Posted by editor@vimooz.com on October 31, 2009 under Comedy, Horror | Comments are off for this article
The zombie horror-comedy “Brain Dead,” makes its West Coast premiere this weekend at the 4 Star Theatre in San Francisco. The film is directed by Kevin Tenney who is best known for his ’80s films Night of the Demons and Witchboard. Read more of this article »
Posted by editor@vimooz.com on October 11, 2009 under Horror | Comments are off for this article
Lars von Trier’s horror movie “Antichrist” continues to live up to its not0riety. Variety reports that at the New York Film Festival screening: The film had to be stopped after a man passed out during one of its more intense scenes. Ambulances were called and the man had to be carried out before the screening resumed for the stunned audience.
Posted by editor@vimooz.com on September 20, 2009 under Horror | Comments are off for this article
The independent horror film, “12/24″ from filmmaker Anthony Colliano and Gargoyle Entertainmentwill finally premiere to the public Thursday at Loew’s Theatre on the Waterfront in Pittsburgh. The film is also an official selection at the Madison Horror Film Festival in Madison, Wis., scheduled for October 3 and 4.
The film follows the story of a husband and wife, two cops and the drug dealers they’re trailing, and a 12-year-old girl, among others, as they try to escape a mass of zombies that has invaded the area on Christmas Eve.
Posted by editor@vimooz.com on September 14, 2009 under Horror | Comments are off for this article
Diablo Cody, 31, who vaulted to stardom as screenwriter of 2007’s “Juno” and winnng an Oscar in the process, is back with the high-school horror movie “Jennifer’s Body.” The movie, which premiered at the Toronto International Film Festival late last week, debuts in theaters on September 18.
Posted by editor@vimooz.com on under Foreign Film, Horror | Comments are off for this article
British company E1 Entertainment have snagged the distribution rights to the Icelandic film Reykjavik Whale Watching Massacre. The film will have its world premiere at Screen Fest in Los Angeles in the USA.
Posted by editor@vimooz.com on July 17, 2009 under Horror | Comments are off for this article
Actress Mischa Barton, 23, canceled a scheduled appearance at the New York premiere of her new indie film Homecoming, one day after reportedly calling the Los Angeles Police Department with a health problem.
Police were called to Barton’s home at 3 p.m. Wednesday for a “medical issue,” People reports. The star’s rep, Craig Schneider, told EW via a statement: “Ms. Barton was safely transferred to medical treatment for which she remains hospitalized, as per the recommendation of her doctor.” Schnider told People that the LAPD officers were there simply to protect the star. “Police were involved due to Ms. Barton’s celebrity status,” he said, adding that the actress is now “okay and resting.”
Police would not confirm Access Hollywood’s claim that the actress has been placed under involuntary psychiatric hold at an L.A. hospital.
HOMECOMING: Mike (Matt Long) was the star quarterback in a blue-collar small town where football is everything. After receiving a scholarship to Northwestern University, he returns home over Christmas break and everyone is surprised to see him with a new girlfriend, Elizabeth (Jessica Stroup), a pretty rich girl from Chicago. No one is more shocked than Mike’s homecoming queen ex-girlfriend, Shelby (Mischa Barton), who desperately wants Elizabeth out of the picture. After a freak car accident leaves an injured Elizabeth at the mercy of Shelby, all hell breaks loose as Shelby does everything it takes to get Mike back.”
The Scar Crow is a debut feature film from UK independent producer/director/writer Andy Thompson (Oxford) & Pete Benson (Aylesbury) and has been selected for a US premiere screening at the Dances With Films Festival on Wednesday June 10th, 2009 at 9:30 p.m. The movie premiered in the UK on April 27th, 2009 to a packed audience at the Coronet Cinema in Notting Hill as part of the London Independent Film Festival and won the Best Horror/Sci-Fi Feature Award.
Scar Crow starts in 2009 with four guys from a city insurance company who are not interested in countryside team building exercises and assault courses. They would rather be playing or watching football and downing several beers while chasing anything in a skirt. Yet here they are on an all expenses paid company trip to the middle of nowhere deep in the English countryside, not their idea of a jolly weekend away.
Posted by editor@vimooz.com on May 28, 2009 under Horror | Comments are off for this article
The 2006 film titled “Grim Love” loosely based on the real story of convicted killer and cannibal Armin Meiwes can be released in German theaters, a German court ruled. The film, starring Thomas Kretschmann and Keri Russell, was banned in Germany after a court ruled it infringed upon Meiwes’s personal rights.
Posted by editor@vimooz.com on under Horror | Comments are off for this article
By day he’s the executive editor at Tucson Lifestyle magazine. On nights and weekends and he is a filmmaker. Arizona filmmaker, Scott Barker, 51, will premiere his first movie, the indie horror “Dead on Site” on Saturday night at the Loft Cinema in Tucson.
Shot in and around Tucson, “Dead on Site” is about a group of university media arts majors who decide as their senior project to move into a house where a year before a family was murdered. In trying to solve the crime live on the Web, the students attract the attention of the killer, and, as Barker puts it, “bad things happen.”
Posted by editor@vimooz.com on May 25, 2009 under Horror | Comments are off for this article
If you’re a fan of horror films, be on the look out for Josh Hasty’s first feature film, “A Mannequin in Static.” Hasty wrote and directed the film.
Haunted by the stigma of their complicated pasts, seventeen year old Alex and his mother Anne are starting new lives together. Hidden from the truth, Alex finds himself feeling disconnected from the physical world he lives in, and begins finding places to live inside his head through the stories he writes.
Life begins to take a pleasant turn when Alex finds himself falling for his new best friend, Ashley. But as Alex begins to discover the truth about himself and the lies that create the world around him, he finds that he is living alone in his own world. However, the world he has created in his head is soon discovered to be no safer than the world that drove him there.