Horror

Wedneday

Editor’s Note: Thanks for your patience with this site, after a weekend of moving files and finding the right look, my move to a new host is complete. Thanks for bearing with me.

Paul Dini Podcast

A great Best Of Conversation from Sci-Fi Talk’s Radio Days as the Batman Scribe, Paul Dini  joined Ernest Lilley and I to chat up Superman The Animated Series. Ernest reviewed a book to as he does so well.

Direct Download

JLA Doom At Paley Center Los Angeles

 

On Thursday, February 17, Warner Home Video, Los Angeles Times and The Paley Center for Media hosted the West Coast Premiere of Justice League: Doom, the highly anticipated next entry in the ongoing series of DC Universe Animated Original PG-13 Movies.

The capacity crowd reveled in the action-packed film, and enjoyed a lively post-screening panel discussion moderated by Los Angeles Times/Hero Complex guru Geoff Boucher and featuring the following film.

JLA Doom Clip

 

Ghost Hunters International Tonite 

Coming On SyFy

The Los Angeles Animation Festival (LAAF) is quickly approaching from March 7-11 and we wanted to make sure you had the dates and latest line-up for this year’s festivities.

This year’s LAAF Artistic Director is Sean Lennon and the 3rd annual event will honor celebrated animator and Academy Award® nominee,Bill Plympton for his contribution to the world of animation. The festival will screen the West Coast Premiere of “A Monster in Paris” as well as revivals of “Team America: World Police,” “The Iron Giant,” “Fantastic Planet,” “Akira,” and first animation Oscar® winner “Shrek.” Please see below for the full schedule and further details can be found online at www.laafest.com.

The Wolfpack Of Reseda

Synopsis: Ben’s life in the sub­ur­ban sprawl is spent be­tween his dumpy apart­ment and a flu­o­res­cent-​lit cu­bi­cle that numb his dreams and as­pi­ra­tions. Ig­nor­ing his room­mate’s warn­ing about were­wolves in the val­ley, he goes to the woods where he is bit­ten by some­thing mys­te­ri­ous.

See Episode 1

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Posted by scifitalk - February 22, 2012 at 2:55 pm

Categories: Being Human, DVD, Film, Horror, JLA Doom, sci-fi, Superman, Superman The Animated Series, SyFy Channel, Tim Daly, TV Series, Uncategorized   Tags:

Dichen Lachman, New Vampire

Dichen Lachman formerly of Dollhouse join the cast of Being Human. Here’s a transcript of a press

Dichen Lachman at the 2009 Comic Con in San Diego.

Image via Wikipedia

conference that occurred recently. (Thanks SyFy)

Tell us about Suren and her journey on Being Human. What do we have to look forward to?

Dichen Lachman:  Lots of things. Obviously I can’t tell you all of them, but she’s very interesting character and I had a lot of fun having the opportunity to play her. I mean, as an actor

obviously, playing a vampire is one of the things sort of on the list. And she’s incredibly complex, very damaged and reckless in many ways. But at the same time, she’s sort of striving to grow up and mature and be the woman that her mother would like her to be.She’s really interesting and I think you guys will enjoy watching her journey through the show because she really – Aidan’s character, it’s – she’s one of those things that just keeps sort of pulling him back into the world of vampires which she’s constantly trying to escape.So she really throws this (banter) in the works, but he’s planned.

Can you talk a little bit more about how Suren connects to Aidan’s past? I know you can’t talk a lot about it, but can you just give us an idea of,  what we can expect from that?

Dichen Lachman:  Well, it’s one of those I guess love-hate relationships. I mean, this had a very long history together and she’s obviously been in the ground for 80 years. So minus that. I mean, there’s sort of (bid) in Boston together and going further back, he knows. I mean, they’ve just had a very complicated past and I don’t think their relationship has ever been consummated.I think it’s just this very strong attraction they’ve had. And it’s going to be interesting them being together I think you guys will see in this modern world because she’s been away for so long underground and he’s had the opportunity to go through all these changes and change his ways.And so there’s that – her trying to understand or how far he’s come.  It’s I guess when you catch up with an old friend who you haven’t seen in a really long time and you sort of end of change.  Because real change as time goes. So it’s going to be – I think you’ll enjoy watching their relationship play out in the present day as well as the past because there’s these opportunities in the show to flash back which is why the show’s so great.And it’ll help you sort of understand their relationship now. So yes, does that answer the question?

I’ve seen your first episode of Being Human and to have you in the part, it seems like it’s tailor made for you. Do you know if they made any changes to the character once you were cast?

Dichen Lachman:  I don’t know. I know that there’s a few people working in the writing staff that worked on Dollhouse or maybe no, one. Maybe it’s just (Lisa). But the creative, the sense of the show, I don’t know if they changed anything.I actually should ask them, but it was such a great opportunity and it came round and I had to chemistry read and like everyone who was there was so nervous. But when I got the (slides) and they said, they’re interested in sort of auditioning you for this part, I read them and I was like, “This is great.”  like if just sometimes you read material and it just makes sense to you and I don’t know whether that’s just,  because it’s meant to be or because the writing’s good and the writing is good. But I just read it and I was like, “I think I know how this girl is meant to play and I know where she sits. And I understand it.” It wasn’t like a really great leap for me to make as, as an actor as far as like, “Oh, how do I do this?” It just came to make complete sense to me. So I’m not sure if they wrote it with me in mind or whether they changed it. I have no idea, I’d love to know. I should ask the guys, but no when I read the (slides), I was like, “This is so exciting” and I was so looking forward to being able to go into those dark places.  Because vampires are – they’re very interesting creatures.They play out one sort of shadow itself and you don’t get the opportunity to really do that a lot of the time,  to live in that dark space constantly.So no, I’d love to know the answer to that. I can’t tell you right now, but I can say that when I read it I really responded to it and I was really excited to go in and have the opportunity to read with Sam and for Syfy.  And the people who, the wonderful writers and creators of the show.

So can you kind of talk about what’s been the most challenging for you filming the series?

Dichen Lachman:  The most challenging, it’s going to be so – such a basic thing. I think it was like showing the teeth with the dots so they could like the fangs extending. And wearing the black contact lenses which cover your entire eye. I mean, all of us – all the vampires you had to have them fitted. You used to dread sitting in the makeup chair having someone like put these enormous lenses in our eyes.It was very difficult and Sam and I often had conversations about how to show our teeth so they could see CGI, the fangs growing because you kind of feel like a complete (unintelligible) in front of the camera and you’re trying to raise your upper lip so they can,  find the dots to make the CGI possible.That was I think one of the more difficult things because I’ve never done anything. Well, I’ve done things with CGI, but never sort of, that’s part of the performance. And when you’re performing – I mean, this is one of the things about being an actor. Sometimes it’s just very technical, it’s not sort of really craft-based.You have to be this angle and you have to raise your lip just the right amount and,  you’re still trying to keep in the moment and also satisfy the needs of the effects department. That was a real challenge and it’s such a basic thing.But no, I found that one of the more difficult things and obviously, as an actor sometimes when you’re doing a show, you have – and they shoot so fast especially, on a show like Being Human. I mean, they’re all remarkable. They work very quickly. They work very hard and the actors are all incredibly good. So they’re all, they’re for each other and for the show.But when you have to reach that emotional point, sometimes you don’t always have the time to get where you need to get and there’s a lot of pressure that I put on myself to get to those places and really commit to them. And I think one of the things in television is when you’re working at that speed, you really have to have a technique.You’re like a very strong technique so that you can be in those moments truthfully for the show and for the character.  That was also challenging and that’s challenging in all shows, when you have to get to the heightened emotional place. But you couldn’t be working with nicer people, more supportive. And yes, so it was definitely the technical aspect first and then  reaching that sort of heightened emotional state.

Can you see through the contacts though? They cover your whole eye or are they just like regular contact lenses?

Dichen Lachman:  There’s a tiny little hole for your pupil to see through, but it’s not very big. So your vision is limited. You can still see. It’s very uncomfortable for the first sort of 15 minutes because the things so large and so foreign in your eye. But then it’s sort of like, it settles in and you just have – your peripheral vision becomes extremely limited and you can only really see what’s directly in front of you.And I remember Sam and Kyle had a big fight scene and they wanted them to wear these contacts and they were like on the top of a building with no balcony. They’re on the roof and Sam just had to say, “We can’t do this with the contacts in. We may fall off and we can hardly see.” It was so completely dangerous. Yes so you can still see, but it’s very limited.But everyone’s so understanding and the makeup department, they’re the sweetest, loveliest people on Earth. And, they did everything to try and make you feel comfortable. And, everyone understood that it was like a thing. I can’t even imagine doing an entire film with those things in and I know people have. But yes, you can see.

Can you could talk a little bit about your experiences filming your first episode of Being Human. What was sort of like stepping into the role initially, anything that really comes to mind from that shoot?

Dichen Lachman:  Well, firstly everyone was amazing. I couldn’t have been on a set with, nicer people. And Montreal which is where they shoot the show is just a really stunning city and, as most of you know it’s predominately French speaking. So, you kind of feel like you’re in Europe in a way.Stepping onto the set, obviously I was nervous. You always get a little bit nervous your first day and there were some sort of - there was a bit of tweaking to do with the character just because I only got there a few days before and we were still trying to find her voice.  Like well how does someone who’s 500 years old or 1000 years old speak, especially when they’ve been in the ground for 80 years? And I had my ideas and the show runner’s had their ideas. And we were trying to find sort of that balance, what does she sound like? And yet you have mother who sounds very, specific and strong. And so does she sound like her mother exactly or is she a little bit different? And finding the voice, the accent was very tricky on the first day. But we finally, I have a lady I work with who’s amazing, a dialect coach.And we basically created after that first day because it was sort of, it was something that we just bypassed, somehow we didn’t manage to discuss. Because I assume that what I did was in the audition was sort of what I would do and then we actually had a discussion about it, but it was sort of too late to change anything.So the very next day, I worked with my dialect coach and we designed sort of an accent and a voice for her that was a little bit American, but a little bit British, sort of like a mid-Atlantusesque type accent. But not specifically. We kind of mdernized it slightly and made her a little bit more youthful.And then once we came up with her voice, I went back and I don’t know if you want to write this or not. But ADR, some of my speeches on that first day because I wanted there to be some consistency with the character obviously. I mean, that’s one of the most important things with the voice and sound because you don’t want that to take someone out of the show or getting carried away with the storyline.So yes, we went back and we ADRed over that because that was very challenging. And, “per sona” in Latin apparently means “through sound.” And you can fool people with little like tricks and people will accept things and they don’t look so good. But if something doesn’t sound right, people won’t believe it. And it’s very important for me for the characters voice to be specific and consistent and settled.So that was like one of my main priorities on the first day was communicating with Adam Kane about what they were looking for and how I felt about the character. And then bringing in Mary McDonald-Lewis who’s just so – an incredible dialect coach.To just communicate,  with the show runners and with me and just so we were all speaking the same language and finding her voice because,  you don’t want her to sound like she’s from,  Pasadena or Brooklyn or something. You want her to sound like she’s from another world in a way, but you don’t want her to be inaccessible.So hopefully – I don’t know if you’ve all seen the second episode, but hopefully you like her sound and it’s something that,  that you respond to because it was one of the things that was really important for me.

You mentioned the mother character. I wanted to get your take sort of how you see Suren’s relationship with her mother. How does that sort of play out in the series?

Dichen Lachman: Well, I mean Suren’s relationship with her mother is very complicated.  She’s always let her mother down and anything she did was never good enough. And it’s sort of like, it’s one of those relationships which is very strained and there’s a lot of love there and there’s a lot of hate there,  and resentment and disappointment.And you really see that as the episode sort of continue on. You really feel the tension. She can never do the right thing by her mother and so sometimes she just doesn’t even try. And then other times, she’s tries and then she fails. And it’s just a very difficult relationship. I actually have a really wonderful relationship with my mother, so it was difficult to find something personal that I connected to bring that to life.But I found other things and hopefully that really comes across and you enjoy the tension in that relationship plays out.

I was just wondering what is it you think about Being Human that keeps people tuning in?

Dichen Lachman: Well, it’s such a wonderful show and I think just people, human beings struggle with being human and just being part of society every day.  I mean there’s a lot of people who feel outside of the community or they don’t feel like they fit in or they’re trying to fit in or they’re just trying to get by.And I think,  even though it’s a show about a vampire, ghost and a werewolf, I think it’s very relatable.  Everyone’s trying to make a relationship,  work with a job and juggling,  different things that come up in their day to day lives. And I think people relate to the show. And the characters are so fun and watchable and they have that balance of sort of drama, but also that lightness.And the camaraderie between the house mates is so beautiful and I think Aidan’s sort of love of – he wants to sort of serve and yet he’s sort of always pulling between giving and also satiating his hunger. And I think that’s in life – I think that’s a balance that everyone struggles with. Everyone struggles with a dark side and they’re always trying to do the right thing.We all – everyone always tries to do the right thing. We don’t always manage, but I think most people I think are inherently good. And sometimes where there are a lot of good people who just aren’t good at being a good person, but sometimes it’s a push and pull like we all have it. And I think people relate to that and it’s a beautiful show.The storyline’s are wonderful and when I first watched the whole series,  I watched it all back to back and I thought I just found this really lovely balance between sort of tragedy and comedy. And usually those things go hand in hand anyway. But I think it’s that, you know. I think people just they respond to the characters.;

And what would you like to say to everybody who is a fan and supporter of you and your work?

Dichen Lachman:  Of me and my word? Just, I just can’t thank the people who support me and the shows that I do and the movies I try and make. Who constantly tune in to watch and support me. I can’t thank them enough, you know. I would be nowhere without the viewers and the fans and I have this very soft place in my heart for the people who enjoy my work and who believe in me because,actors we’re funny creatures. We have these enormous egos, but we’re deeply insecure. There’s an incredible paradox and a lot of the time I, will find – not all the time, but  we all have our moments where we don’t sometimes believe in ourselves and we think, “Oh,  I’m never going to work again and I’m a terrible actor.”But then it’s the fans, I look to them and they believe in me and they help me keep believing in myself. And it’s – and maybe that’s unhealthy. I should probably speak to a therapist or something about that. Everyone in L.A. has a therapist, but I don’t. But I do look to my fans sometimes and they give me more confidence and hope that,  I’m not too bad at what I do and I’ll continue to be able to do it.And I just – I have so much gratitude towards the people who support me and who believe in me.

My first question is, how much – we know the theme of the show this season is temptation. Is Suren going to be tempted as well?

Dichen Lachman:  I think there is some temptation there for her to, I think she’s just been in this world for so long and she’s so deeply entrenched in that because her mother is sort of like the queen of the vampires. I think if it’s there it’s very fleeting because she knows her fate and that’s why in a way she’s so damaged.I think the main – you’ll see more of the temptation creep in with Aidan who’s constantly being pulled back into this world. Somehow he’s always trying to escape it and he’s always trying to sort of run away from who he is and the people around him. And she’s just there, she’s like just pulling him back in and pulling him back in.And as much as he tries to resist, there’s sort of just this – I mean, I guess it all becomes relative and if you’ve been alive for 500 hundred or 1000 years, 80 years isn’t really that long. In the grand scheme of things, maybe it’s like, five years or something. The equivalent of that, in your mind. But yes, she has been a part of his life for a very long time and yes she was gone for a little while.But, she’s back and that sort of feeling with him I think even though he’s never let it really live and occupy too much space. The fact that he’s working so closely with her is making that harder and harder for him. So I think you will see her go through a little bit of that. There’s no question where her future is.And it’s a very hard thing I think ultimately for her to accept, but it’s just something that she knows. And there are things about,  my character as a person,  that I don’t like, but I know that I’m always going to be like that and there’s nothing I can do to change it even if it’s just a little,  mundane thing. There are just some things that we can’t change.

Is your interaction with (Deena) more on a flashback basis or is it more like she’s a constant presence watching over what you and Aidan are doing?

Dichen Lachman:  Yes, no I think you’ll – she is in the flashbacks. Absolutely, but their – Suren’s relationship with mother is played out,  very much in the present and in her conversations with Aidan and you really understand that dynamic with the way Aidan,  and Suren communicate. And how she communicates with Aidan and mother like in the present day.E

Do you know are you going to be on the entire season or do you know how many episodes you’ll be on?

Dichen Lachman: Yes, yes. Suren’s character is in seven episodes, but they’ll refer to her in the other episodes and you know.

You’ve done a lot of science fiction, fantasy, horror. Now, were you a fan of these kind of things before you started doing them?

Dichen Lachman:  I love sci-fi and fantasy. It’s, for me, I – my friend, a very good friend of mine, (Max Kabalek), he always – he’s in casting. But he always says, “I’m Asian, but from the future.” So it’s sort of – it’s very hard for me to fit into like a period piece or, you know – I mean, yes in modern days, they can sort of slip me into a show here or there, but  for the family involved forget about it because,  I have like this sort of weird, unique alien thing going.So I’m very grateful that I guess in a way it just kind of works. Like I love sci-fi, fantasy and I kind of fit into that world because I don’t – it’s weird. People find it hard to cast me in real circumstances. I hope that changes because I’ve always loved period pieces and I love the fact that on this show because it is a fantasy, I actually get to be – I get to exist in,  the 1920s and 30s.in the normal world – I mean, like I love Deadwood, but I’d never be on that show. Like I think it’s one of the greatest shows ever and if I was on that show, I’d probably be one of the Chinese hookers that they throw into the fire and that’s about all I would be doing on that show. And it’s sad because I am half,  Australian and my father’s family is European and I really respond to that.  I understand sort of that time and I would love to explore that, but I can’t. I mean, unless someone writes a show or a movie about one of the little people or the women who work in like in an opium den way back then or something. It’s just not going to happen. So one of the most exciting things about reading the scripts they came in with that I could be a person or a vampire at least.
But in that period and I get to be like a person that people acknowledge and not just like one of the Asian people that do something in the background. So that was really exciting and ‘ve digressed very much from your question. I don’t even know if I’ve answered it.

I always wonder why they don’t have more like Asians and Latinos and other types of people on TV. It’s weird.

Dichen Lachman: Well, I guess it’s because they weren’t like doing things of like note because they were sort of like the people that were kind of pushed down to the bottom of the thing. It was just the way it happened. I don’t think -  obviously there are stories like that that are really fascinating, that occurred in those communities, but I feel like no one wrote them down.I hope something surfaces sometime soon, but at the moment, I love sci-fi/fantasy and somehow I just – thanks to Joss Whedon I guess I’ve made a little home there. And I hope I can continue to do this genre because I love it. I love it, I think it’s a wonderful place to play out ideas and opinions about the world today in a safe place, you know.

Special Thanks To The SyFy Channel.

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Posted by scifitalk - February 21, 2012 at 10:09 pm

Categories: Being Human, Horror, SyFy Channel, TV Series   Tags: , ,

Chiller Has Ghoul And Real Truth

CHILLER ANNOUNCES AIRDATES FOR REAL FEAR: THE TRUTH BEHIND THE MOVIES AND 2nd ORIGINAL FILM, BRIAN KEENE’S GHOUL

Real Fear Premieres Sunday, March 11 @ 8pm

Ghoul Premieres Friday, April 13 @ 9pm

Chiller kicks off a packed year of original programming with the announcement of airdates for the first two all-new projects of 2012. The original special Real Fear: The Truth Behind the Movies will premiere Sunday, March 11 @ 8pm, while Chiller’s second original movie, Brian Keene’s Ghoul, will premiere Friday, April 13 @ 9pm. Ghoul’s airdate announcement comes hot on the heels of its successful screening at Slamdance headquarters in Park City, UT this past weekend.

Based on the acclaimed novel by horror maven Brian Keene, Ghoul is a coming-of-age story exploring the darkness that lurks inside small-town life. It is the summer of 1984 when a teenage couple goes missing among the gravestones of the local cemetery. Twelve-year-old Timmy (Modern Family’s Nolan Gould) and his best friends, Barry and Doug, have grown up hearing stories about a sinister ghoul that haunts the cemetery and they begin to wonder if the horrific legend might actually be real. Timmy and his friends are forced to put their friendship to the ultimate test when they dig up long-buried secrets, facing their personal demons as well as the one hiding underground. Ghoul is written by William M. Miller and directed by Gregory M. Wilson. Andrew van den Houten and Robert Tonino (The Woman) will serve as producers for MODERNCINÉ.

In Real Fear: The Truth Behind the Movies, Chiller investigates the terrifying factual stories that inspired some of the scariest horror movies of all time, including Silent Hill, The Amityville Horror, The Mothman Prophecies and Poltergeist, through exclusive eyewitness interviews and reenactments of actual events. Paranormal investigator Katrina Weidman (Paranormal State) travels with three of her friends into the dark recesses of the unknown to uncover the buried secrets behind these four iconic films. Real Fear: The Truth Behind the Movies is executive produced by Larry Landsman and John D’Auria for AEP Media.

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Posted by scifitalk - February 21, 2012 at 8:22 pm

Categories: Chiller, Film, Horror   Tags: , , ,

7500 Preview

Film Preview – 7500

Synopsis:
7500 concerns a group of passengers who encounter what appears to be a supernatural force while on a transpacific flight.

Visit the official website: http://7500Movie.com
Become a fan on Facebook: http://Facebook.com/7500Movie
On Twitter: @7500Movie

Cast & Crew includes: Ryan Kwanten (TV’s “True Blood”), Leslie Bibb (Zookeeper), Nicky Whelan (Hall Pass), Jerry Ferrera (TV’s “Entourage”), Christian Serratos (Twilight Saga), Jamie Chung (Hangover Part II), Amy Smart (TV’s “Shameless”), producer Roy Lee (The Ring), Producer Taka Ichise (The Grudge) and director Takashi Shimzu (The Grudge)

 

7500, directed by The Grudge filmmaker Takashi Shimizu will be released Aug. 31 from CBS Films.

More To Come

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Posted by scifitalk - February 21, 2012 at 7:03 pm

Categories: Film, Horror   Tags: , , , , , ,

Todd And Pure Book Of Evil On DVD

Todd And The Pure Book Of Evil On DVD

Imagine, if you will, a book of awesome power. A book that will make your deepest, darkest desires come true… but at a horrifying cost. This is The Book of Pure Evil, and it’s loose in Crowley High, unleashing its dark power and filling the school hallways with monsters made of human fat and flesh-eating zombie rockers. Thankfully, four teenagers stand between The Book and the end of the world as we know it. And they will save our souls — whether they like it or not. This February, join Entertainment One for TODD & THE BOOK OF PURE EVIL: THE COMPLETE FIRST SEASON; just in time fo r the second season debut this March on FEARnet, the fan favorite series comes to twisted life in this splatter-tastic 2-disc set, filled with eye-popping extras and every quirky, unforgettable episode from Season One. Only TODD & THE BOOK OF PURE EVIL stands between the world and total destruction, so unleash the devilish hilarity today with THE COMPLETE FIRST SEASON!

CAST

BONUS FEATURES

  •  · Q&A with the Quixotic and Awesome Cast
  • · “Todd & The Book of Pure Evil: The Original Short Film
  • · Promotional Clips
  • · Cast & Crew Commentary
  • · Blooper Reel: Pure Evil is all Shits and Giggles
  • · Outtakes

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Posted by scifitalk - February 21, 2012 at 6:22 pm

Categories: DVD, Film, Horror   Tags: , , , , ,

The InnKeepers On DVD

The Innkeepers On DVD

An New England inn about to close for good is the classically creepy setting for THE INNKEEPERS, the acclaimed new film from Ti West, the young filmmaker whose critically praised House of the Devil gave the genre a jolt. Starring Sara Paxton, Pat Healy and Kelly McGillis, THE INNKEEPERS comes to Blu-ray and DVD from Dark Sky Films and MPI Media Group on April 24, 2012, with SRPs of, respectively, $34.98 and $27.98.

After over one hundred years of service, The Yankee Pedlar Inn in Connecticut is shutting its doors for good. The last remaining employees – Claire (Sara Paxton, Shark Night 3-D, The Last House on the Left) and Luke (Pat Healy, Dirty Girl) – are determined to uncover proof of what many believe to be one of New England’s most haunted hotels. As the inn’s final days draw near, odd guests start to check in and the pair of minimum wage “ghost hunters” begin to experience strange and alarming events that may ultimately cause them to be mere footnotes in the hotel’s long mysterious history.

Writer-director Ti West has revealed a unique style that pays tribute to classic horror of the 1970s and ’80s with the bold spirit of the new American independent cinema. THE INKEEPERS, which co-stars Kelly McGillis (Top Gun, Stake Land), was an award-winning hit on the film festival circuit and opened to rave critical reviews last week in theaters nationwide. “The way he works his magic is through a technique that some fans have called the slow burn: long takes and deliberately paced scenes, in which the camera follows characters down hallways, through the woods or into empty rooms.” says The New York Times < /SPAN>”Featuring great fun, scares and characters, it’s a film that has the wonderful ability to both make you laugh and scream without ever becoming a parody of itself.” says CinemaBlend. Roger Ebert of the Chicago Sun-Times wrote, “Ti West knows how to build suspense.”

THE INNKEEPERS, which blends the classic ghost story style with a solid modern twist is an original Dark Sky Films in partnership with Glass Eye Pix. The extras on the Blu-ray and DVD will include:

 The Innkeepers: Behind the Scenes
Commentary with Writer/Director/Editor Ti West, Producers Peter Phok & Larry Fessenden,and 2nd Unit Director/Sound Designer Graham Reznick

Commentary with Writer/Director/Editor Ti West and Stars Sara Paxton & Pat Healy

 Trailer

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Posted by scifitalk - February 21, 2012 at 6:05 pm

Categories: DVD, Film, Horror   Tags: , ,