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Archive for July, 2009

Black Sabbath guitarist to start a horror movie franchise.

Posted by GoreMaster Special Effects on July 29, 2009

Tony Iommi

Tony Iommi

Alexandra Hartnett – Examiner.com

The UK’s Guardian Online reported Monday, July 27, that former Black Sabbath guitarist Tony Iommi has signed a deal to launch a series of horror films. These films will be called, what else, “Black Sabbath”.

Iommi will team up with producer Mike Fleiss on the project. Fleiss is best known for his reality TV work on shows such as The Bachelor and Shocking Behavior Caught on Tape parts One and Two. However, Fleiss has served as GoreMaster Makeup Effects Manualproducer on the horror films Hostel, Hostel: Part II and the 2006 remake The Texas Chainsaw Massacre.

This announcement comes on the heals of a suit filed by Black Sabbath’s infamous front man Ozzy Osbourne against Iommi over rights to the band’s name. Osbourne is claiming the guitarist illegally took sole ownership of the band’s name when he registered a US trademark. The Guardian writes, “Osbourne is pursuing Iommi over his unilateral use of the Black Sabbath name, seeking rights and lost royalties. Iommi registered the US trademark in 2000, but Osbourne has argued that ‘morally and ethically the trademark should be owned by the four [band members] equally’”.

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Josh Brolin Talks About Sex Scenes With Megan Fox

Posted by GoreMaster Special Effects on July 28, 2009

Josh Brolin

Josh Brolin

megan fox

Megan Fox

Celebuzz.com

The star of the upcoming flick Jonah Hex said his sex scene with brunette stunner Megan Fox was quite awkard.

In the movie, Brolin plays gun-slinging Jonah Hex, who has to wear a prosthetic face. Each morning, he spent three hours every day having his mouth pulled back and stuck with gaffer tape for the prosthetics and a mouthpiece to be fitted.

Megan, on the other hand, plays a hot hooker named Leila who falls in love with the masked man. However, Brolin says, “It was tough to figure out how to kiss with that thing on.”

And their love scenes were even more difficult. “To be honest, it was uncomfortable; those scenes are uncomfortable,” he said. “It was especially uncomfortable because I had this thing on my face.”

Make Up Department
  Kimberly Amacker … makeup artist
  Brent Baker … mold technician: Tinsley Transfers Inc.
  Nikki I Brown … makeup artist
  Samantha M. Capps … makeup artist
  Stacey Herbert… makeup artist
  Rolf John Keppler … special makeup effects artist Goremaster Makeup Effects Manual
  Krystal Kershaw … makeup artist
  Eryn Krueger Mekash … special makeup effects artist
  Jack Lazzaro … makeup artist
  Rose Librizzi … makeup artist
  Darryl Lucas … additional makeup artist
  Kerry Mendenhall … key hair stylist
  Gerald Quist … makeup artist: Megan Fox
  Melizah Schmidt … hair stylist
  Christien Tinsley … designer and creator: special makeup effects
  Christien Tinsley … makeup artist: Josh Brolin
  Christien Tinsley … makeup department head

Special Effects Department
  Roland Blancaflor … special effects technician
  James Bomalick… special effects technician
  Bret Borgeson … special effects assistant
  Darin Bouyssou … mold department: Tinsley Transfers
  Chris Cline … special effects technician
  Val Crawford … hair/fabrication: Tinsley Transfer
  Josh Hakian … special effects supervisor
  Edward Joubert… special effects technician
  Cass McClure… special effects technician
  David Waine … special effects coordinator

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Dorian Gray to premiere in Toronto

Posted by GoreMaster Special Effects on July 28, 2009

Colin Firth’s new film, Dorian Gray, will have its world premiere at the Toronto International Film Festival.

   Dorian GrayThe classic story is about A corrupt young man somehow keeps his youthful beauty eternally, but a special painting gradually reveals his inner ugliness to all.

The British film, which also stars Ben Barnes and Emilia Fox, will debut at the Canadian festival along with Harry Brown, starring Michael Caine, and Perrier’s Bounty, featuring Cillian Murphy and Jim Broadbent.

 

Make Up DepartmentGoremaster Makeup Effects Manual
  Sidony Etherton … daily makeup trainee
  Duncan Jarman… prosthetic sculptor
  Paul Mooney … hair stylist
  Paula Price … make-up/hair artist
  Lesley Smith … makeup artist and hair stylist
  Jeremy Woodhead… hair and makeup designer
  

Special Effects Department
  James Davis III … special effects senior technician
  Hugh Goodbody … special effects senior technician
  Mark Holt … special effects supervisor

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Tomoo Haraguchi Introduces You To His Miniatures and DEATH KAPPA!

Posted by GoreMaster Special Effects on July 28, 2009

Death KappaTodd Brown – TwitchFilm.net

Best known for their backing of extreme splatter films Machine Girl and Tokyo Gore Police Fever Dreams are about to dip their toes into another part of the Japanese cult film pool with Tomoo Haraguchi’s upcoming kaiju film Death Kappa.  And, yes, Haraguchi has turned everybody’s favorite friendly little turtle spirit into a fearsome giant killer. 

Don’t know Haraguchi’s name?  You probably know his work.  The man has done effects work for the likes of Kore-Eda (Air Doll) and Tsukamoto (Bullet Ballet) while designing creature effects for high profile films like Ashura and Uzumaki and you want kaiju cred?  How about a bit of Gamera?  This man knows his stuff, no doubt about it.

And while Haraguchi is still relatively early in the production of his latest directorial effort he has already put together an introductory promo that showcases both the miniature sets that will be used as well as the creature itself.  And, yes, kaiju fans – this will be all old-school style: men in rubber suits and miniature buildings with not a digital effect to be found.

see the video HERE

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An extraterrestrial race forced to live in slum-like conditions in ‘District 9’

Posted by GoreMaster Special Effects on July 28, 2009

District 9 is an upcoming science fiction film produced by Peter Jackson, set for an August 14th release date and will be distributed by Sony’s Tristar Pictures.

  district 9

 It takes place in Johannesburg, South Africa; aliens made first contact with Earth twenty-eight years prior while humanity waited for the hostile attack or for giant advances in technology, though neither came. Instead, the aliens that arrived were refugees, the last survivors of their home world. The creatures were set up in a makeshift home in South Africa’s District 9 as the world’s nations argued over what to do with them. Patience over the alien situation ran out and control over them was contracted out to Multi-National United (MNU), a private company uninterested in the aliens’ welfare.

   MNU stands to receive tremendous profits if they can make the aliens’ advanced weaponry work, but have failed because it requires alien DNA. Tension between the aliens and the humans comes to a head when an MNU field operative, Wikus van der Merwe (Sharlto Copley), contracts a mysterious virus that begins changing his DNA. Wikus quickly becomes the most hunted man in the world, as well as the most valuable, for he is the key to unlocking the secrets of alien technology. Van der Merwe becomes ostracized and friendless and hides amongst the creatures locked within District 9.

Make Up Department
  Donald Brooker … makeup effects & prosthetics: WETA Workshop
  Daniel Cockersell … makeup effects & prosthetics: WETA Workshop
  Joe Dunckley … prosthetics effects supervisor
  Ben Hawker … makeup effects & prosthetics: WETA Workshop
  Thebe Malatse … assistant makeup artist
  Antony McMullen … prosthetic artist: WETA Workshop
  Matt Patte … makeup effects & prosthetics: WETA Workshop
  Frances Richardson … makeup effects supervisor: WETA Workshop
  Sarah Rubano … prosthetics makeup supervisor
  Charlie Runge … assistant makeup artist
  Eden Small … makeup effects & prosthetics: WETA Workshop
  Greg Tozer … makeup effects & prosthetics: WETA Workshop
  Leon von Solms … makeup/hair supervisor

 

Special Effects DepartmentGoreMaster Makeup Effects Manual
  David Barkes … special effects coordinator: additional photography
  Doug Falconer … special effects technician: New Zealand
  Steve Ingram … special effects supervisor: New Zealand
  Gareth J. Jensen … creature painter
  Joel McGowan … special effects technician: additional photography
  Phil McLaren … special effects technician: New Zealand
  Carlos Slater … special effects technician

Mark Gorelord – GoreMaster.com News

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Apted starts Australian shoot for Narnia: Voyage Of The Dawn Treader

Posted by GoreMaster Special Effects on July 27, 2009

The Chronicles of Narnia The Voyage Of The Dawn TreaderWendy Mitchell – ScreenDaily.com

The Chronicles of Narnia: The Voyage Of The Dawn Treader, the third film in the franchise, started shooting today (July 27) on location in Queensland, Australia.

The film will shoot entirely in Queensland, primarily at the Warner Roadshow Studio in Gold Coast, which boasts the Southern Hemisphere’s largest water tank.

Filming is expected to wrap in November, and the film will then go into post-production for a year to be readied for a global release in December 2010.

Michael Apted is directing, with previous cast members Georgie Henley, Skandar Keynes and Ben Barnes reprising their roles.

This production is a joint venture between 20th Century Fox and Walden Media (Fox takes over from Walden’s previous partner Disney).
Andrew Adamson, who directed the first two films, is one of Voyage’s producers, along with Mark Johnson and Philip Steur. Returning executive producers are Perry Moore and CS Lewis’ stepson Douglas Gresham.

The third film’s plot sees Edmund and Lucy and cousin Eustace (played by GoreMaster Makeup Effects ManualSon Of Rambow’s Will Poulter) swallowed into a painting, onto a Narnian ship for a journey to the edges of the world. They join forces with Prince Caspian and warrior mouse Reepicheep as they face Dufflepuds, dragons and merfolk. Christopher Markus & Stephen McFeely wrote the screenplay with Richard LaGravenese and Michael Petroni.

Supporting cast members include Australian actors such as Gary Sweet, Bruce Spence, Arthur Angel and New Zealander Shane Rangi. Liam Neeson again voices Aslan the Lion.

Apted is working with Oscar-nominated DoP Dante Spinotti and film editor Rick Shaine.

CS Lewis published The Voyage Of The Dawn Treader in 1952, the third of his seven Narnia books.

The previous two Narnia films have taken a combined $1.2 billion at the global box office.

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Kate Beckinsale might be in Gears of War movie

Posted by GoreMaster Special Effects on July 27, 2009

Kate Beckinsale

Mark Fujii – CollegeNews.com
   During Epic Games’ Gears of War Panel at Comic-Con 2009 in San Diego California, the director, Len Wiseman, and writer, Chris Morgan, of the upcoming film adaptation shared some details with fans about potential casting selections for the movie.

According to IGN, amongst the prospects to play Maria, the wife of one of the game’s protagonists, Dominic Santiago, Len Wiseman said he was interested in British actress Kate Beckinsale.

   “If I can convince [Kate Beckinsale]—and I think I have a shot—I’d love to see that,” said Wiseman. He is also currently married to Beckinsale. Minor detail, that.

Though best known for her more dramatic roles in films like The Aviator and Pearl Harbor, Beckinsale is no stranger to making action flicks either. She starred in 2003 action movie Underworld as a sultry, leather clad vampire, and co-starred opposite Hugh Jackman in 2004’s Van Helsing.

   However, contrary to Internet rumors that Dwayne “The Rock” Johnson would be starring in a Gears of War movie, Wiseman was quick to announce they were currently not pursuing the former WWE wrestler.

   “A Doom connection would not be smart for us,” said Wiseman, referring to the 2005 film adaptation of the classic PC shooter franchise which was a box office flop. The Doom movie starred recognizable actors like Johnson and Karl Urban, but was scorned by critics and currently holds a Rotten Tomatoes rating of only 20%.

Wiseman said he wasn’t looking to “throw a bunch of strongmen into the ring and see who comes out victorious… I’m looking for an actor for the role and then put him into shape,” according to IGN.

   Wiseman also added that he’s “always thinking who could play the best Marcus [the leading protagonist in Gears of War]. You want to get hooked into the character and then all the amazing spectacle.”

In addition to talking about some of the casting choices for Gears of War, the game’s executive producer, Rod Ferguson, talked about how they were taking steps to avoid the failures of past video game movies.

“You can be too tied to what is the game,” Ferguson said.

   Ferguson then elaborated that creators “so oriented at grabbing the gaming audience, we don’t leave behind what shouldn’t be in the movie. We’re about making the best movie possible, not about making Gears of War the game into a movie” before adding that previous movie-game adaptations “haven’t been willing to let go.”

According to Ferguson, Epic Games, developers of the Gears of War video game series gave the film’s director and writer “basic stuff that are important” but otherwise only requested that Wiseman and Morgan “”make the best movie possible that fits [their] medium.”

   One change that gamers could see in the movie that differs from the video game is the appearance of female COG soldiers. In the Gears of War video games, the cast is almost exclusively male. When asked if women soldiers would play a bigger part in the film than in the games, Wiseman said, “I’d love to see it happen. I’m a big supporter of that.”

   Though a script or a firm plot has yet to be written out, Morgan told Comic-Con attendees that “Emergence Day is making its way into the film. That will be big.”

Emergence Day is a pivotal moment in the Gears of War video game’s storyline where an alien race called The Locust dig their way to the planet’s surface and begin waging war on humanity.

   However, Emergence Day takes place before the events of the first Gears of War game, leading many to believe that the movie will be a prologue for the series rather than a sequel.

Len Wiseman’s last film as director was for Live Free or Die Hard; Morgan is known as the writer for the Angelina Jolie shooter Wanted.

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At home with Horror

Posted by GoreMaster Special Effects on July 27, 2009

Filmmakers -- and Baltimore natives -- Jeremy Kasten (pictured, talking to actors) and Dan Griffiths are filming 'The Dead Ones' in Baltimore. (Baltimore Sun photo by Kenneth K. Lam / July 23, 2009)

Filmmakers -- and Baltimore natives -- Jeremy Kasten (pictured, talking to actors) and Dan Griffiths are filming 'The Dead Ones' in Baltimore. (Baltimore Sun photo by Kenneth K. Lam / July 23, 2009)

Chris Kaltenbach – Baltimore Sun

   Growing up in Baltimore in the late 1980s, Dan Griffiths and Jeremy Kasten knew each other just enough to be wary. When, as freshmen at Boston’s Emerson College, fate cast them as roommates, neither was exactly thrilled.
   “I called the school right away,” says Griffiths, “to say, ‘Hey, I kind of know this guy. Is there a way I can not live in this guy’s room?’ “
The two men roar with laughter. If the housing people at Emerson had only listened.
   But they didn’t, and now, some two decades later, these two Baltimore guys are sitting together on a couch in a largely deserted West Baltimore school building. For the next three weeks, the imposing structure, its hallways mostly empty, its classrooms in disrepair, will double as a set for the third horror movie they’ve made together. Griffiths and Kasten both call Los Angeles home these days, both make a steady living in the movie business. But today they’re really home, back in the city that nurtured their childhood cinematic dreams. And they’re thrilled.
   “Since Dan and I first became friends, and really partners in filmmaking, in college, we’ve had this idea of coming back to Baltimore,” says Kasten, 38, who will be directing The Dead Ones when filming begins Tuesday. “The idea of coming home to make a movie was always incredibly thrilling, both because it’s home, and because Baltimore is charming. It’s a real thing, there’s magic in the air here.”
   Griffiths, 37, looks at his friend and nods in agreement. A former kid actor – look closely, and you might find him on the dance floor in John Waters’ 1988 Hairspray – he’ll be producing, keeping an eye on the business side of things, ensuring that The Dead Ones stays within its $600,000 budget.
   “I feel a real connection to the idea that independent film really comes from Baltimore on some level,” says Griffiths. “Baltimore can rightly lay claim to that, because of John Waters and that fierce independent spirit that came from Baltimore. I think Baltimore seems like a place that really does things on its own terms.”
   Both men look their parts. Griffiths appears decidedly the more conservative, clean-shaven, his hair closely cropped, his shirttail tucked in, while Kasten appears happily disheveled, his hair going in all directions at once, his shirttail flapping, a goatee giving him a vaguely sinister look. Maybe that’s why they work so well together.
   Kasten, who grew up in Mount Washington and attended the Baltimore School for the Arts, says he knew from an early age that he wanted to make movies. And he was lucky enough to have parents willing to work with that dream.
   “From the second grade, my parents were very supportive,” he says. “But they were smart. They bought me a super-8 camera, but I had to buy the film and pay for the processing. I had to earn the money, from my allowance. So I made a movie maybe twice a year, I made the props, I wrote the script, I did everything.”
   One of his first movies? The Guy Who Killed Because He Was Bored. Sounds like the perfect springboard for a career in low-budget horror.
  “Yeah, some of my early films, when I was a kid, were inspired by John Waters,” says Kasten, again invoking the name of Charm City’s favorite cinematic sleazemeister. “Some of those movies, they were almost intentionally bad, and I found that kind of inspiring. That independent brashness – that’s a Baltimore reality.”

GoreMaster Makeup Effects ManualGriffiths, who grew up in Ruxton and graduated from Friends School, and Kasten spent time on local movie sets, gaining experience and perspective that would eventually come in handy. Besides his work on Hairspray, Griffiths shot a scene for Waters’ Cry-Baby (unfortunately, it ended-up on the cutting-room floor). In 1988, a teen-age Kasten spent three weeks as an extra on Her Alibi, hanging out with supermodel Paulina Porizkova and her brother. (“She took us under her wing and tormented us,” he says cryptically. “I knew, at that moment, that my life had great promise.”) He later spent two weeks as a production assistant on He Said, She Said, a romantic comedy starring Kevin Bacon and Elizabeth Perkins.
   While Kasten was honing his moviemaking chops, setting out on a path that would eventually lead to a career, Griffiths was pretty much spinning his wheels. He had dreams of being an actor, but after stints in New York and Boston, realized he didn’t have the discipline necessary to succeed. So he moved to San Francisco, where he wound up with a job as a publicist on a low-budget film that really didn’t need one.
  “I called Jeremy one day and told him I was a publicist, and he sounded really disappointed in me,” Griffiths remembers. ” ‘That’s not a thing you should be. Why don’t you be a producer?’ He basically said that to me. And I thought, ‘Well, what do I think about that?’ “
   A little later, after working on some forgettable movies and even more forgettable TV pilots (including one for a series called Gorilla Grunge, about some thawed-out Neanderthals living with a young girl and her anthropologist uncle), Griffiths called again. This time, Kasten was working on his own movie, an off-and-on project that stretched out over four years called The Attic Expeditions.
   “He said, ‘Do you want to be a producer?’ And I said, sheepishly, ‘OK.’ So I quit my day job, and I started doing it. Being a producer, it clicked with me almost right away.”
   For a first-time effort, The Attic Expeditions, about a convicted murderer in an insane asylum who begins to question whether the crime ever happened at all, turned out pretty well, earning money for its investors (including Kasten’s aunt and uncle) and eventually getting bought by Blockbuster. “Because they bought it, there were, like, 13 copies in every store, spread out over two shelves,” Kasten remembers with a smile. “You’d walk in, and there it was. I walked into Blockbuster once a day for the first three months. I still occasionally do.”
   Since The Attic Expedition’s 2001 release, Kasten has directed a handful of films, including Gayosity (2004), All Souls Day (2005), The Thirst (2006) and his second film with Griffiths as producer, The Wizard of Gore (2007), a remake of Herschell Gordon Lewis’ 1970 cult classic about a hypnotist with a somewhat extreme stage act. He’s also become an in-demand film editor, working on cable-TV making-of documentaries for such films as Spider-Man 3, The Pursuit of Happyness and the recently released The Ugly Truth, a romantic comedy starring Katherine Heigl and Gerard Butler.
   Griffiths, when he’s not producing his friend’s films, heads up a company that brokers deals for international distribution for American films. “I only produce a movie when Jeremy and I come up with one,” he says.
   Which brings our tale back to The Dead Ones, in which four teen-agers (local actors Katie Foster, Torey Garza, Sarah Harper and Brandon Thane Wilson) find themselves trapped inside a haunted school building. Griffiths and Kasten, who have put this movie together pretty much by themselves, can’t wait to get started.

“This movie is the first time where we were able to raise the financing, and we were able to put the business model together,” Griffiths says. “We were able to say, from Day 1, that this is what we’re trying to do. Nobody’s been our boss this time.”

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‘True Blood’: The Beverage

Posted by GoreMaster Special Effects on July 27, 2009

True Blood the beverage

Dave Itzkoff – New York Times

In terrible news for anyone who has trouble distinguishing between reality and a fantasy world where sexy vampires roam the streets of New Orleans, but potentially exciting news for anyone living who would want to consume a beverage intended for the undead, a carbonated drink based on the HBO series “True Blood” is planned to go on sale in September.

In a news release on Monday, Omni Consumer Products said that it had struck a deal with HBO’s licensing division to produce Tru Blood, inspired by the drink that the program’s vampires consume for sustenance (when they’re not feeding on the living). In a statement, the company said that its Tru Blood drink would have “a crisp, slightly tart and lightly sweet tang,” and come in a bottle similar to the one featured on the HBO series.

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Visual Effects of ‘Tron Legacy’ Is Hard Work

Posted by GoreMaster Special Effects on July 27, 2009

by Fred Topel – Starpulse.com

   The difference between technology from Tron to Tron Legacy is stick figures to fully populated cities. All that fancy stuff doesn’t make it any easier to save the cyber world though. The young stars of Tron Legacy still had to wear complicated light suits that made basic scene work exhausting.
 Tron 

   “Once in the Tron world we wear this very technical suit,” said Garrett Hedlund. “That’s fantastic and it looks amazing every time it’s on screen, especially in 3-D, but for two months straight, all day, every day, and being in this you start to forget what it was like to film a film with just jeans and a T-shirt.”
  

   Jeff Bridges, who reprises his role from the 1982 original, recalled the down and dirty style in which they made the first groundbreaking film. “Looking back at that first one it was such an advanced thing,” Bridges said. “I remember it was shot in 70 mm, black and white, and we had black curtains and white adhesive tape. That was basically our set. It was all hand tinted by Korean ladies. We were in Korea and it was hand tinted. I don’t know how much CGI there was.”
  

   New light cycles and deadly discs may be even higher powered in the new Tron, but don’t take the little things for Goremaster Makeup Effects Manualgranted. “[It's] physically just grueling day after day, either the cable works, or certain stunts we had to do,” Hedlund continued. “The most minimal of stuff can be very tedious. Just taking one knee and holding your arms out straight, it’s tough. It just looks great.”
  

   Tron Legacy still has two years of visual effects work before its release in 2011.

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