A newly married couple discovers disturbing, ghostly images in photographs they develop after a tragic accident. Fearing the manifestations may be connected, they investigate and learn that some mysteries are better left unsolved.
Posted by George Kaskanlian Jr in News on December 29th, 2007
A drop bear (or dropbear) is an Australian marsupial said to be related to the koala.
Drop bears are commonly said to be unusually large, vicious, carnivorous koalas that inhabit treetops and attack their prey by dropping onto their heads from above. They are an example of local lore intended to frighten and confuse outsiders, and amuse locals, similar to the jackalope, hoop snake, wild haggis or snipe hunting.
Stories of drop bears are often told to unsuspecting foreign visitors to illustrate Australian deadpan humour. It is often suggested that doing ridiculous things like having forks in the hair or Vegemite or toothpaste spread behind the ears will deter the creatures.
For more info on those little bastards please go to dropbear and get all the info you need to survive an attack
After all of the hype and all of the waiting Steven C. Miller’s Automaton Transfusion is finally arriving on DVD March 4th. Today the official MySpace page for the film released our first look at the DVD cover art, which will arrive as part of Dimension Extreme’s new direct-to-video label. In the film three teens find themselves in a town over run with zombies. Deciding to fight back, they go on a punch you in the throat, action packed, non stop ride through the city, woods, and schools
A terrifying suspense thriller about a couple (Liv Tyler and Scott Speedman) in a remote suburban house who are targeted by three dangerous masked strangers. The resulting clashes force the couple to go well beyond what they thought themselves capable of in order to survive.
At one point attached to direct the big screen adaptation of popular video games series The Clock Tower, young Chilean director Jorge Olguin has certainly landed on his feet since that project seemingly slipped into development hell. He managed to enlist Guillermo Del Toro as a producer on his fantasy picture Caleuche - in post now - and while waiting for his lead actress to become available for that one he quietly snuck out and shot another film on the sly. That picture is Solos. Billed as the first ever Chilean zombie film, Olguin promises that it is a hard edged picture laced with heavy political criticism and if early reports are true it would seem he’s charting some unusual ground here. The lead characters are all children trapped in a violent war zone and while there are certainly zombies present they are not the primary villains of the piece - that honor goes to the human soldiers. A dig at his country’s violent history? Absolutely.