5 items from 2012
23 April 2012 3:55 AM, PDT | The Hollywood News | See recent The Hollywood News news »
The first poster has been released for Jack & Diane, the greatly anticipated indie-lesbian-lycanthropic flick by Bradley Rust Gray and starring Juno Temple and Riley Keough.
It tells the tale of Jack and (funnily enough) Diane, two teenage girls who meet one night in New York and spend the night kissing ferociously. Their love blossoms quickly, but when Jack discovers that Diane is leaving the country, she pushes her away. Little does Jack know that their sexual awakening has stirred the beast in her lover. Are they mere visions? Or is Diane becoming a monster?
The film had been in development for many years and at one point was close to starring Ellen Page and her Juno co-star Olivia Thirlby. This set pulses racing, as the thought of the Page and Thrilby in a lesbian clinch was not unappealing to many. But this will be far from titillating exploitation, as Gray (The Exploding Girl, »
- John Sharp
8 April 2012 8:04 PM, PDT | Trailers from Hell | See recent Trailers from Hell news »
Our 5 most popular trailers. Find out what they are below!
The love for the Nsfw-quality of Tromeo and Juliet not withstanding, you guys are getting a little predictable. As with last week, three holdovers in the top five and two new ones enter. If you want to see something else, get over to our YouTube channel and start exploring.
Lloyd Kaufman on Tromeo and Juliet
The Bard gets Troma-tized. The story’s the same, but Troma adds all the toilet humor, explicit sex scenes and gratuitous gore that old Will thoughtlessly left out of his version.
Jack Hill on The Big Doll House
Jack Hill recalls the making of his mega-hit, the Roger Corman/Cirio Santiago jungle prison flick that started the avalanche of busty-broads-behind-bars pix that packed the drive-ins throughout the 70s.
John Landis on King Kong vs. Godzilla
Original Kong animator Willis O’Brien never got credit (nor »
- Danny
29 March 2012 8:30 AM, PDT | WeAreMovieGeeks.com | See recent WeAreMovieGeeks.com news »
We’re celebrating one of the great Hollywood directors at Super-8 Movie Madness next Tuesday, April 3rd with Super-8 Alfred Hitchcock Movie Madness !!!
We’ll be showing condensed (18 minute) versions of several of Alfred Hitchcock’s greatest films on Super-8 sound film projected on a big screen. They are: 18-minute condensed versions of North By Northwest, The Birds, Psycho, Frenzy, and Family Plot, a Hitchcock Trailer Reel, a Psycho Promo Reel, a The Birds Promo reel. The non-Hitchcock movies we’ll be showing April 3rd are the Hammer Horror shocker Lust For A Vampire, The Three Stooges in Three Sappy People, The Guinness Book Of World Records, the 1936 Sci-Fi epic Things To Come, and the 1945 horror film Dead Of Night.
Cover charge is a mere $3.00 and the show begins at 8pm. We’ll have Alfred Hitchcock trivia with prizes, and, as usual, there will be lots of posters and T-Shirts and stuff given away. »
- Tom Stockman
27 March 2012 6:14 AM, PDT | WeAreMovieGeeks.com | See recent WeAreMovieGeeks.com news »
It’s always a good time to read about director Alfred Hitchcock and expect a lot of attention on the Master of Suspense in the upcoming months as there are two films currently in production about him. Alfred Hitchcock And The Making Of Psycho (expect a title change on that one) based in the book by Steve Rebello, is in pre-production with Sacha Gervasi (Anvil! The Story Of Anvil) directing and an outstanding cast attached. Anthony Hopkins has signed on to play Hitch, Scarlett Johansson is cast as Janet Leigh, Jessica Biel will be playing Vera Miles, British actor James D’Arcy is Tony Perkins, and Helen Mirren will play Alma Reville (Mrs Hitchcock). The other Hitchcock film in the works is The Girl produced by The BBC that will premiere later this year on HBO. The Girl focuses on the love/hate relationship between Hitchcock (played by Toby Jones »
- Movie Geeks
1 February 2012 11:59 AM, PST | TheInsider.com | See recent The Insider news »
The Woman in Black marks a comeback for the Hammer Films banner, as the new Daniel Radcliffe ghost story is a welcome return to Gothic form for the legendary British production company famous for its many horror films of the late '50s, '60s and '70s.
With their own take on the Dracula, Frankenstein, Werewolf and Mummy legends, the prolific brand implied that there would be plenty of blood, lust and gore, often in lacey Victorian style. Classic titles included Taste the Blood of Dracula, Frankenstein Must be Destroyed, The Curse of the Werewolf, The Plague of the Zombies, Dracula Has Risen From the Grave, Lust for a Vampire, Quatermass and the Pit, Dr. Jekyll and Sister Hyde, Dracula A.D. 1972 and so much more.
The Woman in Black: What Scares Daniel Radcliffe
Christopher Lee (later of Saruman/The Lord of the Rings fame) and Peter Cushing (later of Grand Moff Tarkin/Star Wars fame) were »
5 items from 2012
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