Tricia Lee's Blood Hunters kicks off today's Horror Highlights with news that the film will have three screenings this month in North America, just in time for the most glorious of holidays, Halloween! Also: a recap / photos for Trash Fire's Screamfest screening in Los Angeles, a trailer / poster for The Terrible Two, and the Brooklyn Horror Film Festival's list of awards.
Blood Hunters North American October Premiere: Press Release: "The trees are changing color and the weather is starting to cool, but Halloween is right around the corner. And Blood Hunters is having its North American premiere in the month of October. With three screenings scheduled this month, the film is fresh off a successful and well-received world premiere at Horror Channel Frightfest in London.
Directed by Tricia Lee and starring Lara Gilchrist, Benjamin Arthur, Torri Higginson, Julian Richings, Mark Taylor, and Peter Blankenstein, the film debuted in...
Blood Hunters North American October Premiere: Press Release: "The trees are changing color and the weather is starting to cool, but Halloween is right around the corner. And Blood Hunters is having its North American premiere in the month of October. With three screenings scheduled this month, the film is fresh off a successful and well-received world premiere at Horror Channel Frightfest in London.
Directed by Tricia Lee and starring Lara Gilchrist, Benjamin Arthur, Torri Higginson, Julian Richings, Mark Taylor, and Peter Blankenstein, the film debuted in...
- 10/20/2016
- by Tamika Jones
- DailyDead
*full disclosure: an online screener of this film was provided by director Tricia Lee. **there are minor spoilers here. Director: Tricia Lee. Writer: Corey Brown. Cast: Lara Gilchrist, Benjamin Arthur, Torri Higginson and Mark Taylor. Blood Hunters is a film from director Tricia Lee (Silent Retreat) and writer Corey Brown (Clean Break). This creature feature recently had a showing at the FrightFest Film Festival, in the United Kingdom. Very indie, the film takes place, exclusively, in an underground medical facility. Here, the lighting and setting look great. However, almost all of the characters are unlikeable and most are immoral, especially Marion (Torri Higginson). Marion causes most of the film's chaos, due to her incompetency. The film's overly sappy tone also dampens the mood as Blood Hunters focuses on dialogue, over tension, conflict and real terror. Blood Hunters is a dramatic horror feature and it will appeal to some, but it did not entertain this viewer.
- 9/6/2016
- by noreply@blogger.com (Michael Allen)
- 28 Days Later Analysis
A sinister thriller, titled Blood Hunters, is moving towards a World Premiere. To show at Frightfest, in the United Kingdom, the film will have its World Premiere in late August. The film was written by Corey Brown (Silent Retreat) and directed by Tricia Lee. Lara Gilchrist and Julian Richings star, in this Canadian shot feature. And now, a trailer is available for the film and it looms below. A snippet of the film's story has been released. Focusing on a pregnant women, a medical facility has come under attack, by something disfigured. Ellie (Gilchrist) must discover the facility's purpose and escape, before she gives birth. Or, she and her child will be devoured by creatures, of unimaginable origins. The trailer shows some of the film's settings and characters. Shot almost exclusively within an austere structure, the clip focuses on Ellie as she is surprised by her pregnancy. Bodies lay about everywhere.
- 7/5/2016
- by noreply@blogger.com (Michael Allen)
- 28 Days Later Analysis
Welcome to the latest edition of our regular crowdfunding feature here on Nerdly – Back This! – where we take a look at some of the cool content taking the crowdfunding route on sites such as Indiegogo, Sponsume and Kickstarter. In this edition we’re taking a look at two new movie campaigns: a creature feature and a fantastic sounding Troma documentary.
One Drop
One Drop is a new horror creature feature from director Tricia Lee, which tells the story of a single mother who wakes up in the basement of a medical facility only to discover that everyone around her is dead and she is somehow nine months pregnant. As she tries to escape, she realises that something not-quite-human is prowling the hallways, and the only means of survival may be growing inside of her.
Lee, one of the very few successful female directors in the genre, first made the audience...
One Drop
One Drop is a new horror creature feature from director Tricia Lee, which tells the story of a single mother who wakes up in the basement of a medical facility only to discover that everyone around her is dead and she is somehow nine months pregnant. As she tries to escape, she realises that something not-quite-human is prowling the hallways, and the only means of survival may be growing inside of her.
Lee, one of the very few successful female directors in the genre, first made the audience...
- 5/13/2015
- by Phil Wheat
- Nerdly
There was a time when the western was one of the most popular genres on television. At one point, there were over 30 western-themed shows on network TV. Today, a television western seems like an iffy proposition, especially one produced by the Hallmark channel. Add to that the fact that it's brought to us by two guys from the original Beverly Hills 90210 and Goodnight for Justice becomes a dark horse in the realm of made-for-tv movies. Surprisingly, it's not that bad. It's no True Grit but there are worse ways to spend 90 minutes.
Goodnight for Justice is directed by 90210 alumni Jason Priestley and starring his Beverly Hills buddy Luke Perry. The duo of former teen heartthrobs collaborate on this decent but unremarkable horse opera with mixed results. There are some good lines of dialogue and the period details are well done on a TV budget, but the meandering story needs focus.
Goodnight for Justice is directed by 90210 alumni Jason Priestley and starring his Beverly Hills buddy Luke Perry. The duo of former teen heartthrobs collaborate on this decent but unremarkable horse opera with mixed results. There are some good lines of dialogue and the period details are well done on a TV budget, but the meandering story needs focus.
- 5/1/2011
- by Rob Young
- JustPressPlay.net
Photo courtesy of Warner Bros. Pictures From left, Daniel Radcliffe, Emma Watson and Rupert Grint in “Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows Part 1.”
As Hollywood advances towards the summer movie season, trying to get in its sleeper hits and more respectable fare before the bombast of wannabe blockbusters, the industry’s home video releases reflect a similar pattern. This week’s offerings include one tentpole (or, technically, one-half of a tentpole); an animated adventure from Pixar; the debut of two...
As Hollywood advances towards the summer movie season, trying to get in its sleeper hits and more respectable fare before the bombast of wannabe blockbusters, the industry’s home video releases reflect a similar pattern. This week’s offerings include one tentpole (or, technically, one-half of a tentpole); an animated adventure from Pixar; the debut of two...
- 4/13/2011
- by Todd Gilchrist
- Speakeasy/Wall Street Journal
Last night, Hallmark Movie Channel premiered the Jason Priestley-directed Western Goodnight for Justice. It stars Luke Perry, who developed the idea for a movie about a character named John Goodnight, a lawyer who becomes the circuit judge for the deadly Wyoming territory. There, as a boy, he witnessed the murders of his parents and a circuit judge. The judge’s wife raised John as her own, and got him the appointment because she thinks he’ll drink and fight himself to death unless he finds the outlaw and gets closure. Along the way, he proves himself a decent man and a fair judge,...
- 1/30/2011
- by Mandi Bierly
- EW.com - PopWatch
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