“Sector 7” Creature Revealed! Sort of…

Under development by the company responsible for the rather excellent disaster film Haeundae (South Korea-2009; dir. Je-gyun Yun), Sector 7 has been long promised (see this previous Backbrain article), but now appears to be in production. At any rate, Kaiju Search-Robot Avery has dug up a very suggestive synopsis and some production images that create a strange image of the monster plaguing Sector 7.

Synopsis:

In “Sector 7”, an underwater oil field located south of Jeju Island, Hae-jun is working as a marine equipment manager on an oil prospecting ship called Eclipse. Subsequently joining the crew is Jeong-man, a former colleague of Hae-jun’s father, assigned to Eclipse as captain. Though his job is to oversee the withdrawal of the ship, he suggests conducting some drilling one last time.

After three weeks of preparation, Hae-jun takes the new recruit underwater, but he sinks to the bottom of the sea when the equipment fails. Shortly thereafter crew members begin to turn up dead, one by one, their bodies viciously multilated.

What the few survivors soon discover is a transparent underwater creature they had encountered once before. The viral monster infiltrated the ship through the drilling pipe and has been feeding on the crew to survive. Hae-jun and his colleagues’ frantic fight for survival begins.

That hint of a “transparent underwater creature” is vague, but try joining it to this image, which is a production shot of a monster-filming session — clearly destined to be  a combination of actor-in-suit/framework and CGI enhancement.

Intriguing.

Meanwhile here are a series of settings, showing the rig and various parts of it:

The Cast: Oh Ji-ho (My Wife is a Superwoman)

Ha Ji-won (Phone and Haeundae):

Ahn Sung-ki (Musa the Warrior, Silmido, Black Narcissus):

More updates as we get them.

Posted in Film, Giant Monsters, Horror, Monsters in general, News, Update | Tagged , , , , | 3 Comments

Evil Dolls, Replicants and Dead Eyes

Dolls might be surrogate friends to children and kitsch collectibles to many adults, but there lingers deep beneath the surface of our cultural awareness of them a dark and unsettling fear. A whole cinematic genre explores the idea of “evil dolls” and some are among the most memorably creepy movies ever made. Take a look through the Backbrain Evil Doll Film List to tick off examples that have creeped you out at some time in the past. As has been addressed time and again in B-horror films, such humanoid creations partake of an unnerving quality. It’s perhaps their unnatural near-humanity that does it — almost human, yet not fleshy; cold and unliving despite their appearance of life. Add actual movement, actual speech, and our sense of wrongness escalates. Evil dolls are poster children of the Uncanny.

Editor Anthony Ferguson has compiled an outstanding collection of Australian stories that feature evil dolls and artificial humans. It includes my story “Regolith”, which was initially published in the excellent anthology Agog! Smashing Stories, edited by Cat Sparks back in 2004. That anthology is well-nigh impossible to get now, but the story remains a particular favourite of mine. I’m excited that it’s getting a second life in this particular context.

Devil Dolls and Duplicates in Australian Horror
Edited by Anthony Ferguson (Equilibrium Books, 2011)

Synopsis/Blurb:

Since time immemorial, men have dreamed of creating beings in their own image, and for almost as long they have endured nightmare visions of being overthrown by the beings they create.

Dolls and effigies have always been a staple in the horror fiction genre, for what could be more frightening than seeing that which is inanimate move of its own volition, or hearing words emanate from fleshless lips while staring into glassy, lifeless eyes?

Presented here for the first time are the collected ruminations on the theme of dolls and duplicates by some of the biggest names in Australian horror and science fiction. There are tales on reanimated corpses, beautiful gynoids, alien impostors, clones, golems, doppelgangers, and of course, dolls – effigies that exist to serve and protect, and others that want to mess with your head in the worst possible way.

Contents List:

  • Marcus Clarke, “Human Repetends”
  • Wynne Whiteford, “Automaton”
  • Van Ikin, “And Eve Was Drawn from the Rib of Adam”
  • Michael Wilding, “This is for You”
  • Stephen Dedman, “A Single Shadow”
  • Jason Franks, “The Third Sigil”
  • Jay Caselberg, “Porcelain”
  • Sean Williams, “The Girl Thing”
  • Chuck McKenzie, “Confessions of a Pod Person”
  • Lee Battersby, “The Divergence Tree”
  • Rick Kennett, Excerpt from “In Quinn’s Paddock”
  • Lucy Sussex, “La Sentinelle”
  • Jason Nahrung, “Spare Parts”
  • Robert Hood, “Regolith”
  • Kaaron Warren, “Doll Money”
  • Andrew J. McKiernan, “Calliope: A Steam Romance”
  • Tracie McBride, “Last Chance to See”
  • Martin Livings, “Blessed are the Dead that the Rain Falls Upon”
  • B. Michael Radburn, “The Guardian”
  • Daniel I. Russell, “Tricks, Mischief and Mayhem”
  • Christopher Elston, “Hugo: Man of a Thousand Faces”

To order a copy of the book, go to the Equilibrium site.

Posted in Books, Evil dolls, Horror, Living dolls, News | Tagged , , , | Leave a comment

Update: Vampire in the Hole

Check out this fascinating “long trailer” for $1 film The Vampire in the Hole, written and directed by Sadrac González and Sonia Escolano for Lasoga Films, which Undead Backbrain featured last month.

[youtube tqScjGWyEak]

I continue to be amazed at how good this no-budget film is looking.

Sources: Sadrac González and Sonia Escolano; Official website; Facebook page; Ravensbarrow.com. Sourced by Avery Guerra. Written by Robert Hood.

 

Posted in Film, Horror, Independent film, Trailers, Update | Tagged , , , , | Leave a comment

Backbrain Zombies Invade the Aurealis Awards

Some good news today. My story “Wasting Matilda” from Zombie Apocalypse! edited by Stephen Jones (Robinson UK and Running Press, US) has shuffled its way onto the shortlist for the Aurealis Awards, Best Horror Short Story category. For those who don’t know, the Aurealis Awards are the major speculative fiction awards for Australian genre writing — sort of the equivalent of the US Nebulas. Unlike the Nebulas, however, they are juried; in this case the Horror panel consists of three respected Aussie horror aficionados: Chuck McKenzie, Mark Smith-Briggs and Nyssa Pascoe.

For the record, the full list of shortlisted horror stories are:

  • “Take the Free Tour”, Bob Franklin, Under Stones, Affirm Press
  • “Her Gallant Needs”, Paul Haines, Sprawl, Twelfth Planet Press
  • “The Fear”, Richard Harland, Macabre: A Journey Through Australia’s Darkest Fears, Brimstone Press
  • “Wasting Matilda”, Robert Hood, Zombie Apocalypse!, Constable & Robinson Ltd
  • “Lollo”, Martin Livings, Close Encounters of the Urban Kind, Apex Publishing.

The shortlists for all the categories are available here.

For more information on the Aurealis Awards, sponsored this year by HarperVoyager — and to buy your tickets for the gala event, to be held in Sydney (the Independent Theatre, North Sydney) on 21 May — go to the AA website. Bookings are now open.

Writing “Wasting Matilda” was quite a challenge as editor Stephen Jones’ brief for the volume, while open, was rather demanding, in my case requiring a story told through HF radio transmissions — tricky when you want to ensure that it has believable dramatic immediacy. As well as fitting into a sketchy but well-thought-out over-arching back-story, the story had to fulfil certain other criteria, some easier to realise than others.  Yet it proved to be a lot of fun to write, once I found a way of dealing with the logistics, and once I settled upon some enjoyable characters (members of the Royal Flying Doctor Service), an exciting situation (zombie refugees?) and a suitable location — or, as it happened, two locations. Though the story begins in the air and at sea off the east coast of Australia it mostly takes place in a small Australian country town, Gulargambone — a real place and one I eventually felt very familiar with even though I’ve never been there. The internet — and in particular Google Maps — certainly helped in that regard. I walked the streets of Gulargambone on my desktop and then killed off the entire population, turning most of them into zombies. I hope they didn’t mind.

The final anthology — though “anthology” is an inadequate word to describe this particular novelistic collection of interrelated stories — turned out to be a great pleasure to read, cleverly molded into a relatively consistent narrative by Jones and his chosen authors. These were an exciting bunch to share the book with. I’m in there with the likes of Michael Marshall Smith, Pat Cadigan, Kim Newman, Tanith Lee, Paul McAuley, Christopher Fowler, Paul Finch and many others. Reviews have ranged from cautiously positive through to wildly enthusiastic. The developing story of the zombie apocalypse is told via assorted documents, from diary entries, blogs and official reports, through to transcriptions of radio programs and other transmissions, Tweets, letters, film scripts … you name it. These are all formatted appropriately, sometimes complete with blood stains. The result could have been fractured and alienating, but instead it works brilliantly — and is often both poignant and terrifying in its impact, with engaging characters that are right there on the firing line. I heartily recommend that you check it out.

Zombie Apocalypse! is available from Amazon UK, Amazon US and other online sellers if you can’t find it in your local book store.

Posted in Apocalypse, Books, My Writing, News, Zombies | Tagged , , , , , | 4 Comments

New: Snow Beast

Cryptozoological horror films seem to be on the ascendant right now. Fortunately we here at Undead Backbrain are amongst those who think there can’t be too many.

Over the years there have been a few Abominable Snowman or Yeti movies. Some that spring to mind are: the Americanisation of Gojira director Ishirô Honda’s rare-as-hen’s-teeth Jujin yukiotako (“Abominable Snowman”), now renamed Half Human: The Story of the Abominable Snowman (US/Japan-1958; dir. Kenneth G. Crane and Ishirô Honda); The Snow Creature (US-1954; dir. W. Lee Wilder); Man Beast (US-1956; dir. Jerry Warren); Hammer’s excellent The Abominable Snowman (UK-1957; dir. Val Guest), written by the great Nigel Kneale and starring Peter Cushing and Forrest Tucker; Snowbeast (US-1977; dir. Herb Wallerstein), which was written by Psycho screenwriter and Outer Limits producer/writer Joseph Stefano; and the ultra-low budget The Abominable Snowman (US-1996; dir. Michael J. White). You can view two of these films in their entirety on our Cinema of the Backbrain page [look under 22 March 2011].

Coming this year is Snow Beast, a new Yeti-based creature feature from SunWorld Pictures, directed by Brian Brough and starring John Schneider, Jason London and Danielle Chuchran.

Synopsis:

People disappear every year out in the snow — but this year, something is adding to the bodycount.

Jim (John Schneider) and his research team study the Canadian Lynx every winter. This year, Jim has to take his rebellious 16-year-old daughter, Emmy (Danielle Chuchran), with him. But the lynx are missing. As Jim and his team try to find why, something stalks them — a predator no prey can escape.

Though this synopsis neatly avoids mentioning the nature of the “predator”, the newly released trailer isn’t shy about giving us more than a glimpse.

Trailer:

[youtube X2otpDfQouI]

Snow Beast has clearly taken a retro approach to its nature as a  “creature feature”, eschewing CGI for a more tactile approach.  Digital enhancement, yes, but the creature itself is a man in a suit (see the image at the top of this article), which may come as something of a relief to those who think that full digital creature effects in the mid-to-low range of the budgetary scale tend to lack presence and make one nostalgic for the sort of attention to detail that such FX masters as Stan Winston brought to the creation of monsters so many times in the past.

According to SunWorld spokesperson Marie Wilcox:

Cast members performed their own stunts (including John Schneider), making for a good time on set as we threw people through the air, dragged them through snow, launched them off snow mobiles, and dropped them into snow caves.

Snow Beast was filmed in 2010 and is an upcoming SyFy channel movie. It is slated for release on DVD, digital download, VOD, etc. late 2011.  Details will be forthcoming.

Posted in Cryptozoology, Film, Horror, Monsters in general, News, Trailers | Tagged , , , , , | 7 Comments

Weekend Fright Flick: Oceaniden

Oceaniden (Denmark-2010; short [8:12 min] dir. Gorm Just)

This weekend’s Fright Flick harks from Denmark and features a particular cryptozoological favourite — a hybridisation of Man and Fish. In the past, mummified merfolk have been a standard attraction at traveling “freakshows”, though of course the weird displays oft prove to be taxidermological frauds, such as this rather spectacular one:

The main contemporary image we have of mermaids derives from the famous story by Hans Christian Anderson and has appeared in cinema in romantic comedies such as Ron Howard’s 1984 Splash!, and most famously in Disney’s 1989 animated film The Little Mermaid.

But the connection between mermaids and the Sirens of Greek mythology reminds us there is a dark side to the aquatic mythology of the “women of the sea”, which films such as Hideshi Hino’s 1988 tale of delusion and decay, Mermaid in a Manhole [aka Ginî piggu: Manhôru no naka no ningyo] and the under-appreciated She Creature (US-2001; dir. Sebastian Gutierrez) exploit to good (i.e. nasty) effect.

This weekend’s short film presents a cautionary tale that lies somewhere between the beauty and terror of mermaid folklore — veering more to one side than the other.

Check it out here.

Posted in Cryptozoology, Fantasy, Film, Horror, Weekend Fright Flick | Tagged , , , , | Leave a comment

The Age of Dragons is Here!

Once upon a time, when we first reported on it, Age of Dragons was called Dragon Fire (see previous Backbrain article). Based on Herman Melville’s novel Moby Dick, it translates the 19th Century setting of the novel into a land-based fantastical world and the Great White Whale becomes a huge white dragon — the key obsession of Captain Ahab, as in the original, though here Ahab (played by Danny Glover) is a dragon hunter rather than a whaler. To read about how it was developing in May last year, check of the update on Undead Brainspasm.

Since then a full official trailer has been released — and it’s looking much better than I’d hoped.

Age of the Dragons (US-2011; dir. Ryan Little)

Final Trailer:

Synopsis:

Imagine an ancient world where the sky can turn into an unpredictable and ruthless enemy. A world lit by a precious liquid [vitriol] only found in the throat of dangerous predators. In this world of snow and fog, a small band of adventurers and hunters embark on a journey led by a tortured Captain consumed by his obsession with revenge. As they struggle to stay alive across the cold forbidden lands, they will build true friendship, lose loved ones, and fight brutal creatures until truth is unraveled and vengeance is served. (Official website)

And here’s the latest poster:

Age of Dragons poster

  • Danny Glover is Captain Ahab (above) — the Captain of the Pequod, driven by a maniacal desire to kill the great white dragon that maimed and killed his loved ones earlier in his life.
  • Vinnie Jones is Stubbs — second mate of the Pequod.
  • Corey Sevier is Ishmael — an adventurer and a poet.
  • Sofia Pernas is Rachel — adopted as a child by Ahab after her father was killed by the Great White Dragon, now a skilled and fearless hunter.
  • Kepa Kruse is Queequeg — a skilled harpoonist from the South Seas and a close friend of Ishmael.
  • Larry Bagby is Flask — an extractor, trained in the dangerous art of surgically removing the sacks of vitriol from the dragon’s throat.
  • David Morgan is Starbuck — chief-mate of the Pequod.

And this is the Pequod — a “land-ship”.

Concept Art by Kory Lynn Hubbell:

There are many more images in the Gallery below. Check them out.

Gallery:

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Exclusive: The Flock

The Flock has moved into a landing pattern.

Back in 2009 we reported on Undead Brainspasm that Don Murphy, producer of Transformers, Natural Born Killers and From Hell, was led to James Robert Smith’s novel The Flock in reaction to Smith’s criticisms of the film version of From Hell on comic artist Eddie Campbell’s blog, ready to slam it as junk — and found he loved the novel so much he bought the film rights. The novel is a skewed take on a Jurassic Park-type scenario, in which “a group of highly intelligent giant prehistoric birds discovered in the Florida Everglades … are intent on protecting their ancient home when faced with encroachment by theme park developers” (Hollywood Reporter). The giant birds are called Phorusrhacids in paleontological circles. Here’s one, horsing around with an early member of the family Equidae:

(Image source)

Of The Flock the enamoured Murphy said:

“Take one part Seventies disaster film, one part modern day environmental crisis and mix them well with some good old-fashioned state of the art action and you have THE FLOCK, an exciting, all too real adventure that you need to read immediately. I can’t wait for the sequel!” (Source)

You can check it out on Amazon.

Believing that the novel would make a terrific high-concept “summer tentpole” movie, Murphy and Smith have been working to drag The Flock out of the huge swampland of optioned works on which Hollywood floats and turn it into an actual in-production project [hmmm, I think this metaphor is rather at odds with the one I began with. Oh well.].

Well, now James Robert Smith has revealed to Undead Backbrain that the film has a scriptwriter, who has been working away at it for a while. He said:

The screenplay is finished and all that are involved with this project are very happy with it. (Nope, I haven’t seen it myself yet.) It’s by Travis Milloy, who wrote the recent SF-horror film Pandorum.

Currently there is also a short list of directors being considered to helm The Flock, and although I’m not at liberty to release their names, I’m very impressed with the line-up. They’re all very well-known directors. So we’re closing in! I’ll be sure to keep you updated as I’m able and as the project progresses.

So The Flock may be still in development, but it’s progressed quite a few steps further along the bird run. If it keeps going on along this path, and proves a success, we’re all set for the sequel; Smith’s follow-up to the first novel, titled The Clan, is due out in 2012.

Meanwhile, here’s some portraits of the titular monsters, drawn by Mark Masztal. Masztal worked at Tundra Publishing “back in the day”. Now he freelances.

Smith says he has also already pitched the third and final book in his “cryptozoological cycle”, The Tribe — the first of which was of course The Flock and the second, presumably, The Clan. Smith’s latest novel, The Living End, is, however, an apocalyptic zombie story that just came out from Severed Press. Given the still-current popularity of the genre maybe this one will be optioned, too.

Source: James Robert Smith via Cinecryptozoologist Extraordinaire Avery Guerra. Written by Robert Hood.

Posted in Dinosaurs, Giant Monsters, Monsters in general, News, Undead Brainspasm, Update | Tagged , , , | 5 Comments

Announcement: Evangelion Competition

The Backbrain is happy to announcement that the randomly chosen winner of the Evangelion Competition (see here for details) is:

Gitte Christensen

Congratulations, Gitte. The new region-B Blu-ray of Evangelion 1.11: You Are [Not] Alone will be heading your way first thing on Monday, courtesy of Madman Entertainment and Undead Backbrain.

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Pacific Rim: Godzilla By Any Other Name?

So by now everyone and their dog knows that Guillermo del Toro’s pet project, a big-budget version of H.P. Lovecraft’s At the Mountains of Madness, isn’t going to fly. Universal has gone all whimpy in regards to it, dumping it from their schedule because R-rated horror films don’t traditionally bring in the bucks they’d need to make a decent profit on a US$150 million release. Of course that R-rating is the US “R”, which is the Australian MA+, and contrary to what some have assumed, Del Toro’s project was likely to earn that rating not because it’s full of sex and gratuitous violence, but because (in the words of the man himself) it would be “too intense”.  Never mind that other extremely “intense” semi-SF horror films have become huge sellers, especially on DVD — Alien, Aliens and Predator spring to mind — spawning franchises and ongoing mega-sales. Never mind that the film had everything except budgetary conservatism going for it. Never mind that Universal had previously approved of the script, thus wasting the time Del Toro has spent in development and causing him to back away from directing one of The Hobbit films. Never mind the (admittedly single sector) internet ecstasy that’s been raging over the project.  It’s gone! Kaput!

Of course, one has to concede that the lilly-livered execs and their artistically astute accountants have a point. The odds of Del Toro’s At the Mountains of Madness being a mega-blockbuster during its cinema run are dazzlingly remote, for lots of reasons. But let’s face it, the studio hasn’t been very successful in its “conservative” choices of late, losing heaps of money on films that not only performed badly but which have zero ongoing cult value. So maybe an “intense” SF-horror film from one of the world’s most prestigious filmmakers — one with a track record of excellence in fantasy who is so enthused by the project that he managed to drag in the likes of James Cameron as a fellow believer — should be given a chance.

[Cue excuse for a Godzilla picture, perhaps this one — the cover for issue 1 of Dark Horse’s Godzilla King of the Monsters comic by Bob Eggleton. Bear with me. It will become relevant.]

Not that I want to talk about the stupidity of Universal’s lack of gumption. It’s too frustrating. What the tragic removal of At the Mountains of Madness from Del Toro’s current To Do list has meant, however, is that he has agreed to direct Legendary Picture’s Pacific Rim, a project that has been slithering around in a vaguely seductive manner for some time now. If you haven’t heard of it, or if you have but don’t know what it’s about apart from the fact that it’s got giant monsters in it, take a look at this newly released synopsis, courtesy of News in Film, apparently based on their sighting of writer Travis Beacham’s screenplay:

They say that the project will give the Hellboy filmmaker the opportunity to create two worlds:

The first is an alternate version of Earth in the near future, decades after a historic date in November 2012 when the first kaiju, a towering Godzilla-like beast, emerged from a hole in the Pacific Ocean and attacked the city of Osaka, Japan. The second is “The Anteverse,” another universe on the other side of that gaping portal, 5 miles below our ocean’s surface.

Since the first attack, the rim has been “spitting out” a variety of gigantic monsters at an increasing rate, which then stride out of the ocean and begin destroying sea-bordering cities, like Tokyo and Los Angeles. In order to combat these monstrous, otherworldly menaces, the military developed the “Jaeger” program, which trains teams of two pilots to jointly operate massive, building-sized mechanized suits of armor and high-tech weaponry.

Within the first act alone, we are given enough detailed background on the god-like Jaeger systems, its shared neural piloting system (called “pons”), and the relentless beasts. But Beacham is an absolute master at immediately establishing characters and their conflicts.

The central character is Raleigh Antrobus, 23, a skilled Jaeger pilot still wrestling emotionally with the loss of his co-pilot and biological brother, Yance, during a mission a year earlier. The ordeal has wreaked havoc on his mind spirit, leaving him with ghostly nightmares of the battle from the shared “pons” experience. After the initial setup, the damaged hero is recruited to re-join the task force in Tokyo, where pilots are in demand, and team with a fellow “leftover,” 22-year-old female Japanese pilot Mako Mori. Naturally, the language barrier (among other things) presents an issue for the out-of-sync duo, meaning an even steeper learning curve for the unprecedented pairing.

Meanwhile, Felicity “Flick” Kincaid, a journalist and Yance’s former fiancée, circles the globe (ours) to discover answers about this mysterious rift and the origins of its intensifying threat.

It certainly sounds Godzilla-like. Interesting, given the fact that the same studio is currently in production with an actual Godzilla film, under the directorial expertise of Gareth Edwards (Monsters), due for release in 2012.

Could this be another Age of Giant Monsters?

Source: News in Film via Movieweb

Posted in Daikaiju, Film, Giant Monsters, Idle Thoughts, News | Tagged , , , | 4 Comments