1-20 of 89 articles from 2009 « Prev | Next »
10 December 2009 11:33 PM, PST | HugAZombie | See recent HugAZombie news »
What the hell? Yes, the UK can already pre-order Survival of the Dead on Amazon.uk for a March 15, 2010 release. And yet, we still have No Idea when George Romero's latest will reach the U.S.? Those Redcoats have done it again.
Don't worry, America. We've been done this road before as a country, where the British have had the upper hand and we prevailed. Don't forget, Romero is an American, even if we are losing him to Canada, slowly but surely.
Would we have the modern zombie film without Romero? Even if Survival turns out to be as horrible as Diary of the Dead, and we're crossing our fingers it won't, a Romero zombie movie is worth releasing. Someone has to step up and end this national embarrassment.
The Weinstein Company can't pick up the slack this time, they're broke. We're looking at you, Lionsgate.
Via DreadCentral »
6 November 2009 8:00 PM, PST | MoviesOnline.ca | See recent MoviesOnline news »
I am a huge fan of George Romero and his work. I am also the first to admit that Land of the Dead was a big budget attempt at doing Romero which failed even with him at the helm. Diary of the Dead although creative was also a big dissapointment for me.
His new film Survival of the Dead does not appear to offer alot of promise from the trailers I have seen but that does not take away from the fact he is a legendary filmmaker who made the zombie genre what it is. Below you can watch a video interview where he talks about Zombie films and how his first film that broke him into the genre as the King of the Dead... was not even a zombie film as far as he saw it. Its an interesting interview that runs about 8 minutes in length and is very telling. »
2 November 2009 8:28 AM, PST | ReelLoop.com | See recent Reel Loop news »
The father of the modern zombie returns with Survival of the Dead.
Check out the red-band trailer for the upcoming film. Beware youngsters, this is for mature audiences. In the two minutes, you can witness the zombies doing zombie things like eating people, looking menacing and walking slowly.
“On a small island off North America’s coast, the dead rise to menace the living. Although they are endangering their lives, the locals can’t bring themselves to exterminate their loved ones and are determined to find the cure. When a rebel assassinates his neighbors and friends, they banish him from the island.
Bent on revenge, he encounters a small band of survivors on the mainland and joins forces with them to return to the island and kill the flesh-eaters. But, as they get into the island, they discover to their horror the locals have chained the dead inside their homes, »
- Reel Loop News Staff
1 November 2009 8:05 PM, PST | HugAZombie | See recent HugAZombie news »
A new red-band trailer has come out for George Romero's Survival of the Dead and shows of plenty of gore from the upcoming film. So much so, in fact, that we're hoping that Romero has saved some for the theater, and this isn't oneo f those trailers that shows you everything good that's in a movie. Still, it does appear that Romero has done better than the horrible Diary of the Dead.
The plot goes like this: a character from Diary of the Dead, Crockett (Alan Van Sprang), heads with his military buddies to an island containing two warring families. Some can't bring themselves to kill off their zombie family members, and, we're sure, eventually that doesn't turn out as well as they thought it would.
Check out the red-band trailer below:
This is only one of a hndful of trailers so far, but is one that shows that »
- (Fulci)
30 October 2009 5:01 PM, PDT | HeyUGuys.co.uk | See recent HeyUGuys news »
It’s the ten year anniversary of The Blair Witch Project, which was released in the UK to coincide with Halloween a decade ago. On Thursday, i looked at the impact it’s release had at the time in The Blair Witch Project: Ten Years On – Part 1, and yesterday reviewed the movie itself in Did you ever see… The Blair Witch Project. Now, on Halloween night, we’ll see how Blair Witch still impacts the movie industry even now.
Blair Witch immediately set small independent filmmakers off attempting to recreate/replicate the success of the movie. Indeed, a sequel, Blair Witch 2: Book of Shadows was also produced. Inevitably, no success was found in any of these endeavours. Blair Witch had come at the end of the nineties low budget independent film boom. Perhaps more surprisingly, Hollywood executives wisely resisted the temptation to commission a raft of imitations. Common sense »
- Barry Steele
24 October 2009 10:06 PM, PDT | Fangoria | See recent Fangoria news »
The notion of a film using a vérité style and false claims of “it really happened” is nothing new to the horror genre. In 1974, Tobe Hooper’s masterpiece The Texas Chainsaw Massacre, made use of a now famous John Larroquette narration, a group of amateur actors and a gritty shooting style to make mid-70s drive-in movie-goers question the reality of what they had just seen. 1980 brought horror fans the still controversial Cannibal Holocaust, a film that not only invented the now popular “found footage” horror film, but still even today manages to make some of its viewers question if what they are watching is in actuality, “snuff”.
The trend continued into the 1990s with films like the morbidly comical Man Bites Dog (1992), the widely overlooked and heavily flawed The Last Broadcast (1998) and of course the hugely profitable and arguably overrated The Blair Witch Project (1999); a film whose success, though »
- no-reply@fangoria.com (The Horror Professor)
22 October 2009 3:11 PM, PDT | EW - Hollywood Insider.com | See recent EW.com - Hollywood Insider news »
Paranormal Activity is so last week. The latest inexpensive horror flick to catch audiences attention is Ti West's '80s throwback The House of the Devil. Starring Jocelin Donahue as the babysitter in peril, The House of the Devil has already scored with the critics and will open in New York, Los Angeles and Austin on Oct. 30. But since it was purchased through Magnolia Pictures' and their genre arm Magnet, it's also one of the movies you can see now through the company's Ultra VOD, an exclusive 30-day video-on-demand window Before it opens in theaters. The movie premiered »
- Nicole Sperling
22 October 2009 2:08 AM, PDT | SoundOnSight | See recent SoundOnSight news »
1- The Children The concept of killer kids is nothing new, but The Children can safely join the list of great horror movies like The Omen, Home Movie, The Exorcist, The Innocents and Village of the Damned. The film is directed by Tom Shankland who also adapted the script form a story by Paul Andrew Williams the director and writer of London to Brighton and The Cottage. Shankland delivers a simple film, with a simple set up and a simple pay off. What’s not simple are his sublime directorial flourishes. Shankland might add a few jump scares, but avoids genre clichés and wisely chooses an effective slow burn. The journey is unnerving, relentless, packed with suspense with a terrifying and brutal atmosphere. Easily one of the best horror films of the decade and destined to become a Brit Classic. Listen to our review from podcast #140 [1] 2- The Loved Ones Sean Byrne’s debut feature, »
- Ricky
16 October 2009 1:46 PM, PDT | SoundOnSight | See recent SoundOnSight news »
George A. Romero knows what scares you. He also knows what your insides look like, and since 1968’s Night of the Living Dead, he’s been putting both on display in what’s now an epic six film zombie series. The first three films in the hexalogy, widely regarded as classics of the horror genre, were released over the course of nearly twenty years. But the new millennium has already seen three additional entries, 2005’s Land of the Dead, 2007’s Diary of the Dead, and the upcoming Survival of the Dead, a sort of zombie western that takes place on a blood-soaked Delaware island. But despite the often graphic violence, Romero’s work is always rich with subtext, commenting on everything from consumerism to the military-industrial complex. I had the opportunity to sit down with the affable director to talk zombies, allegories, and how to waste a day exploding a head. »
- Ricky
13 October 2009 2:00 PM, PDT | Pretty/Scary | See recent pretty-scary news »
Starz Inside: Zombiemania, directed by Donna Davies and produced by Kimberlee Mctaggert (the team behind Pretty Bloody) premieres tomonight, Tuesday, October 13 at 10:00 p.m. on Starz! This documentary is a fun look at the Zombie craze around the world.
Featuring clips from a vast library of Zombie films and Zombie experts, including the “grandfather of Zombie films” George A. Romero and best-selling author Max Brooks, it traces the evolution of the Zombie from its roots in African folklore and Haitian Voodoo to its current role as pop culture icon. Watch the trailer, and then watch tonight...
How do you kill a Zombie? How can you kill something if it’s already dead? We’ve been told to shoot them in the head or take a machete to the brain. Hey, whatever works. It beats being eaten alive, right? Starz Inside: Zombiemania (Tuesday, October 13 at 10:00 p.m.) is a »
- Superheidi
12 October 2009 12:25 PM, PDT | FilmSchoolRejects.com | See recent FilmSchoolRejects news »
If there is ever a sleeper hit in 2009, Paranormal Activity is it. Accompanied with a lackluster visual marketing campaign (lame poster, lamer trailer), the years-long shelved film is now encountering success by an intense and calculated word-of-mouth, demanding a wider release through online petitions and an exponentially increasing per-theater average to an astonishing total this weekend in the #5 spot with $7 million in only 160 theaters. The film works with its rather simple, straightforward idea of amping up the creepiness slowly and with as minimal revealing material possible (rarely these days do horror films get so much out of so little). The device this movie uses to achieve its creepiness is also simple and is becoming an increasingly familiar way to make horror films, framing the film as an archive of home-video footage made by the victims themselves. This approach to horror arguably started with The Blair Witch Project and has been since reawakened with more recent films like »
- Landon Palmer
10 October 2009 10:16 AM, PDT | iconsoffright.com | See recent Icons of Fright news »
Lists can be fun if I don't take them seriously. I always like to see how other people compile "top" or "best of's," and it's cool to disagree with placements, omissions and inclusions. As a zombie lover, I wanted to have a great time with Entertainment Weekly's "25 Best Zombie Movies of All Time." Alas, as enjoyable as this one was for me to gloss over, I was majorly let down by two issues with the list. Allow me to explain, as I prove that I took this list too seriously.
Any list is only as good as the person who assembles it. And whoever assembled this one followed a regrettable trend common in EW's lists: including recent material that may be hot now, but likely has no place on this list in the long run. Planet Terror was a fun ride and I know how popular the underground [Rec] is, but »
9 October 2009 9:56 AM, PDT | iconsoffright.com | See recent Icons of Fright news »
Apparently Trick 'R Treat isn't the only hot horror flick looking to go franchise this week. In a recent interview with MTV.com, Zombieland writer Paul Wernick related his hopes that his recent #1 box office hit might get a sequel. According to Wernick, after seeing the final cut of the film Woody Harrelson told him, "I've never wanted to do a sequel in the previous movies I've done until this one." Much like George Romero's Diary Of The Dead, Zombieland started off as an idea for a TV pilot back in 2005, so its episodic origins would lend it to sequels.
The sequel might not come for a while, though. Wernick and his writing partner Rhett Reese just handed in a draft for the Spiderman spin off Venom, and are also hard at work on a project tentatively titled Earth Vs. Moon. But with the near $25 million draw of Zombieland'S opening weekend, »
6 October 2009 8:47 PM, PDT | QuietEarth.us | See recent QuietEarth news »
Year: 2009
Directors: George A. Romero
Writers: George A. Romero
IMDb: link
Trailer: link
Review by: rochefort
Rating: 3 out of 10
"Survival of the Dead", George A. Romero's sixth entry in the ongoing zombie mythology he created with "Night of the Living Dead", is upon us. In "Diary of the Dead", George reset the timeline back to the initial days of the zombie outbreak, and you may remember a key scene in which the main characters were robbed by a group of Awol soldiers. "Survival" follows those soldiers as they head to an island where two long-feuding families are dealing with the zombie plague in their own unique way. One group believes we should kill 'em all, but the other side elects to chain up their undead kin and leave them be until somebody comes up with a cure. The zombies in each of Romero's movies have always been just the »
3 October 2009 11:03 AM, PDT | HugAZombie | See recent HugAZombie news »
George Romero is currently bringing his Survival of the Dead around the globe to every film festival, and after the Survival screening at Austin's FantasticFest, Romero talked to ShockTilYouDrop about his sixth zombie film, only two years removed from arguably his worst zombie film, Diary of the Dead (though if you want to argue about Diary, we'll win; it sucked).
Romero explained how he got the idea to make Survival the first of a trio of spin-off films from Diary rather than make a straight sequel.
When we made the sale to the Weinsteins…I started to think about it. I said to myself, I don't really want to go anywhere completely new, and if it looks like there's going to be a few more of these, maybe I could use this device of taking a couple of other characters in Diary I would like to track. I had had »
- (Fulci)
2 October 2009 7:52 AM, PDT | Reelzchannel.com | See recent ReelzChannel news »
This is a busy year for George Romero. Only two years removed from his last zombie epic, Diary of the Dead, Romero has been making the rounds at film festivals with his latest zombie flick, Survival of the Dead. However, there's another Romero movie out there as well, a remake of Romero's 1973 movie The Crazies, though Romero is only serving as Executive Producer. Breck Eisner (Sahara) is directing this Crazies from a script by Ray Wright (Pulse) and, no stranger to remakes, Scott Kosar (The Amityville Horror and The Texas Chainsaw Massacre).
While the remake is similar in plot to the original — townspeople slowly go insane after a contaminant is released in the city's water supply — both the new poster and the trailer of the remake look ironically more in keeping with the zombie genre than the Romero original, which focused more on the military's inability to control the situation »
- Ryan Gowland
2 October 2009 6:40 AM, PDT | Collider.com | See recent Collider.com news »
I saw three films on Day 3 of Fantastic Fest. Two movies were family-friendly films, that had different approaches in being a friend to families. One felt reminiscent of the Disney films that aimed to give families a fun scare, while the other was a more mature “Harry Potter”-esque fantasy of monsters and freaks. Then, I ended it with the latest from the zombie grandmaster whose movie didn’t really want to be a friend to families. Read my reaction to “Under the Mountain”, “The Vampire’s Assistant: Cirque Du Freak”, and “Survival of the Dead” after the jump.
Under the Mountain
Based on the 1958 novel of the same name, which was also turned into a short television series in the early 80s in New Zealand, the film chronicles a teenage twin brother and sister that have moved to an area of New Zealand that is surrounded by seven inactive volcanoes. »
- Adam Charles
2 October 2009 1:46 AM, PDT | HugAZombie | See recent HugAZombie news »
Survival of the Dead recently screened at Austin's FantasticFest on its global film festival tour. The previous stop was the Toronto International Film Festival and next is Spain's Sitges before heading to Las Vegas for Fangoria's Trinity of Terrors at the end of October.
Still the embodiment of zombie filmmaking, Romero moved surprisingly quickly to make another zombie movie after Diary of the Dead. Reaction to Diary was mixed (not us, we hated it), and if the sampling of reviews for Survival are any judge, reaction to Romero's latest runs from "love" to "hate" pretty quickly. Still, there is a theme that all reviewers seem to latch on to...
First Showing: "I'm not the biggest George Romero fan, but I do know that no one can make zombie movies like he does. Unfortunately in the last few years he's been making some pretty awful zombie movies, including Diary of the Dead »
- (Fulci)
2 October 2009 12:48 AM, PDT | Fangoria | See recent Fangoria news »
Legendary filmmaker George A. Romero will be attending the inaugural Fangoria Trinity Of Terrors, to be held October 30 through November 1 at The Palms Casino Resort in Las Vegas! At midnight on Halloween, immediately following a special performance by Slipknot, Romero's latest opus Survival Of The Dead will screen at the Brenden Theatres inside the Palms!
Don't miss this rare opportunity to see the film before it's general release, with a living legend in-attendance!
Tickets are now available online through http://www.trinityofterrors.com and through Vegas.com. You may also order tickets from Vegas.com by phone - 1-888-las-vegas (527-8342) 24 hours a day.
George A. Romero’s Survival Of The Dead follows a war-weary band of soldiers who are lured to a remote island that promises to be the last paradise on Earth, only to discover that even here there is no escape from the appetites of either the living or the dead. »
- no-reply@fangoria.com (James Zahn)
1 October 2009 4:52 AM, PDT | Reelzchannel.com | See recent ReelzChannel news »
Sony Screen Gems has announced that production has officially begun on Resident Evil: Afterlife in Toronto, Canada.
Some casting announcements for the fourth installment of the Resident Evil series were made as well. Boris Kodjoe already Tweeted his involvement in the movie, then revealed the casting of Prison Break's Wentworth Miller as well. Afterlife's press release reveals that Miller will be playing game character Chris Redfield, the brother of Ali Larter's Claire, who first arrived in Resident Evil: Extinction. Spencer Locke will return as Extinction's other survivor, K-Mart, and Kim Coates (Sons of Anarchy) is cast in an unspecified role.
In a surprising re-casting, Shawn Roberts (Diary of the Dead) will take over for Jason O'Mara as the evil Dr. Albert Wexler. Also of note, IMDb's cast list includes some curious casting rumors with Jensen Ackles playing game character Leon S. Kennedy and Eva Mendes playing a character named Excella Gionne. »
- Ryan Gowland
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