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The Mummy’s Shroud (1967)

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‘Warning: to every creature of flesh and blood! Beware the beat of the cloth-wrapped feet!’

The Mummy’s Shroud is a 1967 British supernatural horror film directed by John Gilling (The Night Caller; The Reptile; The Plague of the Zombies) from a screenplay co-written with Anthony Hinds. It was a Seven Arts -Hammer Film production.

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It was the final Hammer production to be made at Bray Studios. It opened as part of a double-bill on the ABC cinema circuit with Terence Fisher’s Frankenstein Created Woman on 18 June 1967

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Buy: Amazon.co.uk

Main cast:

André Morell, David Buck, John Phillips, Maggie Kimberly, Elizabeth Sellars and Michael Ripper. Stuntman Eddie Powell (Christopher Lee’s regular stunt double) played the Mummy.

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Plot:

Ancient Egypt: Prem (Dickie Owen), a manservant of Kah-To-Bey, spirited away the boy when his father (Bruno Barnabe) was killed in a palace coup and took him into the desert for protection. Unfortunately, the boy dies and is buried…

1920: An expedition led by scientist Sir Basil Walden (Andre Morell) and businessman Stanley Preston (John Phillips) is intent on finding the tomb. They ignore the dire warning issued to them by Hasmid (Roger Delgado), a local Bedouin about the consequences for those that violate the tombs of Ancient Egypt and remove the bodies and the sacred shroud. Sir Basil is bitten by a snake just after finding the tomb. He recovers, but has a relapse after arriving back in Cairo…

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Reviews:

Gilling’s style surfaces most effectively in the murder sequences, using unusual angles to denote threat, high contrast between light and dark or a single primary colour, focus and wide angle lenses to skew perception … Unfortunately, there isn’t enough of his visual stamp on the film and a string of very wordy scenes are only intermittently punctuated by these exotic visuals and the pace of the film suffers. However, Gilling’s film is also blessed by some sensational performances.” Frank Collins, Cathode Ray Tube

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” … Gilling understands this is basically pulp, and he treats it as such. The mummy attack scenes are a highlight: Gilling uses canted angles, dynamic compositions, and vivid colors to accompany the surprisingly brutal murders, lending the film an E.C. Comics vibe.” Jeff Kuykendall, Midnight Only

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“Director John Gilling … brings the delightfully creepy atmosphere from his Cornish films and a competent sense of tension, despite the film’s predictability. Fortunately, The Mummy’s Shroud ends on a very high note, with one of the best conclusions in any of their Mummy films, which sort of makes up for its unnecessary prologue.” Sam Delghan, Diabolique magazine

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Cast and characters:

Comic strip adaptation:

The film was adapted into a 12-page comic strip for the December 1977 issue of the magazine House of Hammer (volume 2, #15, published by Top Sellers Limited). It was drawn by David Jackson from a script by Donne Avenell. The cover of the issue featured a painting by Brian Lewis, depicting a scene from the movie.

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Filming locations:

Bray Film Studios
Wapsey’s Wood quarry at Gerrard’s Cross

Wikipedia | IMDb | Related: The Shuffling Saga of the Mummy on Screen – article by Daz Lawrence



Lurking Fear (1994)

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‘Infinite evil’

Lurking Fear – aka H.P. Lovecraft’s Lurking Fear – is a 1994 American supernatural horror film, loosely based on the H. P. Lovecraft short story “The Lurking Fear”. It was produced by Charles Band’s Full Moon Entertainment and written and directed by C. Courtney Joyner (Puppet Master vs Demonic Toys; Prison); From a Whisper to a Scream).

Main cast:

Blake Bailey (The Killer Eye), Ashley Laurence (Hellraiser and sequels), Jon Finch (Frenzy; The Vampire Lovers), Jeffrey Combs (Would You Rather; Re-Animator), Allison Mackie, Paul Mantee (The Manitou; Day of the Animals), Vincent Schiavelli (Bone Chillers; Comedy of Horrors), Joseph Leavengood (Basket Case 2), Cristina Stoica, Luana Stoica, Adrian Pintea, Ilinca Goia, Michael Todd.

Latest release:

On 24 October 2016, the film is issued on Blu-ray by 88 Films in the UK.

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Buy: Amazon.co.uk

Plot:

Ex-con John Martense (Blake Adams) returns to his childhood home of Lefferts Corner after serving time for a crime he didn’t commit. Martense visits family friend Knaggs (Vincent Schiavelli), a mortician who has been holding half of a map for him. The map leads to a graveyard where Martense’s father hid the money from his last heist.

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Arriving at an abandoned church, Martense is confronted by Cathryn (Ashley Laurence), a young woman seeking revenge for the murder of her sister, and town doctor Dr. Haggis (Jeffrey Combs).

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This group is quickly joined by a trio of criminals who are looking to find the money John’s father stole from them. What everyone is not aware of are the humanoid creatures lurking underneath the holy grounds…

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Reviews:

“As with many Full Moon films, Lurking Fear‘s trailer is better than the feature it promotes. That’s unfortunate because Joyner had a wonderful professional cast who, with a cleaned-up script and a hands-on producer, could have made the film a standout among [Lovecraft] adaptations.” Andrew Migliore and John Strysik, Lurker in the Lobby: A Guide to the Cinema of H. P. Lovecraft

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Buy: Amazon.co.uk | Amazon.com

“… zippy little gem … The Morlock-looking creatures are nicely designed by Wayne Toth [House of 1000 Corpses; Wishmaster] and are a suitably nasty bunch, dragging any poor sod they can down into their subterranean abattoir. The product of years of inbreeding, they’re perhaps a fitting metaphor for just how incestuous the Full Moon production line once was.” Matty Budrewicz, UK Horror Scene

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“With such a talented cast, a cool concept, and a fresh young director coming off a popular Trancers sequel, there’s no reason the final product should have been this lousy. I applaud Joyner’s effort to mix the horror, action, and crime film genres, but it just didn’t work. The end result is a somewhat boring creature feature, that apparently ruined C. Courtney Joyner’s taste for filmmaking.” The B-Movie Film Vault

Lurking Fear is pretty spot on and cohesive. The action choreography and stuntwork is top notch. The acting is way better than I expected and I’m impartial to strong female characters. The gore, my favorite aspect of the movie, was amazing and performed through the use of practical effects and that really brought me back to a better time.” Horror Society

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“It’s no masterpiece, but it’s a nicely done flick made by people who clearly strove to produce a good movie. The acting is uniformly good and nicely naturalistic, the characters tend not to do stupid stuff just to advance the plot, the settings are, again, quite fetching, the film is fairly brutal in terms of killing likable characters, and the script is actually *gasp* fairly well thought out, with one event actually leading logically to the next.” Ken Begg, Jabootu’s Bad Movie Dimension

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Buy: Amazon.com | Amazon.co.uk

“There’s an equally impressive cast here, with Combs at his hammy best as the sozzled quack, Finch genuinely menacing as a Cockney gangster and Laurence convincing as a Lara Croft type Amazon. Unfortunately the script doesn’t give them anything more than generic dialogue, and that adjective sums up the film as a whole. While the creatures have an interesting design, though wisely kept hidden for most of the running time, they’re not utilised in any particularly interesting manner.” Eric Hillis, The Movie Waffler

Lurking Fear is loaded with graphic violence, monsters and gore, so fans of this fare will not be disappointed. And the cast is good…” John Stanley, Creature Features

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Buy: Amazon.co.uk | Amazon.com | Amazon.ca

“The gore is generally weak, but I must credit the effects team and director for making so many attempts to please the Fangoria fans out there. There are a lot of dead body, corpse and skeleton scenes in which these props are used for more than just background. They come with a few laughs. The creature make-up is similarly ho-hum. But they embrace it. They don’t make you wait until the last 20 minutes of the movie to see it.” John Leavengood, Movies, Films and Flix

“The actors all seem game enough, but the characters are generally one-note … but as the story winds on, the people seem to have little function but to mark time when the creatures aren’t on screen. The monsters themselves are fairly well-executed but unmemorable…” TV Guide

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Filming locations:

Buftea Studios, Bucharest, Romania

Wikipedia | IMDb | Image credits: The B-Movie Film Vault | The Movie Waffler


Killersaurus (2015)

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‘One experiment you don’t want to go wrong…’

Killersaurus – aka Killer/Saurus – is a 2015 British science fiction horror film written and directed by Steve Lawson (Nocturnal Activity; Survival Instinct) for Creativ Studios.

The film stars Julian Boote (Evil Souls; Deadtime; Dead Room), Adam Collins, Helen Crevel (Survival Instinct), Steven Dolton (Zombie Undead; Devil’s Tower), Vicki Glover (Cleaver: Rise of the Killer Clown; Bikini Girls v Dinosaurs) and Kenton Hall (Valley of the Witch; Theatre of Fear; The Amityville Asylum).

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Plot:

When a scientist runs short of funding for his life-saving medical Bio-Printing research, he accepts an offer of investment from a shadowy military organisation. In return, he is forced to use his technology to create the ultimate battlefield weapon – a full size Tyrannosaurus Rex.

After a horrific accident in which the dinosaur massacres his research team, the scientist shuts down the project. However, his investors demand results and it can only be a matter of time before the deadly T-Rex is unleashed upon the world…

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Buy: Amazon.com

Reviews:

Despite the lack of puppet-on-the-loose action, Killer/Saurus is a fun little sci-fi/horror picture with some appealing performances from its cast and a solid awareness of its limitations. It’s played completely straight when many such microbudget fancies would descend into silliness or spoofery.” MJ Simpson

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“For a supposed “Killer”saurus, he sure does like to tease us. Honestly, about a third of this film is a dinosaur looking at a man. Talking about teasing, why not just give us the expected “Jed’s dead.” line you’ve been hinting at since about minute five? Painful throughout, but some of that dialogue tickles while it smarts.” Jim Drew, Letterboxd.com

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Buy: Amazon.co.uk

My main criticism of the film is its rigidity and lack of playfulness. It’s a crazy concept, but it doesn’t really embrace it, instead veering towards a dramatic narrative which seems a little misplaced. As it stands, while Killersaurus should be commended for its low budget achievements, there is a feeling it could have been so much better.” Dave Wain, Zombie Hamster

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IMDb | Image thanks: MJ Simpson


Dry Bones (2013)

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‘Sometimes you shouldn’t go home again.’

Dry Bones is a 2013 American horror film directed by Greg Lamberson (Johnny Gruesome; Killer Rack; Slime City) and Michael O’Hear (The Fate of Sophie Miller; Something Dark) from a screenplay by producer Lamberson.

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Main cast:

Debbie Rochon, Michael O’Hear (Death House; Model Hunger; Snow Shark), John Renna (Johnny Gruesome; Porkchop 3D), Paul McGinnis (Let Her OutFrankenstein’s Patchwork Monster), Kathy Murphy, Kevin Van Hentenryck [as Kevin Van Hat Trick] (Brain Damage; Basket Case and sequels), Kim Piazza, Jessica Zwolak (Killer Rack) Tia Maurice, Mark Goodfellow, Kaelin Lamberson, Alexander S. McBryde, Robert Bozek (Not Human), Tim O’Hearn.

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Plot:

As a boy, Andy is terrorized by a monster under his bed. Decades later, psychiatrists have convinced Drew (Michael O’Hear) that his childhood trauma is a figment of his imagination – until he returns home to confront his darkest fears. As the people in his life begin to disappear, Drew suspects the creature is hellbent on his destruction…

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Reviews:

“For a monster movie it surprisingly has little blood and guts but it does have human skeletons that you can roll up like a rug. Overall it’s a well directed piece by the duo of Lamberson and O’ Hear that keeps you entertained and holds your attention.” Peter Hopkins, Horror Screams Video Vault

Screen Shot 2016-08-26 at 13.12.29“The entire cast offers up some great performances and work very well with each other. That is something very rare in the indie horror community. Most indie horror films have a cast of people trying to be the next De Niro from Taxi Driver while others lack experience to actually deliver their lines and not just read them.” Blacktooth, Horror Society

Dry Bones is a damn fine time for those into low budget horror. There’s really nothing to complain about with this one. I’m sure plenty would argue that the film could use some more gore but it honestly functions just as well without it.” Foul Feast

IMDb | Facebook

 


Gnawbone (2016)

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‘Sometimes the things you fear are in your head… and sometimes they’re in the woods!

Gnawbone is a 2016 American horror film directed by Darrin Means and James Thompson from a screenplay co-written with Trent Persinger.

The film was partly funded by an online Kickstarter campaign.

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Main cast:

Tony Bartele (Asylum: The Lost Footage), Charlie Bruce, Katie Harbridge, Derek Kunzman, Katy O’Brian, and Ransom Pugh.

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Plot:

It is the story about a boy that witnesses something that takes the life of his grandfather. Thinking that the traumatic event created a false memory, a psychologist wants the now twenty one year old young man to face his fears by trekking into the woods. With the help of friends, he might be able to process these memories and come to terms with that scared little boy. Or is that memory actually the truth…

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Monsters (2010)

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Monsters is a 2010 British science fiction monster film written and directed by Gareth Edwards (Godzilla) in his feature film directorial debut. Edwards also served as the cinematographer, production designer, and visual effects artist.

Plot:

Monsters takes place years after a NASA probe crash in Mexico which led to the sudden appearance of giant tentacled monsters. It follows Andrew Kaulder (Scoot McNairy), an American photojournalist tasked with escorting his employer’s daughter Samantha Wynden (Whitney Able) back to the US by crossing through Mexico’s “Infected Zone” where the creatures reside.

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Overview:

Edwards conceived the idea for the film after seeing fishermen attempt to bring a creature in with a net, and imagining a monster inside. He pitched the idea to Vertigo Films who agreed to finance it.

The film was shot in Belize, Mexico, Guatemala, Costa Rica, and the United States over three weeks., and many locations were used without permission. Most of the extras were people who were at these locations during filming and were persuaded to act in it; all of their dialogue was improvised, and Edwards provided outlines of the primary plot points.

Every night after shooting, editor Colin Goudie and his assistant Justin Hall would download the footage so the memory sticks could be cleared and ready for the next day. While new footage was being captured, the previously filmed footage was edited at the production team’s hotel. After filming concluded, the crew had over 100 hours of footage. The original cut was over four hours long but was trimmed to 94 minutes after eight months of editing. 

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Edwards created the visual effects himself using off-the-shelf Adobe software, ZBrush, and Autodesk 3ds Max. He had five months to create all 250 visual effects shots, a process he undertook in his bedroom. He produced two shots a day until he reached the first creature shot, when “suddenly two months went by and [he] still hadn’t finished a single creature shot”; Edwards stated that the creatures’ visual effects were the most challenging element of production.

Monsters premiered at South by Southwest on 13 March 2010. Hours later, Magnet Releasing acquired the rights to distribute it in North America. It had a limited release there, beginning on 29 October 2010, followed by a theatrical release in the United Kingdom on 3 December 2010.

The film received generally positive reviews and was a box office success, grossing US$ 4.2 million against a budget of less than $500,000. Monsters: Dark Continent, a sequel, was released on 1 May 2015.

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Reviews:

“Both the satire and the human story are more involving than in District 9, and McNairy, in particular, gives an excellent and very convincing performance. This is a very postmodern sci-fi, with its downbeat approach to the monsters themselves, but with a hugely involving love story.” Peter Bradshaw, The Guardian

Monsters is really a road-movie romance that tracks the burgeoning relationship between two strangers as they travel through the ”infected” zone. The result impresses thanks to the lead actors’ performances and Edwards’ skilled efforts. But it should come with a warning: ”Here be (not many) monsters.” Clark Collis, Entertainment Weekly

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” … despite the well-covered terrain, Edwards adds original touches to the genre, especially where production design is concerned. His use of weather-worn “infected zone” signs and other fading notices go far in setting up an established way of life while he admirably refrains from orchestrating those inevitable creature sightings for maximum (brass blaring) shock value.” Michael Rechtshaffen, The Hollywood Reporter

“Monsters” holds our attention ever more deeply as we realize it’s not a casual exploitation picture. We expect that sooner or later, we’ll get a good look at the aliens close up. When we do, let’s say it’s not a disappointment. They’re ugly and uncannily beautiful. We’ve never seen anything like them. And their motives are made clear in a sequence combining uncommon suspense and uncanny poetry.” RogerEbert.com

Monsters’ wants to be an allegory about American self-absorption or the panic over immigration or something; exactly what is never very clear. If the real monsters are supposed to be us — a metaphor the film’s majestic climactic image makes explicit — on the evidence here, we just aren’t scary enough.” Ty Burr, Boston Globe

Interviews:

Gareth Edwards interviewed by Ryan Lambie for Den of Geek!

Wikipedia | IMDb |


Enclosure (2016)

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‘Don’t breathe’

Enclosure is a 2016 horror film directed by Patrick Rea (Fun Size Horror: Volume Two; The Invoking 2; Nailbiter) from a screenplay co-written with Michelle Davidson.

Main cast:

Jake Busey (From Dusk Till Dawn: The Series; Most Likely to Die; Nazis at the Center of the Earth), Fiona Dourif (The Medium; Fear Clinic; Curse of Chucky), Kevin Ryan, Michelle Mills.

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Plot:

A couple’s romantic camping trip is cut short after a group of nearby hunters are brutally killed by a mysterious creature. As the creature turns its focus on the couple, they must fight for their survival while their shelter is destroyed…

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Reviews:

“Some cartoonish effects and digital compositing do let the side down, robbing chunks of fear factor from the tense, siege-like tent sequences and leaving the monsters lacking, but the dramatic threads playing out remain consistently compelling…” Gareth Jones, Dread Central

“By the end, Enclosure has far outstayed its welcome, lumbered with a decent concept that is neither fully developed, nor has enough scare potential to properly sell it. Among all of the other forest-based horror movies, this is tame, and often quite boring stuff. It’s still a win for Dourif, however, who further solidifies her position as one of the most interesting actresses in recent years…” Joey Keogh, Wicked Horror

“Patrick Rea’s Enclosure is a solid if not perfect supernatural allegory about motherhood that boasts a well-written script and a few genuinely creepy moments. It’s well worth the effort of a bag of microwaved popcorn and an hour-and-a-half on the couch.” Tom Holland’s Terror Time

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“A frightening and fraught story elevated by strong performances and some intense creature designs. Predator meets The Descent by way of The Hallow.” Kat Hughes, The Hollywood News

“Director Patrick Rea builds a great little horror film that relies on simplicity and builds some remarkable tension and mounting terror. Rea’s production is tight and he brings the best out of his cast, including Jake Busey who is deliciously slimy. The film’s villain is absolutely creepy, especially when you glimpse at the utterly unnerving make up effects.” Cinema Crazed

Filmed locations:

Charleston, South Carolina

IMDb | Image credits: The Hollywood News

Related: Don’t Read This!!! – article


Hobgoblins (1988)

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Hobgoblins is a 1988 American comedy horror film directed by directed, written, and produced by Rick Sloane, who also served as cinematographer and editor. Kenneth J. Hall (director of The Halfway House and Evil Spawn) fabricated the hobgoblins.

The plot concerns small, hobgoblins (demon like mythical creatures) although they do not appear until 29 minutes into the film.

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Often seen as a rip-off of Gremlins, the film is generally considered to be of exceptionally poor quality, and has come to be regarded as one of the worst films ever made.

The film had a low profile until director Rick Sloane submitted it to the Mystery Science Theater 3000 team. MST3K writer Paul Chaplin later commented: “It shoots right to the top of the list of the worst movies we’ve ever done.” The ensuing negative publicity led Sloane to produce Hobgoblins 2, a self-mocking sequel in 2009.

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On October 24, 2016, Vinegar Syndrome released the film on Blu-ray, with the following bonus features:

Scanned, restored & preserved in 2k from 35mm original camera negative
Archival commentary track with director Rick Sloane
Hobgoblins Revisited: brand new making-of featurette
Brand new interview with hobgoblin creature fabricator, Kenneth J. Hall
Hobgoblins: The Making of a Disasterpiece: featurette
Hobgoblins Invade Comic-Con: featurette
Trailer
Reversible cover artwork
English SDH Subtitles

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Buy: Amazon.com

Plot:

Kevin just got hired to be the assistant night watchman at an old film vault. Warned to stay out of one mysterious chamber, the rookie guard can’t help but satisfy his curiosity and unwittingly unleashes a group of hobgoblins: furry aliens who grant people wishes only to kill them in the process.

As the body count starts to rise, Kevin, with the help of his friends, decide to track down the deadly creatures before they wreak havoc on the city…

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Reviews:

“It’s in the absolute cellar as far as production values and filmmaking competence are concerned, but the acting, creature effects and attempts at comedy are so atrocious that it never once gets boring. There’s so much surreal anti-humor, from the extended garden tool fight scene to the hobgoblins themselves, completely unarticulated puppets that need to be held against the characters…” Jim Vorel, Paste magazine

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“There’s nothing charming about writer/director Rick Sloane’s oily failure, no sense of glorious insanity that accompanies the most charming flops, no feel of outlandish camp that comes with an over-the-top bomb. What we have instead is a loathsome, ugly, and downright dumb stab at comedy, a sort of Ghoulies reimagined by someone who doesn’t have a single clue as to what he’s doing.” David Cornelius, DVD Talk

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Hobgoblins is a movie that I had immense pleasure in watching. If you can stomach unknown actors who are not that good, bad effects, and dumb comedy that is so stupid that it makes you laugh, it is a movie that you will likely enjoy as well. It clearly takes its inspiration from the movies that preceded it, but it does enough with the material to set it apart from the pack.” Jesse, HorrorNews.net

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Buy (English audio option): Amazon.co.uk

Cast and characters:

  • Tom Bartlett as Kevin
  • Paige Sullivan as Amy
  • Steven Boggs as Kyle
  • Kelley Palmer as Daphne
  • Billy Frank as Nick
  • Tamara Clatterbuck as Fantazia
  • Duane Whitaker as Roadrash
  • Jeffrey Culver as McCreedy
  • Kevin Kildow as Dennis
  • Kari French as Pixie
  • Daran Norris as Club Scum M.C
  • James Mayberry as Sergeant Parker
  • Ken Abraham as Thug
  • Don Barrett as Comstock

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Buy: Amazon.com | Amazon.co.uk

Wikipedia | IMDb

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Gremlin (2017)

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‘Big things come in small packages’

Gremlin is a 2017 horror monster movie directed by Ryan Bellgardt (Army of Frankensteins) from a screenplay co-written with co-producers Josh McKamie and Andy Swanson.

The film is being marketed by High Octane Pictures at the American Film Market (AFM) being held in Santa Monica November 2nd – 9th, 2016.

Main cast:

Adam Hampton, Katie Burgess, Caleb Milby, Rachael Messer, Catcher Stair, Mike Waugh, Chris Crane,  Kristy K. Boone, Kyle Pennington, Mike Page, Connie Franklin, Stacy Casaluci, Vicki Wilcox.

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Plot:

Two years after the murder of his ten-year-old son, Adam Thatcher receives a mysterious box from a relative containing a terrible secret, a creature that will brutally kill everyone he cares about one by one. The only way to release himself from the curse is to give the box to someone he loves, continuing the never ending circulation of this ancient evil.

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As the ominous timer on the box counts down to its end, Adam can only imagine the horrors that await. Does he give the box away to save his family, or face his own demise while unleashing a powerful terror on the rest of humanity? He can’t destroy it. He can’t escape it. He can only give it to someone he loves…

IMDb


The Descent (2005)

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‘Face your deepest fear’

The Descent is a 2005 British horror film written and directed by Neil Marshall (Tales of HalloweenDog Soldiers).

The plot follows six women who, having entered an unmapped cave system, become trapped and are hunted by blood-thirsty human hybrids lurking within.

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Buy: Amazon.co.uk

The film took $57.1 million at the box office against a reported budget of £3.5 million. A sequel, titled The Descent Part 2, was released in 2009.

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The skull of women motif used in some advertising material is based on Philippe Halsman‘s In Voluptas Mors photograph.

The film’s marketing campaign in the UK was disrupted by the London bombings in July 2005. Adverts on London’s transport system (including the bus that had exploded) had included posters that carried the quote, “Outright terror… bold and brilliant”, and depicted a terrified woman screaming in a tunnel.

The film’s distributor in the UK, Pathé, recalled the posters and reworked the campaign to exclude the word “terror” from advertised reviews of The Descent. Pathé also distributed the new versions to TV and radio stations. The distributor’s marketing chief, Anna Butler, said of the new approach, “We changed tack to concentrate on the women involved all standing together and fighting back. That seemed to chime with the prevailing mood of defiance that set in the weekend after the bombs.”

The Descent was released in North America with approximately a minute cut from the end. In the American theatrical cut, Sarah escapes from the cave and sees Juno, but the film does not cut back to the cave.

In the 4 August 2006 issue of Entertainment Weekly, it was stated that the ending was trimmed because American viewers did not like its “uber-hopeless finale”. Lionsgate marketing chief Tim Palen said, “It’s a visceral ride, and by the time you get to the ending you’re drained. [Director Neil] Marshall had a number of endings in mind when he shot the film, so he was open [to making a switch].” Marshall compared the change to the ending of The Texas Chain Saw Massacre, saying, “Just because she gets away, does that make it a happy ending?” The North American Unrated DVD includes the original ending.

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Buy: Amazon.com

Plot:

A year after the tragic death of her husband and young daughter on the drive back from an adventure holiday, Sarah (Shauna Macdonald) and her adventurous girlfriends, Juno (Natalie Mendoza), Beth (Alex Reid, Arachnid) , Sam (MyAnna Buring, Kill List) and Rebecca (Saskia Mulder) are reunited at a cabin in the Appalachian Mountains of North Carolina (admirably portrayed by the wilds of Scotland and Buckinghamshire). Holly (Nora-Jane Noone), Juno’s new friend, is introduced.

Whilst Sarah begins to imagine the time she had with her family just twelve months prior, she is whisked along to a potholing jamboree in a cave-system kept as a surprise by Juno. Alas, no sooner have they begun to explore, than the passageway collapses behind them, shutting them in what, Juno now admits, is a completely unmapped labyrinth of tunnels and caverns. Despite the group’s previous disastrous holiday, no-one thought to inform anyone where they were going.

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As the unhappy group progress through the gloom, they find evidence of previous explorers and, more pertinently, cave drawings describing a second exit from the cave, towards which, they hopefully advance. No sooner have they set off than Holly falls and suffers a pleasingly graphic compound fracture of her leg; Sarah applies a splint, though you imagine the entire group is relived it happened to the most annoying of their number.

Whilst collecting their thoughts, Sarah fleetingly spies a figure in the murk, the others essentially patting her on the head, assuming she’s still suffering mental trauma. Exasperated and frightened, Sarah is proved right as the girls find that indeed they are not alone and something humanoid is hunting them down, like lions in the savannah, attacking the weakest (Holly) and ripping out her throat. In the melee of pickaxes and claws, Juno accidentally plunges her rock climbing equipment into Beth, a fact she is not too happy about but does little to resolve.

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Briefly the group are separated but Juno locates Sam and Rebecca, dispatching another of the ever-increasing number of troglodytes before further casualties are inflicted. She convinces the duo to continue on with her towards the exit, despite Sarah being missing. Fearing for their lives and owing something of a debt of gratitude, they relent.

Meanwhile, Sarah is still alive, slightly more-so than Beth who is more blood than flesh but still manages to inform her friend that not only had Juno done her a mischief but had also been having an affair with Sarah’s dead husband, which she proves by producing a pendant she snatched from the increasingly unpopular ‘friend’. Now in a clouded rage, she mercy-kills Beth and slays a family of the pale creatures en-route to find the others.

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Most of the ladies have by now realised the creatures are blind, a result of their evolution underground, though have excellent hearing. This knowledge is ultimately redundant, as the creatures mastery of their domain means that escape is almost impossible, First to demonstrate this are Rebecca and Sam, leaving only Juno and Sarah to fend off their attackers and seek salvation. They’ve come so far but is Sarah in the mood for forgiveness, and even if she is, is there any chance to escape?

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Review:

After the huge critical and commercial success of Neil Marshall’s debut effort, 2002’s Dog Soldiers, everybody waited expectantly to give him a polite ripple of applause for his follow-up but not to push his luck. Much eating of head-wear followed when it was clear that Marshall had at least equalled his efforts and had pushed himself and his team yet further, filming a low-budget horror film with a small cast in a near to pitch-black environment. In fact, no caves were harmed during the making of this movie, the immersive and believable sets being made at Pinewood.

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The Descent has, aside from the creatures and a brief appearance by Sarah’s husband, an all female cast, an intentional device but one which is somewhat nailed-on and for the most part, glaring. The film doesn’t suffer as such, the group still has an alpha female, a brash annoyance and a baddie but it’s an unnecessary ‘first’ and not the only example of the film-maker perhaps trying a little too hard, when their storytelling skill and understanding of what it means to be frightened were already sound.The actresses all do a sterling job both emotionally and physically, their rock-climbing exertions regularly being wince-inducing for the audience. Helpfully, they are given different accents, a huge help in distinguishing who’s who in the necessarily dark filming environment.

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It’s frustrating to watch a film which feasts on such raw human fears – the dark, being lost, claustrophobia, loneliness, things going bump in the dark  – knowing that if every horror film director tapped into such universal emotions, we’d be left with far less chaff. The dark is dealt with bravely and skilfully, the only light being of provided sources, torches, helmets, watch displays and the like. The creatures, known retrospectively as crawlers, are well-devised in many respects, pale and pathetic on one level, possessed of cunning and finely-honed senses on the other.

There are niggling gaps – their excellent hearing makes up for lack of sight but whispering is apparently fine (take heed of the zombies of the Blind Dead series, able to hear even the beating of your heart!) and one might think that a sense of touch would also be similarly keen but their ability to sense the heat of flaming torches and indeed the trapped party’s body-heat is lacking. Curmudgeonly sorts may point to their similarity to Gollum of Tolkein fame.

Though an effective score is provided by David Julyan (The Cabin in the Woods), the traditional musical stingers designed to make the audience jump, are instead easily facilitated by the rasping crawlers appearing out of nowhere.

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As is many a film’s wont, despite the presence of the crawlers, the human participants pose at least the equal amount of physical and psychological danger. The film just about stays the sensible side of the 2000’s version of the 80’s trapping of ‘it was all a dream’, fortunate – although it was felt a statement had to be made beyond the basic plight of the cavers, it would be refreshing to have a horror film that didn’t fall back on ulterior factors, as if to suggest just being a horror film wasn’t enough.

The crawlers themselves, humanoid enough to clarify that they have evolved from Earth not from Mars, are the work of Paul Hyett (HowlThe Facility, Eden Lake) and his team, the prosthetics being anatomically sensible but still repulsive, their appearance being hidden from the actresses until filming started, ramping up the tension yet further. The film spawned one, ill-advised, sequel, whilst Marshall has yet to recapture his early vigour and invention on the big screen.

Daz Lawrence, Horrorpedia

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Other reviews:

” …Marshall delivers what amounts to a feature-length exploitation of viewer phobias — distressingly claustrophobic and shot so vertiginously that it feels as though you’re dangling in the cave with the women. The generously gelatinous gore isn’t without metaphorical purpose either. As the cave gets wormier and wetter, tighter and more terrifying, it feels like a womb thick with amniotic fluid.” Nick Rogers, The Film Yap

“Its no hyperbole to call Neil Marshall’s second feature a masterpiece. It succeeds brilliantly on technical and artistic level and it achieves the basic aim of any horror film. It is as scary as hell.” MJ Simpson, Urban Terrors: New British Horror Cinema 1997 – 2008

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” …carefully establishes the psychological relationships among the women, then squanders this calibrated and generally plausible setup with a series of crude, implausible, and scattershot horror effects. The two strains are supposed to merge but mix like oil and water as the narrative grows increasingly incoherent (the fact that so much of it transpires in darkness doesn’t help). 

“Marshall could very well be the Caravaggio of the B-movie. Working in complete darkness, he playfully uses the cavers’ equipment as his paintbrush … As for a “deeper meaning,” Marshall covers that, too. What is most haunting about this film is Sarah’s own descent into feral madness. In one close-up, her blue eyes pierce the blood that covers her face, and we realize that she might have transformed into a creature herself.” Sarah Lilleyman, Time

“The watery cavern is as scary as the nasty critters who show up about an hour in. Some of the human complications are not as effective and Marshall overuses one flashback device. Ecen so, this works well enough.” Mike Mayo, The Horror Show Guide

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“One of the scariest films of this or any decade… Ultimately, The Descent is the purest kind of horror film – ruthless, unforgiving, showing no mercy.” Bloody Disgusting

Cast and characters:

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Wikipedia | IMDb


Creepozoids (1987)

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‘Even if you kill them, they’re still deadly’

Creepozoids is a 1987 American science fiction horror film, the first 35mm movie directed by David DeCoteau (Sorority Babes in the Slimeball Bowl-O-Rama; Ancient Evil: Scream of the Mummy; the 1313 movies) from a screenplay co-written with Dave Eisenstark [as Burford Hauser] (Blood Nasty).

The score was by Guy Moon (Howling: New Moon Rising; Sorority Babes in the Slimeball Bowl-O-Rama).

The film was remade in 1997 as Hybrid.

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David DeCoteau: “Creepozoids was shot in 15 days in a warehouse in Los Angeles. I think the budget was something like 150k. It was a difficult shoot because of all the FX and monster sequences. Lotsa slime and very ambitious. Linnea Quigley starred in it and we had a great time working together. It was my first feature shot in 35mm. It was theatrically released and a hit on video.”

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Main cast:

Linnea Quigley (WitchtrapSorority Babes in the Slimeball Bowl-O-Rama; The Return of the Living Dead), Ken Abraham (Vampire Knights; Terror Night; Hobgoblins), Michael Aranda (El Chupacabra) and Kim McKamy [later known as Ashlyn Gere] (Willard; Evil Laugh; Lunch Meat), Joi Wilson.

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Plot:

Set in 1998, six years after an apocalyptic nuclear war, a group of army deserters take refuge from acid rain in a seemingly abandoned laboratory complex. They soon discover that the lab was a top-secret government research centre, where a hideous genetically-engineered monster still lurks…

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Reviews:

“For some reason, this low-budget monster-running-rampant-sometime-in-the-near-future opus has received more than the usual amount of criticism. It is an Alien rip-off, yes. There are a million of them out there, yes. And it’s not a even a very good Alien rip-off, yes. But I still didn’t find it as bad as some have made it out to be (or even as schlocky as the title suggests) and it has some good moments.” The Bloody Pit of Horror

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“The sound effects aren’t bad and if there is at least one disturbing note of Creepozoids is the unearthly utterances from the writhing, infected bodies. It embodies sheer suffering and agony. Then again maybe the actors were privy to what they’d gotten themselves into. Perhaps there is a cult following somewhere but I just wasn’t at all creeped out by Creepozoids.” Dave Gammon, HorrorNews.net

” …when one of his movies misses its target and misses wide – as Creepozoids most certainly does, despite a gloriously sick climax involving a new born mutoid baby being strangled with its own umbilical cord – DeCoteau’s films can display an unwillingness to entertain that sometimes verges on the sociopathic.” Empire of the ‘B’s

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” …it’s a little hard to sit through without losing interest at some point. Where the film truly shines though is in the final act when all hell breaks loose. Giant rats assault the female characters while the mutant monster is out in full force, rampaging through the fortified government facility and hunting down the male characters with ease.” Will, Silver Emulsion Film Reviews

“It’s hard to say if that last seven minutes with the weird out-of-nowhere baby makes the whole film worth it, but it’s pretty freaking awesome! There are some good FX in Creepozoids and some boobs so I guess it’s not all bad in the grand scheme of direct-to-video horror from the late 80s. You will also learn how truly long 68 minutes can sometimes feel.” Damon Swindall, Horror’s Not Dead

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Wikipedia | IMDb

 


Jurassic World 2 (2018)

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Jurassic World 2 is a 2018 monster movie directed by J.A. Bayona (A Monster Calls; The Orphanage) from a screenplay co-written with Colin Trevorrow (Jurassic World) and Derek Connolly (Monster Trucks).

The Universal Pictures/Amblin Entertainment film is currently in pre-production with principal photography set to begin in February 2017 in Hawaii and London.

The film’s budget has been rumoured to be $260 million, considerably more than the Jurassic World‘s $150 million dollar budget.

Bayona has commented: “…what we’re doing is a sequel to Jurassic World, but it’s definitely the fifth chapter of a longer saga. It’s very interesting. It’s always tricky, but you need to find a balance in what people expect to find, and the new stuff you’re bringing to the story. And I think the story is looking for a connection between Jurassic World and Jurassic Park — more than what Jurassic World did.”

Bayona has also told ComingSoon.net: “I think there’s a lot of possessiveness towards our creations. I think it’s very interesting where the new movie is heading. It’s so different from the other films, it talks a lot about the moment we live in right now. It’s darker… but at the same time it’s going to be a lot of fun. It’s a blockbuster, you have Chris Pratt, it’s a great adventure, but it’s very interesting the way the film is darker than the other ones.”

Main cast:

Chris Pratt, Bryce Dallas Howard, Toby Jones (Morgan; Berberian Sound Studio; The Mist), Rafe Spall (The Ritual; The World’s EndShaun of the Dead), BD Wong, Justice Smith.

IMDb


It Came from the Desert (2017)

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It Came from the Desert is a 2017 Finnish-British science fiction horror film directed by Marko Mäkilaakso from a screenplay co-written with Hank Woon Jr. and actor Trent Haaga (star of the Killjoy movies).

The film is based on the 1989 Cinemaware game for Commodore Amiga home computers that was itself inspired by Them!, the 1954 monster movie about giant ants.

Principal shooting has been completed and the film is now in post-production for a 2017 release by Raven Banner.

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Main cast:

Mark Arnold, Vanessa Grasse, Harry Lister Smith, Alex Mills, James Alper, Callum McGowan, Claudia Trujillo, Andrew Horton, Ross Ellis, and Michael Majalahti.

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Filming locations:

Almeria, Spain
Turku, Finland

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Spawn of the Slithis aka Slithis (1977)

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‘Hell hath no fury… like’

Spawn of the Slithis – aka Slithis – is a 1977 American science fiction horror monster movie produced, written and directed by Stephen Traxler (producer of Dracula’s Widow, 1988).

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The film was shot in just twelve days in 1977 and released on 21 July 1978. As part of the first run promotional campaign movie patrons were given a Slithis Survival Kit and could send off for a photo via the fan club.

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Aquarius Releasing later used the film as support feature for Doctor Butcher M.D. (aka Zombie Holocaust) when it opened in New York on 7 May 1982.

Main cast:

Alan Blanchard, Judy Motulsky (Idaho Transfer), J.C. Claire, Dennis Falt, Mello Alexandria (Psychic Killer), Win Condict, Rocky Fumarelli, John Hatfield, Hy Pyke (VampHalloween Night; Nightmare in BloodLemora), Daphnae Cohen, Steven J. Hoag, Wendy Rastattar,  Don Cummins, David Ridenour, Dave Carlton.

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Plot:

A nuclear leak creates a mutant Slithis sea monster, which terrorises the variety of pets, winos, and hippies who hang around Venice, California…

Reviews:

“Where Spawn of the Slithis goes most wrong is in devoting so much time to Wayne’s tedious detective work and so little to the monster. Partly it’s because of the usual reasons that this is a mistake— there’s little enough going on in the first hour of Spawn of the Slithis to break the will of any but the most pig-headed audience, and it takes a rare degree of dedication to make it all the way to the final act.” Scott Ashlin, 1000 Misspent Hours and Counting

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“Extremely low budget, and with some talky stretches, Slithis does manage to amusingly merge the 1950s style monster genre with a more free 1970s outlook, with a surprising extent of violence and bloodshed for a film which passed the MPAA with a PG. There is also a bit of nudity, as the monster attacks a pretty pick-up on a houseboat…” George R. Reis, DVD Drive-In

“Traxler benefits from an interesting, untypical backdrop, and though the movie lacks the pace that would ensure a wider cult following he nevertheless conjures some pleasingly bloody moments. To cap it off, Slithis itself boasts one of the most charmingly ugly mugs of monsterdom – a vital consideration for such movies, which operate like beauty contests in reverse.” Stephen Thrower, Nightmare USA

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“Yes, Slithis is one of those special movies where everything is just “off” throughout its 90ish minute runtime, changing what might have been a generic and poorly paced monster flick into a B-movie masterpiece. Every few minutes I was howling at something… Brian W Collins, Horror Movie a Day

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“The audience sat mired in boredom during the dialog, roused itself for the Slithis attacks and sank into torpor again. Nobody seemed to be consulting their Slithis Survival Kit, not even during such slow stretches as when the local high school journalism teacher is suggesting to a cop that he ought to try eucalyptus drops for his cough.” RogerEbert.com

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“The body count is small but the rubber suit looks good, and very ugly, with its hunched back and evil frog face. The suit should have been on screen more … Much of the dialog is amusingly strange, which is good since there is an awful lot of it.” David Elroy Goldweber, Claws & Saucers

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Slithis moves slow as molasses. Don’t let the PG rating fool you, though, as trash viewers will get a glimpse of some boobage during one creature assault and this bit, too, is presented in slow motion. There’s blood and gore flying around and what looks like some guts hanging out of one victim during the handicapped, no disqualification, falls count anywhere battle royal at the end.” Cool Ass Cinema

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Hy Pyke’s manic performance is a highlight

“Part of what makes this movie so painfully slow and plodding is that we have to see everything the high school teacher does. Every conversation, every phone call, every dumb conversation with his wife, everything. Nobody cares about that crap, show us the Slithis killing people and maiming dogs! That’s what I signed up for.” 90 Lost Minutes

Interviews:

There is an interview with director Stephen Traxlor in Stephen Thrower’s Nightmare USA book

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Filming locations:

Los Angeles, Marina Del Rey, Santa Monica, and Venice, California, USA

IMDb | Image credits: Cool Ass Cinema | Poster Perversion


Python (2000)

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‘Created by Nature… Redesigned by Man’

Python is a 2000 made-for-TV horror film with comic overtones directed by Richard Clabaugh (scriptwriter of Eyeborgs) from a screenplay by Chris Neal, Gary Hershberger and Paul J. M. Bogh, based on a story by co-producer Phillip J. Roth (Roboshark; Lake Placid vs. Anaconda; Wrong Turn 6: Last Resort).

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Python was followed by three sequels: New Alcatraz aka Boa (2002), Python 2 (2002) and Boa vs. Python (2004).

Main cast:

Frayne Rosanoff, William Zabka (Python 2), Wil Wheaton (Sharknado 2), Casper Van Dien (Sharktopus vs. Whalewolf; Dracula 3000; Starship Troopers and sequels), Jenny McCarthy, Keith Coogan, Robert Englund, Dana Barron, David Bowe, Sean Whalen, Ed Lauter.

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Opening plot:

The crew of a plane gets nervous when the cargo it is carrying starts making noises and shifting. When one of the crew opens the crate, the pilot hears screams from the back. Something attacks him, causing the plane to crash near a town called Ruby.

Whatever was in the cargo survives the crash and begins attacking Ruby citizens, starting with a lesbian couple camping in the woods.

At a swimming hole the next day, John Cooper (Rosanoff), his girlfriend Kristin (Barron), his best friend Tommy (Wheaton) and Tommy’s girlfriend Theresa (Mornell) find a pet Ball python belonging to one of the dead women, Lisa.

Deputy Greg (Zabka) shows up, mentioning that Lisa is missing and takes the snake. Lisa’s body is found, appearing to have been corroded by acids…

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Reviews:

“As terrible made-for-TV giant snake movies go, this is one of the less terrible. It has two ladies getting friendly in a tent, human bodies dissolved into bloody jelly by the acid in a monster snake’s digestive juices … and some not-so-unintentionally funny scenes like the one where a woman is attacked by the monster snake when she’s taking a shower…” CaliforniaHerps.com

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Python will never be mistaken for a classic, but if you can’t have a good time watching it, you really ought to see your doctor about the amount of stress in your life. This is a cookie cutter popcorn monster flick that is absolutely milked by a willing cast and capable director for every last ounce of fun its worth.” DVD Movie Central

Python is a horrible mess of a film; not only does the Python have an estimated screen time of around three minutes, but the film boasts an “ensemble cast” that doesn’t live up to any of the expectations of their previous accomplishments. Also Wil Wheaton has pink hair and still manages to uphold a respectable profession as a real estate agent.” Darren Fx, Letterboxd.com

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Choice dialogue:

“I don’t know you were going to bring that overgrown worm with you!”

“We’re gonna try the camp ground up at Crystal Lake and if it’s full, I dunno, we’ll play it by ear.”

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Cast and characters:

Frayne Rosanoff as John Cooper
William Zabka as Deputy Greg Larston
Dana Barron as Kristin
Robert Englund as Dr. Anton Rudolph
Casper Van Dien as Special Agent Bart Parker
Sara Mornell as Theresa
Wil Wheaton as Tommy
Jenny McCarthy as Francesca Garibaldi
Chris Owens as Brian Cooper
Sean Whalen as Deputy Lewis Ross
Gary Grubbs as Sheriff Griffin Wade
Theo Pagones as Dootsen
Scott Williamson as Kenny Summers
David Bowe as Boone
Keith Coogan as Lenny
John Franklin as Floyd Fuller
LoriDawn Messuri as Lisa Johnson
Kathleen Randazzo as Roberta Keeler
Ed Lauter as Pilot
Frank Welker as the Python (voice – he also voices Scooby-Doo and Fred)

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Filming locations:

Los Angeles, Malibu, and Santa Clarita, California, USA

Wikipedia | IMDb | Unofficial webpage | Image thanks: CaliforniaHerps.com



Monster Trucks (2016)

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Monster Trucks is a 2016 American 3D live-action/computer-animated action comedy monster movie produced by Paramount Animation and Disruption Entertainment. It was directed by Chris Wedge and written by Jonathan Aibel, Glenn Berger, Derek Connolly and Matthew Robinson.

The film stars Lucas Till, Jane Levy (Office Uprising; Don’t Breathe; Evil Dead), Amy Ryan, Rob Lowe, Danny Glover, Barry Pepper, and Holt McCallany.

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The film cost $125 million and its release has been rescheduled several times. It is now set to be released on January 13, 2017.

Plot:

Looking for any way to get away from the life and town he was born into, Tripp (Lucas Till), a high school senior, builds a Monster Truck from bits and pieces of scrapped cars.

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After an accident at a nearby oil-drilling site displaces a strange and subterranean creature with a taste and a talent for speed, Tripp may have just found the key to getting out of town and a most unlikely friend…

Wikipedia | IMDb | Facebook | Twitter | Official site


Moggy Creatures (2017)

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Moggy Creatures is an upcoming 2017 American practical FX-laden horror film written and directed by Scott Frazelle (co-writer of House of Bad; Creepshow III segment ‘Haunted Dog’).

Michael Moon (Day of the Dead 2 : Contagium) and Sadie Katz (Grindsploitation: The Movie; Blood Feast; Wrong Turn VI) play Michael and Anna, a troubled couple who take in a stray cat hoping to rebuild their marriage, only to have the pregnant animal spawn evil monsters!

The filmmakers are about to embark on a crowd-funding campaign.

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Plot:

Michael and Anna are leftovers of the Hollywood dream; he was once a promising actor, she an aspiring photographer. They cling to their artistic dreams, but their bond has thinned over the years and a devastating loss. Their new fixer-upper, far from the Hollywood Hills, offers some solace when they bring in a stray cat and it has kittens.

Anna loves the new pets, finds a rewarding job, and turns back to Michael, who also finds a new opportunities. But as the kittens grow at a shocking pace, they begin influencing Anna and testing Michael.

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Anna’s behaviour becomes tortured and irrational, the now grown cats more intelligent, and Michael can no longer tell where reality lies – until one final growth spurt reveals what they are, and what he must do…

Official site | Facebook | Twitter | Instagram

Related: Fear of Felines! Cats in Horror Films – Article by David Flint


Dead Squad (2017)

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‘All you need is dead’

Dead Squad is a 2017 jungle-set monster movie directed by music composer Dominik Hauser – making his feature film directorial debut – from a screenplay co-written with Nancy Thornhill. It stars Conan Stevens (who played Man-Thing), Jonathan Looper, Ryan Sobolski, and Réka Gavaldi.

The film is currently in pre-production, in Bali, Indonesia

Main cast:

Conan Stevens, Jonathan Looper, Ryan Sobolski, Réka Gavaldi, Carma Sharon, Tony Kern, Bianca Zouppas, Peer Metze, Elizabeth Morse, Stephen Dixon, Guy Talon.

Official synopsis:

“Dead Squad is a campy, splatter-filled, horror adventure that harkens back to classic films of the early 80s. It concerns a group of young people who become lost in the jungle during a river rafting trip and stumble upon a long lost ruin that is home to a host of mysterious monsters.”

IMDbFacebook | Source: 28 Days Later Analysis


Curtain aka The Gateway (2015)

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‘The portal to Hell has been opened.’

Curtain – also known as The Gateway – is a 2015 American horror film directed by Jaron Henrie-McCrea from a screenplay co-written with Carys Edwards. The film stars Danni Smith and Tim Lueke as two activists that investigate a series of disappearing shower curtains in Smith’s apartment.

The Jash Pictures production had its world premiere in London on 31 August 2015 at the Film4 FrightFest.

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Opening plot:

screen-shot-2016-12-20-at-14-02-53Danni has recently left her job as a hospice nurse in order to become an activist for Whale Savers, a conservation group. She also moves into a recently vacated apartment in order to get a new start on life.

However, soon after she gets settled she discovers that her shower curtains have been disappearing. Danni decides to try to record her bathroom overnight in order to discover what is going on, only to find that her shower curtains are disappearing into a strange portal in her shower wall.

She brings this up with one of her fellow activists, Tim, who eagerly suggests that she put her contact information on a curtain. This way, if someone finds the curtain the person can call Danni and they can discover the portal’s destination.

They are contacted by Willy, a drifter that tells them that her curtain appeared in a wooded creek near Poughkeepsie, New York. He volunteers to take them to the area he discovered the curtain, but shortly after arriving he begins huffing paint, bringing out a hostile alter ego named Frankie and attacking the two activists. They manage to escape the area, but as soon as they arrive back to Danni’s apartment they are confronted by the Pale Man…

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Reviews:

Curtain really is a great little treat of a film. It’s an unforgettable rollercoaster journey that has its own unique identity, but also manages to pay homage to ‘80s schlock. Without being too silly, it grounds its story in reality and uses the bizarre world behind the curtain as a metaphor for much more real, social problems.” Jessy Williams, Scream magazine

” …endlessly inventive and ambitious, blending the lo-fi creature effects (and 80s sensibilities) of Basket Case with the high-concept oddity of Being John Malkovich. Charming and weird enough to get away with its rough edges, it can along the way seem a bit meandering, especially in its focus on Tim’s Save the Whales fixation, but in the end every (narrative) hook on this Curtain fits neatly into place.” Anton Bitel, Sight & Sound

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Curtain isn’t a bad film, despite its oddness. Danni and Tim are great protagonists, and the humour works to add levity to the strangeness … despite its best efforts, doesn’t have the same staying power as more traditional (and some non-traditional) horror films, demanding the viewer’s full attention in order to tell its story.” Pat Torfe, Bloody Disgusting

“We’re not in full-on comedy horror territory, but it certainly skews more in that direction than it does elsewhere (although its Hellraiser type cult is particularly creepy). Well, it is a film about disappearing shower curtains, after all. With a title and concept like that, Curtain was always going to be one of the year’s most original horror films. Thankfully, it also turns out to be one of the best.” Joel Harley, Starburst magazine

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There are also lots of introductions for seemingly minor or useless details, which end up coming back into play. As with any film, that’s always a tough thing to pull off … Curtain is clever, well-performed and touts some very cool monster make-up.” Michael Klug, Horrorfreak News

“Some might describe Curtain as quirky or eccentric. You’ll be able to appreciate that this was in fact what they were going for. This certainly wasn’t a lazy attempt at film making by director Jaron Henrie-McCrea, but it was not a successful one. Either avoid entirely or commit to losing 74 minutes of your life just for the super-odd ending alone.” Sadé Green, Flickering Myth

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Cast and characters:

  • Danni Smith as Danni
  • Tim Lueke as Tim
  • Martin Monahan as The Pale Man
  • Rick Zahn as Uncle Gus
  • Chuck McMahon as Bert
  • Preston Lawrence as Preston the Super
  • Gregory Konow as Willy

Filming locations:

New York City, New York, USA
West Milford and Whitehouse Station, New Jersey, USA

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Colossal (2016) [updated]

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colossal-2017-kaiju-movie

Colossal is a 2017 Spanish-Canadian psychological science fiction monster movie written and directed by Nacho Vigalondo (V/H/S Viral; Open Windows; The ABCs of Death). It stars Anne Hathaway, Dan Stevens and Jason Sudeikis.

Anne Hathaway and Jason Sudeikis in Colossal (2017)

After Gloria (Anne Hathaway) loses her job and is kicked out of her boyfriend’s apartment, she leaves her life in New York and move back to her hometown.

When news reports surface that a giant creature is destroying Seoul, Korea, Gloria gradually comes to the realization that she is somehow connected to this far-off phenomenon.

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As events begin to spin out of control, Gloria must determine why her seemingly insignificant existence has such a colossal effect on the fate of the world…colossal-anne-hathaway-2016-kaiju-monster-paranoia-movie

IMDb


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