Charisma Carpenter

Charisma Carpenter

From: Fearnet.com

by Joseph McCabe

Soon to join the likes of Dead Ringers and Sisters on the list of the finest films ever made about twins is… Deadly Sibling. Then again, maybe not. In fact, based on star Charisma Carpenter’s post-Buffy and Angel filmography, it’ll probably be less frightening than The Parent Trap. But the Charisma-curious among you can check out the film’s poster, unveiled at this week’s American Film Market, after the jump.

Shock Till You Drop nabbed the following image, as well as this synopsis…

Identical twins Janna and Callie have always had a sibling rivalry competing for their father’s love. After a horrific climbing accident kills their father, the twins grow further apart and carry out their lives in the wake of the tragedy. Janna gets married and has a daughter while Callie floats from one job to the next, getting tangled in illegal dealings. After a near fatal crash puts Janna into a coma, Callie secretly steals her sister’s identity in an attempt to start over with a new life and keep her sister out of her way. Callie stops at nothing to seek revenge on a sister that has always had the seemingly better life.

Deadly Sibling Rivalry

Is Horror TV Entering a Golden Age?

 

True Blood and Walking Dead golden age of Horror

 

FROM: Parallel Universe on MSN

by Don Kaye

 

There was a time — at least there seemed to be, in the dim haze of memory — when horror seemed to be prevalent on television. In addition to series like Rod Serling‘s short-lived but often creepy “Night Gallery” and Dan Curtis’ Gothic daytime soap “Dark Shadows,” there was a slew of truly scary TV movies such as “Duel,” “Don’t Be Afraid of the Dark,” “The Night Stalker,” “The Norliss Tapes” and others. Some of these don’t hold up 35 or 40 years later, but they were honest and sometimes even edgy (for the era) attempts to scare the pants off viewers.

The next three decades saw intermittent attempts to bring the supernatural to television, with at least two failed “Twilight Zone” revivals and a string of hot and cold Stephen King adaptations to show for it. The biggest successes from that period? Undoubtedly “Buffy the Vampire Slayer” and, to a lesser extent, “Supernatural” (which is still running and which some fans have declared the best “undiscovered” horror show around).

But in the past three or four years, things have been gradually changing, and we’re now into a period where horror on TV might be entering one of those vaunted “golden ages.” The first sign was the ability of “Supernatural” to survive network cancellation and continue to thrive. But the second and crucial event was the success of HBO’s “True Blood.” The blood- and sex-soaked series is heading into its fifth season and is more massive than ever.

Say what you will about its histrionic acting, its sometimes incomprehensible stories and situations, and frequent descent into camp (intentional or not), but “True Blood” brought a new Gothic sensibility to TV while breaking some of the few remaining taboos on cable TV, bringing monsters like shapeshifters, witches and maenads to mainstream audiences, and visualizing the connections between sex, death and blood that have been a staple of horror (especially the written kind) for years.

“True Blood” seemed to touch something off, because just in the last year and a half, some of the most extreme horror seen on the small screen has burst into our living rooms in all its bloody glory, thanks to “The Walking Dead” (AMC) and the new “American Horror Story” (FX).

“The Walking Dead” has, amazingly, taken the gut-munching antics of ’70s zombie fare, like the movies of George A. Romero and Lucio Fulci (via Robert Kirkman’s comic book), and transferred them to the small screen virtually intact. The gore and sense of decay on the show is more prevalent than even in some recent big-screen zombie epics. “American Horror Story,” on the other hand, takes the out-of-control, almost satirical aspects of “True Blood” and ramps them up, while also delivering some truly eerie and nasty horror imagery as it liberally splashes the walls of the Harmon family’s new home (aka “the Murder House”) with blood and body parts. Both shows are hits, meaning that more than horror hounds are watching.

“I’m not sure that ‘American Horror Story’ could have happened four years ago,” said Stephen Moyer, who plays vampire Bill Compton on “True Blood” “I was very lucky to see the pilot, and it’s extraordinary. My great friend Denis O’Hare is in it and he emails me regularly with updates about the crazy s— they’re getting up to: He’s like, ‘You’re not going to believe what we’re doing!’

Moyer, speaking at a recent press junket in L.A. for his new movie “The Double,” added, “But I don’t think that FX or AMC would have commissioned something like this not knowing if it would work. Who knew that there was an audience in such mass amounts for this stuff? I mean, the ratings for ‘The Walking Dead’ are unbelievable.”

The British actor also mentioned “Game of Thrones” as one of his favorites, and it’s true that HBO’s hit dark fantasy series also takes a few cues from the horror genre, most notably with the mysterious race of ice creatures that live north of the Wall. Continuing that trend, NBC’s new “Grimm” is a blend of cop show, fairy tale and the supernatural that has won solid reviews from critics for its darker, adult tone, while ABC’s “Once Upon a Time” hits on some of the same themes (fairy-tale characters existing in modern-day reality).

There’s more to come as well, most notably with “The River,” a “found-footage” series set on the Amazon, while other upcoming shows like “Alcatraz” might incorporate darker elements into science-fiction premises.

“We are in this kind of world where hopefully the people who give awards will start recognizing this kind of stuff instead of pushing genre off into a side category,” said Moyer. “They’re getting the casts, the writers and the filmmakers to make this stuff, so I hope it carries on.”

 

Johnny Depp In Costume On The Set Of Dark Shadows

Johnny Depp in Dark Shadows makeup

Johnny Depp on set of Dark Shadows film

FROM: Huffintonpost.com

Historically, the teaming of Johnny Depp and ostentatious costuming has made for major success.

“Edward Scissorhands,” his creepily sweet mad scientist creation, is now a cult classic. His Willy Wonka character helped “Charlie and the Chocolate Factory” earn $474 million, while his four “Pirates of the Caribbean” films have earned nearly $3 billion and “Alice in Wonderland” topped a billion by itself.

This fall, Depp is dropping the makeup for “The Rum Diary,” an adaptation of his friend Hunter S. Thompson’s novel, but have no fear: freaky Depp is quickly coming back.

Amongst his plethora of upcoming projects is a big screen remake/adaptation of the late 60s/early 70s TV show “Dark Shadows,” which will be directed by his frequent (and freaky) collaborator, Tim Burton. He’ll play vampire Barnabas Collins, who helped make the show wildly popular and win its daytime TV slot often during its run, which ended in 1971.

Johnny Depp in Dark Shadows costume preview

Johnny Depp on Tim Burton's Dark Shadows set

Depp was captured on the set of the film by photographers, and early glimpses show that he’s really going for the gold — and white makeup — in this one.

Johnny Depp as vampire Barnabas Collins in Dark Shadows

Johnny Depp as vampire Barnabas Collins in Dark Shadows

new zealand ancient swamp monster

By Paul Chapman – The Telegraph

 A multibillion-dollar railway tunnel project in Auckland, New Zealand’s biggest city, is at risk after Maori protested it will plough through the realm of an ancient swamp monster

Auckland’s council regards the NZ$2.6 billion (£1.3 billion) cross-city rail link as vital to solving problems with traffic gridlock, and the city’s mayor has staked his political future on getting it built.

But the area’s Ngati Whatua tribe say the monster, known as a taniwha (pronounced tani-fa), lives in a centuries-old stream that now flows underground through concrete pipes, beneath which the new rail tunnel will burrow.

Glenn Wilcox, a member of the Maori Statutory Board, a watchdog for Maori interests, stunned councillors when he asked them at a meeting what was being done to protect the taniwha, named Horotiu.

He complained that no one from his iwi, or tribe, had been consulted about the taniwha, which he said “was here first”.

Taniwha, often depicted as dragon-like creatures, play a powerful part in Maori folklore, using their supernatural powers both to protect the local tribe and to become fearsome opponents if aroused to anger.

“As kaitiaki, or guardians, they protect people, but they also get up and bite you if they do not like what you are doing,” Mr Wilcox said.

Cameron Brewer, a city councillor, accused Mr Wilcox of “letting off the T-Bomb” by raising the prospect of a taniwha being in the way of the prestigious project.

Len Brown, the mayor, insisted: “I am satisfied that appropriate consultation with iwi on the proposal has occurred since it was first raised, and will continue to occur.”

Councillors will be chastened by a precedent set in 2002, when construction of a stretch of road between Auckland and Hamilton was halted after protesters complained that it was cutting through the domain of a revered one-eye taniwha.

Local Maori attributed a high number of road deaths in the area to the taniwha being angry.

Ranginui Walker, a respected Maori academic, said at the time: “You have to placate local demons, deities, taniwha. Don’t tempt fate.”

The government’s road building agency was forced to divert its new Waikato Expressway around the controversial area at extra expense.

Don't be afraid of the dark remake

Don’t Be Afraid of the Dark is a movie that follows Sally (Bailee Madison), a young girl who moves into a very haunted looking mansion – seriously, why do people still buy obviously haunted looking houses? – with her father (Guy Pearce) and his girlfriend (Katie Holmes).

Sally starts to hear voices coming from the basement (never a good thing) and before you know it all havoc breaks loose as the family battle the evil entities that also inhabit their new home.

Don’t Be Afraid of the Dark is directed by Troy Nixey – the protege of Guillermo del Toro of  The Orphanage and Pan’s Labyrinth fame.

hot katie holmes

Katie Holmes

Rise of the Planet of the Apes Trailer is Out!

An origin story set in present day San Francisco, where man’s own experiments with genetic engineering lead to the development of intelligence in apes and the onset of a war for supremacy

Directed by
Rupert Wyatt

Cast
James Franco
Tom Felton
Freida Pinto
Andy Serkis
Brian Cox
John Lithgow

Make Up Department
Emanuela Daus … makeup artist
Vanessa Giles … second unit: makeup
Naomi Hirano … makeup artist
Emma Julia Jacobs… makeup artist
Michael Nickiforek … animal effects fabrication
Bill Terezakis … special makeup effects designer

Special Effects Department
Cara E. Anderson … special effects buyer
Kelly Coe … special effects technician
Richard Darwin … animatronic designer
Alan Hawes … special effects assistant
Tony Lazarowich … special effects coordinator
Chris Link … special effects rigging
James Paradis … second unit special effects coordinator
Harry Tomsic … special effects technician
Steve Tressel … special effects technician
Dan Youngs … special effects assistant

 

Mila Kunis

Mila Kunis

From TheWrap.com

Mila Kunis is preparing to get very wicked.

The “Black Swan” star will indeed play a nefarious witch in Disney’s “Oz, the Great and Powerful,”  TheWrap confirmed Friday

Oscar nominee James Franco has the title role in Sam Raimi’s “Wizard of Oz” prequel. The film centers around a young magician who is forced to flee from a traveling circus. His hot air balloon gets caught in a tornado, and he winds up in Oz, which is run by a pair of wicked witches.

In this tale, Kunis plays Theodora, a witch who starts off good, like her sister Glinda. But when Franco’s character rejects her romantic advances, Theodora goes evil.

Joe Roth is producing the movie, which is slated to be released in 2013. David Lindsay-Abaire (“Rabbit Hole”) revised the script

James Franco

Original 1939 The Wizard of Oz

Red Skull from Captain America Revealed

Entertainment Weekly has posted the first official image of the Red Skull from Joe Johnston’s Captain America: The First Avenger

official image of the Red Skull from Joe Johnston’s Captain America: The First Avenger

Plot outline
After being deemed unfit for military service, Steve Rogers volunteers for a top secret research project that turns him into Captain America, a superhero dedicated to defending America’s ideals.

Expect a release in late July 2011

by Benjamin Svetkey – Entertainment Weekly

They don’t have a script, haven’t cast a star, and are still thinking about who to hire as a director. They don’t even know if it will be a prequel or a sequel (or if it’ll have voice-over narration). But Alcon Entertainment, producers of The Blind Side and The Book of Eli, have purchased the rights to make a movie based on the characters and settings of Blade Runner, the 1982 sci fi classic about a replicant-killing cop who falls for a fembot. “We have some ideas that we’re not in a position to discuss yet,” Andrew Kosove, Alcon’s co-CEO, teases to EW. “But from our point of view, the thematic core of the original movie — what does it mean to be a human being? — is even more relevant today than it was when the film came out. After all, we’re living in the industrial age of technology.” Kosove and his fellow CEO, Broderick Johnson, are partnering on the project with Bud Yorkin, one of the producers of the original film. “That picture turned out so well — it’s just been selected for preservation by the Library of Congress — that for a long time I was afraid to try to make another one,” Yorkin says. “But now seems like the perfect time. We just need to find the right writer and director.”

They could always try Ridley Scott, although it’s uncertain if the guy who made the original Blade Runner would even be interested. His rep have yet to return requests for comment, but he’s pretty busy right now making Prometheus, the sci-fi quasi-prequel to Alien starring Noomi Rapace and Michael Fassbender.

Here is your New Wonder Woman

Adrienne Palicki Wonder Woman

Adrienne Palicki

Her success just keeps growing, and now Adrienne Palicki has been selected to star in the new “Wonder Woman” television show.

The “Friday Night Lights” hottie scored the role for the new NBC pilot, reprising the part once played by Lynda Carter.

goremaster top 100 horror sci-fi fantasy movies

Top 100 Scary Movies!

 Page 2 of 136 « 1  2  3  4  5 » ...  Last »