What's better than scoring a free horror movie on DVD? Scoring two of them of course! That being said right now we have your exclusive chance to take home Both Zombinator and Piggy on us! Read on for details.
To enter for your chance to win, just send us an email at contests@dreadcentral.com including your Full Name And Mailing Address. We’ll take care of the rest.
This contest will end on at 12:01 Am Pt on June 1st.
Synopsis
A town relies on one man to save them from planned destruction in The Zombinator, coming to DVD and VOD May 13 from Inception Media Group.
While filming a documentary in a small Ohio town, a group of college students come face to face with the undead, turning the class project into an horrific nightmare.
Behind the zombie takeover is an evil corporation intent on lowering the town’s population,...
To enter for your chance to win, just send us an email at contests@dreadcentral.com including your Full Name And Mailing Address. We’ll take care of the rest.
This contest will end on at 12:01 Am Pt on June 1st.
Synopsis
A town relies on one man to save them from planned destruction in The Zombinator, coming to DVD and VOD May 13 from Inception Media Group.
While filming a documentary in a small Ohio town, a group of college students come face to face with the undead, turning the class project into an horrific nightmare.
Behind the zombie takeover is an evil corporation intent on lowering the town’s population,...
- 5/15/2014
- by Steve Barton
- DreadCentral.com
What is it about the visage of a dude wearing a pig snout that just screams horror movie psycho? Hopefully the latest slasher flick Piggy will be able to answer that question and much more! Read on for details!
Synopsis
A grieving brother takes justice into his own hands with the help of a new friend in the bloody revenge thriller Piggy, slashing up DVD and VOD May 13 from Inception Media Group.
When John (Neil Maskell; Kill List, Atonement, Basic Instinct 2) is brutally murdered, his shy, mild-mannered brother, Joe (Martin Compston; The Disappearance of Alice Creed, Red Road), finds solace in Piggy (Paul Anderson; The Sweeney, Sherlock Holmes: A Game of Shadows), one of John’s long-time friends.
Taking the reclusive, grieving brother under his wing, Piggy teaches Joe his gritty, vigilante ways. As their friendship grows, Joe finds himself in an increasingly dangerous, murky world of violence and...
Synopsis
A grieving brother takes justice into his own hands with the help of a new friend in the bloody revenge thriller Piggy, slashing up DVD and VOD May 13 from Inception Media Group.
When John (Neil Maskell; Kill List, Atonement, Basic Instinct 2) is brutally murdered, his shy, mild-mannered brother, Joe (Martin Compston; The Disappearance of Alice Creed, Red Road), finds solace in Piggy (Paul Anderson; The Sweeney, Sherlock Holmes: A Game of Shadows), one of John’s long-time friends.
Taking the reclusive, grieving brother under his wing, Piggy teaches Joe his gritty, vigilante ways. As their friendship grows, Joe finds himself in an increasingly dangerous, murky world of violence and...
- 4/10/2014
- by Steve Barton
- DreadCentral.com
Dublin-based beActive has launched the world's first ever scripted series on Pinterest with its transmedia project 'Beat Girl'. Catriona Scott adapted Kallaly's novel for the web series, which was directed by Mirko Pincelli. Nuno Bernardo and Triona Campbell produced, while Enrico Tessarin was the line producer. Dania Lucas edited in post-production. BeActive has also developed the series into a feature film. Mairtin De Barra directed, working from a script written by Nuno Bernardo, Susana Tavares and Melanie Martinez. Bernardo and Campbell produced, with Ciara Whelan and De Barra the line producers on both productions. Anna Maria O'Flanagan will edit in post-production. English actress Louise Dylan (Emma) plays Heather in both the web and TV series.
- 7/6/2012
- IFTN
Director/writer: Kieron Hawkes. Cast: Paul Anderson, Martin Compston, Josh Herdman, Neil Maskell and Louise Dylan. It is sometimes interesting when a film explores a character's psyche. This is the case with first time director Kieron Hawkes' Piggy. Joe (Martin Compston) is the subject of the psychological exploration and the results are a little vague. The journey to this conclusion is enjoyable as a psychological thriller should be, with Joe accepting a darker more sinister side. Joe is the protagonist and he is disaffected by modern society. Set in London, Joe goes to work, numbs himself with booze, and then rinses repeats. He is a character with social anxiety; he fears others and a darker part of himself. That shadowy side is projected in the character Piggy (Paul Anderson). He is an imaginary friend returned from his childhood after the violent death of his brother brings his world into turmoil.
- 6/4/2012
- by noreply@blogger.com (Michael Allen)
- 28 Days Later Analysis
London seems to be awash with potentially violent males lurking on every street corner, ready to explode with pent up rage given the right situation – if homegrown cinema is anything to go by. Debut writer-director Kieron Hawkes’ Piggy is another depressingly gritty tale of modern-day woe from the UK capital’s ‘mean’ streets that follows a vengeful angle to justify its brutal onslaught. Even the most hardened viewer will find this genuinely beautifully shot film tough to stomach, with little respite or acceptable explanation as to how its protagonist goes from loathing violence to cold-hearted and mindless thuggery.
Mild-mannered and solitary Joe (Martin Compston) is coasting through life in a mundane job and shut away from society until his older brother, John (Neil Maskell), comes back into his life and offers him a chance to reconnect, socially. But after being mugged, then witnessing trouble brewing at the local pub between...
Mild-mannered and solitary Joe (Martin Compston) is coasting through life in a mundane job and shut away from society until his older brother, John (Neil Maskell), comes back into his life and offers him a chance to reconnect, socially. But after being mugged, then witnessing trouble brewing at the local pub between...
- 5/4/2012
- by Lisa Giles-Keddie
- HeyUGuys.co.uk
Piggy
Stars: Martin Compson, Neil Maskell, Paul Anderson, Josh Herdman, Louise Dylan | Written and Directed by Kieron Hawkes
I think I started to worry with Piggy when I saw the poster and it had a quote on it saying it was the “New Clockwork Orange”, the first thing that sprang into my head at that moment was it had a lot to prove. A Clockwork Orange is one of my favourite films so of course my sceptical mind was awoken straight away. This of course was a comment from another review that had been used so you can’t hold it against the film for what a critic has said. I would state though, you can’t beat A Clockwork Orange for what it does, it is that simple.
Piggy is another one of those gritty Brit flicks that we seem to do so well. It tells the tale of Joe,...
Stars: Martin Compson, Neil Maskell, Paul Anderson, Josh Herdman, Louise Dylan | Written and Directed by Kieron Hawkes
I think I started to worry with Piggy when I saw the poster and it had a quote on it saying it was the “New Clockwork Orange”, the first thing that sprang into my head at that moment was it had a lot to prove. A Clockwork Orange is one of my favourite films so of course my sceptical mind was awoken straight away. This of course was a comment from another review that had been used so you can’t hold it against the film for what a critic has said. I would state though, you can’t beat A Clockwork Orange for what it does, it is that simple.
Piggy is another one of those gritty Brit flicks that we seem to do so well. It tells the tale of Joe,...
- 5/3/2012
- by Pzomb
- Nerdly
This is the Pure Movies review of Piggy, directed by Kieron Hawkes and starring Paul Anderson, Martin Compston, Josh Herdman, Neil Maskell, Louise Dylan, Roland Manookian, Jumayn Hunter and Ebony Gilbert. Written by Michael Holder for @puremovies Bleak realism, tough lives and urban gloom. Piggy, the debut feature from young writer-director Kieron Hawkes, is the kind of film for which critics play a game of chicken over who first uses the words “gritty British drama” (a hollow victory right there for others , if claimed). There’s violence, too, of course. At one point, the film’s title character stamps on a man’s head perhaps as many as 30 times; each and every blow causing such a crushing squelch that it wouldn’t be surprising to see the camera tilt down to a pile of pulverised watermelons.
- 4/30/2012
- by Michael Holder
- Pure Movies
This week, Lesbian Vampire Killers debuts in America a the SXSW Film Festival in Austin, Texas. The comedic horror film has been receiving a lot of buzz, as its male stars are UK television stars, and also because of the women featured in the film.
Total Film Magazine recently profiled the women who play the lesbian vampire killers, asking them their favorite vampire movies (besides the one they're in, of course) and the making of the film.
Let's meet them:
Louise Dylan as Anke
Favorite vampire film: From Dusk Till Dawn
On her character: "She’s one of four Swedish tourists, we’ve all been studying myths and legends in Stockholm and we’ve come over to investigate vampires in our Vw. So, we’re basically fun-loving Swedish students looking for a good time." Silvia Colloca as Carmilla
Favorite vampire film: Van Helsing
On her character: "I am the leader...
Total Film Magazine recently profiled the women who play the lesbian vampire killers, asking them their favorite vampire movies (besides the one they're in, of course) and the making of the film.
Let's meet them:
Louise Dylan as Anke
Favorite vampire film: From Dusk Till Dawn
On her character: "She’s one of four Swedish tourists, we’ve all been studying myths and legends in Stockholm and we’ve come over to investigate vampires in our Vw. So, we’re basically fun-loving Swedish students looking for a good time." Silvia Colloca as Carmilla
Favorite vampire film: Van Helsing
On her character: "I am the leader...
- 3/11/2009
- by Trish Bendix
- AfterEllen.com
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