Exclusives
‘Dead Before Dawn 3D: Part 2’ Already Gearing Up For 2013 Production!
A few months back we brought you a sneak peak at the trailer for April Mullen’s Dead Before Dawn 3D, which premiered at Telefilm Canada’s Perspective Canada at Cannes 2012.
Since then, Bloody Disgusting has received exclusive word that sales will commence at Cannes for Dead Before Dawn 3D: Part 2, which will lens sometime in 2013.
So far the plot is said to be similar to the first as a bunch of college kids accidentally unleash an evil curse that causes everyone they come in contact with to turn into Zombie Demons…AGAIN! We’re told that this time around the team builds a “Zemon Army” in their attempt to defeat the evil spirit once and for all.
April Mullen returns to direct from a screenplay by Tim Doiron. The cast has already been locked down and features Devon Bostick, Christopher Lloyd, Martha Macisaac, Brandon Jay McLaren, Brittany Allen, Kyle Schmid, Tim Dioron and April Mullen.
Exclusives
Shudder’s ‘Hellcat’ Exclusive Trailer Traps an Infected Hostage in a Race Against Time
A gnarly infection threatens to claw its way out of a moving camper in the first trailer for Shudder’s claustrophobic Hellcat.
The feature debut of writer/editor/director Brock Bodell, who previously edited the Fantasia title Ultrasound, makes its debut on Shudder on August 14.
In Hellcat, “Lena wakes up in a moving camper trailer with a horrifying wound. She’s warned by the driver that they have one hour to get to a doctor, or she’ll succumb to an unimaginably awful fate. As the pain sets in and reality begins to fray, who should really be afraid?”
Dakota Gorman (Natural Disasters) leads the cast that also includes Todd Terry (“Breaking Bad”), Liz Atwater (The Other People), Jordan Mullins (The Bikeriders), and James Austin Johnson (“Saturday Night Live”) in a voice role. Bodell also produces alongside Andrew Duensing and Nate Eggert.
Hellcat made its world premiere last summer at Fantasia. I wrote in my review, “Hellcat is a bit of a Trojan horror that defies easy classification, by design. Bodell’s sneaky debut feature is occasionally too sparse in its worldbuilding in its bid to preserve the mystery, but not enough to detract from the thrilling road thriller that transforms into a completely left-field type of horror we don’t get nearly enough of. The stripped-down tribute to a classic horror staple catches you off guard in more ways than one, marking Bodell as one to watch.”
In other words, there’s a lot more than meets the eye to Hellcat‘s simple infection setup, delivering plenty of surprises along its bumpy road of horrors.
Check out the trailer and poster below and add Hellcat to your watchlists asap.



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