Tuesday, October 13, 2015

Eerie New Poster for Natalie Dormer-Starring Ghost Story THE FOREST

Shock Till You Drop
Eerie New Poster for Natalie Dormer-Starring Ghost Story THE FOREST

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SHOCK previously reported on the eerie new Natalie Dormer-starring horror film THE FOREST and now, we’re sharing with you the official poster…an abstract bit of art that is frightening without being explicit.

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Here’s the synopsis:

Rising with terrifying grandeur at the base of Mt. Fuji in Japan, the legendary real-life Aokigahara Forest is the suspense-filled setting of the supernatural thriller.  A young American woman, Sara (Natalie Dormer of “Game of Thrones” and “The Hunger Games”), journeys there in search of her twin sister, who has mysteriously disappeared. In the company of expatriate Aiden (Taylor Kinney of “Chicago Fire”), Sara enters the forest having been well warned to “stay on the path.” Determined to discover the truth about her sister’s fate, Sara will have to face the angry and tormented souls of the dead that prey on anyone who dares come near them. These malevolent spirits lying in wait for Sara at every turn will plunge her into a frightening darkness from which she must fight to save herself.

Starring Natalie Dormer (“Game of Thrones” and “The Hunger Games”), Taylor Kinney (“Chicago Fire”), Eoin Macken (“The Night Shift”), and Yukiyoshi Ozawa, director Jason Zada’s THE FOREST hits theaters nationwide from Gramercy Pictures on January 8th.

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Interview: Director Neil Marshall talks TALES OF HALLOWEEN

Shock Till You Drop
Interview: Director Neil Marshall talks TALES OF HALLOWEEN

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MArshall2 British horror and fantasy filmmaker Neil Marshall talks to SHOCK about TALES OF HALLOWEEN.

Neil Marshall needs no elaborate introduction to SHOCK readers, seeing as his dark visions have birthed such contemporary horror masterpieces as DOG SOLDIERS and THE DESCENT as well as go-for-broke action scrappers like DOOMSDAY and CENTURION, not to mention his efforts quickening pulses on GAME OF THRONES and…

Whoops. We just preached to the chorus, anyway. Sorry for wasting space.

Let’s push past his storied past and move into Marshall’s present to discuss his work in the much-buzzed about horror omnibus TALES OF HALLOWEEN, a multi-chapter salute to Samhain that also sports the works of directors Andrew Kasch, John Skipp, Mike Mendez, Axelle Carolyn and many, many others.

Marshall’s contribution to this seasonal creeper comes in the form of a mini-film called “BAD SEED”, a dark police procedural-cum-murder mystery that also happens to be about a killer pumpkin uprising…

In anticipation of the theatrical and VOD release of TALES OF HALLOWEEN this Friday, SHOCK locked Marshall down to shake his candy sack for more info…

SHOCK: You’re British, I’m Canadian. Culturally, we like Halloween…but we don’t LOVE Halloween like the U.S. does. Was it a shock when you moved to LA and discovered just how wild Americans are for Halloween?

MARSHALL: Yes, it was a shock. But it was a pleasant shock. Finally, I found other people who loved Halloween like I had always wanted to. Understand that I had always wanted to celebrate Halloween, but we really just don’t do that in the UK. They’re trying to get there now, though. I mean, people dress up now. But trick or treating was frowned upon where I grew up.  It was just not something that was thought of as decent. We also didn’t eat enough pumpkins in the UK, so we had to use turnips instead…

SHOCK: You did not.

MARSHALL: Oh, Yeah. We did.

SHOCK: Why do you think Halloween is so big here?

MARSHALL: Well, it’s probably because people figured out they could make enough money with it. I think that’s what it is. It’s really no different than Christmas. Once it became commercialized, it got really, really big.

SHOCK: So, with your segment, you’ve made your killer pumpkin movie, which is a ludicrous concept…

MARSHALL: Of course it is!

SHOCK: And yet you play it absolutely straight…

MARSHALL: That’s something I picked up from British comedies; the more outrageous your situation, you HAVE to play it straight. If I had played this for obvious laughs, it would just be goofy. That said, it is tongue-in-cheek, for sure. No matter how you cut it, killer pumpkins are not scary. Maybe for little kids they are, but for adults, no. So it was necessary that everyone acted deadly serious and that’s what makes it funny.

MARSHALL: The movie has a loose vibe. It feels like a bunch of friends just hanging out and making a movie. I can imagine it was a no-pressure gig…

MARSHALL: On the contrary! It was unbelievable pressure to shoot it in time. The most stressful shoot I’ve ever done, in fact. We had no time and no budget to compensate. It was simply, we get it in 2 days or else we forget it. Which is not to say it wasn’t fun, because all my friends were involved in it and that was great. By the same token, the Police stations scene, which was the first thing we shot, all the directors of the other segments are in there…Mike Mendez, John Skipp…everyone was there, just checking you out which was nerve-wracking. But on the whole, when I sat back and considered everything, I was making a killer pumpkin movie and I had Joe Dante and John Savage in it and that was just wild.

SHOCK: How did you manage to convince Savage to get on board?

MARSHALL: Our casting director just called his agent and he said, well, John isn’t doing anything on Monday so he might as well work! Trust me, nobody did it for the money. There was none! Everyone who worked their guts out did it because they loved it, loved the idea of it and saw what it could be. That and we all just love horror movies…

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Robert Englund Shocker THE FUNHOUSE MASSACRE Locks Theatrical Release

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Robert Englund Shocker THE FUNHOUSE MASSACRE Locks Theatrical Release

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Robert Englund’s THE FUNHOUSE MASSACRE to get theatrical release.

LA based production company Petri Entertainment has just announced that their latest flick, the Robert Englund-starring horror comedy THE FUNHOUSE MASSACRE will be receiving a US theatrical release via AMC Independent.

The unhinged gore ‘n’ guffaws feature also stars Scottie Thompson, Jere Burns and the one and only Clint Howard. The special FX makeup comes courtesy of the legendary Robert Kurtzman. The film is directed by Andy Palmer.

From the press release:

On Halloween night, a gruesome group of the United States’ most notorious and colorful serial killers escape from Statesville Asylum and descend on a giant funhouse whose theme is based on their different reigns of terror. The unsuspecting carnival goers think that the carnage created is just part of the show, that is, until they become part of the main attraction. The only people left to stop them are a rag tag group of college kids, a clueless Deputy and the local Sheriff, who seems to have a strange attachment to the leader of this gaggle of maniacs, the silver tongued devil, “Manny the Prophet.

Director Palmer says of his award-winning opus: “The film is an homage to all of the best monsters in cinema with the style, gore and self-awareness we loved in the slashers of the 90’s. Those films appealed to horror fans and general moviegoers alike, which is what I hope for FUNHOUSE.”

THE FUNHOUSE MASSACRE will hit theaters in 15-20 U.S. markets on Friday, November 13th.

Check out the nifty behind-the-scenes video below:

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Monster Mag Meltdown: HORRORHOUND #55 Reviewed

Shock Till You Drop
Monster Mag Meltdown: HORRORHOUND #55 Reviewed

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Monster Mag Meltdown gets into the guts of HORRORHOUND #55.

Last round, Monster Mag Meltdown fawned over the gloriously monochrome pages that made up the pulpy FILMFAX #141, a long-running retro-horror zine that expertly (and economically) blends in-house brand promotion with fantastic classic horror content. It was a great read, eccentric and even daring; a magazine that knows its audience and yet still manages to defy readers expectations.

To recap, this column comes pre-armed with admiration for any madman or woman who dares publish printed niche film-centric media in this hostile, digitally obsessed marketplace (and yours truly has first-hand knowledge of this world, having served as EIC of FANGORIA, GOREZONE and currently, fledgling cult film journal DELIRIUM) and no matter my thoughts on the content in whatever periodical I peruse, there’s always appreciation…always respect.

Which brings us to HORRORHOUND, the bi-monthly print mag published by Jeremy Sheldon and edited by Nathan Hanneman that, in the 55th issue we’re about to discuss, just celebrated its 10th year in business. Now, I can’t comment on HH’s struggles to make it to stands and I have no idea how profitable an enterprise it is. What I can tell you is that when I was running FANGO, HH is the only mag that made me nervous. Because HH is a fan favorite. They have tapped into the collector’s psychology like no other, with gorgeous, lurid covers, quick blasts of esoteric content and general sense of fun, of the joy of just loving weird cinema. HORRORHOUND never seemed concerned particularly about competing with other mags because they have their own cult, a legion of faithful that spills over from their immensely popular conventions and vice versa. These cats have created a myth and an identity that is distinctly their own. And long may they ride.

Now, let’s take a closer look at HORRORHOUND #55…

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As we mentioned, this is indeed the 10th anniversary issue of HH and instead of rolling out a back-slapping selfie party, Hanneman simply mentions the decade-long run on the cover and in his brief editorial and then just moves on with the business of making a quality mag. Said cover is a Vance Kelly salute to the creatures and critters that populate the cinematic world of Guillermo del Toro, who features inside in a lengthy interview about his most recent offering, the hyper-Gothic supernatural romance CRIMSON PEAK. And yet, like (my old haunt) Canadian horror mag RUE MORGUE used to do, HH uses the hook of the new title to really go nuts on a classic, in this case a stem to stern salute to del Toro and Mike Mignola’s HELLBOY franchise. But more on that later…

HORRORHOUND runs only 66 pages, that’s 16 pages less than what I used to try to lock FANGO at, but with a price of $6.99 per issue (as opposed to the $10.99 or more of other mags) HH is a bargain, especially since ads are kept to a minimum. The layout crams a lot of info into its lean spaces, with smaller type and a mass of sidebars on top of sidebars, making it an exciting experience to absorb; your eyeballs just keep jumping around. That said, HH’s art design leaves much to be desired. It’s busy but not a particularly pretty mag. The headers for each feature are, well, they often aren’t even headers, just type tucked to the top left of the page…

There’s also an odd dotted pattern around the columns and photos that made me want to pull out a pair of scissors and cut out coupons. Initially, I found this almost tacky. Then, after spending more time with the mag, I kind of dug it. See, HH almost reads like a catalog. It feels interactive and the impulse to cut and clip sort is sort of appealing. It’s part of the mag’s charm.

Content wise, Jessica Dwyer gets things off to a rollicking start with that aforementioned and expansive del Toro interview chatting about CRIMSON PEAK. I can’t tell if this interview stemmed from a one-on-one talk or a roundtable (I haven’t seen these quotes anywhere else) but either way, the writing is solid, the questions thoughtful and GDT is engaging. A solid read.

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Issue #55 is the September/October issue but some of the other more timely editorial isn’t terribly timely. A preview of AMC’s hit series FEAR THE WALKING DEAD is slightly late out of the gate, considering the show ended at the beginning of October. That bid to tap into the contemporary horror zeitgeist continues with features on the kid-flick GOOSEBUMPS and the still-in-release THE VISIT; the latter piece by Trevor Collins offers an absolutely first rate chat with M. Night Shyamalan that made me actually want to run out and see the flick (I missed it during previews) on my own dime. I did and Collins’ piece made me appreciate the experience more.

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HH’s review section pays respect to the grassroots community that serves as the mag’s bread and butter and focuses exclusively on indie content. The reviews themselves here are spottily penned, like the critics are afraid to really get critical so as not to offend. Which would be fine if the writing was good. Sadly, outside of writer Freddy Morris’ work, which manages to amuse and offer constructive criticism, there aint much meat here. A suggestion for an ongoing indie spotlight section would be to ditch the review angle and perhaps focus on filmmaker profiles and interviews…

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After the expected toy previews and a perfunctory Comic-Con recap (with thumbnail pics too small to register), HORRORHOUND #55 rolls up its red-stained sleeves and really gets down to business. Jason Kretton delivers a brief interview with Mignola that gives way to a massive, 9 page retrospective of HELLBOY, charting the Big Red Guy’s adventures in virtually every known media. Nicely illustrated, this feature is engaging and enlightening.

Following this, Shanna Edwards goes mental, getting into the guts of del Toro’s work by riffing on every film, even ones that didn’t actually make it into production. It’s a thorough piece and a good read.

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Cover artist Vance Kelly is spotlighted and interviewed, with a gallery of his wildest works on display. Horror alumni talent agent and HH columnist Sean Clark delivers gold with a fantastic interview with one of metal giant GHOST’s “nameless ghouls” that proves the man knows his stuff. But the real treat for me this round is regular columnist John Kitley’s salute to Mexican horror films, focusing specifically on the works of Rene Cardona. After reading this, I wish to God HH would have put NIGHT OF THE BLOODY APES on the cover. I’m not sure who would have bought it, except me. But still…

All in all, it feels like HORRORHOUND is trying to spread their black wings a bit here. 10 years in and they’re looking to grow, attract new eyeballs and maybe speak not only to their own loyal choir, but to new pundits as well. They want to compete with the big dogs, but  I’m not sure if they can or if they should. What HORRORHOUND does well is act like a more-refined 12 year old; raving and screaming about what excites them with style and without an ounce of pretension. Whatever path they choose to go down in their second decade, however, I’m a fan and will keep reading…

Go to the mag’s official site to subscribe.

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Monday, October 12, 2015

Exclusive Interview: Writer/Director Trevor Juras Talks Chilling Canadian horror film THE INTERIOR

Shock Till You Drop
Exclusive Interview: Writer/Director Trevor Juras Talks Chilling Canadian horror film THE INTERIOR

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INTERIOR2 SHOCK’s David Bertrand talks to Canadian filmmaker Trevor Juras about his “lost in the woods” creeper THE INTERIOR.

THE INTERIOR is a quiet, haunting, and beautifully chilling debut feature from Canadian writer/director/producer Trevor Juras and producer Peter Kuplowsky (MANBORG), that eases us in with impeccably odd comedy and balletic lunch room scuffles before sharp-turning into one man’s solitary sojourn through evergreen wilderness and slipping sanity. The film starts with a needle drop rap verse punch into the life of James (Patrick McFadden), a terminally frustrated Toronto ad agency creative who gets an undisclosed medical diagnosis and decides to finally tell off his oblivious twit of a boss, drop his girlfriend and sideline his unlikely rap career dreams to wander the British Columbian coastal mountains for some soul searching. What starts off as a completely different film, an irreverent, mumbling and very funny workplace dystopia – like a Joe Swanberg redux of OFFICE SPACE – shifts very swiftly into James’ immensely paranoiac hike through sleepless hell, as his tent is poked and prodded at night, his supplies and patience dwindling and nerves rattled, as James is stalked, watched and spooked by an enigmatic, spectral man in a red jacket.

Overcoming a tiny budget with a spectacular use of the luscious, lonely, wet west coast surroundings that drip character like BC’s perpetual falling dew, THE INTERIOR is a low-key but very impressive debut that lingers in the imagination and convincingly dredges the real terror of being lost alone in nowhere, your own reality starting to unravel. A horror film more by its mood than content, Juras nonetheless unfurls some of the jumpiest stuck-in-a-tent tension since Bobcat Goldthwait’s found footage Bigfoot spooker WILLOW CREEK, while chipping away at his protagonist’s raw psyche.

Following a successful debut at the Fantasia International Film Festival in Montreal this summer and additional festival screenings across Canada, SHOCK caught up with writer/director Trevor Juras on the eve of THE INTERIOR’s hometown screening at the 10th annual Toronto After Dark Film Festival on Monday, October 19th (Canadian election night!). Juras casts some light on his puzzling lost-in-the-woods knock-out sleeper that benefits from being watched in a damp, dark room alone at night without functioning heat or a good sweater.

SHOCK: THE INTERIOR is sharply divided into two clearly distinct segments (by an extremely late opening title card!) – distinct in terms of tone, geography, genre, even the crew… the main story of one man hiking alone could exist without viewing the first act. Likewise, the opening section’s saga of working life frustrations in Toronto and a looming medical diagnosis could certainly play out as a tragi-comic film of its own. What made you decide to jam the two stories together like this with such a hard transition? And how did you make it work so well?

JURAS: Thank you for saying it worked well. The first incarnation of a script called THE INTERIOR took place all in the woods; a couple take a canoe trip into the middle of nowhere, and then after a few days, well, you know… It might as well have been called “The Cliché”. It gradually morphed into what you see now, evolving into more of a character-driven idea. I’m usually bummed by the opening act of a horror film, 20-40 minutes of mundanity we have to suffer through before the good stuff starts. It can be quite necessary, though, so we wanted to provide something different for the audience and try to make it entertaining while really letting you know who James, the protagonist, is, and where his head is at.

To sum up my approach, life in the city to me feels very much like how it’s presented in the film: irony, pettiness, narcissism, often trapped in a room with people you’d rather not spend time with… Being out alone in nature might as well be another planet, or a different life entirely, so it was important to be true to how each setting feels to me, rather than worry about tone or genre continuity. We all feel different depending on where we’re located, so mashing the two together is more natural than most people assume, which I think is the key to why it works. It also gives the audience encouragement to laugh during later parts of the film, which I’m happy to say has been happening at screenings.

SHOCK: The Interior is one of the quieter thrillers I’ve seen in a while, almost up there with ALL IS LOST with Robert Redford alone on his yacht. Can you discuss the use of sound in this film, which, for long sections of its runtime, has zero dialogue, very sparse natural noise, interspersed only with Adam Osinski’s renditions of Chopin on piano and James’ slammin’ raps?

JURAS: When people ask about influences, I’m usually at a loss to remember one, but ALL IS LOST was definitely an influence, together with Gus Van Sant’s GERRY. These two films were lurking around in the back of my mind while making THE INTERIOR. We worked with the simple theory that (near) silence builds tension. When you’re camping and have to pee at 2:00 AM, there’s a big difference between how you feel about it when other campers are still up, versus when everyone is asleep. ‘Quiet’ is one of the most intense features of nature, and we wanted to present it as we were experiencing it ourselves while filming. It keeps you heightened and present.

I believe music must be used very carefully in a film. Often the music reveals too much about a scene, what’s coming and what to expect. It might even try to trick you into feeling something that otherwise isn’t there on the screen. Chopin’s music is so rich and complex, yet somehow manages to be broadly affecting. I don’t want to force the audience’s emotions with music, like a cheap trick. I want the music to give the viewer a sense of what’s happening underneath, and music of great depth can do that. Chopin was also chronically ill throughout his short life, and that to me is everywhere in his music, so of course it fits with our story.

As for the ferociously ill rhymes, it’s so far out of step with the rest of the film and who James appears to be, that my best guess is that deep down James’ dreams were to be a hip hop artist. But I’m not sure–you would have had to ask him that.

SHOCK: This film does an incredible job of staying ambiguous and withholding information, making you want more without feeling cheated – for example, not allowing the audience to hear the audio of the protagonist being told his medical prognosis, or not offering a clear explanation of the man in the red jacket and his bizarre, ghostly behavior. How much do you know that the audience doesn’t, and was it in the editing room that you choose to keep the story fragmentary and elusive?

JURAS: It was quite deliberate, though that becomes most apparent in the editing room, if that makes sense. I would say I know about as much as the audience, maybe slightly more, but only because I’ve seen it so many times and the audience sees it once or twice at the most. If I had any other knowledge I would have put it in the film, otherwise I think you would have felt cheated.

Certain details aren’t addressed, but we’re very forthcoming with who James is at this point in time, how he feels about those who populate his life, etc… You could reveal the man in the red jacket as being this or that, but I think that would kill it. I have my own ideas about who he is and what’s happening, but they’re neither right nor wrong.

SHOCK: Being born and raised in BC myself, I’ve got to ask – why did you set a film (gorgeously, effectively, and elegantly) in British Columbia’s very distinct temperate rain forest of the wet, west coast on Salt Spring Island, yet call the film “The Interior”, which is a very different geographic region of the province? Also, no one in rain-weary BC would ever go hiking for more than a day without a waterproof shell. Like your protagonist, were you new to this part of the country?

JURAS: I wasn’t brand new to that part of the country, but many of the crew were. Much like the protagonist, however, I usually march into nature woefully unprepared. The title “The Interior” actually existed long before I’d even heard of Salt Spring Island or knew that (popular Canadian children’s entertainer) Raffi lived there. It was never meant to refer to “the interior” of BC, and indeed it’s never mentioned where James has escaped to. The downtown Toronto city skyline is distinct, but out in the woods, James could plausibly be in any number of places in the Pacific Northwest.

In the literal sense, the title refers to being within a forest, off the beaten path deep within nature. In the figurative sense, we’re spending time within the interior of James himself. And there’s the added irony that the opening third of the film is all indoors, yet after the title card we’re outside (mostly) for the rest of the film. I like this idea that the more we are out in the open, in nature, the more our inner selves are revealed.

Shooting on Salt Spring Island came about because of a trip I took there the previous year. As soon as I saw it I knew I would shoot the film there if I could. It was a profound and moving experience being there, and it helped me understand this character and story I was crafting. That probably sounds like corny bullshit, but it’s true. The magnitude of the beauty and quiet on Salt Spring changed me as a person, and the influence it had on THE INTERIOR can’t be overstated.

THE INTERIOR screens Monday, October 19th at 9:30 PM at Toronto’s Scotiabank Theatre, as part of the 10th annual Toronto After Dark Film Festival.

For more on the film visit the official website HERE..

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John Carpenter’s Prince of Darkness (1987)

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John Carpenter’s Prince of Darkness (1987)

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Being October, I’ve increased my consumption of horror films. Sure, horror movies are fun to watch all year round, but there’s just something about watching a horror film in October that makes it all the more exciting and special. In addition to keeping up with new releases, I’ve also been re-watching some of the classic films I grew up with. John Carpenter’s PRINCE OF DARKNESS was at the top of my list of one to rewatch. The last time I saw this film was around 1997-1998. I was in grad school and living alone in a creepy old house that was converted into a housing unit. It was the perfect atmosphere for this film. Now after watching PRINCE OF DARKNESS in 2015, I can whole-heartedly say that this one of Carpenter’s most criminally underrated and best films!!

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Written by Carpenter, under the name Martin Quatermass, PRINCE OF DARKNESS tells the story of a secret society that has served to protect a secret older than time. When the current keeper of the secret dies unexpectedly, the secret is exposed and the church is scrambling to figure out what to do with this new knowledge. A simple key hides a secret so important and devastating that its exposure could destroy the world. Donald Pleasence, simply known here as “Priest,” is tasked with discovering out exactly what the secret is. Underneath a deserted church is a cylinder that contains a mysterious liquid which is in constant motion. The Priest enlists the help of a brilliant and world-renown physicist, Prof. Howard Birack (Victor Wong), to help him decipher what is in the mysterious cylinder. Birack assembles a team of his most brilliant and advanced graduate students in both theoretical and applied physics, as well as from other disciplines like metallurgy, microbiology, a grad student who is an expert in ancient, dead languages, etc.  They all gather together to spend a weekend in the abandoned church and try to figure out exactly what it is they are dealing with.

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The script is the perfect blending of old horror tropes, theoretical physics, secret societies, and speculative metaphysics. Carpenter expertly takes all these elements and creates and wholly unique and original script that will grab you from the first frame. I remember seeing this one in the theaters its opening weekend and being scared shitless. I’ve seen this film about nine times since 1987, and every time I see it, I still get creeped out. This film isn’t just about the titular Prince of Darkness but is about the Prince, who is contained in the cylinder, using his influence to summon/bring back HIS father. We learn about this from an old, thick ancient manuscript found in the church. The expert on old religions and ancient, dead languages translates the manuscript and everyone soon realizes that the religions the world has grown up on were lies and bullshit. The true nature of the world and the real reason for religion was to keep this ancient evil contained. It is a fantastic story that exposes a hidden truth that the world just wasn’t ready for–and still isn’t. Throw in a little time travel and an alien threat into the mix, and Carpenter really outdid himself here!!

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The cast is fantastic, albeit very 1980s. Pleasence outdoes himself here and makes his Dr. Loomis character from the HALLOWEEN films seem reserved and laid back. Victor Wong’s physics professor is excitable and played perfectly by Wong. He brings the right amount of energy and intelligence to the role. Jameson Parker, who plays Brian, helps Prof. Birack unravel the mystery of the cylinder, and Lisa Blount’s Catherine, who is another brilliant physics student and Brian’s love interest, plays a pivotal role in the uncovering of the mystery–and its future. The liquid contained within the cylinder quite literally has a mind of its own and infects one of the researchers, who in turn spreads the “disease.” When things get bad inside the church, the remaining survivors attempt to escape but are held captive inside the church by a psychotic homeless man, played by rocker, Alice Cooper.

Not your typical, schizo homeless!!

Not your typical, schizo homeless!!

PRINCE OF DARKNESS has lots of scares and a great, atmospheric set, but the success of this film rests solely on the shoulders of Carpenter himself. In the hands of anyone else, PRINCE OF DARKNESS would’ve been a muddled mess. The high concepts  Carpenter deals with here are never confusing and make sense within the world he created. I’m no physicist and have no idea if the principles and concepts Carpenter writes about are accurate or not, and I don’t really care. What he gives us is a really fun, thought-provoking, metaphysical horror film that is scary, intelligent, atmospheric, and SCARY. Even knowing exactly what is going to happen didn’t make this film any less scary. PRINCE OF DARKNESS is one helluva great, effective film that will have you scared of mirrors for weeks to come and is worth checking out this Halloween season!!

You'll never look at a mirror in the same way after PRINCE OF DARKNESS!!

You’ll never look at a mirror in the same way after PRINCE OF DARKNESS!!

My Summary:

Director: John Carpenter (& writer, under the name Martin Quatermass)

Plot: 4.5 out of 5 stars

Gore: 6.5 out of 10 skulls

Zombie Mayhem: 0 out of 5 brains

Reviewed by Scott Shoyer

Stay Bloody!!!

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Prince of Darkness poster


Filed under: 1980's, Movie Reviews, New Posting

Review: John Carpenter’s CHRISTINE on Blu-ray

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Review: John Carpenter’s CHRISTINE on Blu-ray

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Christine2 SHOCK reviews Sony’s re-release of Carpenter classic CHRISTINE on Blu-ray

John Carpenter’s slick adaptation of Stephen King’s urgent boy-and-his-car love story from Hell CHRISTINE earned the auteur the critical and commercial accolades denied him with his previous picture, THE THING (which famously, bombed in ’82 and is now, of course, considered one of the greatest horror films of all time). But strangely today, perhaps due to the property locked hard into King’s brand, CHRISTINE doesn’t often come up in conversations about Carpenter’s best work. But it should.

No doubt SHOCK readers, being the schooled horror and dark fantasy entertainment aficionados that they are, don’t need a terribly heavy-handed reminder about what CHRISTINE is all about , but for the handful of humans that aren’t savvy to the story, here goes:

Like the book on which it was based, the film tells the tale of socially awkward teen Arnie Cunningham (Keith Gordon, five years past his appearance as lovable goofball in JAWS 2 and three years after his techno-nerd hero turn in DRESSED TO KILL) who, after purchasing and restoring a wrecked, red 1958 Plymouth Fury (nicknamed Christine), begins to radically change his behavior, much to the dismay of both his parents and best friend Dennis (John Stockwell). As Arnie falls deeper into a wormhole of automobile-influenced evil, Dennis investigates and discovers the car’s sordid, spectral history of obsession, death and destruction.

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Carpenter uses the story to hang some of his most festishized imagery to date, almost pornographically letting his camera fondle CHRISTINE while vintage ‘50’s rock ‘n’ roll bounces around in the background. This is an exercise in pure, menacing style and while the director’s own obsessions cause some of the emotional explorations of the characters to be shoved to the sidelines (as the love interest, Alexandra Paul has almost nothing to do except get angry – and almost choke to death – and the most interesting aspect of the book, Arnie’s relationship to his parents, is only touched on), he fills the screen with some remarkable performances. DERANGED star Roberts Blossom near steals the film as the sinister old junkyard bastard who sells Arnie Christine and later reveals the truth about the phantasmagorical Fury; Robert Prosky (GREMLINS 2) is larger than life as the crass, greasy garage owner Darnell and Willaim Ostrander’s malevolent Buddy Repperton is one of the screen’s most vile thugs. And Gordon (now a successful director) is magnificent in the central performance, even if he doesn’t quite get evil enough; indeed his jump from schlub to stud is so brisk that the psychology of the character’s descent is somewhat fuzzy.

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Carpenter directs Gordon after the decimation of Christine.

Sony’s new Blu-ray release is handsomely packaged (love the blue metallic cover) and marks the first time CHRISTINE has been available on Blu since Twilight Time’s limited edition went out of print a few years back. Both the crisp 1080p transfer and the special features are identical to Twilight Time’sl, with many of them ported over from the now 20 year-old DVD release. Key among them is a dynamite commentary with Carpenter and Gordon that is sweet, lively and interesting. No wonder JC opted not to do another commentary; this one is all we need.

CHRISTINE is like a dream-state impression of the book, littered with pulsing music, classic pop tunes and unforgettable imagery. It’s not a perfect Stephen King adaptation by any stretch, but it is a near perfect John Carpenter movie…

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