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Post by jakeawesomesnake on Sept 6, 2013 17:35:29 GMT -5
First of all I would like to apologize for taking so long to do this, normally I like to be punctual and start the competition off on either the first or second of the new month. I've been preoccupied with (college), some connection issues, family issues, and actually being able to sleep somewhat normally. I was also trying to come up with some new ideas (and I have) ,but that being said I liked your idea LOB. The theme of this month is movies made during the current century (21st). The points for this theme work as follows:
1 point for non horror movies 2 points for horror movies 3 point for any non horror movie released this month 4 points for any horror movie released this month
As usual honor system at work and the competition ends on the last day of the month at midnight California time. Bring it on LOB, you're like The Undertaker, I can beat you in the other competitions ,but you always manage to get me at the big Halloween one and I'm going to try and change that this year.
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Post by loverofbeers on Sept 7, 2013 1:18:12 GMT -5
Time to see if your body can cash the checks your mouth has been writing.
Mess with me and I WILL make you famous.
I may not dress like Satan anymore, but I'm still down with the devil and I will go medevial on your ass!
Jake the Snake.... Rest.... In.... Peace.
This is MY yard.
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Post by loverofbeers on Sept 9, 2013 2:02:57 GMT -5
Hatchet III, 2013. This is why I am a salivating and sometimes foaming at the mouth fan and fool for Horror films. I love this series!
First, I am proud to say that I have been a member of the Hatchet Army since the start, 2006. If you are a fan of the series, but haven't seen this third installment yet, just stop reading right now, buy yourself a copy, and geek out. Skip all spoilers. You have been warned, but I don't want to ruin this movie watching experience for any other members of the Hatchet Army. Watch it and guaranteed, you will be proud of our boy Adam Green and you will love all the characters and the surprising cameos.
SPOILERSSPOLIERSSPOILERSSPOILERS.
This installment, aka Adam Green Presents Hatchet III, was so much fun for me, a huge fan. So many characters have appeared in other Horror films. Danielle Harris from Halloween 4: The Return of Michael Myers, Halloween 5, the two Rob Zombie Halloween turds, Hatchet 2, and other Horror films and the Roseanne teevee show. Kane "God" Hodder the best Jason Voorhees from parts 7-10, Hatchet, Hatchet 2, Chillerama, an uncredited role co-playing Leatherface in Leatherface: The Texas Chainsaw Massacre 3, and so much more. Sid Haig from Spider Baby to House of a 1000 Corpses and The Devil's Rejects, and so many other Horror flicks. Zach Galligan from Gremlins and Gremlins 2 and Waxworks. Caroline Williams, "Stretch" from The Texas Chainsaw Massacre 2, Leatherface: The Texas Chainsaw Massacre 3 (a cameo appearance), and more. An extremely surprising and out of nowhere cameo from Joel David Moore from Hatchet, Spiral, Avatar (never seen it, and never will), and the teevee series Bones which I loved. The Newbury Comics logo from Hatchet and Hatchet 2 and probably Frozen. Derek Mears (who looks so much like Glen "Big Red Machine" Jacobs) from the re-imagining of Friday the 13th, Jason Voorhees himself. And Parry Shen, who like Kane Hodder has been in all three Hatchet movies, each time playing a different character. Oh yeah, Adam Green reprises his role as the drunk friend from Hatchet and Hatchet 2. And that is those that I am familiar with. The Sid Haig cameo surprised me and cracked me up with his over the top poor white trash racist character that was hilarious and a scene stealer. The Joel David Moore cameo was pure genius and shocked me. Genius.
This time Adam Green served as the writer of this final installment of the franchise that has made Victor Crowley a modern icon, a character and story he made up when he was eight years old in summer camp. He served as a co-producer also. The producer was his ex-girlfriend who played a young Victor Crowley in Hatchet, Sarah Elbert. The director who knocked it out of the park was BJ McDonnell.
Like Taz would say, this film was "off the Chain" in gore. The gore, make-up, special effects, beautiful cinematography, script, hilarious dialogue, plot, and soundtrack made this fan boy laugh, exclaim "AWESOME!!!", and stand up and clap at the end. This is the final film, with a conclusive finale and end to the legend of Victor Crowley. I am in such a great mood now, and like it's predecessors, I will be re-watching this movie and lending my copy of the dvd to friends for years.
Long live Victor Crowley and Rest In Peace you monstrous ghostly bulldozer. I am so glad that I have met and conversed with Adam Green and Kane Hodder, and I am proud to be a member of the Hatchet Army. Excelsior! And I am not sorry to gush on and on. A blood soaked recommend from me.
Drinking a Real Ale Oktoberfest from Blanco Texas, thirty miles to the west from my house, in the Texas Hill Country. Cheers!
LOB-2
And JAS, thank you for the comparison to The Undertaker, a favorite of mine, and a local Austinite from Houston (Death Valley), Texas. A Cheers! to you.
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Post by loverofbeers on Sept 13, 2013 22:32:13 GMT -5
I watched four movies, two new to me and two re-watches.
First I watched The Hills Have Eyes (2003). I am a big fan of Wes Craven's original seventies film. I have avoided this movie being sure that I would hate it, and I thought it would be torture porn, but nope, I dug it. I still prefer the original, but I can watch this version again. I was surprised that so much of the mutant "makeup" was actually effectively done CGI. The directors were French fanboys of the original and received the blessing of Wes Craven, the producer this time out, to tackle this project. On their part it was a labor of bloody love, and good for them and Horror fans. My main surprise was that the movie was filmed in Morocco. I was sure while watching it that I was seeing the landscape of gorgeous Southwest Utah. I don't know why it was filmed in Morocco but I figure that it was cheaper to film there than in the U.S.A.
Second I watched Freddy Vs. Jason (2003). This was my second viewing of this movie as I had watched it soon after it came out. I remember not liking it. I liked it a bit more this time, but damn, I bet Wes Craven hated it. First what I liked about this movie: Robert Englund reprising his role as the man of our dreams. I also liked how it was evident that Freddy was a sicko child molester and child killer. This truly made him a monster especially when he licked the photo of a girl he had just killed. Now what I did not like. Both Freddy's and Jason's makeup, that Kane (God) Hodder was not chosen to reprise his role as Mr. Voorhees, the script which was a combination of both characters' movies, a Loony Tune cartoon, and a Taiwanese martial arts flick with wire flying fighting a la Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon. The director was too all over the place in his script. I most likely will never re-watch this one again.
Third I watched Zombie Strippers (2008) for the fourth time. I watched it during it's very short theatrical run at The Dobie Theater (RIP) and later bought the dvd. Now what perplexes me is that I have never enjoyed this movie, but I keep watching it again and again. I guess one reason is for the Mexican-American character who is funny as is his burro, Paco. I worked at a topless bar twice and the unrealistic nature of the titty bar in this move bugs me. Titty bar customers don't act as foolish as this movie makes them out to be. Tito Ortiz has a short role as a cowardly bouncer. That is kinda humorous. The best part of the film is not Jenna Jameson's boobs, but Mr. Robert Englund as the general manager of the bar who is disgusted by the germs and possibly herpes that his gals carry like psychological baggage. Oh, dancers do not act like these bitches, most get along with each other, not like these catty man-eating (literally) hos. Also the customers prefer the disgusting zombified super strippers over the living and healthy ones. The zombie strippers did look like they had the herpe and the clap (clap-on, clap-off, the clapper!) all over their nasty bodies. Oh yeah, this movie bashed the Hell out of Dick Cheney, George W., and the military industrial complex, which is fine by me. I hope I never have another brain fart and think that it might be a good idea to revisit this crappy flick. Boobies ain't worth it, trust this old man.
Last I watched The Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde (2006). First the great: Tony Todd did a wonderful job in his two roles especially while playing "Eddie" Hyde. The bad included everything else including all the other actors, the CGI transformations, the script by writer/director John Carl Buechler (Friday the 13th Part 7 and tons of other movies especially as a makeup and effects guy), and the modernization of the Hyde character including nanotechnology chimp injections which led to three phases, Dr. Jekyll, Mr. Hyde, and Super-Chimp Chimp in top hat and cape, I kid you not. If not for the blood (CGI) this would be a crappy movie belonging on the Sci-Fi channel. Thank Uncle Satan for Tony Todd, an extremely talented man.
LOB-10
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Post by loverofbeers on Sept 15, 2013 0:35:07 GMT -5
Watched Evil Dead (2013). All I'm saying is that I approve, and kept trying to guess who was playing the "Ashley Williams" role. Uncle Satan bless Sam Raimi and Bruce Campbell, two of the three producers. No spoilers from me. Go watch this movie.
LOB-12
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Post by loverofbeers on Sept 18, 2013 21:27:24 GMT -5
I have not seen Insidious. Not sure I want to, now.
Today I went to the theater and watched Insidious Chapter 2. I was alone and there was two couples besides me in the whole joint for a very early afternoon screening. I fought not to doze off several times. At the end of the movie, I asked the couple behind me what they thought. The guy said he fell asleep for a while. 'Nuff said.
One detail, the killer spirit that possessed the father's body, well when the father is stuck in the other realm, a little unknown girl was shown. When her character is revealed, well I saw it coming earlier on, and the concept was lifted in my opinion directly from the fucked up sexuality scene and chilling ending of Sleepaway Camp, but not as effective, predictable to me, and not chilling. The movie was decent with two mild laugh moments, but too many "shaky cam" scenes.
-Yawn-
I had heard that Insidious was one of the most terrifying movies from the 2000s, but I can't believe that. Anyway, Insidious Chapter 2 was released this month, so that is a four pointer.
LOB-16
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Post by jakeawesomesnake on Sept 19, 2013 12:50:36 GMT -5
Spoilers Below:
First I watched Simon Rumley's 2010 American horror movie Red, White, & Blue starring Noah Taylor, Amanda Fuller, and Marc Senter, and is about the inter-crossing events that entangle the three main characters. I thought the acting, soundtrack ( a combination of various types of rock and an unrelenting strings/piano piece), cinematography, gore, and acts of violence was all great. I also liked how the movie did a good job of changing who you were rooting for a few times throughout the movie. I thought the three main characters all did a great job ,but I especially liked Noah Taylor as Nate, a sociopathic yet well adjusted former soldier. Additionally I liked how Nate didn't fuck around at all and the various techniques he employs throughout the film. Great movie I'd never heard of before and a recommend.
Second I finally watched Adam Green's 2006 American horror slasher Hatchet, starring Joel Moore, Richard Riehle, Kane Hodder, Robert Englund, and Tony Todd. It's about a pair of friends who get more than they bargain for during Mardi Gras while taking a haunted tour. The acting cinematography, soundtrack, and acts of violence were good. I thought the gore was undeniably great and that the movie was really funny. The sound effects were really bad ,but I think that was intentional to add to the comedy. Victor Crowley was awesome, as was Tony Todd's character. I'm glad I finally got around to seeing this good and really fun movie.
After that I watched the 2012 American film Outlaw Country starring Luke Grimes, John Hawkes, and Michael Rooker. It's about a country musician who is also a small time gangster and his ensuing trials and tribulations, that come with trying to balance these dual aspects of his life. The acting, soundtrack ( a combination of blues, country, and blues, country, and country blues rock), acts of violence, gore, and cinematography were all great. I did a little research and apparently the film was a sort of proof of concept/ pilot for a FX tv series, that as of yet hasn't been picked up. Similarly to Red, White, & Blue this was another great movie I'd heard nothing about and another recommend.
Finally I watched a movie that was highly recommended to me by LOB, Chris Silvertson's 2006 American horror movie The Lost based on Jack Ketchum's story of the same name, starring Marc Senter and Richard Riehle. The acting, soundtrack, cinematography, gore, acts of violence, and dialogue in this movie was all great. I was blown away by this movie and liked how unflinching it was. I thought it was interesting how the antagonist was a sociopath, with a sort of social OCD about his image. That ending sequence was incredibly powerful. Great movie and a recommend to anyone who hasn't seen it.
I have to say my first set was really good, I saw three great movies (two which I'd never heard of), discovered a great actor I'd never heard of (Marc Senter), an a really fun movie I'd been meaning to watch for a long time.
As far as Insidious goes I thought it was good ,but not this great or near-great horror masterpiece that a lot of people had described it as. So it's good ,but nothing special in my opinion. I did think the monster and his workshop was cool though.
JAS-7
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Post by loverofbeers on Sept 20, 2013 4:58:51 GMT -5
Okay, I'm open to Insidious, I trust Jake's judgement in Horror and other film genres and documentaries as well (except for his liking of Rob Zombie's Halloween and the Star Wars prequels, but nobody is perfect). It's trailer looks more intense than it's sequel, the snoozefest I struggled through yesterday.
I watched two movies, one new to me and one a second viewing.
First, last night I watched The Woman in Black (2012). This was a joint CBS Films (CBS?) and Hammer Studios atmospheric masterpiece. All the actors including the many children knocked it out of the park. The main character played by Daniel Radcliffe was an extremely simpathetic character, and a tragic one to boot, from the beginning to the finale. The Woman in Black is a vengeful ghost tale with great cinematography, effective soundtrack, extremely creepy turn-of-the-century (20th century that is) wind-up toys, and perfect Victorian English settings, especially the haunted property known as the Eel Marsh House. My only nitpick is that one of the dead children should have been skeletal remains when discovered, not a decomposed corpse, but 'nuff said as Stan Lee would say. I highly recommend this gorgeous Horror film, which reeks of Hammer, and as Diamond Dallas Page would say, that's a good thing. And talking DDP, I think I should post another Undertaker match, so off to Youtubeland I go.
Second I took Jake's recommend that he took from little ol' me and I re-watched The Lost (2006). I agree with everything Jake said. To add a bit, Marc Senter as Ray Pye reminded me of a younger version of Robert Deniro mixed with a pinch of Elvis Presley, and heavy on Alex from A Clockwork Orange and Charles Manson. There even was a mention by his character of the Tate/Bianca murders, specifically the pregnant Sharon Tate. This movie had references to Jaws and Romero's Night of the Living Dead. The cast was great and I will mention three cameos: Dee Wallace (The Howling and so many other films), Jack Ketchum himself as the bartender, and Richard Riehle who is a great and familiar character actor (Adam Green's Chillerama and Hatchet, and many other films and teevee shows). This movie is rough watching but excellent, and I discovered it listening to a great podcast, HorrorEtc.com's Jack Ketchum spotlight episode. This movie really scarred up the primary host of that show. I might watch two other Jack Ketchum movies this month, but I don't have the heart right now this month to re-watch the tragic and depressing The Girl Next Door, which is a great film that I recommend. Too depressing of a film depicting the real monsters, those people you might meet in the real world as the story is based on a true and sickening story from 1950s America.
LOB-20
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Post by loverofbeers on Sept 20, 2013 5:10:19 GMT -5
RIP Kanyon, a truly talented wrestler who suffered through depression and other "demons" as well as living in the closet. If you are gay, well I suppose life can be full of rough experiences. Fuck society's gay bashing cowards and bullies.
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Post by loverofbeers on Sept 22, 2013 22:33:17 GMT -5
I watched J.J. Abrams' Star Trek Into Darkness (2013). I am really impressed with this man. He is responsible for two of the three best Star Trek films, obviously including Star Trek II: The Wrath of Khan.
I think he is the same type of "nuts" as me, Jesse "The Governor" Ventura, and Alex Jones. I know I did not read too deeply into this film. Like building seven of the World Trade Center, well this movie is about the elements of a government knowingly turning a blind eye to a terrorist attack just to have an excuse to go to war, and achieve a false narrative for their own blood thirsty and greedy purposes, aka a false flag attack. Just like with 9-11 there are two bad sides in this film, one "trust worthy" and on "our side", and one a terrorist, with countless innocents caught in the middle and manipulated by emotion.
If you have not watched this film and plan to, make sure you are familiar with The Wrath of Khan first. I enjoyed how Abrams made nods to that film, but at the same time changed things around, most notably in the self sacrifice of a heroic character, and the rage this imparts in his best friend. I thought this flick was smart, smart, smart, and the CGI by Industrial Light and Magic was perfect with not a single flaw.
I loved the cinematography, the soundtrack, and the acting by the young cast that reminded me of originals they were emulating from the teevee series and the first batch of Star Trek movies. The only actors that did not remind me of the originals, but still delivered great performances, were the fox playing Uhura and Benedict Cumberbatch who played Ricardo Montalbán (I feel the need to say "Corinthian Leather"). Abrams made Khan a sympathetic villain, a surprise to me, and one of the leaders of the Federation into a genocidal, manipulative, and calculating rat bastard. Once again, smart, smart, smart. We even got a Tribble.
I am looking forward to what Abrams does with the love of my life, the Star Wars universe. And yes, I have finally forgiven that old hack-job, George Lucas. Not only did he sell the rights of Star Wars to Disney giving a chance for talented young Turks a chance to steady that wobbly franchise, but he, like Darth Vader, at the end turned from the Dark Side, and gave the $4 billion or so he made from the sale to charity. I guess The Creator was not replaced by a doppleganger after a tragic death circa 1983, just very much steeped in the Dark Side, but found the light before it was truly the end. May the Force be with him and with J.J. Abrams, and yes, I am proudly a dork.
LOB-21
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Post by loverofbeers on Sept 25, 2013 23:37:48 GMT -5
I am watching three movies with Natalie Portman, one down two to go, and isn't she awesome? I'm not a fan of most actors/actresses, but I am a sucker for this talented and brave actress (Black Swan and V for Vendetta). I watched Star Wars Episode Three Revenge of the Sith. I'll keep it short 'cause I could write a college level paper about the few things I liked about this movie and the dozens of things I didn't. So, I liked four actors; Natalie Portman, Ian McDiarmid, Christopher Lee, amd Ewan McGregor. I liked that of the three "prequels", this one was the darkest, the most reminiscent of The Empire Strikes Back, and had nearly no Jar Jar Binks, an abortion of total shit, and worst than the freaking Ewoks. I liked the first space battle, and I suppose the only space battle in the whole movie at the start after the opening crawl. I liked the end with baby Luke, Beru, and Owen and the twin suns of Tatooine, a scene reminiscent of the scene where teenage Luke looks up at the twin suns and tries to picture a more exciting life off-planet, a scene that ALWAYS chokes me up in the original Star Wars which I will not call Episode Four or A New Hope. Not gonna do it. I detested much but I'll leave it at three things for this post. Some of George "The Old Hack" Lucas's canned dialogue especially the lines of romance between Amidala and Anakin. The Frankenstein monster like rebirth of Darth Vader especially his yell/cry of "NOOOOOO!!!!". And the over use in every scene of green screens and subpar CGI. I chose this movie, as a huge Star Wars fan, to compare and contrast it's quality in light of the JJ Abrams' twin Star Trek homeruns. Abrams, I have faith that you will make this franchise worthy of my childhood years desire to see Episodes 7-9. And oh yeah, Han solo in Carbonite was discovered on the planet Mercury by NASA. Credit to JediTempleArchives.com for the heads up and Fox (cough, cough) News for the story and pics. www.foxnews.com/science/2013/09/23/nasa-sees-han-solo-on-planet-mercury/?intcmp=featuresLOB-22
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Post by loverofbeers on Sept 25, 2013 23:44:20 GMT -5
And I have two words for you, "Corinthian Leather".
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Post by jakeawesomesnake on Sept 29, 2013 3:25:01 GMT -5
Spoilers Below:
For my second set I watched a three great movies, one good one, and with half being horror and half not.
First I watched Lucky McKee's 2011 horror film The Woman (which came highly recommended to me) and is the third film I've seen from him. It's adapted from the Jack Ketchum novel of the same name and is about a lawyer who captures a feral woman and decides to civilize her. The acting, soundtrack, gore, cinematography, and acts of violence were great. I liked how all the details came together in this movie, for example you can tell little things aren't quite right even before this movie goes all out. I thought everyone did a great job in their roles. The woman (Polly McIntosh) had a great presence and did a good job of seeming animal-like, Sean Bridgers was great as Chris Cleek the sociopathic and misogynistic antagonist/protagonist , Angela Bettis was great as the battered housewife, Zach Brand was great as his budding sociopathic son, and Lauren Ashley Carter was great as Peggy Cleek. The movie also did a great job of surprising you with it's new turns of extremity. I thought it was great how you saw the son learning how to fake emotion. Great movie and a recommend.
Second I watched Ariel Vromen's 2012 American film The Iceman about the notorious contract killer with the titular nickname Richard Kuklinski, starring Michael Shannon, Winona Ryder, Ray Liotta, and Chris Evans. The acting, cinematography, soundtrack (which did a great job of setting the various eras), gore, and acts of violence were all great. Again, I loved all the little details in this movie and how they came back into play at later points. Shannon as Kuklinski and Chris Evans as Robert Pronge, a pair of hitmen partners did an exceptionally good job and offer a good contrast. You saw how Kuklinski was more of a conservative family man and Evans more of a loner-renegade. Great movie and a recommend.
After that I watched Yves Simoneau's 2003 American film 44 Minutes: The North Hollywood Shootout starring Michael Madsen, Ron Livingston, and Oleg Taktarov. The acting, soundtrack, cinematography, and acts of violence were good. The gore was great. It was done in a pseudo-documentary style, while at the same time also being presented as a regular movie, which sort of took away from it. Additionally,the shootout was hampered by being almost completely done in slow motion, which really took away from it. I think slow motion can be used extremely well in scenes of violence (Peckinpah did a great job of mixing it just at the right time with scenes that were going at regular speed and Copland had a great shootout done in a pseudo slow motion style that was really unique), but when it's overdone it can really take away from a movie. The movie had a good point about heat of the moment decisions and also pointed out how the incident put some faith back into the LAPD. Overall, a good movie that could've been much better.
Finally I watched a movie recommended to me by various sources (including you LOB), Fede Alvarez's 2013 American-New Zeland film Evil Dead. The acting, cinematography, gore, special effects, and acts of violence were great. I liked half of the soundtrack and didn't like other parts of it. I liked how it did a great job of making you wonder who'd survive (if any), how every little detail came into play, and how the movie misdirected you by messing with your expectations and knowledge of the original trilogy. The house was great, just really creepy and ominous, with so many signs that indicate you should get out immediately. I also loved all the drawings in the necronomicon. Additionally, I thought it did an excellent job of merging both practical and CGI effects together wonderfully. It did the right thing by both homaging and referencing the originals ,but without being too overt and liked that it was another story set in the same universe. Great movie, a recommend, and I'm glad to have scene this one without being spoiled.
On a sidenote, The Woman is a sequel to The Offspring, which by all accounts in god-awful and I actually think I've seen it as well. If this is so I agree with everyone else's assertion and it's even more awesome that The Woman was so great.
JAS-13
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Post by loverofbeers on Sept 30, 2013 3:49:06 GMT -5
So I agree with all your thoughts about The Woman. And I have one word for you: Socket. That was pure Horror genius and as disturbing as quality Horror gets in my opinion. I dug The Offspring but just checked some reviews, and it generally got shat on. The Woman is much better, but I thought that The Offspring was good and I disagree on the comparisons of it to The Hills Have Eyes or that it was a ripoff of The Hills Have Eyes because both movies are based on the true story out of Scotland about Sawney Bean and his family of cannibalistic murders ( en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sawney_Bean ). I'm glad you enjoyed the new version of Evil Dead and I agree with your review, and I'm glad it wasn't spoiled for you. I hope you watched through the credits for the "groovy" Bruce Campbell moment. My movie watching for the last half week and my planned viewings have been derailed by DVD player issues, namely, it died on me. Rent is a priority, so my DVD issue will have to wait, which affects my planned October Horrorthon. I am putting, for now, my selections in the hands of people who have uploaded to Youtube, which takes me to the "film" abortion I just watched. So I found The Bunnyman (2011) on Youtube. Last things first: avoid this stinking, steaming pile of monkey crap. I won't bother to look up the movie on IMDB.... okay I will, the blame needs to be dealt, and the culprit must be named.... Carl Lindbergh was the writer, director, and producer. Some good ideas were in this movie like the dump truck that the primary villain who is dressed in a white bunny outfit complete with pink tail drives. The movie is about six victims who don't have a cell phone between them and a murderous group of misfits, the Bunnyman, the psychotic yet hot bitch, and a gimp on a leash. The cameraman was on crack cocaine and I can't explain what a terrible job he did including his lack of focus control which was not on purpose and made a scene suddenly become blurry for a few seconds. The camera they used on closeups was also defective, and I think the cameraman had the shakes at points of filming. I feel that this low budget flick was shot with one take per scene, mistakes be damned. Even the credits were all fubarred. Apparently a sequel has been made, probably with better actors (these actors, well the six victims, were pretty awful) and a bigger budget. Again, skip this pile o'shit. LOB-24
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Post by jakeawesomesnake on Oct 1, 2013 0:00:18 GMT -5
Finally I watched From Hell, Cold Fish, Last Will and Testament of Rosalind Leigh, and Dante's Inferno. With the time left there's no way I can win. So I'll take a break and prepare for the next competition.
JAS-21
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