Quantcast
Channel: vampires Archives -
Viewing all 143 articles
Browse latest View live

Midnight Son

$
0
0

midnight son 3

Midnight Son is a 2011 American vampire horror film written and directed by Scott Leberecht, produced by Matt Compton, and starring Zak Kilberg.

midnight-son-movie

Midnight Son is the story of Jacob, a young man confined to a life of isolation, due to a rare skin disorder that prevents him from being exposed to sunlight. His world opens up when he meets Mary, a local bartender, and falls in love. Tragically, Jacob’s actions become increasingly bizarre as he struggles to cope with the effects of his worsening condition. Forced by the disease to drink human blood for sustenance, he must control his increasingly violent tendencies as local law enforcement narrow their focus on him as a suspect in a series of grisly murders…

midnight son pair

Wikipedia | IMDb | Tumblr

Related : Martin | Let the Right One In

midnight son dvd

Buy Midnight Son on DVD from Amazon.co.uk | Amazon.com

Midnight Son cleverly blends horror, romance, drama, and some good old-fashioned blood splatter.  It’s a genuinely spooky, wholly engrossing film that takes a well-trod genre archetype and does something unique and entertaining with it.  Fans of good, cerebral horror should definitely check out Midnight Son if you get the chance.  It is one of the best independent horror films in recent memory.” Brent McKnight, Beyond Hollywood

“Everything about Midnight Son is intense and dark, from the skulking cinematography to the haunting yet ambient music score by talented musical artist Kays Al-Atrakchi. The final scene in the film is so brilliant and artistic, it will be with me for a long time. Scott Leberecht has single handedly given me hope in the vampire mythos and I hope to see a lot more of him in any genre in the future.” Greg Baty, Cinesploitation

midnight son 4

Post by Will Holland



Byzantium

$
0
0

Byzantiumposter1

Byzantium is a 2012 Irish-British funded fantasy thriller film about a mother and daughter vampire duo. The film was directed by Neil Jordan (Interview with the Vampire), and stars Saoirse Ronan, Gemma Arterton and Jonny Lee Miller.

byzantium-movie-image-gemma-arterton-saoirse-ronan

Clara and Eleanor and have fled the scene of a violent and bloody crime and they’re now looking for refuge at a run-down resort somewhere on the British coastline.

byzantium-gemma-arterton

Clara (Arterton), ever-practical, sells her body. She soon meets shy and lonely Noel (Miller), who provides a roof over their heads in his seedy guesthouse, Byzantium. Clara, always looking towards the future, turns it into a ‘pop-up’ brothel.

Gemma-Arterton-in-Byzantium-2013-Movie-Image-3

byzantium_02
Meanwhile Eleanor (Ronan), the eternal schoolgirl, meets Frank, a kindred spirit who unwittingly prompts her to tell the truth about her life. She tells him that Clara is her mother; yet Clara is only a few years older. She says that she was born in 1804; yet she is just sixteen. She confesses that she must drink human blood to stay alive – and so must her mother. In the small, quiet town, people start to die…

byzantium DVD

Buy Byzantium on Blu-rayDVD | Instant Video from Amazon.com

Byzantium is beautifully shot by Sean Bobbitt, slickly edited, and has that moody, drifty feel of Neil Jordan’s earlier films (Interview with the Vampire was 1994), that sympathy for deviance rather than instinct for horror. As a sketch of life on the margins in a tatty seaside resort, it works well enough. As an action pic, though, it’s just too slow, too long.” David Sexton, London Evening Standard

“The film manages to provide a great mix of melancholy and humor, and it’s the strong performances of both female leads that make it successful. Although Byzantium is a tale about vampires, it primarily deals with the damaging decisions people choose that affect their children and the heartbreaking sacrifices they make in order to keep them safe—and you don’t need to have to drink blood to understand and empathize with that relatable plight. Overall Byzantium is a beautifully shot film that effectively dissects the mother-daughter relationship in a naturalistic style, while also building to a powerful conclusion. Highly recommended!” Serena Whitney, Dread Central

“Neil Jordan directs with energy if not much finesse; characters keep conveniently bumping into one another, and flashbacks to a forsaken island with blood-red waterfalls are awkwardly shoehorned into the narrative … It ends, appropriately, with a car-crash, a beheading, and a possible answer to who burnt down Hastings Pier. Oh those pesky vampires!” Anthony Quinn, The Independent

“Byzantium isn’t as defining a work as it thinks it is, embarking on but eventually forgoing a genuine stab at depth from a vampirically existential angle. Details are thrown around haphazardly, making everything feel more messy than cohesive and generally involving. Sure, it looks nice and is an agreeably welcome break from the Twilight scene, yet Jordan’s latest simply can’t hold a candle to any above average genre entry and is forgettable as such.” Derin Spector, Sound on Sight

gemma-arterton

Gemma-Arterton-in-Byzantium-2013-Movie-Image

“Despite its obvious lineage, Jordan’s film comes with a few original thoughts. For a start, it may be the first time we’ve seen a vampire rebelling against her mother, with perpetual outsider Eleanor taking an ill-advised shine to a mortal lad. The Hastings setting is also inspired. As visitors to the East Sussex town know, it’s a place that exudes an unsettling ambience all of its own. The brooding, doomed tone is also spot-on and may remind you of Martin – George A Romero’s 1976 masterpiece that, for my money, remains the best vampire film made yet. Alas, the themes of good vampires versus bad and teenage rebellion, plus some flashbacks that really pull you out of the action, make for a film more frustrating than frightening.” Scottish Daily Record

byzantium-image03

Wikipedia | IMDb

Posted by Will Holland


Higanjima (Escape from Vampire Island)

$
0
0

Higanjima poster

Higanjima (彼岸島, literally: “waves and coast island”) is a 2009 Japanese live action film adapted from a  manga series by Kōji Matsumoto. Also known as Escape from Vampire Island, it was directed by Kim Tae-Gyun and stars Hideo Ishiguro, Dai Watanabe and Miori Takimoto.

Higanjima1

Two years after losing contact, Akira discovers that his long-lost brother has been seen on a remote island that does not even exist on the map! He decides to investigate the story with several friends and they find their way to Higanjima, a dark and mysterious place, but what has happened to the island s inhabitants? They learn too late that they have been lured into a trap and are quickly surrounded by blood-thirsty vampires. Now the friends must fight for their survival and find a way to escape from Higanjima – the island of vampires…

higanjima-escape-from-vampire-island-470-75

Wikipedia | IMDb

higanjima blu

Buy on Blu-Ray or DVD from Amazon.co.uk

“It’s fun. It’s dumb, stupid, nonsensical balderdash, but it is fun with it. It has some appealing action sequences, and while the premise may be ridiculous, the plot daft as a brush, it also has some appealing characters, and the production values and character performances do elevate it above simple B-movie fare.” Gonin Movie Blog

“Sure, the CGI isn’t all that great and the vampires aren’t really all that scary, but whenever the movie is focused on “showing” and not “talking,” it feels a bit like ‘The Monster Squad Goes to Japanese Vampire Island’. It’s very broad, way too talky, and sometimes too damn goofy for its own good, but genre fans (particularly those who are familiar with the source material) will certainly be able to get behind the “good parts.”" Scott Weinberg, FEARnet

Higanjima-movie-review-4

higanjimaqpr

Post by Will Holland


Monkey (TV series)

$
0
0

monkey_2_3_4_5_6_7_8

Saiyūki (西遊記?), also known by its British title Monkey, is a Japanese television fantasy drama based on the classic 16th century Chinese novel Journey to the West by Wu Cheng’en. Filmed in north-west China and Inner Mongolia, the show was produced by Nippon Television (NTV) and International Television Films in association with NHK, and broadcast from 1978 to 1980 on Nippon Television.

Although primarily a comedic fantasy show, Monkey frequently featured supernatural and horror elements, often taken from Chinese and Japanese traditional folklore. The main adversaries of the heroes were demons – often living in human guise – and other monsters included vampires, shape-shifters and cannibalistic monsters. Despite this, and the frequent martial arts violence, Monkey was broadcast as family entertainment in the UK without complaint.

monkey_vampires

Two 26-episode seasons ran in Japan: the first season ran from October 1978 to April 1979, and the second one from November 1979 to May 1980, with screenwriters including Mamoru Sasaki, Isao Okishima, Tetsurō Abe, Kei Tasaka, James Miki, Motomu Furuta, Hiroichi Fuse, Yū Tagami, and Fumio Ishimori.

Starting in 1979, Saiyūki was dubbed into English (BBC production), and subsequently broadcast in the United Kingdom, New Zealand, and by ABC Television in Australia, with dialogue written by David Weir. Only 39 of the original 52 episodes were shown by the BBC. The remaining episodes were dubbed by Fabulous Films Ltd in early 2004 by the original cast, following a successful release of the English-dubbed series on VHS and DVD; then they aired on Channel 4 in the UK. Alongside The Water Margin, which the show replaced in the BBC schedules, Monkey is a rare example of a Japanese TV show playing on British TV.

monkey-aka-monkey-magic

A Spanish-dubbed version of Monkey aired in Uruguay in the early 1980s. While Monkey never received a broadcast in the United States, Saiyūki was shown on local Japanese language television stations in California and Hawaii in the early 1980s.

Monkey, the title character, is described in the theme song as being “born from an egg on a mountain top”; a stone egg and thus he is a stone monkey, a skilled fighter who becomes a brash king of a monkey tribe. He achieved a little enlightenment, and proclaimed himself “Great Sage, Equal of Heaven”. After demanding the “gift” of a magical staff from a powerful Dragon King, and to quiet the din of his rough antics on Earth, Monkey is approached by Heaven to join their host, first in the lowly position of Master of the Stable (manure disposal), and then – after his riotous complaints – as “Keeper of the Peach Garden of Immortality”. Monkey eats many of the peaches, which have taken centuries and millennia to ripen, becomes immortal and runs amok. Having earned the ire of Heaven and being beaten in a challenge by an omniscient, mighty, but benevolent, cloud-dwelling Buddha, Monkey is imprisoned for 500 years under a mountain in order to learn patience.

dvd_07

Eventually, in 630 CE, Monkey is released by the monk Tripitaka, who has been tasked  to undertake a pilgrimage from China to India to fetch holy scriptures. The pair soon recruit two former members of the Heavenly Host who were cast out and turned from angels to “monsters”, as a result of Monkey’s transgressions: Sandy, the water monster and ex-cannibal,  and Pigsy, a pig monster consumed with lust and gluttony. Monkey’s  magic powers include: summoning a cloud upon which he can fly; his use of the magic wishing staff which he can shrink and grow at will and from time to time, when shrunk, store in his ear, and which he uses as a weapon; changing form; and the ability to conjure monkey warriors by blowing on hairs plucked from his chest.

The pilgrims face many perils and antagonists both human and supernatural. Monkey, Sandy, and Pigsy are often called upon to battle demons, monsters and bandits, despite Tripitaka’s constant call for peace. Many episodes also feature some moral lesson, usually based upon Buddhist and/or Taoist philosophies, which are spoken by the narrator at the end of various scenes.

The songs in the series were performed by the five-piece Japanese band Godiego. In the UK, BBC Records released “Gandhara” as a single in 1979 (RESL 66), with “The Birth of the Odyssey” and “Monkey Magic” on the B-side. The single reached #56 on the UK Singles Chart, eventually spending a total of seven weeks on the chart.

frsingle

Monkey is considered a cult classic in countries where it has been shown. Among the features that have contributed to its cult appeal are the theme song, the dubbed dialogue spoken in a variety of over-the-top “Oriental” accents, (except for Sandy who inexplicably speaks with an English accent), the reasonably good synchronization of dubbing to the actors’ original dialogue, the fact that the young priest Tripitaka was played by a woman and the fact that Guan yin, who is usually depicted in statues and paintings as a female, is portrayed by a male.

_44856093_cast_bbc466

Episodes:

Series 1 (1978-79)

  1. “Monkey Goes Wild about Heaven”
  2. “Monkey Turns Nursemaid”
  3. “The Great Journey Begins”
  4. “Monkey Swallows the Universe”
  5. “The Power of Youth”
  6. “Even Monsters Can Be People”
  7. “The Beginning of Wisdom”
  8. “Pigsy Woos a Widow”
  9. “What Monkey Calls the Dog-Woman”
  10. “Pigsy’s in the Well”
  11. “The Difference Between Night and Day”
  12. “Pearls Before Swine”
  13. “The Minx and the Slug”
  14. “Catfish, Saint and the Shape-Changer”
  15. “Monkey Meets the Demon Digger”
  16. “The Most Monstrous Monster”
  17. “Truth and the Grey Gloves Devil”
  18. “Land for the Locusts”
  19. “Vampire Master”
  20. “Outrageous Coincidences”
  21. “Pigsy, King and God”
  22. “Village of the Undead”
  23. “Two Little Blessings”
  24. “The Fires of Jealousy”
  25. “The Country of Nightmares”
  26. “The End of the Way”

monkey_sandy

Series 2 (1979-80)

  1. “Pigsy’s Ten Thousand Ladies”
  2. “The Dogs of Death”
  3. “You Win Some, You Lose Some” (dubbed 2004)
  4. “Pigsy Learns A Lesson” (dubbed 2004)
  5. “The Land With Two Suns” (dubbed 2004)
  6. “The House of the Evil Spirit” (dubbed 2004)
  7. “Am I Dreaming?” (dubbed 2004)
  8. “The Tormented Emperor” (dubbed 2004)
  9. “Between Heaven and Hell” (dubbed 2004)
  10. “The Foolish Philosopher”
  11. “Who Am I?”
  12. “What is Wisdom?”
  13. “The Fountain of Youth”
  14. “Better The Demon You Know” (dubbed 2004)
  15. “A Shadow So Huge”
  16. “Keep on Dancing”
  17. “Give and Take”
  18. “Such a Nice Monster”
  19. “The Fake Pilgrims” (dubbed 2004)
  20. “Pretty as a Picture”
  21. “Mothers”
  22. “The Tenacious Tomboy” (dubbed 2004)
  23. “Stoned” (dubbed 2004)
  24. “Hungry Like The Wolf” (dubbed 2004)
  25. “Monkey’s Yearning” (dubbed 2004)
  26. “At the Top of the Mountain”

Masaaki+Sakai+(2)

Monkey – opening narration and theme tune MP3 version

Wikipedia

Posted by DF

Horrorpedia.com is a non-profit website. Please help us cover our web-hosting costs by buying from our affiliate links. Thank you.

Visit Horrorpedia at Facebook | Pinterest | Tumblr | Twitter


Prowl

$
0
0
prowl-movie-poster-2010-1020545442

US Poster

Prowl is a 2010 American horror film directed by Patrik Syversen and written by Tim Tori and starring Courtney Hope, Ruta Gedmintas and Bruce Payne. It is an After Dark Original release.

prowl 2

Amber dreams of escaping her small town existence and persuades her friends to accompany her to find an apartment in the big city. When their transportation breaks down, she and her friends gratefully accept a ride in the back of a semi. But when the driver refuses to stop and they discover the cargo is hundreds of cartons of blood, they panic. Their panic turns to terror when the truck disgorges them into a dark, abandoned warehouse where blood-thirsty creatures learn to hunt human prey, which, the friends realize, is what they now are…

Prowl_movie1

Wikipedia | IMDb | Vampires

PROWL-1

Buy Prowl on Blu-ray at Amazon.co.uk or on DVD at Amazon.com

Watch on Amazon Instant View

“I can say that these vamps are just as terrifying as the ones unleashed in 30 Days of Night and when the movie picks up the pace during the second and third acts, director Syversen knows how to keep the tension and body count building until the film’s deadly climax.” Dread Central

Prowl_movie6


Usborne Guide to the Supernatural World (book)

$
0
0

usb

The Usborne Guide to the Supernatural World was first published in 1979 and comprised of three smaller, separately published books by Osborne, all under the ‘Supernatural Guides’ banner; Haunted Houses, Ghosts and SpectresMysterious Powers and Strange Forces; Vampires, Werewolves and Demons. They were written and edited by Eric Maple, Lynn Myring & Eliot Humberstone.

usbback

The books were ostensibly aimed at the younger market but were packed full of odd facts and stories from around the world, many of which certainly play to a wider audience. The books began with an overview of the subjects they covered and then proceeded to travel not only through time but also around the world, demonstrating the beliefs and superstitions of different cultures throughout the ages.

Whilst the books on ghosts and mysterious powers were very interesting and packed with information on the likes of hauntings at Borley Rectory (‘the most haunted house in England’) and ESP, it was the book on vampires, werewolves and demons which really held a huge allure for kids hungry for horrific facts.

usb9

The books were profusely illustrated, rarely with copies of existing works but completely unique, often rather stunning imagery. With such a broad canvas, the third book did not disappoint with sometimes rather alarming pictures of ghouls and beasts from exotic climes. To their credit, the authors backed these up with information which was both easy to understand and factually based, such as the bizarre adventures of Marco Polo or the 17th Century wolf-boy, Jean Grenier.

usb10

Although they were republished in the 1990′s with different (ie worse) covers, though identical text, the books are now out of print but are essential additions to any library of horror and the unknown.

Daz Lawrence

usb4

usb5

usb6

usb3

usb8

 

wolf

usb7


Daybreakers

$
0
0

daybreakersukquad111609

Daybreakers is a 2009 science-fiction horror film written and directed by Australian filmmakers Michael and Peter Spierig. The film takes place in a futuristic world overrun by vampires. A vampiric corporation sets out to capture and farm the remaining humans while researching a blood substitute. Lead vampire hematologist Edward Dalton’s (Ethan Hawke) work is interrupted by human survivors led by former vampire “Elvis” (Willem Dafoe), who has a cure that can save the human species.

Daybreakers premiered at the Toronto International Film Festival and was released in the UK on 6 January 2010 and in North America on 8 January 2010. The film grossed over $US 50 million and received positive critical reception.

daybreakers-vampire-movie

In 2009, a plague caused by a vampire bat has transformed most of the world’s population into vampires. This event formed a world completely dominated by vampires. As vampires are incapable of aging or dying, but are unprotected against the sunlight or any ultraviolet light, the entire vampire world is active at night. Human numbers quickly dwindle and the need for blood becomes desperate, while a global war rages between the surviving humans and vampires. When deprived of blood for extended periods, vampires degenerate into “subsiders,” psychotic bat-like creatures. Humans are captured and harvested in laboratory farms while scientists research a synthetic blood substitute to satisfy vampires’ blood hunger.

daybreakers720pmp4aacbr

In 2019, Edward Dalton (Ethan Hawke) is the head hematologist for the pharmaceutical company Bromley Marks, the largest supplier of human blood in the United States. Along with fellow hematologist Chris Caruso (Vince Colosimo), Dalton is in the process of developing a substitute to bolster dwindling blood supplies. The need is underscored after Dalton’s boss, company owner Charles Bromley (Sam Neill), reveals that the estimated human population is down to 5%, and national blood supplies will not last more than a month. Faced with this knowledge, Edward and Chris carry out a hasty clinical trial of the latest revision, which is a spectacularly gruesome failure.

On the drive home, Dalton becomes momentarily distracted and accidentally runs another vehicle off the road. When he checks on the occupants of the other vehicle he is shot in the arm by a crossbow shot, and quickly discovers they are humans.

The film currently holds a 67% “fresh” rating on Rotten Tomatoes based on 132 reviews, as well as a weighted average score of 57 out of 100 on Metacritic based on 31 reviews. Variety gave the film a mixed to positive review stating the film had a “cold, steely blue, black and gray ‘Matrix‘-y look” going on to say Daybreakers ”emerges as a competent but routine chase thriller that lacks attention-getting dialogue, unique characters or memorable setpieces that might make it a genre keeper rather than a polished time-filler.” Rolling Stone gave the film two and a half out of four stars and called the film a B movie and a “nifty genre piece”. Roger Ebert also gave the film two and a half stars stating the “intriguing premise … ends as so many movies do these days, with fierce fights and bloodshed.” 

Wikipedia | IMDb | Rotten Tomatoes

daybreakers

Buy Daybreakers on Blu-ray from Amazon.com

“Similar to most genre offerings, Daybreakers is set almost entirely at night (after all, vampires are sensitive to the light), so a vital aspect of producing a good transfer relies on subtle contrast gradients and abundant black level depth. Fortunately, this is one example that effortlessly rose to the challenge. Whether we’re witnessing the explosion of a staked vampire in the dead of night, or a subsider emerge from the shadows of an open doorway, I never detected a shred of weakness in black level and contrast.” Blu-ray.com

daybreakers 3

subsider2

2009_daybreakers_006

poster21

tumblr_mnxw1ldGCF1qcctvko5_1280
DaybreakersPoster

daybreakers

tumblr_mn2kxnaBcl1so2219o1_500


Dr. Terrible’s House of Horrible (TV series)

$
0
0

dr.T

Dr. Terrible’s House of Horrible is a British comedy-horror anthology series created by Graham Duff, who co-wrote the series with Steve Coogan (Alan Partridge). BBC Two broadcast the series in 2001.

The series aimed to lovingly mock the British horror films of Amicus ProductionsHammer Film Productions, and Tigon British Film Productions. The title parodies Amicus Productions’anthology film Dr. Terror’s House of Horrors (1965).

dr_terrible_01

Honor Blackman (FrightTo the Devil a Daughter), Graham CrowdenSheila Keith (House of Whipcord; Schizo), and Angela Pleasence each guest-starred in an episode, in a pastiche of their earlier film performances. Mark GatissJohn ThomsonSimon PeggRonni Ancona, and Warwick Davis (Leprechaun) also performed in the series.

Steve Coogan presented each episode as Dr. Terrible, and played various roles throughout.

Viewership of the six-episode series fell short of expectations, and the BBC declined to recommission it. 2 Entertain issued the series on DVD  on 4 August 2003.

And Now the Fearing…
Three people trapped in a lift retell their recent nightmares in 1970s London. Spoofs Amicus Productions’ The Vault of Horror (1973).

lesbian vampire lust in steve coogan's dr terrible's house of horribleFrenzy of Tongs
Gentleman inventor Nathan Blaze must battle the inscrutable Chinese criminal Hang Man Chan in turn-of-the-century London. Spoofs Sax Rohmer‘s Fu Manchu character, Hammer Film Productions’ The Terror of the Tongs (1961), and the Doctor Who serial The Talons of Weng-Chiang (1977).

Curse of the Blood of the Lizard of Doom
Dr. Donald Baxter’s experiment with burn victims lead him down a dangerous path as he uses the regenerative powers of lizards on his patients with terrifying results: “I just want to cure the ills of man by injecting them with large amounts of reptile plasma… is that so wrong?”

Lesbian Vampire Lovers of Lust
Hans Brocken and his lovely new virgin wife Carmina are on their honeymoon when they encounter a castle owned by the mysterious Countess Kronstien. She and her ladies seem unusually interested in Carmina. Spoofs Hammer Films Productions films, especially the Karnstein Trilogy (1970–71): “You’ve pierced her heart with an occasional table!”

Voodoo Feet of Death
A famous ballroom dancer loses his feet to a pair of gigantic scissors. After a quick foot transplant his feet start taking on a murderous mind of their own. Spoofs The Hands of Orlac (1960).

Scream Satan Scream!
Witch locator Captain Tobias Slater travels the north of England accusing beautiful young women of being witches and to avoid the pyre they must sleep with him, until he runs across a real coven and Slater is cursed. Spoofs Witchfinder General (1968), Cry of the Banshee (1970) and witch locating in general.

 Wikipedia | IMDb

‘What we have then is a genuine love for the material being spoofed and not just some idle, ill-informed buffoonery. Interestingly, this has two effects on the series. On the one hand it makes for an incredibly affectionate viewing experience; paradoxically, even the period perfect misogyny, racism and idea that England is the centre of the world elicit a certain charm, as do the intentionally variable special effects and accents. On the other, however, the pleasures of each individual episode are likely to come down to the viewer.’ Anthony Nield, The Digital Fix

‘I can’t see how anyone who loves Hammer and Amicus and horror films of the 1960s and 1970s won’t enjoy these good-natured, affectionate send-ups.’ Paul Mavis, DVD Talk

dr terrible's house of horrible dvd steve coogan

Buy Dr. Terrible’s House of Horrible on DVD from Amazon.co.uk

complete coogan steve coogan box set dvd

Buy Complete Coogan: The Steve Coogan DVD Box Set from Amazon.co.uk



Vampire Circus

$
0
0

VamCir-Tiger

title_vampire_circus_blu-ray

Vampire Circus is a 1971 British horror film, directed by Robert Young. It was written by Judson Kinberg, and produced by Wildburg Stark and Michael Carreras (who was uncredited) for Hammer Film Productions. It stars Adrienne CorriThorley WaltersLynne Frederick and Anthony Higgins (billed as Anthony Corlan). The story concerns a travelling carnival whose vampiric artists prey on the children of a 19th-century Austrian village.

Schoolmaster Albert Müller witnesses his wife Anna taking a little girl to the castle of vampire Count Mitterhaus, where the child is killed. The villagers, led by Müller and the mayor, invade the castle and attack the Count, driving a wooden stake through his heart. With his dying breath, Mitterhaus curses the villagers, vowing that their children will die to give him back his life. The villagers force Anna to run the gauntlet, after which she runs back to the castle, where the briefly-revived Count tells her to find his cousin Emil. Meanwhile the villagers set the castle on fire.

vampire_circus_-still-vampires-and-victim1

Fifteen years later, the village is ravaged by the plague and blockaded by the authorities. The citizens fear that the pestilence may be due to the Count’s curse. A travelling circus, led by a dwarf and a gypsy woman, arrives in the village and the villagers appreciate the distraction from their troubles. One of the artists, Emil, is actually a vampire and Count Mitterhaus’s cousin. Emil and the gypsy woman go to the castle, where they find the Count’s staked body and reiterate the curse, that all who attacked on his cousin and all their children must die…

Wikipedia | IMDb | Rotten Tomatoes

3702_3

“one of the company’s last great classics”, writing, “erotic, grotesque, chilling, bloody, suspenseful and loaded with doom and gloom atmosphere, this is the kind of experiment in terror that reinvigorates your love of the scary movie art form.” PopMatters

35

“Hokum, maybe, but I challenge anyone not to enjoy it. Vampire Circus has stood the test of time – and today’s filmmakers could do worse than to take a look at it if they’re constructing a vampire tale of their own. It wears its crapness firmly on its sleeve, and adds a sense of crazy paced style sadly lacking in today’s turgid gore fests.” Chris Wood, British Horror Films

capture5

“Less a standard Hammer monster melodrama than a surreal journey through dark fantasy (reminiscent of Jean Rollin’s erotic vampire series), with an unexpected (but not entirely inappropriate) surplus of nudity and bloodletting. The film’s creepy highlights include the chilling extended prologue and scenes of vampire trapeze performers transforming into bats in mid-leap.” Gary W. Tooze, DVD Beaver

” … one of the best Hammer horror films of them all” 1000 Misspent Hours and Counting

vampire_circus_02

vampire-circus.w654
doublebill-LEGEND-OF-THE-WEREWOLF-and-VAMPIRE-CIRCUS-590x437

vampirecircus1

la regina dei vampiri vampire circus

Synapse Films Blu-ray features:

• Featurette: THE BLOODIEST SHOW ON EARTH: Making Vampire Circus – An all-new documentary featuring interviews with writer/director Joe Dante, Hammer documentarian Ted Newsom, Video Watchdog editor/author Tim Lucas, author/film historian Philip Nutman, and actor David Prowse (32:39 in HD!)
• Featurette: GALLERY OF GROTESQUERIES: A Brief History of Circus Horrors – A retrospective on circus/carnival themed horror productions (15:07 in HD!)
• Featurette: VISITING THE HOUSE OF HAMMER: Britain’s Legendary Horror Magazine – A retrospective on the popular British horror/comic publication featuring author Philip Nutman (9:48 in HD!)
• VAMPIRE CIRCUS: Interactive Comic Book- Featuring artwork by Brian Bolland (3:15 in HD!)
• POSTER AND STILLS GALLERY (1:58 in HD!)
• ORIGINAL THEATRICAL TRAILER (2:321 in HD!)
• Isolated Effects and Music score
DVD with same content/extras – in SD

vampire circus blu-ray

Buy Vampire Circus on Blu-ray + DVD combo from Amazon.co.ukAmazon.com

robert tayman vampire circus hammer

vampire-circus-mark-morris

Buy Vampire Circus novelisation from Amazon.co.uk


Vampires (television play)

$
0
0

Image

Vampires is a 1979 made-for-television play, broadcast by the BBC as part of their Play For Today strand. Concerning the obsessions of two school boys who suspect their neighbourhood is inhabited by a real vampire, the play was directed by John Goldschmidt who went on to become a celebrated director and producer of documentaries across Europe and America.

Image

Play for Today was a British television anthology drama series, produced by the BBC and transmitted on BBC1 from 1970 to 1984. During the run, more than three hundred programmes, featuring original television plays and adaptations of stage plays and novels, were transmitted. The individual episodes were between fifty and a hundred minutes in duration. 1979 saw the broadcast of Vampires, one of the best remembered episodes.

vampires01

With mum away for a night with her new boyfriend, young siblings Stu and Davey (real-life brothers, Peter and Paul Moran) and their friend, Dingo, develop something of an obsession with vampires, after viewing Christopher Lee in Dracula, Prince of Darkness on late-night TV in 1970′s Liverpool. When Dingo goes home, Stu winds up his younger brother by pretending to be under the influence of the Count. As he struggles to get to sleep, the sound of the inebriated elders returning home acts as a strange counterpoint to the world of suspense they have pretended to be in.

vampires03

The next day, the brothers get into some scrapes whilst attempting to spend their dinner money (£1!) on sweets at the local shop – when this falls flat, they elect to bunk off school, only to be rumbled by Dingo’s big brother who is cruising around in his impressively 1970′s wreck of a car. Stu remains determined to avoid school and takes himself off to see one of his mum’s old flames, ‘Uncle’ Georgie (the most famous actor in the piece, comedy titan, Paul Shane from Hi-De-Hi and many other middle-of-the-road BBC vehicles) who gives him pocket money in a scene which is oddly touching yet almost cruelly sad. The joke shop seems a fitting place to spend his newly found wealth and he purchases a pair of plastic fangs from a man you really wouldn’t want your child giving money to. Spending the rest of the day playing at being the undead in the park, he returns home to apply ‘blood’ to his face to top off the effect.

Also arriving home are Davy and Dingo (who is clearly a bad influence!) who tell him they saw a vampire in the local cemetery earlier and they should go back to check immediately. Return visits to the graveyard confirm that, yes, there is indeed a vampire at large, as what else could a tall old, mute man dressed in black (second most famous face in the play, character actor John G. Heller – also in Clint Eastwood vehicle Kelly’s Heroes) possibly be doing there?

vamp

The following day, their teacher has a heart attack and dies at school assembly (how I wished this happened, back in the day) and the boys tell their younger, interim tutor that this is doubtless down to the diabolical influence of the local vampire. It is also mentioned that Stu has dreamed of his father who is buried there, another tell-tale sign of supernatural goings-on. The teacher nods in the disturbed manner. The pair rope their friends in to hunt down the vampire before he can cause any more havoc, a charade which predictably ends in farce, the planning and organisation sadly lacking and the local coppers chasing them off in all directions. Back home, the boys reflect of the bizarre events of recent days and how they could possibly be wrong…but who’s that at the door..?

vampires04

Filmed in a flat, unremarkable way in the flat, unremarkable (apart from the football club) area between Stanley Park and Liverpool FC’s football ground, this is stellar television,  all the more remarkable due to the lack of professional actors on display, the majority never appearing in a production again. A play which hints at much but discloses little, the picture of a working class family and their mother’s passion for drink and a habit of failed relationships is all too real, a no-frills glimpse at lives which never promise much and require any means of escapism to make tolerable.

vamp2

Whether any vampires are present seems immaterial – there are far more frightening things out in the big bad world. The huge Victorian school building will have you choking on the clouds of chalk dust, the transition of old-school teaching and new, less conservative methods heralding in a world of new opportunities, evidently no more than the reflection in puddles suggested by the rest of the film. A fun and entirely well-judged school boy chat about the differences between horror and science fiction should probably become the given dictionary definition and the whole thing is wrapped up in the even more eye-popping real-life incident concerning the ‘Gorbals Vampire’.

Daz Lawrence, Horrorpedia

With thanks to TV Cream for several of the pics

vampires05


Avengers Assemble: ‘Blood Feud’ (animated series episode)

$
0
0

Avengers_Assemble_-_Blood_Feud_-_Dracula

Avengers Assemble is a 2013 American animated television series, based on the fictional Marvel Comics superhero team the Avengers, which has been designed to capitalize on the success of the 2012 film adaptation. Falcon (the newest member of The Avengers) is the main eyes and ears of the viewer as he fights evil and saves the world with his teammates (consisting of Iron ManCaptain AmericaHulkBlack WidowHawkeye and Thor). Dracula appears, voiced by Corey Burton.

Super villain Red Skull brings together his team of power giants called the Cabal where his invitational transmissions are shown to have been received by AttumaDoctor Doom, and Dracula.

Plot:

Dracula was an uneasy ally of Captain America back in World War II when HYDRA invaded Transylvania. In the episode “The Avengers Protocol” Pt. 2, the King of Vampires is seen receiving a holographic message from Red Skull to join his Cabal.

In the episode “Blood Feud,” Dracula has converted Black Widow into a part-vampire and sends her with a group of vampires to infiltrate Stark Tower where they attack the Avengers. After the vampires are hit by the UV lights and Captain America unmasks the disguised Black Widow, Dracula offers her life in exchange for Captain America’s life. Captain America suggests that the Avengers should go to Transylvania to find the vampire that transformed her.

In Transylvania, Dracula unleashes his vampire minions as he makes off with Black Widow. Captain America leads Hawkeye and Falcon into infiltrating Dracula’s castle. When Falcon and Hawkeye find Black Widow knocked out by Dracula, Captain America surrenders. Dracula states that he can get the Super Soldier serum from Captain America’s blood and gain enough power to destroy HYDRA. Before Dracula can suck Captain America’s blood, the Avengers attack and he ends up sucking Hulk’s blood instead. Hulk becomes a vampire version of himself!

Hulk as vampire from Avengers Assemble

Soon, the Hulk’s blood proves too much for Dracula since gamma radiation is similar to sunlight. Dracula escapes away as his castle collapses while Iron Man uses a synthesized version of Hulk’s blood to restore Black Widow to normal. A recuperating Dracula ponders Red Skull’s offer to get revenge on the Avengers…

Wikipedia | We are grateful to The Daily Marvelite for the image of Dracula and Flickering Myth for the image of the vampiric Hulk


The Body Beneath

$
0
0

body_beneath_xlg

The Body Beneath is a 1969 British-shot horror film written and directed by American auteur Andy Milligan. It stars Gavin Reed, Jackie Skarvellis, Berwick Kaler, Richmond Ross, Emma Jones, and Colin Gordon.

The Reverend Alexander Algernon Ford, a vampire residing at Carfax Abbey in London, wishes to revive his ailing bloodline, which has deteriorated due to inbreeding. With the help of his mute wife, Alicia, his hunchback servant, Spool, and a gang of female vampires, he sets about contacting the last few members of the Ford family not already converted. After abducting a distant relative, Susan Ford, whose role is to sire a new army of vampire babies, the Reverend convenes a vampire feast where the future of the Ford clan will be decided…

Image

A tale of incestuous vampires cruising the outermost branches of their family tree for new blood, this was the second of five films made in London by Andy Milligan in the late 1960s (the first, Nightbirds, was shot immediately before it, in late Autumn 1968). Milligan generally preferred period-settings for his horror films (the late 1800s in The Ghastly Ones; medieval England in Torture Dungeon), although his ultra-low budgets and nonchalant approach to mise-en-scène resulted in numerous visual anachronisms. The Body Beneath is the reverse angle: a modern-day drama one could almost mistake for ‘period’. The primary location is a Neo-Tudor house with carefully preserved Victorian furnishings, the women wear flouncy dresses of uncertain vintage, and two of the main characters, an evil vicar and a hunchbacked simpleton, could have stepped out of a Gothic Victorian fantasy. However, the glimpses of formica surfaces and Kays Catalogue knitwear are intentional this time; we’re definitely in the 1960s.

Image

Villainous bloodsucker the Reverend Ford, marvellously played by Gavin Reed, is The Body Beneath’s most compelling creation. Reed (who died in 1990 at the age of just 59) knew precisely how to handle Milligan’s dauntingly overwritten material. With a lofty, supercilious attitude and immaculate diction he would have made an excellent mischief-maker in shows like The Avengers or Department S. “I was reading the papers – The Times of course – when I came across your name in the arrivals,” he sniffs to Canadian relative Graham Ford. (Note how actor Colin Gordon starts to improve his own enunciation in response, as if cowed by the Reverend’s impeccable English.) Milligan gives Reed most of the best lines: when hammering six-inch nails through the hands of his hunchbacked servant Spool as punishment for disloyalty, he muses, “It’s strange… I have no soul, yet I feel compassion. It doesn’t make sense, does it?” The Body Beneath appears to have been Reed’s only major role; he had a couple of parts in obscure TV shows in the 1960s, plus a blink-and-you’ll-miss-it appearance as a camp windowdresser in Carry on Loving (1970), but that’s about all. At some point in the 1970s he moved to the USA, but there’s an eleven year gap between Carry on Loving and his appearance in the oddball Bruce Dern vehicle Tattoo (1981). He turned up again as a snide theatre director bullying Dustin Hoffman in the early scenes of Tootsie (1982) but seems to have done little else on the big screen. Perhaps the theatre was his natural home?

Image

A well shot sex scene introduces second-billed Jackie Skarvellis, and again, Milligan is well served; Skarvellis is a vivid, energetic performer who takes a relatively uninteresting character and makes her watchable. It’s rather a pity she wasn’t given a villainous role, because Milligan writes for his monsters far better than his heroines, and Skarvellis is the sort of performer who would gleefully sink her teeth into such an opportunity. Chiefly a theatre actor, she was one of the uninhibited London cast of the nudist stage show “Oh! Calcutta!” and went on to a busy career as actor, writer and stage director which continues to this day.

Image

Berwick Kaler, who plays Spool, can barely recall making The Body Beneath, but says that his role took no more than two or three days to shoot. The main thing he remembers about ‘playing hunchback’ is that Milligan wanted him to stoop too much. Milligan may have been over-egging things, but since Spool comes across more like a child’s distant memory of The Hunchback of Notre Dame than a plausible depiction of disability perhaps it was simply a case of the director failing to convey the required tone to the performers. Either that, or he liked to see Kaler bent over…

Milligan’s stories often involve the travails of families riven by hatred, and The Body Beneath is no exception. The Fords’ vampire bloodline has been weakened by incest, requiring new donors, hence the Reverend’s attempt to track down and exsanguinate distant kinfolk. With smarmy relatives popping round for tea, and stilted conversation before murder, the film is like one of Mike Leigh’s suburban comedies crossed with an episode of the supernatural soap opera Dark Shadows.

gutter-auteur-films-of-andy-milligan

Buy Gutter Auteur: The Films of Andy Milligan from Amazon.co.uk | Amazon.com

“Set in the graveyards of England!” boasts the US one-sheet for The Body Beneath, and indeed, the film begins with an atmospheric scene in Highgate Cemetery. Chiefly, however, The Body Beneath takes place in a brooding Neo-Tudor mansion called  was shot in West Hampstead’s Sarum Chase, built in 1932 on the edge of London’s Hampstead Heath. The owner, Frances Owen Salisbury, died in 1962 and left the house to the British Council of Churches, after which it was available for film and photo shoots (see the gatefold inner sleeve of The Rolling Stones’ “Beggars Banquet” album and the nudie short Miss Frankenstein R.I.P.). Milligan gathered some wonderfully creepy shots at Sarum Chase, staged a crude ‘crucifixion’ in the mansion’s ornate gardens (one wonders how the British Council of Churches would have reacted), and returned a few months later to shoot a werewolf movie Curse of the Full Moon - later released in the States as The Rats Are Coming! The Werewolves Are Here!.

Image

In 1968, vampires and Gothic horror in general were still very popular in the UK, therefore Milligan’s decision to venture into the supernatural made sound commercial sense. Yet for reasons that remain unclear he eschewed the classic image-pool from which he could have drawn. The vampires in The Body Beneath have no fangs, they can move around in the daylight (albeit with special injections to counteract the sun), and they spend more time bickering with their victims than gnashing at their throats. Given that their leader lives in the liturgical splendour of ‘Carfax Abbey’ and wears priestly garb, one supposes too that this clan of peculiar bloodsuckers are immune to the effects of crucifixes and clerical paraphernalia, although this is never explicitly put to the test. Only in the semi-comedic and thoroughly wonderful Blood (1974) did Milligan at last give us a fanged vampire allergic to the cross.

ghastly-one-sex-gore-netherworld-of-any-milligan

Buy The Ghastly One: The Sex-Gore Netherworld of Andy Milligan from Amazon.co.ukAmazon.com

When he does go for a touch of supernatural menace, Milligan handles it well. For instance, when Graham’s wife allows the vampires to enter the conjugal bedroom, their arrival is so creepy that we don’t think to ask how all four of them squeezed through one tiny window. The fate of a maid, eyes popped by knitting needles, is satisfyingly grisly, though inflicted on one of the few likeable characters, played by Elizabeth Sentance with a quirky charm not unlike British thesp’ Brenda Blethyn. The aforementioned prologue in the cemetery is a Gothic delight, with three female vampires, trailing coloured lace like some sinister Kate Bush cult, attacking a mourner in a graveyard. (The scene is further distinguished by Milligan’s wonky sound recording, which gives an unearthly warble to the vampires’ insinuating “Hello!”). Then there’s the vampire party in which, unusually, Milligan chooses eerie electronic music for accompaniment. It’s the sustained highlight of the film, and one of the best sequences he ever shot. With artfully blurred lensing and some accomplished low level lighting he creates a ritual haze of near-abstraction, redolent of underground/experimental films such as Kenneth Anger’s Inauguration of the Pleasure Dome. Less successful is Graham Ford’s off-camera demise, nibbled to death by vampire harpies while unconscious. It’s something of a let-down that we don’t see this stolid, handsome, but oh-so-boring hunk struggling for his life in a welter of gore. The pacing, too, is virtually non-existent. For instance, after the prologue we’re thrust into three consecutive dialogue scenes; long rambling discourses between Graham Ford and the Reverend, Susan Ford and her fiancé, and Candace Ford and her maid. This prolixity, however, is par for the course with Milligan. If you can’t dig the ceaseless prattle of his sniping, carping, endlessly debating characters, you’re never going to ‘get’ his films!

ImageThe Compton Cinema, Soho, owned and run by Milligan producer Leslie Elliot in the late 1960s.

Elizabeth: “Go to America? Never! What is America? What is it made of? Pimps, prostitutes, religious fanatics? Thrown out of England but a few short centuries ago. They’re the scum of the Earth.”

This scabrous attack on the USA comes during a ‘vampire summit meeting’ held by the Reverend Ford, in which he suggests that the assembled bloodsuckers should emigrate West. It is apparently word-for-word what Curtis Elliot, the bullying father of The Body Beneath’s producer Leslie Elliot, said during a row which brought to a violent end Milligan’s association with Elliot’s Cinemedia company. (How did the argument begin? Rumour has it that Elliot Snr. thought an offhand remark of Milligan’s was anti-Semitic; Leslie Elliot, however, believes his father deliberately took umbrage at an innocent comment.) Afterwards Milligan managed to eke out his finances for another three films shot in London (Bloodthirsty Butchers; The Man With Two Heads; Curse of the Full Moon) before returning to New York. The Body Beneath was never released in the UK, but it went on to play various 42nd Street dives throughout the 1970s, on a double bill with Milligan’s first film shot in 35mm, Guru the Mad Monk (1970).

Image

Sadly, life didn’t get any easier for Andy back in New York. Despite or maybe because of his abrasive, combative manner he found himself regularly screwed over by producers and distributors. In many ways his sojourn in England was a highpoint of his career; he found himself wanted, in the homeland of the Gothic horror tale, making movies for a producer who admired him. Had he not so catastrophically fallen out with the man holding the purse-strings, who knows where his English adventure might have taken him?

nightbirds andy milligan BFI blu-ray DVD

Buy Nightbirds + The Body Beneath on BFI Blu-ray + DVD from Amazon.co.uk

The Body Beneath enjoyed one of the more startling renaissances in recent years when it was included as an extra on the BFI’s Blu-Ray release of Milligan’s Nightbirds.

Stephen Thrower, Horrorpedia

Related: The Ghastly Ones | The Rats Are Coming! The Werewolves Are Here!


From Dusk Till Dawn: The Series (TV series)

$
0
0

FROM-DUSK-TILL-DAWN_612x380

From Dusk Till Dawn: The Series is an upcoming American horror/crime television series created by Robert Rodriguez. It forms part of the saga of film, direct-to-video, comic and cult following of From Dusk till Dawn, expanding on the chronicles of the Gecko Brothers: Seth and Richie, The Fuller family, and Santanico Pandemonium. The series will premiere on March 11, 2014.

unnamed

The show will explore and expand on the characters and story from the film, providing a wider scope and richer Aztec mythology. It is planned to be broadcast by Rodriguez’s newly launched channel El Rey. The series features:

Wilmer Valderrama as enigmatic crime lord Carlos,

D.J. Cotrona as Seth Gecko

Zane Holtz as Richie Gecko

Jesse Garcia plays Texas Ranger Freddie Gonzalez,

Don Johnson in a recurring role as Sheriff Earl McGraw;

Robert Patrick (Terminator 2: Judgment DayThe X-Files) as Jacob Fuller

Madison Davenport as Kate Fuller

Brandon Soo Hoo as Scott Fuller

Eiza Gonzalez as Santanico Pandemonium

Adrianne Palicki portrays Vanessa Styles, a woman from Seth Gecko’s past

Lane Garrison plays Pete, the clerk at Benny’s World of Liquor which the Gecko brothers take over in the pilot

Jake Busey portrays Professor Aiden Tanner, an eccentric intellectual obsessed with the Mesoamerican mythology behind the vampires…


The Vampire Show

$
0
0

5000

The Vampire Show is a four part Danish web series, shot in 2013 and available for viewing online. The episodes total just under 90 minutes.

Shot in English, the series a parody of reality TV, and has been described by the producers as “political satire”. It follows the lives (if that’s the right word!) of a group of vampires, who are being filmed by a TV crew.

The show is the creation of Xinxin Ren Gudbjörnsson, a Chinese filmmaker living in Denmark. After applications for funding were turned down, the production was shot independently for just 660 Kroner ($121), most of which seems to have been spent on the website (visit www.thevampireshow.com) and two pairs of plastic fangs. A crew of 20 people, including the cast, were sourced through a free casting agency and Facebook. Each episode was shot over a weekend once a month.

450

Unfortunately, the series is rather weak, even when you take into account the zero budget. It’s overly dark (and while studio lighting is costly, you can do wonders with a 500 watt security light and a bit of ingenuity) and rather too slow moving to be involving. More significantly, it’s not really very funny. But, we invite you to make your own mind up. Here’s the first episode – the others, along with behind the scenes footage, is on the website.

http://cphpost.dk/news/mission-impossible-how-to-make-a-tv-show-for-the-cost-of-a-tom-cruise-poster.3969.html

David Flint

Horrorpedia is a non-profit website. Please help us cover our web-hosting costs by buying from our affiliate links. Thank you.

Join the Horrorpedia online community on Tumblr (8,000 more images!) | Facebook | Twitter | Pinterest


Carmilla (novella)

$
0
0

Carmilla-Edi

Carmilla is a Gothic novella by Joseph Sheridan Le Fanu. First published in 1872, it tells the story of a young woman’s susceptibility to the attentions of a female vampire named Carmilla. It was first published in the magazine The Dark Blue and then in the author’s collection of short stories In a Glass Darkly in the latter year.

Carmilla

Plot:

The story is presented as part of the casebook of Dr. Hesselius, whose departures from medical orthodoxy rank him as the first occult doctor in literature. It is narrated by Laura, one of the two main protagonists of the tale. Laura begins her tale by relating her childhood in a “picturesque and solitary” castle in the midst of an extensive forest in Styria, where she lives with her father, a wealthy English widower, retired from the Austrian Service. When she was six years old, Laura had a vision of a beautiful visitor in her bedchamber. She later claims to have been bitten on the chest, although no wounds are found on her.

12 years later, Laura and her father are admiring the sunset in front of the castle when her father tells her of a letter he received earlier from his friend, General Spielsdorf. The General was supposed to bring his niece, Bertha Rheinfeldt, to visit the two, but the niece suddenly died under mysterious circumstances. The General ambiguously concludes that he will discuss the circumstances in detail when they meet later. Laura is saddened by the loss of a potential friend, and longs for a companion. A carriage accident outside Laura’s home unexpectedly brings a girl of Laura’s age into the family’s care. Her name is Carmilla. Both girls instantly recognize the other from the “dream” they both had when they were young…

tumblr_lb251ePPQ61qzzf25o1_1280

Influence:

Carmilla, the title character, is the original prototype for a legion of female and lesbian vampires. Though Le Fanu portrays his vampire’s sexuality with the circumspection that one would expect for his time, it is evident that lesbian attraction is the main dynamic between Carmilla and the narrator of the story. When compared to other literary vampires of the 19th century, Carmilla is a similar product of a culture with strict sexual mores and tangible religious fear. While Carmilla selected exclusively female victims, she only becomes emotionally involved with a few.

Films:

The-Vampire-Lovers

Music:

1295534839_aura012

Books:

  • A vampire named Baron Karnstein appears in Anno Dracula by Kim Newman. Carmilla herself is mentioned several times as a former (until her death at the hands of vampire hunters) friend of the book’s vampire heroine Geneviève. Some short stories set in the Anno Dracula universe have also included Carmilla.
  • In the Japanese light novel series High School DxD the vampires are depicted as having a society divided among two major factions: The Tepes and the Carmilla. The Carmilla faction favors a matriarchal society for the world of vampires while the Tepes prefer a patriarchal government.
  • Elfriede Jelinek‘s play Illness or Modern Women uses Carmilla as the name of one of its female protagonists, who becomes a vampire.
  • Author Anne Rice has cited Carmilla as an inspiration for The Vampire Chronicles; a series of bestselling vampire books she wrote from 1976-2003.
  • The novel Carmilla: The Wolves of Styria is a re-imagining of the original story. It is a derivative re-working, listed as being authored by J.S. Le Fanu and David Brian.
  • Carmilla: A Dark Fugue is a short book by David Brian. Although the story is primarily centered around the exploits of General Spielsdorf; nonetheless it relates directly to events which unfold within Carmilla: The Wolves of Styria.
  • Carmilla: The Return by Kyle Marffin is the sequel of Carmilla.

77f0057c-f798-4171-bfd9-47555a08271a

Comics:

  • In 1991, Aircel Comics published a six-issue black and white miniseries of Carmilla by Steven Jones and John Ross. It was based on the story by Sheridan Le Fanu and billed as “The Erotic Horror Classic of Female Vampirism”. The first issue was printed in February 1991. The first three issues were an adaptation of the original story, while the latter three were a sequel set in the 1930s.
  • In the first story arc of Dynamite Entertainment‘s revamp of Vampirella, a villainous vampire named Le Fanu inhabits the basement of a Seattle nightclub named Carmilla.

Video games:

Television:

  • In episode 36 of The Return of Ultraman, the monster of the week in the episode, Draculas, originates from a planet named Carmilla. He also possesses the corpse of a woman as his human disguise.

StateofDecay_Camilla

  • The Doctor Who serial State of Decay features a vampire named Camilla who in a brief but explicit moment finds much to ‘admire’ in the Doctor’s female travelling companion Romana who finds she has to turn away from the vampire’s intense gaze.
  • In the HBO TV series True Blood, in episodes 5 and 6 of season 2, a hotel in Dallas, Texas has been built for vampires called “Hotel Carmilla”. They have heavy shaded rooms, and provide room service of human “snacks” (with blood type and sexuality) for their vampire clientele.

Wikipedia

yutte-stensgaard10



What We Do in the Shadows

$
0
0

 

what we do in the shadows vampire sex

What We Do in the Shadows is a 2014 New Zealand horror comedy film about a group of vampires who live together in Wellington, New Zealand. It was directed and written by Taika Waititi and Jemaine Clement, who also star in the film. The remainder of the cast are: Jonathan Brugh, Cori Gonzalez-Macuer, Stu Rutherford, Jackie Van Beek, Ben Fransham.

What We Do in the Shadows is based on a 2006 short film of the same name by Waititi and Clement. It premiered at the Sundance Film Festival in January 2014.

Official synopsis:

Follow the lives of Viago (Taika Waititi), Deacon (Jonathan Brugh), and Vladislav (Jemaine Clement) – three flatmates who are just trying to get by and overcome life’s obstacles-like being immortal vampires who must feast on human blood. Hundreds of years old, the vampires are finding that beyond sunlight catastrophes, hitting the main artery, and not being able to get a sense of their wardrobe without a reflection-modern society has them struggling with the mundane like paying rent, keeping up with the chore wheel, trying to get into nightclubs, and overcoming flatmate conflicts…

what-we-do-in-the-shadows-trio

Reviews:

“takes pleasure in poking fun at various aspects of vampire lore, but not surprisingly (given the filmmakers), What We Do in the Shadows is more deadpan, clever, and silly than it is simple, “schticky,” or mean-spirited. And while Shadows is most assuredly a full-fledged comedy in horror clothing, fans of the darker genre will certainly enjoy how colorfully gory the movie gets during some of the best visual gags.” Scott Weinberg, FEARnet

“Some genre fans who prefer the silly to the satiric may bite, but the anemic pic isn’t remotely weird or witty enough for cult immortality. Feeling eternal at 87 minutes, the film introduces a rival gang of G-rated werewolves (“We’re werewolves, not swearwolves!”) and drags its way to the Unholy Masquerade Ball, populated by hard-partying vampires as well as zombies — the movie’s final act of desperation.” Rob Nelson, Variety

what-we-do-in-the-shadows-sundance-4

 

“It’s also as silly as it is smart, unloading plenty of easy gross-out gags involving gushing blood and projectile vomiting plus some token childish moments — a character audibly masturbating from inside his coffin, for example — and some the movie gets away with by having its characters act immaturely in spite of their ages ranging in the hundreds to thousands of years … There’s always a smart bit within seconds of something stupid.” Christopher Campbell, Film School Rejects

“If there is any justice, What We Do in the Shadows, will break out into the light of day as a crossover hit. This film is absolutely hysterical, came as a complete surprise to me, and even breathes life back into the withering corpse of the doc-comedy style of The Office.” Ed Travis, Cinapse

what we do in the shadows nosferatu

Wikipedia | IMDb


Bachelor Party in the Bungalow of the Damned

$
0
0

bachelor-party-in-the-bungalow-of-the-damned_full

bungalow-1

‘One crazy night of debauchery and damnation!’

Bachelor Party in the Bungalow of the Damned is a 2008 American comedy horror film written, directed and produced by Brian Lindsay Thomson. It stars Joseph Riker, Trina Analee, Gregg Aaron Greenberg, Joe Testa, Rebecca Hodges, Sean Parker, Gelu Dan Rusu, Zoe Hunter (Witchcraft 13: Blood of the ChosenThere’s a Maniac in My House!!!), Afro-American Scream Queen Monique Dupree (Zombthology; Bikini Bloodbath ChristmasSheriff Tom Vs. The Zombies), Kaitlyn Gutkes and Troma’s Lloyd Kaufman. It was shot for a budget of approximately $10,000 on Long Island, New York.

Bachelor Party in the Bungalow of the Damned (2007)_005

Troma’s Lloyd Kaufman as “Hot babe”

Official synopsis:

Sammy’s got access to a genuine bungalow in the Hamptons! He decides to throw the ultimate bachelor party for his best friend, Chuck. The only stipulation is that he must invite the house’s caretaker, the prude yet sexually ambiguous Gordon, to the festivities. A trio of gorgeous strippers arrives to give Chuck a taste of the lascivious delights he will soon forego. But just who will taste who and what will happen when Chuck’s fiancé arrives at the doorstep of the damned? The Bungalow may have been free but that doesn’t mean Sammy is getting it for nothing!

bungallow-03

MV5BMTg2NDExOTQ3M15BMl5BanBnXkFtZTcwMTEwNDA2NA@@._V1_SX640_SY720_

Reviews:

“Writer/director/overworked multi-tasker Brian Thomson may well believe, as he sardonically notes in the end credits, that “gaps in continuity constitute the unconscious poetry of the cinema” – but sometimes there’s just no substitute for a well written script with good dialogue, that’s well acted, well directed and well shot. The likeability of Greenberg and the spankability of Dupree apart, Bachelor Party in the Bungalow of the Damned has pretty much none of those things going for it. Cheap and it may be cheerful it may be, but that will only get you so far.” Brutal as Hell

” … a horror comedy mash-up that really delivers the goods.” Icons of Fright

4c8374bba1b74b5f21b4ba18607dd1be

“The acting is poor, but Greenberg does his best. The camerawork is perfunctory, often settling for the most obvious shots, but there are some nice stylistic touches (Fish’s introduction, especially). Most of the film relies on natural lighting, with the night-time interiors looking yellow and sickly, and the night-time exteriors (shot day-for-night, by the looks of it) are too dark to really see anything at all.” Mark West,  Zone-SF.com

MV5BMTMxNzIxNTYwMV5BMl5BanBnXkFtZTcwOTEwNDA2NA@@._V1._SX640_SY493_

“It’s the horror element that I think misses the mark most of all, because really, when your protagonist is a dude in a club shirt with flaming skulls on it who wears a Fred Durstian backwards red cap even when he’s in a hot tub, there’s not really much reason to not want to see him get brutally murdered.” Chris Sims, Heavy.com

“This is far from a decent low budget vampire spoof movie yet it benefits from Greenberg’s somewhat stoic lead and a few smart one-liners amidst some painfully homophobic dialogue. Where it fails is the inferior lighting and poor effects. But compared to the likes of Bikini Bloodbath Christmas – which also features Monique Dupree and Lloyd Kaufman – this is a trashy masterpiece.” Adrian J Smith, Horrorpedia

61U4QBujydL

Buy on Amazon.com Instant | DVD from Amazon.co.uk

Choice dialogue:

“I know one thing for sure, this dump smells of pussy, we gotta get cleaned up.”

“He’s a vampire! I’m engaged to a vampire?”

MV5BMTkzOTg1ODU1M15BMl5BanBnXkFtZTcwODEwNDA2NA@@._V1._SX640_SY983_

10906

Screen Shot 2014-06-19 at 22.54.25

IMDb | Facebook


Kitchen Sink

$
0
0

Vanessa-Hudgens-Kitchen-Sink-2015-comedy-horror

Kitchen Sink is a 2015 American horror comedy film directed by Robbie Pickering from a screenplay by Oren Uziel (Mortal Kombat: Rebirth; Men in Black 4) The film stars Vanessa Hudgens (Sucker Punch; Machete Kills), Ed WestwickDenis Leary and Bob Odenkirk. The film’s original title was The Kitchen Sink.

Originally slated to open on January 9, 2015, the Columbia Pictures production will now be released on September 4, 2015 by the company in conjunction with Sony Pictures Releasing.

bob-odenkirk-the-kitchen-sink

Plot teaser:

In the town of Dillford, it used to be that vampires, humans and zombies used to get along, but then something unexpected arrived and now it’s humans vs. vampires vs. zombies in all-out mortal combat. Now three teenagers must try to get things back to “normal”…

Cast:

Filming locations: 

The film started shooting in Los Angeles on August 15, 2013 and lasted 37 days at different locations in LA including Santa Clarita, Temple City and Van Nuys High School.

Wikipedia | IMDb


Vampires in Havana

$
0
0

VampiresInHavana_screenprint_Cuba_Bachs-1-500x741

¡Vampiros en La Habana! – English title: Vampires in Havana – is a Cuban animated film directed by Juan Padrón. Released in 1985, the film features trumpet performances by Arturo Sandoval. A sequel to the film, called Más vampiros en La Habana, was released in 2003.

Plot teaser:

Joseph Amadeus von Dracula, known as Pepito to his friends, is a trumpet player in 1930s Havana who spends his time away from the bandstand dabbling in quasi-terrorist plots to overthrow the Cuban government of dictator, Gerardo Machado. He is unaware that he is really a vampire, and that his uncle, Werner Amadeus von Dracula, the son of Count Dracula, has been using him as a test subject for a formula that negates the usually fatal effects of sunlight.

vampiresinhavana_theprofessor

A Chicago-based crime syndicate and a group of vampires with members from several countries in Europe have both learned of the formula and wish to possess it for different reasons—the Chicago group to suppress it and thus maintain their monopoly on indoor, artificial beach resorts, and the Europeans to market it as “Vampisol.” When Pepito learns of his true heritage (and his uncle’s wish to give the formula away to vampires everywhere) he becomes the target of a multi-pronged manhunt, leading all parties involved on a wild chase through some of the seediest neighborhoods of Havana…

vih group

Reviews:

‘The animation and sexual themes at work in the film make the Ralph Bakshi comparisons inevitable. These elements also stand to make some viewers less comfortable because the idea of innocuous characterizations was not a part of the crafting here. Generalized ethnic phenotypes are taken to the extreme and female characters spend as much time naked as clothed. If you are looking for all inclusive apolitical and moral content then this is one cartoon you should steer clear of.’ Bloody Good Horror

2prinap

‘It’s all very hip, with takeoffs on gangster-movie types and Latin lovers, but the animation is nothing special and many of the jokes are standard crash-and-splat stuff. The exceptions, such as the toasts drunk in vintage O-Plus blood, tend to be repeated. The freshest turn shows an audience of cartoon figures being scared by human beings on a movie screen, and the ending, when Pepito sings out the secret formula over Radio Vampire International, has a happy beat. The 14- to 16-year-old crowd may not get the anti-capitalist message, but they might be tickled by the fangs.’ Walter Goodman, The New York Times

4564261829_8e97804164_b

‘There is a lot of political subtext to be found in ¡Vampiros en La Habana!. It’s not the type one mulls over, or the type that spurs one on to some sort of political course of action. Instead, the political commentary in ¡Vampiros en La Habana! is of the cheap and easy variety. Cuba is a tiny little island that just wants to get by and it is caught in the games being played between the European and American powers. The film makes this obvious in its first ten or so minutes, and it repeats this commentary for the rest of its run time. Maybe the commentary is true, but that doesn’t make the commentary poignant or well done.’ Bill Thompson, Sight on Sound

Wikipedia | IMDb

 


Sampson vs. the Vampire Women

$
0
0

santo_vs_vampire_women_poster_031

Santo vs. las Mujeres Vampiro is a 1962 Mexican horror film directed by Alfonso Corona Blake (The World of the Vampires; Samson in the Wax Museum) from a screenplay co-written with Rafael García Travesi, Antonio Orellana and Fernando Osés. K. Gordon Murray supervised the American re-edited version, Samson vs. the Vampire Women.

The film stars Santo, Lorena Velázquez, Jaime Fernández, María Duval, Augusto Benedico and Ofelia Montesco.

Vampireeyes

Plot teaser:

Vampire women are awakened by their leader, The Evil One, in order to find him a bride. Diana, a local professor’s daughter (María Duval) is kidnapped and so he enlists masked wrestler Santo to rescue her…

samson-vs-the-vampire-women

Reviews:

‘The main problem is that Santo and the vampire film are odd cousins. Santo is a very physical character based around his brute strength and wrestling skill, while the vampire is supernatural in nature. When the two meet, his immediate response is to engage the male vampire slaves in wrestling matches, which only serves to reduce the vampire’s customary aura of mystery to a very mundane level.’ Moria

Screen Shot 2015-03-22 at 22.33.19

‘There’s the usual odd dubbing (one of Santo’s opponents talks like Nick Adams), but the special effects (the customary rubber bats notwithstanding) are pretty good, including vampires burning up in flames at the sight of a giant cross or the morning sunlight, or beautiful faces seen as the crusty, aged horrors that they really are when reflected in a mirror. One of the film’s most memorable moments has Santo unmasking his karate-chopping wrestling competitor to reveal a wolf-like kisser!’ George R. Reis, DVD Drive-In

Screen Shot 2015-03-22 at 23.25.40

Screen Shot 2015-03-22 at 22.50.02

‘Some of the concepts in the film go from the sublime to the ridiculous. We have a police inspector who, after the first kidnap attempt, believes in vampires (and thus releases the unfortunate cop he had locked up earlier) … We have a Professor who contacts Samson by video phone – oddly sci-fi and very out of place.’ Taliesen Meets the Vampires

 

SampsonvsVampireWomen

santo_vs_the_vampire_women_poster_01

Samson-Santo-DVD

Cast:

  • Santo [Rodolfo Guzmán Huerta] as Santo/Sampson
  • Lorena Velázquez as Thorina, queen of the vampires
  • María Duval as Diana Orlof
  • Jaime Fernández as Inspector Carlos
  • Augusto Benedico as Professor Orlof
  • Xavier Loyá as Jorge – Diana’s fiance
  • Ofelia Montesco as Tandra, vampire priestess
  • Fernando Osés as Vampire
  • Guillermo Hernández as Vampire
  • Nathanael León as Vampire
  • Ricardo Adalid as Detective at Party

Choice dialogue:

“Follow me, we’ll search for human blood!”

Wikipedia | IMDb


Viewing all 143 articles
Browse latest View live


<script src="https://jsc.adskeeper.com/r/s/rssing.com.1596347.js" async> </script>