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‘Blink Twice’ Official Poster – Can You Make It Out of This Party Alive?

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Directed by Zoë Kravitz (The Batman), and formerly titled Pussy Island, MGM’s Blink Twice will be released only in theaters August 23, and the official poster has arrived.

Are you having a good time? Check out the poster below and expect a new trailer soon.

Blink Twice has been rated “R” for…

“Strong violent content, sexual assault, drug use and language throughout, and some sexual references.”

Naomi Ackie stars alongside Channing Tatum in Blink Twice, with the film’s impressive ensemble cast of familiar faces also including Kyle MacLachlan, Adria Arjona, Alia Shawkat, Simon Rex, Haley Joel Osment, Christian Slater, and Geena Davis.

In Blink Twice, “Tech billionaire Slater King (Channing Tatum) meets cocktail waitress Frida (Naomi Ackie) at his fundraising gala, and sparks fly. He invites her to join him and his friends on a dream vacation on his private island. It’s paradise. Wild nights blend into sun-soaked days and everyone’s having a great time.

“No one wants this trip to end, but as strange things start to happen, Frida begins to question her reality. There is something wrong with this place. She’ll have to uncover the truth if she wants to make it out of this party alive.”

Kravitz wrote the script alongside E.T. Feigenbaum.

Writer in the horror community since 2008. Editor in Chief of Bloody Disgusting. Owns Eli Roth's prop corpse from Piranha 3D. Has four awesome cats. Still plays with toys.

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‘George A. Romero’s Resident Evil’ Documentary Director Brandon Salisbury Talks the Games, Romero’s Films and More in New Interview [Video]

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It still carries that “Coming Soon” tag, but for those of you itching to see more of the upcoming George A. Romero’s Resident Evil documentary, Residence of Evil has just the thing. Founder J.J. sat down with George A. Romero’s Resident Evil director Brandon Salisbury to chat it up about the documentary, as well as delving into the Resident Evil series itself, Salisbury’s thoughts on Romero’s work and more.

Salisbury first got into the Resident Evil in 1998, when the marketing campaign for Resident Evil 2 was kicking off. “In December 1997, I got a PlayStation 1, and that was when the marketing campaign for Resident Evil 2 ramped up right over the Christmas season.” Salisbury said he was “absolutely floored” by one of the commercials for Resident Evil 2, as up until that point, he had never played a video game that you would even consider a horror video game. “So when the game came out in January 1998, I immediately played it.”

Salisbury then pivoted to how he came to be aware of Romero’s involvement with a Resident Evil film adaptation. “I found out around when Resident Evil 2 came out. That’s when they had the “win a part in the movie” sticker. Right after that was when the rumours started that George Romero might be directing. And then it was about 7 months after the release [of RE2] when it was officially announced that he was attached.”

Obviously, as we know now, things unfortunately didn’t pan out with Romero’s involvement, which led to Salisbury’s documentary. “What had happened, just as a little bit of additional backstory, is I really wanted to make movies. But then I went into the military for 12 years, and then when I got out, I really didn’t know if that point in my life I could even get into film. I had tried a couple of times before like in high school, and then when I was out of the military, and nothing ever seemed to work out.”

Eventually, Salisbury had done a video on Romero’s Resident Evil script on his YouTube channel, which he was “never satisfied” with it. “I wanted to redo it. So I did more research, and then I contact Robbie McGregor who I’d known from the Horror is Alive forum. I had helped them a little bit with McElroy’s script, finding additional information that had kind of been lost for years. So I contacted him and just said ‘Hey, I want to make this video.’ So we decided to join forces.”

After uncovering more information about the film, as well as realizing the possibilities from going into the Romero archives at the University of Pittsburgh and learning about Romero’s process, Salisbury decided that this should be a full-length documentary. “It needs to be feature length. It’s not a YouTube documentary anymore.”

You can check out the full 40 minute interview below, as well as the most recent trailer for the documentary.

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