The trailer didn't look that bad. I really liked the original (though I saw it through dubious means ), and I've become pretty good at making the gurgling noise that sounds like a the beginning sound of a door opening. Otherwise, it looks just like the original.
On an unrelated note, Gollum's not that hard to make.
The trailer didn't look that bad. I really liked the original (though I saw it through dubious means ), and I've become pretty good at making the gurgling noise that sounds like a the beginning sound of a door opening. Otherwise, it looks just like the original.
On an unrelated note, Gollum's not that hard to make.
I hate to say it, but these movies are starting to get the "same old same old" feeling to me already. Pale kids with long black hair walking around. But my interest in Japanese horror started to wane with The Eye.
I hate to say it, but these movies are starting to get the "same old same old" feeling to me already. Pale kids with long black hair walking around. But my interest in Japanese horror started to wane with The Eye.
Last night the winners in the 3rd "Project Greenlight" contest were announced, and just like they had promised back when the new season was getting started, a horror film has won the day.
The script that took away all the accolades of it's peers is called Feast, written by Patrick Melton and Marcus Dunston. Cinescape describes it as "a monster mash that manages to deliver a scary, never-a-dull-moment action ride while also parodying the spectrum of stereotypical characters and dangerous situations we've seen in countless horror movies before." I'm not sure if that's from the press release or an actual opinion, however...The logline for the script goes something like this;
On a snowy evening at a rural watering hole, a motley crew of bar patrons struggle to survive a hungry family of flying beasts set on consuming a human buffet.
Running parallel to the screenwriting competition was the contest to find a director to helm the project, and that man is John Gulager, who won the right to direct Feast based on the strength of a short film he submitted. Wes Craven will serve as producer/mentor on Feast, which does not have start date as of yet.
None of the Project Greenlight films has really delivered yet. Could this be any good?