Whether it's The Halloween Tree or The October Country or Something Wicked This Way Comes, autumn is a wonderful time to read (or reread) Ray Bradbury's classic works. It's an especially perfect time of year, then, for Fantagraphics to publish Home to Stay!: The Complete Ray Bradbury EC Stories (featuring 28 Bradbury stories adapted by EC Comics in the 1950s), and we've been provided with "The Handler" story for Daily Dead readers to enjoy in its entirety ahead of the collection's October 18th publication!
Based on Bradbury's short story of the same name that was published in the 1947 collection Dark Carnival, "The Handler" (with artwork by Graham Ingels and a script by Al Feldstein) can be read in its entirety below!
We also have the official press release with additional details, and to learn more about Home to Stay!: The Complete Ray Bradbury EC Stories, visit:
https://www.
Based on Bradbury's short story of the same name that was published in the 1947 collection Dark Carnival, "The Handler" (with artwork by Graham Ingels and a script by Al Feldstein) can be read in its entirety below!
We also have the official press release with additional details, and to learn more about Home to Stay!: The Complete Ray Bradbury EC Stories, visit:
https://www.
- 10/17/2022
- by Derek Anderson
- DailyDead
In today’s news that I’m almost positive you didn’t see coming, Deadline has revealed that Rob Schneider is developing a sequel to The Animal for Tubi.
The original film was released over twenty years ago and found Rob Scheider playing Marvin Mange, a police station evidence clerk who is critically injured and put back together by a mad scientist who gives him animal parts in a transplant procedure, resulting in strange changes to his behaviour. The Animal sequel will once again star Rob Scheider as Marvin, who is now an old dog who needs to learn new tricks as he hunts down a new uber-animal with powers far beyond his own. Deadline hears that Marvin will get into yet another accident and will have to be put together yet again with new animal parts. In addition to starring in the sequel, Rob Schneider will also direct, produce,...
The original film was released over twenty years ago and found Rob Scheider playing Marvin Mange, a police station evidence clerk who is critically injured and put back together by a mad scientist who gives him animal parts in a transplant procedure, resulting in strange changes to his behaviour. The Animal sequel will once again star Rob Scheider as Marvin, who is now an old dog who needs to learn new tricks as he hunts down a new uber-animal with powers far beyond his own. Deadline hears that Marvin will get into yet another accident and will have to be put together yet again with new animal parts. In addition to starring in the sequel, Rob Schneider will also direct, produce,...
- 10/4/2022
- by Kevin Fraser
- JoBlo.com
Click here to read the full article.
As the Toronto Film Festival marks a big post-pandemic return to the physical realm with something almost normal for its 47th edition, the biggest sighs of relief may well come from local Canadian filmmakers and premiere party organizers.
“You cannot launch a festival film digitally. You need to build up hype in person. You need to meet people in person to be able to forge relationships to launch your film,” Markhor Pictures producer Shehrezade Mian, who is launching Antoine Bourges’ Concrete Valley immigrant drama in Toronto as part of the Wavelengths sidebar, told The Hollywood Reporter.
Mian insists fellow filmmakers who screened their films at scaled-down Toronto festivals in 2020 and 2021 had their launch plans undermined by play on digital platforms. “The buzz this year is so much more hyped and so much more intense,” she added.
Director Kelly Fyffe-Marshall, who is bringing her...
As the Toronto Film Festival marks a big post-pandemic return to the physical realm with something almost normal for its 47th edition, the biggest sighs of relief may well come from local Canadian filmmakers and premiere party organizers.
“You cannot launch a festival film digitally. You need to build up hype in person. You need to meet people in person to be able to forge relationships to launch your film,” Markhor Pictures producer Shehrezade Mian, who is launching Antoine Bourges’ Concrete Valley immigrant drama in Toronto as part of the Wavelengths sidebar, told The Hollywood Reporter.
Mian insists fellow filmmakers who screened their films at scaled-down Toronto festivals in 2020 and 2021 had their launch plans undermined by play on digital platforms. “The buzz this year is so much more hyped and so much more intense,” she added.
Director Kelly Fyffe-Marshall, who is bringing her...
- 9/11/2022
- by Etan Vlessing
- The Hollywood Reporter - Movie News
Kino Lorber has released three Barbara Stanwyck films in a boxed set collection. Here is the official announcement:
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This collection feature three classic films starring screen legend Barbara Stanwyck:
Internes Can’T Take Money (1937) – Young Dr. James Kildare, interning at a clinic, falls for his patient Janet Haley. The feeling is mutual, but Janet has a secret she will not divulge: She’s the widow of a bank robber who hid their daughter before he died and she is desperately trying to find the little girl. She will use anyone—including Dr. Kildare—to get her child back. The doctor’s association with gangster Hanlon, whose injuries Kildare secretly patched up, and Janet’s connection with gangster Innes (Stanley Ridges, Black Friday), who’s helping her find her daughter, bring it all to a rousing head filled with action, suspense and the unexpected!
Normal 0 false false false En-us X-none X-none
This collection feature three classic films starring screen legend Barbara Stanwyck:
Internes Can’T Take Money (1937) – Young Dr. James Kildare, interning at a clinic, falls for his patient Janet Haley. The feeling is mutual, but Janet has a secret she will not divulge: She’s the widow of a bank robber who hid their daughter before he died and she is desperately trying to find the little girl. She will use anyone—including Dr. Kildare—to get her child back. The doctor’s association with gangster Hanlon, whose injuries Kildare secretly patched up, and Janet’s connection with gangster Innes (Stanley Ridges, Black Friday), who’s helping her find her daughter, bring it all to a rousing head filled with action, suspense and the unexpected!
- 8/12/2020
- by nospam@example.com (Cinema Retro)
- Cinemaretro.com
By John M. Whalen
Kino Lorber has released “Singing Guns” (1950), a Republic Pictures “singing cowboy” western filmed in Trucolor. The film is based on a western novel by Max Brand, and is pretty unremarkable except for the fact that the cowboy anti-hero, Rhiannon, an outlaw with a long bushy beard who has been robbing stagecoaches to the tune of over a $1 million, isn’t played by Roy, or Gene Autry, Rocky Lane Rex Allen, or any of the other western stars in Republic’s stable. Rhiannon, is played by a popular singer from that era named Vaughn Monroe.
I remember Vaughn Monroe when I was a kid. I used to hear him singing “Racing with the Moon,” on the radio. He had a rich baritone voice and my mother would turn up the radio every time it came on and sort of stare out into space with a funny look in her eyes.
Kino Lorber has released “Singing Guns” (1950), a Republic Pictures “singing cowboy” western filmed in Trucolor. The film is based on a western novel by Max Brand, and is pretty unremarkable except for the fact that the cowboy anti-hero, Rhiannon, an outlaw with a long bushy beard who has been robbing stagecoaches to the tune of over a $1 million, isn’t played by Roy, or Gene Autry, Rocky Lane Rex Allen, or any of the other western stars in Republic’s stable. Rhiannon, is played by a popular singer from that era named Vaughn Monroe.
I remember Vaughn Monroe when I was a kid. I used to hear him singing “Racing with the Moon,” on the radio. He had a rich baritone voice and my mother would turn up the radio every time it came on and sort of stare out into space with a funny look in her eyes.
- 9/16/2018
- by nospam@example.com (Cinema Retro)
- Cinemaretro.com
In a world where the internet is hit with information dumps, whether they be interviews, convention panels or six-minute trailers, on a regular basis, we have become used to knowing vast chunks, if not the entirety of plots before ever seeing the most hotly anticipated blockbusters. Avengers: Age of Ultron made more sense in the multiple trailers I saw on YouTube than it did in theaters.
With Star Wars: The Force Awakens, however, we have been given very little. What trailers we have seen show mere snapshots, with almost nothing that allows the audience to tether them together. Any information we have has been carefully selected and told to us. Recently we saw a few seconds of new footage showcasing John Boyega wielding a light saber. Everybody went insane. Meanwhile, we learned the “lineup” of the upcoming Marvel Civil War, and nobody could care less. Disney has us on...
With Star Wars: The Force Awakens, however, we have been given very little. What trailers we have seen show mere snapshots, with almost nothing that allows the audience to tether them together. Any information we have has been carefully selected and told to us. Recently we saw a few seconds of new footage showcasing John Boyega wielding a light saber. Everybody went insane. Meanwhile, we learned the “lineup” of the upcoming Marvel Civil War, and nobody could care less. Disney has us on...
- 9/2/2015
- by Jason Kwasnicki
- AreYouScreening.com
In his THR recap, the comics veteran writes that the show has become "choppy and unsatisfying at best. Irritating at worst."
Jim Steranko, one of the creators of the Nick Fury character, recaps Agents of Shield for THR's Heat Vision every week. Read more about the Marvel Comics writer-artist in a Q&A here.
“I can do everything better in a Brooks Brothers suit!” is the line I wish would have been delivered by Clark Gregg's Coulson in "The Hub," Number Seven in the ongoing, narcoleptic Shield series. Not that it would have articulated the purpose, the intent, the perspective of the show, but at least it may have provided some insight (from a skewed Lmd viewpoint) as to why Coulson is no slave to efficiency or logic when he wears a suit into a tropic jungle or a 30-degree below zero Siberian environment. Would you even trust this...
Jim Steranko, one of the creators of the Nick Fury character, recaps Agents of Shield for THR's Heat Vision every week. Read more about the Marvel Comics writer-artist in a Q&A here.
“I can do everything better in a Brooks Brothers suit!” is the line I wish would have been delivered by Clark Gregg's Coulson in "The Hub," Number Seven in the ongoing, narcoleptic Shield series. Not that it would have articulated the purpose, the intent, the perspective of the show, but at least it may have provided some insight (from a skewed Lmd viewpoint) as to why Coulson is no slave to efficiency or logic when he wears a suit into a tropic jungle or a 30-degree below zero Siberian environment. Would you even trust this...
- 11/13/2013
- by Jim Steranko
- The Hollywood Reporter - Movie News
August 30, 2013
CBS Radio Workshop Volume 4 The CBS Radio Workshop debuted at the end of the Age of Classic Radio, which was a time of innovation and experimentation, especially in terms of radio drama. The ten-hour Volume 4 includes “All Is Bright”, a history of the famous Christmas song; “1489 Words”, which featured the debut of later film composer Jerry Goldsmith’s “The Thunder of Imperial Names”, which was written for a concert band and was based on a text piece by Thomas Wolfe; a two-part adaptation of Frederick Pohl and Cyril M. Cornbluth’s The Space Merchants, which offers a satirical look at rampant consumerism from the viewpoint of an advertising executive; Archibald MacLeish’s “Air Raid”, the series’ only re-broadcast, which had first been written for the 1938 Columbia Workshop. Aired during the Cold War era, it took on a sinister new meaning; Henry Fritch’s “The Endless Road”, about a road...
CBS Radio Workshop Volume 4 The CBS Radio Workshop debuted at the end of the Age of Classic Radio, which was a time of innovation and experimentation, especially in terms of radio drama. The ten-hour Volume 4 includes “All Is Bright”, a history of the famous Christmas song; “1489 Words”, which featured the debut of later film composer Jerry Goldsmith’s “The Thunder of Imperial Names”, which was written for a concert band and was based on a text piece by Thomas Wolfe; a two-part adaptation of Frederick Pohl and Cyril M. Cornbluth’s The Space Merchants, which offers a satirical look at rampant consumerism from the viewpoint of an advertising executive; Archibald MacLeish’s “Air Raid”, the series’ only re-broadcast, which had first been written for the 1938 Columbia Workshop. Aired during the Cold War era, it took on a sinister new meaning; Henry Fritch’s “The Endless Road”, about a road...
- 9/4/2013
- by Glenn Hauman
- Comicmix.com
Los Angeles, June 15: Actor Gerard Butler is reportedly no longer in a relationship with Romanian model Madalina Ghenea.
The "300" star began dating her in May 2012 when she was hired to help Butler promote a new razor for the Super-Max brand. He even took her to his native Scotland over the Christmas 2012 holidays to meet his mother. But their relationship seems to have fizzled out, reports dailystar.co.uk.
Asked if he is currently in a relationship, the actor said in an interview with German website Filmreporter.de: "Not at the moment. But at some point I do want to settle down."
Ians...
The "300" star began dating her in May 2012 when she was hired to help Butler promote a new razor for the Super-Max brand. He even took her to his native Scotland over the Christmas 2012 holidays to meet his mother. But their relationship seems to have fizzled out, reports dailystar.co.uk.
Asked if he is currently in a relationship, the actor said in an interview with German website Filmreporter.de: "Not at the moment. But at some point I do want to settle down."
Ians...
- 6/15/2013
- by Machan Kumar
- RealBollywood.com
While discussion about and reaction to Glee's school shooting episode continues to happen in the real world, in the fictional world of McKinley High School, the show must go on.
And go on it did. In about four different directions, some of which were dreams come true and some of which were sort of nightmares.
"Sweet Dreams" aren't exactly made of episodes like this one, where so much is going on it's hard to keep up.
In the wake of last week's shooting, some of the McKinley students were left visibly shaken.
Tina has adopted a "steam punk" style. Unique is obsessed with growing breasts. Sam, back to being a caricature of himself, developed an...Australian twin?
I sit here in my living room watching this all unfold and I find myself trying to rationalize all of this.
Tina's always been a bit of a fringe fashion fan. Trying...
And go on it did. In about four different directions, some of which were dreams come true and some of which were sort of nightmares.
"Sweet Dreams" aren't exactly made of episodes like this one, where so much is going on it's hard to keep up.
In the wake of last week's shooting, some of the McKinley students were left visibly shaken.
Tina has adopted a "steam punk" style. Unique is obsessed with growing breasts. Sam, back to being a caricature of himself, developed an...Australian twin?
I sit here in my living room watching this all unfold and I find myself trying to rationalize all of this.
Tina's always been a bit of a fringe fashion fan. Trying...
- 4/19/2013
- by miranda.wicker@gmail.com (Miranda Wicker)
- TVfanatic
London, Sept 3: Gerard Butler has reportedly found love with Romanian model/actress Madalina Ghenea.
The 43-year-old actor reportedly fell for the European beauty when she was hired to help him promote a new razor for the Dubai-based Super Max brand.
The couple first sparked rumours of a romance in May, but Ghenea rubbished the claims at the time, stating, "Gerard is.
The 43-year-old actor reportedly fell for the European beauty when she was hired to help him promote a new razor for the Dubai-based Super Max brand.
The couple first sparked rumours of a romance in May, but Ghenea rubbished the claims at the time, stating, "Gerard is.
- 9/3/2012
- by Rahul Kapoor
- RealBollywood.com
Los Angeles, Sep 1: Actor Gerard Butler is reportedly dating Romanian model-actress Madalina Ghenea.
The Scottish actor reportedly got smitten by the European beauty when she was hired to help Butler promote a new razor for the Dubai-based Super Max brand this spring, reports contactmusic.com.
The couple was first linked in May, but Ghenea denied the claims at the time, stating, "Gerard is a friend of mine. We are friends and nothing more."
However, reports suggest that the relationship.
The Scottish actor reportedly got smitten by the European beauty when she was hired to help Butler promote a new razor for the Dubai-based Super Max brand this spring, reports contactmusic.com.
The couple was first linked in May, but Ghenea denied the claims at the time, stating, "Gerard is a friend of mine. We are friends and nothing more."
However, reports suggest that the relationship.
- 9/1/2012
- by Rahul Kapoor
- RealBollywood.com
For the second consecutive year, Encore has chosen a select group of screen professionals who have achieved new heights in 2010/2011, whose decisions influence and shape Australia’s audiovisual industry, and whose work has stood out from the crowd. These are our Power 50.
1. Emile Sherman – Producer
Last February, Sherman became the first Australian producer to receive an Academy Award for Best Picture, alongside his See-Saw Films partner Iain Canning, and Bedlam Productions’ Gareth Unwin. It also won at the BAFTAs and the Producers Guild of America, in addition to the many other honours for its cast and crew.
While technically a UK production, the Australianness of the film is undeniable – and so is its success; with a modest U$15m budget, The King’s Speech has grossed more than $405m worldwide – one of the most successful independent films of all time. Read Emile Sherman interview
2. Baz Luhrmann – Director, writer, producer
There...
1. Emile Sherman – Producer
Last February, Sherman became the first Australian producer to receive an Academy Award for Best Picture, alongside his See-Saw Films partner Iain Canning, and Bedlam Productions’ Gareth Unwin. It also won at the BAFTAs and the Producers Guild of America, in addition to the many other honours for its cast and crew.
While technically a UK production, the Australianness of the film is undeniable – and so is its success; with a modest U$15m budget, The King’s Speech has grossed more than $405m worldwide – one of the most successful independent films of all time. Read Emile Sherman interview
2. Baz Luhrmann – Director, writer, producer
There...
- 6/9/2011
- by Colin Delaney
- Encore Magazine
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