Introducing the B-Movie Celebration

As the Backbrain has been honoured with the task of introducing the films scheduled to screen at the 6th Annual B-Movie Celebration’s Film Festival being held in Columbus, Indiana during September, it’s appropriate that the official press release appears here first. Read on to embrace the ideology and the passion that lies behind the notion that B-Movies deserve to be celebrated.

OFFICIAL PRESS RELEASE

Often the term “B-Movie” is thought to carry an attitude of derision and scorn. Low budget “B” or Genre filmmaking is considered to be second class or in some way inferior to Hollywood’s slick corporate product. We at the B-Movie Celebration know otherwise. We know that for the most part the grand American cinematic tradition has evolved from origins in B-Movies. The weavers of images, whom we as a collective culture deem as masters of the cinematic arts — Scorsese, Coppola, Kaufman, Demme, Leone, Bogdanovich, Lucas, Spielberg and Tarantino — all either toiled in the fields of B-filmmaking or consider themselves primarily influenced by this cinematic tradition.

The B-Movie Celebration realizes that Hollywood has taken the stock-in-trade of B-Movies and subverted the exploitation aspect of it for its own ends, often ignoring the passion and the creativity of the B-Movie auteurs, and have created mega-budgeted flicks which have no heart and do not move the art of cinema further. The product Hollywood now produces often acts as a kind of celluloid Eurasian Milfoil, crowding all other forms of cinema off the viewing public’s radar and demanding that only they have the right or ability to bring entertainment to the world.

We take deep exception to this and intend to offer an alternative.

The B-Movie Celebration recognizes that most of the innovation and indeed the very definition of the cinematic arts came as a result of B-Movies. There is a tradition and legacy here that should not be forgotten. Filmmakers like Oscar Micheaux, Ida Lupino, Samuel Fuller, Jacques Tourneur, Lloyd Kaufman, Robert Lippert, Roger Corman and Jim Wynorski have all contributed significantly to the tradition and the emerging art form that is Movies. Some of them still do.

This year we are showcasing a global overview of emerging genre filmmakers. These filmmakers are from around the globe and are responsible for creating what we at the B-Movie Celebration know will influence and impact the next generation of Movie fans. These people have taken on the banner of advancing the art of the motion picture and they like their predecessors must be celebrated. Come and share their works with us this September when the B-Movie Nation comes together to celebrate Everything B.

We hope you’ll join us on September 14th-16th for the Sixth Annual B-Movie Celebration — this year at the YES CINEMA in Columbus Indiana.

Official website: www.bmoviecelebration.com

Well, there you have it. Film Festival Organiser Avery Guerra adds:

The B-Movie Celebration film program will feature the world premieres of “Gila!”, “Spores”, “Synevir”, “From Beneath”, “The Woodsman”, “Lizardman: The Terror From the Swamp”, and the North American premieres of “Virgin Beach Creature”, “Zombies From Outer Space”, “Poisoned”, “Monkey Boy”, “Tartarus”, “Attack of the Indian Werewolf”, “Bait”, plus the US premiere of “Metamorphosis” and the US and festival premiere of “The Tentacle’s Claw”, festival premieres of “Jonah Lives”, “Squid”, “House Of Ghosts” and “Red Blob Massacre”, and screenings of hotly anticipated films such as “I Am A Ghost”, “Return of the Killer Shrews”, “Bio-Slime”, “Frankenstein: Day Of The Beast”, “Empress Vampire”, “The Caretaker”, and much, much more … including a rare screening of the new Daikaiju short “The God Of Clay”. It’s an amazing line-up already — and there’s more on the way!

Download a PDF copy of the Press Release here.

Posted in B-Movie Celebration, Kaiju Search-Robot Avery, News | Tagged , , , , | 2 Comments

Official Poster: Metamorphosis

Exclusive Backbrain Release

Official Poster for Metamorphosis (UK-2011; dir. Chris Swanton), which will be screened as part of the 6th Annual B-Movie Celebration’s Film Festival to be held in Columbus, Indiana during September.

Click to enlarge.

Source: Via B-Movie Celebration Film Festival Program Director Avery Guerra.

Posted in B-Movie Celebration, News, Posters | Tagged , , , , , | 2 Comments

Update: New Footage of the Giant God Warrior

Twitchfilm has posted some extended footage from the Studio Ghibli live action film made by Hideaki Anno and Hayao Miyazaki, Kyōshinhei Tokyo ni Arawaru [lit. Giant God Warrior Appears In Tokyo]. It involves some great shots of the old-school, non-CG kaiju destruction.



For more extensive coverage of the project, see the Backbrain article Mad Gods and Ghibli.

Posted in Daikaiju, Giant Monsters, Japanese | Tagged , , , , | Leave a comment

B-Movie Celebration: The God of Clay

Exclusive Poster Art created for Undead Backbrain and the 6th Annual B-Movie Celebration

There’s a new giant monster about the rise over the B-Movie horizon:

The God of Clay [aka ねんどの神さま], (Japan-2009/2011) is a 13-minute short from Koichi Kawakita, the SFX director of the Godzilla movies from 1989’s Godzilla vs Biollante (Gojira tai Biorante) to the end of the “Heisei” period with 1995’s Gojira tai Desutoroya [Godzilla vs. Destroyah]. Kawakita took over the production from credited co-director Nobuaki Sugimoto, who directed the initial footage. Made in the “classic” tokusatsu style, The God of Clay is a welcome return to monster suits and miniature sets.

Synopsis:

Back in his childhood Ken-chan, a young boy whose parents were killed in World War II, created a tiny clay god to symbolically punish warmongers for the destruction they’ve wrought. 50 years later Ken is president of a Japanese defense contractor — the sort of war profiteer he’d once blamed for his parents’ death. In response to this irony, Ken’s long-forgotten God Of Clay grows to enormous size, wreaking havoc and miniature destruction as it treks across the countryside toward Tokyo to confront its maker. (Adapted from SciFi Japan)

The film is based on a 1992 anti-war children’s book by author Masamoto Nasu and boasts the work of many well-known Ultraman, Mothra and Godzilla alumni. (For details, check out the excellent SciFi Japan article, which includes production art such as the image below by Tetsuzo Osawa.)

The SciFi Japan article, written by daikaiju eiga expert Steve Ryfle, also features an informative interview with the director.

The God of Clay will be screened at the 6th Annual B-Movie Celebration’s Film Festival to be held in Columbus, Indiana during September.

Source: Via B-Movie Celebration Film Festival Program Director Avery Guerra.

Posted in B-Movie Celebration, Daikaiju, Film, Giant Monsters, Independent film, Japanese | Tagged , , , | Leave a comment

B-Movie Celebration: I Am A Ghost

A Backbrain B-Movie Celebration Exclusive

I Am A Ghost (US-2012; dir. H.P. Mendoza) is a film I instinctively love, though so far all I’ve seen is the trailer, some screenshots and a press release. Oh, and the following poster:

The fact that the above poster has been designed to look like a book cover is both telling and very cool. It suggests an intent to give the film a distinctively literary ambiance, totally in keeping with descriptions of it as both “experimental” and “horror”. What it should not be taken as is an intimation that the film lacks true cinematic qualities. Though limited in setting and cast, the trailer reveals an evocative visual palate and atmospheric cinematography. For me, the film’s closed setting creates a claustrophobic ambiance that plays into its themes and evokes just the sort of quiet creepiness that works best for haunted house movies.

[youtube C_O2OATk97k]

Synopsis:

Taking place in a single Victorian house during an indeterminable time period, I Am A Ghost is a supernatural mystery that explores identity mixing experimental non-linear filmmaking with classic haunted house spookiness.

Emily (Anna Ishida), a troubled spirit, haunts her own house every day, wondering why she can’t leave. With the help of Sylvia (Jeannie Barroga), a clairvoyant hired to rid the house of spirits, Emily is forced into a ‘patient/therapist’ relationship, uncovering disturbing mysteries about her past that may help her move on to ‘the next place’.

Spooky, atmospheric and experimental, I Am A Ghost is the second narrative feature from H.P. Mendoza (writer of Colma: The Musical and director of Fruit Fly).

Above and below: Emily (Anna Ishida) investigates a noise coming from the attic


Above: Emily listens to a demon through the bathroom door

Above: Fleeing from a malevolent force

Writes Mendoza about the basic theme of I Am A Ghost:

I’ve always fantasized that one day I’d be reminded that I’ve been dead for a while and that I’ve just been such a space case I simply forgot. Sometimes I’d even fantasize that the current moment I’m in is actually nothing more than a past memory to which I’m retreating because I can’t deal with the present condition I’m in.

About 20 years ago, I was chatting with magician Christian Cagigal about hauntings and supernatural occurrences. He introduced the idea, new to me, that hauntings could possibly be nothing more than imprints in time, like fingerprints or scents. He likened hauntings to “recordings” or “snapshots”. I asked him then, why can’t the living haunt a house as well. He didn’t have an answer for me. I suddenly thought of ghosts as pitiful things, oblivious to their own state, stuck in scattered memories for eternity.

I fell in love with the idea of a movie that wandered throughout a house following a ghost through her memories and that the only thing that would trigger any suspicion in the audience’s mind would be the fact that some memories repeat. As I wrote the script, I realized that I Am A Ghost would have to be a pretty intimate shoot, seeing as how it would be a camera watching one actor for the entirety of the film. That’s when I decided I would shoot the film myself. (Press Release)

When asked, Mendoza cited his inspirations as Stanley Kubrick and Stan Brakhage among directors, and The Shining (Stanley Kubrick), The Haunting (Robert Wise), Picnic at Hanging Rock (Peter Weir) and Persona (Ingmar Bergman) in terms of films. The influence of all these seems clear, even just on the basis of the trailer.

 

 

This breaking discovery will feature at the 6th Annual B-Movie Celebration’s Film Festival to be held in Columbus, Indiana during September. What better reason to be there!

But if you want more, check out on its website the rave reviews I Am A Ghost has been getting:

With frosty cinematography and a meticulous mise-en-scene, [I Am a Ghost] anticipates the burgeoning of a more sophisticated, inclusive kind of horror. — Curran Nault, SFIAAFF30

I Am A Ghost is a strange beast, part experimental film and part supernatural horror, the film goes places you wouldn’t expect and I was hooked early on. — J. Hurtado, twitchfilm

Source: H.P. Mendoza via B-Movie Celebration Film Festival Program Director Avery Guerra. Official website.

Posted in B-Movie Celebration, Ghosts, Horror, Independent film, News, Trailers | Tagged , , , , , , | Leave a comment

New: Attack of the Giant Brain Sucker Monster from Outer Space

A Backbrain B-Movie Celebration Exclusive

There’s nothing like a good brainsucker from outer space to get the B-Movie Celebration vibe going.

Attack of the Giant Brain Sucker Monster from Outer Space [aka L’attaque du monstre géant suceur de cerveaux de l’espace] (France-2012; short [c. 18 min.]; dir. Guillaume Rieu) is a sci-fi comedy musical featuring the old-school monster-film aesthetic that warms the hearts (and sucks the brains) of B-film fans everywhere. Here, the impetus comes from France, so a whole other aesthetic gets woven into the mix.

“I wanted to make a movie with a lot of old special effects because I love that stuff,” explained writer/director Guillaume Rieu. “And I love monsters, and I love science fiction. So I wrote a story with a monster that comes and eats people or turns them into zombies. But except for the fun and the special effects, the film has no hidden depth. It is just a simple homage to old science fiction movies. So to justify this referencing, I added the opposite genre — the coloured French musical part.”

Check out the trailer to get an idea of what’s going on:

[vimeo 23805641]

 Rieu’s inspirations are pretty clearly defined:

For the black and white science fiction / horror part, my main inspiration was the first King Kong, but also Night of the Living Dead, [the 1953] War of the Worlds, The Beast from 20,000 Fathoms, It Came from Beneath the Sea … And many other good and not-so-good old movies. And, of course, the coloured French Musical part is inspired by Jacques Demy’s movies, such as Les Demoiselles de Rochefort  and Les Parapluies de Cherbourg.

Rieu added that he will try to make a feature-length version of Attack of the Giant Brain Sucker Monster from Outer Space in the future but as to his next project:

I’m preparing to shoot another short movie with Metronomic Productions — an adventure movie about movies and special effects (yes, again, but not the same way)…

Attack of the Giant Brain Sucker Monster from Outer Space will be part of the 6th Annual B-Movie Celebration’s Film Festival to be held in Columbus, Indiana during September.

Sources: Guillaume Rieu via B-Movie Celebration Film Festival Program Director Avery Guerra; IMDb.

Posted in B-Movie Celebration, Film, Giant Monsters, Giant Squids, Independent film, News, Retro, Science Fiction | Tagged , , , , | Leave a comment

The Killer Shrews Help Kids

It has just been announced that Return of the Killer Shrews, James Best’s return to his 1959 cult success, The Killer Shrews, is to premiere in Bristol, Tennessee, to benefit Speedway Childrens Charities on July 27th. Directed by Steve Latshaw, the “remake/sequel” stars the likes of James Best, John Schneider, Jennifer Lyons, Rick Hurst, Sean Flynn and special guest Bruce Davison and many of them will be at hand for the gala event.

A red carpet, music, dancing, celebrities and shrews are promised, the latter on three 16-foot HD video screens with their shrieks coming through a state-of-the-art Bose sound system.

While we’re at it, here’s the official trailer:

[youtube RMJUAIeprls]

Check out this interview with actor David Browning for more information as well as some insight into the development of the film.

(For more about the film see this update on Undead Brainspasm, as well as these Backbrain articles: First Details; Update 1; Casting Details; Update 2, and the trailer release.)

Official website: www.killershrewsmovie.com. Info via Avery Guerra.

Posted in Activity, Independent film, News, Remake, Update | Tagged , , , | Leave a comment

New Crypto Thriller: Monongahela

A Backbrain Exclusive

Monongahela (US-2013; dir. Cayce Mell) is a new creature feature based on the search for a “legendary” monster. A pair of cryptozoologists have come to Pittsburgh to investigate sightings of a mysterious creature lurking in the Monongahela river. Check out the following trailer to get a few clues regarding the nature of the beast.

[youtube ErZsoWGjeG4]

Synopsis:

Kate Walsh (Alexandra Russo, Dying to Meet You), after she misses her flight, loses her job, and meets two men in the airport bar: Mick (Scott Sullivan, Brothers at Last) and Ben Munroe (Jake Mulliken, “Breaking Bad”). Mick and Ben reveal to Kate that they are cryptozoologists — researchers who spend their time chasing down Bigfoot and camping out on the shores of Loch Ness. When Kate asks them what they are doing in Pittsburgh, they inform her that they have come to investigate sightings of a mysterious creature lurking in the Monongahela river.

That meeting marks the beginning of a fast paced adventure filled with comedy, romance, and suspense as the three discover they are now racing the clock to solve the Monongahela mystery before hundreds of triathlon runners take to the waters exactly where people have seen the creature!

A feature length sci-fi thriller filmed entirely in Pittsburgh, PA (home of George Romero’s  low-budget Night of the Living Dead and subsequent horrors) by independent film production company 2nd State, Monongahela began production on 1 March this year and wrapped April 29th. The shoot took a total of 32 days with what 1st Assistant Director Heidi Schlegel describes as “nothing but hard work and dedication given”. She added:

We worked with well over 200 people to make this project a success. Currently we are seeking theatrical distribution through a series of screenings nation-wide.

Below, the cast gathers to look for the monster…

Asked about the production company Schlegel replied:

2nd State Productions was born out of the notion that great storytelling, very much like great talent, is everywhere – even right in your backyard. 2nd State found a great story to share, cast amazing non-union talent-actors passionate about their craft, and found eager crew members who were all ready to bring the story of Monongahela to life on a screen. We worked with all local businesses and communities to create a movie of our city, for the big screen.

Monongahela is currently in post-production and the producers are hoping to release the finished product at the beginning of 2013, when we’ll learn what exactly lives in the Monongahela river…

Addendum: Apparently the creature has been brought to life via old school practical FX supervised by FX maestro Cody Ruch. B-Movie Celebration 2012 Film Festival Organiser, Avery Guerra, says that while he can’t reveal anything concrete, he’s been told “the creature in Monongahela is definitely something we haven’t seen featured before”.

The gallery below includes more images from the production.

Original Teaser (Made before filming began):

[youtube DpyM5Qr6gaQ]

Behind The Scenes:

[youtube C8Ft5JIwwK8]

Source: courtesy of Cayce Mell and Heidi Schlegel via Avery Guerra. Written by Robert Hood

Gallery:

 

Posted in Cryptozoology, Film, Giant Monsters, Independent film, Lake Monsters, News, Preview | Tagged , , , , , | Leave a comment

New Images of Gila

Another Backbrain Exclusive

Jim Wynorski’s 2012 remake of the cult classic creature feature The Giant Gila Monster (US-1959; dir. Ray Kellogg) promises to be one of the highlights of the 6th Annual B-Movie Celebration in Franklin, Indiana this September. We’ve already released a slew of images from the film, but here are a couple more:

Program Director Avery Guerra commented: “I’ve seen footage of Gila! and this has got to be considered Jim’s best yet. He’s really outdone himself. It’ll be a blast for B-movie and creature feature lovers everywhere!”

Read more about Gila! in this Undead Backbrain article.

Source: Bill Dever via Avery Guerra (Program Director). Official Celebration website.

Posted in B-Movie Celebration, Exploitation films, Giant Monsters, Monsters in general, News, Remake | Tagged , , , , | 5 Comments

Now That’s Big

Going on the latest poster created for this year’s Comic-Con, the giant robots of Guillermo del Toro’s Pacific Rim are utterly gigantic. Assuming their size is roughly comparable to that of the daikaiju enemies they are created to fight, we’re talking totally awesome!

The giant robots vs giant monster epic stars Idris Elba (Stringer in The Wire, Heimdall in Thor and Prometheus), Charlie Hunnam (Children of Men, Sons of Anarchy), Ron Perlman (the Hellboy movies, and endless other things), Charlie Day, Rinko Kikuchi, Robert Maillet, and others.

Below is a shot of the pilots’ battle suits from the film, as worn by Charlie Hunnam and Rinkio Kikuchi:

Posted in Daikaiju, Fantasy, Film, Giant Monsters, Mecha | Tagged , , , , , , | 1 Comment