Thursday, 31 January 2019
GRIP: Combat Racing’s Big Ass Update Unleashed
Watford, England - January 31, 2019 – Wired Productions Ltd., a leading independent video games publisher, and developer Caged Element Inc., are today pleased to announce that the ‘Big Ass Update’ has arrived on PlayStation 4 and Xbox One with the Nintendo Switch release coming close behind.
Hot-on-the-wheels of securing the runner-up spot in the IndieDB www.indiedb.com ‘Players Choice Indie of the Year’, Grip: Combat Racing shows no sign of slow-down thanks to an exciting roadmap of game-transforming content scheduled to roll out over the coming months, including team modes, new vehicles, race courses and as yet unannounced content - sure to wipe out the opposition!
The affectionately titled “Big Ass Update” offers a significant overhaul of the game’s online lobby and matchmaking systems, allowing players to blow each other up and pass the finish line quicker than ever before! Alongside this the game’s AI and catch-up system has been rebalanced, offering a more competitive experience, not only in the game’s single-player campaign but in each and every race.
A breakdown of the Big Ass Update highlights can be found, below:
*Lobby overhauled with new simplified voting mechanics and count down timer
*Catch-up assistance has been rebalanced and can be toggled during the game’s campaign
*AI bots now drive more competitively even when catch-up assistance is turned off
*AI bot vehicles are now selected to be comparable to the player’s vehicle
*Bug fix for AI bot catch-up in MP games
*Resolved issue when displaying split-screen results
*"View to a kill" battle arena is now rebalanced and redesigned
*"Magmatic Core" battle arena now has speed-pads and has been redesigned to prevent insta-death
*Improvements to various tracks’ collisions and performance
*Fixed issues around vehicle customisation
*Improved stability for split-screen tournaments
*Fixed bug preventing players 3 and 4 selecting vehicles in split-screen
*Resolved issue where achievements were incorrectly unlocked when spectating a MP game
*Improved calculations for leaderboard statistics
*Improved how the player’s overall average speed and position are calculated
*Electrical sounds volume is now set correctly
*Improved missile targeting when the target is manoeuvring hard
*Improved missile guidance – missiles now avoid the floor much more often when launching
*Vehicles are now allocated correctly to human players in split-screen events or tournaments
For full notes of the over 100 fixes, please visit https://wiredproductions.com/blogs/news
The game can be purchased now for console and PC – digitally on Steam, the PlayStation™ Store, Xbox Games Store or physically, upright and upside-down at global retail.
In addition to its digital release on Xbox One, GRIP: Combat Racing is available through the Xbox Game Pass subscription service, bringing the title to Xbox players around the world.
The Kid Who Would Be King - Epic Featurette
Old school magic meets the modern world in the epic adventure THE KID WHO WOULD BE KING. Alex (Ashbourne Serkis) thinks he's just another nobody, until he stumbles upon the mythical Sword in the Stone, Excalibur. Now, he must unite his friends and enemies into a band of knights and, together with the legendary wizard Merlin (Stewart), take on the wicked enchantress Morgana (Ferguson). With the future at stake, Alex must become the great leader he never dreamed he could be.
Starring Louis Ashbourne Serkis, Dean Chaumoo, Tom Taylor, Rhianna Dorris, Angus Imrie, Patrick Stewart and Rebecca Ferguson, THE KID WHO WOULD BE KING arrives in UK cinemas February 15, 2019.
Channel 4 commissions Deadwater Fell
Written by Daisy Coulam, this 4-part series is a forensic examination of a tragedy and its effects on a small Scottish community, and an exploration of the evil which can reside behind closed doors
The series examines the ripple effect of the crime on each person who knew and loved the family. From the best friends of the victims, to their parents, and the children who have to go to school the next day.
Deadwater Fell is also a dissection of two marriages. Best friends Jess and Kate were closer than sisters, they worked together at the local school and went on holiday together. But when Kate and her three children are found murdered, and her husband Tom is suspected of the crime, Jess’ world is upended in her search for answers. She is desperate to understand what caused this tragedy, and what secrets lie at the root of this horrific act. Meanwhile, her own already-fragile relationship with her husband Steve is driven to the brink of collapse amid the chaos.
Beneath the shadow of this murder, once strong relationships become fractured, respect gives way to recriminations, and friendship is replaced by suspicion. The community is now irrevocably associated with death, while those that are left behind desperately try to make sense of a tragedy that simply makes no sense at all.
Caroline Hollick, Head of Drama at Channel 4, says: “I’m so proud that Deadwater Fell (w/t) is my first commission at C4. Daisy’s writing is warm and full of heart, while boldly tackling epic themes of extreme violence with psychological acuity. She is turning the norms of family drama on its head, with a story that’s deeply shocking yet always relatable.”
Emma Kingsman-Lloyd, Executive Producer for Kudos, adds: “Daisy’s beguiling new drama dissects a community in crisis and examines the human psychology behind a horrific and hard to comprehend crime. But with her signature warmth and humanity, Daisy leads the audience on a journey to examine not just the nature of evil but also love and forgiveness.”
Daisy Coulam says: “With Deadwater Fell (w/t) I wanted to look at the notion of evil. We're very quick to call something evil - to dismiss it out of hand as something inhuman or monstrous. But it is humans who commit these acts. Deadwater Fell (w/t) is an unflinching look at a community we might live in, families we might know and what happens when tragedy befalls them.”
Interview with Jack McHenry - Director of Here Comes Hell
Ahead of the World premiere of the stand-out period horror comedy HERE COMES HELL at Arrow Video FrightFest Glasgow 2019, director Jack McHenry tells us about the challenges of a £22,000 budget. casting his mum and why nothing beats puppets and real blood.
HERE COMES HELL is to receive its world premiere at Arrow Video FrightFest Glasgow. Excited or what?
It’s amazing! I made this movie for people like me, people who like horror movies and crazy genre films. It’s the perfect place to premiere this kind of movie, as horror audiences are the most open minded movie-goers, they’re not turned off by low budgets or films made by first time directors. They just want an exciting cinematic experience.
The film started life as a Kickstarter campaign. Were you pleased with the outcome?
We shot a short trailer and a pitch video. That was the worst part for me, having to talk in front of a camera. I feel much happier behind the lens. When we posted the Kickstarter I had no idea it would turn out so well, I was a nervous wreck all the way though the campaign, I was terrified we wouldn’t make our goal. But it was really encouraging to see people getting behind the project. I’m so grateful to everyone who donated, without them we wouldn’t have a movie.
It’s been described as “Downton Abbey meets The Evil Dead”. True?
Yeah, that was our “elevator pitch”. The idea came about when I was watching David Lean’s Blithe Spirit and was like: what would happen if instead of his wife coming back and it being funny, it turned into a full on horror picture? I’ve always been a massive fan of Agatha Christie and early Hitchcock, but also at the same time I love horror movies like Sam Raimi’s Evil Dead and Peter Jackson’s Braindead and this movie allowed me to combine these two elements in a really fun way.
The film has copious amounts of crazy carnage. How did you achieve so much gory glory on so low a budget (£22,000)? Not to mention the caviar and cocktails…
“Gory glory” that’s cool. It was a tight budget, especially for what we were trying to achieve. I really wanted the audience to feel as if they are watching a film from the 1930’s so it was really important to try and make if look and sound as authentic as possible, and that was hard on our small budget. A lot of the effects we built from just joke shop stuff, like masks and fake arms. I wanted a lot of the gore and monster effects to be in camera, and have that old school feel about them. Nothing beats puppets and real blood.
What was the biggest challenge you faced as a director?
This is my first feature film and biggest project I’ve ever done, so that was already really terrifying for me. We shot the movie in 19 days, 10 of those were the main chunk of the film set in “Westwood Manor” so it was a really tight schedule. There were days were we were literally sprinting between set-ups, and at the same time I really wanted it to look as grand and luscious like a massive studio picture from the 1930’s or 1940’s. But the cast and crew were so great I think we managed to pull it off.
There are some terrific performances. What was the casting process like?
The actors really make the film; without them the movie wouldn’t be anywhere nearly as engaging. I’d worked with Margaret Clunie and Tom Bailey on a short film before this and they were so great. I really wanted to work with them again, so when we started writing this we wrote with them in mind. Margaret introduced me to Timothy Renouf, and as soon I met him I knew he had to play Freddie - he has this old movie star feel about him. Then I saw Charlie Robb doing a stand up show and he was so funny and I thought he would bring something interesting to the part of Victor. Jessica Webber was acting in a play that the composer of Here Comes Hell, Ben Pearson, was working on. When I saw her she really reminded me of Joan Fontaine, which was perfect for the role of Elizabeth. Then finally my Mum plays Madam Bellrose, so that was really fun working with her.
It looks like you all had a lot of fun. How tough was it balancing the comedy with the horror?
Like any horror comedy you have to make sure you get people to laugh at the funny bits and be scared at the horror moments, and that can be a hard line to tread. I looked to movies like An American Werewolf in London and Ghostbusters to the way they deal with the tone. I never wanted it to feel as if we were making a “spoof” or poking fun at the movies we were referencing, instead I wanted to make a love letter to genre movies.
Who are your genre influences?
For this film the influences were people like Sam Raimi, John Carpenter, Hitchcock , Argento and James Whale. Francis Ford Coppola's Dracula is one of my favourite movies, I love the visual style, and that was a massive influence on this film. But there’s also Peter Jackson’s early works in there and some of the Ealing comedies, as well as some elements of Rosemary’s Baby and The Shining.
Tell us a bit about the ambitions of your company Trashouse,
To make good movies! We’ve got a great crew of people together and we’ve got plenty of ideas. When we were making Here Comes Hell our pitch was always that we can make really original, entertaining films on a really low-budget, and we think that sums up Trashouse. We wanted to show, “hey, look what we can do for £22,000, imagine what we could do with £200,000!”
Finally, what’s next?
We’re developing a couple of scripts at the moment. One is a horror-adventure set in medieval times, and the other is an 18th century smuggler movie. Think The Departed meets Treasure Island…
HERE COMES HELL is showing at the Glasgow Film Theatre on Fri 1 March, 6.30pm, as part of Arrow Video FrightFest Glasgow 2019. Jack McHenry will be attending.
ST.AGATHA – opening FEB 8 in theaters
It's the 1950's in small town Georgia, a pregnant con woman on the run seeks refuge in a convent hidden in deafening isolation. What first starts out as the perfect place to have a child turns into a dark layer where silence is forced, ghastly secrets are masked, and every bit of will power Agatha has is tested. She soon learns the sick and twisted truth of the convent and the Odd people that lurk inside its halls. Agatha must now find a way to discover the unyielding strength needed to escape and save her baby before she's caged behind these walls forever.
A mobile go-kart game to play today? Starlit On Wheels is out!
January 31, 2019 - Looking forward for a go-kart-style racing experience on your smartphone? You can play it today! Starlit On Wheels is finally available for free for Android and iOS!
Starlit On Wheels is a racing title from the popular Starlit franchise, that has been downloaded by over 10 Million players. The free-to-play title is developed by Brazilian Studio Rockhead, and combines all the fun of the best kart games with colorful characters, insane tracks and even a powerful editor for the community to create their own courses.
Starlit On Wheels is the third installment of the Starlit series, after Starlit Adventures (mobile, PlayStation 4) and Starlit Archery (mobile).
All the series’ main characters - Bo, Kikki, Pikke and the villain Nuru - return in Starlit On Wheels, this time facing each other in crazy tracks full of obstacles, turns and loops. All of the 9 characters and 11 vehicles are fully customizable, with different handling, speed, acceleration; bringing an added layer of strategy to the game. Will you choose speed to get ahead on the straight line, or more control to get an edge on each corner? You decide.
Starlit On Wheels already features on launch 128 tracks carefully developed by the Rockhead team, but that is only the beginning. The game features a full-fledged and fun to use editor that lets players create their their own dream circuits and share them with the community. The best tracks of the week are selected for the competitive ingame Cup.
The series tells the story of the Starlits, peaceful creatures that hail from Starlit Island, a floating island in the night sky. All is well in the land until the coming of the evil Nuru, that sucks all the stars into his purse. Without them, the Starlits become sleepy and dispirited, and it’s up to Bo and Kikki to use the last remaining star to travel to the Low Lands, confront Nuru and save the day. It is just the beginning of an epic journey that will take them to different worlds, to face strange creatures and live many adventures.
Starlit was created by Rockhead, a Brazilian studio based in Porto Alegre, Brazil, with vast experience working with some of the biggest game publishers and the world. Starlit is also one of the few Brazilian franchises that explores multiple media formats: beyond the games, the franchise can also be found in comics and an animation (currently in development).
“We have been enjoying ourselves developing and testing Starlit On Wheels for many years, so we are very excited to see the players join the fun with the launch,” says Rodrigo “Chips” Scharnberg, Rockhead producer. “All the team at Rockhead worked really hard to create something truly exciting, and we are proud to be already getting some incredible feedback from both new players and fans of the Starlit series.”
Download now at
Play Store
iTunes
Wednesday, 30 January 2019
Devilworks Drops new Art and Trailer for Alien Sci Fi ‘After The Lethargy”
A new trailer has been released for alien sci-fi film ‘After The Lethargy’ from writer/director/producer Marc Carrete (Asmodexia, Framed).
After The Lethargy tells the story of a young journalist who travels to a war shelter, where one of history's most terrifying alien abduction occurred and discovers she is being hunted by a family of hybrid human aliens.
The film was first presented at SITGES, as part of the Pitchbox program, when it was a proof of concept & Devilworks has boarded Worldwide rights and will present the film to buyers in Berlin at the EFM.
Starring Andrea Guasch (Submergence), Joe Manjón (Framed, The Man Who Killed Don Quixote), Ramon Canals (Asmodexia) and Mark Schardan (Realive). After The Lethargy’ was produced under Marc Carret’s Spanish production companies After The Lethargy AIE and Creatures of the Dark and is his first feature in English.
The film screened at Terror de Molins, Buenos Aires Rojo Sangre and won Best Scare at the 2018 Horror Movie Awards and Best Sci Fi at 2018 New York City Horror Film Festival. Marc Carrete and Charles Hamilton executive produced.
Devilworks will be exhibiting at EFM in the Marriott Hotel Office #248 7th - 13th Feb
Trailer for alien sci-fi film #AfterTheLethargy from writer/director/producer #MarcCarrete.— BeenToTheMovies 💙 (@beentothemovies) January 30, 2019
The story of a young journalist who travels to a war shelter, where one of history's most terrifying alien abduction occurred & discovers she is being hunted by a family of hybrid aliens. pic.twitter.com/c4bPnnEdl0
New UK trailer for YULI – The Carlos Acosta Story
Yuli will receive its UK premiere at Glasgow Film Festival on 23 February
YULI – THE CARLOS ACOSTA STORY is directed by IcÃar BollaÃn (Take My Eyes, Even the Rain), written by Paul Laverty (I, Daniel Blake) and produced by Andrea Calderwood (Potboiler Films) and Juan Gordon (Morena Films). The film will be released in the UK and Ireland on Friday 12 April 2019, with an exclusive Live Film Event from the Linbury Theater at the Royal Opera House on Wednesday 3 April. This special screening will include a Q&A with Carlos Acosta, IcÃar BollaÃn and Paul Laverty which will be cinecast to audiences nationwide.
YULI had its World Premiere at the San Sebastian Film Festival, where it won the Best Screenplay Award. It has gone on to receive five nominations for the Spanish ‘Goya’ awards including Best New Actor for Carlos Acosta, Best Cinematography and Best Adapted Screenplay.
Based on Carlos Acosta’s autobiography NO WAY HOME – A CUBAN DANCER’S STORY, it is his own story about growing up in Cuba, becoming a dancer, moving to London and his relationship with his father, his family and his country.
The cast includes Carlos Acosta playing himself and introduces Edilson Manuel Olbera playing Carlos as a boy, Keyvin Martinez who plays Carlos as a young man and Santiago Alfonso as his father.
YULI is the nickname given to Carlos Acosta by his father Pedro. From a young age, Yuli fled any kind of discipline and education; the streets of a run-down neighbourhood in Havana was where he learned most of his schooling. But Pedro knows his son has natural talent and forces him to attend Cuba’s National Dance School. Against his will and despite his initial indiscipline, Yuli ends up being captivated by the world of dance, and from childhood he will begin to build his own legend, as one of the best dancers of his generation, often breaking boundaries and becoming the first black Principal dancer with The Royal Ballet in London, where he forged a legendary 17-year career.
Modern Films will release YULI in the UK on 12 April 2019.
Second Act - Stills and clips from Jennifer Lopez's new film
A woman stuck in a low-paying job gets a chance to fulfill her career ambitions when a private finance firm is misled into believing that she is an accomplished consultant, and hires her to handle a major business deal.
Starring
Jennifer Lopez
Leah Remini
Vanessa Hudgens
Treat Williams
Milo Ventimiglia
Stills:
Clips:
Netflix announced the cast of its latest Mandarin Original The Ghost Bride
Singapore, January 30 - Netflix announced the cast of its latest Mandarin Original The Ghost Bride today. The six-episode drama will be directed by award-winning Malaysian directors Quek Shio-Chuan and Ho Yu-Hang, written by an international team of screenwriters led by American-Taiwanese TV writer Kai Yu Wu, and stars Wu Kang Jen, Huang Peijia, Ludi Lin and Kuang Tian.
The Ghost Bride is an adaptation of a New York Times bestseller of the same name created by Yangsze Choo. The series takes a refreshing production approach of featuring dual directors and a team of international screenwriters with established Hollywood American-Taiwanese TV writer Kai Yu Wu as head writer. She is known for her work in smash hits such as Hannibal and The Flash. Quek Shio Chuan, one of the directors, has moved the hearts of thousands with his autobiographical film Guang The Movie, a story of his relationship with his high-functioning autistic brother. Ho Yuhang’s brilliant direction of At the End of Daybreak featured female lead Kara Hu and was awarded the Best Actress in eight Asian film awards.
Along with the joint force from Hollywood, Malaysia and Taiwan, The Ghost Bride also casts a diverse lineup of talents across the east and the west. Wu Kang Jen, named Best Actor at the Golden Bell Awards and Taipei Film Festival for his outstanding performances in Wake Up and White Ant, will be joined by Malaysian actor and Mandarin musical and theatre artist, Kuang Tian, and Canadian-Chinese Hollywood star Ludi Lin, who is known for playing the Black Ranger in Power Ranger 2017 and recently seen in his role as Murk in Aquaman as the male leads. Rounding out the cast is Huang Peijia, an emerging actress who won the Best Actress from 2018 Golden Bell Awards with her performance in Roseki and from the Taipei Film Festival for her role in Cha Cha for Twins.
The Ghost Bride is set in 1890s Colonial Malacca. Li Lan has been offered a marriage proposal from the wealthy Lim Family to become the “ghost bride” to their recently deceased son. Her family will be saved from a lifetime of debt, but she’ll spend the rest of her life being haunted by the Lim family’s son. Desperate to get out of this ghastly arrangement, she soon finds herself wrapped up in a murder mystery and embroiled in other-worldly affairs much bigger than she could have ever imagined.
The series has started production in collaboration with Ideate Media. It is Netflix’s first Mandarin original series that is shot in Malaysia including locations at Johor Bahru, Penang and Ipoh.
ITV Studios label, Silverprint Pictures, produces four part drama, Flesh and Blood, written by Sarah Williams
Press Release from ITV
ITV Studios label, Silverprint Pictures, produces four part drama, Flesh and Blood, written by Sarah Williams
ITV’s Head of Drama, Polly Hill, today announced the commission of family drama, Flesh and Blood, written by Sarah Williams and produced by Silverprint Pictures.
Flesh and Blood is the modern story of three adult siblings - Helen, Jake and Natalie - who are thrown into disarray when their recently widowed mother Vivien declares she's in love with a new man.
This is no ordinary relationship drama, as someone in the family will be dead by the end of the story - but the question of who dies and who is the killer keeps us guessing right up to the last moment.
As she nears her 70th birthday, the siblings’ suspicions are heightened when retired GP Mark sweeps their mother off her feet, shifting her priorities away from her children. The happiness of her 45-year marriage to their father, Terry, is called into question, which sends a seismic shock through the lives of the siblings. Years of secrets, lies, rivalries and betrayals come to the surface and threaten to blow apart everything they’ve held dear.
With their large family home overlooking the Kent coast, their inheritance and the happy memories of their childhood all suddenly threatened by the arrival of Mark, the siblings attempt to find out more about him. But will their long-buried grudges and complicated personal lives allow them to pull together?
Commented Polly Hill:
“Sarah Williams perfectly captures the messy personal lives of the three siblings, and all is not what it seems. There’s so much more going on behind closed doors as we explore themes of relationships, trust, loyalty and love. Sarah cleverly weaves together this truthful family drama, through a compelling investigation that doesn’t reveal the victim until the very end. It’s a very original story, and we are delighted to have it on ITV.”
Sarah Williams (The Long Song, Case Sensitive, Poppy Shakespeare) executive produces Flesh and Blood alongside Silverprint Pictures, Creative Director, Kate Bartlett (Dark Heart, Shetland, Vera). Letitia Knight (Dark Heart, Vera) will produce the show.
Commented Kate Bartlett:
"Flesh and Blood is an original contemporary drama exploring family and romantic relationships in a way which is both darkly sharp and witty as well as deeply touching. Sarah Williams has written compelling and atmospheric scripts, which we are thrilled to be bringing to the screen for ITV."
Commented Sarah Williams:
“Coming from a big family myself, I’ve always been fascinated by sibling dynamics. Our brothers and sisters can be our closest allies or our sworn enemies – often in the space of a heartbeat. There’s a bond between siblings that was formed before we were fully conscious beings – something bone-deep and instinctual. No one can make us laugh as hard or wound us as deeply as our family - and that seemed to me incredibly rich territory for a drama.”
The series will begin filming in June in London and on the Kent coast.
ITV Studios Global Entertainment will distribute Flesh and Blood internationally.
Keeley Hawes, Sally Phillips, Jill Halfpenny join Year of the Rabbit
Channel 4’s up-coming comedy, Year of the Rabbit, has gone in to production with an outstanding guest cast.
The new 6x30 comedy, which is produced by Objective Fiction out of OMG Scotland with international partners IFC and all3media international, sees BAFTA-winning actor Matt Berry play Detective Inspector Rabbit, a hardened booze-hound cop in Victorian London. He's aided and abetted by his new partner Wilbur Strauss (Freddie Fox) and the country’s first female police officer, Mabel Wisbech (Susan Wokoma), as they bring justice to the streets of the east end.
Alongside the crime-fighting trio, Keeley Hawes (Bodyguard, Misbehaviour) stars as the mysterious Lydia, Sally Phillips (Veep, Bridget Jones) is Princess Juliana of Bulgaria, and Jill Halfpenny (Three Girls, In the Club) features as Rabbit’s ex, the deadly Flora.
Within the turmoil of the Whitechapel police station, Alun Armstrong (The Cane, Frontier) plays Chief Inspector Wisbech – who suffers two ways, as Rabbit’s boss and Mabel’s father – while Paul Kaye (Game of Thrones, Afterlife) plays Rabbit’s nemesis, D.I. Tanner.
Also starring in the series are David Dawson (Last Kingdom, Ripper Street), Ann Mitchell (Call The Midwife, Widows), Alistair Petrie (The Night Manager, Sex Education), Matthew Holness (Garth Marenghi’s Darkplace, Toast of London) and Craig Parkinson (Black Mirror: Bandersnatch, Line of Duty).
Keeley Hawes said: “It’s great to be working with Matt, Susan and Freddie on such a brilliantly original show. Lydia is such an enigmatic character. It’s been a thoroughly enjoyable, bonkers experience.”
Sally Phillips commented: ““I can report that there is literally nothing more pleasurable than playing a haughty, 19th Century, pansexual, Bulgarian autocrat with access to guns. I may have peaked.”
Jill Halfpenny added: “I’m thrilled to be a part of Year of the Rabbit. It's an amazing creative team and I’ve had the best time making it.”
Year of the Rabbit is directed by BAFTA-nominated Ben Taylor (Catastrophe, Sex Education) and written by Emmy and WGA Award-winners Andy Riley and Kevin Cecil (Veep, Black Books), with additional material from Matt Berry.
Ben Farrell and Toby Stevens will executive produce for Objective Fiction and Objective Media Group Scotland, with Hannah Mackay producing. The show was commissioned for Channel 4 by Fiona McDermott, Head of Comedy, and Jack Bayles, Commissioning Editor.
Those Who Remain - Darkness Trailer | PS4
Those Who Remain is a psychological thriller that takes place in Dormont, a small town in the US. Dormont appears to be a regular and typical American town at first glance, but it is however cursed by a demon who shrouded everything in darkness.
Most of Dormont’s population has been trapped inside the darkness, with no means of escape.
Edward Turner is just an ordinary man with a troubled past, who arrives in the wrong place at the wrong time. But he soon finds out that something is very wrong in Dormont.
There are strange creatures roaming in the dark, killing everyone that gets close. The only way to survive is by staying in the light.
The danger in the dark is not the only thing at play in Dormont.
There are strange portals that emanate a bright light, that seem to bring anyone that goes through them to another place, similar yet different, apparently unreal but very real.
Actions taken in one place have repercussions in the other.
PLATFORMS
PC, Nintendo Switch, PS4, Xbox One
Tuesday, 29 January 2019
REVIEW: - Incubo on Steam
Review by Jon Donnis
Incubo is a side scrolling platform game from Hehe Gamez and has a somewhat horror theme with many famous horror ghost characters making an appearance.
At it's base this is a classic side scrolling platform game. Each screen will have a puzzle to solve before you can move to the next screen.
Puzzles vary from moving objects around to reach different parts of the level, to using knowledge learnt from one part of the level to get past an obstacle. An obstacle might be a gap too large to jump, or it might be a ghost that if it touches you will kill you.
You play as a little boy who is stuck in a dream, he needs to find out the truth in the dream so he can escape.
So lets take a look at what is good and what is bad.
The Good
Hand drawn animation means this game looks beautiful. Really impressive.
The music/sound effects really do add to the experience, and as the game suggests, it is really best if you play while wearing headphones.
The levels have interesting challenges which can feel very satisfying once you figure out how to get past it, and then when you finally do.
The Bad
The game has a steep learning curve, and sometimes you can find yourself getting frustrated not so much because it is too difficult but because the controls can be a bit fiddly at times, meaning you need to sometimes make pixel perfect jumps in quick succession to complete an objective.
The controls could be improved, there is hardly any margin for error, and sometimes doing quick moves means that a jump you need to do simply does not happen. I hope these issues are fixed in future updates.
There are a few graphical glitches, and you can sometimes find yourself trapped with no way to continue other than to reset the levl.
Summary
A fun game that with the right updates could be a great game.
As the game is now I give it a 7/10
Buy from Steam at
https://store.steampowered.com/app/992330/Incubo/
Review By Jon Donnis
Sky One and Sky Kids release Moominvalley first-look trailer
Sky One and Sky Kids have released a first-look trailer of the upcoming family drama, Moominvalley, which will air in Easter 2019:
Moominvalley is based on the cherished Moomin stories by Finnish-Swedish artist Tove Jansson, and will consist of two series of 13 x 22-minute-long episodes. The new animation, created by Gutsy Animations, will air on Sky One, Sky Kids and NOW TV in Easter 2019 in the UK and public service broadcater Yle in Finland. The show is being created by an outstanding team, including Oscar®-winning director Steve Box (Wallace & Gromit: The Curse of the Were-Rabbit) and creative director Marika Makaroff.
The beloved characters are voiced by an outstanding cast including Taron Egerton (Moomintroll), Rosamund Pike (Moominmamma), Matt Berry (Moominpappa), Bel Powley (Little My), Warwick Davis (Sniff), Joe Wilkinson (Hemulen-Male), Kate Winslet (Mrs Fillyjonk), Jennifer Saunders (Mymble) Alison Steadman (Emma the Stage Rat), Will Self (The Muskrat), Richard Ayoade (The Ghost) Akiya Henry (Snorkmaiden), Edvin Endre (Snufkin), Mayumi Kawai (Ninny), Matt Lucas (Teety-Woo), Katie Leung (Too-Ticky), Rebecca Root (Misabel), Susie Brann (Hemulen-Male), Joe Wilkinson (Hemulen-Male).
Jamie Heaslip and John Barclay join BBC’s 2019 Six Nations Championship line-up
Former British and Irish Lions and Ireland player Jamie Heaslip along with Scotland captain John Barclay are the latest rugby union stars to join the BBC’s line-up for the upcoming 2019 Guinness Six Nations Championship.
*Former British and Irish Lions captains Martin Johnson, Sam Warburton and Paul O’Connell return to line-up
*Scotland captain John Barclay and former Ireland player Jamie Heaslip join BBC team
*Gabby Logan and John Inverdale to front live games on the BBC
*Women’s Six Nations Championship games streamed live
*Live commentary from every home nations game on Radio 5 live and 5 live sports extra
*Comprehensive coverage available at all times on BBC Sport’s digital channels
Bringing viewers live TV coverage of all of Wales, Scotland and France home games, the Six Nations Championship opens with France v Wales in Paris on Friday 1 February on BBC One and BBC iPlayer. Other key matches on the BBC include Wales v England, Scotland v Ireland and last year’s runners-up, Wales against last year’s winner, Ireland on March 16.
Gabby Logan and John Inverdale will lead the BBC’s TV coverage and will be joined by some of the biggest names in rugby union to offer their expert analysis and insight, including, Sam Warburton, Martin Johnson, Paul O’Connell, Jamie Heaslip, John Barclay, Jeremy Guscott, Jonathan Davies, Martyn Williams, Chris Paterson, Thomas Castaignede, Jake Polledri, Andy Nicol and Brian Moore.
TV commentary will be provided by the experienced Eddie Butler, Andrew Cotter and Sara Orchard. Sonja McLaughlan and Lee McKenzie will be pitch side at every TV game delivering viewers all of the updates as they happen on and off the field.
A highlights show will be available on BBC Two every Sunday afternoon during the competition where John Inverdale will be joined by guests to look at how all six nations performed that weekend as well as covering all the major talking points and incidents.
The Women’s Six Nations Championship returns to the BBC for 2019 with selected games available to watch on the BBC Sport website, app and Connected TVs. A highlights show will also be shown each Sunday night on BBC Two and BBC iPlayer so viewers can catch up on the action from every game.
Live radio commentary from every home nations game will be available on 5 live and 5 live sports extra throughout the competition. Also, all of England’s Women’s Six Nations games will be covered on 5 live sports extra and the BBC Sport website. World Cup winner and former England player Danielle Waterman will be part of the commentary team for the women’s games.
Joining the 5 live commentary team for the 2019 Six Nations are Shane Williams, Rory Lawson, Shane Horgan, Gavin Hastings, Denis Hickie and Paul Grayson.
Matt Dawson’s Rugby Show returns to 5 live every Thursday night before a Six Nations game weekend and the Rugby Union Weekly podcast will be available to listen to every Monday - Ugo Monye and the BBC’s new rugby union correspondent Chris Jones will cover all of the latest happenings in the Six Nations.
A comprehensive digital service enables fans to share in all the excitement of the men’s and women’s Six Nations through the BBC Sport website and via the BBC Sport app on mobiles, tablets and connected TVs.
Selected men’s and women’s live matches will be streamed via the website, app and Connected TVs and there will be in-play highlights of BBC games and match highlights of others after the final whistle.
BBC Live pages will also cover every minute of every match day with live text commentaries, video streams, clips, stats and social media content.
BBC Sport’s social media accounts, which have over 20 million followers across Facebook, Twitter, Instagram and YouTube will provide all the latest breaking news and some of the best clips from the tournament catching the most crucial, dramatic and shareable moments in all their glory.
Every Friday ahead of each Six Nations weekend, the BBC News Channel will preview all of the action and major talking points with special guests and features in Sportsday from 6.30pm.
Pure: Interview with director Aneil Karia
What was it that attracted you to the idea of working on Pure?
When I read the Pure script, it was immediately apparent the show wanted to do something bold and different - but crucially, not just for the sake of being different. Its difference was an intrinsic part of it, much like Marnie’s difference is a difficult but immovable part of her. Its blend of humour and pathos, and its ability to handle mental illness with both a deep respect and brilliant irreverence, was a pretty rare and impressive blend. Beyond its portrayal of mental illness it was, more broadly, exploring something more universal - the process of moving to a new city and having to figure out who you are versus who you think you’re supposed to be. There was a lot to like.
It’s quite unusual to give the lead role to someone making their screen debut. Why was Charly given the opportunity?
Finding the lead for a new show like this was a challenge for various obvious reasons - it’s kind of like you don’t know 100% what they’re supposed to look or sound like until you see or hear them. And that was the case with Charly….we’d seen a lot of really talented actors who read brilliantly for the role but I suppose just didn’t quite feel right. Then we saw Charly and that slightly corny click-moment happened….she seemed to have this blend of youth, wisdom, optimism and dryness that suddenly took the character off the page and made her three dimensional, human and very very watchable. The fact it was Charly’s screen debut was more exciting rather than concerning. We just spoke a lot and did a lot of work before we started; on the process of shooting; blocking, light, multiple takes, the good stuff, the tedious stuff…we chatted a lot about all that.
The cast as a whole is pretty youthful. Do you like working with young actors?
Yeah I do. Young actors on the whole are excited to be working. They’re keen to discuss things, try different approaches… I was really lucky to work with this cast. They’re extremely talented and are either already going or about to go on to big things.
One of the challenges you had to face was to visually recreate what it’s like to experience an intrusive sexual thought. How did you go about that, and who did you take advice from?
I was very keen from the get-go that the intrusive thoughts were grounded in reality, and resisted the temptation for them to become too heightened visually speaking. When we have these thoughts (while I’m lucky enough not to suffer from Pure O I was very familiar with the concept of intrusive thoughts and had a lot as a teenager) there is nothing stylised about them, aesthetics-wise. The distressing image we imagine looks a lot like the reality would like; that’s why it’s disturbing. The thoughts are little bursts of another reality for the sufferer, so to then shoot it in a way that was ‘cinematic’ to the point of artificiality would really defeat the point. We obviously consulted with Rose a lot - and also the charities we worked alongside (MIND and OCD Action). In post-production we ended up giving the intrusive thoughts a slightly different grade, more for clarity than anything. We also played with focus a little, as a way of honing in on the distressing part of the scene - the mind’s eye is not 16:9 widescreen, so it was a good way of isolating the thought.
A lot of your scenes involve mass nudity – that must be interesting to direct!
Yeah it was quite nuts, so to speak. Having fifty naked SAs crammed into a tube carriage and trying to retain some kind of order is a challenge though it’s amazing how quickly the nudity and graphic acts became very normal - especially as the SAs were people who were very comfortable with nudity. The nature of shooting, whatever you’re on, tends to be that you’ve got a shit ton to do in not-enough-time so you just get on with choreographing the scene as you would with 50 clothed folk at the end of the day. While it’s a slightly absurd scenario you’re in, these mass nudity scenes are the intrusive thoughts, which are so integral to the portrayal of the illness (and so tragically un-absurd to Marnie) that you quickly just put aside the madness and concentrate on getting the shot as best you can.
In a comedy drama about mental illness, how do you ensure you don’t cross a line into mockery and bad taste?
I think the comedy in Pure is never at the expense of the illness. The comedy is used as a coping strategy; as a way of laughing through the pain it brings and the perceived isolation it causes Marnie. Pure hopefully allows us to laugh at the surface-absurdity of an illness while appreciating the deeper torment it brings.
Shipwrecked - Vick Hope interview
You’re the voice of the new series of Shipwrecked. What appealed to you about being part of the show?
It’s exciting! I watched the show when I was younger, and I remember thinking of all the reality shows around at the time that Shipwrecked would be the one I’d most like to take part in. Because it’s an adventure, and travelling on your own and meeting people with the same sense of adventure when you’re young is a dream that we all have. I feel really honoured to be a part of the new series.
What can you tell us about the new series?
There are two rival tribes – The Sharks and the Tigers - on two rival tropical islands competing to win over new arrivals, with £50k prize available for the largest tribe at the end. You’ll see beautiful friendships formed, some sweet summer romance, some explosive arguments, betrayals and island swapping. And that’s just in the first week!
Did you get to go to the Cook Islands?
I was on the dancefloor when Shipwrecked was being filmed and I didn’t come on board until it had all finished filming. I think it takes a few flights to get to the Cook Islands from the UK, but it certainly looks like paradise once you’re there and that shows on screen. They look absolutely stunning on the show. The contestants were all so lucky to have gone and had that experience. I’m very jealous of them because it looks absolutely gorgeous – better than Instagram!
Why do you think the show was so relatable to you?
It’s something I would have wanted to do when I was younger, for sure. Even taking away the TV show part, it’s an incredible life experience to go to the other side of the world and build a life and new friendships in paradise. But also, the idea of working out who your tribe are was so important to me when I was younger. I think that’s the same for all of us. The idea of what forms your identity and whether you fit in as one thing or another is something that we all think about, and something that’s definitely been a preoccupation of mine. I’m from Newcastle and went to Cambridge University and I worried whether I’d fit in; I’m mixed race, so my mum grew up in Nigeria and my dad grew up in England, and I’d sometimes wonder which culture I felt I identified with better. That whole thing of being young and working out which group of people you identify with and what things you have in common is very relatable to everyone and you see that play out in the new series as well.
What are the contestants like?
There are loads of great characters right from the start and coming through throughout the series. You have people who wouldn’t necessarily see on other shows. They all come from different walks of life – there’s somebody who grew up in Chelsea and someone who grew up on a housing estate in Manchester; Somebody who works as Prince Charming at Disneyland and somebody else who works in a charity shop. But nobody is defined by where they come from; they all learn about each other on their own terms. And because the tribes grow as the series goes on, you get a chance to learn more about their traits and how becoming a tribe moulds them as individuals.
How do you think you would get on as a castaway?
I like to think that I’d be quite practical. My mum’s from a very rural village in Nigeria, she grew up in a war, and for her it was really important that my brothers and I knew how to fend for ourselves. My dad bought me a Swiss army knife for my 13th birthday and we used to go camping and he showed me how to light fires. I climbed Kilimanjaro when I was 18. This said, my friends and brothers would probably say, although I just like to get stuck in and mean well, I’m quite clumsy and often more of a hindrance than a help. I would light a fire, but it may spread!
How do you think it differs from other reality shows?
Shipwrecked was the OG reality series, before Big Brother, before The Island, before Love Island, this one started it all, so it definitely feels special in that way. I think because the aim of the game isn’t falling in love, the characters that come through and the conversations they have are very different to what you may see on similar shows. I won’t go into too much detail, but there’s a really moving conversation that happens between some of them where they talk about bereavement and I shed a tear watching it. Also the fact that they aren’t being whittled down means we get to learn more about them as the series goes along.
You mention that it’s quite competitive. How does that affect the tribes?
As the series goes on, they become more tribal. The Sharks become SHARKS and the Tigers become TIGERS. They get very competitive to the point that some of them are using techniques to try and sabotage the rival island’s chances. Because they have this fire in their belly and a shared goal to win, both islands become really strong units. The bonds the castaways form and the ups and downs of their friendships is really touching to watch. But as well as being an amazing experience, they always have to keep in mind that it’s a game. Anything can happen. There are lots of twists and lots of turns. Loyalties will be tested and nobody’s place is safe on either island.
What’s your process when it comes to narrating the show?
I have a routine now. I get sent an advanced version of the episode and I run myself a big bath with a glass of red wine. I have my laptop on my laundry basket in the bathroom and watch the whole episode fully to get a sense of where their emotions are and what the big stories are, and I watch it without making any notes. Then the second time I watch it, I watch it through part by part to write my script around it. Then I’m in the booth and recording. But I’ve really looked forward to my Shipwrecked bath and wine time every week!
This is your next big TV project after doing Strictly Come Dancing. What was it like competing on such a huge entertainment show?
It’s incredible to be on a show that’s so loved by so many people. It was such a huge privilege to be asked, because until then the TV stuff I’d done had mainly been on youth programmes and specialist music programmes. To be on the biggest TV show was mad. For me the best part was getting messages from little girls and their mums saying that they were enjoying watching me dance. It was so touching to have that connection with that audience. But also, as a presenter, it was a real honour to be able to work with Tess and Claudia and all the team backstage who are just the best in the business and watch what they do.
Are you still dancing?
I always dance! As soon as the mics are down in the studio on Capital Breakfast, I’m dancing around to Little Mix.
What would your luxury item be?
I would want to take a camera, just to be able to collect my own memories. I know it’s obviously all being filmed, but to be able to save your own mementos of being there would be special.
Shipwrecked starts (28/01) and continues weeknights at 9pm on E4
Agents of SHIELD Season 6 - Official Teaser Trailer
Agent Coulson may be dead, but it looks like Clark Gregg isn't done with Marvel's Agents of SHIELD, judging by the action-packed new teaser trailer for Season 6. Could we be meeting an alternate universe, potentially evil, version of Coulson? Agents of SHIELD returns to ABC this summer, with a premiere date yet to be announced.
John Rhys-Davies Vs the undead in SOLDIER OF WAR, available On Demand this March
How do you fight the undead?
An undead soldier rises in Uncork’d Entertainment’s SOLDIER OF WAR this March!
In an acclaimed, award-winning performance, John Rhys-Davies (the Indiana Jones films, Lord of the Rings trilogy) faces a monstrous adversary from his past in SOLDIER OF WAR, available on demand this March.
Deep in the forest, two boys discover the entrance to a secret military bunker hidden since World War II and inadvertently awaken an undead soldier, who embarks on a grotesque, ritualistic killing spree. A police investigation begins, but one by one the police and other locals are murdered. Only a World War II veteran holds the secret to stop the killings, but will anybody believe him?
From director John Adams, and starring John Rhys-Davies, Rosie Fellner, and Tanya Franks, SOLDIER OF WAR on VOD March 3rd and DVD April 9th from Uncork’d Entertainment.
Monday, 28 January 2019
Competition: Win Monsters & Men
Monsters & Men is released on 4th of February on DVD & Bluray
And to celebrate we have a great competition for you and 3 Bluray copies to give away.
Synopsis
MONSTERS AND MEN premiered at Sundance and won the Special Jury Award for Outstanding First Feature and screened at the 2018 Toronto International Film Festival. Altitude Film Distribution have partnered with platinum selling artist Drake to jointly release the film in the UK & Ireland.
Shot in Brooklyn, NY, Monsters And Men features John David Washington (BlacKkKlansman, Ballers), up-and-coming actor Kelvin Harrison Jr. (Mudbound, It Comes At Night, The Wolf Hour) and star of Broadway’s Hamilton Anthony Ramos.
Monsters And Men tells a ripple-effect narrative: from an eye-witness (Ramos) who captures a shooting on his phone, an African-American police officer (Washington) battling with his conscience to stand up against his fellow officers, to a local high school student (Harrison Jr) who transforms from passive bystander to vehement activist. With fluid cinematography that's alert and expressive, the film explores the ramifications of such an event in a terrifying and poetic way.
Click here to buy from Amazon (Opens in a new window)
For your chance to win just answer the question below.
COMPETITION CLOSED
Terms and conditions
1. Closing date 11-02-19
2. No alternative prize is available
3. When the competition ends as indicated on this page, any and all entries received after this point will not count and emails blacklisted due to not checking this page first.
4. Winners will be chosen randomly and will be informed via email.
Competition: Win Crucible of the Vampire
Crucible of the Vampire is released on 4th of February on Dual Format DVD/Bluray
And to celebrate we have a great competition for you and 3 copies to give away.
Synopsis
An ancient, cursed artefact draws a young, university researcher to an old house which holds a dark and terrible secret. The young woman discovers the truth within the grim, foreboding walls of the house, but once in the clutches of its malevolent occupants, will she be able to leave with her life?
Starring Neil Morrissey, Katie Goldfinch, Florence Cady, Larry Rew and Babette Barat
Click here to buy from Amazon (Opens in a new window)
For your chance to win just answer the question below.
COMPETITION CLOSED
Terms and conditions
1. Closing date 11-02-19
2. No alternative prize is available
3. When the competition ends as indicated on this page, any and all entries received after this point will not count and emails blacklisted due to not checking this page first.
4. Winners will be chosen randomly and will be informed via email.
Interview with Lawrie Brewster - Director of Automata
Ahead of the World premiere of the darkly erotic AUTOMATA at Arrow Video FrightFest Glasgow 2019, director Lawrie Brewster tells us about his record-breaking Kickstarter campaign, the growth of Hex Studios and his fascination with creepy dolls.
AUTOMATA has earned its place in Kickstarter history as the UK’s most funded narrative film ever. Why do you think that happened?
The reason this happened is because there is a disconnect between a swathe of the audience, in our case a genre audience, and commercial distributors. Because commercial distributors and broadcasters for that matter, are so adept and so accustomed to selling a type of predictable product, that a form of repetition occurs whereby films that might not fit the mould, are simply not sold, and hence not usually produced. With Automata, and with all of our films at Hex Studios, we utilise that underserved niche, to produce unique genre films, which would be considered both unpredictable and even risky. Despite the financial merit of our achievements, when met with these facts, most industry types bury their head in the sand and plug their ears.
You have described the film as a glorious celebration of gothic horror. Can you elaborate?
Myself and Sarah Daly, we both grew up on classic Hammer Horror, Amicus and the American International Pictures (particularly those produced by Roger Corman and Vincent Price.) That, coupled with a great love of Gothic literature, and the art-movement which shares its name. It places the raw intensity of human emotion and the supernatural at its core, aspects which are of great importance to the human experience. In this respect, it provides a perfect field of creative exploration, with a rewarding sense of rich storytelling, romance, and spine-tingling chills. Our film celebrates all those influences mentioned in the above and adds to them an adult sense of perversion. The idea, that something can look pretty, beautiful even on the outside, and be pitch black on the inside. Gothic narratives, are a great way to explore such theatrical depictions while retaining a deep sense of psychological narrative.
As with your previous features, there is a supernatural fusion of historical narrative with contemporary themes, but would it be fair to say that AUTOMATA is your most darkly erotic?
That is a really interesting question because, with my head down working on the film it is easy to lose a sense of the outside perspective, especially of anyone's new perspective. If you’re to describe the film as a dark erotic Gothic Fantasy / Horror then that is fairly compatible with its influences. Additional influences stem from the Marquis de Sade, and of the novel Lolita by Vladimir Nabokov, among others. We examine adulthood, some aspects of perversion and the manner in which we may become complicit in thoughts and deeds we’d admonish in others. So, to answer your question I would say, yes.
Some of the main cast have appeared in your previous films. Does this reflect a close collaborative process? Take us through the key casting process.
Yes, we do take a collaborative approach to our filmmaking. I was always inspired by the John Waters ‘dream team’ approach and I do enjoy our team feeling like a family. Of course, each film brings new talent a well, but we do offer a strong sense of appreciation and loyalty towards those we’ve worked with both in front and behind the screen. With casting, there is a sense of repertory theatre, but the benefit of this model is that it allows us to grow our talents together. From each film, myself and our actors can discuss where we can take our talent forward.
Literature seems to be a huge inspiration in all the films you and co-creator Sarah Daly have made through Hex Studios. Are there literary roots to AUTOMATA?
There are definite literary influences, though they may be difficult for me to singularly identify. Broadly speaking, me and Sarah take influence from Gothic authors such as M. R. James, Edgar Allen Poe, H. P. Lovecraft, Henry James and modern authors such as James Herbert. This particular film takes additional inspiration from the works of the Marquis De Sade, and of Lolita by Vladimir Nabokov. In general, we produce so much pre-production material and research for the histories that abound in the sliver of story told by our films, that they almost feel like adapted novels, rather than specifically produced screenplays.
Where do you think our fascination with automata, particularly with automaton dolls, comes from?
I’ve always had a fascination with creepy dolls and have found Automaton to be of particular interest. I hadn’t thought of producing a horror film specific to that subject, until I saw one depicted in the horror film ‘Gothic’ directed by Ken Russell. I wondered then, with so many ‘creepy doll’ films why the story of a such a doll hadn’t been told before. Also, in the context of a Gothic Romance, which the period of those creations would be ideally suited.
Without giving too much away, there is a magnetic, perverse beauty in Alexandra Nicole Hulme’s interpretation of ‘The Infernal Princess’. What challenges did bringing the doll to life present?
Primarily our challenge was to produce the correct balance of what might present the ‘uncanny valley,’ that so-called determinator of the line between ‘life like’ and ‘artificial’ that we find so disturbing. Alexandra Nicole Hulme produced a brilliant performance, which I believe presents the uncanny valley experience for the audience, while also creating a sense of humanity and sensuality in her portrayals of the doll and it’s living muse, in the flashback scenes. Alexandra also choreographed careful movements and a magnificent clockwork dance, which is truly quite breath-taking to behold.
AUTOMATA is to receive its world premiere at Arrow Video FrightFest Glasgow 2019. How important is your relationship with FrightFest?
We’re honoured and delighted that FrightFest have chosen Automata to be a part of FrightFest Glasgow. I’m a huge admirer of everything that FrightFest has built and achieved for the genre community of filmmakers and fans. If it weren’t for FrightFest, and it’s commitment to present a diverse range of genre films to its audiences, then studios like Hex would struggle to find the appropriate platforms to share our films. Through our relationship with FrightFest, we are able to support that event, and receive their support in such a way, that we can build an alternative path for films to reach audiences outside the traditional market model. FrightFest is a pillar from which new independent films can be supported.
Hex Studios has created a YouTube Channel, which currently has over 270K subscribers. Having shrewdly released Kate Shenton’s EGOMANIAC, what future plans do you have for the growing indie supporting platform?
We’ve two channels now, our main channel for which we hope to produce more Horror themed prank videos, web series and indie film presentations of the type you mention. Our overall aim with the channel is to create a platform and a voice for independent horror genre film-makers that will allow us to grow together, while expanding the audience for us both. We also have a new channel: ‘Hex Creepypasta’, which will be focussing on narrated horror stories as well.
What does 2019 hold in store for Lawrie Brewster?
2019 will be our biggest year yet, in which Hex Studios will be distributing a number of feature films, including two of our own productions Automata and our portmanteau For We Are Many. We’re also looking to produce several web-series, while developing new feature films, as well as distributing two hard-back books, filled with terrifying short stories. While our plans are somewhat broad and ambitious, our target remains niche, which is to say, we aim to produce great horror entertainment for an audience that feels underserved. While so many are being ‘too cool for school’ or begin meta-ironic and retro, we’re instead quite earnest and traditional. Horror is a timeless and beautiful thing and we do our best to keep the candle alive… even in its darkest vaults!
AUTOMATA is showing at the Glasgow Film Theatre on Sat 2 March, 1.00pm, as part of Arrow Video FrightFest Glasgow 2019. Lawrie Brewster will be attending.
Ring - 20th Anniversary Trailer
Celebrate the 20th anniversary of the icon that taught western audiences to fear J-Horror with the newly restored cinematic return of Hideo Nakata’s classic Ring. Then, experience the terrifying Sadako through your own screen with the feature-packed first ever UK
A group of teenage friends are found dead, their bodies grotesquely contorted, their faces twisted in terror. Reiko (Nanako Matsushima, When Marnie Was There), a journalist and the aunt of one of the victims, sets out to investigate the shocking phenomenon, and in the process uncovers a creepy urban legend about a supposedly cursed videotape, the contents of which causes anyone who views it to die within a week – unless they can persuade someone else to watch it, and, in so doing, pass on the curse….
RING, will release in cinemas 1st March 2019.
It will then release on Digital, DVD, Blu-ray, Limited Edition Steelbook, and Limited Edition
Collection featuring Ring, Ring 2, Ring 0 and Spiral 18th March 2019.
Saturday, 26 January 2019
Ava Michelle to play the lead in new NETFLIX comedy film Tall Girl
Hollywood, CA - January 24, 2019 - After conducting an extensive worldwide casting call, Netflix announced today that actor, dancer, and model Ava Michelle will play the lead role in its upcoming live action comedy Tall Girl, making her feature film debut. The film captures the tone of the classic John Hughes movies, while exploring the nuanced and delicate relationships that make high school challenging, frustrating, memorable, and uplifting. Ava Michelle, who is 6 feet and 1 inch tall, will play Jodi, a 16 year old who must embrace what makes her different and be proud to stand out, not fit in.
Griffin Gluck (Netflix’s American Vandal, who also stars in the coming of age drama Big Time Adolescence) will star in Tall Girl as Jack Dunkleman, Jodi’s best friend. Actor, musician, and model Luke Eisner (The Goldbergs), who is making his feature film debut, will star as Stig, a handsome - and equally tall - Swedish foreign exchange student.
Sabrina Carpenter (The Hate U Give, forthcoming The Short History of The Long Road) stars as Harper, Jodi’s beautiful and extremely melodramatic pageant-winning older sister. Carpenter is signed with Hollywood Records and is preparing to embark on a world tour this year. Paris Berelc (Netflix’s Alexa & Katie) stars as Liz, the unconventional best friend of Jodi’s tormentor.
Rounding out Jodi’s family is Steve Zahn (Valley of the Boom, War for the Planet of the Apes) as Richie Kreyman, Jodi’s manic and anxious dad with a big heart and Angela Kinsey (Haters Back Off!, The Office) as Helaine Kreyman, Jodi's former pageant-queen mom who struggles to connect with her daughter.
Additional members of Tall Girl’s newly-announced cast are:
Anjelika Washington (DC Universe’s Stargirl) as Fareeda, Jodi’s best friend who seems to have it all figured out;
Clara Wilsey as Kimmy, the most popular girl at school and Jodi’s nemesis;
Rico Paris as Schnipper, a popular jerk and one of Jodi's regular tormentors
Production has begun in New Orleans with Nzingha Stewart (Grey’s Anatomy, A Million Little Things) directing. The film is written by Sam Wolfson (Andi Mack, Finding Carter). It is Netflix’s fourth collaboration with Wonderland’s McG and Mary Viola (The Duff). Wonderland’s Corey Marsh also serves as a producer.
“It was essential for us to find an actor to portray our lead who can speak to the challenges and lessons that Jodi experiences from a very personal place of authenticity,” said Nzingha Stewart, the film’s director. “Ava’s ability to beautifully and uniquely showcase those attributes stood out to us in a way that we believe audiences will connect with. Tall Girl showcases that embracing the very qualities that make you different is what allows you to overcome anything.”
ABOUT TALL GIRL
Tall Girl is the 2019 Netflix original comedy about Jodi, the tallest girl in her school, who has never quite felt comfortable in her own statuesque skin. All of that changes when she falls for the handsome (and equally tall) foreign exchange student Stig who, of course, gets Jodi's quirky, best, male friend Dunkleman and his hippie mom as a host family. As a result, Jodi gets embroiled in a surprising love triangle, which helps her realize she’s far more than her insecurities about her height have led her to believe.
Griffin Gluck (Netflix’s American Vandal, who also stars in the coming of age drama Big Time Adolescence) will star in Tall Girl as Jack Dunkleman, Jodi’s best friend. Actor, musician, and model Luke Eisner (The Goldbergs), who is making his feature film debut, will star as Stig, a handsome - and equally tall - Swedish foreign exchange student.
Sabrina Carpenter (The Hate U Give, forthcoming The Short History of The Long Road) stars as Harper, Jodi’s beautiful and extremely melodramatic pageant-winning older sister. Carpenter is signed with Hollywood Records and is preparing to embark on a world tour this year. Paris Berelc (Netflix’s Alexa & Katie) stars as Liz, the unconventional best friend of Jodi’s tormentor.
Rounding out Jodi’s family is Steve Zahn (Valley of the Boom, War for the Planet of the Apes) as Richie Kreyman, Jodi’s manic and anxious dad with a big heart and Angela Kinsey (Haters Back Off!, The Office) as Helaine Kreyman, Jodi's former pageant-queen mom who struggles to connect with her daughter.
Additional members of Tall Girl’s newly-announced cast are:
Anjelika Washington (DC Universe’s Stargirl) as Fareeda, Jodi’s best friend who seems to have it all figured out;
Clara Wilsey as Kimmy, the most popular girl at school and Jodi’s nemesis;
Rico Paris as Schnipper, a popular jerk and one of Jodi's regular tormentors
Production has begun in New Orleans with Nzingha Stewart (Grey’s Anatomy, A Million Little Things) directing. The film is written by Sam Wolfson (Andi Mack, Finding Carter). It is Netflix’s fourth collaboration with Wonderland’s McG and Mary Viola (The Duff). Wonderland’s Corey Marsh also serves as a producer.
“It was essential for us to find an actor to portray our lead who can speak to the challenges and lessons that Jodi experiences from a very personal place of authenticity,” said Nzingha Stewart, the film’s director. “Ava’s ability to beautifully and uniquely showcase those attributes stood out to us in a way that we believe audiences will connect with. Tall Girl showcases that embracing the very qualities that make you different is what allows you to overcome anything.”
ABOUT TALL GIRL
Tall Girl is the 2019 Netflix original comedy about Jodi, the tallest girl in her school, who has never quite felt comfortable in her own statuesque skin. All of that changes when she falls for the handsome (and equally tall) foreign exchange student Stig who, of course, gets Jodi's quirky, best, male friend Dunkleman and his hippie mom as a host family. As a result, Jodi gets embroiled in a surprising love triangle, which helps her realize she’s far more than her insecurities about her height have led her to believe.
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