Humongous Faggotous
kiwifarms.net
- Joined
- Jun 18, 2020
Anyone seen Suitable Flesh yet? The trailer worked on me as a big Stuart Gordon and HP Lovecraft fan. Now that it's out on Shudder I'll probably watch it this weekend.
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This could be interesting.https://youtube.com/watch?v=d4sGQ-h1XFU
Interesting premise for a slasher that I admit I wanted to make myself. Although, this has been done before with Angst (1983) where you are with the killer the entire time without any cutaways at all to other characters.
Yea this does look decent and I do like the concept for this. I might give it a shothttps://youtube.com/watch?v=d4sGQ-h1XFU
Interesting premise for a slasher that I admit I wanted to make myself. Although, this has been done before with Angst (1983) where you are with the killer the entire time without any cutaways at all to other characters.
I temporarily forgot that the Maniac remake is another example of being with the killer the entire time. But I'd argue other serial killer movies are close enough to the premise.This could be interesting.
I loved the Maniac remake so much. It's up there with my favorite remakes like The Thing, Little Shop of Horrors, and The Blob.I temporarily forgot that the Maniac remake is another example of being with the killer the entire time. But I'd argue other serial killer movies are close enough to the premise.
That's one of my all time favorite remakesI temporarily forgot that the Maniac remake is another example of being with the killer the entire time. But I'd argue other serial killer movies are close enough to the premise.
“The Nightmare Before Christmas” director Tim Burton and “Gone Girl” writer Gillian Flynn are tackling a remake of “Attack of the Fifty Foot Woman” for Warner Bros.
Burton is directing the upcoming film from a script by Flynn. The science-fiction horror story follows a wealthy heiress who grows to a giant size after an alien encounter and exacts revenge on her cheating husband. It’s unclear how closely this new take will follow the original 1958 movie, starring Allison Hayes, William Hudson and Yvette Vickers.
The project reteams Burton with Warner Bros., where he is currently working on the sequel to his 1988 movie “Beetlejuice.” The follow-up film about a pesky poltergeist, newly and fittingly titled “Beetlejuice Beetlejuice,” will be released in theaters on Sept. 6. His other directing credits include “Edward Scissorhands,” “Alice in Wonderland,” “Charlie and the Chocolate Factory” and “Planet of the Apes.”
Flynn, meanwhile, was recently hired to adapt her novel “Dark Places” for a limited series at HBO. The former “Entertainment Weekly” writer wrote the screenplay for David Fincher’s 2014 thriller “Gone Girl.” She also turned her 2006 book “Sharp Objects” into the HBO miniseries of the same name, starring Amy Adams.
In addition to directing, Burton is producing “Attack of the Fifty Foot Woman” with Andrew Mittman and Tommy Harper. Kai Dolbashian served as executive producer. Burton is repped by WME. Flynn is repped by WME, Theresa Kang, and Jackoway Austen.
>Tim BurtonTim Burton to Direct ‘Attack of the Fifty Foot Woman’ Remake With ‘Gone Girl’ Author Gillian Flynn
Epic bump. This dude is like "WTF? Who quoted this months later?"It was 1994's Texas Chainsaw Massacre: The Next Generation. It was directed by Kim Henkel who co-wrote the original TCM with Tobe Hooper, and was his first and last directing gig
https://youtube.com/watch?v=TE4--hBr8UM
Kind of an interesting idea, but I felt like it sort of ran counter to the kind of random fatalism of the first one, where The Family is just totally fucked and nobody notices because its in the middle of nowhere. The government/illuminati angle sort of explains things that didn't need explaining and were better left unexplained. This goes into the whole random/reason spectrum regarding horror villains, and which you find scarier or more compelling. It can be a kind of fatalistic terror where the victims are just in the wrong place at the wrong time and usually involves flat characters with little development against mindless slashers, animals or monsters. Or the more personal kind that explores the deeper elements of the villain's motivation and relationship to the victims, including their emotional journeys, feeling of fault for being targeted, etc.But I think Next Generation has one very interesting idea that is deeply underdeveloped and that's the whole angle that the family work on behalf of the illuminati for unknown purposes but something involving rituals. It's also why I think Joe Bob likes Next Generation because of that angle... And it probably helped that he was quoted right on all the advertising.
That's a low bar.I Am Legend with Will Smith looks a million times better.