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OldmanCHILLERAMA
#1
[Image: chillerama.thumbnail%203.jpg]
An anthology horror-comedy featuring segments from Adam Rifkin (Detroit Rock City), Joe Lynch (Wrong Turn 2: Dead End), Tim Sullivan (2001 Maniacs) and Adam Green (Hatchet).

"The Diary of Anne Frankenstein" (Adam Green)
Follows Adolf Hitler as he seizes Doctor Frankenstein’s secret journal and uses it to piece together the perfect killing machine to help him win World War 2.

"Zom-B-Movie" (Joe Lynch)
A final night of nostalgia unfolds at the Kaufman Drive-In before it is torn down, where owner Cecil Kaufman is screening obscure B-movies from his private collection to an audience of local geeks and line-quoting movie lovers. Little do the unsuspecting cinema-loving patrons know, but tonight something is horrifically amiss at the Last Drive-In...

"Wadzilla" (Adam Rifkin)
No official plot yet.

"I Was a Teenage Werebear" (Tim Sullivan)
Follows a day in the life of closeted new kid Ricky O'Reilly, who falls for Malibu High's mysterious bad boy Talon. When aroused, the two transform into bestial leather daddies, the titular "Werebears."
CURRENT STATUS
Awaiting Release

RELEASE DATE
November 29, 2011 (DVD)

Image Entertainment will distribute the film.

Actor Sean Paul Lockhart is also a gay adult film star that goes by the name "Brent Corrigan."

Writer/director Tim Sullivan was quoted saying: "The idea behind the project was for each of us to make our own "solo album" like KISS did back in the day when each member went off and did a very personal record of music they more then likely would not have done as part of KISS. We also wanted to push the envelope and make a movie we knew traditional Hollywood would never let us make."

Tim Sullivan's I Was A Teenage Werebear features "five rock ‘n roll musical numbers in a stylistic mash-up of genre icons Roger Corman and John Waters that spins the frothy boy/girl/beach format into a humorously bloody, albeit well-intentioned, call for acceptance and tolerance."

Said to be an "homage to the drive-in movies of the '50s and '60s."
[INDENT]FROM
http://www.upcominghorrormovies.com

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“The hottest places in hell are reserved for those who in times of great moral crises maintain their neutrality”

RON ZOMBIE:madfire:
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#2
Now this sounds pretty fun. Reminds me of Tales from the Crypt or even Creepshow. Corny but hopefully in good fun.
"The conquest of fear lies in the moment of its acceptance. And understanding what scares us most is that which is most familiar, most common place"
- Chris Carter

Please check out my blog: The Paradise of Horror
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#3
Sounded awful until I read what they were aiming to spoof. I think there's a chance they'll pull it off with the aforementioned segments considering what they're trying to do. It's clearly more spoof than homage though; if anything, a modern homage to the type of film would be something akin to Re-Animator.
“The Fright Night remake is a film which taps into the audience’s deepest rooted fears, such as those of vampires throwing motorcycles at them. I dread the thought of a vampire throwing a refrigerator or a deskjet printer or... I’d better stop before I give myself nightmares”
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#4
[SIZE="7"]PASS[/SIZE]
Torture is only truly pleasurable when performed.....slowly----The Machine Girl
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#5
It might me an homage to drive-in fares like, They Saved Hitler's Brain.
"The conquest of fear lies in the moment of its acceptance. And understanding what scares us most is that which is most familiar, most common place"
- Chris Carter

Please check out my blog: The Paradise of Horror
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#6
Hitler's Brain, though cheesy, took itself seriously I believe. To be a true "homage" they'd have to make the head of Hitler (or whatever other villain they decide to use) seem like a real scary prospect as the original creators attempted to Tongue
“The Fright Night remake is a film which taps into the audience’s deepest rooted fears, such as those of vampires throwing motorcycles at them. I dread the thought of a vampire throwing a refrigerator or a deskjet printer or... I’d better stop before I give myself nightmares”
Reply
#7
They might. I don't think an anthology of spoofs would work so much as an anthology of camp drive-in movies.
"The conquest of fear lies in the moment of its acceptance. And understanding what scares us most is that which is most familiar, most common place"
- Chris Carter

Please check out my blog: The Paradise of Horror
Reply
#8
on the other hand I do enjoy drive in /camp classics and my daughter has got us watching pretty much everything from the 50's/60's/70's so I suppose it MIGHT be worth checking out
Torture is only truly pleasurable when performed.....slowly----The Machine Girl
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