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Archive for July 5th, 2009

Dr Who appearing at San Diego Comic Con

Posted by goremasterfx on July 5, 2009

David Tennant

Danielle – FamousMonstersofFilmland.com

   Guess who’s attending this year’s Comic-Con in San Diego?

In support of BBC America’s U.S. Premiere of four Doctor Who specials, the Doctor himself, David Tennant, will appear alongside writer/executive producer Russel T. Davies at the 2009 pop culture event. They will take part in a Doctor Who panel along with executive producer Julie Gardner and director Euros Lyn, Sunday, July 26 10:00-11:00 PT.

You can also catch Davies and Gardner at a panel for Torchwood, alongside director Euros Lyn, Sunday, July 26 2:15-3:45 PT.

At the same panel, check out the talent from the sci-fi drama Being Human. Creator and Writer, Tobey Whithouse, lead actors Russell Tovey, Lenora Crichlo and Aidan Turner will give you the scoop on what it’s like to play characters with double lives as a werewolf, vampire and ghost. All four of these panelists are also signing exclusively at the BBC America booth, Saturday, July 25 3:00-4:00 PT. 

For the first time, cult comedy favorite and BAFTA-nominated, The Mighty Boosh, is coming to Comic-Con. On Friday, July 24 from 4:45-5:45 the creators and actors will hold a discussion about their magical world. They’ll even sign autographs beforehand in the autograph area. 

Check out what’s coming up next at this year’s 2009 Comic-Con in San Diego

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The Collector is a true home invasion thriller!

Posted by goremasterfx on July 5, 2009

The Collector

 

Mark Gorelord – GoreMaster News

The Collector,  directed by Feast, Saw IV and Saw V writer Marcus Dunstan, follows the story of handyman and ex-con Arkin (Josh Stewart), who aims to repay a debt to his ex-wife (Daniella Alonso) by robbing his new employer’s country home. Unfortunately for Arkin, a far worse enemy has already laid claim to the property – and the family. As the seconds tick down to midnight, Arkin becomes a reluctant hero trapped by a masked “Collector” in a maze of lethal invention – the Spanish Inquisition as imagined by Rube Goldberg – while trying to rescue the very family he came to rob. Sound like something a few of you may check out?

Producer Mickey Liddell explains: “Marcus Dunstan and Patrick Melton have come up with a unique twist on the home invasion thriller that we think will have people gripping their seats,” says Liddell. “With its stylized blend of action and horror, the movie delivers on every level.”

Ralis Kahn (Tenacious D in The Pick of Destiny, Dogma, Progeny, Kiss Kiss Bang Bang) is the makeup department head

Gary J. Tunnicliffe (Mission: Impossible II, X-Men Origins: Wolverine, Blade, Candyman) is the special makeup effects designer

Claire Jane Vranian (Halloween: Resurrection, My Bloody Valentine, Exorcist: The Beginning) is the special makeup effects administrator

Mike J. Regan (How the Grinch Stole Christmas, Team America: World Police, Men in Black) is the senior makeup effects artist

Frank Ceglia (The Sum of All Fears, Scream, The A-Team, Sorority Row) is the special effects coordinator 

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Amazon Specials!

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Disability service team prepares for big-scream debut with horror tale

Posted by goremasterfx on July 5, 2009

Matt Fairall plays the head vampire in James Jones And The Living Dead.

Matt Fairall plays the head vampire in James Jones And The Living Dead.

Tim Elliott – Sydney Morning Herald
   At the public library the zombies play pool with the vampires, and the violently deceased take tea and scones.

Such is life on the set of James Jones And The Living Dead, an Australian horror film written and shot entirely by people with a disability.

“We’re all relaxing now,” said an actor, Matt Fairall, who has a mild intellectual disability.

“Then we’ll be putting the sounds – all the screams – to the zombie scene.”

A huge horror movie fan (“I love all the ones that have blood and gore”), Fairall, 19, stars as the head vampire in the short film, which has been made by Macarthur Disability Services and Camden Council.

The film, which will premiere at Narellan United Cinemas this year, is part of a series of workshops that uses movie making both as therapy and skills training for disabled people in Sydney’s south-west.

“It’s been awesome,” said Frank Nicastri, who has spina bifida.

“I have been exposed to different production platforms and also how to work better with other people. It’s definitely made me more confident and eager to get out there, whereas before I was a lot shier.”

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Nicastri, 20, appears in the film as an extra, but his main role is as sound recordist and mixer.

“Part of my disability is that I have hydracephalus, which is pressure on the brain. It means that my problem-solving skills are not so great, and I don’t handle stress that well.

“But in making the movie I had to just deal with that. I had to be more patient, because most of the people we are working with have intellectual disabilities. When there was a problem, I had to learn to bite my tongue and work through it.”

The film tells the story of several Macarthur Disability Services staff members who are attacked one day by a group of zombies who rise up from the office grounds.

Asked where he got the idea for the movie, Uoka Antonia (who also plays the hero, James Jones), said: “My head.”

The movie-making workshops have been inundated by applicants since being advertised in March.

“Usually people with disabilities are the subject of films,” said Julie Deane, the community training and development manager at Macarthur Disability Services.

“But this time they are making the film. In that sense it’s very empowering for them.”

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Valerie Cruz, ‘True Blood’s’ First Latina Vampire

Posted by goremasterfx on July 5, 2009

valerie cruz

Marilyn Beck and Stacy Jenel Smith – National Ledger

Valerie Cruz, who comes aboard “True Blood” this season as the show’s first Latina vampire, Isabel, recounts that she was surprised to find series creator Alan Ball on hand when she first went in for a casting meeting.
   “Funny, I wasn’t even expecting him to be in the room. A lot of producers nowadays, it’s like they can’t even be bothered to be in the room anymore. They want it on tape,” says the actress, known as Sylvia Prado — Jimmy Smits’ wife — to “Dexter” fans. “There are a lot of things you can’t get from an audition tape — the energy when someone walks in, their interaction. Alan is such a class act. He’s there at every table read. The writers I’ve spoken to say he’s incredibly gracious — he trusts the people that he hires to really do a great job. The cool thing about it is, once you’re cast, once the whole thing is put together, he takes a step back and lets people do creatively what they want to do.”
   One thing she did, as Isabel, “I definitely asked for the wardrobe. Everyone was pretty gracious about that. She’s 600 years old and definitely from the time of the Spanish Inquisition in my mind. It’s pretty clear where she comes from. She still speaks with a Spanish accent.”
   Adds Cruz, “I’ve always loved vampires, so I was really excited about doing the show. Well, you’d be hard-pressed to find an actor who doesn’t get excited about the prospect of playing a character with this mindset that you live forever. The world just weighs on you differently, you know? That’s part of what makes vampires so interesting to play. In a sense they lack humanity, but in another sense there is a great humanness about them.”
   Cruz says she became an avid fan of “True Blood” in its first season. “My handful of Sunday nights when I could watch TV were ‘Mad Men’ and ‘True Blood,’ even though I was working on ‘Dexter’ at the time. It made me feel a little bit of a traitor.” 

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Visitors flock to the Capital of ‘Twilight’

Posted by goremasterfx on July 5, 2009

twilight

By SU-JIN YIM – New York Post

In Washington state’s scenic northern Olympic Peninsula, you can find “Twilight” body glitter for $2.99. “I Love Jacob” Christmas ornaments for $11.99. Four different daily tours of “Twilight” destinations for $39 per person. Even a “Twilight” sparkling wine.

It’s what you would expect from ground zero for the global phenomenon/vampire love story. As publicity ramps up for “New Moon,” due out in November, locals in Forks, Wash., also known as Bella’s hometown, are girding for visitors.

But drive seven miles west to La Push, and the roar of the marketing machine turns to a dignified whisper. The home of the tiny Quileute Nation (pronounced QUILL-ee-oot) sits on a square mile of land on the Pacific Ocean, boasting an unspoiled view of the sometimes stormy, often misty beaches.

The setting for much of “New Moon” and subsequent books, real-life La Push is a stripped down, back-to-nature experience. Giant, weathered logs litter the beaches. The tribe-owned resort offers rooms from $45 to $300, with no TVs, no phones and spotty WiFi. The sound of the surf is a constant companion, and it’s easy to imagine Bella finding peace and refuge here with her werewolf friends.

“Twilight” author Stephenie Meyer chose Forks after Googling for the rainiest place in America and was pleased to find the Quileute nearby.

Locals marvel at how much she got right, but the economically depressed reservation is ambivalent about “Twilight” and how its 350 residents should capitalize on it. Compared to Forks, where visitors can pose with Bella’s truck and participate in a “Twilight” look-alike contest, the reservation is cloaked in centuries-old anonymity.

“There are mixed feelings,” says tribal council member Anna Rose Counsell. Over the last three months, the tribe has struggled over what to do. “This is a phenomenon that is happening whether we like it or not.”

Tribal leaders hired a p.r. pro, Jackie Jacobs, in February after being inundated with “Twilight” inquiries. The tribe opened its Wednesday night drum circle to all visitors, which recently included two families of “Twilight” fans.

At the tribe-owned Oceanside Resort, director Renee Rux says business is up 30 percent, thanks to “Twilight.” “It’s been huge for us,” Rux says. The resort recently partnered with a charter boat company to offer “Twilight” tour packages for $250.

At the moment, the shop stocks few “Twilight” souvenirs, including hand-knit hats emblazoned with “Bella,” “Jacob” and “Edward.” Another holds $8 bottles of sand, labeled “Jacob’s Treasure.”

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Rux, a non-native, retrained the staff to reach out to visitors. “That’s the paradigm shift,” she says. “People [now] want that experience of being with the Quileute.”

A hospitality industry veteran, Rux promised to add $1 million to the resort’s $2 million in revenue when she was hired last September. It’s just not clear how much the Quileute people want to share their culture for profit.

Hospitality is an ingrained part of their culture, but elders are worried about building a tourist economy. They fret about how their creation story is portrayed in the book. The tribe says they were changed from wolves to humans by a traveler. Meyer took literary liberty, enabling them to change back at will in an eternal battle against vampires.

“This is our opportunity to educate people on Quileute history,” Counsell says.

At the Wednesday drum circle, artist and grandmother Ann Penn-Charles works up a sweat in the kitchen while a group of men sing traditional songs. More than 75 people have come on this night for the tribe’s free dinner and music.

Quileute artists take pride in harvesting their own materials, whether it’s raw animal sinew for a drum or cedar bark for baskets. Penn-Charles says she’s felt judged by some tribal members because she knits the names of “Twilight” characters into traditional cowichin hats. They sell for $50 at the resort store, or $25 directly from her.

“They’re resentful. They think we’re selling out,” Penn-Charles says. “It’s not. It makes your car payment, or those braces your kids need.”

The tribe has hired a business developer, Justin Finkbonner, who also spearheads a crusade to market Quileute and other native artists.

“We have so many talented artists here, so many untapped,” Counsell says. “They don’t know how to market.”

In Forks, Chinook Pharmacy owner Chuck Carlson, agrees. He’s seen a 20 percent jump in business thanks to “Twilight” merchandise, but the store only carries one Quileute craft — tiny hand-woven cedar baskets that sit behind a glass case and sell for $49.

“They need to take more advantage of what’s going on,” Carlson says. “I don’t think they understand how to do that.”

In particular, he feels the tribe should profit from the tour buses that rumble through the reservation. “I would be saying, ‘Hey, you’re coming down here, you’re making a lot of money off us. You need to share some of that profit.’ “

The tribe is now talking about working with tour operator Dazzled by Twilight. Its evolution as a business likely will only grow as the rest of the books are made into movies. In later books, the Quileutes’ role becomes nearly as prominent as the Cullens’.

Fans of La Push hope visitors who come for “Twilight” will learn to appreciate the area’s natural allure. That could help connect the Quileutes to more sustainable tourism, such as fishing trips with a Native American guide, kayak rentals and eateries focused on fresh seafood that will attract culinary tourists.

Tribal publicist Jacobs practically scoffs at questions about what the Quileutes will do once “Twilight” fades.

“The Quileute have traced their ancestry to the Ice Age,” she says. “One day, ‘Twilight’ will go away and they will continue being the hospitable, welcoming people they’ve always been, practicing the culture they have been practicing for tens of thousands of years.

“Once ‘Twilight’ is gone, the Quileute will be fine.”

* light” scenes. St. James Island is in the distance.

* The Quileute Nation, based in La Push, is ambivalent about embracing “Twilight” tourists.

* Tribe members lead visitors in traditional dances at their community gathering.

* The Forks, Wash., house that serves as Bella’s home in “Twilight” is a regular stop for tours.

* In the Forks Hospital parking lot, fictional vampire doc Carlisle Cullen gets his own spot.

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Hungarian-American Film Director to Direct Next ‘Predator’ Movie

Posted by goremasterfx on July 5, 2009

Shannon Shea works on The Predator

Shannon Shea works on The Predator

by John Winn
   For the next “Predator” movie, the franchise may be getting a taste of goulash along with its staple of blood and gore.
   According to Daily Variety, Hungarian-American film director Nimrod Antal, known for his 2007 movie, “Vacancy,” starring Kate Beckinsale and Luke Wilson, has been tapped by Fox to film the next film in the popular “Predator” franchise.
   The move follows the studio’s decision to bring director Robert Rodriguez on board to give the series a much needed makeover.
   In addition to Rodriguez, Antal will be working alongside screenwriters Alex Litvak and Michael Finch in overseeing the film.
   Besides slasher films such as “Vacancy,” Antal also directed the critically acclaimed “Kontroll” in his ancestral home of Hungary, which won him several awards, including the coveted Gold Hugo Award at the Chicago Film Festival.
   The Antal-helmed film will be the fifth in a string of “Predator” films dating back to Arnold Schwarzenegger’s appearance in the first film in 1987. Since then, the franchise has spawned several sequels, including “Predator 2,” starring Danny Glover, and the “Alien Vs. Predator” spin-off franchise.
   The film is expected to be released in 2010.

Master Makeup Effects Man Shannon Shea led the team on the original Predator..read his exclusive interview here

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