A new vampire flick is on its way that's thankfully rooted in horror instead of brooding teens in love! Check out your first look at the artwork and exclusive stills from Aeon: The Last Vampyre on Earth. Dig it!
Directed by Daniel E. Falicki, written by Warren Croyle and Ryan Lieske, and starring April Basile, Daniel E. Falicki, Chris Eddy, Joseph Charles McIntosh, Sara Jean Anderson, Ryon Lieske, and Jason Roth, check out the goods below.
Synopsis
Fleeing a cataclysm of unimaginable origin, Catherine Murnau finds herself trapped in a nightmare while holed up in a crumbling warehouse where a cryptic classified "human predator," has been accidentally set free. Catherine soon realizes that she is in fact not alone - coming face to face with the last Vampyre who is starving from being imprisoned in a weakened state for decades. Catherine begins to fear that she may have stumbled into her own tomb,...
Directed by Daniel E. Falicki, written by Warren Croyle and Ryan Lieske, and starring April Basile, Daniel E. Falicki, Chris Eddy, Joseph Charles McIntosh, Sara Jean Anderson, Ryon Lieske, and Jason Roth, check out the goods below.
Synopsis
Fleeing a cataclysm of unimaginable origin, Catherine Murnau finds herself trapped in a nightmare while holed up in a crumbling warehouse where a cryptic classified "human predator," has been accidentally set free. Catherine soon realizes that she is in fact not alone - coming face to face with the last Vampyre who is starving from being imprisoned in a weakened state for decades. Catherine begins to fear that she may have stumbled into her own tomb,...
- 6/21/2013
- by Uncle Creepy
- DreadCentral.com
Elizabeth Massie is a Bram Stoker Award-winning writer of short stories and novels, and she is also a humanitarian who has come up with some creative ways to give back. Elizabeth was gracious enough to take time out of her schedule to answer a few questions about the short story, "Abed," and her Hand to Hand Vision Fundraising work.
"Abed" has been called "one of the most disturbing horror stories ever written." What inspired you to write the story?
Necon is a fantastic horror convention in Rhode Island, a convention I attend as regularly as possible. One year, back in the early 1990s, John Skipp and Craig Spector were in attendance. Skipp had read some of my other works and invited me to submit a story to the second of the Book of the Dead (zombie) anthologies, Book of the Dead 2: Still Dead. He basically said, "Send us something that will blow our minds.
"Abed" has been called "one of the most disturbing horror stories ever written." What inspired you to write the story?
Necon is a fantastic horror convention in Rhode Island, a convention I attend as regularly as possible. One year, back in the early 1990s, John Skipp and Craig Spector were in attendance. Skipp had read some of my other works and invited me to submit a story to the second of the Book of the Dead (zombie) anthologies, Book of the Dead 2: Still Dead. He basically said, "Send us something that will blow our minds.
- 10/31/2012
- by Nancy Greene
- FEARnet
Breathing new life into a sub-genre that, it can be argued, has become somewhat stagnant, is new director Ryan Lieske, with his adaptation of horror author Elizabeth Massie's very subversive, very gory, zombie tale Abed. First printed in Skipp and Spector's Still Dead, an anthology of tales by the top names in horror literature, which was loosely based in the Dead universe created by George A. Romero, Abed tells the story a couple torn apart by the effects of the zombie apocalypse, and one woman determined to finally be a grandmother.What helps makes this project extra special amongst the horde of other zombie movies both feature length and short form, is the inclusion of one Mister Philip Nutman. If his name rings a bell...
- 2/17/2012
- Screen Anarchy
The Fifth Annual Buried Alive Film Festival invaded Atlanta’s historic Plaza Theater November 12-13th, showcasing the best in international short and feature length independent horror films. Hosted by author and horror evangelist Phil Nutman, the festival boasted the southeastern premiere of Frank Hennenlotter’s “Herschell Gordon Lewis, The Godfather of Gore” documentary, as well as screenings of Terry Gilliam’s short, “The Legend of Hallowdega,” and Greg Nicotero’s “United Monster Talent Agency.” Other highlights included appearances from filmmakers Ashley Thorpe and Andre Paim, who traveled to the festival from England and Brazil respectively, as well as the crew from Collective Studio in Michigan. (Pictured Left: Filmmakers Ashley Thorpe and Andre Paim. Photo Courtesy Buried Alive Film Festival.) Other feature screenings included a screening of H.G. Lewis’ “Two Thousand Maniacs”, and the Southeastern premieres of “Satan Hates You” and “She Wolf Rising.”
The hub of Atlanta’s thriving horror film loving community,...
The hub of Atlanta’s thriving horror film loving community,...
- 11/15/2010
- by Jessie
- FamousMonsters of Filmland
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