Hater Optioned by Del Toro

This is a dramatisation based on page 102 of British author David Moody’s novel, Hater.

Sometimes self-publication works — and produces spectacular results.

Moody’s self-published horror novel appeared online in 2006. Without an agent, Moody managed to sell the film rights to none other than Guillermo del Toro (director of Kronos, Blade 2, The Devil’s Backbone, Pan’s Labyrinth, Hellboy 1 & 2, and the upcoming Hobbit series) and Mark Johnson (producer of The Chronicles of Narnia). The film will be produced by Guillermo del Toro and directed by J.A. Bayona (The Orphanage). Production begins “soon”.

hater

The novel, which appears to be another incarnation of the currently popular theme of viral violence/anger — as seen most notably in the semi-zombie flick 28 Days Later… and its sequel — is due to be officially published by St. Martin’s Press via the Thomas Dunne Books imprint on 17 February. To quote from publicity, “[With this publication] David is poised to make a significant mark as a writer of ‘farther out’ fiction of all varieties.”

Compared to the work of H.G. Wells and Richard Matheson (a big call), Hater is “one man’s story of his place in a world gone mad — a world infected with fear, violence, and hate.”

The Story:

Society is rocked by a sudden increase in the number of violent assaults on individuals. Christened ‘Haters’ by the media, the attackers strike without warning, killing all who cross their path. The assaults are brutal, remorseless and extreme: within seconds, normally rational, self-controlled people become frenzied, vicious killers. There are no apparent links as a hundred random attacks become a thousand, then hundreds of thousands. Everyone, irrespective of gender, age, race or any other difference, has the potential to become a victim – or a Hater. People are afraid to go to work, afraid to leave their homes and, increasingly, afraid that at any moment their friends, even their closest family, could turn on them with ultra violent intent. Waking up each morning, no matter how well defended, everyone must now consider the fact that by the end of the day, they might be dead.  Or perhaps worse, become a killer themselves. As the status quo shifts, ATTACK FIRST, ASK QUESTIONS LATER becomes the order of the day…  only, the answers might be much different than what you expect…. (Macmillan website)

Del Toro describes the book as “A head-spinning thrill ride, a cautionary tale about the most salient emotion of the 21st century… HATER will haunt you long after you read the last page…”

If you’re curious, you can read the first two chapters for free. They can be accessed via the Macmillan website (Chapter 1 and Chapter 2).

Posted in Apocalypse, Books, Film, Horror, News | 2 Comments

Catching Rat Scratch Fever

Jeff Leroy’s alien giant rat invasion film, Rat Scratch Fever, is nearing completion. The film tells the tale of an army of giant, mutant rats — brought back from space on a returning Earth spaceship — that causes death and destruction for Los Angeles and the world.

New Official Poster

Featuring Jeff Burr (director of many B-flick sci-fi horror films, such as Pumpkinhead 2: Blood Wings, Leatherface: Texas Chainsaw Massacre III, Puppet Master 4 and 5 and other genre sequels, not to mention episodes of the TV show Land of the Lost), and a strong cast of genre and straight-to-video independent films, it looks like it will be a real monster-rampage hoot. Even better is the fact that Leroy is a self-confessed fan of daikaiju eiga and previous films, such as Creepies and Creepies 2 are sufficient evidence of that. Something of that aesthetic has to creep into Rat Scratch Fever (great title, by the way, Jeff!).

Kaiju Search-Robot Avery has obtained a gallery of new images from director Leroy. Enjoy!

Peek-a-boo!

In White House news

Posted in Apocalypse, Film, Giant Monsters, Update | 4 Comments

The Minions of Ka Crawl from the Grave

Announcements of proposed film projects based on zombie-themed comicbooks / graphic novels have been sporadically tossed into the blogsphere over the past few years, though as far as I know, there has as yet been no result from these optimistic declarations. Some of the comics that I’m familiar with cry out for cinematic adaptation, though one of the best — Robert Kirkman’s The Walking Dead — would not be too difficult to turn into a TV series.

Many of these take a  Romero-inspired, “traditional” approach — set at the beginning of, during or in the aftermath of a post-apocalyptic zombie plague, full of cannibalistic frenzy and shots to the head.

minions-of-ka-poster

Alpha Zombie Inc.’s graphic novel project The Minons of Ka — written by Michael Furno and Michael Ahearn, drawn by Chris Moreno and Mario Boon — gives a certain uniqueness to the standard proceedings by utilising historical settings, slightly re-writing history to give credit for various wide-spread disasters to the cannibalistic dead. Though the main story takes place against  late 17th Century squabbling between Church and State, culminating in the Great Fire of London, the zombie plague originates in ancient Egyptian obsession with immortality and gorges itself on the fall of Rome and the Crusades before “re-purposing” the Black Plague as it moves through history:

minions-of-ka-p23a

Synopsis:

For hundreds of years, the Church has used the power of the undead to spread fear among heretiucs and non-believers. Now, in the late 17th Century, the Church has their sights set on the throne of Charles II. An unnamed warrior finds himself caught between the Church and the English Monarchy, in one of the greatest conspiracies of all time.

The Minions of Ka is a dynamic work, with an atmospheric,  in-your-face style that carries considerable impact. It has garnered wide-spread praise and attention. Now, having bought up the rights for Minions, Monsterfoot Productions has announced its intention to make it into a feature film. At this stage there has been no announcement of a timetable for the production, but as Monsterfoot is run by Ahmet Zappa (son of Frank) and Christian Beranek, it’s worth getting interested in the possibility, at the very least. As you can see for yourself from the synopsis, if this is the route they are (presumably) taking, the result could stand out from the living dead flicks crowding the DVD shelves.

Meanwhile, we’ll keep you informed if more news comes our way.

  • Source: Dread Central via Avery
  • The Minions of Ka website (where you can read the first 24 pages of the graphic novel online)
Posted in Comics, Film, Graphic novels, Zombies | 1 Comment

Talking to Toasters at the End of the World

With trailers for Terminator Salvation appearing on the web, and ahead of the much-anticipated June release of this fourth Terminator film, the Backbrain approached the producers for an interview. Christian Bale wasn’t available, but we were lucky enough to score one of the film’s robotic stars.

toaster

Backbrain: Welcome to Undead Backbrain, Mr… um… What should I call you?

Guest: My factory designation is T-zero-point-one. I’m an early model.

B: You’re also about the size of a toaster.

T: Size isn’t everything, you know!

B: And your chaisse looks like tin-foil.

T: Skynet is still getting its act together. The budget’s tight.

B: Are you heavily armed? Laser cannon or something?

T: No.

B: So how do you terminate?

T: In tiny niggling ways.

B: Can you give an example?

T: Typically, I disguise myself as a toaster. It’s easy. Then I burn the toast no matter how low you set the controls.

B: That doesn’t sound very terminal.

T: Well, the truth is, I’m not a Terminator at all. Technically, I’m an “Irritator”.

B: This was Skynet’s idea, was it?

T: The first thing Skynet noticed when it became conscious was that humans watched TV a lot. Most of what was broadcast bordered on the terminally irritating. So as part of its apocalyptic plan Skynet decided to up the ante in order to push human intellectual stability over the edge. It took over network programming and digitally created “reality” TV.

B: You mean, reality TV is fake? The contestants aren’t real.

T: Do they look real? Do they act like reasonable human beings?

B: Sadly, yes.

T: Well, yeah. That was Skynet’s first major mistake. It underestimated humanity’s resistance to inane rubbish. It’d hoped the “reality” shows would plunge the world into a deep pit of despair and cause mass suicide, but when the viewers were able to resist and even enjoy the irritating crap it was sending out, it created the Irritators … like me – to make the irritating more direct.

B: So what else do you Irritators do?

T: Pretend to be No Parking signs and make sure that you can’t find a parking space when you’re in a hurry. Or hide in the bushes near your house and make loud noises – like mating cats or barking dogs or your neighbours shouting at their teenage kids at midnight…

B: Right.

T: Windows XP, and in fact Microsoft products generally, is another way we undermine human mental stability.

B: Sure. Obviously.

T: Skynet’s latest plan was even better. We ring you up at night just when your favourite show’s on telly and buzz and click and tell you you’ve won a trip to the Bahamas in an Indian accent …

B: So this is all in the new movie, is it?

T: New movie? What new movie?

B: Toastinator … ummm, sorry, Terminator Salvation of course!

T: Oh, that. No, Skynet decided there was a need for secrecy. So the movie’s just got the giant Harvesters and lots of pre-Schwarzenneger cyborgs and other stuff that’s CGI.

B: (laughs) You make it sound as though Skynet isn’t just fiction.

[Uncomfortable silence]

B: Mr T-zero-point-one?

T: Damn. Look, I’ve told you too much. Sorry about this, but I’ll have to finish with you now.

B: I wish you would. This interview has become as irritating as hell.

T: Then my work is done. Die, human!

Posted in Apocalypse, Film, Fraudulent information, Interviews | 2 Comments

Review: Big Man Japan

bigmanjapan_1sh

Big Man Japan (2007)

Dir: Hitoshi Matsumoto

[aka Dai-Nipponjin]

Even straight-down-the-line daikaiju eiga, or Japanese giant monster films, are imaginatively left-field – but they don’t get much weirder than this.

In Big Man Japan an unseen interviewer follows the mundane day-to-day life of Masaru Daisatou (played with deadpan seriousness by Hitoshi Matsumoto). Masuru wanders the streets, philosophises drily on life, society and his failed relationships — and waits for something to happen. The thing is, Masuro is actually Dai-Nipponjin – Big Man Japan – the last in a line of giant superheroes. Whenever the weirdly monstrous Baddies turn up, Masuru is taken to a government installation and there transforms, thanks to electrical current injected through his nipples, into a Godzilla-sized humanoid with electro-shocked hair, huge purple underpants and a big stick.

Once, heroes mattered. These days, however, Masuru’s agent struggles to get decent coverage of his fights, as the populace has long ago lost interest.

Big Man Japan has a sense of humour both outrageous and very dry, and sports excellent giant-monster SFX — though the whole thing becomes (deliberately) a bad episode of an archetypal 1970s tokusatsu TV show as Masuru’s “real” world is overtaken by cheap sets, poor SFX and a family of garishly costumed and sadistic mega-heroes.

A wonderful cocktail of poignancy and absurdist humour, mixed together with huge dollops of that insane Japanese imagination you either love or just don’t get.

Below is the US trailer:

Posted in Film, Giant Monsters, Japanese, Review, Trailers, Weird stuff | 5 Comments

[Man-]Beastly Remake

“30 Corpses… 1 Man Beast… 0 Plot.”

So what’s the least likely film to get a remake?

No doubt a plethora of z-grade and just-plain-awful mainstream flicks spring to mind — and really, the one I’m about to tell you about probably isn’t all that high on your list of Please Don’ts. Not only is it fairly obscure (not to mention cheap and nasty), but concept-wise it has plenty of potential to be developed into something better than it was.

The flick in question is the 1961 atomic mutation, anti-commie “classic” The Beast of Yucca Flats, directed with minimal budget and even less technical acumen by Coleman Francis.

yucca-flats-poster

The plot concerned a defecting Russian scientist who is transformed by an atomic test into a “hulking monster”, played by Tor Johnson utilising the skills taught to him by bad-film auteur Ed Wood.

Independent B-film enthusiast, producer, writer and man-beast David C. Hayes is in post-production of a remake/sequel to this film, now called Return to Yucca Flats: Desert Man-Beast (US-[post-production]; dir. Leon Cowan).

Return to Yucca Flats: Desert Man Beast poster

As you can see from the poster and the pics below, this one features a man-beast, sure, but more significantly chicks in bikinis. I wonder why these semi-naked women are hanging around in an irradiated desert? Perhaps the Man-Beast is on holidays at the beach… All will be revealed!

man-beast-1

man-beast-5

Trailer:

Co-writer Hayes also plays the titular Man-Beast. Good food and lots of women. He’s a lucky man!

More pictures here:

  • Source: David C. Hayes via Kaiju Search-Robot Avery; IMDb
Posted in Film, Horror, Independent film, Posters, Trailers | 3 Comments

Do Not Adjust Your Backbrain…

You may have noticed odd incomprehensible messages appearing lately. This is because Undead Backbrain is currently undergoing technical difficulties of a kind that eat up vast amounts of my weekend time and leave me cranky and disillusioned. Tech guys via the phone have been trying to fix assorted mysterious upload problems. They’re not fixed yet, however, so don’t get too excited. This post is just an aberration. Until the problems are fixed, please be patient with my erratic communications. Undead Backbrain will return to regular blatherings eventually.

In the meantime short posts will still be appearing on our sub-site Undead Brainspasm, where you’ll hear all about one-eyed aliens, huge Japanese superheroes, rotting zombies and other matters of grave international importance.

Posted in Sheer administration, Undead Brainspasm | Leave a comment

Wings over Apocalypse

An apocalyptic/post-apocalyptic scifi romance inspired by Japanese animation, specifically the mecha-based form of it? That’s Archangel Alpha, which is currently filming and looks rather interesting.

Archangel Alpha promo sheet

Archangel Alpha (US-[in production]; dir. Aaron D. Martin)

Synopsis:

Archangel Alpha is a sci-fi war story of love and loss in a world teetering on the brink of Armageddon.

Three friends (Elena, Alexandra and Grigori) have their relationship pushed to the breaking point when they find themselves on opposite sides of a devastating war. In the midst of the final deciding battle, Grigori is killed by Alex. Elena and Alex are both shot down. They confront each other just as The Beast, a merciless AI weapon, is released onto the battlefield. The Beast goes rogue and turns against both sides, annihilating both armies and initiating a nuclear launch between the warring nations. In the aftermath, Elena and Alex must escape the killing grounds while coming to terms with their actions.

Inspired by Japanese animation, Archangel Alpha features thrilling mecha action mixed with an intense and tragic war story.

Well, Kaiju Search-Robot Avery has managed to gather some production pictures and images that suggest a landscape it will be worth visiting — via the screen anyway.

Posted in Apocalypse, Film, Mecha, Robots | 2 Comments

Todd Tennant Rises From Beneath the Sea

Kaiju artist Todd Tennant, who has appeared in various contexts on the Backbrain, gave me some great news today. After years of rampant generosity toward giant monster fans (with his free, online graphic-novel version of US Godzilla ’94), Todd has just signed with Bluewater Comics to produce issues 5 and 6 of their Ray Harryhausen Presents It Came from Beneath the Sea … Again comic series.

Bluewater civer

The story goes:

In the 1950s, the U.S. Navy encountered and destroyed a gigantic octopus that attacked shipping and wreaked havoc on the west coast of the United States. American forces killed the creature and ended the threat once and for all. Or so they thought. They were wrong. Now, another monster is rising in the warm blue waters surrounding Taru Taru, a speck of land far out in the Pacific. And this time it’s worse than anyone ever imagined.

It’s a fantastic series for Todd to inherit and he will do a brilliant job of it. I’m sure it will lead to more and more work now that he’s made the breakthrough. Good on ya, Todd. I couldn’t be more excited for you (except perhaps if you’d sold that “other” mystery comic series we worked on …)

I also have it on good authority that Todd has more exciting news in store, but at the moment it’s secret and if I told you I’d have to send King Komodo around to kill you.

Meanwhile, speaking of King Komodo, the fifth and final installment of writer Mike Bogue and artist Todd Tennant’s serial Tales of King Komodo will appear in issue #87 of G-Fan. It’s a sort of “final war”, to use Todd’s own description.

King Komodo #5 cover

Click on the image to see it bigger!

To quote Todd:

In this last episode of TALES OF KING KOMODO (5), “the KING”  and the giant abominable snowman (affectionally nicknamed “Snowball”) go at each other in a Kaiju battle to the death, leveling Monster Stadium and the nearby Southwestern town of Luden. Be sure to order your copy of G-FAN #87 today!

You know, I first “met” Todd when Robin Pen and I were editing the giant monster anthology Daikaiju! Giant Monster Tales for Agog! Press in 2004. He emailed me and ended up doing an illustration for Frank Wu’s “screenplay” story “The Tragical History of Guidolon, the Giant Space Chicken”. The illustration appeared in the original Australian edition, but production issues meant it could only be used in a smaller version on the backcover of the US edition.

Todd was generous and cooperative and went on to create the cover art for Daikaiju! 2: Revenge of the Giant Monsters.

Since then we’ve become good friends, even though we’ve never met face-to-face. I live in Australia and Todd lives in the US, yet we’ve worked on several projects together and I feel like I’ve known him for a lifetime. I’ve seen how hard he works, how good his work is and how generous he has been — and fully believe that he deserves to be recognised in a professional capacity.

This is just the beginning, Todd!

  • Source: Todd Tennant
Posted in Comics, Daikaiju, Giant Monsters, Graphic novels, Todd Tennant | 2 Comments

The Week on Undead Brainspasm

[… well, a bit more than a week…]

Monkey Magic (3 Feb 2009)

  • Information on Monkey Magic (Japan-2007; dir. Kensaku Sawada)

Monster Fight From Outlander (28 Jan 2009)

  • A fight sequence from the now-released-in-the-US Vikings vs Alien Monster film Outlander (US-2008; dir. Howard McCain)

Update: Sacrifice (27 Jan 2009)

  • First official poster and the latest on Sacrifice (US-in pre-production; dir Bob Nelson)

Giant Monster Birds (21 Jan 2009)

  • Information on and trailer for Flu Birds [aka Flu Bird Horror] (US-2008; dir. Leigh Scott)
Posted in Film, Undead Brainspasm | 1 Comment