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Hammer Films begins shooting adaptation of Let the Right One In

Posted by GoreMaster Special Effects on November 3, 2009

Let Me In

From Overture Films Press Release

On behalf of Overture Films, we are excited to announce that principal photography began today on LET ME IN, writer/director Matt Reeves’ adaptation of Let the Right One In, in Albuquerque, New Mexico. Reeves (Cloverfield) and young stars Kodi Smit-McPhee (The Road) and Chloe Moretz ((500) Days of Summer) were among those on-set as filming commenced on the Hammer Films production at Albuquerque Studios. Filming will also take place in various other locations in New Mexico before returning to Albuquerque to wrap in January.

In the haunting and provocative LET ME IN, an alienated 12-year-old boy (Smit-McPhee) befriends a mysterious young newcomer (Moretz) in his small New Mexico town and discovers an unconventional path to adulthood. The film is based on the bestselling vampire novel, Lat den Ratte Komma In, by Swedish author John Ajvide Lindqvist, and is an English-language remake of the highly acclaimed Swedish film of the same name.

Cara Buono

Cara Buono

The filmmakers note that while the new film will pay respect to the original Swedish version, they intend to forge a unique identity for LET ME IN, placing it firmly in an American context.

“This project is very personal to Matt as it is to the many passionate fans of the original story,” said Simon Oakes, President and CEO of Hammer Films. “The brilliance of that story deserves to be seen by audiences on a wide scale and we are excited that the pieces are in place to make that a reality.”

Updates to the cast list include Elias Koteas (Shutter Island) as the policeman, Cara Buono (“The Sopranos”) as Owen’s mother and Sasha Barrese (The Hangover) as “Virginia.” It was previously announced that Smit-McPhee and Moretz would play the leads “Owen” and “Abby” respectively and Oscar®-nominee Richard Jenkins (The Visitor) would play the guardian of “Abby”.

   Hammer Films acquired the remake rights to Let the Right One In at the 2008 Tribeca Film Festival where the film took home the Founders Award® for Best Narrative Feature. The production is scheduled for a 2010 release in the U.S. by Overture Films. Exclusive Film Distribution is handling worldwide sales and distribution of the film.

Producing the film are Hammer’s Oakes, Guy East and Nigel Sinclair, along with Oscar®-winner Donna Gigliotti (Shakespeare in Love). Hammer’s Alex Brunner and Tobin Armbrust will executive produce along with John Ptak, Philip Elway and Fredrik Malmberg. Overture’s Robert Kessel, EVP Production & Acquisitions, will oversee production for the studio. Swedish producers John Nordling and Carl Molinder, who produced the original film, are also involved as producers on this remake.

Sasha Barrese

Sasha Barrese

LET ME IN is the first film in a two-picture co-production, financing and distribution agreement between Overture Films and Exclusive Media Group, the parent company of Hammer Films and Spitfire Pictures.

Be sure to visit LET ME IN on Facebook and Twitter:

http://www.twitter.com/letmeinthemovie
http://www.facebook.com/letmein

ABOUT HAMMER

Hammer is the legendary British film brand, which was originally launched in 1934 and delivered a hugely successful run of films in the 1950s including Gothic classics “Dracula” and “The Curse of Frankenstein” and Sci-Fi picture “The Quatermass Xperiment.” Hammer’s reputation became branded worldwide as ‘Hammer House of Horror.’ In the 1960s Hammer struck distribution deals with Universal, Warner Brothers, Fox and Columbia. Hammer went on to produce a huge volume of films which included such titles as “The Plague of the Zombies,” “The Nanny,” “Quatermass and the Pit,” “The Devil Rides Out” and “One Million Years B.C.”

Not in production since the 1980s, the company’s brand is now being aggressively reinvigorated by Exclusive Media Group through new investment in the development and production of film, television and digital-platform content.

Hammer’s return to horror was heralded by interactive web serial “Beyond the Rave,” which was broadcast by MySpace in 13 territories in 2008. Today, Hammer has an active development slate totaling more than 25 projects across diverse genres sourced out of both Europe and the United States. Hammer recently wrapped production on “The Resident,” which stars two-time Academy Award winner Hilary Swank, Jeffrey Dean Morgan and Hammer legend Sir Christopher Lee and is directed by Antti Jokinen.

ABOUT EXCLUSIVE MEDIA GROUP (EMG)

Formed by strategic investment group Cyrte Investments in May 2008, Exclusive Media Group (EMG) (www.exclusivemedia.com) is the parent company of Spitfire Pictures and the legendary British studio, Hammer, which now has a combined share holder equity and bank facility in excess of $100 million. The company is run by Nigel Sinclair, Guy East and Simon Oakes, with Sinclair and Oakes serving as co-chairmen and co-CEOs (out of Los Angeles and London respectively). East is president of EMG and chairman of Exclusive Film Distribution (EFD).

Under EMG, Spitfire and Hammer operate as two separate production entities with offices both in London and Los Angeles. EMG aims to produce 6-8 films per year and to acquire additional pictures for worldwide distribution through EFD, its London based subsidiary responsible for worldwide sales and distribution. The group also develops projects for television and digital platforms.

EMG has over 300 titles in the combined Hammer and Spitfire libraries and pursues an aggressive library acquisition policy. The Hammer library is noted for its remake potential and the company is in discussions with A-list writers and directors to revive and re-imagine some of its highly touted titles.

Cyrte Investments is part of Delta Lloyd Asset Management, one of the Netherlands major asset managers, which in turn is majority-owned by London Stock Exchange listed Aviva plc, one of the world’s largest insurance companies.

ABOUT OVERTURE FILMS

Overture Films (www.overturefilms.net) develops, produces, acquires, and distributes feature length, theatrical motion pictures worldwide. The studio is a wholly owned unit of Starz Media, a controlled subsidiary of Liberty Media Corporation attributed to the Liberty Capital Group. Its affiliated companies, Anchor Bay Entertainment and Starz Entertainment, make the films available domestically to viewers via home video, premium television, Internet and other outlets.

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George Hamilton brings us “Batrimony: Love At Second Bite”

Posted by GoreMaster Special Effects on August 20, 2009

Love at First Bite

George Hamilton is set to vamp it up again for laughs as the producer of a new comedy horror sequel of his hit film Love At First Bite.

It has been 30 years since the movie star played Count Vladimir Dracula in the cult 1979 movie and now he’s back for more blood with a camp sequel Twilightcalled “Batrimony: Love At Second Bite”.

He tells WENN, “It’s terrific. It’s all about old world school of Dracula in the Bela Lugosi 1940s up against the Twilight felons with humor. It’s hard to do but it’s great fun.”

And Hamilton thinks the time is perfect for another vampire movie spoof: “I think ‘Twilight’ is a wonderful series of books. It’s so important for these young girls with hormonal changes and this love that’s worth giving your life for. But now I have a find a way to bring my ‘Love At First Bite’ character into that kind of story and make it funny and not be at all like ‘Twilight’ and I think I found a way to do that.”

And ‘Batrimony’ isn’t the only film project Hamilton is working on – he’s also producing a movie about movie legend Errol Flynn’s son Sean, who was captured by the Khmer Rouge during the Vietnam War.

He adds, “It’s a wonderful story.”

 Here is the plot outline per IMDB.com: Dracula’s son is about to marry a mortal woman and tries to keep his family’s heritage a secret from his future in-laws. A follow-up to the 1979 vampire comedy “Love at First Bite”.

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Puppets don’t just belong in kids movies

Posted by GoreMaster Special Effects on August 11, 2009

Team America

Team America

Laura MacInnis – Miramichileader.com

Avenue Q is wrapping up on Broadway after a hugely successful stint internationally.

The Tony award-winning musical is a comedy in which the characters are puppets.

But don’t be fooled. It isn’t for young kids.

Though the colourful puppets are certainly inspired by Sesame Street, creators Robert Lopez and Jeff Marx have placed their hipster characters in a dingy New York dealing with real adult problems. The final performance will be held September 13.

But Avenue Q certainly isn’t the first or the last time puppets will be used to entertain a grown up audience.

Hand puppets, marionettes, animatronics and other techniques have been used in family fare as well as stuff you wouldn’t want your kids watching.

Just think of all the wonderful creatures we were introduced to by Jim Henson in the original Star Wars trilogies. No amount of CGI ever truly breathed life into Yoda the way Henson did. Those eyes, those ears, that wrinkly skin— the animation was just to shiny on the big screen during the Phantom Menace.

Then there’s that other childhood favourite Labyrinth, starring a freaky David Bowie and some even freakier puppets again from Henson.

In the last decade new movies have emerged with sprinklings of the art of puppetry here and there. In Being John Malkovich John Cusack’s character is a struggling artist who uses marionettes.

His job, of course, is a metaphor for the way he manipulates Malkovich’s brain but there is a beautiful scene in the beginning of the movie where two of his marionettes yearn for each other as one lies trapped in a castle. The performance on the street quickly angers a parent who has stopped to watch with their child on the street when the marionettes start getting sexual. Hilarious moment.

Later Jason Segel would create a special musical/comedy about Dracula for his 2007 comedy Forgetting Sarah Marshall. Watching a female women plop out 3 vampire puppet babies is worth the price of admission. I only wish that musical actually existed so I could go to it.

It was really Matt Stone and Trey Parker who took puppet movies for adults to new heights with Team America:World Police. The MPAA in the US was so taken aback by a puppet sex scene it was removed from the film altogether. All in all though, there’s almost nothing funnier than the ferocious puma played by a small cute black cat who attacks the puppet heroes. Well, that and puppet Kim Jon- il singing “I’m So Lonely”.

Here’s my list of favourite movies that include some masterful puppetry:

1. Being John Malkovich

2. Labyrinth                                                                                                                            

3. Star Wars (original trilogy)

4. Team America:World Police

5. The Sound of Music

6. Forgetting Sarah Marshall

7. Muppets Christmas Carol

8. Meet the Feebles

9. Gremlins

10. The Dark Crystal

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“Why Vampires Never Die” by Guillermo del Toro

Posted by GoreMaster Special Effects on August 3, 2009

GUILLERMO del TORO

GUILLERMO del TORO

New York Times – Op-Ed Contributors

Why Vampires Never Die

 

 

TONIGHT, you or someone you love will likely be visited by a vampire — on cable television or the big screen, or in the bookstore. Our own novel describes a modern-day epidemic that spreads across New York City.

It all started nearly 200 years ago. It was the “Year Without a Summer” of 1816, when ash from volcanic eruptions lowered temperatures around the globe, giving rise to widespread famine. A few friends gathered at the Villa Diodati on Lake Geneva and decided to engage in a small competition to see who could come up with the most terrifying tale — and the two great monsters of the modern age were born.

One was created by Mary Godwin, soon to become Mary Shelley, whose Dr. Frankenstein gave life to a desolate creature. The other monster was less created than fused. John William Polidori stitched together folklore, personal resentment and erotic anxieties into “The Vampyre,” a story that is the basis for vampires as they are understood today.

CHUCK HOGAN

CHUCK HOGAN

With “The Vampyre,” Polidori gave birth to the two main branches of vampiric fiction: the vampire as romantic hero, and the vampire as undead monster. This ambivalence may reflect Polidori’s own, as it is widely accepted that Lord Ruthven, the titular creature, was based upon Lord Byron — literary superstar of the era and another resident of the lakeside villa that fateful summer. Polidori tended to Byron day and night, both as his doctor and most devoted groupie. But Polidori resented him as well: Byron was dashing and brilliant, while the poor doctor had a rather drab talent and unremarkable physique.

But this was just a new twist to a very old idea. The myth, established well before the invention of the word “vampire,” seems to cross every culture, language and era. The Indian Baital, the Ch’ing Shih in China, and the Romanian Strigoi are but a few of its names. The creature seems to be as old as Babylonia and Sumer. Or even older.

The vampire may originate from a repressed memory we had as primates. Perhaps at some point we were — out of necessity — cannibalistic. As soon as we became sedentary, agricultural tribes with social boundaries, one seminal myth might have featured our ancestors as primitive beasts who slept in the cold loam of the earth and fed off the salty blood of the living.

Monsters, like angels, are invoked by our individual and collective needs. Today, much as during that gloomy summer in 1816, we feel the need to seek their cold embrace.

Herein lies an important clue: in contrast to timeless creatures like the dragon, the vampire does not seek to obliterate us, but instead offers a peculiar brand of blood alchemy. For as his contagion bestows its nocturnal gift, the vampire transforms our vile, mortal selves into the gold of eternal youth, and instills in us something that every social construct seeks to quash: primal lust. If youth is desire married with unending possibility, then vampire lust creates within us a delicious void, one we long to fulfill.

In other words, whereas other monsters emphasize what is mortal in us, the vampire emphasizes the eternal in us. Through the panacea of its blood it turns the lead of our toxic flesh into golden matter.

In a society that moves as fast as ours, where every week a new “blockbuster” must be enthroned at the box office, or where idols are fabricated by consensus every new television season, the promise of something everlasting, something truly eternal, holds a special allure. As a seductive figure, the vampire is as flexible and polyvalent as ever. Witness its slow mutation from the pansexual, decadent Anne Rice creatures to the current permutations — promising anything from chaste eternal love to wild nocturnal escapades — and there you will find the true essence of immortality: adaptability.

Vampires find their niche and mutate at an accelerated rate now — in the past one would see, for decades, the same Goremaster Makeup Effects Manualvariety of fiend, repeated in multiple storylines. Now, vampires simultaneously occur in all forms and tap into our every need: soap opera storylines, sexual liberation, noir detective fiction, etc. The myth seems to be twittering promiscuously to serve all avenues of life, from cereal boxes to romantic fiction. The fast pace of technology accelerates its viral dispersion in our culture.

But if Polidori remains the roots in the genealogy of our creature, the most widely known vampire was birthed by Bram Stoker in 1897.

Part of the reason for the great success of his “Dracula” is generally acknowledged to be its appearance at a time of great technological revolution. The narrative is full of new gadgets (telegraphs, typing machines), various forms of communication (diaries, ship logs), and cutting-edge science (blood transfusions) — a mash-up of ancient myth in conflict with the world of the present.

Today as well, we stand at the rich uncertain dawn of a new level of scientific innovation. The wireless technology we carry in our pockets today was the stuff of the science fiction in our youth. Our technological arrogance mirrors more and more the Wellsian dystopia of dissatisfaction, while allowing us to feel safe and connected at all times. We can call, see or hear almost anything and anyone no matter where we are. For most people then, the only remote place remains within. “Know thyself” we do not.

Despite our obsessive harnessing of information, we are still ultimately vulnerable to our fates and our nightmares. We enthrone the deadly virus in the very same way that “Dracula” allowed the British public to believe in monsters: through science. Science becomes the modern man’s superstition. It allows him to experience fear and awe again, and to believe in the things he cannot see.

And through awe, we once again regain spiritual humility. The current vampire pandemic serves to remind us that we have no true jurisdiction over our bodies, our climate or our very souls. Monsters will always provide the possibility of mystery in our mundane “reality show” lives, hinting at a larger spiritual world; for if there are demons in our midst, there surely must be angels lurking nearby as well. In the vampire we find Eros and Thanatos fused together in archetypal embrace, spiraling through the ages, undying.

Forever.

Guillermo del Toro, the director of “Pan’s Labyrinth,” and Chuck Hogan are the authors of “The Strain,” a novel.

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21 Qs With ‘New Moon’ Director Chris Weitz

Posted by GoreMaster Special Effects on July 25, 2009

Katie Bain – Hollywood.comNew Moon
Chris Weitz is the, um, male director with the epic task of bringing the achingly romantic New Moon to the big screen. He explains how — plus, his thoughts on taking on the fourth installment, Breaking Dawn.

What was your interest in coming on board a franchise like this, that has predominantly been more popular with women than with men?

Chris Weitz: Actually, in that regard, my brother and I often end up doing movies whose predominant audience is either women or whose kind of tipping point of success relies on a female audience. Even American Pie.

In as much as the Twilight series has a global appeal to women, I think it reflects that it really concentrates on the emotions of the central character and romance. And I think that’s something unfortunately that the studio system has not been very good at getting boys to be interested in. They think, maybe correctly, that all the male gender is interested in is things blowing up, and robots and that sort of stuff. I don’t really think that’s true. I certainly didn’t make this movie with an eye towards only girls or women being interested in seeing it. There’s a lot for diverse audiences, including older audiences.

But really, frankly, I was drawn to the cast and I thought that the central cast was great, and I wanted to work with them. And it also sort of employed some skills I had picked up along the way, including working with special effects, working with younger actors and working on kind of emotionally-centered stories.

Twilight, as you said, is very emotional, and of course, it’s got a lot of CG elements and action elements. Would you say that you’re in a comfort zone? Is this familiar ground for you? Obviously your early work was very character-driven.

CW: I’m never really in a comfort zone making a movie. I’m in a discomfort zone, because you’re always kind of working under pressurized circumstances because you don’t have an unlimited amount of time or money to do these things, but there were a number of things I was quite familiar with, and familiar enough so that I could do what I think is really important, which is not to foreground the special effects or the action elements, but to make those settle into the story. You never really want someone to watch a movie and say, “”Wow, those were great special effects.”" You hope that they don’t notice the majority of what you’re actually doing.

Obviously, people are going to notice horse-sized wolves and realize on some level that they’re special effects, but they’re photo-realistic and they should be as expressive as a good actor if possible. So in terms of kind of wrangling that sort of process, yeah, it is something that I’m used to.

When we were on set and talked to the producer, he was like, “”Yeah, we’re still working on some of the designs for the Wolf Pack,”" then I think it was two weeks or three weeks later we saw the first trailer and that great shot [of the wolf] at the end. Is this the quickest you’ve ever worked?

CW: It is. I myself was surprised that Phil Tippett’s company was able to turn out that wolf shot. And I think they kind of did that as a matter of institutional pride that they could. Even that shot that was in the trailer has gone through 20, 30 iterations since then, but they have done a really extraordinary job. Phil Tippett is a complete genius. He was responsible for the walkers in Star Wars and Empire Strikes Back, and he’s kind of one of the legends of the visual effects community. And it has been really amazing what they’ve been able to do on very short notice.

We’re working on kind of breakneck speed, at the same time as really trying to achieve something quite elegant as well. And it’s not just Tippett, it’s also Frantic Studios as well, which is headed up by Mike Fink, who is my old friend who was the visual effects supervisor on Golden Compass, which won the Oscar the year that it came out. So, yeah, we’re working very fast, but we’re also trying to work as beautifully as possible to make the effects kind of settle into the really amazing cinematography that Javier Aguirresarobe brought us. We’re kind of moving at light speed, but still trying to deliver something that’s very elegant and beautiful.

Can you tell us about how far along you are to completion right now?

CW: Well, let me see. I am about two weeks away from showing my director’s cut to the studio. I’ve got some wolves with fur, and some wolves are still invisible [laughs] … basically. Some wolves are still kind of like, you’ve probably all see the ones that are kind of claymation versions. We are still in the late R & D [research and development] phases of what Edward looks like when he’s hit with sunlight, what the vampires look like when they’re hit with sunlight, the diamond effect and also kind of the hallucinatory effect that Bella has when she hears Edward’s voice, and she imagines him.

Alexandre Desplat has just started working on his music for the film. And we are just starting to put together what bands are going to be on the soundtrack, so it’s kind of like keeping 10 plates spinning at once. But it’s all good because we’ve got Alexandre Desplat, who I think is one of the greatest film composers living, and because of the kind of great strength of the franchise that I inherited, a lot of people are really interested in working on the soundtrack, and we’ve got great visual effects people. That just leaves me hopefully not dropping the ball in terms of editing to gather the story.

Sounds like a lot …

CW: It is a lot. Then we’re going to Comic-Con on the 24th [correction: July 23rd] where we’re going to be showing a couple of scenes to whoever can get inside that particular auditorium. It’s a lot to be getting on with. It’s fun at the same time.

Since you mentioned the music, will Alexandre Desplat be using Carter Burwell’s theme at all, or any variation?

CW: Yes, because it’s like any franchise, there are certain things that become familiar. I suspect he’s going to transpose it in some manner, and most of the music will be entirely new to the franchise, because his style is somewhat different from Carter Burwell’s. But I think that there is some value in having some familiar — I guess the word is leitmotifs — running through the entire series.

Were you surprised with the number of acts wanting to be on the sequel? Have you had to turn anybody down?

CW: Fortunately, I’m not at the stage where I have to turn anybody down yet, because everything is still kind of up in the air. But I am surprised and pleased at some of the bands that have said that they’re interested. It’s really kind of great. The criterion will still be what’s right for the movie at that given moment. Thom Yorke is interested. We might, if we’re very lucky, be able to get Kings of Leon to do something. So it’s exciting to be able to have access to this kind of talent.

Can you talk a bit about the mini-movie Face Punch?

CW: The funny thing is, I had to come up with the name of a movie within a movie. And the first one, which I think was named in the book Crossfire, or Crosshairs, or something like that, couldn’t be cleared because it had already been used. And you’d be shocked at the number of stupid action-movie names that have been turned into movies.

I eventually turned in a list of 10 to Summit’s lawyers to see which ones they could go and clear, and Face Punch was one of two out of the 10 that could actually be cleared, and I chose that over Kill Hunt. So now somebody can go and actually make Kill Hunt, but Face Punch is ours. There was a joke between my brother that there should be a movie called Face Punch, which was just about people punching one another in the face, but it’s a kind of movie within a movie. It’s the kind of least romantic thing Bella can think of to go to, because her friend asks her essentially on a date, and she wants nothing romantic to happen at all.

Did Stephenie give you any thoughts on that?                         

Goremaster Makeup Effects ManualCW: Well she gave me a T-shirt with the Face Punch logo on it. She’s kind of a fan of popular culture as well, the absurdity of popular culture, so I think she’s kind of tickled by the name of the movie.

Will it be on the DVD?

CW: The movie itself? [Laughs]. No. Sadly, there is no Face Punch. Maybe it’ll be something the fans will be left to make. You’ll hear the sounds of Face Punch, which will be a lot of people being shot and hacking each other to bits. There are a few other movies, imaginary movies that are referred to within this movie and the way it satirizes other genre films in a very brief and lighthearted way. This is the example of the stupid-as-possible action movie imaginable.

Was there a pressure for you in taking on a project that has become a huge pop culture phenomenon?

CW: Yeah, definitely there is. I think it’s largely self-imposed because the fans are tremendously supportive and very kind. One thing that’s interesting about the Twilight fans is that they’re not like fanboys in the sense that they start cynical. They actually begin from the point of view of being enthusiastic and wanting it to be good and to be done well.

I do feel a tremendous amount of responsibility, more to the readership than to the movie franchise in way, because I think that’s the core experience you’re trying to get at. The experience of someone reading the books for the first time, or the second or third, fourth time just kind of galloping through it the way that one reads books when you’re younger and you’re completely absorbed in it. To try to provide an experience that kind of compliments that. So that meant kind of keeping very good touch with Stephenie, without trying to second-guess oneself, always thinking about things with a degree of loyalty to the fans.

What was your favorite scene to film?

CW: There were a lot of fun scenes to film, frankly. I really did enjoy the scenes in the Volturi headquarters, although it’s a tremendous logistical headache. In a way, it’s the scenes that you dread the most, because they are so time-consuming and you have to get it just right, which is like the stuff in the Volturi headquarters, or the stuff that was shot in Montepulciano. I suppose that has to be my favorite scene, because it’s kind of the highpoint of the movie, when Bella goes to try to stop Edward from killing himself.

We had 1,000 extras in this medieval town square in a hill town in Tuscany in the most beautiful country on Earth. It’s just such an extraordinary opportunity to get to work there, and it was also kind of surreal because every Twilight fan who could make it from all over continental Europe and further had gotten by hook or by crook to Montepulciano and booked a hotel room, sometimes at the very hotel at which the cast and crew were staying. And so there was this kind of weird Beatle-mania sort of thing going on in this small, beautiful hill town, and so for five days it was kind of this bizarre festival atmosphere. And it really wasn’t bothersome at all. It was incredibly gratifying that all these people would applaud after every single take. Whether or not we had screwed it up. They had no idea because they weren’t close enough to hear, but if you look down any alley down which the camera wasn’t pointing, you’d see hundreds of these young girls who’d come to kind of just touch a piece of what they really loved.

Can you talk about what it was like who had all sort of established these characters, and to come in as a new director. Did you learn anything by talking to anyone else, or did you just sort of go your own way?

CW: I think that I always actually go into any movie knowing that a confident actor is probably going to know as much if not more of what their character is about than I will, even if it isn’t a franchise because that’s their job, but it’s especially the case when they’ve played these characters falling in love. They’ve kind of lived with these characters as well as with the franchise for quite awhile.

My first job was to ask them what they thought of the script and what they thought their characters would be up to and to kind of work along with them. Obviously, it was going to be a different experience for them, it’s going to be a different kind of movie because in a way I’m much more old-fashioned than Catherine Hardwicke in terms of my film taste and in terms of the way the film was going to turn out. So it was sort of a balancing act between respecting everything that they brought to the table knowing the characters as well as they did, and what I thought that I could bring.

And also it was great to be with Taylor Lautner as he went from a character who had three small scenes in the first movie, he only worked three days in the first movie or something like that, to one of the dominant characters in the movie. That was really, really, a really fun process, also because he’s a great guy. All of the kids, as I like to call them, because I’m 39 and that kind of makes me twice their age, were fun to work with and clever and smart and thoughtful about it.

Talking about the proposal scene at the end of the book. Fans are worried that that might have been altered or cut out for the film. Can you address those concerns?

CW: It hasn’t been cut out, I can tell you that much. It’s not going to hit them in exactly the way they think it’s going to, but I will say that, I gotta put it: It’s gonna be quite special. I kind of saved all of my gusto for that moment. I don’t think it’ll disappoint.

The Volturi. Can you talk about your vision for this new group of characters?

CW: No matter how strange one of the characters is in a work of fantasy, I think you kind of have to approach them as people, and so you start to think, well, they’ve been around for 2,000 years. How would they live? How would they interact with one another? The conclusion really was that after 2,000 years, you would probably be more than mildly insane, no matter how cultured or gracious you appear on the surface.

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I think that’s what Michael Sheen really managed to convey in portraying Aro, the head of the Volturi, which is that on the surface, he’s terribly gracious, warm, a wonderful host, and yet at the same time he’s absolutely lethal and frightening, and it’s also kind of what Dakota Fanning kind of conveys as Jane. She’s this, in appearance, very innocent-looking, harmless-looking almost kind of a teenager, but she’s absolutely deadly.

The first thing I wanted to do was to put them in a setting that wasn’t sort of Dracula’s castle. Because I feel that’s been done, there have been so many vampire movies and werewolf movies and horror movies where everything is dreary and dark and everything is blue or green, and instead for their headquarters to be surprisingly light and crisp, and then the characters that they play have kind of a tactile reality to them, in spite of how kind of bizarre their situation is. And the whole point is not to leave kind of Forks, Wash. where everything has been very realistic, and then suddenly go to a location that completely throws you out of the movie.

So that’s kind of a difficult balance to achieve. And the set, although it’s huge and grand and magnificent, actually kind of feels like a real place. One always has the option in these kinds of situations of shooting everything in green screen and adding the set later, and I’ve done that before, but in this case, it felt really important to actually build something that surrounded the characters, that they could interact with and that had a real sense of existing in in actual space.

There’s a lot of fan speculation about what the Volturi will actually look like, and from what we’ve read and seen, they’re really off the mark. Will we see the Volturi in any of the upcoming trailers or publicity stills, or will that be top secret until the movie is released?

CW: I think they’ll be some publicity stills coming out about them eventually. I’m not sure whether they’ll be in the trailers or not. I think, essentially, our aim was to make them look like what it says they look like in the book and not to be too fancy about it. It was very important to [Stephenie] that the werewolves transform very quickly and that they look like wolves, that we not have this kind of magical Lon Cheney-esque long transformation, and I think the reason behind that is to make sense of their reality. And I think that that was important to the Volturi as well. That they’re not levitating above the ground. They’re not surrounded by mystical auras, they are creatures who actually exist, and they’re very specific, they’re very stylish, they’re very elegant, they’re very dangerous. But essentially, it’s fairly faithful to the book.

Would you talk about all these rumors or fan speculation or hopes that you might come back to direct Breaking Dawn? And if anything is being talked about now or if there’s even any carryover between Eclipse to Breaking Dawn in terms of planning?

CW: I think it’s really charming that not having seen New Moon, people would be enthusiastic about me wanting to do Breaking Dawn. I think the proof is in the pudding, and they should see New Moon before they decide they want me to have anything else to do with their series. But I would hope to earn that kind of rumor.

I haven’t really spoken with Summit about that. All I knew was that I was going to be too tired to do Eclipse and that it was better that somebody else take it over as well so that they could put their own imprint on it, and also kind of the way the films are being shot would have precluded it anyway, but in terms of the planning, David Slade came in while we were shooting the end of New Moon, and I showed him everything that I could to kind of give him a sense of what direction we were going.

He’s going to do whatever way he wants to because he’s his own guy and will have his own style and particular take on things, but just as I was inheriting certain things from Catherine Hardwicke, he’s going to inherit certain things from me and make a choice as to if he wants to keep them or alter them. Tippett is going to do the wolves for Eclipse, so there’s a continuity in terms of the look of the werewolves and obviously the cast is going to remain the same. So Dakota is Jane and all the Volturi are the same people that we’re familiar with, but other than that, it’s kind of David Slade’s show to run on Eclipse. By the time that comes out they’ll probably want him to do Breaking Dawn, not me.

But for the time being everybody wants you to do it.

CW: It’s kind of like, you know, yes, I have unlimited potential at the moment.

So you would make all the fans happy by saying you would consider.

CW: I would certainly consider it. It’s funny. I spend all my time avoiding the Internet because I don’t want to get — I end up getting into arguments with 15-year-olds in Germany, and it’s kind of like I’ve got to concentrate on making the movie, so I don’t even know the positive rumors out there. I don’t know the negative rumors; I don’t know the positive rumors; I’m just trying to do the best job I can, but it’s really sweet that people would like me to do that. I think that’s very cool.

Do you think that Breaking Dawn would be very doable?

CW: No, it’s a tough one. I mean, yes, it’s doable. Anything is doable. It’s a hard one, because the series gets more and more ambitious as it goes along. Yes, it’s doable; anything is doable.

What’s your drop date that you have to turn the film in to the studio before opening?

CW: Ironically, I think it’s the day before Halloween. I believe October 30 is our drop date. When it’s time to start striking the prints or we’re in big trouble.

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Irish horror will not be a Hammer

Posted by GoreMaster Special Effects on July 24, 2009

The Wake Wood

Johnny Caldwell – BBC News

A horror film shot on location in a picturesque Irish village last year will not get an official Hammer Films release, BBC News can reveal.

The Wake Wood, which was part-financed by the legendary British film company, was to herald its much anticipated return to the big screen.

However, the bigger budget The Resident, starring two-time Oscar winner Hillary Swank and Sir Christopher Lee, now looks set to be chosen as Hammer’s first official feature-length release in almost 30 years.

The Wake Wood will still be released by Dublin-based Fantastic Films later this year, but without full Hammer backing.

This would have no doubt assured a blaze of publicity and presumably resulted in die-hard Hammer fans putting Pettigoe, County Donegal, on their must-visit list.

Hammer Films, whose back catalogue includes Dracula, The Curse of GoreMaster Makeup Effects ManualFrankenstein and The Plague of the Zombies was not directly involved in The Wake Wood’s production, but has had a more hands-on role in relation to The Resident.

Hilary Swank plays doctor Juliet Dermer who is settling into a new life and a new loft apartment in New York when mysterious occurrences lead her to suspect that she is not alone in her new home.

The Resident was recently shot over six weeks in both New York and New Mexico. Its release date is scheduled for sometime next year.

The Wake Wood’s plot centres around attempts by a vet and his pharmacist wife, using a pagan ritual, to bring their only daughter back to life after she is ravaged by a dog.

Its cast includes Harry Potter and Auf Wiedersehen, Pet star Timothy Spall and Aiden Gillen, whose credits includes Queer As Folk and more recently, US crime drama, The Wire.

Pettigoe is one of only a handful of places which is bisected by the border between Northern Ireland and the Republic of Ireland, but is mostly in County Donegal.

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Johnny Depp’s vampire meditation

Posted by GoreMaster Special Effects on July 19, 2009

Source: bang showbizJohnny Depp

‘Public Enemies’ actor Johnny Depp has devoted a room in his UK home to vampire memorabilia.

Johnny Depp meditates in a room full of vampire memorabilia.

The ‘Public Enemies’ actor is fascinated by the mythical blood-sucking creatures, and has a space in his London home full of items relating to them.

A source explained to National Enquirer magazine: “Johnny has a whole room devoted to vampires. He’s fascinated by them.

“Johnny uses the room to relax, meditate and be alone.”

Among the items in the space are masks, capes, posters, fangs and a rare copy of Bram Stoker’s novel ‘Dracula’.

Johnny, 46, has previously admitted he is fascinated by vampires, claiming he found 60s supernatural show ‘Dark Shadows’ enthralling.

He said: “Barnabas Collins from ‘Dark Shadows’ was a huge obsession of mine. I loved Barnabas Collins more than I loved the Harlem Globetrotters.

“I wanted to be Barnabas Collins so much that I found a ring, it was probably one of my mother’s rings, and I wore it on this finger, and I tried to comb my hair like Barnabas Collins, and I was trying to figure out how I could get fangs. It really had a heavy impact on me, a heavy influence on me.”

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Stephen Dorff ready for another ‘Blade’

Posted by GoreMaster Special Effects on July 9, 2009

Wesley Snipes and Stephen Dorff in Blade

Wesley Snipes and Stephen Dorff in Blade

Robert Falconer – CinemaSpy.com

   Back in October of 2008, The Sunday Mail reported that Blade director Stephen Norrington and actor Stephen Dorff, who played villain Deacon Frost in the original 1998 film, were working on a prequel trilogy which would focus on the Frost character.

   “It will be a prequel to the Blade movies, Deacon’s story,” Dorff said. “It’s a new trilogy the director has created. It will cool.”
   “We hope to shoot the first film next year,” he added. “Frost is a character I have never been able to shake.”

   Now, according to a report over at Comics2Film, Dorff has updated that information, stating that the project is “not exactly how the article describes but close.”
   Meanwhile, Norrington told the site that the film is definitely envisioned as part of the existing mythology. “The linkage to ‘Blade’ is still big in the equation.”GoreMaster Makeup Effects Manual
   The original Frost comic book character, written by Marv Wolfman and illustrated by Gene Colan, debuted in Marvel’s “The Tomb of Dracula #13″ (October 1973), and sought the key to immortality by kidnapping a woman to inject her with the blood of a recently killed vampire. However, during a skirmish Frost was accidentally injected with the blood, becoming a vampire with the ability to generate a ‘doppelgänger’ out of his victims.
   Frost intended to use this power to ascend to the position of Lord of Vampires, a position held by Dracula

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Terrifying vampire virus tale feeds on our darkest fears

Posted by GoreMaster Special Effects on June 24, 2009

Gulliermo del Toro and his new book "The Strain"

Gulliermo del Toro and his new book "The Strain"

Dan Murphy – Buffalo News

   The creative genius who made “Pan’s Labyrinth” one of the creepiest and most innovative movies of the last few years is taking a bite out of the vampire genre, and the result is an imaginative and genuinely frightening mashup of “Dracula” and “Outbreak.”

   Written by Guillermo Del Toro and Chuck Hogan, “The Strain” is Part One of a trilogy that takes the vampire genre into bold new territory while still staying grounded in the classical motifs established by Bram Stoker and Romanian folklore. These vampires aren’t the suave, brooding Romantic figures of Lord Byron, Anne Rice, or the “Twilight” series. These are nasty, rotting revenants that soil themselves as they feed and bed down in dirt and filth.

   And forget all about the dainty little bite marks on the side of the neck left by the post-Stoker vamps. These undead literally transform into infected new creatures, their anatomy morphing into something both hideous and wonderfully practical. Their jaws disjoint like nightmarish Pez dispensers and they lash out with a whiplike stinger that can extend up to six feet. This new tool neatly slashes the throat, allowing the vampire to feed, and giving it more of a middle-range attack.

   The physical transformation is nicely explained as the hero of the novel, Dr. Ephraim Goodweather, is able to dissect one of the creatures and explain exactly what he sees going on beneath the surface. Del Toro and Hogan take vampire mythology and make it seem disturbingly realistic, providing basic medical explanations and couching the vampire epidemic threatening Manhattan in post-9/11 paranoia and fear. Yet they still weave in a folkloric origin story and honor classical conceits, introducing a wizened Van Helsing character (Abraham Setrakian), and preserving the vampires’ susceptibility to direct sunlight, inability to traverse moving water, and need for hibernation during daylight hours.

   The novel starts with an intriguing opening. A trans-Atlantic flight from Berlin arrives at JFK airport, touching down safely but coming to a halt before arriving at its gate. The plane suddenly goes quiet; all of its blinds are drawn. Airport crews are unable to enter the sealed and unresponsive craft, and a panic begins to build as fears of terrorism build.

Just as emergency crews begin cutting into the fuselage to try to board the plane, one of the emergency doors suddenly opens, as if released from inside. Virtually every passenger and crew member is dead, with no signs of trauma, biological weapons, or any other cause of death. Four passengers, seated in different areas of the plane, inexplicably survive with no memory of what occurred. Unbeknownst to everyone, an ancient stowaway had boarded the flight.

   The mysterious plane’s arrival coincides with a solar eclipse that plunges most of the Eastern seaboard into darkness. When the sunlight returns, New York City is no longer the same; especially when all of the bodies of the flight victims suddenly vanish from the morgue.

   The most frightening aspect of “The Strain” is the way Del Toro and Hogan compare the spread of vampirism to a viral epidemic and explore how utterly unprepared a metropolitan city like New York would be in the face of an unforeseen — and uncontainable — epidemic. Within days, there is anarchy in the streets; within weeks, most of the world could be killed.

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  “The glycoprotein has amazing binding characteristics,” a CDC analyst tells Goodweather. “This little bugger doesn’t merely hijack the host cell—it fuses with the RNA. Melds with it. Consumes it. — This could replicate and replicate and replicate.’— Eph’s head was swimming. It made too much sense. The virus overwhelmed and transformed the cell. . just as the vampire overwhelmed and transformed the victim. The vampires were viruses incarnate.”

   “The Strain” is the first part of an epic trilogy, an engrossing war between humanity and an enveloping darkness. The entire fate of the human race is at stake. By the end of the first book, the death toll — including both humans and vampires —is staggering. Manhattan becomes a gore-strewn killing field.

   Del Toro (who directed the 2002 vampire film “Blade II”) and Hogan have created a gripping page-turner that’s bound to be one of the hottest novels of the year. The scenes are outlined in vivid detail, and a film or TV miniseries adaptation is a natural.

The next two parts of the trilogy are scheduled to be released in 2010 and 2011 respectively.

  “The Strain” is a captivating thrill ride that injects new life into the vampire genre. More importantly, it’s a horror novel that’s actually frightening. Its monsters are so fully rendered, its scenes so well-crafted, that the story takes over your imagination. It will give you nightmares and make you think you see something moving out of the corner of your eye when you’re walking to your car at night (these things literally happened to me several times while reading this).

   It is an incredible fiction debut for Del Toro, who shows that his eye for detail and dark imagination are not limited to film.

In terms of sheer horror and atmosphere, “The Strain” can stand beside the best of Stephen King or Peter Straub. It combines the elemental fears of antiquity with the unique fear and anxiety of an age of terrorist threats and biological weapons. It’s the quintessential horror story of this decade.

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Christopher Lee is the first knighted vampire!

Posted by GoreMaster Special Effects on June 13, 2009

Christopher Lee vampire

The career of Christopher Lee, the veteran screen actor who has received a knighthood in the Queen’s Birthday Honours list, has lasted 60 years and includes roles in more than 250 films.

   It is for his long line of memorable villains that he is best known – a distinguished lineage that includes Bond bad guy Scaramanga and evil wizard Saruman in The Lord of the Rings.

  The Rings trilogy, coupled with the Star Wars prequels in which he played the nefarious Count Dooku, were the most successful films of his career from a commercial standpoint.

For all that, the 87-year-old will always be associated with Count Dracula, a malevolent hero he invested with a demonic charisma and a dash of sex appeal.

Born into affluence, the imposing actor can trace his lineage to Charlemagne, the first Holy Roman Emperor. After public school he served in the Royal Air Force Volunteer Reserve during the Second World War, where he was mentioned in dispatches.

Christopher Lee vampire cape

His screen career began when he joined the Rank Organisation in 1947, training as an actor in their so-called “charm school”. Yet it was his association with British studio Hammer that made him a household name, playing such iconic characters as Frankenstein’s Monster, The Mummy and, of course, Dracula.

   Critics said Hammer’s movies were films to disgust the mind and repel the senses, but audiences lapped up their ghoulish, blood-soaked excesses.

Lee would go on to reprise his trademark role in a number of sequels before finally laying him to rest in the 1970s. A move to Hollywood offered a wider range of characters to sink his teeth into – among them a gay Hell’s Angel in 1980 film Serial. A measure of his popularity came when he hosted Saturday Night Live, a comedy show watched by 35 million Americans.

   Among hundreds of films, Lee’s personal favourite is cult thriller The Wicker Man. He also cites Jinnah, a biopic of Pakistan’s founder, as his most important work.

“It had the best reviews I’ve ever had in my entire career – as a film and as a performance,” he told the BBC News website in 2004. A distant cousin and golfing partner of James Bond creator Ian Fleming, Lee was in the frame to play Doctor No in the first Bond movie.

   Joseph Wiseman won the part, but Christopher Lee would later appear opposite Roger Moore’s 007 in 1974′s The Man With The Golden Gun.

Christopher Lee Lored of the Rings

In 2000 he was seen as Flay, the loyal yet verbally challenged manservant in the BBC adaptation of Gormenghast. In recent years he has also been seen in a number of Tim Burton movies, among them Sleepy Hollow and Charlie and the Chocolate Factory.

In the flesh, the tall and authoritative actor is nothing like the larger-than-life grotesques who chilled generations of moviegoers.

   His knighthood for services to drama and charity reflects the esteem with which he is held and his unique ability to make screen villainy devilishly attractive.

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 Christopher Lee’s Autobiography

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Christopher Lee’s Movies and Books
 

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