Looking for something audibly spooky to spend some time with this evening? Of course you are! Hell, most of us look for that kind of entertainment all year, but tonight we have something special.
Riki Rachtman's Fork in the Road show will be live tonight on TradioV from 7pm to 9pm Pt, and it will be featuring Robert Kirkman of The Walking Dead, FX legend Steve Johnson, Sean Decker, and actress-turned-producer Bobbi Sue Luther to discuss all things horror and Halloween.
Check it out by clicking on the link above!
Visit The Evilshop @ Amazon!
Got news? Click here to submit it!
Tune in, in the comments section below!
Riki Rachtman's Fork in the Road show will be live tonight on TradioV from 7pm to 9pm Pt, and it will be featuring Robert Kirkman of The Walking Dead, FX legend Steve Johnson, Sean Decker, and actress-turned-producer Bobbi Sue Luther to discuss all things horror and Halloween.
Check it out by clicking on the link above!
Visit The Evilshop @ Amazon!
Got news? Click here to submit it!
Tune in, in the comments section below!
- 10/29/2013
- by Uncle Creepy
- DreadCentral.com
Welcome to Propdomain's ninth big auction! From Screen Used Horror Props to costumes & body parts for your Haunt or Indy film! From The Walking Dead, Puppet Master X, Chucky, and House, to everything from World famous Director, Producer, and F/X master Steve Johnson's F/X shop. From Screen Used Props anyone can afford, to Screen Matched Icons anyone would be proud to display as a center piece in your keeper collection. Whether you have $100.00…...
- 5/18/2013
- Horrorbid
At some point in the past Steve Johnson's Xfx studio made a pitch to be the special effects team for a Fantastic Four film. Based on an early script they created a rather bizarre, yet intriguing mechanical arm for Dr. Doom. A role that Steve Johnson says was at one point filled by Nicolas Cage ("Ghost Rider"). They even have concept art of Dr. Doom's mask designs based on the shape of Nic Cage's face. Thoughts? "This arm and original painting, which the arm design was based on, were produced by Steve Johnson's Xfx studio based on an early version of the script. They were made as examples and demonstrations on how Doctor Doom would have looked if the studio had done the final work on the character." - Elemental Auctions "Doctor Doom Test Arm - created for pre-production makeup and effects tests, made when Nicolas Cage...
- 1/14/2013
- ComicBookMovie.com
Howard Berger features in a new documentary called Nightmare Factory, which showcases some of the best make-up effects he has created over the years with Greg Nicotero - his business partner at K.N.B. Effects Group. Together, they have worked on some of the biggest movies in the history of Hollywood, such as Evil Dead II, Pulp Fiction and From Dusk Till Dawn.
Read more about the documentary in the new October-November (#149) issue of If magazine.
If Magazine: What have been the highlights of your career so far?
Hb: I still treasure the time I spent on Army of Darkness and remember the experience as some of my best days in film. I also really enjoyed working on The Chronicles of Narnia: The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe. But I have to say that Hitchcock, which I have worked on recently, was a surprisingly dream project for me. It was...
Read more about the documentary in the new October-November (#149) issue of If magazine.
If Magazine: What have been the highlights of your career so far?
Hb: I still treasure the time I spent on Army of Darkness and remember the experience as some of my best days in film. I also really enjoyed working on The Chronicles of Narnia: The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe. But I have to say that Hitchcock, which I have worked on recently, was a surprisingly dream project for me. It was...
- 10/11/2012
- by Rodney Appleyard
- IF.com.au
Non-football fans have a prayer today, as co-workers are sure to ask about your holiday: the turkey, the in-laws, the traffic. But it’s Monday, and it’s only a matter of time before the banter shifts to football once your meathead cubemate exhausts his icky anecdote about his tipsy Aunt Maude getting handsy with his cousin’s college boyfriend. Since you spent the weekend with friends and family, watching The Muppets and The Walking Dead — and not necessarily wearing a throwback jersey — here are three quick-hit comments about yesterday’s NFL action that will serve as effective Jedi-mind tricks...
- 11/28/2011
- by Jeff Labrecque
- EW.com - PopWatch
It's 2011! We've lived through a week of the new year, and it's one of my favorite times of the cinematic calendar because nothing all that awe-inspiring hits theaters. Every once in awhile, something like Cloverfield will light up the pre-Oscar Telecast season, but usually this is the dumping grounds for movies the public will likely pass over in favor of seeing movies they should have caught in 2010 (not that I'm complaining about True Grit's $100m western dominance of the past few weeks). Me? I got back to work on that reality TV series and sat around New York waiting for my friends to return from their holiday sojourns. That meant a whole bunch of watching lesser films I left out of my 2010, as well as catching the newest Nic Cage trainwreck in theaters. It's a new year and nothing managed to kill me, so let's kick her off! [Season Of The Witch] Nic...
- 1/10/2011
- LRMonline.com
Well this is unfortunate. According to an interview with THR (via /Film), Hans Zimmer has completely denied the news that he would be scoring Zack Snyder’s reboot of Superman. It seemed like a pretty sure thing, but he really goes out of his way to let people know that he’s not in any way involved with this project.
He seems to blame the spreading of such a rumor on the murder of his former publicist Ronni Chasen, saying that if she were still alive the story would have been discredited almost immediately. His extremely to-the-point quotes are as follows:
You know, it’s like some dirty quote taken out of context. Let’s just be absolutely straight here: I have never in my life met Zack Snyder. I think I need to give him a ring. But here’s the thing: No Ronni [Chasen]. Suddenly all sorts of stuff...
He seems to blame the spreading of such a rumor on the murder of his former publicist Ronni Chasen, saying that if she were still alive the story would have been discredited almost immediately. His extremely to-the-point quotes are as follows:
You know, it’s like some dirty quote taken out of context. Let’s just be absolutely straight here: I have never in my life met Zack Snyder. I think I need to give him a ring. But here’s the thing: No Ronni [Chasen]. Suddenly all sorts of stuff...
- 12/7/2010
- by Nick Newman
- The Film Stage
One of the first pieces of online film journalism to truly legitimize the profession was Drew McWeeny's September 2002 evisceration of a J.J. Abrams script for a film eventually referred to as Superman: Flyby. McWeeny, then working for Ain't It Cool News under the name "Moriarty," ripped apart Abrams' script so completely, and in such a public forum, that he is widely credited for killing the film. To this day, the piece is a fantastic read [1]. This was before Superman returned and before Batman began. At the time, Warner Brothers was hoping to reinvent their superhero franchises with filmmakers like McG and Brett Ratner. They couldn't know that the man who would eventually revitalize Batman was already working for them [2] or that their Superman screenwriter would do the same for Paramount and Star Trek years later. This wasn't the J.J. Abrams of Mission: Impossible or Lost. This was the Alias and Felicity J.J. Abrams.
- 12/6/2010
- by Germain Lussier
- Slash Film
So back in 1997, Kevin Smith wrote a script for a Superman reboot called Superman Lives. Then Tim Burton got involved and thought Smith's script was stupid. Warner Brothers decided that the guy who made Mr. Mom the Dark Knight and said "I was never a giant comic book fan, but I've always loved the image of Batman and The Joker. The reason I've never been a comic book fan--and I think it started when I was a child--is because I could never tell which box I was supposed to read" well, you know, that guy obviously was the one to reboot Superman and not the silly fat guy who had been reading comics obsessively since youth, because Burton did the only thing that mattered. He made money with Batman.
So what happened with Superman Lives? Well basically they went into pre-production and then dicked around for year, signing Nic Cage,...
So what happened with Superman Lives? Well basically they went into pre-production and then dicked around for year, signing Nic Cage,...
- 11/2/2010
- by Steven Lloyd Wilson
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