Frankenstein's Army

[BD Review] ‘Frankenstein’s Army’ Screens In Amsterdam!

Having just played at the IMAGINE film festival in Amsterdam, Bloody Disgusting’s Netherlands stringer Joris Westerdaal was on hand for the premiere of Richard Raaphorst’s Frankenstein’s Army, whcih will have its U.S. premiere at this month’s Tribeca Film Festival.

In the waning days of World War II, a battalion of Russian soldiers find themselves lost in enemy territory. Stumbling upon a village decimated by an unseen terror, they discover that a mad scientist (Hellboy’s Karel Roden) conducts experiments to fuse flesh and steel, creating an unstoppable army of undead soldiers. Leaderless and faced with dissention amongst their dwindling ranks, they must find the courage to face down an altogether new menace – or die trying.

Check out Joris’ thoughts on the film by reading on. READ MORE

[BD Review] ‘The Battery’ is Damn Good

The Battery written, directed and starring Jeremy Gardner is an emotional 100 minutes and 23 seconds of a zombie film. Like most zombie films, the story revolves around the humans involved. In this case it’s baseball players Ben (Gardner) and Mickey (Adam Cronheim). The two have been on the run from zombies for some time, and are surviving well. While Ben has to kill any of the undead that cross their path, it’s ok, because he is happy to do so as he has Mickey as a companion in the desolate world, which they now live. However, everything changes when the two find a set of walkie talkies. Soon they hear a radio transmission and the voice of a woman, Annie. Mickey becomes obsessed with Annie, which literally leads the friends down a path they shouldn’t travel.

I’ve reviewed a lot of movies for Bloody-Disgusting. I’ve reviewed a lot of bad movies, at that. And I’ve reviewed a lot of movies made on huge budgets, over a long period of time, that are just awful.

Check out these specs:

Shot On: DSLR (Canon 5D Mark ii) with Zeiss Lenses

Edited With: Adobe Premiere on a Windows PC

Budget: $6,000

Shoot Length: 16 days

The Battery is good. It’s damn good. For everything listed above, this movie is outrageously, insanely good. I went into this movie not reading the press kit info and watched it for what it was. Afterwards, I literally clapped and yelled “Brav-f***ing-O!” when I saw the specs. Jeremy Gardner, make more movies.

It isn’t just the above information that makes The Battery good. It’s the attention to detail. Ben and Mickey have been wandering, scavenging, living life the best way they can. Mickey has been longing for that normality they once had. The moment he hears Annie, you see that click inside him. The horrid longing for a woman and he’s hooked. You feel for Mickey in that moment. He just wants what he once had. While he is dreaming of that world, Ben has resigned to their apocalyptic reality. He ensures that Annie is not the gorgeous image inside Mickey’s head.

Mickey’s anguish is perfectly summed up not much later in the film. While taking a nap in the car – and with Ben nowhere around – Mickey is attacked by a female zombie. For a moment he thinks to call for help, but as the zombie girl presses her breasts against the car window, Mickey’s instincts turn on. And you can’t blame him. With Annie’s voice in his head, there is no reason he wouldn’t immediately do what he does. Gardner sets up a completely plausible situation in a completely realistic vision of an apocalyptic world.

Even better, earlier in the film, the two friends find toothbrushes and toothpaste. For a minute we see their ecstasy in the act of simply brushing their teeth. At first I felt the use of music and somewhat montage-like episodes were long running, however, after rethinking it – everything that happens in those long scenes is exactly what survivors would be doing. Whether it be brushing their teeth, or draining the juice from canned chicken to later use for hydration, the little details within The Battery are spot on.

The Battery proves something about the depths of the horror genre. There is very little gore, there is very little action – however the cinematic quality and the emotionally charged atmosphere are sculpted in the right manor to make it an excellent example of what can truly be considered horror. The film is set to premiere with a worldwide digital release in June. I eagerly await its debut. It is deserving of all the positive publicity it will receive.

the-bay

[DVD Review] Found Footage ‘The Bay’ Lacks Thrills

The Bay is completely unconventional in the way it tells its tale of an ecological disaster. Through iPhone footage, webcams, surveillance video – you name it – the movie tells the story of Claridge, Maryland and the tainted water that brings on a plague of sorts. Ultimately, it’s just not very scary.

The Bay tries. Directed by Academy Award winner Barry Levinson, who won for Rain Man back in 1988, the film has been compared to the likes of Cloverfield in its style. I personally didn’t like Cloverfield, but it was far more thrilling than The Bay. What holds together this conundrum of footage is the parasitic culprit that is causing boils and death amongst the residents of a Claridge. It’s vile. The effects are there, gross and disturbing – but they aren’t scary. Unsettling, maybe, but not terrifying. READ MORE

[BD Review] ‘Bad Meat’ is Rotten

Bad Meat is just bad. The 2011 movie was originally supposed to be directed by Rob Schmidt (Wrong Turn) back when it was announced in 2007. Then, in 2008, production was halted with the movie about 75% done. After the actors in the movie had received some credibility for their TV roles, the movie resumed production and was finished. Schmidt then pulled an Alan Smithee and slapped the name Lulu Jarmen on the film.

If you actually attempt to watch Bad Meat, you’ll see exactly why.

A group of troubled teens are sent to a boot camp of sorts. However, those running the camp are ridiculous, badly written caricatures – which could work in the right set up. These counselors, however, just make little sense. They’re porking each other left and right, yelling and harassing the kids and there really is no point for anything they do. Speaking of pork, the cook at the camp ends up making a stew with whatever Jeffrey Corbin may have guessed was for dinner (Meatballs reference, folks) and this infected meat of sorts ends up turning the counselors into crazed cannibals.

The story is full of plot holes. It seems as though there may have once been a logical thought behind it, but it must have been lost in the years this film was in limbo. In the end it really has few, if any, redeeming qualities. I could make a list everything wrong with the movie, like how are these people even allowed to be in charge of kids? But really, the time and effort to do so is not worth it.

That being said, if you are into Troma type films, where there is tons of puke and gore, this movie may be up your alley. There are scenes of a camp counselor played by Mark Pellegrino where he is doused in his own spew. There is a scene where one of the ferocious dogs that has eaten the tainted meat is dissected. If you could care less about a story and just want to be grossed out, Bad Meat will deliver. Sort of.

The characters are under developed and unlikeable. The storyline is pointless. The movie just abruptly ends without explanation. Bad Meat is just bad; avoid it at all costs.

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[Ghosts Of Gaming Past] A Review Of ‘Condemned 2: Bloodshot’

Welcome to Ghosts of Gaming Past — here we’ll be reviewing older horror games, classics and non-classics we missed when they were originally released. Have a game you’d like reviewed? Send us an email.

Written by Ally Doig, @allydoig

When Ethan Thomas stares drunkenly into the cracked remains of the latest mirror he’s punched, just for a second, he might see Max Payne scowling right back at him. It turns out that he and Condemned 2: Bloodshot’s liquor soaked lead have a fair bit in common. Both are former – and subsequently disgraced – law enforcement officers caught in a downward spiral of dependence. Binge drinking is one thing, but these guys knock back hallucinatory amounts of the hard stuff.
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[B-D Review] ‘Iron Doors’ is a Well-crafted, Claustrophobic Blast

Reviewed by Patrick Cooper

“Trapped in a box” movies are inherently fun. Even if the characters aren’t all that interesting, it’s still entertaining to try to figure a way out before they can. Then we feel stupid when that “oh shit” curveball hits us in the face. Sometimes the ending doesn’t satisfy (I love Cube but hate the end), but at least the ride there was nice. One recent example that a lot of people seemed to like was Buried, which I thought was a 90-minute wank-a-thon. Being trapped in a coffin with Ryan Reynolds for an entire movie is not cool.

Stephen Manuel’s Iron Doors is a thoroughly enjoyable addition to the genre. Like most of its kind, the premise is simple: A man (Axel Wedekind) wakes up alone in a room. The only way out seems to be a huge, iron vault door. Inside the room is a dead rat infested with maggots, a locker, a blowtorch, and a chisel and hammer. He has no idea how he got there – his first impression is that it’s his work buddies playing an elaborate prank on him. The last thing he remembers is going out drinking with his boys – then he blacked out and woke up in this room. I’ve been there, bro.

We spend every second with Axel as he curses (a lot), drinks urine, eats maggots, and gradually deteriorates physically and mentally. Luckily, nearly every second is compelling and Axel is a strong enough actor to carry the entire thing. At first he comes off as some kind of douchebag investment banker type, but as the movie progressed I grew to like him. He talks to himself a lot and through this continuous one-way conversation he reveals himself to be a regular, foul-mouthed everyman.

A lot of focus is put on the whole piss drinking and maggot eating parts. It’s gross the first time Axel does it, then every other time is just plain gratuitous. It happens maybe three times in the movie and forces the suspense to come to a screeching halt. The entire film takes place in essentially three connected rooms. The filmmakers made the most of it – filming from every angle you can imagine and using minimal lighting with precision.

The mystery of why he’s there isn’t revealed until the final seconds of the film. Even then, it’s not really explained. It’s an ambiguous shot that leaves it up to the audience to fill in the blanks. I found the ending pretty damn weak and somewhat corny. Axel, who by the end is on the cusp of dying of starvation, definitely earned this ending, but I felt like the audience deserved something meatier.

But like I said earlier, endings are allowed to suck in this subgenre as long as the ride there was fun. Iron Doors is definitely an enjoyable, psychologically thrilling trip. Axel Wedekind is a capable actor, so you won’t mind being locked in a room with him for 90 minutes. Although the ending probably won’t blow anyone’s mind, it’s a well-crafted, claustrophobic blast up to that point.

A/V

Iron Doors is presented by Jing Films in 1.78:1 widescreen. It looks fine for a DVD; the only problem was that the audio didn’t match up. I tried both audio tracks and neither did, which was horribly distracting. I saw online that other people had this problem, so someone made a major goof at the factory.

Special Features

Just a trailer.

[B-D Review] ‘Badlands’ is Pretty Flawless in its Execution

Reviewed by Patrick Cooper

With the exception of Blood Simple and Mean Streets, few debut features in modern film are as impressive as Terrence Malick’s Badlands. Released in 1973 while the Vietnam War was still raging, Badlands is a visually stunning, amoral meditation on loneliness, media image, and a bunch of that transcendent nature-related philosophy junk that Malick compulsively puts in his pictures. While the other two debuts I mentioned are a little rough around the edges, Malick’s Badlands is pretty flawless in its execution. And most people don’t touch on this, but I also think it’s hysterical. There’s no doubt the enigmatic Malick had a clear vision and now, thanks to the Criterion Collection, you can absorb yourself in this hilarious Montana nightmare in brilliant HD.

The story is based on the real-life murder spree committed by James Dean-wannabe Charles Starkweather and his adolescent girlfriend Caril Ann Fugate in 1958. Martin Sheen and Sissy Spacek (who had never had starring roles before) play Kit and Holly. When we first meet Kit, he’s collecting garbage, offering a fellow garbage man $1 if he’ll eat a dead dog. Then he tries selling some old boots he found in the trash for $1. It’s clear from the get-go that Kit’s a charlatan who’s constantly trying to convince everyone around him how smart he is.

Like some kind of fairy tale encounter, he meets teenage Holly as she’s practicing her baton outside. It takes little convincing to have her wrapped around his finger. She’s instantly charmed on her ass by this strikingly handsome young man who seems so knowledgeable about the world. Through her narration, Holly spends most of the film trying to figure out what’s going on in Kit’s head – including why he pursued her when he could “have any girl he wanted.” After shooting Holly’s dad, played by the late, great Warren Oates (Cockfighter, Race With the Devil), she accompanies Kit on a murder spree through the badlands of Montana.

The killings, of which there are many, are presented in a dry, remorseless manner. Malick provides no explanation for Kit’s homicidal tendencies – although Kit does exhibit some of the characteristics of a textbook psychopath, such as irresistible charm and zero conscious. There’s an obvious element of celebrity involved too. After he’s caught, he relishes the attention paid to him by the police. He gleefully hands out his zippo and comb as souvenirs and lights up when a cop says he resembles James Dean. I don’t think Kit’s a total fame-whore, but once he realizes the public is fascinated by him, he really starts hamming it up.

Badlands is easily Malick’s most hilarious film. I can’t believe more critics don’t talk about how funny this damn movie is. Martin Sheen’s Kit provides loads of eccentric humor – from emotionlessly shooting at a football to building his own rock monument while waiting for the cops to catch up with him, this guy’s a real card. One of my favorite scenes is when Kit and Holly are fleeing a rich guy’s house where they were shacked up. As they’re running, Kit won’t shutup about how much effort it must be to care of such a big lawn. If Malick’s visual philosophizing doesn’t do anything for you (or if you found Tree of Life a major snooze-fest), just read Badlands as a comedy and I promise you’ll have a good time.

Criterion drops about six or seven releases a month and they aint cheap. If you only buy a few every year, make Badlands one of them.

* One of Bruce Springsteen’s greatest songs, “Nebraska”, is heavily based on Badlands. This is important, I swear.

A/V

The Criterion Collection presents Badlands in a beautifully restored 4K digital 1080p transfer, in its original aspect ratio of 1.85:1 with uncompressed monaural audio. The transfer looks like your standard Criterion Blu-ray, meaning pretty damn flawless. Dirt, scratches, and other imperfections are obsolete and the amount of detail is stunning. The scenes of nature sound clear and crisp, as does the rest of the film. The car chase near the end sounds particularly strong.

Special Features

“Making Badlands”: This 42-minute documentary features Martin Sheen, Sissy Spacek, and art director Jack Fisk. Spacek discusses her acting roots and how her and Malick’s shared experiences growing up in 1950s Texas helped get her cast. Sheen presents some really heavy insight. When he got the call from Malick, it was nearly a religious experience for him. He explains how it was the first time a director “saw something” in him. Fisk details how he researched the film and the philosophical questions presented in Malick’s work. Like most of Criterion’s original documentaries, this one’s totally worth a watch.

Interview with executive producer Edward Pressman: Pressman, who’s produced some seriously kick ass films (Sisters, Conan, Phantom of the Paradise), discusses how he used his family’s toy business as a credit line to produce Badlands, his first thoughts on the script, and basically what a goddamn leap of faith producing this film was.

Interview with associate editor Billy Weber: During this 20-minute interview with editor Billy Weber, he talks about growing up during the Starkweather murder spree, what he believes Malick wanted to understand about the real killer, and how difficult the 15-month editing process was. To put it into perspective: Badlands was 60,000 feet of film, Days of Heaven was 120,000 feet, and Thin Red Line was over a million. Pressman edited them all – what a soldier.

1993 episode of American Justice about Charles Starkweather: This 20-minute episode of the real-crime TV program profiles Starkweather, placing the murders in the context of the time. The real guy was way more ruthless than Kit – he stabbed Caril Fugate’s two-year-old sister (which he claimed was self-defense), as well as her mother. He also sexually assaulted a young girl and killed two dogs. Not cool.

Trailer

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[Album Review] Device ‘Device’

Today marks the release of Device’s debut full-length, the self-titled Device. The brainchild of Disturbed frontman David Draiman, Device features Filter guitarist Geno Lenardo and a slew of guest artists, including Lzzy Hale (Halestorm), Serj Tankian (System Of A Down), and more. It is a project that has drawn the interest of countless Disturbed enthusiasts, especially since the announcement of the group’s hiatus in 2011.

With all of these guest artists and one of today’s most recognizable vocalists, is there any way that this debut could fail? Head on below to read my thoughts on the album! READ MORE

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[Ghosts Of Gaming Past] A Review Of ‘Evil Dead: Regeneration’

Welcome to Ghosts of Gaming Past — here we’ll be reviewing older horror games, classics and non-classics we missed when they were originally released. Have a game you’d like reviewed? Send us an email.

Written by Hayden Dingman, @haydencd

Okay, reader, I can hear you puzzling this out in your brain. “If Hail to the King was the ‘Evil Dead’ of Evil Dead video games, and Fistful of Boomstick was ‘Army of Darkness,’ then Regeneration must be…Evil Dead 2!”

And you’d be wrong.
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[Exclusive] Seeker’s Bryce Lucien Reviews ‘Videodrome’

Seeker vocalist Bryce Lucien raised a lot of eyebrows back in February when he brought a Top 10 list to Bloody Disgusting entitled 10 Horror Movies You May Not Watch With Your Girlfriend. Aside from the feminist uprising that the article spurred, it featured some truly fantastic horror films that many readers had not seen nor had even heard of before.

Now Lucien is back with his take on the Cronenberg classic Videodrome, which is widely loved and appreciated by the horror community. After all, who hasn’t at one point in their life said “Long live the new flesh!” after seeing the film?

Head on below to read Lucien’s thoughts on the film. READ MORE

Castlevania

‘Castlevania: Lords of Shadow – Mirror of Fate’ Review: A Slaying Spree Without Substance

MercurySteam’s Castlevania: Lords of Shadow, released in 2010, played like no Castlevania game that came before it, yet it still felt like it took place in the same universe. The series’ flagship European castles, dark and moody forests, and supernatural creatures worked better than expected when mixed with God of War-esque combo-driven combat, larger-than-life set pieces, and light RPG elements, a noticeable departure from its NES and SNES ancestors and Metroidvania counterparts.
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[BD Review] ‘Evil Dead’ Holds Up As A Thrillingly Gory Blast!!

FilmDistrict and TriStar’s Evil Dead was officially released last night at 10PM, so I figure now is a good a time as any to re-post my review from last month’s SXSW Film Festival. I’ve seen the film once more since then, and my impression was largely the same – I pretty much loved it. It hits some snags in the first 30 minutes and some of the character beats are thin – but once it gets going it just flies. By then end of the last exhilarating hour I was so buzzed on the carnage I didn’t care about the flaws.

From my review, “It’s even gorier than you’re expecting. I seriously don’t have a clue as to how they wrangled an “R” rating here. Blood, pus, bone fragments, limbs and brains are flung around with playful abundance and the result is both punishing and exhilarating… This film doesn’t condemn its audience, it exalts it – and as a result it’s able to achieve a sustained symphony of carnage that energizes rather than exhausts.

Directed by Fede Alvarez, the R-rated remake stars Jane Levy, Shiloh Fernandez, Lou Taylor Pucci, Elizabeth Blackmore and Jessica Lucas.

Check out the entire review here And don’t forget to write YOUR review here! You’ve been waiting for so long – tell the world what you thought! READ MORE

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[BD Review] ‘Stitches’ Is Destined To Be A Cult Classic!!

Fantastic Films and MPI Media Group (Hatchet II, Stakeland, The Innkeepers)’s horror comedy Stitches, directed by Conor McMahon, is currently out on DVD, Blu-ray and VOD – and I certainly recommend it! So I’m taking the time to re-post Mr. Disgusting’s review to remind you of the film’s potential!

And while the filmmakers let the good times roll, when its time to get to business, they f*cking deliver. Stitches is a relentless and brutal slasher that’s not only ultra violent, but also off-the-wall gory. But the icing in the ice cream cake is how original the death scenes are taking the genre to an entirely new level (think Killer Klownz weird).

You can read his review in its entirety by clicking here. And don’t forget to write your own to tell all of Bloody what YOU think. READ MORE

GhostsOfGaming

[Ghosts Of Gaming Past] A Review Of The ‘Silent Hill HD Collection’

Welcome to Ghosts of Gaming Past — here we’ll be reviewing older horror games, classics and non-classics we missed when they were originally released. Have a game you’d like reviewed? Send us an email.

Written by Vikki Blake, @_vixx

This is a story almost too terrible to tell.

Nah, I’m not talking about the closing moments of Silent Hill 2 (although, let’s face it, that was all pretty grim, wasn’t it?). I’m talking about the tragedy that is the once much-anticipated Silent Hill: HD Collection.
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GhostsOfGaming

[Ghosts Of Gaming Past] A Review Of ‘Evil Dead: A Fistful of Boomstick’

Welcome to Ghosts of Gaming Past — here we’ll be reviewing older horror games, classics and non-classics we missed when they were originally released. Have a game you’d like reviewed? Send us an email.

Written by Hayden Dingman, @haydencd

My name is Hayden, and I am a slave. Close as I can figure, the year is 2013 A.D. and I’m being dragged to my death.

It wasn’t always like this. I had a real life once. A job at this site called Bloody Disgusting.

I had a wonderful girlfriend. Together we drove to my apartment in San Francisco. It seems an archeologist had come to this remote place to translate and study his latest find—Evil Dead: A Fistful of Boomstick. Encased in human flesh and encoded in blood, this ancient VIS Entertainment game contained bizarre burial rites, funeral incantations, and demon resurrection passages. It was never meant for the world of the living.
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Room 237

[BD Review]: ‘Room 237′ A Gift For ‘Shining’ Obsessives!

Now in limited theaters and Ultra VOD is Rodney Ascher’s Room 237, an experimental documentary that explores the numerous theories about the real meaning of Stanley Kubrick’s film The Shining. The film may be over 30 years old but it continues to inspire debate, speculation, and mystery. Five very different points of view are illuminated through voice over, film clips, animation and dramatic reenactments. Together they’ll draw the audience into a new maze, one with endless detours and dead ends, many ways in, but no way out…

Ryan Daley wrote his review out of Sundance, “Many of the ideas presented are preposterous and absurd, but every interview subject has a point or two that’s surprisingly relevant. The film as a whole is insanely thought-provoking. And more importantly, whether it’s discussing subliminal Hitler mustaches or implied erections, Room 237 is consistently entertaining. But this is coming from someone who has seen ‘The Shining’ more than 20 times.

Click here for the full review. READ MORE

GhostsOfGaming

[Ghosts Of Gaming Past] A Review Of ‘Alone In The Dark’

Welcome to Ghosts of Gaming Past — here we’ll be reviewing older horror games, classics and non-classics we missed when they were originally released. Have a game you’d like reviewed? Send us an email.

Written by Ally Doig, @allydoig

The original Alone in the Dark predated the emergence of survival horror. While Resident Evil rightly takes the credit for popularizing the genre later that same decade, it owes much to the likes of Infogrames’ ambitious 3D title. Its influence, though arguably understated, still earned it its own page in the history books. Sixteen years later and unfortunately that dusty old page now seems like the best place for a series that failed to properly build on its own foundations.
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GhostsOfGaming1

[Ghosts Of Gaming Past] A Review Of ‘Evil Dead: Hail To The King’

Welcome to Ghosts of Gaming Past — here we’ll be reviewing older horror games, classics and non-classics we missed when they were originally released. Have a game you’d like reviewed? Send us an email.

Written by Hayden Dingman, @haydencd

In case you hadn’t noticed, it’s Evil Dead month here at Bloody Disgusting in preparation for the new film. One day I was driving down the road in my Delta 88 and I thought, “Hey, there’s got to be some Evil Dead video games out there. We should probably review those for our beloved readers.” Adam agreed.
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[Ghosts Of Gaming Past] A Review Of ‘Penumbra: Requiem’

Welcome to Ghosts of Gaming Past — here we’ll be reviewing older horror games, classics and non-classics we missed when they were originally released. Have a game you’d like reviewed? Send us an email.

Written by Hayden Dingman, @haydencd

Imagine:

It’s 2008. You’re a fairly new developer coming off two acclaimed horror games, and your fan base is growing pretty rapidly. Unfortunately, your publisher is having issues and cuts your series from three games down to the two you’ve already released. You feel bad. Really bad. There were stories you still wanted to tell in that universe, and you feel you’re letting down your fans.
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TWD

‘The Walking Dead: Survival Instinct’ Review: An Apocalypse Not Worth Surviving

Like many of you, I’ve been skeptical since the beginning. The Walking Dead: Survival Instinct’s marketing campaign has been a rocky one, after being soured by a series of disappointing trailers — both fake and official — screenshots, and an obvious push by Activision to get the game out during the third season of the television series. It didn’t help that the game was quietly crammed into the very busy march lineup, almost as if Activision realized the game wouldn’t live up to expectations so they let it die in the shadow of several of this year’s more high profile releases.

I won’t bury the lead: this game isn’t good. If you’re interested in finding out just how bad it is, I suggest reading on.
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[SXSW '13 Review] Evan Calls ‘Plus One’ A Weird, Violent and Original Surprise!

Evan Dickson is back with more from the SXSW Film Festival, this time sharing his review from the World Premiere of Plus One, the latest film from The Last House on the Left‘s Dennis Iliadis.

In the horror party starring Rhys Wakefield, Logan Miller, Ashley Hinshaw and Natalie Hall, three college friends go to the biggest party of the year, each looking for something different: love, sex and a simple human connection. When a supernatural phenomenon disrupts the party, it lights a fuse on what will become the strangest night anyone has ever seen.

“Plus One demands that you pay attention if you want to keep up, something you’re not usually asked to do in sci-fi horror movies soaked in booze and sexuality,” says Dickson. “If you do, you’ll find that the film has a lot on its mind. It’s an inspired take on what happens when we choose to view the world through a fearful lens rather than an accepting one.

As for the style, well, it’s got a lot going on, too: “It sets up a unique Project X via Can’t Hardly Wait universe and melds it into an Invasion Of The Body Snatchers shaped mold.

It sounds amazing, no? Click here for the entire review. READ MORE

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‘Dead Space 3: Awakened’ Review: Is It Real Or Is It Marker-ex?

Written by Brittany Vincent, @MolotovCupcake

In many ways, Dead Space 3 was inferior to its predecessors, but it still valiantly forged ahead as one of what will ultimately be the year’s best third-person action games. While it eschewed classic survival horror convention for in-your-face (albeit usually generic) action, it did have its moments, namely, any time Isaac Clarke or his partner suffered from hallucinatory visions. Dead Space 3: Awakened is the first round of DLC released to further expand upon the schizophrenic shooter, and while it’s short on content, it packs an interesting wallop as an additional epilogue and surrogate survival horror section. And if you’re anything like me, that’s a good thing.
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[BD Review] ‘Holy Ghost People’ Prays For Heaven But Ends Up On Earth

Like so many films at SXSW, I walked into Holy Ghost People utterly blind and not knowing at all what to expect. For the majority of the film’s running time I was handsomely rewarded – this is a well shot piece of work with an intriguing premise and several amazing performances. I was really digging this tale, steeped in the world of Appalachian snake-handling churches, as a sort of Martha Marcy May Marlene meets The Vanishing hybrid. It shows a remarkable restraint and the aesthetic is authentic enough to make you feel like you’re actually in this world. Unfortunately, a series of questionable decisions towards the end of the film diminished some of my goodwill.

Holy Ghost People starts out intriguingly when drifting alcoholic Wayne [Brendan McCarthy] wakes up, bloodied and hungover, on his couch. In the shower is a beautiful stranger Charlotte [Emma Greenwell - whose soulful determination is one of the film's biggest assets] who, once she emerges, makes damn sure he’s going to pay her back for saving his ass in a bar fight a few hours ago. The favor she requests? To accompany her to “The Church Of One Accord” – a religious cult compound atop a remote Appalachian mountain – in search of her sister who disappeared there.

The film has a poetic, lyrical voice-over that feels a little out of place here, but otherwise it’s smooth (and occasionally exhilarating) sailing for sometime after this. Director Mitchell Altieri does a nice job of not only establishing the geography of the compound, but making it feel lived in and real. You can almost smell the place and the faux peacefulness its selling. It also doesn’t hurt that Joe Egender (who also co-wrote and produced the film) turns in a truly electrifying* performance as Brother Billy, the enigmatic leader of the compound.

Sadly, the film shifts gears for its last act in a manner that feels out of character for the film we’ve come to know and enjoy for the past hour or so. It’s not that Holy Ghost People goes totally off the rails, but it teeters dangerously close. Wayne gets into some righteous shotgun justice that distracts us from the resolution of the film’s central mystery. And the voiceover, which once alternated between engaging and irksome, veers into complete irrelevance – telling us things as we’re watching them happen without deepening the context. I’m not a stickler about narration, in fact I feel like I welcome it more than most of my fellow critics. But it has to be done right and here the poetic Terrence Malick vibe they’re going for just muddies the tone of the film. If Altieri wants to play with this sort of thing, he should save it for a different movie and cut the vast majority of it out of this one entirely.

Overall, I’d recommend Holy Ghost People with a few reservations. At the screening I attended, they mentioned that this cut was only 6 days old and they were still toying with it. If they could lose most of the narration and trim some of the incongruous action during the film’s climax, those reservations would diminish greatly.

*I rarely use the word “electrifying” out of a fear of sounding like Peter Travers, but I feel it’s appropriate here.

GhostsOfGaming

[Ghosts Of Gaming Past] A Review Of ‘Penumbra: Black Plague’

Welcome to Ghosts of Gaming Past — here we’ll be reviewing older horror games, classics and non-classics we missed when they were originally released. Have a game you’d like reviewed? Send us an email.

Written by Hayden Dingman, @haydencd

I know we’re reviewing games that are fairly old in this column, but I still don’t want to spoil anything for those of you who went out and purchased Penumbra: Overture after my last review (here). Therefore, consider this your standard spoiler warning—there be spoilers for the end of Penumbra: Overture ahead.
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