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Good Tidings (2016)

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‘Just when you thought it was safe to look at the calendar again’

Good Tidings is a 2016 British horror film directed by Stuart W. Bedford (Apocalypse) from a screenplay co-written with Giovanni Gentile and Stu Jopia. It is produced by Two-Headed Snake Entertainment and Blue Fox Entertainment.

Director-writer Stuart W. Bedford explained the ethos behind the production: “We’ve always been fascinated by exploitation movies. Good Tidings is our love-letter to those phenomenal slashers from the 70’s and 80’s, tied together by a festive satire: Christmas is cruel to the poor.”

The film had a micro budget of £15,000 and was shot on location in a disused courthouse in Southport, Merseyside.

XLrator Media have announced that the film will be released in North America on their ‘Macabre’ label on December 6, 2016. In the meantime, the film is playing at film festivals such as The Starburst International Film Festival, Bram Stoker International Film Festival, Buenos Aires Film Festival, Requiem Fear Festival and Toronto Indie Horror Festival.

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Plot:

A homeless war veteran with a chequered past must rely on a side of himself once thought buried when he and his companions are targeted by three vicious psychopaths wearing Santa suits on Christmas Day.

IMDb | Facebook

Related: Ho, Ho, Horror! Festive Fright Films – article by David Flint



The Trail of Dracula (2013)

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The Trail of Dracula is a 2013 British feature documentary written, directed and shot by Dave Mitchell. The documentary examines Bram Stoker’s classic novel, the life of the author and a history of the vampire genre including Vlad the Impaler, as well as the controversy surrounding the novel’s release in Romania.

In the US, Intervision Pictures Corp. are releasing the film on October 25, 2016.

Press release:

‘Diabolical. Seductive. Immortal. Vampires have been an icon of evil in folklore and popular culture for more than three centuries, yet only one name still personifies the ultimate aristocrat of bloodlust.

Now join the world’s foremost experts on Dracula – including academics, authors and horror historians – as they explore the untold story of the Transylvanian Count, from the screen-shot-2016-10-01-at-20-39-21legend of Vlad The Impaler and Bram Stoker’s celebrated novel through its landmark stage productions and classic movie adaptations.

It’s a crimson trail of twisted archival materials, startling film clips and rare interviews – featuring Jonathan Rigby, Kim Newman and John Florescu (Dracula: Prince of Many Faces: His Life and Times) – plus Bonus Materials that include additional interviews with Udo Kier and Werner Herzog (Nosferatu the Vampyre), over 90 minutes of Dracula movie trailers, and more!

Special Features:

Filming locations:

London, Munich, Vienna, Budapest, and at various locations in Romania.

IMDb


Escape from Cannibal Farm (2017)

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Escape from Cannibal Farm is a 2017 British horror film written, produced and directed by Charlie Steeds (Labyrinthia). It is a Dark Temple Motion Pictures production.

The film is currently in post-production and is due to be released in 2017.

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Main cast:

Kate Marie Davies (Knights of the DamnedApparition of Evil), Barrington De La Roche (Deadman Apocalypse; Blood Moon), David Lenik, Rowena Bentley, Toby Wynn-Davies, Peter Cosgrove (Evil Souls), Joe Street, Dylan Curtis, Kate Llewellyn, Sam Lane, Charlotte Roest-Ellis, Jackson Wright, Jack Miller, Harrison Nash, Joe Smith.

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Plot:

In the British countryside, the Harver family head out on an idyllic summer camping trip where they can bury past tensions and enjoy some family bonding. But when their camp is sabotaged by an unseen intruder in the night, they head to the nearby creepy old farm desperate for help, where vengeful farmer Hunt Hansen and his hideously deformed son aren’t farming animals.

Caged and waiting for their limbs to be severed, cooked and eaten one at a time, the Harver family must overcome their differences and unite in order to escape alive…

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IMDb | Official site | Facebook | Twitter


Doomwatch – TV series (1970 – 1972)

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Doomwatch was a British science fiction television programme produced by the BBC, which ran on BBC1 between 1970 and 1972. The series was set in the then present day, and dealt with a scientific government agency responsible for investigating and combating various ecological and technological dangers.

The series was followed by a 1972 film adaptation produced by Tigon British Film Productions, and a revival TV film was broadcast on Channel 5 in 1999.

Review:

Created by Kit Pedler – a real life scientist and early environmental campaigner – and Gerry Davis (the pair having met while working on Doctor Who, for which they created the Cybermen), Doomwatch is the story of the titular government division the Department for the Observation and Measurement of Scientific Work, created up to monitor threats to humanity caused by dodgy or simply over-ambitious scientific work (the series is a classic example of anti-science paranoia, where every new development is bound to cause death and destruction).

While Doomwatch was intended by politicians (usually represented by John Barron, as inadvertently hilarious here as he was in The Fall and Rise of Reginald Perrin) as a sop to public green concerns and not designed to have real power, under the control of Dr. Spencer Quist (John Paul), it takes its duties very seriously indeed, and throughout the three series, tackles assorted threats – from the small scale to the apocalyptic – while often battling with government bureaucrats who are often keen to cover up wrongdoing, placate voters and support their big business chums.

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Working for Quist are serious minded new recruit Toby Wren (Robert Powell – also in Asylum; Harlequin) – who is dramatically killed off at the end of series one – and loud-shirted ladies man Dr. John Ridge (Simon Oates), while in the second series (in response to viewer complaints that the women in the show were little more than bimbo secretaries) the team were joined by a couple of female scientists, Dr. Anne Tarrant (Elizabeth Weaver) and Dr. Fay Chantry (Jean Trend).

There are two problems with Doomwatch when seen today, and to be fair to the show, neither are really its fault. Firstly, most of the show master tapes have been wiped, as per BBC policy on anything that wasn’t sport. Five episodes of series one and nine out of twelve episodes of series three remain lost – and we only have series two because tapes were found in Canada. Most annoyingly, the pivotal episode in which Wren is killed off is missing, though the important scene luckily survives as the introduction to series two. The loss of these episodes makes it hard to judge how the series developed in the third series and fails to explain the sudden absence of some characters.

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The other problem with Doomwatch is more damaging, however. This is a show that was very much of its time in terms of production style, and as such it has dated very badly. We are used, of course, to the idea that 1970s BBC shows would be shot in a disconcerting mix of film (for exteriors) and videotape (for studio sets), the latter giving everything a horribly cheap feel and the jumping from one to the other an aesthetic annoyance. It seems especially irritating in this series though, for some reason.

What’s more, the style at the time was to shoot ‘as live’, meaning that if anyone fumbled their lines, they just kept going. And it happens a lot here. John Paul is especially bad, but he can be forgiven when you consider the sheer levels of gobbledegook he had to remember in dialogue scenes that go on forever. And that’s the most irritating aspect of the show now, more than the fumbling dialogue of the mismatched shooting formats – it’s very, very slow.

I’m not one for demanding everything movies at lightning speed – in fact, it’s one of the things that irks me about modern cinema. But here, a large chunk of the running time of each episode seems to consist of Quist in his office ranting interminably (Paul seemed determined to get through his dialogue as quickly as possible, maybe before he started to forget more of it). Quist is probably one of the most unappealing characters ever to head a TV show – and this doesn’t seem especially deliberate. But when you start feeling sympathy for the government lackeys that he is barking at, you know the character needs more work.

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It’s a shame, because the series is full of interesting ideas that remain relevant today – you almost want these to be remade with better production values and acting, because most would still work now. Sure, the much-shown scene of actors hopping around with stuffed rats attached to their legs in Tomorrow, The Rat are hilarious – but the story itself is suitably chilling. And that’s often the case here – the stories deserve better than the show can provide.

Interestingly, one of the few episodes from series three to survive is the unbroadcast Sex and Violence, where Doomwatch is brought in to oversee an investigation into ‘the permissive society’. As relevant now as it was in 1972 (politicians still trot out the same cynical anti-smut arguments as those mocked here), it’s conversely very much of its time – you can’t imagine a modern TV show mocking clean up campaigners like Mary Whitehouse or Cliff Richard (here rechristened “Dick Burns”) – modern producers and writers would be more likely to sympathise with the anti-porn argument – or showing genuine Nigerian execution footage (fans of Faces of Death 2 will recognise this as the imagery that closed the film).

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Buy: Amazon.co.uk

I very much wanted to like Doomwatch, but in the end, it felt very hard going. Clearly, there is a lot of love for the show still, but how much of this is rose-tinted childhood memory is open to question. I can’t see many people under 40 getting very much from this series, to be honest – the technical and production deficiencies will be just too much to move beyond, I suspect. But even as someone used to the BBC style of the era, I found this something of a struggle, and my disappointment was increased because unlike many shows, it felt as though Doomwatch deserved to be better than it ultimately turns out to be.

David Flint, review courtesy of The Reprobate

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My Bloody Banjo (2015)

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‘Peltzer has an imaginary friend. Unfortunately for him… It’s Ronnie’

My Bloody Banjo is a 2015 British comedy horror film written and directed by Liam Regan. It was originally titled Banjo and is an expansion of Regan’s short film Confessions of Peltzer.

Main Cast:

James Hamer-Morton (Dead Love), Damian Morter (The Eschatrilogy: Book of the Dead; Hellbilly 58; Temptation), Dani Thompson (Carnivore; Cute Little Buggers; Forest of the Damned 2), Laurence R. Harvey (Boogeyman: Reincarnation; Dead LoveThe Human Centipede II and III), Vito Trigo (RipperReturn to Nuke ‘Em High Volume 1 and 2; Dark Windows), Clay von Carlotwitz (Return to Nuke ‘Em High Volume 1 and 2; The House in the Woods).

Plot:

Peltzer Arbuckle (James Hamer-Morton) is a meek and bullied office employee, humiliated by his megalomaniac boss, teasing colleagues and his cheating partner. Peltzer spends his days in misery, stuck in his own mundane, nightmarish reality. Once news about his embarrassing sexual accident makes it’s way around the workplace, Peltzer decides to put up with his humiliation no more, and conjures up his childhood imaginary friend Ronnie (Damian Morter).

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Peltzer’s world is soon turned upside down, when Ronnie attempts to manipulate him to exact revenge on his tormenting co-workers in the most gruesome fashion. As the body count stacks up, Peltzer must ultimately decide whether to run away from his past or take control of his future…

Reviews:

“Damian Morter does a superb job as Peltzer’s imaginary friend playing him over-the-top, caked in prosthetics and stealing every scene he appears in … His scenes with James Hamer-Morton are all great to watch and James also gives a great performance as Peltzer. The bloody manhood scenes and the condom scene made me cringe and probably have the same effect on many male viewers but it was good to see it done in such a humorous way.” Dean Sills, UK Horror Scene

“Admittedly, the film really doesn’t come alive until Ronnie appears which is probably the point, but the downside. In the first 20 minutes or so, you do really wonder what the director is really going for. Birdemic or American Psycho? Overall, Banjo is surprisingly decent for a low-budget comedy horror.” Liam Regan creates perfectly a comical but dark world…” Louise Tooth, The Hollywood News

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Interview:

Liam Regan talks to Scream magazine

Cast and characters:

James Hamer-Morton (Peltzer Arbuckle)
Damian Morter (Ronnie)
Dani Thompson (Deetz Montgomery)
Vito Trigo (Mr. Sawyer)
Clay von Carlotwitz (Stiles Rembrandt)
Serena Chloe Gardner (Melissa Lee Ray)
Laurence R. Harvey (Clyde Toulon)
Dan Palmer (Terrance Parker)
David Curtis (Mikey Stone)
Lloyd Kaufman (Dr. Samuel Weil)
Choice dialogue:
Mr. Sawyer (the boss): “Make like a tampon, and get out of my bloody hole!”
Filming locations:
Barnsley, Doncaster, Rotherham, Sheffield, South Yorkshire
Peak District, Derbyshire

IMDb | Official website


Fox Trap (2016)

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‘It’s hunting season’

Fox Trap is a 2016 British slasher horror film directed by Jamie Weston (shorts: SinnersTales from the Apocalypse: Silent Dawn) from a screenplay by producer Scott Jeffrey (Babysitter Killings; The Attic) for Proportion Productions.

The film has its world premiere at the Bram Stoker International Film Festival in Whitby on 28th October; it is set for a February 2017 DVD and online release in the UK and US by 4Digital Media.

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Photography by Mark Kelly

Main cast:

Klariza Clayton (Blood Money; Young Dracula TV series), Scott Chambers (Blood Money; Hush), Alex Sawyer, Kate Greer (The Attic), Becky Fletcher (The AtticDeadly Waters), Julia Eringer (The Missing Knife; Vampire Gang Origins).

Plot:

Eight years after a terrible accident that left a young girl disabled, the group responsible are invited to a remote manor house in the countryside for a class reunion. Little do they know, they are being targeted by a masked maniac hell bent on revenge…

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Filming locations:

Somerset, England

 

IMDb | Facebook | Twitter


Feed the Devil (2015)

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‘Fair game is here’

Feed the Devil is a 2015 British-Canadian horror film produced and directed by Max Perrier from a screenplay co-written with Matthew Altman.

The film was released on DVD in the UK on 3 October by High Fliers Films.

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Buy: Amazon.co.uk

Main cast:

Jared Cohen (Sharknado: Heart of Sharkness; Pernicious; 13/13/13), Ardis Barrow, Brandon Perrault, Victoria Curtain, Nahka Bertrand, Tyson Houseman, Marco Collin, Nicholas B. York, Astrida Auza, Alan Harrington, Jean Drolet, Julia Dawiskiba, Jonathan David Orr, Serge Patry, Daniel Tuira.

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Plot:

Marcus takes his sister and her friend on a dangerous trip into an ancient forest that according to ancient Native American legend is haunted.

The trip soon becomes a deadly game of cat and mouse as Marcus must battle the ancient evil forces that are determined not to let them leave alive…

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Reviews:

Feed the Devil is a competent and confident addition to horror from Max Perrier and proves that running through the woods still has the ability to shock, scare and surprise. This is definitely an impressive demonstration of intensity that is filled with fun jumps and scares.” Jessy Williams, Scream magazine

“Perrier’s direction is uneven, and his script (with Matthew Altman) is plodding and incoherent at times. But he succeeds at keeping the tension in high gear, aided by Miksa Kovek’s inventive score and gorgeous, if chilling, scenery. The best of Feed the Devil boils down to the uniformly good acting, especially by Cohn, Barrow and Tyson Houseman, who plays an unwilling and unwitting accomplice to Marcus, arriving late to the party.” Allan Walton, Ravenous Monster

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“Despite the characters’ improbable reactions and appalling dialogue, writer/director Perrier and co-writer Altman prove lush filming and a retelling of primal, aggressive folklore builds suspense and makes for good filmmaking. Silence interspersed with an interesting soundtrack by Miksa Kovek adds to the tension, and sweeping cinematic work builds to the inevitable.” Kerry Black, Cryptic Rock

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“Like many other first time horror directors, Perrier goes to the woods and we watch his cast slowly get bumped off in various nasty ways. However the particular evil in this film comes from Native American roots and gives the film an uneasy racial tone … the film often drags with slow pacing.” Christopher Stewart, UK Horror Scene

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IMDb | Official webpage


Wilderness (2006)

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‘Don’t go down to the woods today’

Wilderness is a 2006 British-Irish horror film directed by Michael J. Bassett (Ash vs Evil DeadSilent Hill: Revelation 3DDeathwatch) from a screenplay by Dario Poloni (Black Death).

Main cast:

Sean Pertwee (Howl; The Seasoning House; Dog Soldiers), Alex Reid (The Facility; ArachnidThe Descent), Toby Kebbell (Kong: Skull Island; A Monster Calls; Dawn of the Planet of the Apes), Stephen Wright, Karly Greene, Lenora Crichlow (Being Human; Doctor Who), Luke Neal, Ben McKay (Hot Fuzz), Richie Campbell (The Frankenstein Chronicles).

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Plot:

Following the suicide of a young offender, the other teenage prisoners are sent on a character-building adventure trip to a remote supposedly uninhabited island. There, they encounter two female young offenders and their ex-army warden. Both groups are soon picked off one by one by a mysterious man lurking in the woods…

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Buy: Amazon.co.uk

Reviews:

“The graphic and expertly executed gore effects are the standout aspect of the film, elevating this fairly derivative, if well told, story into a gorehound’s all you can puke buffet. We’re treated to dismemberment, beheadings, torture, and a particularly “sucks to be you” moment involving not one, but two, bear traps.” Jon Condit, Dread Central

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“Taut and visceral, Wilderness is a marked improvement on director Michael J Bassett’s muddled debut feature, Deathwatch, thanks, one suspects, to Dario Poloni’s bleak, misanthropic script. But this is also the film’s Achilles heel: some may find it hard to care about the fate of these selfish, hateful toe-rags.” Nigel Floyd, Time Out London

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“It’s a violent affair, very like Dog Soldiers in which hard-as-nails Sergeant Sean Pertwee led a band of threatened squaddies on a doom-laden military exercise in Scotland, and somewhat arbitrary in its sense of what constitutes rough justice.” Philip French, The Guardian

“Tight, by-the-book script, credited to Dario Poloni, moves the action at a predictable clip, and knows when to pause for a tension-breaking wisecrack from one of the ensemble or a quieter spooky moment.” Leslie Felperin, Variety

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” …street tuff dialogue sounds as though it was lifted off the last Dizzee Rascal album. Meanwhile, atrocious editing and hapless direction stifle interest long before the preposterous identity of the killer is exposed.” Jamie Russell, BBC

“Michael J Bassett’s horror film is lurid, wildly improbable and not especially well made, but it is also entertaining in its own B-movie way … There are lots of gruesome touches – heads impaled on sticks, bodies ripped to pieces – and some incongruously comic ones (for instance, the kids are reduced to eating barbecued dog).” Geoffrey Macnab, The Guardian

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“This over-literal, fright-free slasher is strictly for completist gorehounds and Home Secretaries seeking radical solutions to the high number of youth offenders.” Anton Bitel, Film4

” …a distinct improvement on Deathwatch. The characters are clearly defined, well-rounded and believable in their actions and reactions. And we are not asked to like any of them. There have been so many films glamourising aggressive thugs that it’s refreshing to watch a film where they are depicted as realistically anti-social low-lifes.” MJ Simpson, Urban Terrors: New British Horror Cinema 1997 – 2008

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Buy: Amazon.comAmazon.co.uk

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Cast and characters:

Sean Pertwee as Jed
Alex Reid as Louise
Toby Kebbell as Callum
Stephen Wight as Steve
Luke Neal as Lewis
Ben McKay as Lindsay
Lenora Crichlow as Mandy
Karly Greene as Jo
Adam Deacon as Blue
Richie Campbell as Jethro

Filming locations:

Scotland
Northern Ireland
Republic of Ireland

Wikipedia | IMDb



Sherlock Holmes vs. Frankenstein (2017)

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‘The game is a foot’

Sherlock Holmes vs. Frankenstein is a 2017 French-British adventure mystery horror film written and directed by Gautier Cazenave (Ghosts in the Machine aka House of VHS), with additional material by Stephen Marians and David Whitehead. The titular characters were created by Arthur Conan Doyle and Mary Shelley.

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The project is currently seeking additional funding via Indiegogo in order to move forward with further casting and pre-production for principal photography.

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Main cast:

Clement von Franckenstein, Eric Godon (Tombville), John Lebar as The Creature (Prometheus; The SickhouseShane Briant (Frankenstein and the Monster from Hell; Captain Kronos: Vampire Hunter; Demons of the Mind), Rod Fielder (My Friend DahmerNight of the Living Dead: Rebirth; Puppet Master: Axis Termination), Nicolas Robin, Ben Syder, Stéphanie Campion, Angèle Vivier, Stéphane Roquet.

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Plot:

1898. Sherlock Holmes and Doctor Watson travel to Germany to investigate a strange case in the village of Darmstadt – near castle Frankenstein…

IMDb | Facebook | Twitter


Cutter (2017)

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‘Some scars never heal’

Cutter is a 2017 British horror film directed by Aubrey Reynolds (short: Leashed) from a screenplay by Monte M. Moore (End of the Road). It is being produced by Olga Barr and Svetlana Barr (The Old Hag Syndrome) for One Eyed Dog Films. Line producer Scott Ford worked on Bone Tomahawk and Burying the Ex.

Main cast:

Jason Flemyng (Stonehearst Asylum; Forbiddent Empire; Below), Kevin Wayne (Hunting the Legend: Part IIParanoid), Mark Sivertsen (John Carpenter’s Vampires; Howling V), Crispian Belfrage (The Rectory; When Demons Die; The Loch Ness Monster), Isabelle Francke.

When Amanda and friends stumble across an old boat, they assume that they have found an ideal secluded party spot. Drinking too much and cranking up their music they have no idea that they are disturbing the boat’s violent sole occupant- a scarred figure with a painful past and a dark secret.

Soon, this mysterious violent man begins to pick off the unwelcome visitors and adds them to his macabre collection in the meat locker. Amanda thinks help is at hand with the arrival of another group on board but the newcomers have their own agenda and wont let anything get in their way…

Filming locations:

Canton, Mississippi, USA
Ratliff Ferry, Jackson, Mississippi, USA

IMDb | Facebook | TwitterOfficial site


Kill Command (2016)

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Kill Command (also known as Identify) is a 2016 British science fiction action horror film written and directed by Steven Gomez, making his feature debut. It stars Thure Lindhardt and Vanessa Kirby. The story focuses on a group of U.S. Marines attempting to survive after a training mission against warfare A.I. goes wrong.

Opening plot:

In a technologically advanced near future, Katherine Mills, a cyborg working for Harbinger Corporation, discovers a reprogramming anomaly regarding a warfare A.I. system located at Harbinger I Training Facility, an undisclosed military training island. She meets with Captain Damien Bukes and his team consisting of Drifter, Robinson, Cutbill, Goodwin, Hackett, and Loftus – all of whom have been assigned to a two-day training mission at Harbinger I.

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Upon their arrival, the team notices global communications have been disabled, limiting them to local access only. They discover autonomously operating surveillance drones monitoring them. The team begins their mission of eliminating A.I. threats.

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The first encounter proves easy for the team as they eliminate A.I. drones from a vantage point. During the battle, Mills discovers an advanced S.A.R. (Study Analyze Reprogram) unit, S.A.R.-003, but is unable to access it. That night, Drifter and Mills discuss their pasts and Bukes’ disdain for her. Later, Loftus is killed by the S.A.R. unit.

The next day, they discover Loftus’s body at the location of the first encounter. The drones take the team’s original vantage point and kill Hackett. They discover the A.I. is adapting and learning from them…

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Reviews:

” …it’s a brisk, accomplished effort with a lot more wit, integrity, and intelligence than some of the more lavishly-budgeted genre movies which overwhelm the multiplexes. Our command… watch Kill Command.” Paul Mount, Starburst

“For a low-budget British film, this has great robot/effects design – courtesy of writer/director Steven Gomez’s background in visual effects. However, it has an over familiar premise, not much in the way of plot and is even a touch monotonous in the action department.” The Kim Newman Web Sitekill-command-2016-mike-noble

“The bare-bones storytelling and character-development-on-the-fly might be indebted to Walter Hill’s work on Alien, but Gomez, a former visual effects artist making his debut, doesn’t have the chops to turn it into anything remotely intriguing, let alone special. Along with the European ensemble cast talking with cockamamie American accents, mouthing dialogue taken from the Bumper Book of Soldier Clichés written by James Cameron…” Martyn Contario, SciFiNow

“It’s a sci-fi action thriller whose borrowings are very plain, but it’s decent and watchable nonetheless, with an interesting central character premise … Gamers will have a bit of deja vu watching this but it is a well managed movie with some cool, controlled performances among the detonations.” Peter Bradshaw, The Guardian

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“In terms of the performances, Kirby comes off best, aided by some striking VFX work on her glowing blue eyes, but the screenplay fails to deliver on the promising resentment that her presence on the mission initially provokes. As robo thrillers go, this has its moments, but the mechanical script could have used a little more in the way of human warmth.” Matthew Turner, The List

“The film’s main asset – the impressive digital effects that create the formidable sentient battle machines – is also its main problem. Having designed the robots, the film-makers show them off to the audience at every available opportunity, ignoring the basic rule of cinema that the most effective threat is the one that we create in our own minds.” Wendy Ide, The Observer

Cast and characters:

  • Thure Lindhardt as Captain Damien Bukes
  • Vanessa Kirby as Katherine Mills
  • David Ajala as Drifter
  • Bentley Kalu as Sergeant Rory Robinson
  • Tom McKay as Corporal Robert Cutbill
  • Mike Noble as Lance Corporal Martin Goodwin
  • Kelly Gough as Corporal Daniella Hackett
  • Osi Okerafor as Corporal Sam Loftus

Filming locations:

Coldharbour, near Docking
Old Vinyl factory in Hayes, London, England

Wikipedia | 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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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

“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


Village of the Damned (1960)

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‘Beware the stare that will paralyze the will of the world’

village-pbVillage of the Damned is a 1960 British science fiction horror film by German director Wolf Rilla. The film is adapted from the novel The Midwich Cuckoos (1957) by John Wyndham (Web). 

A sequel, Children of the Damned (1963), followed, as did a remake by John Carpenter, also titled Village of the Damned (1995).

The film was originally a 1957 American project, to be filmed at the Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer studios in Culver City, California. Ronald Colman was contracted for the leading role, but MGM shelved the project, bowing to pressure from religious groups that objected to the apparently sinister depiction of virgin birth.

Ronald Colman died in May 1958—by coincidence, his widow, actress Benita Hume, married actor George Sanders in 1959, and the latter was cast in the role that Colman was originally due to play. The film was transferred to the MGM British Studios.

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The blonde wigs that the children wore were padded to give the impression that they had abnormally large heads. The children were lit in such a way as to cause the irises and pupils of their eyes to merge into a large black disc against the whites of their eyes, to give them an eerie look. The American release includes shots where the children’s eyes actually glow.

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Main cast:

villageofthedamned1960George Sanders (Psychomania; The Lodger), Barbara Shelley, (The Gorgon; Blood of the Vampire; Cat Girl) Martin Stephens, Michael Gwynn (Scars of Dracula; What a Carve Up), Laurence Naismith, Richard Warner.

Opening plot:

The inhabitants of the British village of Midwich suddenly fall unconscious, as does anyone entering the village. The military establishes a cordon around Midwich and sends in a man wearing a gas mask, but he, too, falls unconscious and is pulled back with rope. The man awakens and reports experiencing a cold sensation just before passing out. The pilot of a military reconnaissance plane is contacted and asked to investigate. When he flies below 5,000 feet, he loses consciousness and the plane crashes. A five-mile exclusion zone around the village is established for all aircraft. The villagers regain consciousness and apparently are unaffected.

Two months later, all women and girls of childbearing age in the affected area are discovered to be pregnant, sparking many accusations of infidelity and extramarital sex. The accusations fade as the extraordinary nature of the pregnancies is discovered, with seven-month fetuses appearing after only five months.

All the women give birth on the same day. Their children have an unusual appearance, including “arresting” eyes, odd scalp hair construction and colour (platinum blond), and unusually narrow fingernails. As they grow and develop at a rapid rate, it becomes clear they also have a powerful telepathic bond with one another. They can communicate with each other over great distances, and as one learns something, so do the others…

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Contemporary reviews:

“As a horror film with a difference it’ll give you the creeps for 77 minutes.” Dilys Powell, The Sunday Times, 20 June 1960

” …as a quietly civilized exercise in the fear and power of the unknown this picture is one of the trimmest, most original and serenely unnerving little chillers in a long time” Howard Thompson, New York Times, 8 Dec 1960

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Other reviews:

“This is a horror milestone, not just for its unique concept, but also for the director’s willingness to push the standards of the day at the conclusion of film, which was (and remains) anything but formulaic … Any true horror fan must take a trip back through time once in awhile to remind himself/herself how the genre progressed through the ages and appreciate the particulars of a bygone era.” John Strand, Horror Freak News

“With a chilling performance from Martin Stephens as David, the outspoken leader of the children, Village of the Damned is an incredibly effective thriller. It helps that the film is focused on a group of mind controlling children, always a great choice to sends shivers up someone’s spine” The Film Reel

“Besides a strong cast, who play their parts without a hint of campiness, Village of the Damned also possesses powerful direction from Wolf Rilla. The scenes are crisp and subtle. There is very little onscreen violence, but suspense and suggestion are used competently. Even without a lot of action, we never lose interest in the story.” Exclamation Mark

“The film is remarkably faithful to the novel, but Rilla’s direction is surprisingly pedestrian, failing to make enough of the enigmatic world Wyndham creates.” The Aurum Film Encyclopedia: Science Fiction

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Cast and characters:

Filming locations:

The village of Letchmore Heath, near Watford. Local buildings, such as The Three Horseshoes Pub and Aldenham School, were used during filming.

Influence:

  • The climactic scene in which the children break down Zellaby’s mental brick wall is #92 on the Bravo miniseries 100 Scariest Movie Moments.
  • The film is parodied in “Wild Barts Can’t Be Broken,” the eleventh episode of the tenth season of American animated series The Simpsons, as a horror movie titled The Bloodening.

Wikipedia | IMDb | Image credits: Wrong Side of the Art!


Deadly Intent (2016)

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‘Don’t let him into your head’

Deadly Intent is a 2016 British paranormal horror drama directed by Rebekah Fortune from a screenplay by Diana Townsend (Scarycrows).

Main cast:

Gus Barry, Rebecca Reaney, Lara Lemon, Peter Lloyd, Vic Stagliano, Elester Latham, Shawn McDonald.

The film is currently available on DVD via Amazon.com, or Amazon.co.uk Instant Video and other VOD platforms.

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Plot:

After the death of her husband, a soldier posted to Afghanistan, Bryony tries to build a new life for herself and her young son, James. Struggling with her own grief she fails to notice that James has become secretive and withdrawn, spending hours alone playing out death scenes with his toys.

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When things start to go missing and furniture is smashed Bryony blames James but when she confronts him she finds herself facing a reality more terrifying than any nightmare. As her world crashes around her Bryony realises that she and James will be separated forever…

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Reviews:screen-shot-2016-11-16-at-13-52-36

“It boasts some nice tricks, including a sudden reflection in the mirror and one jump with an Ouija board, but for the horror purists, it is more of a slow-burning vehicle than a pulse-pounding paranormal thriller. That being said, scares aren’t everything and Deadly Intent makes up for it with an undeniable dread, especially paired with the very real and gritty discussion of PTSD.” Luke, Oracle of Film

Filming Locations:

Devon, England

IMDb | Official site | Facebook


Tank 432 (2015)

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‘There’s no turning back.’

Tank 432 is a 2015 British action horror thriller film written and directed by Nick Gillespie (The Shadow Seamstresssecond unit work and additional photography on The GhoulA Field In England; Sightseers; Doctor Who; Kill List and High-Rise). It was formerly titled Belly of the Bulldog.

Kaleidoscope Home Entertainment released the film on DVD in the UK on 22 August 2016. It is released on VOD in the United States on November 25th by IFC Midnight.

Main cast:

Rupert Evans (Hellboy), Steve Garry (Unwelcome), Deirdre Mullins (Doghouse), Michael Smiley (Kill List), Gordon Kennedy, April Pearson, Tom Meeten,  Alex Rose March, Georgina Beedle, Todd Bruce, Sara Dee.

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Plot:

On the run and with nowhere to hide, a group of mercenaries and their two prisoners take cover from a mysterious enemy inside an abandoned military war Bulldog tank. Whilst they try to keep the forces outside at bay, secrets are uncovered; and little do they realize the real enemy is already among them, locked inside Tank 432…

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Reviews:

“There are some effective reveals and a few memorable kills using practical effects, along with some epic drone cinematography and a melancholy piano score, that combine to make Tank 432 feel almost like an R-rated episode of The Twilight Zone. The performances, especially by Smiley as the increasingly crazed Capper, are all compelling and add to the claustrophobia … The big reveal towards the end is somewhat vague and emotionally unsatisfying.” Drew Tinnin, Dread Central

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Tank 432 will march straight into a foggy, steel-encased nightmare for audiences who love being led into darkness, but for me, Gillespie only makes it two-thirds of the way there. It’s not an unmitigated disaster – there are plenty of sequences that draw up taught, deranged tension (plus Michael Smiley absolutely kills it) – just a more mundane single-location suspension of belief.” Matt Donato, We Got This Covered

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“Nick Gillespie clearly has more talent behind the camera than he does on scripting duties, and while the low budget is often apparent, he does manage to capture some neat shots and attempts to convey a certain level of tension, uncertainty and atmosphere, but it seldom truly pays off. The underdeveloped script wastes the good character actors involved, and come the bizarre ending where everyone seems to go off the deep end, after you’ve unintentionally laughed at the silliness of it all…” Tony Black, Flickering Myth

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The Island of Doctor Moreau – novel by H.G. Wells (1896)

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The Island of Doctor Moreau is an 1896 science fiction novel by English author H. G. Wells.

The text of the novel is the narration of Edward Prendick, a shipwrecked man rescued by a passing boat who is left on the island home of Doctor Moreau, who creates human-like hybrid beings from animals via vivisection.

The novel deals with a number of philosophical themes, including pain and cruelty, moral responsibility, human identity, and human interference with nature. Wells described the novel as “an exercise in youthful blasphemy”.

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Opening plot:

The Island of Doctor Moreau is the account of Edward Prendick, an Englishman with a scientific education who survives a shipwreck in the southern Pacific Ocean. A passing ship takes him aboard, and a man named Montgomery revives him. Prendick also meets a grotesque bestial native screen-shot-2016-11-20-at-11-49-51named M’ling, who appears to be Montgomery’s manservant. The ship is transporting a number of animals that belong to Montgomery. As they approach the island, the captain demands Prendick leave the ship with Montgomery.

Montgomery explains that he will not be able to host Prendick on the island. Despite this, the captain leaves Prendick in a dinghy and sails away. Montgomery takes pity and rescues him.

The island belongs to Dr. Moreau. Prendick remembers that he has heard of Moreau, formerly an eminent physiologist in London whose gruesome experiments in vivisection had been publicly exposed and has fled England as a result of his exposure.

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The next day, Moreau begins working on a puma. Prendick gathers that Moreau is performing a painful experiment on the animal, and its anguished cries drive Prendick out into the jungle. While he wanders, he comes upon a group of people who seem human but have an unmistakable resemblance to swine.

As he walks back to the enclosure, he suddenly realises he is being followed by a figure in the jungle. He panics and flees, and the figure gives chase. As his pursuer bears down on him, Prendick manages to stun him with a stone and observes the pursuer is a monstrous hybrid of animal and man…

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Influence:

The Island of Doctor Moreau is a classic of early science fiction and remains one of Wells’s best-known books. It has been adapted to film and other media on many occasions.

  • Ile d’Epouvante (1913), a French silent film. The 23-minute two-reeler film was directed by Joe Hamman in 1911 and released in 1913. It was picked up by US distributor George Kleine and renamed The Island of Terror.
  • Die Insel der Veschollenen (1921), a German silent adaption.
  • Island of Lost Souls (1932), with Charles Laughton and Bela Lugosi.

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  • Terror Is a Man (1959), with Francis Lederer, Greta Thyssen, and Richard Derr. This Filipino film, directed by Gerardo de Leon, was reissued in the United States as Blood Creature (1964).

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  • Aged thirteen, Tim Burton made an amateur adaptation of Wells’ novel, The Island of Doctor Agor (1971).
  • Twilight People (1972), starring John Ashley and with an early role for Pam Grier, was Eddie Romero’s version of the original story.

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  • The Island of Dr. Moreau (1977), with Burt Lancaster and Michael York.

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  • The Island of Dr. Moreau (1996), with Marlon Brando, Val Kilmer, David Thewlis, Fairuza Balk, and Ron Perlman. Filmmaker and scriptwriter Richard Stanley was sacked during production and his experiences are recounted in the documentary Lost Soul: The Doomed Journey of Richard Stanley’s Island of Dr. Moreau

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  • Seattle’s Taproot Theatre Company performed Sean Gaffney’s theatrical adaptation of the novel in 1999. The performance was filmed by Globalstage Productions and is available on video.
  • The Simpsons annual Halloween special adapted the novel as a segment in their “Treehouse of Horror” episode called The Island of Dr. Hibbert, in which the doctor invites unsuspecting Springfield residents to his island resort, and turns them into human-animal hybrids.

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  • The film Dr. Moreau’s House of Pain (2004), made by cult horror studio Full Moon Pictures, is billed as a sequel to the novel.

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Wikipedia | Image credit: Wrong Side of the Art!


Heretiks (2016)

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Heretiks is a 2016 British supernatural horror film directed by Paul Hyett (Howl; The Seasoning House) from a screenplay co-written with Conal Palmer, based on a story by Gregory Blair. It is produced by Marcia Do Vales and Michael Riley.

Director Paul Hyett commented: “Being a lover of classic British horror for years I’ve been wanting to give a classic period tale a modern, harder, stylish edge. Heretiks is the perfect vehicle to do this. It’s both a richly-layered medieval character piece and a wonderful chance to showcase the latest in visual effects and contemporary cinematography while being blessed with some of my favourite actors”.

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Main cast:

Michael Ironside (Patient Seven, Starship Troopers, Scanners), Clare Higgins (Doctor WhoHellraiser, Hellbound), Rosie Day (Howl; The Seasoning House), Hannah Arterton, Dilan Gwyn (Dracula Untold), Ciarán McMenamin (Demons TV series), Sian Breckin, Katie Sheridan, Ryan Oliva (Ghost Stories; Howl; The Seasoning House), Petra Bryant, Grahame Fox, Jill Buchanan, Carl Wharton, Sarah Malin, Ania Marson, Ayvianna Snow.

Plot:

heretiks-2016-horror-movie-paul-hyettSet during the 17th Century, a young woman is saved from execution and led to a priory to repent her sins but discovers a greater evil lies within…

IMDb


Dominique (1978)

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‘A story of the macabre… with a different twist.’

Dominique – aka Dominique is Dead – is a 1978 British horror mystery film directed by Michael Anderson (Murder By Phone; Orca) from a screenplay by Edward and Valerie Abraham. The film is based on the 1948 short story What Beckoning Ghost by Harold Lawlor. It was produced by Andrew Donally and Milton Subotsky (Amicus films and The Monster Club).

Main cast:

Cliff Robertson (13th Child; The Twilight Zone: ‘The Dummy’), Jean Simmons, Jenny Agutter (Child’s Play 2; The SurvivorAn American Werewolf in London), Simon Ward (The Monster ClubDeadly Strangers), Ron Moody (Legend of the Werewolf), Judy Geeson (31; Inseminoid; 10 Rillington Place), Michael Jayston (Jack the Ripper 1988; Craze; Tales That Witness Madness), Flora Robson (The Beast in the Cellar; The Shuttered Room), David Tomlinson (City in the Sea), Jack Warner (The Quatermass Xperiment).

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Plot:

Greedy David Ballard (Cliff Robertson) wants to get the money of his wife Dominique (Jean Simmons), so he attempts to drive her insane. He succeeds and she hangs herself, only to come back to haunt him from the afterlife…

Reviews:

“By far the film’s biggest problem is that it feels like a 50 or 60 minute script has been dragged and stretched to, and beyond, breaking point to more than 90 minutes that feel significantly longer. The sheer amount of time spent watching characters walk around the house is staggering and, most of the time, incredibly dull.” Andrew Garvey, The Spooky Isles

“Produced by the mediocre Milton Subotsky and directed by the fair-to-middling Michael Anderson … you might want to pump up the volume a bit and turn down the colour – there’s a lot of whispering and more harsh lighting than a high school rock eisteddfod.” Nigel Honeybone, HorrorNews.net

Dominique is a particularly disappointing failure because visually it is occasionally extremely impressive with some gorgeous lighting and assured photography. It looks great, but it is a mortifyingly dull experience in every other regard.” Harvey Fenton, Ten Years of Terror

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” …the use of luckless British characters actors in stock roles (Robson as the housekeeper, Ward as the ambiguous chauffeur) only serves to underline the lack of effective detail which might have served, as in Les Diaboliques (1955), to offset the essential contrivance of the storyline.” The Aurum Film Encyclopedia: Horror

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“A sluggish British attempt at a ghost yarn not helped by wooden acting and interminable use of the “let’s make it look like night” blue lens filter. The twist at the end is entirely predictable in this tedious effort.” John Elliott, Elliott’s Guide to Films on Video

“The old Diabolique syndrome revamped in a very parismonious production with little to hold the interest.” Leslie Halliwell, Halliwell’s Film Guide

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Cast and characters:

Wikipedia | IMDb | Image credit: VHS Collector


Rillington Place – TV mini-series

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Rillington Place is a 2016 British three-part BBC television mini-series about John Christie, the necrophile serial killer who murdered eight women and stowed their bodies behind the walls, under the floor, and in the yard of his Notting Hill house. It was directed by Craig Vivairos from a script by Tracey Malone and Ed Whitmore.

Before the extent of Christie’s chilling crimes were detected, Timothy Evans, an innocent man, was unjustly hung for the murder of his pregnant wife Beryl.

Tim Roth stars as John Christie. His wife Ethel is played by Samantha Morton. Nico Mirallegro and Jodie Comer play lodgers Timothy and Beryl Evans who are drawn into Christie’s dark world and pay the ultimate price…

The story of John Christie’s murder spree was previously dramatised in the 1971 film 10 Rillington Place with Michael Attenborough as the infamous multiple murderer.

Reviews:

“The sheer menace of the thing is extraordinary. The interiors are tiny, dark, oppressive. The script is minimal, elliptical … Tim Rothas Christie is an ocean of malevolence packed into one small, unassuming frame. And Samantha Morton as Ethel, upon whom the impossible truth slowly, almost imperceptibly dawns, is a world of pain entire.” Lucy Mangan, The Guardian

“The bleakness of Britain in the Forties and early Fifties was well caught by director Craig Vivairos. The depressing mise-en-scène – soot-stained brickwork and damp bubbling underneath flock wallpaper – was appropriately oppressive, as was the sparsity of the dialogue, indicating the joylessness of the Christies’ lives.” Ben Lawrence, The Telegraph

Filming locations:

Glasgow, Scotland

Wikipedia | IMDb | Related: 10 Rillington Place


The Ritual (2017)

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The Ritual is a 2017 British horror film directed by David Bruckner (Southbound; V/H/SThe Signal) from a screenplay by Joe Barton, based on Adam Nevill’s 2012 novel of the same title.

The film is produced by Jonathan Cavendish, Richard Holmes (Eden Lake) and Andy Serkis (actor in Rise of the Planet of the Apes and sequels; Burke and HareKing Kong; The Cottage).

Main cast:

Rafe Spall (Jurassic World 2; Shaun of the Dead), Rob James-Collier, Arsher Ali, Sam Troughton (Slumber; Spirit TrapAVP: Alien vs. Predator), Paul Reid, Kerri McLean, Jacob James Beswick.

Plot:

A group of college friends reunite for a trip to the forest, but encounter a menacing presence in the woods that’s stalking them…

Filming locations:

Romania

IMDb


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