Featured in today's Horror Highlights, we have Splathouse podcast's discussion of the 2001 movie The Lost Skeleton of Cadavra, DVD release details for The Abduction of Jennifer Grayson, the SXSW Film Festival poster for Atomic Blonde, details on The Mason Brothers' upcoming theatrical run, a Q&A with Fashionista director Simon Rumley, and a look at the short film Nightmare.
Splathouse Podcast Discusses The Lost Skeleton of Cadavra: From Splathouse: "Sleepy skeletons, spirited space aliens, and super-scientists are the focus of this week's show! That's right, we're profiling Larry Blamire's excellent comedy "The Lost Skeleton of Cadavra".
Two of the film's featured performers, Brian Howe ("Westworld") and Fay Masterson ("50 Shades Darker"), stop by to talk about their careers and their work on "Lost Skeleton..."
Our good friend Sarah Jane (aka @fookthis on Twitter and Letterboxed, and she of the Talk Film Society) stops by with her cinematic picks for fans of “Lost Skeleton.
Splathouse Podcast Discusses The Lost Skeleton of Cadavra: From Splathouse: "Sleepy skeletons, spirited space aliens, and super-scientists are the focus of this week's show! That's right, we're profiling Larry Blamire's excellent comedy "The Lost Skeleton of Cadavra".
Two of the film's featured performers, Brian Howe ("Westworld") and Fay Masterson ("50 Shades Darker"), stop by to talk about their careers and their work on "Lost Skeleton..."
Our good friend Sarah Jane (aka @fookthis on Twitter and Letterboxed, and she of the Talk Film Society) stops by with her cinematic picks for fans of “Lost Skeleton.
- 2/28/2017
- by Tamika Jones
- DailyDead
Ahead of the UK premiere of his latest film Fashionista at Horror Channel FrightFest Glasgow, Simon Rumley reveals why he’s a fan of drugs in film and his planned foray into London gangster land…
Fashionista finds you back in Austin after Red White and Blue. What excites you about Austin so much? Could Fashionista have been set anywhere else?
I had such a great experience on Red White & Blue for so many different reasons that it was only natural that, at some point, I’d return to Austin. With Tim League (exec producer), Paul Knauss (co-producer) and Karen Hallford (casting director) I’ve got a great bunch of friends who also happen to be great collaborators and they form the core of both films’ Austin based crew and most probably without them neither films would have happened. Beyond that, I love the unique style of Austin, the food, the music,...
Fashionista finds you back in Austin after Red White and Blue. What excites you about Austin so much? Could Fashionista have been set anywhere else?
I had such a great experience on Red White & Blue for so many different reasons that it was only natural that, at some point, I’d return to Austin. With Tim League (exec producer), Paul Knauss (co-producer) and Karen Hallford (casting director) I’ve got a great bunch of friends who also happen to be great collaborators and they form the core of both films’ Austin based crew and most probably without them neither films would have happened. Beyond that, I love the unique style of Austin, the food, the music,...
- 2/21/2017
- by Phil Wheat
- Nerdly
When Danny Boyle’s Trainspotting debuted in 1996, with its comical commentary on clubbing and drugging in Scotland, it was (and in some ways, still is) considered the start of a new age in British filmmaking. One of the artists clearly inspired by Boyle’s style is Director Simon Rumley who went on to create a trilogy of films steeped in London youth culture and varied form between documentary, intimate drama, and a loose flowing comedy. His films Strong Language, The Truth Game, and Club Le Monde are all now available on DVD, and today two out of three of the films stand up to the test of time as prime examples of low-budget British cinema.
Read more...
Read more...
- 9/5/2013
- by Lex Walker
- JustPressPlay.net
With Little Deaths; Red, White & Blue; and a segment in The ABCs of Death, Simon Rumley is one of horror's rising stars. Curious about his early films? Jinga Films has you covered with its August release of Rumley's "youth culture trilogy."
From the Press Release:
From Jinga Films and Simon Rumley, one of the UK's leading independent filmmakers, comes this trilogy of films featuring Strong Language, The Truth Game, and Club Le Monde, available on DVD on August 20th. This youth culture trilogy collectively celebrates clubbing, Britpop, and growing up in the bustling center of 1990s London. Strong Language, The Truth Game, and Club Le Monde will be distributed by Jinga Films separately at an Srp of $16.95 for each DVD.
Strong Language
16 young people talk about everything from ecstasy to one-night stands as a narrator relates a night of terror that changes his life forever.
DVD Special Features:
-...
From the Press Release:
From Jinga Films and Simon Rumley, one of the UK's leading independent filmmakers, comes this trilogy of films featuring Strong Language, The Truth Game, and Club Le Monde, available on DVD on August 20th. This youth culture trilogy collectively celebrates clubbing, Britpop, and growing up in the bustling center of 1990s London. Strong Language, The Truth Game, and Club Le Monde will be distributed by Jinga Films separately at an Srp of $16.95 for each DVD.
Strong Language
16 young people talk about everything from ecstasy to one-night stands as a narrator relates a night of terror that changes his life forever.
DVD Special Features:
-...
- 7/23/2013
- by The Woman In Black
- DreadCentral.com
Gut-twisting and soul-troubling, Simon Rumley's latest film fires a stun gun into the heart of horror. For every convention that is honored, another is upended and a third is smashed to pieces. Red White & Blue amply demonstrates Rumley's continuing evolution as a filmmaker.
It's not enough to say that Rumley traffics in the cinema of the uncomfortable, because that would deny the ribald humor and extreme, everyday horrors that lances his earlier work. The Living and the Dead brought him to the attention of genre fans in 2006, but Rumley's feature film career dates back to 2000, when he made Strong Language, the first of three films that revolved around youth culture in Britain. Young people chat amiably about their adventures, the scenes alternating with shadowy scenes recreating a horrible night for the narrator.
The Truth Game (2001) plays around with a dinner party scenario, in which six friends gather and learn...
It's not enough to say that Rumley traffics in the cinema of the uncomfortable, because that would deny the ribald humor and extreme, everyday horrors that lances his earlier work. The Living and the Dead brought him to the attention of genre fans in 2006, but Rumley's feature film career dates back to 2000, when he made Strong Language, the first of three films that revolved around youth culture in Britain. Young people chat amiably about their adventures, the scenes alternating with shadowy scenes recreating a horrible night for the narrator.
The Truth Game (2001) plays around with a dinner party scenario, in which six friends gather and learn...
- 3/16/2010
- Screen Anarchy
IMDb.com, Inc. takes no responsibility for the content or accuracy of the above news articles, Tweets, or blog posts. This content is published for the entertainment of our users only. The news articles, Tweets, and blog posts do not represent IMDb's opinions nor can we guarantee that the reporting therein is completely factual. Please visit the source responsible for the item in question to report any concerns you may have regarding content or accuracy.