Friday, October 9, 2015

The PRIDE AND PREJUDICE AND ZOMBIES International Trailer is Here!

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The PRIDE AND PREJUDICE AND ZOMBIES International Trailer is Here!

Pride and Prejudice and Zombies international trailer

The Pride and Prejudice and Zombies International Trailer is Here!

The Pride and Prejudice and Zombies international trailer is here!

Lionsgate UK has revealed the first highly-anticipated Pride and Prejudice and Zombies international trailer, which you can view below!

Written and directed by Burr Steers (Igby Goes Down), Pride and Prejudice and Zombies is based on the book by Seth Grahame-Smith and stars Lily James (Cinderella), Sam Riley (Control), Jack Huston (American Hustle), Bella Heathcote (Dark Shadows), Douglas Booth (Jupiter Ascending), Matt Smith (“Doctor Who”), Charles Dance (“Game of Thrones”) and Lena Headey (300).

A zombie outbreak has fallen upon the land in Jane Austen’s classic tale of the tangled relationships between lovers from different social classes in 19th century England. Feisty heroine Elizabeth Bennet (Lily James) is a master of martial arts and weaponry and the handsome Mr. Darcy (Sam Reilly) is a fierce zombie killer, yet the epitome of upper class prejudice. As the zombie outbreak intensifies, they must swallow their pride and join forces on the blood-soaked battlefield.

Steers told EW in July that they didn’t go for laughs in adapting the material. “The idea was that it was Pride and Prejudice set in this alternate world and then for everyone to play it straight,” he says. “The movie’s big wink is that there is no big wink. It’s definitely not camp.”

Lily James says that the Bennet girls will see some real action in the film. “Rather than knitting and crocheting, they’re polishing muskets,” she says, adding that Elizabeth is “the most badass zombie slayer there is.” 

 Screen Gems will open Pride and Prejudice and Zombies in U.S. theaters on February 19, 2016.

What better way to get in the mood for #WorldZombieDay, than with the FIRST LOOK at PRIDE AND PREJUDICE AND ZOMBIES https://t.co/sixvksmkkg

— Lionsgate UK (@LionsgateUK) October 9, 2015

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Terrifying Anthology Chiller MÉXICO BARBARO Gets Trailer

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Terrifying Anthology Chiller MÉXICO BARBARO Gets Trailer

GigiDia3

GigiDiaHOT

Nightmarish Mexican horror film gets release date and new trailer.

Acclaimed Mexican horror omnibus MÉXICO BARBARO (see our interview with one of the filmmakers, Gigi Saul Guerrero HERE) comes to DVD and digital download on November 3rd from Dark Sky Films and SHOCK has just gotten a peek at the new trailer.

And it’s a lulu….

From the press release:

Eight Mexican directors have united to create a film anthology featuring the most brutally terrifying Mexican traditions and legends, brought to vividly shocking life. MEXICO BARBARO presents haunting stories that have been woven into the fabric of a nation’s culture, some passed down through the centuries and some new, but all equally frightening. Stories of boogeymen, trolls, ghosts, monsters, Aztec sacrifices, and – of course – the Day of the Dead all come together to create a film that is as original as it is familiar… and as important as it is horrifying.

Keep reading SHOCK for more on this dark, deranged magnum Mexican opus soon…

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Thursday, October 8, 2015

Fashion Slasher! Slick Trailer For Chloe Sevigny Shocker #HORROR

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Fashion Slasher! Slick Trailer For Chloe Sevigny Shocker #HORROR

#horrorGirls

#horror High fashion, screaming teens and Chloe Sevigny in #HORROR trailer.

Actress model and eternal badass Chloë Sevigny stars in what looks to be a very slick and seriously fashion conscious slasher/thriller; kind of a preteen giallo.

Kind of…

ENTERTAINMENT WEEKLY just premiered the trailer for the new flick #HORROR, which comes out in theaters and VOD on November 20th an is directed by fashion designer Tara Subkoff.

The cast also includes Natasha Lyonne, Taryn Manning, and Timothy Hutton.

I like the vibe of this one…a “dead teenager” film made with dollops of style and more than a dose of strange.

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Review: TALES FROM THE CRYPT Flicks DEMON KNIGHT and BORDELLO OF BLOOD on Blu-ray

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Review: TALES FROM THE CRYPT Flicks DEMON KNIGHT and BORDELLO OF BLOOD on Blu-ray

TalesBordello

TalesMain SHOCK takes a critical look at a double-dose of TALES FROM THE CRYPT features on Blu-ray.

Every horror fan should steep themselves in the legacy of publisher William Gaines’ lamented EC Comics, the line of inky pulp trash responsible for such immortal and controversial 1950’s-weened titles as WEIRD SCIENCE, THE VAULT OF HORROR and, of course…TALES FROM THE CRYPT. The formula for these often imitated, never duplicated comics classics were simple: good (or bad) people make bad decisions and are rewarded justly by creepy karma, usually in the form of some class of shambling, rotten, undead vindicator. And man, were these tales cold around the heart…

The 1972 Amicus-produced EC adaption TALES FROM THE CRYPT got it right, adapting 5 grim tales, casting A list British talent against type and reveling in cruel, phantasmagorical punishments for people who most assuredly deserved it. Years later, the Rober Zemeckis, Richard Donner and Joel Silver produced HBO TV series TALES FROM THE CRYPT took those tales and jazzed them up with slick production values, explicit violence, dirty sex and broad humor, usually in the form of the giggling (and awesome) Crypt Keeper puppet, who, like in the comics, provided wraparound commentary for these shocking stories.

So popular was that series that Universal Pictures soon green-lit what was to be a series of big screen feature CRYPT films, expansions of the HBO show that were meant to both capitalize on the fan base and hook an even bigger audience not yet savvy to HBO’s pay for play charms. Three films were planned(at one point, Tarantino’s FROM DUSK TILL DAWN screenplay was scheduled to be an entry) but, as of this writing, only two “official” CRYPT films were made, with Rob Cohen’s 2002 I WALKED WITH A ZOMBIE remake RITUAL later attached to the franchise for its DVD release.

On October 20th, Scream Factory will release both “legit” Crypt flicks on Blu-ray but before then, allow SHOCK to assess the releases and the films themselves….

TALES FROM THE CRYPT PRESENTS: DEMON KNIGHT (1995)

Horror fans that came of age in the 90’s have fond memories of DEMON KNIGHT, a film that wasn’t necessarily planned to be a TALES film but was modified to fit the format. Sort of. The film stars William Sadler as Brayker, a stranger who rolls into town and checks into a crumbling hotel, run by the great, and unfortunately late, CCH Pounder (who later on delivers the best middle-finger salute in film history).

The hotel is a rogue’s gallery of miscreants, grifters, greaseballs and broken souls and they’re played by an equally diverse set of actors like Thomas Hayden Church, Charles Fleischer and of course, the inimitable Dick Miller, all of whom deliver top notch, wonderfully committed turns.
While Brayker is setting up shop, a giggling bounty hunter (Billy Zane) appears and enlists the local authorities to help him find the supposedly dastardly drifter. And when he does finally find his quarry, he promptly sheds his skin (not literally, yet), decimates his Cop-panions and reveals his true nature: seems the grinning, faux-bounty hunter is in fact a demonic “collector” sent from Hell to retrieve the last of six keys that will unlock the portal between this world and the underworld. And guess who has the key?

Again, many horror fans of a certain vintage hold DEMON KNIGHT in very high regard and it’s easy to see why. The storyline is borderline epic, the special effects are stunning (the movie is virtual practical make-up FX meltdown), the cast is killer, the script is witty, Jada Pinkett Smith gives a career best performance as a tough heroine who faces down the Devil, the sex and gore firmly push the boundaries of its R rating, director Ernest Dickerson keeps it stylish and Zane…Zane…well, Zane gives the most batshit crazy, super-sonic performance since Nicolas Cage in VAMPIRE’S KISS. The man is a sight to behold and his manic energy keeps the entire thing glued together.

The only problem – and it’s kind of a big problem – is that despite its title and the fun, arch Crypt Keeper framing device, DEMON KNIGHT has almost zero to do with TALES FROM THE CRYPT. There’s no morality tale here. There’s no twist. There’s no bad-behavior-getting-punished-by forces-from-beyond-the-grave-stinger. There’s no sense of danger and the film aint scary at all. Instead what we have here is an enjoyable, campy, theologically-tinted monster mash, well-scripted, professionally acted and briskly paced. In fact, DEMON KNIGHT would fare far better had it been released as a stand-alone film without the baggage and expectations of the TALES title…

TALES FROM THE CRYPT PRESENTS: BORDELLO OF BLOOD (1996)

A supremely tacky follow-up to the surprisingly classy DEMON KNIGHT, director Gilbert Adler’s BORDELLO OF BLOOD casts smarmy, SNL “Weekend Update” comedian Dennis Miller as a smarmy P.I named Guttman who gets hired by former BAYWATCH babe Erika Eleniak to find her missing scumbag brother (played by a fresh out of rehab Corey Feldman). The trail leads him from grotty pool halls to the doorstep of a looming funeral home; said stiff factory is in fact a front for a demented backdoor brothel, run by a recently resurrected vampire queen named Lilith (played with leering charm by admitted non-actor and supermodel Angie Everhart) and its packed to the pantyline with bloodsucker hookers from hell.

BORDELLO was put together quickly and reportedly wasn’t exactly the cheeriest of sets (according to Feldman in the supplemental making-of dock, both Miller and Eleniak were a pair of diva-jerks on set) and that lack of camaraderie shows on screen. The make-up effects are less impressive as well (handled primarily by Canadian whiz Todd Masters), but really that’s more indicative of the fact that, well, these are just vampires after all and outside of fangs, arched brows and contacts, there aint much left to do with them…

That said, BORDELLO is in many ways a superior TALES FROM THE CRYPT entry. Adler had previously directed episodes of the show and the film feels like an amplified episode, brightly lit, garish and tricked out with even more sleaze, sex, blood and general luridness. Miller is miscast but often very funny, veteran Charles Band alumni actor Phil Fondacaro is great as Lilith’s liberator and henchman and the great Chris Sarandon (FRIGHT NIGHT) steals the movie as a guitar wailing televangelist whose treatise with the vampires is uneasy at best. And, in true CRYPT style, there is indeed a dose of nihilism injected into the finale that draws the flick back to its EC roots.

Scream Factory pack both discs with their usual assortment of A1 extras, the highlights of both which are a double-dose of features charting the behind the scenes action; they’re edifying and funny as hell and will make you care even more about the films themselves.

All in all, though, if it’s a real deal cinematic TALES FROM THE CRYPT experience ye be seeking, stick with George A. Romero’s 1982 classic CREEPSHOW. That’s as close to the pulp genius of Gaines and company that we’ve yet to see…

Yet.

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Exclusive Poster Reveal: Author Ken Hanley’s THE I IN EVIL

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Exclusive Poster Reveal: Author Ken Hanley’s THE I IN EVIL

Hanleycover

Hanleycrop SHOCK gets an eyeful of the promo poster for Ken Hanley’s new book THE I IN EVIL

I’m always thrilled when people I admire use their spare time to make stuff that matters and my colleague, current FANGORIA Managing Editor Ken Hanley has done just that, using his talents as a word wrangler to take his art to the next level.

Hanley is on the cusp of unleashing his first book, a satirical monster mash self-help epic called THE I IN EVIL, due out October 20th from Skyhorse Publishing. The book (featuring illustrations by Marvel and DC artist Adam Wallenta) has already been earning rave reviews from famous folk like SPLICE director Vincenzo Natali who calls it “…a thoroughly original, highly entertaining and witty offering for all the needy monsters out there, lurking in the shadowed corners of the world and within the darker regions of the soul.”

Tom Holland, director of CHILD’S PLAY and FRIGHT NIGHT simply says, “It’s Bat-shit crazy”.

From the press release:

FANGORIA Magazine’s Ken Hanley has devoted his life of uplifting the spirits and changing the lives of monsters across this great nation of ours. Vampires, Mummies, Wolfmen, Gill-men and Monsters (Frankenstein’s or Otherwise) will finally be able to step out of the shadows after reading THE I IN EVIL and be the social, conscientious citizens without the psycho-and-sociological issues that plague mankind every day.
THE I IN EVIL is not meant for humans. This book contains dark, terrifying truths and the author relinquishes any and all responsibility for any actions taken against monsters or themselves as a result of this book.

SHOCK is pleased to be able to give you the exclusive premiere of the alarmingly cool Todd Spence illustrated promotional poster for the book. Have a look below…

Hanley Poster

To pre-order THE I IN EVIL go HERE.

Do it for your inner ghoul…

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Review: Keanu Reeves Gets Kinky in Eli Roth’s KNOCK KNOCK

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Review: Keanu Reeves Gets Kinky in Eli Roth’s KNOCK KNOCK

Knockposter

Knock

Eli Roth’s latest is a misfired splatter satire.

KNOCK KNOCK’s opening plays like one of those Penthouse Forum “name withheld by request” letters but director Eli Roth quickly dumps the sexy stuff in favor of presenting a cautionary tale about the consequences of infidelity.

When we first meet the Webbers they are a happy, 1% family with a home perched high in the Hollywood Hills. Karen (Ignacia Allamand) is an artist with a major show coming up at a Los Angeles gallery, Evan (Keanu Reeves) is an architect and their adorable kids are, well, just adorable. They even have a French Bulldog named Monkey. Cute.

With Karen and the children off to the beach for the weekend Evan is home alone, listening to KISS 1976 album “Destroyer” at top volume, caught up in his work. It’s raining cats and dogs when he hears a knock at the door. (NOTE: This is the Penthouse Forum “name withheld by request” part.) On his doorstep are two drenched women, Bel (Ana de Armas) and Genesis (Lorenza Izzo), scantily clad party-goers looking for directions and a phone. “You don’t look so dangerous,” Evan says as he invites them in, “Worst case scenario, I think I can take both of you.” 

Things quickly get flirty with talk of threesomes, flight attendants and clothes being thrown in the dryer. By the time the sun rises the next morning everyone has gotten naked, vows have been broken (NOTE: This is the end of the Penthouse Forum “name withheld by request” part.) and the girls have taken over the house. Destructive and dangerous, Bel and Genesis stage a home-invasion-with-a-twist topped off by staging a fake game show called Who Wants to Punish a Pedophile? 

KNOCK KNOCK, directed by Eli Roth is based on the 1977 film DEATH GAME starring Colleen Camp and Sondra Locke (both are producers on this film) and is a deeply unpleasant movie. It’s supposed to be nasty, so in that way it’s wildly successful, but that won’t make me any more inclined to sit through it again. I guess you could call it a message film about the evils of faithlessness but the moral gets lost in the shenanigans. Evan is repeatedly punished for his transgression but the Dangerous Duo’s repetitive cat and mouse games get tired very quickly and, save for the odd bit of dark humor—like Evan accidentally “Liking” a sex video on Facebook—the movie is a one trick pony. 

What makes KNOCK KNOCK unusual is the male lead’s complete inability to protect himself. Time after time he is close to getting free only to bollocks it up. As a result he lands in some very bad situations giving Bel and Genesis the upper hand throughout. But don’t confuse this with a grrrl power movie. In the end, it’s little more than a down ‘n dirty exploitation flick that aims to be provocative but instead paints all its characters as victims and knocks female empowerment back twenty years.    

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Parenting Horror! Fright Flicks HIDDEN and JUNE Reviewed

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Parenting Horror! Fright Flicks HIDDEN and JUNE Reviewed

Hidden

EvilJune

SHOCK takes a look at two new releases that deal with the horrors of parenting.

This one’s for mom and dad…

It may seem a cliché to say (that’s because clichés tend to be steeped in truth) but once you have children, and if you truly take to being a parent, you quickly learn the true meaning of terror. It’s hardwired into our primordial ooze: once we make our own people, once we are tasked with overseeing the care and well being of something/someone who cannot function without our aid and loves us simply because of that relationship, real deal dread locks its claws into your guts and doesn’t leave until you’re dead. Because we know what the world is. We know that beneath its pretty sunsets and shimmering lawns and smiling faces and illusions of immortality lurks a dangerous ball of pain and violence, with predators skulking around, yellow-eyed and drooling in the dark.

As Lillian Gish says in Charles Laughton’s 1955 morality tale masterpiece NIGHT OF THE HUNTER:

“It’s a hard world for little things…”

Indeed it is.

And since cinema exploits and meditates on all of our varying conditions, it goes to follow that its direct portal to primal dread, the horror film, would draw out the poisons of parenting with bloody, sadistic glee. From the kid killer of Fritz Lang’s M, to the aforementioned NIGHT OF THE HUNTER to Nicolas Roeg’s DON’T LOOK NOW to Lars Von Trier’s ANTICHRIST; the horror of procreating and the dangers and misery it can make are alive and well on screens big and small, past, present and, no doubt, future.

Here, SHOCK looks at two new releases that deal with the terrors of being a parent in various imaginary worlds that mirror our own…

HIDDEN (Warner)

Written and directed by sibling duo The Duffer Brothers (whose previous work includes penning episodes of the M. Night Shyamalan approved, Lynchian TV series WAYWARD PINES), HIDDEN is a hidden gem indeed. TRUE BLOOD and MELANCHOLIA star Alexander Skarsgard plays a father who, along his his daughter (Emily Alyn Lind) and wife (Andrea Riseborough), is barricaded in an underground chamber and has been there for almost a year. Their sun-free hiding hole is dark, dank and miserable; rats sneak in and steal what’s left of their rations and they all live in terror of a roaming species of post-apocalyptic monsters that live above ground, beasts they have dubbed the “breathers”. And yet, like Viggo Mortensen’s character in the filmed adaptation of Cormac McCarthy’s THE ROAD, it’s up to dad to keep up morale and protect his child from succumbing to despair.

Yet, with their food sources almost depleted, the father must make the difficult decision to leave their dismal, but at least protected, sanctuary and face the dreaded “breathers”. What they discover instead provides the twist in the tale, which we will not reveal here, of course, but the journey to get there pushes the parents to their limits and beyond as they resort to unthinkable measures to protect their baby in this brutal new world.

HIDDEN is an absolutely first rate horror film. Moody, dark, exceptionally well-acted by the three leads and genuinely terrifying. And, oh man, is that twist a doozy. Maybe not quite PLANET OF THE APES “wow”, but still palpably shocking. Perhaps a tad slow for some horror fans (not this one), this is a thoughtful film that betrays typical zombie flick conventions and comes armed with genuine soul.

JUNE (RLJ Entertainment)

Co-writer/director L. Gustavo Cooper’s JUNE is a very different film that attacks a different angle of parenting terror, that of the parent that is blinded by their child’s true nature. Essentially a spin on classic “bad seed” movies like, er, THE BAD SEED and THE OMEN, JUNE tells the tale of the titular moppet (played skillfully by THE WALKING DEAD’s Kennedy Brice), a pretty kiddy who, after being born to a woman that barely escaped a Satanic cult, is tossed from foster home to foster home; each and every time, June blows it by having her eyeballs fill with black blood and adopting an adult’s screeching voice while growling out threats and fucking things up with her psychic tantrums.

Eventually she ends up with a kindly couple (STARSHIP TROOPERS’ Casper Van Dien and actress Victoria Pratt) who do their damndest to de-damn the kid. But as things begin to unravel rapidly, Dad does some research on her past and tries to convince mom that their dear, deadly daughter must depart. Little does he know that when it comes to that bond between mother and daughter, Hell hath no fury like.

Cooper is a very, very talented director. A true stylist who isn’t afraid of painting his canvas with broad strokes and whose style is very akin to a grandiose Italian or Japanese approach to horror. This aesthetic both works for and occasionally against JUNE, especially since the human drama is so finely etched. When we see Van Dien (who is excellent, by the way) begin his descent into mania, it’s effect is betrayed by the ho-hum CGI and dastardly vocal effects that mark June’s outbursts. The film is still a quality piece of work and exceedingly well produced on what was no doubt a lower budget. But a little more subtlety would have pushed JUNE from good to great…

Extras on HIDDEN are non-existent while JUNE has a lengthy, if superfluous, making of feature that is essentially a flurry of talking heads praising each other. Both pictures offer a glimpse into how treacherous a territory parenting can be and, while differing in their approach,  both treat their stories seriously; they make a fine Friday night double feature.

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