Tuesday, October 6, 2015

Interview: Extreme Cinema King Takashi Miike Talks YAKUZA APOCALYPSE

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Interview: Extreme Cinema King Takashi Miike Talks YAKUZA APOCALYPSE

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Miike4 SHOCK sits down with legendary Japanese director Takashi Miike to chat about his latest mind-bender, YAKUZA APOCALYPSE.

For those with a weak stomach and a taste for Japanese horror, merely hearing the name Takashi Miike might be enough to prompt an extended bathroom break. With just under 100 films to his name over 24 years of service, Miike might be the hardest working man in the Japanese film industry. Yet, a strong work ethic isn’t exactly why his name is so notorious. Nope, it’s his steadfast dedication to deeply disturbing viewers with some of the most unsettling images to ever come out of a deranged imagination. If you’ve been scarred by the insanity that Miike unleashed in titles like ICHI THE KILLER, AUDITION, GOZU, VISITOR Q or 13 ASSASSINS, then you’ll know exactly what I’m talking about. If not, your eyeballs might be a little cleaner, but your life is certainly a little duller.

Though Miike has managed to maintain his ridiculous work schedule of cranking out 2-4 movies per year, he has settled down somewhat in his old age. Sure, his movies still pack a shock punch, but they aren’t exactly the endurance test of absurdity and grotesquery that they once were. However, Miike clearly had enough of playing polite last year when he announced plans to rescue Japanese cinema from boring productions and return to his rampaging roots in a tongue-in-cheek statement released before beginning production on the appropriately titled YAKUZA APOCALYPSE (read our review HERE).

The final film certainly delivers a high insanity quotient, serving up a surreal concoction of gangsters, vampires, rampaging children, torture-filled knitting circles, anime obsessed kung-fu fighters, and the most hilariously deadly felt mascot you’ll ever see. Though the gorehounds won’t quite get the geysers of fluids and gristle of vintage Miike, there are certainly enough wild ideas, bizarre diversions, and disturbing sights to remind everyone why he is one the premiere brand names in Asian extreme cinema. We got a chance to chat with the legendary shockmaster when YAKUZA APOCALYPSE premiered at this year’s Midnight Madness program in the Toronto International Film Festival. Please join us in this surprisingly subdued chat with one of the wildest imaginations of world cinema.

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SHOCK: When you began production on YAKUZA APOCALYPSE, you released a statement saying that Japanese cinema had gotten too polite and you wanted to fight against that and cut loose. Now that you’ve finished the film, do you think you accomplished your goals?

MIIKE: I think that it turned into something weirder than I expected, but I don’t have any remorse about it. When something turns out exactly as you planned, it’s really boring. The magic of filmmaking is that things never turn out like you expect. My movies are never something that I feel like I made. I didn’t make it. It became. That’s the power of film.

SHOCK: Were you worried about diving back into type this brand of extreme filmmaking after so long and whether audience demands had changed?

MIIKE: Well, if the audience has changed then I feel like I have as well. It’s not really something that I concern myself with. I don’t worry about having to be one step beyond them. Actually, my producers always tell me, “You have to come up with something new. You’ve done this before.” But, I don’t necessarily think that making something new is always good. If I have an idea that seems old or like something I’ve done before, I won’t necessarily avoid it. I’m not the type of guy who is always looking for something that’s never been done before. That’s not where my focus is.

SHOCK: When you set out to make a movie like YAKUZA APOCALYPSE that uses the familiar tropes of vampire and gangster movies, how do you find a way to make version unique?

MIIKE: I think that when you strive for uniqueness, you fail. You can’t really make anything unique. Movies should evolve naturally. I think audiences are very shrewd and can see through obvious scares or an attempt to twist something well known. You can’t fake it. What I tried to do is take vampires and digest them through my own filter. That way, the movie becomes something unique because you can never replicate something directly. It always becomes your own.

SHOCK: What made you want to take two elements as benign as knitting circles and felt mascots and turn them into something sinister?

MIIKE: Well, my mother actually teaches knitting. So it was a fact of life for me growing up that there would be large knitting circles in my home. Everyday when I returned from school, I would see her and her students in a similar knitting circle. Actually all of the props used in the movie were from my mother’s students. So that was a very personal inspiration. As far as the stuffed figure, I’m a big fan of stuffed toys and figurines. But I think that even though people put a lot of affection into stuffed toys, as time goes by they’ll loose a limb or some of their stuffing with age. It starts out as something that you can control and love, but that changes and it can become something far more horrible. So, those two elements were personal elements in my life, which is probably how they became part of my film. With stuffed toys in particular, I’ve always found something a bit scary about them after they leave your control.

SHOCK: How do you walk the line when making a movie this deliberately strange? Is it tough to tell when you’ve gone too far?

MIIKE: I don’t really try to strike a balance. Once a movie is made, it’s made and if it’s weird, it’s weird. It’s more a matter of looking at what you’ve made and if it’s too weird, asking yourself if you have remorse about it. For me, it’s more like “Ok, that’s really, really weird, but it’s also me.” I think people are too worried about balance. The Japanese always maintain a sense of balance and equilibrium to avoid anything too extreme. I like extremes. So when I succeed, I succeed and when I fail, I fail really badly. If people think that I’m always failing, they might not want me anymore and perhaps I’ll be freed from the world of filmmaking.

SHOCK: Your films always have one or two really grotesque and striking sequences at the center. Do you start your movies with these sequences or do you tend to work those in once you’ve found a story that interests you?

MIIKE: When I set out to make a film, the goal is never merely to make a violent film. That’s not the point, really. The violence is just a result of how the characters evolve through the process of filmmaking. We tend to start out with a script that’s not that violent, but movies always take on a life their own when you flesh out the characters, depending on their personalities. Obviously that varies a lot depending on which actors are cast. But the violence always comes out of the characters and the scenarios. I don’t impose it.

SHOCK: It almost felt like there was an element of self-parody to Yakuza Apocalypse, where you were playing with things that you’ve done before. Was that deliberate?

MIIKE: Well, if there’s a sense of self-parody or me laughing of myself in the movie, perhaps that’s because I’ve experienced many successes and failures. Obviously, that will be reflected on my characters at this point. I didn’t consciously intend to do that, but if people choose to find that, it’s fine.

SHOCK: How does the schedule of making two to four movies a year weigh on you physically and creatively? Does it get exhausting or do you think it keeps you sharp?

MIIKE: It used to make me sharper to make that many films, but now that I’ve hit 55 I find myself losing concentration all of a sudden. I can tell that my body can’t take as much anymore, but I don’t think it’s all bad. What I do to supplement my own energy is bring in a younger staff. They provide the energy that I can’t. I think by making a masterpiece like MAD MAX: FURY ROAD. George Miller proved that just because a director gets old doesn’t mean that his movies have to.

SHOCK: What sort of movies do you enjoy watching? Is it the same sort of movies that you make or something that would surprise us?

MIIKE: If you were to ask all the film directors from around the world, I’m probably the one who has seen the fewest movies. I never watch movies as a reference point for one of my own projects. I’m never curious to see what kind of movies are out there. But, in Japan when they show a movie for the first time on television, they’ll play it all night long. So I’ll buy two big cans of beer and watch a movie that will let me enjoy those two beers. You might be disappointed to learn that a movie I saw recently and quite enjoyed was TED 2. I heard that the movie HARDCORE [Midnight Madness Peoples Choice Award Winner at TIFF] was really good. Did you see it? Would I like it?

SHOCK: Oh yes. That’s a movie for you.

MIIKE: Yeah, there are certain movies that you watch and wonder where they could have possibly come from. Almost like a mutation. That sounds like one of them and I always get excited for those.

(Note: This interview was conducted through a translator and edited for clarity)

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In Defense of A NIGHTMARE ON ELM STREET 5: THE DREAM CHILD

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In Defense of A NIGHTMARE ON ELM STREET 5: THE DREAM CHILD

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Writer M-E Girard pens a personal account of her relationship with A NIGHTMARE ON ELM STREET 5: THE DREAM CHILD.

In or around 1994, there was this: a twelve-year-old French-Canadian kid, a 13-inch TV-VCR combo set, and a copy of A NIGHTMARE ON ELM STREET 5: THE DREAM CHILD. It was likely a Saturday afternoon, a great time to clean and organize my room. If I wasn’t done by the time Alice and Yvonne gushed over baby Jacob in the Freddy-free park, I’d Stop and Rewind right back to Dan’s and Alice’s undulating bodies in blue-filtered shots that I was never quite sure contained nudity or not.

I spent an embarrassing number of weekends this way, hanging out with the 1989 group of Elm Street teens. Their dialogue was my dialogue. The gang bantering in their caps and gowns—a pretty benign exchange of lines—was one of my favorite moments to join in on. The whole let’s-feed-Greta-to-death scene? Had it down. And of course, Amanda Krueger’s “Your birth was a curse on the whole of humanity” speech was simply epic. I got closer to the TV at that part to deliver my lines.

The Nightmare movies entered my life by way of Parisian-dubbed, late-night TV programming (un, deux, voila Freddy l’affreux…). Before Five, Four had made the most impression on me, largely due to Lisa Wilcox’s portrayal of Alice.

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I was twelve-ish but something made this film stupidly rewatchable for me. Back then, had you asked me what it was about this movie that made it The One, I think my answer would’ve gone a little like this: “I don’t know. It’s just so good. The people, and like, the story. Watch it, and if you don’t like it, then I guess you suck.”

At thirty-two-ish now, and being a fiction writer, I’ve gotten better at articulating my thoughts, or at least, I have more words to work with. But it turns out I had it right back then: It really is as simple as “the people, and like, the story.”

The element of storytelling that I connect with and respond to the most is characterization. Give me a movie about a group of friends and show me who they are, how they relate to the world and each other—even if the plot is super low-key—I’ll be transported. Of course I can appreciate something that’s high-concept, plot-driven, something that’s flashy, that’s aesthetically pleasing, or that has a rhythm.But ultimately, it’s the people.The Dream Child gives me a group of young adults I care about—fronted by a lead I was already willing to follow anywhere. A group of people I wanted—and still want—to be friends with (maybe cyber friends, far away from Elm Street). I trusted that the Elm Street movies were going to keep delivering a central group of young characters that I was going to root for; Dream Warriors and The Dream Master had established this for me already. Alice’s character arc was taking her places that I felt were authentic, and I identified with her, I understood her, I admired her.

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THE DREAM CHILD gave me people to pay attention to, who were more than what they appeared to be on the surface: a loyal comic book nerd waiting for his moment to kick ass; a disciplined, bossy girl who had to open her mind and relinquish control in order to get the job done; a supermodel-in-training who could’ve gone places, except the only place she wanted to go was wherever was going to be farthest from her mother’s relentless cloud of pressure; and, of course, the girl who’d finally risen above tragedies of the past, only to have it all ripped away in exchange for something she didn’t want but now had to fight like hell to save—not only from supernatural evil, but from those insufferable adults who always think they know best. If you’re thinking “character cliché,” which is something the movie’s been criticized for, I’ll argue that summing up a life in a few words always turns it into a cliché. These characters were believable, unique, and their characterization, coupled with the actors’ performances, made their journeys compelling. It sucked when members of the gang were offed, no matter how imaginative the kill scenes were.

I was hooked on the Elm Street movies’ dream-world transition scenes. In The Dream Child, my first trip to Freddy’s playing field began with Alice plunging her fingers into the shower drain to see what nasty gunk might’ve been blocking it, and I watched as the thing first sputtered with baby-puke-like sludge, then the entire shower filled with water.

Of course, there are the one-liners, the odd dream sequences, the insight into Freddy Krueger’s past. There are visually pleasing scenes such as when Alice clutches on to a mangled Greta who suddenly appeared in the refrigerator, and when an eviscerated doll lies on a dinner platter. Mysterious, sad-eyed Jacob appearing to Alice and eventually being revealed as being a projection of her unborn baby—this is what gave the movie substance.

This movie dealt with a myriad of issues: teen pregnancy, drinking and driving, eating disorders, and parental pressure to name a few. One of my favorite moments was watching the set-up as Alice’s doctor and Dan’s parents did their best to convince her she was crazy and needed to give up her baby, and being there when Alice stood up for herself, prompting her father to snap out of his subdued state and stand behind her. Lisa Wilcox was quoted in an interview as saying this was perhaps too much for a Nightmare film to handle. It’s difficult for me to know if I should agree here or not, as I’m not a knowledgeable movie critic, nor am I a connoisseur of the horror genre. I’m just a run-of-the-mill Freddy fan, but that also means I was the intended audience for the film, and to anyone who criticizes it or fails to see its brilliance, I have this to say: If you don’t like it, then I guess you suck…

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Milla Jovovich Shows More of the Resident Evil Cast on Set

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Milla Jovovich Shows More of the Resident Evil Cast on Set

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Milla Jovovich Shows More of the Resident Evil Cast on Set.

Milla Jovovich shares photos of Resident Evil cast from set

Production is continuing for Resident Evil: The Final Chapter and star Milla Jovovich has shared more photos of the film’s cast from the set. Check out the Resident Evil cast in the gallery below along with all of the other photos from the set!

Jovovich will reprise her starring role as Alice in the film. The Resident Evil cast also includes Ali Larter (“Heroes,” Resident Evil: Afterlife) as Claire Redfield,  Iain Glen (“Game of Thrones,” Resident Evil: Extinction) in the role of Dr. Alexander Isaacs, Shawn Roberts (Edge of Darkness, Resident Evil: Afterlife) as Albert Wesker, Australian actress Ruby Rose (“Orange Is the New Black”) as Abigail, Eoin Macken (“The Night Shift”) as Doc, Cuban American actor William Levy as Christian, Fraser James (“Law & Order: UK”) as Michael, and Japanese model and TV personality, Rola, as Cobalt.

Picking up immediately after the events in Resident Evil: Retribution, humanity is on its last legs after Alice is betrayed by Wesker in Washington D.C. As the only survivor of what was meant to be humanity’s final stand against the undead hordes, Alice must return to where the nightmare began – Raccoon City, where the Umbrella Corporation is gathering its forces for a final strike against the only remaining survivors of the apocalypse.

In a race against time Alice will join forces with old friends, and an unlikely ally, in an action packed battle with undead hordes and new mutant monsters. Between losing her superhuman abilities and Umbrella’s impending attack, this will be Alice’s most difficult adventure as she fights to save humanity, which is on the brink of oblivion.

Resident Evil: The Final Chapter is produced by Jeremy Bolt, Paul W.S. Anderson, Robert Kulzer and Samuel Hadida. Martin Moszkowicz (Constantin Film) is the executive producer together with Victor Hadida (Metropolitan Films). Production services in South Africa are rendered by producer Genevieve Hofmeyr (Moonlighting Filmmakers). The creative production team includes Director of Photography, Glen MacPherson; Production Designer, Edward Thomas; Costume Designer, Reza Levy; Visual Effects Supervisor, Dennis Berardi and Editor, Doobie White.

Resident Evil: The Final Chapter will be distributed in the U.S. by Screen Gems in January 27, 2017,

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Forget JAWS 19…Here’s JAWS 3D!

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Forget JAWS 19…Here’s JAWS 3D!

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The internet is ablaze with the phony baloney and admittedly uproarious very real trailer for the very fake feature JAWS 19.

The preceding laff riot was produced as part of a marketing campaign to support the 30th Anniversary Blu-ray and DVD release of Robert Zemeckis’ timeless (har) comedy/fantasy classic BACK TO THE FUTURE and it’s equally witty and worthy sequels. For fans of the mind-bending BACK TO THE FUTURE PART II,  JAWS 19 is significant as Marty (Michael J. Fox) strolls by a theater playing this fictional flick, which was meant to open on October 21st, 2015. Funny stuff…

Alas, one of the very real sequels referenced in the spoof is even funnier…

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Director Joe Alves’ 1983 dimensional dud JAWS 3D is about as erect a middle finger to Steven Spielberg’s immaculate 1975 original as you can get. Which is not to say it’s not a fun flick; it most certainly is, and it boasts a rather stirring knock-off John Williams score, composed by Alan Parker (no, not the director of ANGEL HEART and THE WALL, thank you, a different Alan Parker). In it, the Brody boys, last seen as teens in the sturdy but soulless JAWS 2, are now all growed up, with the elder Mike (played by Dennis Quaid) now a marine biologist at SeaWorld and his little brother Sean (John Putch) now a goofy cowboy who’s terrified of the water and – in a roundabout tie-in back to BACK TO THE FUTURE – dating a lass named Kelly, played by Marty’s mom Lea Thompson.

At the core of JAWS 3D is a gloriously flat stereoscopic salute to everyone’s favorite ocean-life Guantanamo Bay, the dolphin death camp known as SeaWorld, framed by a wickedly goofy plot that has a biggie-sized shark infiltrating the park and feasting on a few divers (in one of the few decent 3D gags, a victim’s severed arm comes floating off screen into your lap). Mike and his gal pal and fellow biologist Kathryn (Bess Armstrong) capture the beast and try to turn the Great White into a half-assed attraction at the park but the poor thing dies of stress and blowhard park manager Calvin Bouchard (Louis Gossett Jr., sandwiched between AN OFFICER AND A GENTLEMAN and IRON EAGLE) shakes his fists and curses the commercial fates.

Problem is, the now dead shark was only a baby and, when mama finds out that Jr. met his fate at the mitts of some damned dirty humans, she busts her 10 tonne, 30 foot ass through the park’s iron underwater gates and proceeds to lay 3D waste to everyone and everything in her path.

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JAWS 3D boasted special effects that were closer to special defects.

JAWS 3D is a goofy romp that suggests the shark may or may not have followed the Brody’s to Florida, an idea that is hammered home with even greater ham in the legendary but actually not-really-all-that-bad JAWS: THE REVENGE. The film – whose script was penned by series regular Carl Gottlieb and none other than the greatest dark fantasy writer of all time, the late Richard Matheson – is a hodge-podge of warmed over JAWS character arcs (Gossett Jr. is essentially Murray Hamilton’s callous mayor while Armstrong and Quaid both channel Roy Scheider’s Brody AND Richard Dreyfuss’ Hooper), the setting is silly, the dialogue goofy, the climax jaw-dropping (slave dolphins to the rescue!) and the 3D generally sucks. The film was released at the tail (har) end of the 2nd mini-3D craze (which utilized the split-stereoscopic process wherein two images were squished onto one frame and a special lens was placed on the project to blend the left and right polarized image) and was obviously tricked out with dippy “gotcha” gags in post production. The scene where the blue-screen toy shark (which looks like a cut-out moving across a still photo) comes through the glass window of the underwater lookout is a knee-slapper and the flying “jaws” themselves that hurtle to the screen after the shark has been dynamited (spoiler, sorry…) are just plain tacky.

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JAWS in yo FACE!

On the plus side, the late Simon MacCorkindale is in it. He played MANIMAL. And MANIMAL is awesome.

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JAWS 3D is available on Blu-ray in a 3D version for 3D TV’s. It is also available in 2D as just plain old JAWS 3 on DVD.

JAWS 19 does not exist.

And the BACK TO THE FUTURE 30th Anniversary Trilogy streets on October 20th.

This time it’s really, really personal…

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Monday, October 5, 2015

Robert Z’Dar Slasher EASTER SUNDAY Locks World Premiere

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Robert Z’Dar Slasher EASTER SUNDAY Locks World Premiere

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The late Robert Z’Dar stars in indie slasher EASTER SUNDAY.
The late, great Robert Z’Dar, MANIAC COP himself, left us earlier this year, leaving behind a wild tapestry of arch, cult cinema. One of his final films is the the ultra-gory , indie slasher satire EASTER SUNDAY, written and directed by Jeremy Todd Morehead; SHOCK has learned that EASTER SUNDAY (dig that wild Marc Schoenbach poster!)  will have its world premiere on October 16th at the Four States Slasher Con in Winchester, VA.
 
Says Morehead:
 
“I am beyond thrilled that this goofy, bloody movie I’ve had in my head since I was 18 years old is about to premiere on the big screen at Four States Slasher Con,” exclaims Morehead. “It has been an amazing ride, and I think what my crew and I pulled off with very little resources is rarely achieved from a movie of our size. Some people tried to convince me that it could not be done. Well, it’s premiering on October 16. This has been a dream of mine for most of my life, and I am ecstatic over what we have accomplished with Easter Sunday.”
 
Check out the new trailer below and hang out with the EASTER SUNDAY team on their official Facebook Page.
 

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When Your Flesh Screams Slated for October Release

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When Your Flesh Screams Slated for October Release

The indie horror flick, WHEN YOUR FLESH SCREAMS, will be getting a full release from LeglessCorpse Films on October 6, 2015. WHEN YOUR FLESH SCREAMS is written and directed by Guillermo Martínez, and stars Omar MusaVictoria WitemburgOscar Molinari, Omar Musa, and Alicia Julianez. Check out the press release for the plot crunch, the trailer, and all the various mediums it is being released on:

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LeglessCorpse Films releases WHEN YOUR FLESH SCREAMS 

September  30, 2015, Huntsville, AL. LeglessCorpse Films will release Guillermo Martínez’s WHEN YOUR FLESH SCREAMS on limited edition BluRay, DVD, Steelbook DVD/BluRay, and Harmful Syndiate Video VHS.

A homage to the great revenge films of the past like Wes Craven’s Last House On The Left and Meir Zarchi’s I Spit On Your Grave. 

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Martina, a biology student, who after moving from her hometown to complete her studies decides to undertake an excursion to the outskirts of the city in search of rare and exotic specimens for research. Not finding the specimen after a long search, she decides to rest by the roadside. At that time, her new psychotic neighbors propose to take her to the woods where they claim is the specimen that she seeks. Martina accepts the crossing naturally, but on the way the thugs kidnap her, determined to cause all sorts of sinister and gruesome acts, both physical and psychological. The story takes an unexpected turn when Martina decides to release her pent- up anger.

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WHEN YOUR FLESH SCREAMS will be released on DVD (SRP $11.99) and BluRay (SRP $14.99) formats on October 6th with a VHS (SRP $19.99) release on October 12th. VOD dates will be coming soon. Free limited edition poster included with steelbook, VHS, and Bluray orders and while supplies last on DVD orders.

BluRay’s will be numbered and limited to 100, Steelbooks onumbered to only 20, and VHS numbered to only 13 ONLY. 

All formats are available at LeglessCorpseFilms.com

Stay Bloody!!!


Filed under: Breaking News, Exploitation Flicks, Females in Horror, New Horror Releases, New Posting, Upcoming Releases

Paranormal Activity: The Ghost Dimension TV Spot Unleashes Hell

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Paranormal Activity: The Ghost Dimension TV Spot Unleashes Hell

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Paranormal Activity: The Ghost Dimension TV Spot Unleashes Hell.

A new Paranormal Activity: The Ghost Dimension TV spot

Paramount Pictures and Blumhouse Productions have released the new Paranormal Activity: The Ghost Dimension TV spot, which you can view below! Opening in theaters on October 23, the film marks the final installment of the franchise, which began in 2009 with Paranormal Activity.

Paranormal Activity: The Ghost Dimension centers on the Fleeges — father Ryan (Chris J. Murray), mother Emily (Brit Shaw) and their young daughter Leila (Ivy George) — who move into a house and discover a video camera and a box of tapes in the garage. When they look through the camera’s lens, they begin to see the paranormal activity happening around them – including the re-emergence of young Kristi and Katie. The video camera footage will be presented in 3D in theaters.

“All the questions that everyone has asked from the past ‘Paranormal Activity’ films: What does Toby look like? What’s the backstory to the families? These questions have been teased out. Now they will be answered,” producer Jason Blum said previously.

Gregory Plotkin directs The Ghost Dimension from a script by Adam Robitel and Gavin Heffernan. Oren Peli produces with Jason Blum, and Steve Molen is executive producer.

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