Showing posts with label vampires. Show all posts
Showing posts with label vampires. Show all posts

Sunday, September 26, 2010

LOST BOYS THE THIRST Shows Its Fangs with New Photos


A batch of new screenshots from the soon to be released direct-to-DVD sequel LOST BOYS: THE THIRST has made their way online and here's a selection of the best.

The third entry of the LOST BOYS franchise finds veteran vampire hunter Edgar Frog destitute and almost friendless, and thinks his life has hit bottom when wealthy vampire-romance novelist Gwen Liebling reaches out to hire him. Gwen offers Edgar a small fortune to go on the vampire hunt of a lifetime and rescue her son Peter from the Alpha Vampire D.J. Dusk. With the help of his friends Zoe, Lars and Blake, Edgar once again heads into a bloody battle to exterminate evil.



If you're thinking to yourself that you just can't get enough LOST BOYS action and hope for more adventures of Edgar Frog, then Corey Feldman has some good news for you.
"If The Thirst performs as it seems it's going to, we're open to not only another sequel, but we're talking three more films, a second trilogy. We've plotted out three more films that could bring back more original characters. We're also talking a television series."
THE THIRST is set for DVD release October 12th. If you want to make your dreams and Feldman's dreams come true about more LOST BOYS flicks, make sure to pick up a copy.

Saturday, September 11, 2010

NEAR DARK Movie Review


NEAR DARK (1987)


near dark movie poster
Caleb is just your average midwest town boy, who cares for his family, and likes to ride horses. But after an evening of hanging out with Mae, a shy young woman he meets while at the bar, he is indoctrinated against his will into Mae's "family", a dirty nomadic band of vampires. Caleb tries multiple times to escape the nightmare from which he can't wake up, and begins to feel a new, but very natural instinct within himself, to feed on human blood. Eventually, Caleb escapes into the darkness, but is swiftly followed by his vengeful co-blooddrinkers. He knows he must make a stand, alone, or his family may be the next to fall victim to the ravenous neck-biters.

This is one of the crown jewels in the overlooked list of 80s horror, that due to poor advertising and a genre-defying storyline, fell to the side to make room for unending franchise sequels and generic slasher rip-offs. Here, the vampire mythos is turned completely on its head, and remains to this day a unique entry in the genre. In NEAR DARK these "nightwalkers" do not call themselves vampires (the word itself is never even mentioned in the film), are not aristocratic, do not have fangs or fly, and more-so do not even enjoy being what they are. These are "cursed" souls doomed to live forever, and have taken a nasty turn to violence and cruel humor to pass their evenings.

Director and writer Kathryn Bigelow, who would go on to create the nigh-perfect STRANGE DAYS and most recently THE HURT LOCKER, brings a modern blend of horror, western symbolism and mythology to the screen, shrouding it in shadows, blue-washed light, and crimson red. Even with her limited behind-the-camera experience at the time, Bigelow is able to pull off just the right angles, framing and pacing that keeps the film exciting and moving along. The writing is a little over-the-top at times, but in the quieter and subtle conversations, lies more character development and back story than most films can hope to accomplish in their 100-minute running times.

Much like a pop-punk song right out of the 80s, NEAR DARK has a tremendously enjoyable flux between chaotic and noisy choruses, and soft and melodic verses. Bigelow cuts her teeth on just about every action style, which she would later incorporate into her following productions. Between a holed-up hotel shootout with some inventive ideas that would later be seen in FROM DUSK TILL DAWN, car and foot chases, and tense one-on-one stand-offs including a western-style showdown between a vampire and a semi-truck, there is a little something for everyone.

Adrian Pasder takes on the role of Caleb, and does a decent job portraying a newly-turned vampire, as does Jenny Wright as the shy and sweet Mae. The real fun though, is watching Lance Henriksen, Bill Paxton and Jennette Goldstein, fresh off their stint on James Cameron's ALIENS. All three of them relish in their vampire roles, and the friendship the actors created on ALIENS shines through in their characters' friendship here. You can almost sense the rich bonds between them. Henriksen's Jesse Hooker is the leader, and his longevity as a creature has brought about a wisdom that can only be cultivated from centuries of living. Paxton's Severin is a loose cannon, who still languishes in his power over humans. Goldstein's Diamondback is a cunning thinker, and something of a den mother within the group. And while the scenario may be somewhat far-fetched, each of them portray their characters with total sincerity.

Although failing at the box office, NEAR DARK has gone on to collect a dedicated following through the years in the home video and DVD circuit. It is one of the more unique releases from the 80s, and through some impressive practical special effects work on a low-end budget it has aged quite gracefully, and has avoided being trapped in the constriction that is known as "80s horror". Sadly, as with many films that have enough of a cult following to make the name marketable but not well-known enough to leave it be, a remake is being planned. No word has been set as to how faithful the adaptation will be, or who is attached, but it is coming. Hunt down a copy of the now out-of-print Anchor Bay released 2-disc DVD set that gives the film the justice it is due.

Sunday, February 21, 2010

30 DAYS OF NIGHT (2007) Movie Review

30 DAYS OF NIGHT (2007)

The town of Barrow, Alaska, is the most northern city of the United States. And for thirty days out of the years, the sun does not rise. On the day of the last sunset for the next month, Sheriff Eben (Josh Hartnett) finds a series of bizarre vandalisms that he can’t quite place why they would be done. It culminates with his meeting of a stranger in the town’s dinner, who is becoming increasingly hostile because they won’t serve him a bowl of raw hamburger. Eben believes that this stranger is the cause of the crimes, but has no idea that this man is merely the scout for something much, much worse.

On the outskirts of town, a clan of vampires gather, and they are planning to turn Barrow into an all-you-can-eat buffet. They quickly begin to work their way in, as they destroy the communications center, kill the power, and begin to ravage those that live on the border. Their massacre reaches crescendo as they hit the town center, and begin ripping, shredding, clawing, biting, and drinking their way through the citizens. In the chaos, Eben, along with his estranged wife Stella, his brother, and a few of the lucky ones that managed to escape, hole up in the diner. For the next thirty days, they will have to maneuver from hiding spot to hiding spot, grabbing food where they can, and hoping against hope that they will survive. But as the endless nights wear on and desperation sets in, what will the few brave do to ensure the survival of the rest?

Adapted from the comic book mini-series of the same name by Steve Niles and Ben Templesmith, director David Slade (Hard Candy), along with producer Sam Raimi, brings to the screen a truly horrifying visage of survival horror, and the first truly inspiring and original vampire tale since Near Dark first ran almost twenty years ago.

Slade begins everything off by just bringing the cameras through the vast nothingness where Barrow is located, and sets the desperate tone of the inhabitants There is wonderful and ominous that Slade injects from the first frame of the movie, as if the townsfolk are already dead, and just don’t know it yet. As Eben makes his daily patrol, Slade takes his time trying to get the viewer familiar with the layout of Barrow and introduces most of the sorry souls that make up the secondary characters who will return later in the movie. Slade goes for a combination of classic jump scares that never once chicken out, and continues to expand on his ability to create tension-building atmosphere. And when he finally unleashes the hungering forces, Slade whips everything up into an anarchic frenzy and terrifying bloodletting that doesn’t pause for more than a brief moment until the screen finally goes to black.

Steve Niles, co-writes the screen adaptation, along with Stuart Beattie and Brian Nelson. Hardcore fans may be disappointed to discover that it is not a direct page-to-screen translation, but don’t fear too much, as much of the main storyline remains untouched. A subplot involving a voodoo priestess hunting for vampire proof has been removed, as has much of the inner strife within the vampire clan. The vampires, while remaining very true visually to Templesmith’s nightmarish look, have been mostly reduced to growling screaming beasts. Much of Niles’ original snappy dialogue that painted them as rather intelligent creatures has been removed as well, with all but the most crucial lines that move along the plot remaining. Eben and his wife have also been transformed from a blissful couple to a pair on the brink of divorce, which while it adds a little dramatic tension, seemed completely unnecessary in the overall picture.

The script also adds several characters that were not originally in the comic book, and expands on those that are. These characters allow for a full spectrum of reactions to the terror brought upon the town, small character arcs thrown in to add depth to the carnage, and they even squeeze in a bit of heartache as loved ones are torn from each others arms, while others perform simply snap and perform unspeakable acts they never thought themselves capable of. This is survival horror at its most raw, and as the days creep by, so too does the script turn up the desperation and flaring tempers. Slade slowly tightens his camera shots as the film carries on, and brings the compositions from the wide expanses of the beginning to claustrophobic attics and stores, where the very walls seem to be closing in. Though this, Slade forces the viewer to be an unwilling member of the survivors, and to make it all the more terrifying, keeps information on a subjective learn-as-you-go level. You rarely know more than the characters on screen do.

One thing that Slade keeps pitch perfect in the translation is the sheer brutality of the vampires’ feeding habits. Key executions in blood-drenched panels are lifted exactly from the page, and the main massacre of the town, which takes up about twelve pages in the comic, is drawn out to an almost cruel and squeamish length. Weta Workshop is responsible for most of the film’s mayhem, and most of the effects appear to be done in-camera. Gorehounds will be particularly pleased with the unapologetic throat-tearing, decapitations, and headshots, made even more fun with the effects crew’s dedication to realism and the dirty ugly truth to the amount of damage the human body can take.

With a simple idea of pure genius, Niles and Templesmith brought to the horror community a comic book that was destined to be transformed into a movie. As an adaptation, 30 Days Of Night remains fairly faithful to its source and should be considered near the top of the list of comic book translations. As a stand alone horror movie, well this could just be the scariest movie of the year. This Halloween, forget tired sequels and rehashed ideas, and support a truly original idea. The sun is setting. Are you prepared to do whatever it takes to see the daybreak?

Tuesday, September 9, 2008

LOST BOYS THE TRIBE Movie and DVD Review

LOST BOYS: THE TRIBE (2008)



After Chris is kicked off his surfing team and loses his endorsements, he and his sister head off to the sleepy town of Luna Bay to lay low and hopefully start anew. Within twenty-four hours of arriving in the town, he discovers that his one-time surfing idol Shane lives in the town, meets up with a delusional surfboard shaper who claims to be a vampire hunter named Edgar Frog, is invited to a party at Shane’s who picks up Chris’ sister Nicole, and has sex with a woman who turns out be a vampire.

Confused, bewildered, and none-to-happy that Nicole also seems to be displaying symptoms of vampirism, Chris turns to Edgar for some unbelievable advice. Edgar, who has been hunting vampires for more than twenty years, quickly catches Chris up to speed with a stack of comic books. He tells Chris that Nicole is only half-vampire — as long as they can kill the head vampire before she feeds, she will be saved. And with that, Chris makes the fateful decision to become half-vampire himself so he has the strength to fight, while Edgar loads up on stakes and holy water to dispatch this latest tribe of bloodsuckers who have invaded his town.

It has been more than two decades since Joel Schumacher introduced a band of beach bum vampires and a group of pre-teen vampire slayers to moviegoers who had been jacked up on John Hughes teen dramas and horror-comedy hybrids, and lovingly embraced the fun-filled characters. With the current trend that seems to have no end of producing sequel after sequel coupled with an everlasting love for all things eighties, it is a wonder it took this long to create a sequel to THE LOST BOYS. But does this movie hold up? Is it worthy of carrying such a moniker? The answer is a resounding and deafening “meh.”

Had this been a standalone film, direct-to-video hack writer Hans Rodionoff would have been accused of stealing core elements from The Lost Boys and mocked for making not one, but two forced references to THE BIG LEBOWSKI. However, he would have at least been given credit for dishing out a script that allowed for plenty of teasing T&A and a few decently gory feeding sequences. As it stands though, this is a sequel to a beloved film, where the only thing it had to do right was please nostalgic fans of the original, since anyone without fond memories of Corey Feldman screaming “try the holy water, death breath!” will or won’t see this no matter what its called. And with that in mind, Rodionoff falls flat on his face.

Director P.J. Pesce puts together a somewhat competent, if wholly mediocre vampire film, where the emphasis is on how “extreme” the tribe of neck biters are rather than providing a good story, and more importantly, a good sequel. Plot holes are left wide open, and frustrating inferences are left unanswered so that we have room for a day-for-night surfing scene (which looks as bad as POINT BREAK’s sequence) and vampires playing video games. Several throwbacks and winks to the original film are sneaked in, not least of all is a randomly placed pair of antlers, which of course are used to impale one of the vampires.

Our only returning character is Edgar Frog, and Corey Feldman, who is sporting a gravely voice, seems eager to strap on some camouflage, sharpen some cross-shaped stakes, and fill balloons with holy water, and is criminally relegated to a minor character whose scenes are clearly the best in the movie. The rest of the cast pale in comparison, with only Angus Sutherland (younger half-brother to the original’s star Kiefer) pulling off something that resembles a descent villain in the role of Shane. The rest, including our protagonists and vampire underlings, you just want to see die.

Corey Haim, reprising his role as Sam Emerson, does make a very quick cameo during a cutaway in the middle of the end credits, and it is a shame that this is where it was decided to throw his character. But the real stinger comes in the Alternate Endings that are part of the extras found on newly released Warner Brothers DVD. These scenes, which reunite Edgar Frog and Sam Emerson, reveal that Edgar’s brother Alan has become a master vampire and is coming to settle a score with Edgar. This three-minute scene is better than the entire movie and it is a travesty that it has been reduced to an bonus feature. This scene hints at what should have been the basis for the entire sequel, and it is a slap in the face to the fans which have kept the original’s popularity going long after its expiration date.

Movie and DVD review originally published on Geeks Of Doom.

Saturday, July 26, 2008

WEREWOLF SHADOW Movie and DVD Review

WEREWOLF SHADOW (1970)


The legacy of the Countess Wandesa, a woman who drank the blood of young women to stay alive, brings Elvira and her friend Genevieve out to a secluded part of Spain where it is said that Wandesa was buried. Though their search has a bad start when they become lost and their car runs out of gas, they are greeted by Waldemar (Paul Naschy), a man who has been living in a nearby mansion for several months now. Waldemar is aware of Wandesa’s grave, and takes the two women to uncover it. But their curiosity and desecration has unforeseen consequences and the Countess returns to life as a Vampire.

Genevieve is quickly overcome by the power of Wandesa, and becomes her vampire slave. Even worse is that Elvira, who has fallen in love with Waldemar, learns that he is cursed to turn into a werewolf whenever there is a full moon! As a man, Waldemar knows of Wandesa’s ultimate plan to bring Satan into the physical world and plague the Earth with darkness, but as a werewolf he is an uncontrollable beast! As the next full moon cycles closer, Waldemar along with Elvira prepare to stop Wandesa from completing her diabolical task, But with the werewolf growing restless inside him, will Waldemar be able to keep his murderous rage reigned in long enough to stop the vampire queen?

Read my full review at The DVD Lounge!

Wednesday, December 12, 2007

THE OMEGA MAN Movie Review

THE OMEGA MAN (1971)



Two years after germ warfare exterminates the human population, Robert Neville believes he is the last human on Earth. But the germs have created an entire new race of mutants out of those that were infected but did not die. These creatures, who have taken on the properties of albinos and are extremely light sensitive, are forced to live in total darkness. By night, Robert fortifies himself in his home as he attempts to survive the mutants' daily assaults. But by day, Robert becomes the hunter, and speeds through the barren streets of Los Angeles looking for their den.


When Robert is captured by the mutants, he fears that this is the end for him. At the last minute, however, he is rescued by a group he never knew of before — an even smaller band of those who have been infected, but have not completely submitted to the alterations of the germ. These infected are still able to walk in daylight and have not been driven to madness. With this new revelation, Robert once again begins to work on a way to use his own immune blood to create a serum that will cure his new friends. But the clock is ticking and the mutants are growing ever stronger!

Read my full review at Geeks Of Doom!

Tuesday, December 11, 2007

THE LAST MAN ON EARTH Movie Review

THE LAST MAN ON EARTH (1964)


After a mysterious plague decimates the entire planet and wipes out the entire human race, Dr. Robert Morgan (Vincent Price) literally believes he is the last man on Earth. But he is certainly not alone, for the plague has turned all those who are infected into mindless zombie-like vampires who sleep during the day and at night call for Robert's blood. During the day, Robert kills as many of the vampires as he can with homemade stakes and collects the goods he needs to survive. By night, he barricades himself into his home in order to see the next sunrise. But while out on his daily errands one day, he comes across vampires that have been killed by someone other than himself, and more importantly, comes across a rather mysterious woman that is able to walk in the sun! Cautiously, Robert brings the woman back to his house, not sure of just where this newfound revelation of information will lead.

Based on the 1954 novel I Am Legend, author Richard Matheson's story of isolation and survival horror is given a 1960's b-movie horror makeover and throws the reigning champion of such films, Vincent Price, into the leading role. If you have not yet read Matheson's story, I urge you to read it post-haste. It is one of finest horror stories to come out in the past century, and with its chronicled inspiration on the likes of Stephen King and Dean Koontz, it is a must-read piece of literature.

Read my full review at Geeks Of Doom!


Sunday, October 21, 2007

30 DAYS OF NIGHT Movie Review

30 DAYS OF NIGHT (2007)


The town of Barrow, Alaska, is the most northern city of the United States. And for thirty days out of the years, the sun does not rise. On the day of the last sunset for the next month, Sheriff Eben (Josh Hartnett) finds a series of bizarre vandalisms that he can’t quite place why they would be done. It culminates with his meeting of a stranger in the town’s dinner, who is becoming increasingly hostile because they won’t serve him a bowl of raw hamburger. Eben believes that this stranger is the cause of the crimes, but has no idea that this man is merely the scout for something much, much worse.

On the outskirts of town, a clan of vampires gather, and they are planning to turn Barrow into an all-you-can-eat buffet. They quickly begin to work their way in, as they destroy the communications center, kill the power, and begin to ravage those that live on the border. Their massacre reaches crescendo as they hit the town center, and begin ripping, shredding, clawing, biting, and drinking their way through the citizens. In the chaos, Eben, along with his estranged wife Stella, his brother, and a few of the lucky ones that managed to escape, hole up in the diner. For the next thirty days, they will have to maneuver from hiding spot to hiding spot, grabbing food where they can, and hoping against hope that they will survive. But as the endless nights wear on and desperation sets in, what will the few brave do to ensure the survival of the rest?


Read The Rest Of My Revew At Geeks Of Doom

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