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Swamp Thing comes to 4K and Blu-ray in July

MVD Entertainment Group has announced that Swamp Thing is being re-released in North America on 4K Ultra HD and Blu-yay on July 25, 2023. The release will include the PG rated theatrical cut and for the first time in North America, the Unrated International Cut.

Directed and written by Wes Craven, Swamp Thing was released in1982 and based on the DC Comics character of the same name created by Len Wein and Bernie Wrightson. It tells the story of a brilliant scientist, Dr. Alec Holland (Ray WiseRobocop) and a government agent, Alice Cable (Adrienne BarbeauJohn Carpenter’s The Fog) who have developed a secret formula that could end world hunger and change civilization forever. Little do they know, however, that their arch nemesis, Arcane (Louis JourdanOctopussy) is plotting to steal the serum for his own selfish schemes. Looting the lab and kidnapping Cable, Arcane douses Holland with the chemicals and leaves him for dead in the swamp. Mutated by his own formula, Holland becomes “Swamp Thing” – a half human/half plant superhero who will stop at nothing to rescue the beautiful Cable and defeat the evil Arcane… even if it costs him his life. 

The supporting cast includes David Hess (The Last House on the Left), Nicholas Worth (Barb Wire) and Dick Durock as “Swamp Thing” (who reprised the role in the 1989 sequel The Return of Swamp Thing and the 1990 – 1993 “Swamp Thing: The Series”). Swamp Thing became a cult hit upon its release on home video back in the 1980’s and its countless airings on cable television in the 80’s and 90’s.

RELEASE DETAILS:  

MVD LaserVision Collection #1 

TITLE: Swamp Thing (2-Disc Collector’s Edition) [4K
Ultra HD + Blu-ray] 
SKU: MVD12567UHD 
UPC / Barcode: 760137125679 
MSRP: 49.95 
STREET DATE: 7/25/2023 
DISC 1: SWAMP THING 4K LASERVISION COLLECTION – SPECIAL FEATURES: 

  • 2023 4K Restoration (16-Bit Scan of the Original Camera Negative) of both the US Theatrical PG Version and Unrated International Version of the film presented in its original 1.85:1 Aspect Ratio in Dolby Vision / HDR 
  • Audio: DTS-HD Master Audio 2.0 Mono, Spanish Mono 
  • Optional English Subtitles 
  • Audio Commentary with Writer/Director Wes Craven moderated by Sean Clark (Theatrical / PG Version) 
  • Audio Commentary with Makeup Effects Artist William Munns moderated by Michael Felsher (Theatrical / PG Version) 
  • Collectible “4K LaserVision” Mini-Poster of cover art 
  • Limited Edition “4K Laservision” Slipcover (First Pressing Only) 

DISC 2: SWAMP THING REWIND COLLECTION BLU-RAY – SPECIAL FEATURES: 

  • 2023 HD Restoration of both the US Theatrical PG Version and Unrated International Version of the film presented in its original 1.85:1 Aspect Ratio 
  • Audio Commentary with Writer/Director Wes Craven moderated by Sean Clark (Theatrical / PG Version) 
  • Audio Commentary with Makeup Effects Artist William Munns moderated by Michael Felsher (Theatrical / PG Version) 
  • DTS-HD Audio 2.0 Mono, Spanish Mono Audio 
  • Optional English Subtitles 
  • “Tales From the Swamp” (Remastered) with Actress Adrienne Barbeau (HD, 16:56) 
  • “Hey Jude” with Actor Reggie Batts (HD, 14:30) 
  • “That Swamp Thing” with Len Wein, Creator of Swamp Thing (HD, 13:19) 
  • “Swamp Screen: Designing DC’s Main Monster” featurette (HD, 20:32) 
  • “From Krug to Comics: How the Mainstream Shaped a Radical Genre Voice” featurette (HD, 17:34) 
  • Posters & Lobby Cards – Photo Gallery 
  • Photos from the Film – Photo Gallery 
  • William Munns’ Behind the Scenes Pictures – Photo Gallery  
  • Behind the Scenes Photos by Geoffrey Rayle – Photo Gallery 
  • Theatrical Trailer (HD, 1:31) 
  • “REGION A” LOCKED 

MVD Rewind Collection #51 

TITLE: Swamp Thing (Collector’s Edition) [Blu-ray] 
SKU: MVD8554BR 
UPC / Barcode: 760137855484 
MSRP: $39.95 
STREET DATE: 7/25/2023 

SWAMP THING MVD REWIND COLLECTION BLU-RAY – SPECIAL FEATURES: 

  • 2023 HD Restoration of both the US Theatrical PG Version and Unrated International Version of the film presented in its original 1.85:1 Aspect Ratio 
  • Audio Commentary with Writer/Director Wes Craven moderated by Sean Clark (Theatrical / PG Version) 
  • Audio Commentary with Makeup Effects Artist William Munns moderated by Michael Felsher (Theatrical / PG Version) 
  • DTS-HD 2.0 Mono Audio, Spanish Mono 
  • Optional English Subtitles 
  • “Tales From the Swamp” (Remastered) with Actress Adrienne Barbeau (HD, 16:56) 
  • “Hey Jude” with Actor Reggie Batts (HD,14:30) 
  • “That Swamp Thing” with Len Wein, Creator of Swamp Thing (HD, 13:19) 
  • “Swamp Screen: Designing DC’s Main Monster” featurette (HD, 20:32) 
  • “From Krug to Comics: How the Mainstream Shaped a Radical Genre Voice” featurette (HD, 17:34) 
  • Posters & Lobby Cards – Photo Gallery 
  • Photos from the Film – Photo Gallery 
  • William Munns’ Behind the Scenes Pictures – Photo Gallery  
  • Behind the Scenes Photos by Geoffrey Rayle – Photo Gallery 
  • Theatrical Trailer (HD, 1:31) 
  • Two-Sided Artwork 
  • Collectible MVD Rewind Collection Mini-Poster 
  • Limited Edition Slipcover (First Pressing Only) 
  • “REGION A” LOCKED 

Ghostface goes to New York in Scream VI for what could be an homage to city slashers

The Big Apple is no stranger to sadistic slashers, both real and imagined. New York City has quite simply proven fertile ground for gratuitous violence, often amplified by its dark history. The city is, after all, home to some of America’s most vicious serial murderers, among them the Torso Killer, the Son of Sam, and Albert Fish (also known as The Brooklyn Vampire and The Werewolf of Wysteria). In the horror world, it has hosted slasher icon Jason Vorhees (in 1989’s Jason Takes Manhattan), Maniac’s gory mannequin collector Frank Zito (1980), and Reno Miller the Driller Killer (from the 1979 movie of the same name, directed by Abel Ferrara).

It’s now Ghostface’s turn to carve up the city as is revealed in the new teaser trailer for Scream VI, in which the survivors of the previous instalments leave Woodsboro, California behind for the promise of new terrors in the sprawling metropolis.

The teaser focuses on a subway train ride filled with people in masks and costumes, seemingly on Halloween night, as returning cast members Jenna Ortega and Melissa Barrera Martínez realize a man dressed like Ghostface is staring at them. It’s an unsettling development that is made worse by the presence of more than one passanger dressed as Ghostface. How many of them are just morbid fans of the real one and how many are actual killers remains a mystery, something we’ll definitely be looking at more closely in the movie.

The move to another location is a welcome one. There’s only so much metafictional horror storytelling you can do in the same place. In a way, Woodsboro has given everything it possibly could and it’s now time for a change of scenery. Setting swaps in franchise horror movies can be tricky to pull off. You don’t want the story to fall victim to gimmick by giving a tourist’s view of the new place with key stops in fresh crime scenes. In a sense, the movie’s success will hinge on how well it captures the feel of New York, on how well it can make Ghostface adapt to its surroundings.

It might do well to avoid all of the pitfalls that the infamous Jason Takes Manhattan movie falls so hard into. The movie’s jump from summer camp into a big city proved to be a massive flop and it quickly became the least liked entry in the Friday the 13th franchise (it also tanked at the box office). For one, the movie wasn’t shot in New York and it shows. It was filmed in Vancouver, with additional photography in Times Square and Los Angeles, and very rarely does it even resemble the place it features in its very title.

One of the scariest components of city horror is how it considers the concept of anonymity. This alone brushes aside the relative safety of small-town scenarios seen in more traditional slashers. In Woodsboro, the suspect pool is limited mostly to the town’s residents or a stranger from elsewhere. In a city, the suspect list numbers in the millions. The possibilities are near endless.

Fear ramps up under this condition, an element that makes Maniac’s Frank Zito (played by Joe Spinell), for instance, such an unsettling slasher. Maniac, it should be noted, deals in serial killings from a resident, not an outsider. The killer is homegrown, not a transfer from somewhere else. And yet, what makes him so scary still offers lessons on how to make slashers work in cities.

Frank Zito’s motivations, for instance, point to the frustrations of a very lonely and mentally disturbed man that is ignored by city folk whose attention spans are severely limited to the people they interact with on a daily basis. They don’t have time for strangers. In fact, they avoid them at all costs, a luxury that’s on short supply in small towns. Scream VI might not have the time to laser-focus on Ghostface that Maniac has, but it does present a detailed blueprint for the creation of a terrifying city location.

Maniac excels in putting victims in real places anyone could run into and trap themselves in. It portrays the darkest corners of the city as places where people can die without anyone ever finding out. A shout for help might not even help as a city of millions doesn’t stop for just one scream. Again, anonymity. Whatever’s happening to a victim somewhere is no one else’s business in an urban environment.

In a sense, the city slasher creates its own fear state, thrusting an entire city into panic and paranoia. They turn cityscapes into killing floors where anyone is a potential victim. Whereas the small town slasher makes killing personal to those looking from the outside, the city slasher makes it impersonal. The net this kind of fear casts is wider, deadlier, and more unpredictable.

Scream VI steps into a very special kind of slasher territory by making the jump to NYC. The history, the culture, the social indifference attributed to it by principle of overpopulation all combine for a cruel playground that killers can run amok in. Ghostface’s sixth outing stands to gain quite a lot if it knows how to use New York to its advantage, to find horror among the masses who more often than not look the other way.

Scream VI premieres in theaters on March 10th, 2023.

One:12 Collection A Nightmare on Elm Street: Freddy Krueger is Available for Pre-Order

“Whatever you do, don’t fall asleep!”

The One:12 Collective Freddy Krueger figure features four head portraits capturing the fearsome expressions of the dream demon, including one with a removable faceplate that reveals a skull sculpt – from the iconic scene where Freddy and Tina have a fatal encounter. Freddy is outfitted in his infamous stripped sweater and comes complete with his signature clawed gloves and a trash can lid, straight from Tina’s nightmare.

In Wes Craven’s classic slasher film, A Nightmare on Elm Street, several teenagers fall victim to Freddy Krueger as he preys on them in their dreams. Dark secrets start to unravel as the teens suspect their parents may be the key to solving the puzzle before it’s too late.

THE ONE:12 COLLECTIVE FREDDY KRUEGER FIGURE FEATURES:

  • One:12 Collective body with over 30 points of articulation
  • Four (4) head portraits
  • Hand painted authentic detailing
  • Approximately 16cm tall
  • Five (5) interchangeable hands including
    • One (1) claw hand (R)
    • One (1) pointing claw hand (R)
    • One (1) posing hand (L)
    • One (1) grappling hand (L)
    • One (1) severed finger hand (L)

COSTUME:

  • Fedora
  • Stripped sweater
  • Slacks
  • Work boots

ACCESSORIES:

  • One (1) trash can lid
  • One (1) One:12 Collective display base with logo
  • One (1) One:12 Collective adjustable display post

Each One:12 Collective Freddy Krueger figure is packaged in a collector friendly box, designed with collectors in mind. The figure is available for pre-order from Mezco, Entertainment Earth, TFAW, and more.

Freddy and The Walking Dead are Coming for You in the Next Horror Block

Freddy’s on his way to invade your dreams of sugar plums dancing in your head. Why are you having such strange dreams anyway?

In the next Horror Block, joining Freddy is an EXCLUSIVE Funko collectible from The Walking Dead. What could it be? Definitely something that you’d riot without ;)

They’ve also packed Godzilla in there, along with Cthulhu, and a stunning tribute to horror great Wes Craven.

Horror Block Walking Dead Nightmare on Elm Street

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Wes Craven & Steve Niles Team Up For The Disciples Adaptation

The Disciples #1 CoverBlack Mask Studios has announced that horror maestros Wes Craven and Steve Niles are joining forces to adapt Black Mask’s upcoming comic book The Disciples into a TV show for Universal Cable Productions with Niles’ Black Mask co-founders Matt Pizzolo and Brett Gurewitz executive producing alongside Industry Entertainment’s Sara BottfeldThe Disciples marks Black Mask’s latest foray into TV, joining the adaptation of Five Ghosts that Black Mask has in development at Syfy with Evan Daugherty writing the pilot.

The Disciples is a sci-fi/horror story about a team of interstellar private eyes tracking down a girl who’s run off to join a cult on Jupiter’s moon Ganymede… it’s ‘True Detective in space’ brought to you courtesy of Steve Niles and Christopher Mitten.

Niles co-founded Black Mask Studios with Pizzolo and Gurewitz in 2013 as a home for edgy and subversive comics.

The Disciples #1 comes to shelves May 27th.

SDCC – “Deadliest Warrior – Vampires vs. Zombies” Panel Session

Official Press Release

Spike TVdeadliest warriorSpike TV

 “DEADLIEST WARRIOR – VAMPIRES VS. ZOMBIES” PANEL SESSION

WHO:    WES CRAVEN (“Scream,” “Nightmare on Elm Street”) – Panelist

        MAX BROOKS (Zombie Survival Guide, World War Z) – Panelist

        STEVE NILES (30 Days of Night) – Panelist

        RICHARD “MACK” MACHOWICZ (“Deadliest Warrior” host) – Panelist

        DR. ARMAND DORIAN (“Deadliest Warrior” host) – Panelist

        RASHA DRACHKOVITCH (“Deadliest Warrior” executive producer) – Panelist

        ROBERT DALY (“Deadliest Warrior”) – Panelist

        GEOFF BOUCHER (LA Times writer, HeroComplex.com founder) – Moderator

WHAT:   “DEADLIEST WARRIOR – VAMPIRES VS. ZOMBIES”

Vampires and Zombies have terrorized and tantalized their way through pop culture for decades – from “Dracula” to the “Twilight Saga” to “Walking Dead.”  SPIKE TV and its “DEADLIEST WARRIOR” franchise are going to finally answer the question – which of these mythical creatures would come out on top in a fight to the finish?  “DEADLIEST WARRIOR” steps outside the confines of history for this groundbreaking fantasy episode destined to rouse heated debates amongst fans in the blogosphere for months.  The special episode features an array of icons of film and fiction who are authorities on the topic.  Through these expert interviews, scientific tests and careful analysis, it will be determined who would win in a battle to the death between these two iconic groups, Zombies and Vampires. The “DEADLIEST WARRIOR ” team of Richard “Mack” Machowicz, Dr. Armand Dorian, Rasha Drachkovitch, Robert Daly and special guests Wes Craven, Max Brooks and Steve Niles will be on hand for this special Comic Con panel to make their case for who is, indeed, the fiercest.  Acclaimed Los Angeles Times writer and HeroComplex.com founder Geoff Boucher will serve as moderator.

WHEN:   Thursday, July 21 from 10–11 AM

WHERE:  Room 25ABC

Movie Review – Scream 4


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Scream 4I loved the first Scream film.  I remember it fondly coming out when I was in the tail end of high school.  Me and my friends saw multiple times and giggled each time seeing it.  It’s follow ups weren’t even close to capturing the fun of the first, but included enough to make them entertaining, but not necessarily good.  So, I went into Scream 4 expecting a movie on par with the second and third iterations and by the end, I was actually pleasantly surprised.

It’s been a decade in both the movie and since the last Scream and Sidney Prescott, the heroine of the first three, has moved on with her life no longer the victim, but instead preaching empowerment.  When she returns to her home town though, this opens up all kinds of shenanigans and of course the return of Ghostface to hack and slash in new ways.

The first half of the movie is quite good with an opening that’s fantastic, sending up the fact this is the fourth film in the series and having some great commentary about sequels and modern horror movies and gore porn.  The problem is, such a fantastic opening makes you expect the rest of the movie to hold that sort of cheeky/meta wink throughout.  It holds up at times but quickly spirals into a ho-hum movie that instead of a new direction and a fresh start with a new generation, we’re left with the same old.

There’s a lot here that I like.  It totally throws out the rule book for horror movies and sticks to these new rules.  It really does update the horror film for the new technology savvy generation.  Wouldn’t today’s victims be texting, checking in on foursquare and making Facebook statuses?  The answer in this movie is yes and it plays off of that.

It’s hard to totally review the movie without blowing the great twists and giving away what I really liked.  But, for the most part the villain is predictable, even though there’s so many red herrings that are attempted to be thrown out there.

Overall, the movie is entertaining and fun.  It wasn’t a bad way to spend a Saturday night and the audience seemed to have some fun, though it was the most reserved audience I’ve seen a Scream movie with.  I walked out having enjoyed myself, and you can do a lot worse.  The movie derails towards the end, but the first three quarters hold up quite well.

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