Blu-ray Has a DARK NIGHT OF THE SCARECROW!

Wednesday, August 31st, 2011
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To all Blu-ray owners, get ready to upgrade.  VCI Entertainment has announced they’ll be bringing the made-for-tv 1981 horror film, DARK NIGHT OF THE SCARECROW, to Blu-ray!  It will grace store shelves on October 11th with the following special features:

  • Director & Writer Commentary
  • Daniel Griffith Documentary
  • Q&A with Larry Drake
  • Tonya Crowe & J. D. Feigelson
  • CBS Network World Premiere Promo
  • Rebroadcast Promo
  • Behind the Scenes Photo Gallery

Premise:

When young Marylee Williams (Tonya Crowe) is found viciously mauled, all hell breaks loose in her small rural town. Officious postmaster Otis P. Hazelrigg (Charles Durning) leads a gang of bigots in pursuit of the suspect: her mentally challenged friend Bubba Ritter (Larry Drake). Finding him hiding inside a scarecrow, they exact brutal mob "justice"…only to discover a tragic mistake! Now a strange apparition stalks the land seeking each of them out, as the legend of the Scarecrow begins.

Promo Trailer:

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Fright Night (2011)

Wednesday, August 24th, 2011
Reviewer Rating: 
7


frightnightposter1.jpg
Rating #: 

7/10

Director: 

Craig Gillespie

Runtime: 

106 minutes

Cast: 

Anton Yelchin,
Colin Farrell,
Toni Collette,
David Tennant,
Christopher Mintz-Plasse,
Imogen Poots,
Sandra Vergara,
Dave Franco,
Emily Montague

Overall: 

Fright Night could've been a pointless carbon copy of the original, but instead, turned out to be a surprisingly amusing and enjoyable effort from an overused sub-genre. There are a lot of pros and cons for the changes made to the characters and story, but for the most part stayed true to the theme and offered some entertaining and fairly memorable scenes. Despite the excessive use of CGI and some glaring plot-holes towards the end, I liked the flick and had fun watching it.

Like many other fans, I hate remakes and especially the idea of a Fright Night remake. Despite that fact, I still try to see these films with somewhat of an open mind, especially if the original had room for improvement. Fright Night, however, I thought was perfectly fine the way it was, but naturally the studio thought otherwise. Either way, I went in with low expectations and came out rather surprised and pleased at how much of an entertaining flick it turned out to be.

Although the movie kept the general theme of its predecessor, and aside from the characters, some of the dialogue and a similar scene or two, this remake is pretty much an entirely different film, which is a plus in my book. If you’re not familiar with the source material, Fright Night tells the story of a young man, who suspects his new neighbor (Colin Farrell) is a vampire and the cause of all the disappearances in their small community.
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Fright Night Reviews: What did you think?

Friday, August 19th, 2011

By now you should likely have all read Sam’s review of the new Fright Night movie which hit theaters today and now its your turn to weigh in with your verdict. Sam gave it a 7 out of 10 in his review writing;

Fun is the operative word here. Fright Night isn’t deep, it’s not looking for Oscars, it wants to be an amusing comedy horror ride, something to distract you and your mates on a Friday night, and one those grounds it’s extremely successful. I laughed throughout the film, and though I was never scared, the horror set pieces (especially a club scene and the final confrontation between Peter, Charley and Jerry) are effective.

It’s almost exactly what I hoped I’d be signing up for with this movie, and though it’s not perfect it definitely comes recommended. Have a pizza, have a couple of beers, take a mate or a date and go and have fun.

A remake of the 1985 original, teenager Charley Brewster (Yelchin) guesses that his new neighbor Jerry Dandrige (Farrell) is a vampire responsible for a string of recent deaths. When no one he knows believes him, he enlists Peter Vincent (Tennant), a self proclaimed vampire killer and Las Vegas magician, to help him take down Jerry

Note: There is a poll embedded within this post, please visit the site to participate in this post’s poll.


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Fright Night 3D Review

Tuesday, August 16th, 2011

I’ve only seen the original Fright Night once, a couple of years back when I was filling in some gaps in my horror education. I didn’t think very much of it to be honest, and have only distant memories of it, so I didn’t really mind when I heard it was being remade.

For those who don’t know, both versions of Fright Night share the same basic framework; high schooler Charley Brewster (here Anton Yelchin) discovers that his next door neighbour Jerry (Colin Farrell) is a vampire, and enlists the help of famous vampire ‘expert’ Peter Vincent (Roddy MacDowall as an actor in the 1985 film, David Tennant as a Las Vegas magician in the 2011 version) so that he can kill ‘Jerry’ and save his Mother (Toni Colette) and girlfriend (British actress Imogen Poots). The two films hit most of the same beats and both owe much to Rear Window, though young audiences are likely to see it as horror version of Disturbia. However, the update works, and this energetic and entertaining film is one of the few truly successful remakes of the past few years.

Perhaps one of the reasons it works so well is that the screenwriter is Marti Noxon, who was a prolific writer and later became show runner on Buffy the Vampire Slayer. She doesn’t recycle Buffy speak here, but there are echoes of that show in Fright Night’s sharp and snarky writing (in particular the exchange about Jerry’s name could have come out of a Buffy episode, and there is also a Scooby gang reference). Characters are broadly defined, but largely well played. Anton Yelchin hasn’t yet become quite the recognisable name that he deserves to be, but this should help, it’s not his best performance but he’s a likeable protagonist and the former nerd who’s now got an impossibly hot girlfriend is a character type that a lot of us probably aspired to in high school. Yelchin’s no action hero, which means that there is at least a little tension inherent to scenes in which he confronts either Farrell or Christopher Mintz-Plasse, who again plays a McLovin’ like character in the first part of the film, as Charley’s nerdy former friend, but gets to play something quite different later on, to fun effect.

There is a sense of fun that runs through Fright Night, and it is embodied in the performances of its two biggest name actors. Colin Farrell clearly relishes playing Jerry’s gleeful evil — though he does make you question how, given how open he is about killing people (once doing so barely after dusk on a residential street) he has managed to avoid being identified in the past. In an early scene with Yelchin he oozes creepiness in a way that could mean ‘vampire’, or could simply suggest that Jerry’s a dick. You couldn’t accuse Farrell of being subtle (nor of having a perfect American accent), but he gets the tone of the film right with his performance. The same is true of David Tennant, who plays Peter Vincent as an alcoholic, ego-maniacal, boorish, and very funny Vegas magician. It’s a flamboyant and hugely entertaining turn, almost pantomimic in scale at times, but always good for a laugh. He may not have a great deal of screen time, but whenever he’s there Tennant owns the movie with his ridiculously entertaining (take that phrase however you like) performance.

Sadly the film’s two female leads, despite again turning in rather engaging performances and both being talented and likeable actresses, get a little sidelined. Toni Collette suffers most, with a somewhat thankless role as Yelchin’s mother, and while Imogen Poots shows off a great American accent and has one really striking scene towards the end of the film, she’s really more plot device than character here.

Director Craig Gillespie (whose last film was the sweet, sensitive, and very funny Lars and the Real Girl) is the real hero of the hour here. He gets the tone just right, allowing Noxon’s many jokes to play, but without letting the film lapse into parody, and helping the actors find the right tone as well. More than that though, and believe me, I’m as shocked as you are that I am about to say this… he uses the film’s 3D visuals well. I’m a dedicated 3D skeptic, and I still remain unconvinced that Fright Night needs to be in 3D, but I can’t deny that it does work, and that some of the film’s effects use the format to good (if slightly cheesy) advantage. Fright Night is, as you might expect, a dark film, but I didn’t experience any of the sort of detail obscuring fog that has dogged recent 3D movies, action (also a key part of the film) is also rendered well, and never has that smeary, indistinct, quality the format can convey. In terms of showing off with the 3D effects, Gillespie does so somewhat sparingly, but the moments he chooses — like a recently turned girl Charley attempts to rescue exploding into ashes — make for fun breaks of the fourth wall. Glowing ashes appearing to fall on the audience is a nice touch for a sunlight vampire death, and the kind of thing the 3D gimmick is made for. It still isn’t a storytelling device, but here it’s a device I can definitely live with, and I can see it adding to the fun of a first screening.

Fun is the operative word here. Fright Night isn’t deep, it’s not looking for Oscars, it wants to be an amusing comedy horror ride, something to distract you and your mates on a Friday night, and one those grounds it’s extremely successful. I laughed throughout the film, and though I was never scared, the horror set pieces (especially a club scene and the final confrontation between Peter, Charley and Jerry) are effective. It’s almost exactly what I hoped I’d be signing up for with this movie, and though it’s not perfect it definitely comes recommended. Have a pizza, have a couple of beers, take a mate or a date and go and have fun.

7/10


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First Hi-Res Image from Shark Night 3D

Saturday, April 16th, 2011

David R. Ellis’ Shark Night 3D at one time was going to be titled Untitled 3D Shark Thriller as Ellis hated the title of Shark Night but I guess thats a thing of the past.

Anyway thanks to the studio we have the first high-res image from the upcoming Shark Night film which features Sara Paxton in quite the predicament.

Shark Night 3D is set to hit theatres via Relativity this September 2nd. The film stars Dustin Milligan, Joel David Moore, Chris Carmack, Katharine McPhee and Sara Paxton.

Synopsis: “A group of friends spend a weekend at a lakeside house only to find that a danger lurks beneath the waters. Yet their biggest fear is realized when they discover that the lake’s shark inhabitants are not their only enemy. When attempts to skip town fail, one by one, these college kids — or the ones that are left — will have to battle their enemies head on in order to survive.”



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First Stills from the Fright Night Remake

Thursday, April 7th, 2011

Craig Gillespie’s upcoming remake of Tom Holland’s absolute classic Fright Night still has a few more months to go till we can witness his take on the film, but until then take a gander at a couple of stills from the remake courtesy of the guys over at Moviefone.

I have to say these images haven’t really changed my view on the remake but perhaps it could live up to the original, we shall see.

Anyway the images consists of Colin Farrell (Jerry Dandridge), Anton Yelchin (Charlie Brewster), Imogen Poots (Amy Peterson) and Christopher Mintz-Plasse (“Evil” Ed).

Synopsis: “Senior Charlie Brewster (Anton Yelchin) finally has it all going on: he’s running with the popular crowd and dating the most coveted girl in his high school. In fact, he’s so cool he’s even dissing his best friend. But trouble arrives when Jerry (Colin Farrell) moves in next door. He seems like a great guy at first, but there’s something not quite right—but everyone, including Charlie’s mom (Toni Collette), doesn’t notice. After observing some very strange activity, Charlie comes to an unmistakable conclusion: Jerry is a vampire preying on the neighborhood. Unable to convince anyone, Charlie has to find a way to get rid of the monster himself in this Craig Gillespie-helmed revamp of the comedy-horror classic.”

Fright Night hits theatres on August 19, 2011.


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Colin Farrell Comments on Fright Night Remake

Sunday, January 16th, 2011

Craig Gillespie’s remake of the iconic 80′s horror/comedy Fright Night, is one I am not happy with at all, but as its already been filmed, there isn’t much I can do, but just hope it still has somewhat of the same vibe as the original. The awesome thing about the remake is though, is that Chris Sarandon, who played Jerry Dandridge in the original makes a cameo.

Speaking of the Jerry Dandridge character, Colin Farrell who plays that character in the remake recently spoke with MTV about the Fright Night remake, while promoting his film The Way Back.

He told them; “I mean, I loved the original, and I hope the film is — on it’s own —
entertaining and works. Because I really did love the original, so much
so that — as I’ve said — I was hoping I wouldn’t like the remake when I
read it, because I didn’t want to have to answer questions about
remakes and lack of originality and all that s—,” he laughed. “I
didn’t want to think of myself in those terms either, so I was hoping
that I didn’t like it. But read it and I’m an actor and I loved it and I
went, ‘OK, let’s go to work.’” 

Farrell also revealed that Peter Vincent is a lot younger, but I think we gathered that from the poster, and that the remake is set in a very contemporary setting.

The Fright Night remake is directed by Craig
Gillespie and stars Anton Yelchin, Colin Farrell, Toni Collette, David
Tennant, Christopher Mintz-Plasse and Imogen Poots.

Synopsis:Senior Charlie Brewster (Anton
Yelchin) finally has it all going on: he’s running with the popular
crowd and dating the most coveted girl in his high school. In fact,
he’s so cool he’s even dissing his best friend. But trouble arrives
when Jerry (Colin Farrell) moves in next door. He seems like a great
guy at first, but there’s something not quite right—but everyone,
including Charlie’s mom (Toni Collette), doesn’t notice. After observing
some very strange activity, Charlie comes to an unmistakable
conclusion: Jerry is a vampire preying on the neighborhood. Unable to
convince anyone, Charlie has to find a way to get rid of the monster
himself in this Craig Gillespie-helmed revamp of the comedy-horror
classic.
 

Fright Night remake arrives in theatres on August 19, 2011.

So what are your thoughts on the upcoming remake? Liked the original, hated the original?


Horror-Movies.ca!

Fright Night

Sunday, November 28th, 2010
Fright Night – Halloween Horror
2007
Halloween Sounds
256kbps (VBR) Stereo
126MB
57 minutes
6 tracks

Here are one of the many albums I bought at Spirit Halloween store near me. This one is pretty good and like all the new albums I am ripping I’m making it higher quality so it might exceed over 100MB and some of them exceed sharebee’s file size so I will most likely share it on megaupload if that’s ok with everyone. Enjoy. Also look forward to the other two albums and a few reupped albums.

Tracklist

1. Graveyard Your
2. Into The Haunted House
3. Into The Lab
4. Down In The Dungeon
5. Creatures of The Night
6. Alien Abduction

Download Here

Scary Sounds of Halloween Blog

Shark Night 3D Finds Release

Saturday, November 27th, 2010

The race of 3D Shark films is apparently won, the American Shark Night will be beating the Australian Bait to the cinemas.  According to STYD Shark Night 3D (directed by David R. Ellis of Final Destination 2 & 4 and Snakes on a Plane) has been picked up by Relativity Media.  The title will undergo a change, I dunno why; it’s a decent enough title that tells you what you want to know.  Lose the 3D part, but that’s about it.  Shark Night 3D will be hitting theaters on September 2 2011.  


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Night of the Demons (2009)

Monday, October 18th, 2010
Reviewer Rating: 
6


notdemonsdvdart.jpg
Rating #: 

6/10

Director: 

Adam Gierasch

Runtime: 

93 minutes

Cast: 

Diora Baird,
Shannon Elizabeth,
Monica Keena,
Bobbi Sue Luther,
Jonathan Beach,
Michael Copon,
Tiffany Shepis,
Edward Furlong,
Linnea Quigley

Overall: 

The NotDemons remake doesn't really improve on the original as much as it could have and ends up with its own faults and room for improvement. Regardless, I was entertained and kept watching, despite it being incredibly clichéd and offering much of the genre's standard scare tactics, but I'd recommend just sticking to the original for a good watch this Halloween.

As with all horror classics, it was only a matter of time before we got a Night of the Demons "re-imagining" — another addition to the remake bandwagon that nobody asked for. Not surprisingly the movie fails to top the original, but still somehow managed to keep me somewhat entertained until the credits rolled.
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