"The nightmare begins when you wake" in The Shadow Man, a new horror film that's out on digital and DVD today from Sony Pictures Home Entertainment. To celebrate the Halloween release of the supernatural movie, we've been provided with an exclusive clip from the film as a treat for Daily Dead readers to enjoy with their bowls of trick or treat candy.
You can watch our exclusive clip below, and read on for full details on The Shadow Man from the official press release:
Press Release: Culver City, Calif. (August 28, 2017) – It starts with a nightmare when the terrifying horror film The Shadow Man debuts on digital and DVD on Halloween, October 31, from Sony Pictures Home Entertainment. Rachel Darwin (Sarah Jurgens, “iZombie”) is pregnant, shackled, giving birth to something terrible, attended to by a dark man in a brimmed hat, a multidimensional being, a shadow that feeds upon human souls. She...
You can watch our exclusive clip below, and read on for full details on The Shadow Man from the official press release:
Press Release: Culver City, Calif. (August 28, 2017) – It starts with a nightmare when the terrifying horror film The Shadow Man debuts on digital and DVD on Halloween, October 31, from Sony Pictures Home Entertainment. Rachel Darwin (Sarah Jurgens, “iZombie”) is pregnant, shackled, giving birth to something terrible, attended to by a dark man in a brimmed hat, a multidimensional being, a shadow that feeds upon human souls. She...
- 10/31/2017
- by Derek Anderson
- DailyDead
Stars: Sarah Jurgens, Nick Baillie, Adam Tomlinson, Rebecca Amzallag, Celest Chong, Alison Louder, Manuela Casinha | Written by Adam Tomlinson | Directed by Joshua Fraiman
Rachel Darwin (Sarah Jurgens) is a young, mother-to-be, haunted by nightmares. When she wakes, looming over her is the shadowy image of a dark man with a brimmed hat. Her hotshot lawyer of a husband, Scott (Nick Baillie), doesn’t believe in any of that supernatural nonsense. It’s sleep paralysis. It’s stress. It’s hallucinations. Rachel seeks group therapy, but she’s too weird, even for them. But she’s not too weird for William (Adam Tomlinson), who knows exactly what she’s going through and is even weirder than her. What is the shadow man? Is he the manifestations of a confused and troubled woman? Or is he an extra-dimensional cattle rustler looking to fatten up and eat human souls?
First off, let’s...
Rachel Darwin (Sarah Jurgens) is a young, mother-to-be, haunted by nightmares. When she wakes, looming over her is the shadowy image of a dark man with a brimmed hat. Her hotshot lawyer of a husband, Scott (Nick Baillie), doesn’t believe in any of that supernatural nonsense. It’s sleep paralysis. It’s stress. It’s hallucinations. Rachel seeks group therapy, but she’s too weird, even for them. But she’s not too weird for William (Adam Tomlinson), who knows exactly what she’s going through and is even weirder than her. What is the shadow man? Is he the manifestations of a confused and troubled woman? Or is he an extra-dimensional cattle rustler looking to fatten up and eat human souls?
First off, let’s...
- 10/20/2017
- by Nik Holman
- Nerdly
Helix continues to tell an increasingly implausible and unconvincing sci-fi tale. Surely this won't return for season 3?
This review contains spoilers.
2.10 Mother
What with some of the weird things said by characters in recent episodes, and a general malaise overtaking what narrative does exist, I’ve come to the conclusion that the writers of Helix are simply bored with it now. Perhaps they've already been told there won’t be a third season, and so they’re working on another idea that won’t crash as spectacularly as this one has.
To wit, Mother is written essentially as a series of short conversations between two characters that mostly go nowhere. Julia talks to Amy, Winger talks to Alan, Alan talks to Soren, Sarah talks to Peter. It’s disturbingly repetitive and seemingly endless.
Quite why at the start Alan makes an odd face after talking to Soren I’ve no idea?...
This review contains spoilers.
2.10 Mother
What with some of the weird things said by characters in recent episodes, and a general malaise overtaking what narrative does exist, I’ve come to the conclusion that the writers of Helix are simply bored with it now. Perhaps they've already been told there won’t be a third season, and so they’re working on another idea that won’t crash as spectacularly as this one has.
To wit, Mother is written essentially as a series of short conversations between two characters that mostly go nowhere. Julia talks to Amy, Winger talks to Alan, Alan talks to Soren, Sarah talks to Peter. It’s disturbingly repetitive and seemingly endless.
Quite why at the start Alan makes an odd face after talking to Soren I’ve no idea?...
- 3/23/2015
- by louisamellor
- Den of Geek
Review Kaci Ferrell 1 Apr 2014 - 07:06
A week away from the season finale, Being Human psychologically tortures its characters and audience one last time...
This review contains spoilers.
3.12 House Hunting
In this week's episode of Being Human... pure psychological torture. For both the characters and the viewers.
The plot of this episode is pretty simple: it is revealed that Ramona was offered as a sacrifice by her parents to the demon Paimon and is not actually a ghost, but rather the physical embodiment of evil in the house. And as the gang attempts to move on into their post-murder house lives (Josh and Nora into Nora's apartment, Aidan and Sally into the werewolf camper), Ramona laughs her evil laugh and proceeds to psychologically torture all of them into a giant murder-suicide pact that they don't quite manage to escape; Aidan ends up staking Kenny, who uses his last few moments...
A week away from the season finale, Being Human psychologically tortures its characters and audience one last time...
This review contains spoilers.
3.12 House Hunting
In this week's episode of Being Human... pure psychological torture. For both the characters and the viewers.
The plot of this episode is pretty simple: it is revealed that Ramona was offered as a sacrifice by her parents to the demon Paimon and is not actually a ghost, but rather the physical embodiment of evil in the house. And as the gang attempts to move on into their post-murder house lives (Josh and Nora into Nora's apartment, Aidan and Sally into the werewolf camper), Ramona laughs her evil laugh and proceeds to psychologically torture all of them into a giant murder-suicide pact that they don't quite manage to escape; Aidan ends up staking Kenny, who uses his last few moments...
- 4/1/2014
- by louisamellor
- Den of Geek
Episode 208 “I’ve Got You Under My Skin”
After last week’s surprise ending where Aidan (Sam Witwer) blasted a hole in Connor’s (Jon Cor) heart, we expected him to lay low and deal with the aftermath, but he managed to top that feat this week. Also Josh (Sam Huntington) gets an intervention and Sally (Meaghan Rath) considers her current status of unemployment in what was another fine week of Being Human.
Sally
Last week’s haunting of Sally was a tease because we actually thought Danny (Gianpaolo Venuta) was back this season but thankfully (?) he was shredded by the Grim Reaper (Dusan Dukic), but what was unsettling heading into “I’ve Got You Under My Skin,” was knowing that Sally’s time was coming. The Reaper had to fill his quota, and maintain the balance in the afterlife. What would be her way out? Become the grim reaper...
After last week’s surprise ending where Aidan (Sam Witwer) blasted a hole in Connor’s (Jon Cor) heart, we expected him to lay low and deal with the aftermath, but he managed to top that feat this week. Also Josh (Sam Huntington) gets an intervention and Sally (Meaghan Rath) considers her current status of unemployment in what was another fine week of Being Human.
Sally
Last week’s haunting of Sally was a tease because we actually thought Danny (Gianpaolo Venuta) was back this season but thankfully (?) he was shredded by the Grim Reaper (Dusan Dukic), but what was unsettling heading into “I’ve Got You Under My Skin,” was knowing that Sally’s time was coming. The Reaper had to fill his quota, and maintain the balance in the afterlife. What would be her way out? Become the grim reaper...
- 3/7/2012
- by Ernie Estrella
- BuzzFocus.com
In 2310, Gladiators Are Made - Not Born!
Animated Sci-fi Feature - Based on the Worldwide Comic Book Series Phenomenon - Comes to DVD, VOD & Digital May 10th !
For Immediate Release:
Miami, Fl -- Mti Home Video, the premier studio for independent filmmakers, will release their first animated film; the sci-fi fantasy hit Gene-fusion, on DVD, VOD and Digital Download May 10, 2011. The film is based on Jeff Amano's (Red Warrior) phenomenally successful comic book and the comic book mini-series written by Ivan Brandon (Doc Savage, Viking), illustrated by Neil Vokes (Dr Strange: From The Marvel Vault), and inked by Jay Geldhof (Grendel).
In the year 2310, a new sport, "Gene-Fusion," is all the rage! In this exciting game, specially trained athletes, called Fusers, design their own super-creature by combining three forms of animal DNA... Four teens, seemingly plucked from obscurity, are trained to be Fusers. They become instant celebrities as they perform before sold out crowds.
Animated Sci-fi Feature - Based on the Worldwide Comic Book Series Phenomenon - Comes to DVD, VOD & Digital May 10th !
For Immediate Release:
Miami, Fl -- Mti Home Video, the premier studio for independent filmmakers, will release their first animated film; the sci-fi fantasy hit Gene-fusion, on DVD, VOD and Digital Download May 10, 2011. The film is based on Jeff Amano's (Red Warrior) phenomenally successful comic book and the comic book mini-series written by Ivan Brandon (Doc Savage, Viking), illustrated by Neil Vokes (Dr Strange: From The Marvel Vault), and inked by Jay Geldhof (Grendel).
In the year 2310, a new sport, "Gene-Fusion," is all the rage! In this exciting game, specially trained athletes, called Fusers, design their own super-creature by combining three forms of animal DNA... Four teens, seemingly plucked from obscurity, are trained to be Fusers. They become instant celebrities as they perform before sold out crowds.
- 3/28/2011
- by brians
- GeekTyrant
The British are coming… and they have television formats. The UK’s been a prolific exporter of hit reality/gameshow formats since the turn-of-the millennium, but just recently many British drama premises are finding a home in the Us. A remake of underclass drama Shameless debuted on Showtime a few weeks ago, Torchwood’s become an Anglo-American co-production for Starz, an Americanized version of teen-drama Skins launched on MTV this week, and now BBC3′s supernatural comedy-drama Being Human has been adapted by a Canadian production company for Syfy.
Being Human’s zany, high-concept premise remains intact: a handsome vampire called Aidan (Sam Witwer) and an affable werewolf called Josh (Sam Hungtington) resolve to live ordinary lives (or “be human”) by moving into a house together, only to find they’re sharing tenancy with chatterbox Sally (Meaghan Rath), the ghost of a girl who previously lived there with her fiancé.
Being Human’s zany, high-concept premise remains intact: a handsome vampire called Aidan (Sam Witwer) and an affable werewolf called Josh (Sam Hungtington) resolve to live ordinary lives (or “be human”) by moving into a house together, only to find they’re sharing tenancy with chatterbox Sally (Meaghan Rath), the ghost of a girl who previously lived there with her fiancé.
- 1/19/2011
- by Dan Owen
- Obsessed with Film
A few weeks ago, we told you that SyFy's adaptation of the UK show Being Human would feature a recurring lesbian character played by Alison Louder. During a panel about the supernatural show at TCA this week, we find out a little bit more about what we could expect from Alison's character of Emily.
Sam Hungtinton plays Josh, a werewolf moonlighting as a nurse at a Boston hospital. His roommates are a ghost (Meaghan Rath) and a vampire (Sam Witwer) and they are trying to move through the world without their friends and family knowing about their dark sides. But Josh isn't so lucky, when he runs into Emily, his estranged sister, while at his day job.
"I'm ostracized from my family, being turned into a werewolf years prior from where the series started," Sam said. "And it's horrifying for me. She's a surprise. She shows up at the hospital,...
Sam Hungtinton plays Josh, a werewolf moonlighting as a nurse at a Boston hospital. His roommates are a ghost (Meaghan Rath) and a vampire (Sam Witwer) and they are trying to move through the world without their friends and family knowing about their dark sides. But Josh isn't so lucky, when he runs into Emily, his estranged sister, while at his day job.
"I'm ostracized from my family, being turned into a werewolf years prior from where the series started," Sam said. "And it's horrifying for me. She's a surprise. She shows up at the hospital,...
- 1/14/2011
- by Trish Bendix
- AfterEllen.com
With the New Year upon us, prepare to add a new Lgbt character to your radar when Syfy's Being Human remake premieres on Jan. 17.
The remake of the popular U.K. series about three twentysomethings — a vampire, werewolf and ghost who share living quarters — features a lesbian supporting character: Emily, the sister of the show's resident moon howler.
Played by Alison Louder, viewers meet Emily in Episode 2 of the new Monday night scripted drama that stars Sam Witwer (Smallville) as Aidan the vampire, Sam Huntington (Superman Returns) as Josh the werewolf and relative newcomer Meaghan Rath (Prom Wars) as Sally the ghost.
Alison Louder
For fans of the supernatural, the series grabs you immediately as Josh transforms into a werewolf. It's not the campy greatness of HBO's True Blood, but it's fun just the same. Judging from the first three episodes, we know that Aidan is a 200-year-old vampire who,...
The remake of the popular U.K. series about three twentysomethings — a vampire, werewolf and ghost who share living quarters — features a lesbian supporting character: Emily, the sister of the show's resident moon howler.
Played by Alison Louder, viewers meet Emily in Episode 2 of the new Monday night scripted drama that stars Sam Witwer (Smallville) as Aidan the vampire, Sam Huntington (Superman Returns) as Josh the werewolf and relative newcomer Meaghan Rath (Prom Wars) as Sally the ghost.
Alison Louder
For fans of the supernatural, the series grabs you immediately as Josh transforms into a werewolf. It's not the campy greatness of HBO's True Blood, but it's fun just the same. Judging from the first three episodes, we know that Aidan is a 200-year-old vampire who,...
- 12/30/2010
- by Lesley Goldberg
- AfterEllen.com
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