Archive for June, 2012

Suicide Forest next stop for Ringu Director

Posted in Horror News, Updates with tags , , on June 15, 2012 by splatterpictures

Hideo Nakata (director of Ringu ) is going to be directing a film based around the graphic novel “The Suicide Forest”

 

the story revolves around one of the most famous suicide spots in the world  Aokigahara, a vast forest outside Tokyo. Of course it’s rumoured that the forest is in fact haunted

I’ve always been fascinated by Aokighara and find news of this project very interesting. No word as of yet on actors, release dates or any of that good stuff but I will be keeping an eye on it and keep you all posted.

Alice Hearts Welsh Zombie (Ottawa, ON June 16th 2012 Book Premier!)

Posted in Horror News, Updates with tags , , , , on June 14, 2012 by splatterpictures

One of the new things we are going to be doing here at splatterpictures is not only shine the light on some fantastic home grown Canadian filmmakers but also moving on to authors as well. As i’ve said often; horror is alive and well in Canada and has been for many years. Even though I love horror content from all over the world there will always be a special place in my heart for stuff coming out of my own backyard. Check it out!

Hey all are you from Ottawa Ontario and looking for a super cool way to spend your Saturday June 16th!?

Here’s the details!
Alice Hearts Welsh Zombies
by Victoria Dunn
AKA Victoria Higgins and Meghan Dunn

Saturday, June 16th, 7:00 to 10:00 pm
Collected Works Bookstore & Coffeebar
1242 Wellington Street West (at Holland)
Ottawa (613) 722-1265

I haven’t gotten my hands on a copy of the book yet but I can tell you the writers seem like wonderful people who are true fans of the genre here is their synopsis!

The World Bog Snorkelling Championships in Wales is being menaced by shambling hordes of the undead. Fortunately for bog sport enthusiasts, Alice, the former telephone psychic, and Welly, the mostly indestructible man, head up Odyssey International’s Enforcement branch, dedicated to stomping out the supernatural. But Alice and Welly might not even make it to Wales because a fervent zombie rights activist has stowed his zombie best friend in their plane’s luggage compartment. Now the zombie plague is spreading at 25,000 feet, complicated by the moral dilemma that zombies just might be people too! Decaying, infectious, bitey people…

There is also going to be a super fun Zombie Beauty contest, so dress up as a zombie and show up!

Sinister (not Insidious)

Posted in Horror News, Updates with tags , , on June 14, 2012 by splatterpictures

Okay so the trailer doesn’t really seem that different from Insidious and the title is basically the same and it was produced by the same people who made Insidious but honestly I am really digging this trailer. It’s dealing with some familiar themes but they happen to be themes I gravitate towards anyways. The film is to be released October 5th but before then here’s all the details!

The film stars James Ransome, Ethan Hawke, Vincent D’Onofrio, Fred Dalton Thompson, Clare Foley and Juliet Rylance.

Synopsis BAM!

“The Story follows a journalist who moves his family into a house where another family was murdered. After moving in, he uncovers found footage that leads to clues about the murders. Ransone will play a deputy.”

 

 

Prometheus (Evolution is a hell of a thing)

Posted in Horror Showcase, Updates with tags , , , on June 12, 2012 by splatterpictures

When I heard that this movie was getting made I didn’t care. I love Alien, and Ridley Scott has the skills to pay the bills but for some reason it just didn’t blip on my radar. Then, holy hell did the hype start pouring in. I checked out the trailer and still wasn’t impressed. Sure it looked like it had high production value but I couldn’t make heads or tails of what it was trying to tell me. It didn’t help that the earliest reports were calling it a prequel to Alien and then by the time trailers were emerging (it seemed like a slightly different one every other week) everyone from camp Prometheus were adamant that it wasn’t really a prequel. It was clearly stated that this was a story that occupied the same universe as Alien and all of its sequels but that it was a story that would launch the events of alien and then run adjacent to the original franchise. So why were their still people confused? Probably because people just don’t read/listen. That’s probably a good lesson to anyone looking to promote future projects: Make sure your first message is the right one because that’s pretty much what us ignorant masses will remember.

I finally broke down and checked it out and I feel as though Ridley Scott just strutted into the theatre I was in, punched out a few pimply-faced theatre employees and blew a fucking hole in the wall with his Prometheus cannon to let the fresh air in. Ladies and gentlemen I have seen the light and it is Prometheus.

(Some small spoilers ahead, consider yourselves warned.)

The film starts off ominously enough, with a strange alien who looks like he is an avid watcher of fitness made simple, drinking some black goo, which results in him dying a horrible death. Cut to the not too distant future of 2089 and we find two archeologists Elizabeth Shaw and Charlie Holloway (Noomi Rapace and Logan Marshall-Green) in the midst of a major discovery. It seems that throughout earth there are cave drawings that indicate we were the product of alien creation. They dub the aliens “Engineers” and the Weyland Corporation (yeah the same one from Alien) finances a trip to the distant world to find them.

When they finally arrive in 2093 we meet the Crew which is made up of characters that are very much in keeping with the entire feel of the films that came before it. The synthetic David, (Michael Fassbender) The corporate douche (Charlize Theron) The grizzled but weary Captain Janek (Idris Elba) and a bunch of other character types you’ll find in any of the other alien movie are present.  The tech they use, the ship they have and the overall feel of “truckers in space” is there also. I defiantly felt like I was watching an Alien movie. That fact is almost a complaint because I found myself a little too familiar with what I was watching at first but thankfully plot elements and characters really surprised me in the end. The biggest question I’ve heard from people is; are their Xenomorphs (Aliens) in the movie? Well I won’t say much more than evolution is a hell of a thing.

The movie was visually breathtaking. It had equal parts gritty industrial and slick, clean and futuristic. The biggest joy for me was the use of practical special effects on many of critters that were running around. It just looked fantastic. There were some moments watching it that I had wished they didn’t use CGI but it’s just the nature of the beast, hint that means two things *wink wink*

Fassbender’s character of David is compelling and is easily the most interesting one of the bunch but I have to say that Noomi Rapace has a scene in the movie that is probably the most stomach turning example of being a badass I’ve ever seen. I’m not saying she’s Ripley level of badass here but damn. Big brass balls award goes to her character. Which reminds me, the deaths and gore in this film are top notch. There is a decent body count and they defiantly earn that R rating.

Some of the things I didn’t really care for were how rushed it seemed towards the end. I also felt like we didn’t get to spend enough time with characters before they were inevitable killed off. I hear that the directors cut is going to have another 20 or so minutes added to it so I have a feeling that will be cleared up. Also I realize it’s just a movie but the idea we would have fully sentient androids, deep space travel, hyper sleep and half of the other things they were using in less than 100 years seems a bit far fetched but whatever it’s a movie.

Finally I’ll address the general complaints I’ve been hearing about too many unanswered questions, or the plot wasn’t solid. While I agree there were unanswered questions Ridley Scott said they would be answered in the sequel if they get one but he worked hard to make sure Prometheus stood on its own. I actually don’t really think that it does. I mean I liked it a lot but not so much that I would deny it suffers from the same pitfalls as any film that is intended to be the first in a trilogy. I am really hoping for a sequel because I loved how it left off.

Prometheus is wonderfully written, visually stunning and full of characters that are destined to become part of pop culture history. There is still room in this world for R rated blockbusters and they don’t have to pander to the audience and Ridley Scott just proved it. Prometheus has busted the lore of the alien universe wide open and I want more.

“Oh God, what did I eat?”