Archive for April 13, 2012

A special thanks. (Splatterpictures: One Year Later)

Posted in Updates on April 13, 2012 by splatterpictures

A year ago Splatterpictures launched for the first time. It was a small idea; I wanted to write about horror. I wanted to talk about the weird movies I watched at 1 AM as a kid when I was supposed to be in bed. So many great memories of my childhood are speckled with horror and sci-fi. Staying up with my mom every Saturday night to watch Tales from the Crypt or watching a weird monster movie with my dad.

Splatterpictures has really given me something to be proud of and it’s all thanks to you guys. And that’s really what this post is about. I want to sincerely thank everyone who helped me get Splatterpictures off the ground. My family and friends have been extremely supportive of this endeavor and I owe them a lot for that.

My regular readers have gone above and beyond with their donations and it has only made me want to work even harder to ensure you guys get regular and quality content. The internet is a funny beast and it is really as free as you want it to be. I have some fantastic stuff coming up in the next few months.

Looking back on some of my first posts and looking at my latest one it’s funny to think about how much the site has changed over the last 12 months and it really makes me excited for how much farther it can go. Oh, and just incase you’re worried I’ll run out of movies.

No this isn't all of them. Just most of them 😛

Thanks again!

Deliverance from Evil (we’re gettin’ Indie!)

Posted in Horror Showcase, Updates with tags , , , , , , on April 13, 2012 by splatterpictures

As I’ve said many times on this site. We love independent horror on Splatterpictures. That being said it opens us up to some things that can be pretty awful. Thankfully Deliverance from Evil manages to avoid a lot of the pitfalls that just make things with a smaller budget impossible to enjoy.

Deliverance from Evil is brought to us by the good folks at Pumpkin Patch Pictures. It’s directed by Indie horror veterans the Quiroz brothers. The film stars Angel Avoles and Jose Rosete.

The basic idea is that a couple move in to a new home with their young son who is taking a bath. Suddenly a mysterious force causes the boy to drown and it triggers a chain of events that forces the devastated parents to uncover the mysterious and tragic history of their new home and banish an evil force before it destroys them all.

The film never loses focus of its story and that is one of the strongest aspects of it. Both Avoles and Rosete do a fine job portraying a couple who has just lost their son in a seemingly sudden accident. I think they both start off as likable characters that come off sympathetic and sincere in their portrayals. I also really enjoyed the secondary characters. The special cameo by Friday the 13th writer Victor Miller was also a nice little treat. He plays the sort of soothsayer mailman.

One of the biggest problems I had with the film was the lighting. Supernatural horror relies on many things to create tension or fear. Actors have to do their part, music is also very important but you can’t ignore the lighting. Many of the scenes (in fact almost all of them) take place during the day or in well lit areas. In supernatural thrillers I often tease about how dark the films always are and how even when characters turn on a light it often makes little to no difference. As cheesy as the perpetually dark rooms can be there is something to be said for the atmosphere they create. Ghost stories like this rely on our imaginations to fill in a lot of the blanks. When you’re in a dark room your mind can play tricks on you and shadows can suddenly take shape into something horrific.

Scenes where I felt there should have been a lot more tension just didn’t work because it was bright as day. The film did have more night shots towards the end and when certain scene were going on at night or in dimly lit rooms they were noticeably more effective.

The special effects were great. I was glad to see some practical stuff which always looks much better than CGI when you’re dealing with smaller budgets. There is a great scene with a pillow indenting as if a head is reading on it that looks great. The effects on the ghost were decent as well but I would have liked to have seen more instances where the characters were encountering the ghost as oppose the just us as the audience seeing him.

All and all the Quiroz brothers offer up well thought out character driven supernatural horror that is defiantly worth a look. The complaints I have are pretty minor and by the second half of the movie they are mostly fixed. The ending especially has a great creepy spin on it that sticks with you. Check it out!