If you hear anyone lamenting the state of the short horror fiction market these days, pay them no mind – they are clearly not looking in the right places. Yes, it’s true, the presence of genre fiction on the newsstands at your local bookshop is nearly nonexistent (if you’re lucky, you’ll find a beat-up copy of Cemetery Dance crammed on a bottom shelf in the Hobbies section next to the model train and dog grooming magazines), which is a shame considering the large amount of horror/science fiction movie magazines you can find just a few sections over. If you’re relying on the good folks at Barnes and Noble or Books-a-Million to feed your appetite for horrific literature, you’re all but starving.
But like a lot of things, short horror fiction has found new life online. Many small press publishers maintain online magazines that are companions to the books they produce,...
But like a lot of things, short horror fiction has found new life online. Many small press publishers maintain online magazines that are companions to the books they produce,...
- 10/8/2012
- by Blu Gilliand
- FEARnet
Anomaly Effects, a special make-up effects lab based in Western New York is releasing a “Limited Edition Debbie Rochon Floating Tub Face Replica” from Gregory Lamberson’s film Slime City Massacre. Only 1,000 units will be produced.
The replica is cast from the actual mold used for the film, sculpted by R.J. Sevin. Each unit is cast by Andrew Lavin, hand painted by Arick Szymecki, and comes with a numbered Certificate of Authenticity signed by Debbie Rochon (official website here).
In Slime City Massacre (review here) Rochon portrays Alice, a recovering drug addict who’s carved out a survivalist existence for herself in the post-apocalyptic ruins of Slime City. When Alice imbibes “Zachary Devon’s Home Brewed Elixir” and consumes some “Himalayan Yogurt,” she melts into a pool of orange slime and inhabits an old bathtub, her disembodied face rising from the goo to communicate with her lover, Mason (portrayed by...
The replica is cast from the actual mold used for the film, sculpted by R.J. Sevin. Each unit is cast by Andrew Lavin, hand painted by Arick Szymecki, and comes with a numbered Certificate of Authenticity signed by Debbie Rochon (official website here).
In Slime City Massacre (review here) Rochon portrays Alice, a recovering drug addict who’s carved out a survivalist existence for herself in the post-apocalyptic ruins of Slime City. When Alice imbibes “Zachary Devon’s Home Brewed Elixir” and consumes some “Himalayan Yogurt,” she melts into a pool of orange slime and inhabits an old bathtub, her disembodied face rising from the goo to communicate with her lover, Mason (portrayed by...
- 9/11/2010
- by The Woman In Black
- DreadCentral.com
We've been following the progress of Greg Lamberson’s Slime City Massacre fairly closely, and today we got word that filming of the indie flick has wrapped after a 19-day shoot at various locations in Buffalo, New York, including an abandoned postal facility adjacent to the dormant Central Terminal Station. In addition, Lee Perkins, who plays Mason, has provided with the first look at his character, both pre- and post-sliming.
Along with Perkins, the film stars Jennifer Bihl, horror author Kealan Patrick Burke, Debbie Rochon, and Slime City veterans Robert C. Sabin, Mary Bogle, T.J. Merrick, and Dick Biel. Brooke Lewis and Tommy Sweeney provide additional support.
“Despite our budget, this was the biggest film I’ve ever worked on,” says Lamberson. “We had four characters who become Slime Heads, five who are mercenaries, eight who are cannibals, and fifty homeless people. My director of photography, Chris Santucci, did some amazing shots,...
Along with Perkins, the film stars Jennifer Bihl, horror author Kealan Patrick Burke, Debbie Rochon, and Slime City veterans Robert C. Sabin, Mary Bogle, T.J. Merrick, and Dick Biel. Brooke Lewis and Tommy Sweeney provide additional support.
“Despite our budget, this was the biggest film I’ve ever worked on,” says Lamberson. “We had four characters who become Slime Heads, five who are mercenaries, eight who are cannibals, and fifty homeless people. My director of photography, Chris Santucci, did some amazing shots,...
- 8/3/2009
- by The Woman In Black
- DreadCentral.com
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