In his feature film Don’t Look in the Basement 2 director and co-screenwriter Anthony Brownrigg continues the storyline of the original 1973 ‘Basement’ film directed by his late father S.F. Brownriggand released as The Forgotten. This 2016 sequel which Brownrigg tags a “supernatural thriller” is set forty years later when the only known survivor of a mass murder returns to the […]...
- 2/23/2017
- by Brad Miska
- bloody-disgusting.com
A nasty new clip is here from the sequel to S.F. Brownrigg’s 1973 film Don’t Look in the Basement, entitled appropriately enough Don’t Look in the Basement 2. Check it out! Tony Brownrigg directs the sequel, which stars Andrew Sensenig,… Continue Reading →
The post A Psycho Snaps in New Don’t Look in the Basement 2 Clip appeared first on Dread Central.
The post A Psycho Snaps in New Don’t Look in the Basement 2 Clip appeared first on Dread Central.
- 5/19/2016
- by Steve Barton
- DreadCentral.com
Legless Corpse Films will release Anthony Brownrigg's Don't Look In The Basement 2 on a 2 disc special edition Blu-Ray and regular edition DVD on May 24th. We have a searing hot clip to share with you to give you a taste of the gore that is in store for you. In 1972 Stephens Sanitarium was the scene of a brutal mass murder.Forty years later Sam Withers, the only known survivor, arrives at Green Park mental institution. Dr. William Matthews, a successful New York doctor fighting his own inner demons, accepts a position at the small-town clinic and is assigned Sam’s problematic case. Sam’s arrival at Green Parktriggers strange behaviors in the staff members and residents.Even the building itself takes on a...
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- 5/19/2016
- Screen Anarchy
Exploitation sequel releases new clip and director’s statement. As we reported here, director Anthony Brownrigg’s Don’T Look In The Basement 2, the belated follow-up to his father S.F. Brownrigg’s notorious exploitation film classic Don’T Look In The Basement, is set for release on May 24th via LeglessCorpse Films. Today, Brownrigg circulated an impassioned director’s statement,…
The post New Clip and Director’s Statement: Anthony Brownrigg’s Don’T Look In The Basement 2 appeared first on Shock Till You Drop.
The post New Clip and Director’s Statement: Anthony Brownrigg’s Don’T Look In The Basement 2 appeared first on Shock Till You Drop.
- 5/19/2016
- by Chris Alexander
- shocktillyoudrop.com
Take a gander at this preview for Fallout 4: Far Harbor, which will be released on Xbox One, PlayStation 4, and PC on May 19th. Also in today’s Horror Highlights: a trailer / release details for Don’t Look in the Basement 2, info on a live digital séance from the team behind The Darkness, Crypt TV’s “One Sentence Scare” Contest, and details and teaser images for Hunting the Legend Part II.
Fallout 4: Far Harbor Gameplay Details and Trailer: “Preview your journey to Far Harbor, the next game on for Fallout 4. Far Harbor docks on Xbox One, PlayStation 4, and PC on Thursday, May 19th.
In Far Harbor, a new case from Valentine’s Detective Agency leads you on a search for a young woman and a secret colony of synths. Travel off the coast of Maine to the mysterious island of Far Harbor, where higher levels of radiation have created a more feral world.
Fallout 4: Far Harbor Gameplay Details and Trailer: “Preview your journey to Far Harbor, the next game on for Fallout 4. Far Harbor docks on Xbox One, PlayStation 4, and PC on Thursday, May 19th.
In Far Harbor, a new case from Valentine’s Detective Agency leads you on a search for a young woman and a secret colony of synths. Travel off the coast of Maine to the mysterious island of Far Harbor, where higher levels of radiation have created a more feral world.
- 5/5/2016
- by Tamika Jones
- DailyDead
In his feature film Don’t Look in the Basement 2 director and co-screenwriter Anthony Brownrigg continues the story line of the original 1973 ‘Basement’ film directed by his late father S.F. Brownrigg and released as The Forgotten. This 2015 sequel which Brownrigg tags a “supernatural thriller” is set forty years later when the only known …
The post ‘Don’t Look In The Basement 2’ Sequels 1973 Cult Classic Thriller Coming May 24th first appeared on Hnn | Horrornews.net - Official News Site...
The post ‘Don’t Look In The Basement 2’ Sequels 1973 Cult Classic Thriller Coming May 24th first appeared on Hnn | Horrornews.net - Official News Site...
- 5/4/2016
- by Horrornews.net
- Horror News
There's a special place in my black heart for '70s horror films that are just the right blend of shlock and and grit. Like-minded fans may recall the 1973 film Don't Look In The Basement, aka The Forgotten, aka what I would argue is one of several influences on Edgar Wright's fantastic faux grindhouse trailer, Don't.The surprisingly good Don't Look In The Basement has now spawned a sequel more than 40 years later, aptly titled Don't Look In The Basement 2. Director Anthony Brownrigg, son of the director of the first film, S.F. Brownrigg, has returned to the original shooting location for the newest tale. "The film is more of a paranormal thriller than drive-in horror," Brownrigg says.Twitch was able to get an exclusive quote from star...
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- 5/9/2014
- Screen Anarchy
S.F. Brownriggs cult classic Dont Look In the Basement gets a sequel 40 years later. Anthony Brownrigg the son of S.F. Brownriggs wrote and directed the sequel Id Dont Look in the Basement 2. The film is said to be a true sequel that completes the story that S.F. was unable to before his passing. Synopsis Dont Look In the Basement 2 will pick up the story of Sam after the end of the first film 40 years later. After Sam is moved to a new asylum in 2013 strange things begin happening there to the patients as well as the doctors. One doctor must find out whats causing everyone go delve even deeper into insanity before it overcomes him as well. Starring Andrew Sensenig Frank Mosley Arianne Margot Willie Minor...
- 5/7/2014
- Best-Horror-Movies.com
In 1973 S.F. Brownrigg directed a low-budget horror flick called Don't Look in the Basement, which oftentimes hit theaters alongside Last House on the Left on a double-bill. Now, 40 years later, Brownrigg's son, Anthony, is intent on continuing the story, and we have the trailer for you right here. Dig it!
Andrew Sensenig, Frank Mosley, Arianne Margot, Willie Minor, Jr., Camilla Carr, and Megan Emerick star in Id: Don't Look in the Basement Part 2. Anthony Brownrigg and Megan Emerick wrote the script. Look for it sometime this fall.
The film will pick up after the events of Don't Look in the Basement, following the character of Sam around 40 years after he and his fellow asylum inmates ran amok. Sam is moved to a new asylum, where strange things begin happening once more.
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Don't...
Andrew Sensenig, Frank Mosley, Arianne Margot, Willie Minor, Jr., Camilla Carr, and Megan Emerick star in Id: Don't Look in the Basement Part 2. Anthony Brownrigg and Megan Emerick wrote the script. Look for it sometime this fall.
The film will pick up after the events of Don't Look in the Basement, following the character of Sam around 40 years after he and his fellow asylum inmates ran amok. Sam is moved to a new asylum, where strange things begin happening once more.
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Got news? Click here to submit it!
Subscribe to the Dread Central YouTube Channel!
Don't...
- 5/5/2014
- by Steve Barton
- DreadCentral.com
Some fourty years after the original film was released, Anthony Brownrigg – son of the original films director S.F. Brownrigg – brings us the long-awaited sequel Don’t Look in the Basement 2, featuring special effects from the ever-reliable Marcus Koch (100 Tears) and starring Andrew Sensenig, Frank Mosely, Arianne Margot, Camilla Carr, Megan Emerick, Scott Tepperman, Jim O’Rear, Brady McInnes, Chester Rushing, Carolyn King, Kim Foster, Libby Hall and Willie Minor as Sam.
In 1973, in a small town in Texas, Stephens Sanitarium was the site of a grizzly tragedy. Doctor Stephens was brutally murdered, and with no one else in charge, the patients took over control of the asylum. The result was mayhem, and the eventual death of almost all the patients as well. The only surviving patient was found a week later alone in the building. And since then has been moved to a state institution and labeled a dangerous murderer.
In 1973, in a small town in Texas, Stephens Sanitarium was the site of a grizzly tragedy. Doctor Stephens was brutally murdered, and with no one else in charge, the patients took over control of the asylum. The result was mayhem, and the eventual death of almost all the patients as well. The only surviving patient was found a week later alone in the building. And since then has been moved to a state institution and labeled a dangerous murderer.
- 5/5/2014
- by Phil Wheat
- Nerdly
We return with another edition of the Indie Spotlight, highlighting recent independent horror news sent our way. Today’s feature includes details on a Wes Craven art exhibition, the first sighting of Megafoot, a 100 zombie films graphical print, first photos from Australian Horror film, Barrow, an interview with actor, writer, and filmmaker Sean Stone, and much more:
The Horror Legacy of Wes Craven Exhibit Details: “Wes Craven has been feeding our collective horror consciousness since 1972, when his first feature, “The Last House on the Left,” debuted. That film was gritty, raw and terrifying, it still causes a guttural reaction some 40 years later. In his career, Wes has created some of the most memorable moments in horror cinema, from the torture scene in “The Serpent and the Rainbow,” to the Johnny Depp’s explosive scene in “A Nightmare on Elm Street,” to the first glimpse of Michael Berryman’s savagery in “The Hills Have Eyes.
The Horror Legacy of Wes Craven Exhibit Details: “Wes Craven has been feeding our collective horror consciousness since 1972, when his first feature, “The Last House on the Left,” debuted. That film was gritty, raw and terrifying, it still causes a guttural reaction some 40 years later. In his career, Wes has created some of the most memorable moments in horror cinema, from the torture scene in “The Serpent and the Rainbow,” to the Johnny Depp’s explosive scene in “A Nightmare on Elm Street,” to the first glimpse of Michael Berryman’s savagery in “The Hills Have Eyes.
- 3/9/2014
- by Tamika Jones
- DailyDead
Parrish Randall is a Texas actor who has a lot of cool stuff going on. He’s part of the team putting together the “Don’t Look in the Basement” remake together and he recently got to work on one of the Chillerama segments that we’ll be seeing this fall. Randall talks about his filming experiences and a few more upcoming projects in the works. Check out my latest Versus with actor and all around cool guy Parrish Randall.
Brian S- First off, how'd you get into acting and filmmaking?
Parrish Randall- I grew up watching the old classics on TV...you know, the Bogie, Jimmy Stewart, John Garfield type of films and was always mesmerized that the medium of film could take the viewer on adventures for two hours that one could never imagine going on. Pretty cool, I thought, even at six years old watching these films.
Brian S- First off, how'd you get into acting and filmmaking?
Parrish Randall- I grew up watching the old classics on TV...you know, the Bogie, Jimmy Stewart, John Garfield type of films and was always mesmerized that the medium of film could take the viewer on adventures for two hours that one could never imagine going on. Pretty cool, I thought, even at six years old watching these films.
- 6/5/2011
- by brians
- GeekTyrant
Archaic Redemption. I know, right? What the hell does that mean. It's not like we're familiar with big words and all. Good thing for us that director Anthony Brownrigg (Red Victoria) is there to give us the skinny!
Below you'll find a short video that clues us in on the types of horrors that await us in Brownrigg's upcoming feature that he describes as a "feature length film adaptation from the RPG on SecondLife "City of Lost Angels" by Suzanna Soyinka."
Check out the video and some pretty cool artwork below. For a bit more information (and we mean a bit) hit up the official Archaic Redemption Facebook page.
Look for additional stuffage as it comes. We think. What was all this about again?
- Uncle Creepy
Visit The Evilshop @ Amazon!
Got news? Click here to submit it!
Find redemption in the comments section below!
Below you'll find a short video that clues us in on the types of horrors that await us in Brownrigg's upcoming feature that he describes as a "feature length film adaptation from the RPG on SecondLife "City of Lost Angels" by Suzanna Soyinka."
Check out the video and some pretty cool artwork below. For a bit more information (and we mean a bit) hit up the official Archaic Redemption Facebook page.
Look for additional stuffage as it comes. We think. What was all this about again?
- Uncle Creepy
Visit The Evilshop @ Amazon!
Got news? Click here to submit it!
Find redemption in the comments section below!
- 1/21/2011
- by Uncle Creepy
- DreadCentral.com
Director Josh Vargas (Sway) dropped us another line today updating us on the casting for his remake of the S.F. Brownrigg film Don't Look in the Basement. There's good stuff coming, folks.
You can add three names to the festivities! Tim Sullivan (2001 Maniacs, Driftwood) will be playing L.J, the head orderly of the Stevens Sanitarium; James Fury (Walking Distance) will be playing Billy Doyle, the unlucky telephone repair technician dispatched to the isolated asylum for what proves to be a most deadly meeting with the inmates; and Anthony Brownrigg (Red Victoria), who's also the son of the late S.F. Brownrigg, will be playing Sergeant Craig Jaffe, one of the more dangerous patients in the sanitarium.
The trio join the already announced Brooke Lewis (iMurders, Dahmer vs. Gacy) as Charlotte Beale, Kelli Maroney (Chopping Mall, Night of the Comet, Fast Times at Ridgemont High) as Nurse Jane St. Claire, Kristen Hall (Sweatshop,...
You can add three names to the festivities! Tim Sullivan (2001 Maniacs, Driftwood) will be playing L.J, the head orderly of the Stevens Sanitarium; James Fury (Walking Distance) will be playing Billy Doyle, the unlucky telephone repair technician dispatched to the isolated asylum for what proves to be a most deadly meeting with the inmates; and Anthony Brownrigg (Red Victoria), who's also the son of the late S.F. Brownrigg, will be playing Sergeant Craig Jaffe, one of the more dangerous patients in the sanitarium.
The trio join the already announced Brooke Lewis (iMurders, Dahmer vs. Gacy) as Charlotte Beale, Kelli Maroney (Chopping Mall, Night of the Comet, Fast Times at Ridgemont High) as Nurse Jane St. Claire, Kristen Hall (Sweatshop,...
- 4/17/2010
- by Uncle Creepy
- DreadCentral.com
Brooke Lewis is a prolific actress with dozens of acting credits to her name. However, Brooke is not only a previous off Broadway actress, but an executive producer, producer, director, and promoter of horror films and now one of several stars in the upcoming "iMurders," which, as previously reported here, will show in a limited engagement in Pasadena this July 25.
Small in stature, curvaceous, and big in heart Ms. Vampy talks of "iMurders" and several other upcoming features in this one of a kind interview from one of the most beautiful actresses in the horror genre. Check out the interview and get a sense of Brooke's passionate personality on camera and off just past the break
(Michael Allen) When did you realize your passion for acting?
(Brooke Lewis) "I feel like I have been very fortunate to know what I wanted to do with my life at an early age.
Small in stature, curvaceous, and big in heart Ms. Vampy talks of "iMurders" and several other upcoming features in this one of a kind interview from one of the most beautiful actresses in the horror genre. Check out the interview and get a sense of Brooke's passionate personality on camera and off just past the break
(Michael Allen) When did you realize your passion for acting?
(Brooke Lewis) "I feel like I have been very fortunate to know what I wanted to do with my life at an early age.
- 7/6/2009
- by Michael Ross Allen
- 28 Days Later Analysis
Well, it seems like these days every other news item in the horror world is about a remake…and this is no exception.
Indie director Alan Rowe Kelly, who received some minor buzz for his first film I’ll Bury You Tomorrow in 2002, talked to Fangoria while at the Chicago Weekend of Horrors and dished with them that he intends on filming a remake of the 1973 gorefest Don’t Look in the Basement (also known to some as The Forgotten).
Kelly, owner and producer with SouthPaw Pictures, told Fango, “I love the first film. I really want to do justice to it and it looks as if it will be set and shot in Southern Indiana. Debbie Rochon and Raine Brown will be in the cast and so is Anthony Brownrigg who is the son of S.F. Brownrigg (who directed the original).”
“We are staying true to the original film,...
Indie director Alan Rowe Kelly, who received some minor buzz for his first film I’ll Bury You Tomorrow in 2002, talked to Fangoria while at the Chicago Weekend of Horrors and dished with them that he intends on filming a remake of the 1973 gorefest Don’t Look in the Basement (also known to some as The Forgotten).
Kelly, owner and producer with SouthPaw Pictures, told Fango, “I love the first film. I really want to do justice to it and it looks as if it will be set and shot in Southern Indiana. Debbie Rochon and Raine Brown will be in the cast and so is Anthony Brownrigg who is the son of S.F. Brownrigg (who directed the original).”
“We are staying true to the original film,...
- 3/9/2009
- by thehorrorchick
- DreadCentral.com
Indie director Alan Rowe Kelly has been in touch with Fango during this weekend’s Chicago convention to speak about his remake of 1973’s infamous “video nasty” Don’T Look In The Basement. “We are hoping to get it all off the ground at the end of the year,” states Kelly – who admits to being a big fan of the original movie.
“I love the first film,” he continues. “I really want to do justice to it and it looks as if it will be set and shot in Southern Indiana. Debbie Rochon and Raine Brown will be in the cast and so is Anthony Brownrigg who is the son of S.F. Brownrigg who directed the original Don’T Look In The Basement. He is going to do a bit part. We are staying true to the original film but there will be some new plot twists and it will...
“I love the first film,” he continues. “I really want to do justice to it and it looks as if it will be set and shot in Southern Indiana. Debbie Rochon and Raine Brown will be in the cast and so is Anthony Brownrigg who is the son of S.F. Brownrigg who directed the original Don’T Look In The Basement. He is going to do a bit part. We are staying true to the original film but there will be some new plot twists and it will...
- 3/8/2009
- Fangoria
Indie director Alan Rowe Kelly has been in touch with Fango during this weekend’s Chicago convention to speak about his remake of 1973’s infamous “video nasty” Don’T Look In The Basement. “We are hoping to get it all off the ground at the end of the year,” states Kelly – who admits to being a big fan of the original movie.
“I love the first film,” he continues. “I really want to do justice to it and it looks as if it will be set and shot in Southern Indiana. Debbie Rochon and Raine Brown will be in the cast and so is Anthony Brownrigg who is the son of S.F. Brownrigg who directed the original Don’T Look In The Basement. He is going to do a bit part. We are staying true to the original film but there will be some new plot twists and it will...
“I love the first film,” he continues. “I really want to do justice to it and it looks as if it will be set and shot in Southern Indiana. Debbie Rochon and Raine Brown will be in the cast and so is Anthony Brownrigg who is the son of S.F. Brownrigg who directed the original Don’T Look In The Basement. He is going to do a bit part. We are staying true to the original film but there will be some new plot twists and it will...
- 3/8/2009
- Fangoria
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