, young couple Kelly (Ashley Greene) and Ben (Sebastian Stan) discover they are being haunted by a presence that was accidentally conjured during a university parapsychology experiment. The horrifying apparition feeds on their fear and torments them no matter where they try to run. Their last hope is an expert in the supernatural (Tom Felton), but even with his help they may already be too late to save themselves from this terrifying force…

Once You Believe. You Die… READ MORE

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Believe It, Your Fear Feeds ‘The Apparition’ Trailer & Poster!

Once You Believe. You Die.

Warner Bros. has released an absolutely fantastic trailer for Todd Lincoln’s The Apparition, which features gratuitous shots of Ashley Greene’s butt, haunting visual effects, a J-horror ghost and a pretty damn cool story.

Here’s the crunch for the PG-13 supernatural horror opening in theaters August 31, “When frightening events start to occur in their home, young couple Kelly (Ashley Greene) and Ben (Sebastian Stan) discover they are being haunted by a presence that was accidentally conjured during a university parapsychology experiment. The horrifying apparition feeds on their fear and torments them no matter where they try to run. Their last hope is an expert in the supernatural (Tom Felton), but even with his help they may already be too late to save themselves from this terrifying force…

We’ve added the trailer inside, along with the official one-sheet that’s sort of similar to Dimension’s poster for Pulse. READ MORE

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Altitude (V)

Lost in a mysterious cloudbank, a rookie pilot and her four teenage friends must contend with a freak mechanical failure that first sends their small plane climbing to an impossible height, and then plummeting through endless mist.

After regaining control, the survivors are confronted with a horrifying realization – the very ground beneath them has vanished and a malevolent force lurking in the clouds wants them dead.

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Friday the 13th (2009)

The story follows a group of young adults that find themselves going toe-to-toe with the infamous Jason Voorhees (Derek Mears) at a cabin near Camp Crystal Lake.

Searching for his missing sister, Clay heads up to the eerie woods of legendary Crystal Lake, where he stumbles on the creaky remains of rotting old cabins that lie in wait behind moss-covered trees. And that’s not the only thing hiding under the brush. Against the advice of police and cautions from the locals, Clay pursues what few leads he has, with the help of a young woman he meets among a group of college kids up for an all-thrills weekend. But they are about to find much more than they bargained for. Little do they know, they’ve entered the domain of one of the most terrifying specters in American film history-the infamous killer who haunts Crystal Lake, armed with a razor-sharp machete… Jason Voorhees.