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Night Howl – USA, 2017

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Night Howl is a 2017 American horror film written and directed by Michael Taylor Pritt (Are We the Waiting) who also stars. The Fun Time Productions movie also stars Alana Mullins, Rob Pemberton and Jeremy Wheeler.

Kaci Evans, a socially awkward photojournalist who can’t seem to come to grips with the death of his mother. As a child, Kaci was psychologically traumatised after seeing his mother monstrously mauled by a large canine.

Now that Kaci is an adult, he suffers constant night terrors and flashbacks to the time his mother was murdered. After numerous visits with his psychiatrist, Dr. Ezay, Kaci starts to question whether his nightmares are repressed memories, or are they something far more sinister?

Writer/director Michael Taylor Pritt told PopHorror.com: “This is not another predictable or typical werewolf film. I figured out a way, hopefully, to do a whole new take on werewolves that has never been done before. The twist at the end of this [werewolf] movie has never been done before. I promise you that!”

Night Howl is currently available to buy via Amazon Prime Instant Video

IMDb

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Slaughterhouse Rulez – UK, 2018

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Slaughterhouse Rulez is a 2018 comedy horror feature film directed by Crispian Mills (A Fantastic Fear of Everything), from a screenplay co-written with Henry Fitzherbert. The Stolen Picture production stars Simon Pegg and Nick Frost (pictured above in Shaun of the Dead; The World’s EndHot Fuzz), Finn Cole, Asa Butterfield, Hermione Corfield and Michael Sheen.

An illustrious British boarding school becomes a bloody battleground when a mysterious sinkhole appears at a nearby fracking site unleashing unspeakable horror. Soon a new pecking order will be established as pupils, teachers and the school matron become locked in a bloody battle for survival…

Regarding the plot, Simon Pegg told Digital Trends: “It’s going to be really fun. It’s a sort of a horror comedy. It felt like the right thing for Nick and I to have as our first collaboration with Stolen Picture. It’s about a private school in the UK which sells off parts of its land to a fracking company, and the fracking company then unleashes a subterranean monster that terrorises the school. It’s a big metaphor for the UK privatising things, and it’s mixed up with some ridiculous, sloppy horror. So it’s right up our street.”

Slaughterhouse Rulez is scheduled for a release in the UK on September 7, 2018.

Cast and characters:

  • Simon Pegg … Meredith Houseman – The World’s End; Hot Fuzz; Shaun of the Dead
  • Nick Frost … Anonymous – The World’s End; Hot Fuzz; Shaun of the DeadBoy Eats Girl
  • Finn Cole … Don Wallace
  • Hermione Corfield … Clemsie Lawrence – Pride and Prejudice and Zombies
  • Michael Sheen … The Bat – The Twilight Saga: Breaking Dawn – Part 1 and Part 2; Doctor WhoUnderworld franchise
  • Asa Butterfield … Willoughby Blake – The Wolfman
  • Jo Hartley … Babs Wallace
  • Jamie Blackley … Caspar De Brunose
  • Jassa Ahluwalia … Yuri
  • Isabella Laughland … Kay
  • Bern Collaço … Terrafrack Security
  • Kit Connor … Wootton
  • Hanako Footman … Poppet Chenvix-Trench
  • Tom Rhys Harries … Clegg
  • Ryan Oliva … Minotaur

Production companies:

  • Catalyst Global Media
  • Sony Pictures International
  • Special Treats Production Company (EPK)
  • Stolen Picture (in association with)

Filming locations:

Chislehurst CavesInseminoid; Doctor Who

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Night of the Lepus – USA, 1972

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‘There was no limit to the Horror… no end to the’

Night of the Lepus is a 1972 American horror feature film directed by William F. Claxton from a screenplay by Don Holliday and Gene R. Kearney, based on the 1964 science fiction novel The Year of the Angry Rabbit. Stuart Whitman, Janet Leigh and Rory Calhoun star.

Shot in Arizona, Night of the Lepus used domestic rabbits filmed against miniature models and actors dressed in rabbit costumes for the various attack scenes.

Rancher Cole Hillman (Rory Calhoun) seeks the help of college president Elgin Clark (DeForest Kelley) to combat thousands of rabbits that have invaded the area after their natural predators, coyotes, were killed off.

Elgin asks for the assistance of researchers Roy (Stuart Whitman) and Gerry Bennett (Janet Leigh) because they respect Cole’s wish to avoid using cyanide to poison the rabbits. Roy proposes using hormones to disrupt the rabbits’ breeding cycle and takes some rabbits for experimentation. One is injected with a new serum believed to cause birth defects.

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While inspecting the rabbits’ old burrowing areas, Cole and the Bennets find a large, unusual animal track. Meanwhile, Cole’s son Jackie (Chris Morrell) and Amanda go to a gold mine to visit Jackie’s friend Billy but find him missing. Amanda goes into the mine and runs into an enormous rabbit with blood on its face. Screaming in terror, she runs from the mine…

Buy Blu-ray: Amazon.com

Reviews:

“The filmmaking is slick and surprisingly bloodthirsty, and for some unexplainable reason the actors don’t even seem too embarrassed to be associated with this nutty feature. DeForest Kelley comes off best of all, since he was simply glad to get a hiatus from Shatner and all the other Trek twits. Fast-paced and indescribably dumb — it’s perfect for an Easter Family Matinee, as well as a must-see for mutant monster aficionados.” Shock Cinema

” …plagued by some of the funniest dialogue you’ll ever hear in a horror film […] It’s all such a mismatch. The funny monsters and the lousy special effects play off the earnest actors to generate a really amusing picture.” John Kenneth Muir, Horror Films of the 1970s, McFarland, 2002

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

“A misfire on virtually every level, Lepus goes limp almost immediately. A chore to get through, it warrants at least one viewing just so you can say you actually watched a movie about giant bunnies that eat people. If you can’t get enough of flesh-ripping rabbits, see Monty Python and the Holy Grail (1975) — it’s intentionally funny.” Cool Ass Cinema

“Night of the Lepus is played really straight, without a tongue-in-cheek line or a single pun. As a director, William Claxton keeps things moving but little else. Composer Jimmie Haskell provided the fairly ominous theme music. The well-done sound effects, however, build up more chills than any music. Despite its zany “monsters,” Night of the Lepus has its charms for the rabid monster fan.” William Schoell, Creature Features: Nature Turned Nasty in the Movies, McFarland, 2008

Buy: Amazon.co.uk | Amazon.com

“Unintentional humor seems to be its saving grace, but there’s a certain early 1970s allure that plays a role, too. It doesn’t have the charm of an Ed Wood, Jr. film, but something akin to it. It’s also amusing that the sheriff enlists the help of drive-in theater goers to wrangle the Herculean hares. I imagine a drive-in theater would have been the perfect venue for this flick.” Exclamation Mark

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“It’s not as bad as similar giant-animals flicks from the 70s, e.g. The Food of the Gods or Empire of the Ants, but still pretty bad. Western-director William F. Claxton tried his best to scare American audiences with a bloodthirsty killer bunnies, but ultimately failed, mainly because bunnies aren’t scary AT ALL! It doesn’t help showing them jumping around miniature farms in slow-motion with their mouths ketchup-smeared.” Horror Movie Diary

” …you will giggle when you see these little critters hopping around HO-scale sets in slow motion to make them appear large and powerful. If the filmmakers had only embraced the humor of their subject and coaxed their cast into the same spirit, this might have been a cult classic. Instead they brought together a group of so-so character actors – and one genuine star, Janet Leigh – who turn in wooden performances that match the lame script.” Mike Mayo, The Horror Show Guide

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

“Quite fun, although the enlarged rabbits, shown in slow motion with thundering hooves on the soundtrack, don’t really carry a genuinely monstrous charge.” Alan Frank, The Horror Film Handbook, Batsford, 1982

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Piranha – USA, 1978

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Piranha is a 1978 American horror feature film about a swarm of killer piranhas. It was directed by Joe Dante (The Howling, GremlinsTrapped Ashes; Burying the Ex) and stars Bradford Dillman (Bug), Heather Menzies, Kevin McCarthy (Invasion of the Body Snatchers), Keenan Wynn, Barbara Steele (Black Sunday; Shivers), Dick Miller and Belinda Balaski.

Produced by Roger Corman, Piranha is a low budget parody of the 1975 film Jaws, which had been a major success for Universal Studios and inspired a series of similarly themed killer critter movies such as GrizzlyTintoreraTentacles, and Orca. It was shot at Aquarena Springs in San Marcos, Texas. Screenwriter John Sayles (Alligator) used the proceeds to fund his own films and also wrote the tie-in novelization.

The film was followed by a sequel, Piranha II: The Spawning, in 1981, and two remakes, a cable TV remake in 1995, and a 3D remake in 2010, that spawned its own sequel in 2012.

 

Two teenagers exploring at night come upon an apparently abandoned military installation. They take advantage of what appears to be a swimming pool to skinny dip. The teenagers are attacked by an unseen force and disappear under the water. A light activates in the main building and a silhouetted figure investigates the screams but is too late to help.

A determined but somewhat absent-minded insurance investigator named Maggie McKeown (Heather Menzies) is dispatched to find the missing teenagers near Lost River Lake. She hires surly backwoods drunkard Paul Grogan (Bradford Dillman) to serve as her guide. They come upon the abandoned compound, which functioned as a fish hatchery prior to being militarized. They discover bizarre specimens in jars and indications of an occupant. Maggie locates the drainage switch for the outside pool and decides to empty it to search the bottom, but the moment she activates it a haggard and frantic man attacks her, attempting to stop the draining until he is subdued by Grogan.

The two find a skeleton in the filtration trap of the empty pool and learn it was filled with salt water. The man awakens and steals their jeep, but crashes it due to his disorientation, and is taken to Grogan’s home where they spend the night. They take Grogan’s homemade raft down the river, where the man wakes up and tells them that the pool in the facility was filled with a school of piranhas and that Maggie released them into the river…

Review:

A classic, lively, fun and old-fashioned monster movie, Piranha is a delight. And the new Blu-ray edition looks fabulous and is full of extras, including a lively commentary from Joe Dante and producer Jon Davidson, some great 8mm behind-the-scenes footage (again with commentary), outtakes and a ‘making of’ that is pretty badly put together and pretty poor quality, but does feature a lot of the cast and crew discussing the movie. All in all, there’s a tempting selection of supplementary material for a film that would be an essential purchase anyway.

David Flint, HORRORPEDIA

Buy: Amazon.co.uk | Amazon.com

 

Other reviews:

‘Piranha rises above the pack because it goes about its task in an intelligent, lov­ingly crafted way. The basis of its savvy approach is a smart script by first-time screenwriter (and future indie-film icon) John Sayles that layers the storyline with quirky, well-drawn characters that charm the viewer into caring about them. Thus, when the monster-fish attacks kick in, it’s a pleasant surprise how dramatically involving it is because the audience is invested in these oddball heroes.’ Schlockmania

PIRANHA 1978 JOE DANTE BRITISH DVD SLEEVE

Buy DVD: Amazon.co.uk

“Dante’s cunning filmmaking, with plentiful gore yet judicious, mostly suggestive sense of the physical mayhem spread by the killer fish, which, apart from some unfortunate shots of them swimming in schools, are mostly glimpsed in quick flashes of wicked teeth and darting, nipping blurs, is shot and edited with the kind of zest that truly marks out talented filmmakers even in low-budget fare.” This Island Rod

“This one is cheap but funny […] The trailer doesn’t even try to pretend it’s not a rip-off, claiming “These are the man-eaters who go beyond the bite of all other jaws. Sharks kill alone, but piranha come in thousands.” This is the kind of drive-in film that simply has an x-factor and cleverness not present in most of its forgotten peers…” Jim Vorel, Paste magazine

piranha-novel-john-sayles-new-english-library-NEL-paperback

Offline reading:

How I Made a Hundred Movies in Hollywood and Never Lost a Dime by Roger Corman with Jim Jerome, Da Capo Press

Crab Monsters, Teenage Cavemen, and Candy Stripe Nurses Roger Corman King of the B Movie
Buy: Amazon.com | Amazon.co.uk

horrors of the deep piranha the last jaws tentacles

Buy Horrors from the Deep: Amazon.co.uk

Cast and characters:

  • Bradford Dillman as Paul Grogan
  • Heather Menzies as Maggie McKeown
  • Kevin McCarthy as Dr Robert Hoak
  • Keenan Wynn as Jack
  • Barbara Steele as Dr Mengers
  • Dick Miller as Buck Gardner
  • Belinda Balaski as Betsy
  • Bruce Gordon as Colonel Waxman
  • Paul Bartel as Mr Dumont
  • Melody Thomas Scott as Laura Dickinson
  • Barry Brown as Trooper
  • Shannon Collins as Suzie Grogan
  • Shawn Nelson as Whitney
  • Richard Deacon as Earl Lyon
  • John Sayles as Sentry

Wikipedia | IMDb

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Ghastlies – Canada, 2016

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‘Pure evil. Bite-sized.’

Ghastlies is a 2016 Canadian science fiction comedy horror feature film directed by Brett Kelly (My Fair Zombie; Homicycle; Jurassic Shark) from a screenplay by Chris Bavota (shorts: Never Tear Us Apart; Attack of the Brainsucker; After Ate).

The movie stars Kim Valentine (Monster Pool: Chapter Two), Kendra Summerfield (Raiders of the Lost Shark), Jessica Huether and Julie Racine.

Three sorority sisters plan an initiation for their nerdy friend during a weekend getaway. Things don’t go exactly as planned when they accidentally stumble upon a craft containing a trio of extraterrestrial ghastly ghouls! Armed with only their boyfriends and brains, they resolve to send these pint-sized gatecrashers back to the edge of the universe—or die trying…

Reviews:

Ghastlies is not just a low-budget film, but an ultra low-budget film that attempts to impress without the proper resources to actually look legit. For example, the alien creatures are so cheaply made that it feels as if someone ran to Toys R Us and then grabbed whatever exotic villains they had on sale that could get the job done. Then there are large bits of the ‘acting’ that really look like screen tests…” Svet Atanasov, Blu-ray.com

“The cartoonish hand puppets, the implausible effects, and the technical inconsistencies can all be overlooked as campy charm, passed aside to enjoy Ghastlies for what it’s worth, but what can’t subside is the wonky connection between the cast that doesn’t favor well that’s diluted at the end by the starkly questionable and abrupt editing…” Stephen T. Lewis, It’s Bloggin’ Evil 

“The effects are about as lo-fi as you get can, of course, with felt puppets serving as the title monsters (complete with actors flailing around trying to hold the inanimate critters to their heads) and lots of practical gore effects, some of them surprisingly squishy and others deliberately fake and ludicrous (such as a torn spinal cord).” Nathaniel Thompson, Mondo Digital

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“There is a sufficient body count, blood, and gore contained in this to satisfy horror fans, the major issue is its quality. Yes, it is all practical effects, but they are done rather poorly. And not in a fun campy sort of way, but in a that was disappointing way. The puppet monsters have to be the best part of the picture. They are fairly crude, yet fun.” Raul Vantassle, The Movie Sleuth

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“If originality isn’t a strong point, the movie has a lot more going for it –pretty girls, goofy characters, a good sense of humor. The aliens are all puppets, which gives the film some retro charm (even when one of those puppets proves to be a little rapey!) and the movie is fairly gory as well. All of those effects are done practically, another feather in the picture’s cap.” Ian Jane, Rock! Shock! Pop!

Ghastlies was released as a Blu-ray + DVD combo and HD digital on November 11, 2017 via Camp Motion Pictures. The disc special features are:

  • Audio commentary by director Brett Kelly and actor Trevor Payer
  • “Going Ghastlies” FX featurette
  • “Tomb Talks Tubular Toonage” music featurette
  • “They’re Ghastlies” music video
  • Double-sided cover art

Main cast:

  • Kim Valentine
  • Kendra Summerfield
  • Jessica Huether
  • Julie Racine
  • Eric Deniverville
  • Joel Elliot
  • Kyle Martellacci
  • John Migliore –The Drownsman; Bite; Poltergeist Encounters; et al
  • Janet Hetherington
  • Peter Whittaker
  • Jurgen Vollrath
  • Kyle Martellacci

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Universal Classic Monsters: Complete 30-Film Collection – Blu-ray set

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Universal Classic Monsters: Complete 30-Film Collection is a Blu-ray set being released in North America on August 28, 2018.

“Showcases all of the original films featuring the most iconic monsters in motion picture history including Dracula, Frankenstein, The Mummy, The Invisible Man, The Bride of Frankenstein, The Wolf Man, Phantom of the Opera and Creature from the Black Lagoon.

Starring some of the most legendary actors including Bela Lugosi, Boris Karloff, Lon Chaney Jr., Claude Rains and Elsa Lanchester in the roles that they made famous, these films set the standard for a new horror genre with revolutionary makeup, mood-altering cinematography and groundbreaking special effects.

Order in advance for $149.98 from Amazon.com

The 24-disc box set includes the following movies, hours of bonus features, plus a 48-page collectible book:

  • Dracula (1931)
  • Dracula [Spanish version] (1931)
  • Frankenstein (1931)
  • The Mummy (1932)
  • The Invisible Man (1933)
  • The Bride of Frankenstein (1935)
  • Werewolf of London (1935)
  • Dracula’s Daughter (1936)
  • Son of Frankenstein (1939)
  • The Invisible Man Returns (1940)
  • The Invisible Woman (1940)
  • The Mummy’s Hand (1940)
  • The Wolf Man (1941)
  • The Ghost of Frankenstein (1942)
  • The Mummy’s Ghost (1942)
  • The Mummy’s Tomb (1942)
  • Invisible Agent (1942)
  • Frankenstein Meets the Wolf Man (1943)
  • Phantom of the Opera (1943)
  • Son of Dracula (1943)
  • House of Frankenstein (1944)
  • The Mummy’s Curse (1944)
  • The Invisible Man’s Revenge (1944)
  • House of Dracula (1945)
  • She-Wolf of London (1946)
  • Abbott and Costello Meet Frankenstein (1948)
  • Abbott and Costello Meet the Invisible Man (1951)
  • Creature from the Black Lagoon (1954)
  • Abbott and Costello Meet the Mummy (1955)
  • Revenge of the Creature (1955)
  • The Creature Walks Among Us (1956)

Lifechanger – Canada, 2018

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‘It Becomes You.’

Lifechanger is a 2018 Canadian horror feature film written, produced and directed by Justin McConnell (producer of Galaxy of Horrors; Minutes Past Midnight). The Unstable Ground production stars Lora Burke, Jack Foley and Elitsa Bako.

A murderous shapeshifter sets out on a blood-soaked mission to make things right with the woman he loves…

Lifechanger is due to have its world premiere at the Fantasia International Film Festival, in Montreal on July 20, 2018. It will also be shown at the Arrow Video FrightFest in London on August 24, 2018.

In the United States, Lifechanger is being distributed by Uncork’d Entertainment. Raven Banner Entertainment will handle the film’s Canadian distribution.

Cast and characters:

Lora Burke … Julia Wilson – Poor Agnes
Jack Foley … Robert – Fugue
Elitsa Bako … Emily Roberts – Antiviral
Rachel VanDuzer … Rachel
Steve Kasan … Detective Freddie Ransone – Covenant; Red Spring
Sam White … Sam Richardson
Bill Oberst Jr. … Drew [voice] – 3 From Hell; Impuratus; Death House; Ayla; Dis;The Fetish Set; et al
Peter Higginson … Andrew
Adam Buller … James
Brian Quintero … Tommy
Uche Ama … Jen
Mark Rainmaker … John
Ry Barrett … Richard
Michelle D’Alessandro Hatt … Mary Richardson
Daniel Faraldo … Bill

Filming locations:

Toronto, Ontario, Canada

Triassic World – USA, 2018

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‘Some things should remain extinct!’

Triassic World is a 2018 American science fiction horror feature film directed by Dylan Vox, making his directorial debut, from a screenplay by Marc Gottlieb (Alien Convergence; Planet of the Sharks). The Asylum production stars Shellie Sterling, Joseph Harris, Hayley J. Williams and Thomas Varga.

Dinosaurs are back, used as the perfect animals to grow human organs for transplants. But in doing so, scientists have made them all but indestructible, leaving humans scrambling to fight back when the prehistoric creatures escape a research lab…

Reviews:

“It’s not gonna deliver too much in the way of greatness, but it avoids many of the problems other Asylum offerings suffer from (see as Tomb Invader and Atlantic Rim 2) and provides a decent creature feature in a compact amount of time. If you want a low-risk, low-yield movie to put on, this isn’t too bad of a choice. Plus, it doesn’t come with the baggage of the Jurassic Park franchise…” Kyle Saubert,  Allusions of Grandeur

“The CGI monsters for once aren’t a joke and some of the scenes look like practical effects might have been used as well. There’s some decent gore including a head being torn off that keep the proceedings interesting. There’s even some reasonably good attempts at building suspense along the way.” Jim Morazzini, Voices from the Balcony

Related:

Jurassic World: Fallen Kingdom – USA, 2018: updated with reviews


The Horror of Party Beach comes to Blu-ray – news

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The Horror of Party Beach is coming to Blu-ray via Severin Films.

“On August 28th, you’re invited to the bloodiest beach bash of the year. The Horror of Party Beach is ready to rock viewers’ eyeballs in sparkling HD, leaving no grain of sand unstained by the gory aftermath of its shock-and-roll shenanigans!

In 1964, 20th Century Fox released an independent shocker – shot in two weeks for $50,000 outside Stamford, Connecticut, by local producer/director Del Tenney – advertised as “The First Horror-Monster Musical.” More than fifty years later, this “absolute classic of exploitation cinema” (Legends Magazine) returns like you’ve never seen or heard it before.

When nuclear waste dumped into the ocean mutates a shipwreck full of corpses, it will unleash an onslaught of bikini teens, surprising gore, dubious science, an intrepid maid, The Del-Aires, and arguably the greatest worst monsters in horror movie history.

Severin Films is proud to present this cult favourite from “Connecticut’s own Ed Wood” (Stamford Advocate), now featuring a new 2K scan from the original negative and loaded with all-new Special Features like nothing that ever stalked this earth!”

The Gate – Canada, 1987

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‘ …pray it’s not too late.’

The Gate is a 1987 Canadian supernatural horror feature film directed by Tibor Takács (Spiders 3D; Ice Spiders; Mosquito ManI, Madman) from a screenplay by Michael Nankin. The movie stars Stephen Dorff, Louis Tripp, Christa Denton, Kelly Rowan, and Jennifer Irwin.

A sequel, Gate 2: The Trespassers, was released in 1990.

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When best friends Glen and Terry stumble across a mysterious crystalline rock in Glen’s backyard, they quickly dig up the newly sodden lawn searching for more precious stones.

Instead, they unearth The Gate — an underground chamber of terrifying demonic evil. The teenagers soon understand what evil they’ve released as they are overcome with an assortment of horrific experiences. With fiendish followers invading suburbia, it’s now up to the kids to discover the secret that can lock The Gate forever…

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Review:

The Gate is one of those late 1980s films that was generally the kind of bland and safe horror movie that was coming to dominate the genre at the time. But because a lot of 40-somethings saw this as children and have subsequently been unable to look at it without the rose-tinted glasses of youth, the film has developed an unlikely following, probably with the same kind of people who think The Monster Squad is a masterpiece.

Like that film, The Gate is essentially juvenile horror, with a twelve-year-old hero, Glen, played by Stephen Dorff who manages to open up a gate of Hell in his back garden, unleashing a horde of mini-demons, zombies and assorted ghoulishness. With his parents away for the weekend, it’s down to Glen, his older sister Al and geeky friend Terry to defeat the evil forces and close the gate.

gate demons

Essentially, this is a Lucio Fulci-type story without the gore, grafted onto a sub-Spielberg narrative – Poltergeist is clearly the template for this sort of kiddie-level horror, with just enough shocks to make the older teens put up with it. It pretty much runs out of plot after the first hour, and then coasts along with a padded story until coming to a safe, threat-free finale. If you think that PG-13 horror is the ultimate achievement of the genre, then you’ll probably love this film.

In truth though, it’s very average, saved from being a washout by the impressive stop-motion demons, but very much of its time – and that was not a great time for the genre. This is by no means a terrible film, but ultimately, the best that can be said for The Gate is that if you have kids and want to introduce them to horror movies, this is – BBFC ratings be damned – a safe enough place to begin. But even then, Joe Dante’s equally family-friendly The Hole tells a not-dissimilar story with considerably more panache.

David Flint, HORRORPEDIA

Other reviews:

” …this film’s movie magic will make you appreciate old school effects like stop motion animation. As the CGI machine keeps rollin’ on, The Gate can remind us that computer graphics are still inferior to the creations of special effects wizards, such as the real creative force behind this film, Randall William Cook.” Canuxploitation

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” …the movie offers up enough memorable moments to work and despite having a pretty wimpy “hero” in Glen and having a so-so dispatch of our final, gigantic, demonic creature, the movie does sport a good series of “scare” moments and has extremely well done effects for its decade and budget range (those mini troll demons are pretty cool looking).” The Video Graveyard

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The Gate is a wonderful example of 1980’s horror. The concept is great, this was at the time when record companies were being scrutinized for having backwards messages in their songs, so the idea that a demonology grimore being contained in a record albums sleeve is hardly far fetched.” Killion, Horror News

Cast and characters:

  • Stephen Dorff … Glen
  • Christa Denton … Al
  • Louis Tripp … Terry Chandler
  • Kelly Rowan … Lori Lee
  • Jennifer Irwin … Linda Lee
  • Carl Kraines … The Workman

Digital release:

Vestron Video released a Collector’s Edition Blu-ray on February 28, 2017 with the following special features:

  • Audio commentaries with director Tibor Takacs, writer Michael Nankin, and special effects designer Randall William Cook
  • Audio commentary with special effects designer Randall William Cook, special make-up effects artist Craig Reardon, special effects artist Frank Carere, and matte photographer Bill Taylor
  • Isolated score selections and audio interview with composers Michael Hoenig and J. Peter Robinson
  • The Gate: Unlocked featurette
  • Minion Maker featurette
  • From Hell It Came featurette
  • The Workman Speaks! featurette
  • Made in Canada featurette
  • From Hell: The Creatures & Demons of The Gate featurette
  • The Gatekeepers featurette
  • Making of The Gate featurette
  • Teaser Trailer
  • Theatrical Trailer
  • TV Spot
  • Storyboard Gallery
  • Behind-the-Scenes Still Gallery

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The Giant Spider Invasion – USA, 1975

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‘Creeping!… Clawing!… Crushing!’

The Giant Spider Invasion is a 1975 American science fiction horror feature film directed by Bill Rebane (Blood Harvest; The Demons of Ludlow; The Capture of Bigfoot) from a screenplay by Robert Easton and Richard L. Huff.

The film is about giant spiders that terrorise the town of Merrill, Wisconsin and the surrounding area. The iconic theatrical poster art was a throwback to the giant monster movies of the 1950s. The $300,000 film received a considerable theatrical run via Group 1 and became one of the fifty top grossing films of that year.

Major roles were played by some actors who may have been considered “has-beens” at the time. The leads were Steve Brodie and Barbara Hale, with other roles going to Alan Hale, Jr. and Leslie Parrish (whose character unwittingly drinks a Bloody Mary cocktail containing a pulped arachnid!).

giant spider invasion volkswagen

The film’s one “Giant Spider” was constructed by covering a Volkswagen automobile with artificial black fur, with the fake legs operated from the inside by seven members of the crew. The back of the car was the front of the monster, and its red tail lights served as the monster’s glowing eyes. In August 2013, it was reported that the rusting frame of the giant spider had been stolen and sold off for scrap.

A comic book was created to help promote the film and was reprinted for Retromedia’s DVD of the film.

giant spider invasion dvd comic book page 2 & 3

Reviews:

“This movie also has some of the most wonderful fleeing-crowds footage since Reptilicus, and a few shots of the main monster eating people which are on nearly the same exalted plane of gross technical overreach as their counterparts from the latter film. For my money, the actor-eating spider is even funnier than the spidermobile that attacks the carnival, if for no other reason than that we get a much better look at it. The eight-legged pervert hiding in Ev’s underwear drawer is a hoot, too.” Scott Ashlin, 1000 Misspent Hours and Counting

“Despite the jokey reference to Jaws (1975) this film is clearly a displaced item from the fifties cycle of radiation (and such like) mutation movies. It even comes complete with Brodie and Hale as the boy-meets-girl couple who save the day. But, whereas the fifties films were at least a direct reflection of their times, this ineptly mounted offering has no such backdrop.” The Aurum Film Encyclopedia: Science Fiction

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“Something of a hotch-potch as Rebane jumbles comic strip with genuinely unsettling horror. Real spiders are used to reasonably good effect, whereas the one giant specimen, despite a spirited first appearance, is patently mechanical and sadly undemonstrative.” Time Out

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Buy: Amazon.com | Amazon.co.uk

“Lots of laughs … there hasn’t been a movie with special effects so bad since The Giant Claw!” Michael Weldon, The Psychotronic Encyclopedia of Film

” …stars the silliest “giant creature” ever created in movie history. It takes this film almost an hour for the “giant spider” to show up up, and when it does, it’s so blatantly a VW beetle with fake legs attached that you won’t believe your eyes.”John Wilson, The Official Razzie Movie Guide

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“For my money, the actor-eating spider is even funnier than the spider mobile that attacks the carnival, if for no other reason than that we get a much better look at it. The eight-legged pervert hiding in Ev’s underwear drawer is a hoot, too. The most incredible thing of all, however, may be the simple fact that The Giant Spider Invasion was not by a long shot the worst movie Bill Rebane made.” 1000 Misspent Hours… and Counting

“In spite of the title, there is only one giant spider, but we don’t feel cheated because it’s a dilly. It is impossible to see such a budget conscious special effect without feeling a wave of admiration.” Stephen King, Danse Macabre

“Modest and unpretentious, The Giant Spider Invasion is really much better than its reputation […] But the famously bad spider puppets are the main draw […] Be sure to enjoy good-natured 70s sexism: a teenaged floozy appears virtually topless, and at one point the camera shamelessly zooms in on her cleavage.” David Elroy Goldweber, Claws & Saucers

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

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Horrors of Spider Island aka It’s Hot in Paradise – West Germany, 1960

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‘Blood-curdling! Hair-raising! Spine-chilling!’

Ein Toter hing im Netz (‘A Corpse Hung in the Web’) is a 1960 West German science fiction horror cheesecake feature film directed by Fritz Böttger and produced by Wolf C. Hartwig (The HeadDead Sexy, Bloody Moon).

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The film was dubbed and released in the United States by Pacemaker Pictures as an adults-only feature titled It’s Hot in Paradise (sometimes advertised as just Hot in Paradise) in March 1962.

It was later re-issued by Pacemaker in November 1965 in a 75 minute edited ‘horror’ version titled Horrors of Spider Island. It was also apparently released in the United States as The Spider’s Web and Girls of Spider Island

Pacemaker Pictures specialised in releasing European imported movies, bolstered by their lurid ad campaigns, such as The Slaughter of the Vampires, Terror Creatures from the Grave and Bloody Pit of Horror.

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Reviews:

“While watchable even in its shortest version, Horrors of Spider Island becomes a delirious experience with the added nude swimming footage. The atrocious dubbing contains some of the more quotable one-liners around, while D’Arcy’s weird but decidedly non-threatening monster makes up for the decided lack of actual arachnids on screen.” Nathaniel Thompson, Mondo Digital

‘Horrors of Spider Island is actually amusingly bad for a brief while, especially when Webster is holding auditions for the gals before they plunge into the Pacific in a cheaply-conceived plane crash that consists of stock footage and over-acted reaction shots from the cast. Even when they make it aboard the island, the film shows a little bit of promise’. Oh, the Horror!

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

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“The close-ups of his face are scary, but the editing is awful and the whole movie is confusing.” Michael J. Weldon, The Psychotronic Video Guide

“…garter-belt fetishists are going to be in heaven nearly from start to finish. Of course, great lovers of crappy monster makeup are going to be in heaven, too, even though the were-spider doesn’t get as much screen-time as I would have liked. Indeed, with the were-spider and its little hand-puppet monkey-bug friends on the one hand, and all the lifted skirts and shimmying hips on the other, Horrors of Spider Island would have easily scored enough points to qualify it as a minor classic of trash.” 1000 Misspent Hours and Counting

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Horrors of Spider Island gets more wrong than right, which means it’s an average grindhouse flick. The biggest problem with this film is there’s not enough nudity for a decent exploitation movie and not enough horror for a good creature feature. So, it’s more sizzle than steak. But, I ask you: Isn’t that what the grindhouse was all about?” TheronNeel.com

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

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“The producers were clearly aiming for nothing more than unabashed unashamed exploitation. They did a great job! The spider makeup covers only the guy’s hands and face, but it looks both real and scary […] The spider resembles those of Cat-Women of the Moon or Missile to the Moon, but it’s smaller and has an evil face.” David Elroy Goldweber, Claws & Saucers

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

‘It’s Hot in Paradise makes more sense as a title. The horror is just a distraction, this entire film is about getting trapped on a desert island with a bunch of young dancing girls like buxom Barbara Valentin to flesh out a wild orgy. In other words the entire point of the film is what was cut out of it for this version’. Apocalypse Later

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

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“It has buxom Teutonic babes in (slightly) skimpy swimwear lounging around being all sexy and occasionally getting into hair-pulling girl-fights, it has hunky men looking for love in all the wrong bikini bottoms, and it has a tropical setting full of azure lagoons and cozy beachside cabins. And for some inexplicable reason it also has horrible mutant killer spider-people-thingies who want to murder them all and eat their flesh!”  Million Monkey Theater

Image credits: Wrong Side of the Art! | Todos el Terror del Mundo

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Blood Clots – USA, 2018

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Blood Clots is a 2018 American horror anthology feature film curated by Freedom Cinema, consisting of seven shorts from New York distributor Hewes Pictures. There is no wraparound footage linking the individual shorts.

The movie features stories directed by Evan Hughes, Sid Zanforlin, Luke Guidici, Carl Timms, Patrick Longstreth, Timothy J. Richardson, Martyn Pick and Nick Spooner.

Featuring a collection of horror stories involving cannibals, zombies “and other funny creatures”, it includes an awkward dinner with an ancient creature in ‘The Call of Charlie’ and a rightfully justified fear of basements in ‘Time to Eat.’

The stories feature Brooke Smith (Bates MotelThe Silence of the Lambs), Harry Sinclair (Lord of the Rings), Madalina Bellariu Ion and Kristin Slaysman.

 
Blood Clots premiered on Vimeo and Amazon on August 3, 2018.

Reviews:

“Hilarious, ridiculous, and downright Dee-f*ckin’-lightful, The Call of Charlie is hands down my favorite selection offered here (with Hellyfish being a very close second) […] Blood Clots is all killer, no filler with nary a shitty segment in the bunch! If you love creatures, gore, and silliness in equal measure this is the fright flick for you my boils and ghouls!” Horror Fuel

Roadkill – USA/Ireland, 2011

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Absentia and Return of the Killer Shrews also use this artwork

‘Fear the skies!’

Roadkill is a 2011 American/Irish horror feature film directed by Johannes Roberts (The Strangers: Prey at Night; The Other Side of the Door; 47 Meters Down; Storage 24; et al). The movie stars Kacey Barnfield, Oliver James, Diarmuid Noyes and Stephen Rea.

Kate (Kacey Barnfield) is traveling around Ireland in an R.V. with her ex-boyfriend Ryan (Oliver James), brother Joel (Colin Maher) and friends Hailey (Eliza Bennett), Chuck (Diarmuid Noyes), Tommy (Kobna Holdbrook-Smith) and Anita (Roisin Murphy).

After driving into the countryside, the group stop off at a small shop, where they encounter Luca (Ned Dennehy) who attempts to scam them from buying a medallion, and warns them it is dangerous before Chuck steals the medallion and the group attempt to make a quick getaway.

However, as they drive away they hit an old woman, who puts a curse on the group, telling them the mythical bird the roc will take vengeance on them, before dying.

The group quickly drive away but hit a patch of thick fog and become lost, as fears of the curse heighten. Stopping, they encounter a young boy in the road. Anita talks to the boy, but he runs away before the roc grabs Anita and drags her into the air. Her body is dropped, with half of her face mauled off before the roc returns and flies away with her…

Reviews:

“In case you’ve not realized this yet – this was a “SyFy Original” movie. I didn’t actually know that going in, but the pedigree was obvious after only a few minutes. Had it been called “Mega-Roc” I would have known before pressing “play”.  Just stay away from it.  It’s the worst kind of bad – uninspired, lazy and insipid.” Depressed Press

Roadkill is by all accounts bad, but, as with Beneath Loch Ness, it ticks a lot of the silly monster movie boxes for me. I don’t know that it’s the best Syfy horror movie I’ve seen, but it’s probably in the top ten or so.” Devon B., Digital Retribution

” …Roadkill would’ve been reminiscent of Jeepers Creepers 2 with Ireland substituting for whichever cornfield state Victor Salva’s sequel was set in. However, screenwriter Rick Suvalle jimmies a secondary plot involving a backwoods-style killer a la Wolf Creek or Eden Lake. Here, it’s the evil gypsies who aren’t happy about the murder – but aren’t exactly altruistic in any case. The protagonists run afoul of them several times, leading to shotgun blasts and other “torture p*rn” shenanigans.” Justin Felix, DVD Talk

“Yes the bird looked kind of crappy, but that’s why we had hillbilly gypsies. Sure the movie was wildly inconsistent and erratic, but outside of Hailey the slut on occasion, most of these actors were super consistent in keeping their accents in check. What I’m saying is that ‘Roadkill’ is like another Sci-Fi epic, Pterodactyl, only entertaining. And there’s no Coolio.” Christopher Armstead, Film Critics United

” …Roadkill is just another one of those poor late night creature features which relies on cliches and uses poor CGI. The only genuinely good thing about it is that it is shot on location and the scenery is a pleasant distraction.” Andy Webb, The Movie Scene

Cast and characters:

  • Keith Burke … Deputy – Boy Eats Girl
  • Stephen Rea … Seamus – Out of the Dark; Asylum (2014); Werewolf: The Beast Among UsUnderworld: Awakening; The Devil’s Mercy; Feardotcom; Interview with the Vampire; The Company of Wolves; et al
  • Kacey Clarke [as Kacey Barnfield] … Kate – Bayou Tales; Underworld: Afterlife
  • Roisin Murphy … Anita
  • Colin Maher … Joel
  • Kobna Holdbrook-Smith … Tommy
  • Oliver James … Ryan
  • Diarmuid Noyes … Chuck
  • Eliza Bennett … Hailey
  • Ned Dennehy … Luca
  • Stella McCusker … Fortune Teller
  • Eve Macklin … Drina
  • Una C. … Gypsy [uncredited]

Filming locations:

The film was shot on location in Ireland.

Release:

Roadkill was released on DVD in the UK on August 30, 2011.

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Uninvited – USA, 1987

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‘You’ll never look at a cat the same way again!’

Uninvited – aka The Uninvited is a 1987 American science fiction horror feature film written, produced and directed by Greydon Clark (Satan’s CheerleadersWithout Warning). It stars George Kennedy, Alex CordClu Gulager, Toni Hudson and Eric Larson.

A sinister corporation loses control of a cat that has been infected with a malignant genetically-engineered virus. As the death-toll rises during its savage rampage, the feline-abomination is taken aboard a criminal kingpin’s ship by two female co-eds. The mutant cat-within-a-cat kills the vessel’s doomed passengers, one by one…

Reviews:

“Still, for 80s cheese movie fans, the premise and hand-puppet cat creature alone merit this a look. Director Clark (who also wrote, produced and has a cameo during the opening sequence) might not be a genre luminary, but he does come up with some amusingly absurd concepts.” The Bloody Pit of Horror

“As a novelty act, Uninvited is a true winner, but prepare yourself for some major tedium whenever the ol’ puss isn’t onscreen. Greydon Clark’s writing and directing skills are somewhere near the bottom of the barrel, and as such his product is often hit-or-miss.” Jonathan Persinek, CineBomb

“The monster in Uninvited, resembling a Muppet reject that’s always popping out of a cat’s mouth, is so obviously faked as to invite uninvited laughter […] rather than trust in his own abilities, Clark resorts to Alien clichés.” John Stanley, Creature Features

“No stranger to low budget exploitation, Greydon Clark delivers a manic if somewhat rushed monster picture with Uninvited. Maybe it’s just the slapped together killer cat puppet but it feels like the whole of the picture was shot in about three days. I’m sure this is not the case, as according to comments left on his official website, www.greydonclark.com, Greydon used his own pool to shoot the interior of the sinking ship. Proof that he gave it his all, despite budgetary limitations in getting Uninvited in the can.” Jason McElreath, DVD Drive-In

“This is a perfect example of a film maker having a good idea, but not enough talent or budget to make a film as good as the idea…yes, I just said that a story about a cat with a with poisonous saliva oozing monster living inside of it was a good idea […] That sounds pretty crazy and it is, but my favorite thing about this film is how perfectly horrible all of the dialogue and acting are! It’s ridiculous.”. Dymon Enlow, Happyotter

“Granted, cats are often presented as villains or at least omens of death in movies, but few grow to mutant size and/or have smaller mutant cats coming out of their host’s mouth. And whether Clark didn’t understand basic continuity or just didn’t care, I don’t know, but either way the cat keeps changing size throughout the movie, sometimes more than once in the same scene.” Brian Collins, Horror Movie a Day

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“There’s only one reason to watch this movie, and that’s to see the mutated cat kill some of these people. Kill them he does, usually in fun, gory ways that really get you hooting and hollering. I haven’t laughed this loud at death scenes in a while. They aren’t everything they could be by any means, but damn, some of them are really enjoyable.” Silver Emulsion Film Reviews

“Even for a movie made in 1987 this has horrid effects (be it bladder effects, creature or otherwise) and they go perfectly with the clunky dialogue, shitty attack scenes and a lifeboat finale that’s the cherry on the desert (let’s just say if my eyes could roll any further back in my head…). The tedium sets in early in this one which may explain why it took me five sittings to get all the way through…” The Video Graveyard

the uninvited 1987 mutant cat movie british VHS sleeve

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Cast and characters:

  • George Kennedy … Mike Harvey
  • Alex Cord … Walter Graham – Chosen Survivors
  • Clu Gulager … Albert
  • Toni Hudson … Rachel
  • Eric Larson … Martin
  • Clare Carey … Bobbie
  • Beau Dremann … Lance
  • Rob Estes … Corey
  • Shari Shattuck … Suzanne
  • Michael Holden … Daryl Perkins
  • Austin Stoker … Carribean Officer
  • Cecile Callan … Girl in Pizza Parlor
  • Jack Heller … Hotel Concierge
  • Gina Schinasi … Bartender
  • Ron Presson … Man at Gas Station

Image credits: Cult Trailers | Museu do VHS

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Fear of felines! Killer cats in horror films – article

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Last American Horror Show – USA, 2018

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‘Watch it or die’

Last American Horror Show is a 2018 American horror anthology feature film written and directed by Michael S. Rodriguez (6Days66Years; Like a Shadow).

The movie stars Felissa Rose (Sleepaway Camp), Lynn Lowry (The Crazies), Tiffani Fest (Garden Party Massacre), Arch Hall Jr. (The Sadist), Robert Allen Mukes (House of 1000 Corpses) and Jim Van Bebber (director of The Manson Family).

“Three terrifying tales to keep you awake all night: ‘Night of the Sea Monkey’, ‘Lamb Feed’ and ‘Homewrecked’ – a trifecta of 80s throwback terror with mauling monsters, home invasions gone haywire and stomach-turning human sacrifice.” .

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The Golem – Israel, 2018

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‘An ancient legend reborn’

The Golem is a 2018 Israeli/American supernatural horror feature film directed by Doron and Yoav Paz (JeruZalem). The movie stars Hani Furstenberg, Ishai Golan and Alex Tritenko. It was produced by Shalom Eisenbach in conjunction with Shaked Berenson and Patrick Ewald of Epic Pictures Group

The Golem will shown on 27 August 2018 at the Arrow Video FrightFest in London. It will be released in the USA in February 2019 by Dread Central Presents.

A woman’s tight-knit Jewish community that is besieged by foreign invaders. Turning to Jewish mysticism, she conjures a dangerous creature to protect her and her people. However, her creation may be more evil than she ever imagined…

Cast and characters:

  • Hani Furstenberg … Hanna
  • Ishai Golan … Benjamin
  • Lenny Ravich … Horrovits
  • Brynie Furstenberg … Perla
  • Alexey Tritenko … Vladimir

More Israeli horror

The Golem: How He Came into the World – Germany, 1920

JeruZalem – Israel/USA, 2015

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Dracula, Prisoner of Frankenstein – Spain/France/Portugal, 1972

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Dracula, Prisoner of Frankenstein is a 1972 European horror feature film written and directed by Jesús Franco. The movie stars Dennis Price, Howard Vernon, Paca Gabaldón and Alberto Dalbés.

Plot:

Dracula kills another innocent victim and Dr. Seward decides it’s time to wipe the fiend off the face of the earth. Armed with a hammer and a wooden stake, he arrives at Castle Dracula and duly dispatches the vampire Count.

Next day, however, Dr. Frankenstein arrives with his assistant, Morpho, and a large crate containing the monster. Using the blood of a pub singer who has been abducted by his creation, the doctor brings Dracula back to life and uses him for his own ends.

The Count and a female vampire continue to terrorise the town, so Dr. Seward once again sets out for Castle Dracula. Unfortunately, he is attacked by the Frankenstein monster and left for dead. Amira, a gypsy, rescues him and summons up a werewolf to do battle with the forces of evil…

Buy Blu-ray: Amazon.com

Review:

What do you get when you combine competent directorial technique, a solid script, and a clearly delineated narrative? Not this. Jess Franco’s Dracula, Prisoner of Frankenstein is on par with most of his other early ’70s productions. That is to say, it’s stodgy, painfully slow, cheap, gratuitous, embarrassing, and essentially an unwatchable, coma-inducing sledgehammer.

Franco’s filmmaking skills come dangerously close to the incompetent here, with his visual style summed up simply as: zoom, zoom, zoom, with the occasional insertion of extreme long-shots, claustrophobic close-ups, and soporific slow pans. His boggling narrative execution is hallucinatory at best, but not in an interesting way; scenes float into the air, unattached to anything else around them until an innocuous and brief pseudo-grounding is provided via an equally innocuous action or galumphing explication later on, giving the viewer headaches while trying to piece it all together.

Thematically and conceptually, Franco’s on the level of a lurid, feeble-minded child playing with his newly acquired, and tattily-made, monster action figures; for example, in the climactic scene where Frankenstein’s monster and the Wolf Man are slapped together in order to duke it out Three Stooges-style, the monster nearly loses his toupée. This would all be quite funny if it had been planned or at least done with some enthusiasm, but it wasn’t; the whole thing is simply bloated and indifferent, dragging itself to a conclusion that Franco doesn’t seemingly even care about. This movie is a cinematic creature best left un-revived.

Ben Spurling, HORRORPEDIA

Other reviews:

“A Brillo-pad werewolf. Bubbling sex that never boils over. Four-star, no budget vampire attacks. The expected Jess Franco Nightclub Sequence. A strange focus on frantic bats (both rubber and real). Dracula, Prisoner of Frankenstein is, quite literally, a pleasant dream. Upon regaining your wits, you’re left half-asleep, yet ready to conquer the world. Or, at the very least, your insomnia.” Joseph A. Ziemba, Bleeding Skull!

“Only Britt Nicholl’s elegantly erotic Lady Dracula comes off as a credible, original creation. In fact, the actresses here, Josiane Gibert as the doomed cabaret singer, Genvieve Deloir as the gypsy and Paca Galaban’s mentally disturbed Maria are much more defined and interesting characters than the male leads. They have to react to the mad scientists and monsters, who are pretty much one-dimensional menaces in Franco’s raggedy mise-en-scene.” Robert Monell, El Franconomicon

” … has laughable make-up and special effects but offers rich surrealistic moments lightened by a corny nightclub act with sub-sexy songs […] it is an enjoyable piece of fun for people with a good sense of humour.” Lucas Balbo, Obsession: The Films of Jess Franco, 1993

“It’s like a dream that seems to tell a logical and coherent story while you’re in the midst of it, but appears utterly nonsensical under the scrutiny of the waking mind. Franco did that sort of thing a lot in the early 70’s, of course, but to see the narrative sensibility of A Virgin Among the Living Dead applied to the old House of Frankenstein template somehow feels so counterintuitive.” Scott Ashlin, 1000 Misspent Hours and Counting

Cast and characters:

  • Dennis Price … Doctor Frankenstein
  • Howard Vernon … Dracula
  • Paca Gabaldón [as Mary Francis] … Maria
  • Alberto Dalbés … Doctor Jonathan Seward
  • Carmen Yazalde [as Britt Nichols] … Female vampire
  • Geneviève Robert [as Genevieve Deloir] … Amira
  • Anne Libert … Dracula’s first victim
  • Luis Barboo [as Luis Bar Boo]… Morpho
  • Brandy … The Wolf Man
  • Fernando Bilbao… The Monster
  • Josyane Gibert [as Josiane Gibert] … Estela

Filming locations:

Estoril, Cascais, Sintra, Lisbon, Portugal
Alicante, Comunidad Valenciana, Spain

Alternate titles:

Drácula contra Frankenstein
Dracula contro Frankenstein
Dracula prisonnier de Frankenstein
Die Nacht der offenen Särge
The Screaming Dead

Image credits: El Franconomicon

The views expressed in the HORRORPEDIA review above are those of the author only and may not necessarily represent the opinions of the website editor and/or its owner.

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Mermaid’s Song – Canada, 2015

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‘Her story begins where the fairy tale ends’

Mermaid’s Songaka Charlotte’s Song is a 2015 Canadian fantasy horror feature film directed by Nicholas Humphries (ABCs of Death 2.5  “M is for Messiah”; Death Do Us Part) from a screenplay by Jessica Leigh Clark-Bojin, Meagan Hotz and Bob Woolsey, based on a story by Lindsey Mann. The Done Four Productions movie stars Iwan Rheon, Katelyn Mager, Brendan Taylor and Jessie Fraser.

Charlotte (Katelyn Mager) is a young girl coming of age in the midst of one of the most desolate and desperate periods in American history. Set in the 1930s Oklahoma Dust Bowl, the untimely death of Charlotte’s mother triggers a downward spiral for her father, five sisters and their family-run song and dance act.

Help comes from an unlikely source when a gangster named Randall (Iwan Rheon) offers to pay off their debt in exchange for making some unsavoury changes to the family business.

Matters are complicated when it is discovered that Charlotte, like her mother before her, is in fact a mermaid capable of controlling humans with her voice…

Mermaid’s Song is available on digital September 18, 2018 via Wild Eye Releasing.

Cast and characters:

  • Iwan Rheon … Randall
  • Katelyn Mager … Charlotte
  • Brendan Taylor … George
  • Jessie Fraser … Emily
  • Steve Bradley … Tim
  • Barbara Wallace … Gertrude
  • Trevor Gemma … Harold
  • Natasha Quirke … Serena
  • Leala Selina … Beatrice
  • Casey Strandquist … Sophia
  • Kallie Jean Sorensen … Patricia
  • Stephanie Dyck … Harriet

Filming locations:

 Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada

New and future releases

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The Mermaid: Lake of the Dead – Russia, 2018

Killer Mermaid aka Nymph – Serbia, 2014

Death Do Us Part – USA, 2014

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Creature from Cannibal Creek – Canada, 2018

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‘It was what they eat’

Creature from Cannibal Creek is a 2018 Canadian comedy horror feature film written and directed by John Migliore (Exorcism of the Dead; Poltergeist Encounters; The Friday Night Death Slot). The Survival Zombie Films production stars Deborah Jayne Reilly Smith, Simon Wheeldon, Jim Ordolis, Lena Montecalvo and John Migliore. There are also cameo appearances by filmmakers Brett Kelly (GhastliesMy Fair Zombie; Jurassic Shark)  and Sébastien Godin (Lycanimator).

A group of cannibals keep people in cages until they’re ready to be butchered. One of the captives escapes but dies in the surrounding forest. Nature soon takes a hand, reviving the former captive and turning him into a marauding beast…

Director-writer John Migliore: “I wanted the first trailer for Creature from Cannibal Creek to capture the heart of the film, while also reflecting back on what influenced us to make this kind of movie. I’m a huge fan of horror movies in general, but films from the 1970s have alway held a special magic for me.”

The movie is currently in post-production.

Source: Horror Society

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