More Rick and Morty goodness is headed your way.
Adult Swim has given a series order to Ricky and Morty: The Anime from director Takashi Sano (Tower of God), TVLine has learned. Sano previously wrote and directed the anime shorts Rick and Morty vs. Genocider and Summer Meets God (Rick Meets Evil).
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The network also greenlit Ninja Kamui, a...
Adult Swim has given a series order to Ricky and Morty: The Anime from director Takashi Sano (Tower of God), TVLine has learned. Sano previously wrote and directed the anime shorts Rick and Morty vs. Genocider and Summer Meets God (Rick Meets Evil).
More from TVLineRick and Morty Writer Explains That Soul-Crushing Season 5 Finale SpeechTracy Morgan Joins Squidbillies as New Voice of Early Cuyler in Final SeasonSquidbillies Sets Final Season Premiere Date on Adult Swim; Auditions for New Voice of Early 'Underway' After Firing
The network also greenlit Ninja Kamui, a...
- 5/18/2022
- by Keisha Hatchett
- TVLine.com
Rick and Morty will get the anime treatment at Adult Swim.
Ahead of Warner Bros. Discovery’s Upfronts presentation on Wednesday, Adult Swim revealed the official greenlights for Rick and Morty: The Anime from Tower of God helmer Takashi Sano and Ninja Kamui from Jujutsu Kaisen’s Sunghoo Park. The series orders come as Adult Swim continues to build its anime portfolio, which currently includes the series adaptation of Junji Ito’s Uzumaki, Blade Runner, Black Lotus and more. The two newly-ordered series are in production and will premiere on Adult Swim and HBO Max.
Rick and Morty: The Anime is a “10-episode adventure” that will be separate from the flagship series, but will adapt themes and events from the original title. The upcoming anime will mark yet another Rick and Morty venture for Sano, who previously directed two anime shorts, “Rick and Morty vs. Genocider” and “Summer Meets God...
Ahead of Warner Bros. Discovery’s Upfronts presentation on Wednesday, Adult Swim revealed the official greenlights for Rick and Morty: The Anime from Tower of God helmer Takashi Sano and Ninja Kamui from Jujutsu Kaisen’s Sunghoo Park. The series orders come as Adult Swim continues to build its anime portfolio, which currently includes the series adaptation of Junji Ito’s Uzumaki, Blade Runner, Black Lotus and more. The two newly-ordered series are in production and will premiere on Adult Swim and HBO Max.
Rick and Morty: The Anime is a “10-episode adventure” that will be separate from the flagship series, but will adapt themes and events from the original title. The upcoming anime will mark yet another Rick and Morty venture for Sano, who previously directed two anime shorts, “Rick and Morty vs. Genocider” and “Summer Meets God...
- 5/18/2022
- by Alexandra Del Rosario
- Deadline Film + TV
“Rick and Morty” is getting the anime treatment.
On Wednesday, Adult Swim announced it had greenlit the new anime series “Rick and Morty: The Anime,” from director Takashi Sano (“Tower of God”). Sano previously directed two anime shorts in the franchise, “Rick and Morty vs. Genocider” and “Summer Meets God (Rick Meets Evil).” Sano will adapt themes and events of the main series for “The Anime.”
“The multiverse-straddling exploits of Rick and the gang pose challenges to the family bond, but they always rise to the occasion,” Sano said in a statement. “It’s such a life affirming sight, and Jerry is no exception. … I am honored to have been given an opportunity to tell a new story about this amazing family. I hope you enjoy their adventures!”
The new series, from Telecom Animation Film (“Lupin the IIIrd Series”), will span 10 episodes. It will air on Adult Swim and stream on HBO Max.
On Wednesday, Adult Swim announced it had greenlit the new anime series “Rick and Morty: The Anime,” from director Takashi Sano (“Tower of God”). Sano previously directed two anime shorts in the franchise, “Rick and Morty vs. Genocider” and “Summer Meets God (Rick Meets Evil).” Sano will adapt themes and events of the main series for “The Anime.”
“The multiverse-straddling exploits of Rick and the gang pose challenges to the family bond, but they always rise to the occasion,” Sano said in a statement. “It’s such a life affirming sight, and Jerry is no exception. … I am honored to have been given an opportunity to tell a new story about this amazing family. I hope you enjoy their adventures!”
The new series, from Telecom Animation Film (“Lupin the IIIrd Series”), will span 10 episodes. It will air on Adult Swim and stream on HBO Max.
- 5/18/2022
- by Jolie Lash
- The Wrap
Crunchyroll has announced the nominations for its sixth annual Anime Awards, including anime series, characters, and creators across eight different streaming platforms — a new record for the kudos. Voting is open now; the full list of nominees can be found below.
Among top nominees, in the key best anime category: “86 Eighty-Six,” “Attack on Titan Final Season Part 1,” “Jujutsu Kaisen” (cour 2), Oddtaxi,” “Ranking of Kings” and “Sonny Boy.”
Crunchyroll has also added additional new categories for voice actors across several different regions and languages, including English, German, French, Portuguese, Spanish (Spain), Spanish (Latin America) and Russian.
Funimation, Hulu, Netflix, Prime Video, iTunes, YouTube, HBO Max and Crunchyroll are all streamers represented by this year’s nominations. The tally includes 156 nominees in 26 categories, via 54 different properties.
The 38 studios represented by nominations include Mappa, Olm, P.I.C.S., Wit, Madhouse, A-1, Lidenfilms, CloverWorks, Tms Entertainment, Pine Jam, Pierrot, KyoAni, Bones, White Fox, Ufotable, Studio Bind,...
Among top nominees, in the key best anime category: “86 Eighty-Six,” “Attack on Titan Final Season Part 1,” “Jujutsu Kaisen” (cour 2), Oddtaxi,” “Ranking of Kings” and “Sonny Boy.”
Crunchyroll has also added additional new categories for voice actors across several different regions and languages, including English, German, French, Portuguese, Spanish (Spain), Spanish (Latin America) and Russian.
Funimation, Hulu, Netflix, Prime Video, iTunes, YouTube, HBO Max and Crunchyroll are all streamers represented by this year’s nominations. The tally includes 156 nominees in 26 categories, via 54 different properties.
The 38 studios represented by nominations include Mappa, Olm, P.I.C.S., Wit, Madhouse, A-1, Lidenfilms, CloverWorks, Tms Entertainment, Pine Jam, Pierrot, KyoAni, Bones, White Fox, Ufotable, Studio Bind,...
- 1/18/2022
- by Michael Schneider
- Variety Film + TV
In the early 2000s, when the era of J-horror was reaching its peak, there were already many features which changed the formula or diverted from the tropes of a genre which, by that time, had become a little too predictable. Whereas the works of Kiyoshi Kurosawa had been known for their uniqueness, showing strange worlds and characters instead of being “only” horror movies, there were also odd entries such as “Uzumaki, directed by Akihiro Higuchi, better known as Higuchinsky. With regard to the original manga by Junji Ito, the director explained how he was much more interested in the changed the uzumaki (“spiral”) ignited in people and places, turning a familiar environment into something quite strange and weird, which is precisely the atmosphere we wanted to capture in his adaption. As a result, “Uzumaki” is a true oddity within J-horror, with a focus on atmosphere rather than scares, making it...
- 8/20/2021
- by Rouven Linnarz
- AsianMoviePulse
Lineup and Pre-Festival Announcements and News
Cannes Film Festival 2021 Lineup: Gaspar Noé, Sean Baker, Wes Anderson, and More
Cannes Directors’ Fortnight 2021 Lineup Includes Joanna Hogg’s ‘The Souvenir Part II’ and More
Cannes Critics’ Week Unveils 2021 Lineup: 13 World Premieres, No U.S. Directors
Spike Lee’s Cannes 2021 Jury: Song Kang-Ho, Maggie Gyllenhaal, Melanie Laurent, and More
Spike Lee Makes History as Cannes Film Festival 2021 Jury President
Cannes Film Festival Pushed to July 2021
Pre-Festival Analysis
Cannes 2021 Lineup: 10 Surprises and Snubs, from Sean Penn to Park Chan-wook
Cannes Remains Male-Dominated, Don’t Let the Record Number of 2021 Female Filmmakers Fool You
Cannes 2021: 12 Most Anticipated Films Playing at This Year’s Festival
10 Films That Might Sell Big at the Cannes Market, from Natalie Portman to Zoe Kravitz’s ‘Pussy Island’
Reviews
‘Annette’ Review: Adam Driver Is a Deranged Force of Nature in Carax’s Mind-Blowing Musical Fantasia
‘Ahed’s Knee’ Review: An Israeli...
Cannes Film Festival 2021 Lineup: Gaspar Noé, Sean Baker, Wes Anderson, and More
Cannes Directors’ Fortnight 2021 Lineup Includes Joanna Hogg’s ‘The Souvenir Part II’ and More
Cannes Critics’ Week Unveils 2021 Lineup: 13 World Premieres, No U.S. Directors
Spike Lee’s Cannes 2021 Jury: Song Kang-Ho, Maggie Gyllenhaal, Melanie Laurent, and More
Spike Lee Makes History as Cannes Film Festival 2021 Jury President
Cannes Film Festival Pushed to July 2021
Pre-Festival Analysis
Cannes 2021 Lineup: 10 Surprises and Snubs, from Sean Penn to Park Chan-wook
Cannes Remains Male-Dominated, Don’t Let the Record Number of 2021 Female Filmmakers Fool You
Cannes 2021: 12 Most Anticipated Films Playing at This Year’s Festival
10 Films That Might Sell Big at the Cannes Market, from Natalie Portman to Zoe Kravitz’s ‘Pussy Island’
Reviews
‘Annette’ Review: Adam Driver Is a Deranged Force of Nature in Carax’s Mind-Blowing Musical Fantasia
‘Ahed’s Knee’ Review: An Israeli...
- 7/6/2021
- by Kate Erbland
- Indiewire
This year’s Cannes promises to be an edition unlike any other. More movies, fewer guests, plus a slew of logistical hurdles all add up to an epic case of Fomo — fear of missing out — for those too cautious to attend.
For those who do make the trek, however, Cannes artistic director Thierry Frémaux and his cohortsdown the Croisette seem determined to make it worth their while.
They’ve served up a slate that, sight unseen, has cinephiles salivating: The festival will kick off with “Annette,” a musical from “Holy Motors” director Leos Carax; and includes Wes Anderson’s “The French Dispatch” (a film we could scarcely imagine premiering anywhere else); Paul Verhoeven’s portrait of a nun on fire, “Benedetta”; three films featuring auteur darling Tilda Swinton; four starring Léa Seydoux; plus a bounty of anticipated titles from leading international directors.
It’s a sampling that would get audiences excited in any year,...
For those who do make the trek, however, Cannes artistic director Thierry Frémaux and his cohortsdown the Croisette seem determined to make it worth their while.
They’ve served up a slate that, sight unseen, has cinephiles salivating: The festival will kick off with “Annette,” a musical from “Holy Motors” director Leos Carax; and includes Wes Anderson’s “The French Dispatch” (a film we could scarcely imagine premiering anywhere else); Paul Verhoeven’s portrait of a nun on fire, “Benedetta”; three films featuring auteur darling Tilda Swinton; four starring Léa Seydoux; plus a bounty of anticipated titles from leading international directors.
It’s a sampling that would get audiences excited in any year,...
- 7/6/2021
- by Peter Debruge
- Variety Film + TV
The 74th Locarno Film Festival will take place in person from August 4 to August 14 in Locarno, Switzerland, and the festival’s film lineup has been announced via The Hollywood Reporter. The Swiss event was founded back in 1946 and is one of the longest-running film festivals in the world.
Read More: ‘Halloween Kills’ To Premiere At Venice Film Festival As Jamie Lee Curtis Honored With Lifetime Achievement Award
Studio pics at the Piazza Grande lineup will include Ferdinando Cito Filomarino’s thriller “Beckett” that features performances from John David Washington and Alicia Vikander, Shawn Levy‘s video game adventure film “Free Guy” led by Ryan Reynolds and Jodie Comer, John Swab’s actioner “Ida Red” starring Melissa Leo, and Liesl Tommy’s biopic “Respect” starring Oscar-winner Jennifer Hudson.
Continue reading Locarno Film Festival Lineup Includes ‘Beckett,’ ‘Ida Red,’ Abel Ferrara’s ‘Zeros & Ones,’ Gaspar Noé’s ‘Vortex’ & More at The Playlist.
Read More: ‘Halloween Kills’ To Premiere At Venice Film Festival As Jamie Lee Curtis Honored With Lifetime Achievement Award
Studio pics at the Piazza Grande lineup will include Ferdinando Cito Filomarino’s thriller “Beckett” that features performances from John David Washington and Alicia Vikander, Shawn Levy‘s video game adventure film “Free Guy” led by Ryan Reynolds and Jodie Comer, John Swab’s actioner “Ida Red” starring Melissa Leo, and Liesl Tommy’s biopic “Respect” starring Oscar-winner Jennifer Hudson.
Continue reading Locarno Film Festival Lineup Includes ‘Beckett,’ ‘Ida Red,’ Abel Ferrara’s ‘Zeros & Ones,’ Gaspar Noé’s ‘Vortex’ & More at The Playlist.
- 7/2/2021
- by Christopher Marc
- The Playlist
Year after year a site par excellence for the most innovative premieres—in that respect an antithesis to the ensuing fall circuit—the Locarno Film Festival returns triumphant next month. Their 2021 lineup, per usual, mixes iconic names with complete unknowns and, admittedly, a head-scratcher or two. Abel Ferrara’s much-anticipated Zeros and Ones, sure. Gaspar Noé’s Vortex—makes sense. A new film from The Wild Boys director Bertrand Mandico? Great! But Shawn Levy and a Jennifer Hudson Aretha Franklin biopic?
However, new festival head Giona A. Nazzaro sees it as part of a steady influx, telling Variety “A festival can be quite highbrow and also entertaining at the same time. That is why for this year’s lineup we have selected several comedies and also some genre movies, as well as straightforward auteur films.” By that metric it’s more inclusive than almost any other major competition on the European circuit.
However, new festival head Giona A. Nazzaro sees it as part of a steady influx, telling Variety “A festival can be quite highbrow and also entertaining at the same time. That is why for this year’s lineup we have selected several comedies and also some genre movies, as well as straightforward auteur films.” By that metric it’s more inclusive than almost any other major competition on the European circuit.
- 7/1/2021
- by Leonard Pearce
- The Film Stage
With Cannes right around the corner, two more prominent European film festivals announced their official lineups for 2021 this week. The 2021 Locarno Film Festival (the 74th edition of the event) is taking place August 4-14 and will feature the world premiere of Abel Ferrara’s “Zeroes and Ones,” plus the Melissa Leo-Frank Grillo starring thriller “Ida Red” from director John Swab. Perhaps the most prominent U.S. title in the Locarno lineup is “Respect,” the Jennifer Hudson-starring Aretha Franklin biopic that has already caught the eye of Oscar pundits here in the states. The film will screen out of competition, as will Ryan Reynolds’ long-delayed Disney-Fox tentpole “Free Guy.”
“A festival can be quite highbrow and also entertaining at the same time,” Nazzaro told Variety in a statement. “That is why for this year’s lineup we have selected several comedies and also some genre movies, as well as straightforward auteur films.
“A festival can be quite highbrow and also entertaining at the same time,” Nazzaro told Variety in a statement. “That is why for this year’s lineup we have selected several comedies and also some genre movies, as well as straightforward auteur films.
- 7/1/2021
- by Zack Sharf
- Indiewire
Abel Ferrara’s contemporary thriller ’Zeros And Ones’ stars Ethan Hawke.
Abel Ferrara’s contemporary thriller Zeros And Ones and Srdjan Dragojević’s dark comedy Heavens Above are among 17 films from 12 countries having their world premiere in the international competition at the 74th Locarno Film Festival (August 4-14) under the new artistic director Giona A. Nazzaro.
Scroll down for full line-up
In his first collaboration with Ferrara, Zeros And Ones sees Ethan Hawke plays an American soldier stationed in Rome who pursues an unknown enemy threatening the entire world after the Vatican gets blown up.
Ahead of shooting in Italy...
Abel Ferrara’s contemporary thriller Zeros And Ones and Srdjan Dragojević’s dark comedy Heavens Above are among 17 films from 12 countries having their world premiere in the international competition at the 74th Locarno Film Festival (August 4-14) under the new artistic director Giona A. Nazzaro.
Scroll down for full line-up
In his first collaboration with Ferrara, Zeros And Ones sees Ethan Hawke plays an American soldier stationed in Rome who pursues an unknown enemy threatening the entire world after the Vatican gets blown up.
Ahead of shooting in Italy...
- 7/1/2021
- by Martin Blaney
- ScreenDaily
Slate also includes new films from Michel Hazanavicius and Pierre Salvadori.
Wild Bunch International (Wbi) has unveiled one of its biggest Cannes slates to date as it gears up for its first trip to the Croisette in two years.
As well as 10 Cannes selections (as of June 15), it also features upcoming projects from Palme d’Or winners Jean-Pierre and Luc Dardenne and fellow Cannes laureate Arnaud Desplechin, and the portmanteau work Shining Sex, combining the talents of Lucile Hadzihalilovic, Sion Sono, directorial duo Helene Cattet and Bruno Forzani, Bertrand Mandico and Kleber Mendonça Filho.
Now in pre-production, the Dardenne’sTori...
Wild Bunch International (Wbi) has unveiled one of its biggest Cannes slates to date as it gears up for its first trip to the Croisette in two years.
As well as 10 Cannes selections (as of June 15), it also features upcoming projects from Palme d’Or winners Jean-Pierre and Luc Dardenne and fellow Cannes laureate Arnaud Desplechin, and the portmanteau work Shining Sex, combining the talents of Lucile Hadzihalilovic, Sion Sono, directorial duo Helene Cattet and Bruno Forzani, Bertrand Mandico and Kleber Mendonça Filho.
Now in pre-production, the Dardenne’sTori...
- 6/15/2021
- by Melanie Goodfellow
- ScreenDaily
Slate also includes new films from Michel Hazanavicius and Pierre Salvadori.
Wild Bunch International (Wbi) has unveiled one of its biggest Cannes slates to date as it gears up for its first trip to the Croisette in two years.
As well as 10 Cannes selections (as of June 15), it also features upcoming projects from Palme d’Or winners Jean-Pierre and Luc Dardenne and fellow Cannes laureate Arnaud Desplechin, and the portmanteau work Shining Sex, combining the talents of Lucile Hadzihalilovic, Sion Sono, directorial duo Helene Cattet and Bruno Forzani, Bertrand Mandico and Kleber Mendonça Filho.
Now in pre-production, the Dardenne’sTori...
Wild Bunch International (Wbi) has unveiled one of its biggest Cannes slates to date as it gears up for its first trip to the Croisette in two years.
As well as 10 Cannes selections (as of June 15), it also features upcoming projects from Palme d’Or winners Jean-Pierre and Luc Dardenne and fellow Cannes laureate Arnaud Desplechin, and the portmanteau work Shining Sex, combining the talents of Lucile Hadzihalilovic, Sion Sono, directorial duo Helene Cattet and Bruno Forzani, Bertrand Mandico and Kleber Mendonça Filho.
Now in pre-production, the Dardenne’sTori...
- 6/15/2021
- by Melanie Goodfellow
- ScreenDaily
Cannes-bound … Ari Folman’s Where Is Anne Frank?, the latest animated feature from the director of Waltz With Bashir Photo: Wild Bunch
The organisers of this year’s Cannes Film Festival (running from 7 to 17 July) have added additional titles to the official selection (already announced on 3 June) including Vortex by French enfant terrible Gaspar Noë and the latest animated feature from Israel’s Ari (Waltz With Bashir) Folman, Where Is Anne Frank?
Vortex, which features Italian horror director Dario Argento (80) in his first acting role, alongside Françoise Lebrun, details the last days of an elderly couple. It features in the Cannes Première section.
From Somalia to Critics’ Week: Somalian director Khadar Ayderus Ahmed’s The Gravedigger’s Wife Photo: Semaine de la Critique
Folman, (Oscar nominated and Golden Globe winner for Waltz With Bashir), has adapted Anne Frank’s internationally-loved classic The Diary Of A Young Girl. Folman has talked...
The organisers of this year’s Cannes Film Festival (running from 7 to 17 July) have added additional titles to the official selection (already announced on 3 June) including Vortex by French enfant terrible Gaspar Noë and the latest animated feature from Israel’s Ari (Waltz With Bashir) Folman, Where Is Anne Frank?
Vortex, which features Italian horror director Dario Argento (80) in his first acting role, alongside Françoise Lebrun, details the last days of an elderly couple. It features in the Cannes Première section.
From Somalia to Critics’ Week: Somalian director Khadar Ayderus Ahmed’s The Gravedigger’s Wife Photo: Semaine de la Critique
Folman, (Oscar nominated and Golden Globe winner for Waltz With Bashir), has adapted Anne Frank’s internationally-loved classic The Diary Of A Young Girl. Folman has talked...
- 6/11/2021
- by Richard Mowe
- eyeforfilm.co.uk
Filmmaking provocateur Gaspar Noé is back with a surprise new film, “Vortex.” A mysterious, Instagram-style first-look image from the drama has been released, showing someone ghostlike under a bedsheet. Not much about “Vortex” is known yet, though it will have its world premiere at the 2021 Cannes Film Festival in the newly created Cannes Premiere section. The cast includes the iconic Italian director Dario Argento, plus Françoise Lebrun and Alex Lutz.
A report in Variety on the film’s Cannes premiere describes “Vortex” as “a documentary-style film revolving around the last days of an elderly couple.” ScreenDaily reports that Noé “had been racing to finish the film” for Cannes, as production only started this year. Some intel dug up by The Film Stage pegs “Vortex” as fusing the styles of French filmmaker Jean Eustache and the Italian giallo horror genre, of which Argento is a figurehead. No official details from...
A report in Variety on the film’s Cannes premiere describes “Vortex” as “a documentary-style film revolving around the last days of an elderly couple.” ScreenDaily reports that Noé “had been racing to finish the film” for Cannes, as production only started this year. Some intel dug up by The Film Stage pegs “Vortex” as fusing the styles of French filmmaker Jean Eustache and the Italian giallo horror genre, of which Argento is a figurehead. No official details from...
- 6/10/2021
- by Zack Sharf
- Indiewire
Following up his love-it-or-hate-it Climax, director Gaspar Noé secretly shot a new film this past spring and it’s among the additions to the Cannes Film Festival lineup, which also includes new work by Ari Folman, a Bill Murray concert film, Noémie Merlant’s directorial debut, and more.
As for the Enter the Void director’s latest, he shot Vortex over twenty days between mid-March and April 2021, with a cast including Dario Argento, Françoise Lebrun, and Alex Lutz, as well as a budget of 3.3 million euros, more than his last two features. Check out a roughly-translated synopsis below via his Le Temps de Trout Tout:
Gaspar Noé, son of the Argentinian painter Luis Felipe Noé, finished his film at the last minute because he shot it quickly and late. A quasi-documentary film about the last days of a loving old couple suffering from senility, played by Françoise Lebrun and Dario Argento.
As for the Enter the Void director’s latest, he shot Vortex over twenty days between mid-March and April 2021, with a cast including Dario Argento, Françoise Lebrun, and Alex Lutz, as well as a budget of 3.3 million euros, more than his last two features. Check out a roughly-translated synopsis below via his Le Temps de Trout Tout:
Gaspar Noé, son of the Argentinian painter Luis Felipe Noé, finished his film at the last minute because he shot it quickly and late. A quasi-documentary film about the last days of a loving old couple suffering from senility, played by Françoise Lebrun and Dario Argento.
- 6/10/2021
- by Jordan Raup
- The Film Stage
Noé’s ’Vortex’ will play in the new Cannes Premiere section, while Folman’s animation ’Where Is Anne Frank?’ will play Out Of Competition.
The Cannes Film Festival (July 6-21) has completed its Official Selection with new films from Gaspar Noé and Ari Folman.
Noé’s Vortex will play in the new Cannes Premiere section, while animation Where Is Anne Frank? from Waltz With Bashir director Folman will play Out Of Competition.
Yohan Manca’s feature debut La Traviata, My Brothers And I joins the revamped Un Certain Regard strand.
Two French titles have been added to Midnight Screenings -...
The Cannes Film Festival (July 6-21) has completed its Official Selection with new films from Gaspar Noé and Ari Folman.
Noé’s Vortex will play in the new Cannes Premiere section, while animation Where Is Anne Frank? from Waltz With Bashir director Folman will play Out Of Competition.
Yohan Manca’s feature debut La Traviata, My Brothers And I joins the revamped Un Certain Regard strand.
Two French titles have been added to Midnight Screenings -...
- 6/10/2021
- by Orlando Parfitt
- ScreenDaily
In the latest consolidation move within WarnerMedia’s TV operations, Adult Swim and HBO Max’s adult animation development teams are being combined into one, led by Suzanna Makkos. Previously EVP Original Comedy and Animation for HBO Max, Makkos is taking an expanded role as EVP Original Comedy and Animation for HBO Max and Adult Swim.
She will continue to report to Sarah Aubrey, HBO Max’s head of original content, and will now also report to Adult Swim president Michael Ouweleen on all content developed for Adult Swim on all platforms. Adult Swim’s development team, led by VP Walter Newman, will now report into Makkos.
“The adult animation boom is just starting, and by aligning our strengths and organizing as one, unified, best-in-class development team we are creating an unmatched, multiplatform destination for both creators and fans,” said Aubrey. “Adult Swim has created an iconoclastic adult animation brand,...
She will continue to report to Sarah Aubrey, HBO Max’s head of original content, and will now also report to Adult Swim president Michael Ouweleen on all content developed for Adult Swim on all platforms. Adult Swim’s development team, led by VP Walter Newman, will now report into Makkos.
“The adult animation boom is just starting, and by aligning our strengths and organizing as one, unified, best-in-class development team we are creating an unmatched, multiplatform destination for both creators and fans,” said Aubrey. “Adult Swim has created an iconoclastic adult animation brand,...
- 4/23/2021
- by Nellie Andreeva
- Deadline Film + TV
Adult Swim is one of the longest-running purveyors of adult animation and President Michael Ouweleen talked up the medium’s ability to produce new content during Covid.
But the Turner veteran also warned that broadcasters and platforms may face a drop in viewing once the pandemic is over as a result of increased social activity.
“Coming out of this [pandemic], I think it’s going to be the 1920s again and people are going to go off and be out in the world in a very serious way. I think it will be gradual rather than sudden. But we will see a time where we’ve gotten really good at producing animation in all these flexible ways, but we might see a dip in content consumption in the future, once everyone’s safe and we have to be ready for that,” he said during an animation panel session at SXSW.
Ouweleen...
But the Turner veteran also warned that broadcasters and platforms may face a drop in viewing once the pandemic is over as a result of increased social activity.
“Coming out of this [pandemic], I think it’s going to be the 1920s again and people are going to go off and be out in the world in a very serious way. I think it will be gradual rather than sudden. But we will see a time where we’ve gotten really good at producing animation in all these flexible ways, but we might see a dip in content consumption in the future, once everyone’s safe and we have to be ready for that,” he said during an animation panel session at SXSW.
Ouweleen...
- 3/16/2021
- by Peter White
- Deadline Film + TV
The newest collection of stories from the master of Horror Manga, Junji Ito. “Venus in the Blind Spot” contains a few iconic works of the mangaka along with adaptations of Edogawa Rampo and Robert Hichens.
Billed as a “best of” release of some the iconic creator’s work, the newest edition from Viz media exists as the highest quality one to date, an impressive feat granted the publisher’s history with the mangaka. However, the phenomenal approach in presentation becomes marred in the story selection which, many fans would agree, is a far-cry from the most notable work created by the master of horror.
To lead on a positive, the release gloriously frames the art of Ito, with opening pages on glossy stock, highlighting his unique visual approach (these pages also include a mini-poster which is a welcomed collectible). In the vein of previous releases, the book...
Billed as a “best of” release of some the iconic creator’s work, the newest edition from Viz media exists as the highest quality one to date, an impressive feat granted the publisher’s history with the mangaka. However, the phenomenal approach in presentation becomes marred in the story selection which, many fans would agree, is a far-cry from the most notable work created by the master of horror.
To lead on a positive, the release gloriously frames the art of Ito, with opening pages on glossy stock, highlighting his unique visual approach (these pages also include a mini-poster which is a welcomed collectible). In the vein of previous releases, the book...
- 8/23/2020
- by Adam Symchuk
- AsianMoviePulse
As part of Comic-Con @ Home, Adult Swim has announced Adult Swim Con! This virtual event will give you the closest thing to the Comic-Con experience at home, with special previews, cast and crew Q&a's and much more. Of special interest to horror fans will be the sneak preview of Junji Ito's Uzamaki:
Adult Swim announces the first-ever Adult Swim Con, a free, fully-immersive convention experience where no badge, plane ticket, or hotel reservation is required. Running Thursday, July 23rd to Saturday, July 25th from 4pm–10pm Pst, lineup highlights include special behind the scenes looks at Rick and Morty presented by Pringles and Robot Chicken, featuring a Q&a with the cast and crew from both shows, a special Samurai Jack: Battle Through Time gameplay session, Toonami Edition with new show announcements, sneak previews of Blade Runner and Uzumaki, and an exclusive DJ set from Flying Lotus to...
Adult Swim announces the first-ever Adult Swim Con, a free, fully-immersive convention experience where no badge, plane ticket, or hotel reservation is required. Running Thursday, July 23rd to Saturday, July 25th from 4pm–10pm Pst, lineup highlights include special behind the scenes looks at Rick and Morty presented by Pringles and Robot Chicken, featuring a Q&a with the cast and crew from both shows, a special Samurai Jack: Battle Through Time gameplay session, Toonami Edition with new show announcements, sneak previews of Blade Runner and Uzumaki, and an exclusive DJ set from Flying Lotus to...
- 7/8/2020
- by Jonathan James
- DailyDead
Whenever Hollywood releases a great horror film, you can be reasonably sure that a similar film was made in Japan several years previously. Japan has been a hotbed for the creation of truly frightening horror movies for several years, but as Western audiences don’t like watching films with subtitles on, the idea usually has to be taken and re-made with an English-speaking cast in order for the concept to become a global success. That means if you want to see what the future of horror films might look like, you should probably be looking at Japan rather than what’s on at American movie theaters.
We want to highlight Japanese horror films in this article not just because they’re great, but because they don’t often get the acclaim they deserve. There are millions of people around the world who don’t know that “The Ring” or “The Grudge...
We want to highlight Japanese horror films in this article not just because they’re great, but because they don’t often get the acclaim they deserve. There are millions of people around the world who don’t know that “The Ring” or “The Grudge...
- 6/15/2020
- by Peter Adams
- AsianMoviePulse
The suburban enclave of Lemoncurd — “a charming town full of charming people leading charming lives and eating charming food” — is surely home to many delightful residents, but only three of them really matter: a trio of Debras who, as the title of the bite-sized Adult Swim series tells us, are very busy indeed. Busy with what, you may ask? Only upending the social order, taking aim at the patriarchy, and engaging in all manner of crimes along the way (in pristine white outfits to boot).
Created by and starring the eponymous Debras — Mitra Jouhari (“High Maintenance”), Sandy Honig (“Isn’t It Romantic”) and Alyssa Stonoha (“Rules of Cool”) — the series is a canny fit for Adult Swim, which has long trafficked in off-kilter programming populated by fresh faces. The trio, all members of the Upright Citizens Brigade improv and sketch community, first started working together in 2015 when they teamed up to...
Created by and starring the eponymous Debras — Mitra Jouhari (“High Maintenance”), Sandy Honig (“Isn’t It Romantic”) and Alyssa Stonoha (“Rules of Cool”) — the series is a canny fit for Adult Swim, which has long trafficked in off-kilter programming populated by fresh faces. The trio, all members of the Upright Citizens Brigade improv and sketch community, first started working together in 2015 when they teamed up to...
- 3/30/2020
- by Kate Erbland
- Indiewire
Around 25% will be invested in projects by new talents.
Warner Bros Germany is to invest €3m over the next three years in the development and production of feature films originating from or shot in the German region of Hamburg and Schleswig-Holstein in the first deal of its kind between a German regional fund and a Us major.
At least 25% of each annual €1m will be earmarked for projects by up-and-coming filmmakers to boost talent development in the region.
The deal was signed today (January 24) between Hamburg-based Warner Bros Entertainment and the regional film fund Filmförderung Hamburg Schleswig-Holstein (Ffhsh)
The financial...
Warner Bros Germany is to invest €3m over the next three years in the development and production of feature films originating from or shot in the German region of Hamburg and Schleswig-Holstein in the first deal of its kind between a German regional fund and a Us major.
At least 25% of each annual €1m will be earmarked for projects by up-and-coming filmmakers to boost talent development in the region.
The deal was signed today (January 24) between Hamburg-based Warner Bros Entertainment and the regional film fund Filmförderung Hamburg Schleswig-Holstein (Ffhsh)
The financial...
- 1/24/2020
- by 158¦Martin Blaney¦40¦
- ScreenDaily
With the upcoming miniseries “Uzumaki:Creation” set for release this year on “Adult Swim”, it feels like an ideal time to revisit the manga. “Uzumaki” has had an enduring reputation of one of the core titles within the horror manga, almost becoming synonymous with mention of the genre. It can be said that Ito’s work, and this title in particular, proved to be gateway for many towards fandom into the sub-genre.
For those unfamiliar with the title, the story follows a young girl named Kirie and her friend Shuichi as they battle an infectious obsession with spirals plaguing their seaside town. The infection warps the mind and bodies of its inhabitants in all sorts of bizarre scenarios, eventually leading to the entire town being engulfed in a spiral pattern. Through Kirie and Shuichi paying constant witnesses to the decline of family, friends and community, the weight of...
For those unfamiliar with the title, the story follows a young girl named Kirie and her friend Shuichi as they battle an infectious obsession with spirals plaguing their seaside town. The infection warps the mind and bodies of its inhabitants in all sorts of bizarre scenarios, eventually leading to the entire town being engulfed in a spiral pattern. Through Kirie and Shuichi paying constant witnesses to the decline of family, friends and community, the weight of...
- 1/18/2020
- by Adam Symchuk
- AsianMoviePulse
Manga creator Junji Ito (Tomie, Uzumaki, Gyo, Fragments of Horror) is recognized as one of the greatest contemporary artists working in the horror genre, and in a couple of weeks Viz Signature will be sharing his greatness via Shiver, which collects nine of his best short stories into one nightmare-inducing hardcover edition. If you’re a […]
The post Get Ready to Shiver with These Selected Stories by Junji Ito appeared first on Dread Central.
The post Get Ready to Shiver with These Selected Stories by Junji Ito appeared first on Dread Central.
- 12/7/2017
- by Debi Moore
- DreadCentral.com
Earlier this year, we wrote about a new Japanese anime called “Junji Ito’s Collection”, a series that was based on the works of the legendary horror manga artist who brought us such titles as Gyo and Uzumaki. It’s been a while since we’ve heard anything new surrounding the title but today brings news that’s not […]
The post Junji Ito’s Collection Anime Series Gets a Bizarre and Unsettling Teaser appeared first on Dread Central.
The post Junji Ito’s Collection Anime Series Gets a Bizarre and Unsettling Teaser appeared first on Dread Central.
- 12/2/2017
- by Jonathan Barkan
- DreadCentral.com
One month ago, I posted a story about a new anime series that would be based off the work of horror manga legend Junji Ito (Gyo, Uzumaki). Today, new news has come out that reveals the series, which is now… Continue Reading →
The post Junji Ito Anime Gets Website and New Title appeared first on Dread Central.
The post Junji Ito Anime Gets Website and New Title appeared first on Dread Central.
- 8/10/2017
- by Jonathan Barkan
- DreadCentral.com
Junji Ito, the mastermind behind such terrifying visions as Gyo and Uzumaki, is going to see his “Haunted House” series adapted into an anime and there are rumors that it may be an anthology series! Asahi’s website (cheers CrunchyRoll) announced… Continue Reading →
The post Junji Ito’s Haunted House Getting an Anime Adaptation! appeared first on Dread Central.
The post Junji Ito’s Haunted House Getting an Anime Adaptation! appeared first on Dread Central.
- 7/10/2017
- by Jonathan Barkan
- DreadCentral.com
“It’s just thunder. It happens when it rains.”
‘When It Rains’ is an old story: a spiky, unpleasant person learns to accept help and to open up to those around them. It’s a little shopworn, a little canned, but it’s still a pleasant quarter hour and a successful about-face for a character who looked headed for ineffectual Saturday Morning Cartoon villainy. If it has a real weakness it’s not that its story has been told before but that it can’t let its moments land without indulging in its own preciousness. Moments like Steven posing after Garnet tells him that she loves him turn the organic into the contrived, though a prostrate Steven reaching automatically for Peridot’s hand after the two fall off a cliff is a great example of how emotionally deft the show can be at its best.
Motivated by fear after a...
‘When It Rains’ is an old story: a spiky, unpleasant person learns to accept help and to open up to those around them. It’s a little shopworn, a little canned, but it’s still a pleasant quarter hour and a successful about-face for a character who looked headed for ineffectual Saturday Morning Cartoon villainy. If it has a real weakness it’s not that its story has been told before but that it can’t let its moments land without indulging in its own preciousness. Moments like Steven posing after Garnet tells him that she loves him turn the organic into the contrived, though a prostrate Steven reaching automatically for Peridot’s hand after the two fall off a cliff is a great example of how emotionally deft the show can be at its best.
Motivated by fear after a...
- 10/2/2015
- by Gretchen Felker-Martin
- Nerdly
Stuffed with straw, dressed in rags and left to twist in the breeze, the typical mild-mannered scarecrow may not be built to frighten anything larger than your average feathered pest... but that hasn't stopped these eerie effigies from coming to life in our nightmares. For generations, this image of the harvest has been associated with the darker, colder days to come, so it wasn't long before spooky tales were being spun about evil scarecrows wandering the fields, intent on reaping something more substantial than corn. Cinematic scarecrows have come a long way since the lovable Wizard of Oz character, but some of them might still be looking for a brain... maybe even the one that's still in your skull. Let's look at some of the all-time scariest movie scarecrows ever to stalk the fields by moonlight... “Bubba” (Dark Night of the Scarecrow, 1981) This chilling made-for-tv classic presents one of the...
- 3/13/2014
- by Gregory Burkart
- FEARnet
Odd List Ryan Lambie Simon Brew 28 Nov 2013 - 06:04
Our series of lists devoted to underappreciated films brings us to the year 2000, and another 25 overlooked gems...
The new millennium brought with it an eclectic range of hit films. Hong Kong action director John Woo brought us Mission: Impossible II, the most profitable film of the year at the box office. Ridley Scott enjoyed one of the biggest critical and financial successes of his career with Gladiator, while Robert Zemeckis created a memorable drama with Tom Hanks and a ball named Wilson in Cast Away.
From a comic book movie standpoint, 2000 was also a key year. X-Men not only established a successful film franchise which is still going, with X-Men: Days Of Future Past out next year, but also headed up a wave of big-budget Marvel adaptations which shows no sign of slowing down.
As ever, we've travelled far outside the...
Our series of lists devoted to underappreciated films brings us to the year 2000, and another 25 overlooked gems...
The new millennium brought with it an eclectic range of hit films. Hong Kong action director John Woo brought us Mission: Impossible II, the most profitable film of the year at the box office. Ridley Scott enjoyed one of the biggest critical and financial successes of his career with Gladiator, while Robert Zemeckis created a memorable drama with Tom Hanks and a ball named Wilson in Cast Away.
From a comic book movie standpoint, 2000 was also a key year. X-Men not only established a successful film franchise which is still going, with X-Men: Days Of Future Past out next year, but also headed up a wave of big-budget Marvel adaptations which shows no sign of slowing down.
As ever, we've travelled far outside the...
- 11/27/2013
- by ryanlambie
- Den of Geek
Looking for a little more than free candy in your basket this Halloween? Free Comic Book Day (the organization behind the event) has just released its list of titles for this year’s second-ever Free Comic Book Day Halloween ComicFest 2013.
Originally published on the Halloween ComicFest 2013 website, the announcement reveals a grand total of 22 titles from 16 different publishers including DC Comics, Marvel Comics, and Idw Publishing, to name a few. The titles are as follows:
Full-sized:
Skyward: Into the Grim
Sonic the Hedgehog #1
Soulfire: Genesis
Disenchanted Debut
Batman: Li’l Gotham #1
Batman: The Long Halloween #1
Cartoon Network Super Sampler
Thor: God of Thunder #1
Ultimate Spider-Man Adventures #1
Junji Ito’s Uzumaki
Miss Peregrine’s Home for Peculiar Children #1
Mini Comics:
Vamplets: The Legend of the Ghost Pony
Zombie Kid Diaries 3: The Walking Dad
Sesame Street #1
Pantalones, TX Zombinata
Archie’s Pals ‘N’ Gals
Adventure Time
Itty Bitty Hellboy #1
My Little Pony...
Originally published on the Halloween ComicFest 2013 website, the announcement reveals a grand total of 22 titles from 16 different publishers including DC Comics, Marvel Comics, and Idw Publishing, to name a few. The titles are as follows:
Full-sized:
Skyward: Into the Grim
Sonic the Hedgehog #1
Soulfire: Genesis
Disenchanted Debut
Batman: Li’l Gotham #1
Batman: The Long Halloween #1
Cartoon Network Super Sampler
Thor: God of Thunder #1
Ultimate Spider-Man Adventures #1
Junji Ito’s Uzumaki
Miss Peregrine’s Home for Peculiar Children #1
Mini Comics:
Vamplets: The Legend of the Ghost Pony
Zombie Kid Diaries 3: The Walking Dad
Sesame Street #1
Pantalones, TX Zombinata
Archie’s Pals ‘N’ Gals
Adventure Time
Itty Bitty Hellboy #1
My Little Pony...
- 8/2/2013
- by Josh Wright
- ScifiMafia
It’s Monday, so we all know what that means! Yes, it’s time for another rundown of DVDs and Blu-ray’s hitting stores online and offline this week. It’s a jam-packed week, with plenty of movies waiting to take you money, so let us breakdown the new releases and highlight what you should – and shouldn’t – be buying from today, September 3rd 2012.
Pick(S) Of The Week
Piranha 3Dd (DVD/Blu-ray)
There’s something in the water . . . again. And this time no one is safe from the flesh eating fish as they sink their razor sharp teeth into the visitors of the best summer attraction, The Big Wet Water Park. With Ving Rhames and Christopher Lloyd.
Elevator (DVD)
9 people stuck on an elevator – one has a ticking bomb – the other 8 will do absolutely anything to survive. The bomb cannot be defused. There is no escape and no promise of rescue.
Pick(S) Of The Week
Piranha 3Dd (DVD/Blu-ray)
There’s something in the water . . . again. And this time no one is safe from the flesh eating fish as they sink their razor sharp teeth into the visitors of the best summer attraction, The Big Wet Water Park. With Ving Rhames and Christopher Lloyd.
Elevator (DVD)
9 people stuck on an elevator – one has a ticking bomb – the other 8 will do absolutely anything to survive. The bomb cannot be defused. There is no escape and no promise of rescue.
- 9/3/2012
- by Phil
- Nerdly
It must be very, very strange to be Junji Ito. Given what comes out of the celebrated manga artist's head, I can only imagine what all happens in it. Best known as the writer of Tomie and Uzumaki, Ito has a loyal worldwide cult for his off-kilter horror works and that cult has embraced the recent animated adaptation of his Gyo with open arms.A story that imagines what would happen if all the fish in the world suddenly sprouted legs and moved to dry land - imagine a great white shark ambling down your street - Gyo has been a hit on the festival circuit and is about to be released on DVD in the UK on the Terrorcotta imprint. Which means, yes, new...
- 8/31/2012
- Screen Anarchy
Director: Takayuki Hirao. Review: Adam Wing. It’s probably not a question you’ve asked yourself before, but what would happen if all the fish in the world sprouted legs and walked on dry land? That’s the question morbid manga master Junji Ito (Uzumaki, Tomie) posed when he created Gyo: Tokyo Fish Attack. Takayuki Hirao directs this lively adaptation of Ito’s manga, an anarchic animation that reeks of the ‘death stench’, a revolting smell first encountered when mutant fish bring a city to its knees. As you’ve probably guessed by the rest of the title, Gyo finds our frenzied fishy friends leaving the ocean behind in favour of big city life, causing chaos, confusion and devastation wherever they go. We first meet Kaori in Okinawa, where giant mutant sharks with metal legs are attacking her and her friends in their holiday home. When she loses touch with her boyfriend,...
- 8/21/2012
- 24framespersecond.net
Screened at the 2012 Terracotta Far East Film Festival. “Gyo” is an Ova anime adaptation of the horror manga by popular artist Junji Ito, the mad genius best known for the likes of “Tomie” and “Uzumaki”. Directed by Takayuki Hirao, the film is a lunatic tale which revolves around the bizarre concept of horrible smelling fish with sharp, talon like legs emerging from the sea and laying waste to Japan. Kicking off in Okinawa, the story focuses on a young woman called Kaori, who is attacked by the creatures while on holiday with her friends. Although they survive, she loses contact with her boyfriend Tadashi back in Tokyo, and fearing the worst heads to the capital, only to find it overrun by the fish and their monstrous ‘death stench’. Although the idea of legged, murderous sealife may sound weird enough, this really is just the tip of a particularly crazed and fetid iceberg,...
- 4/17/2012
- by James Mudge
- Beyond Hollywood
Anime studio ufotable are bringing morbid manga master Junji Ito's putrid, and surreal, story of mutant zombie fish that sprout legs and attack Okinawa, Japan, to home video systems everywhere later this month.Ok. Wrapped your head around that concept yet, readers? It's eccentric to say the least. That's right,Gyo, that bizarr-o survival horror tale of a couple vs. bio-mechanical fart propelled rotting sea-life, is now a new Ova directed by Takayuki Hirao (Futakoi Alternative), and slated for release on Feb. 15'th. Ito is probably most well-known as the creator of a couple of classic horror mangas, Tomie, and my personal favorite, Uzumaki. Both have been brought to the screen in live action incarnations, the Tomie manga spawning a long running series of films, about...
- 2/8/2012
- Screen Anarchy
The Power of the SpiralOnce in a while, as a writer, I come across a concept that makes me hate the field I’ve entered. Not because it’s offensively ridiculous. Quite the contrary; these are pieces that I aspire to produce, words and images that I would give an obsolete body part just to have the courage to conjure. Junji Ito’s Uzumaki is one of those works of art. The story, set in the...
- 10/16/2010
- by Anthony T
Best known for their backing of extreme splatter films Machine Girl and Tokyo Gore Police Fever Dreams are about to dip their toes into another part of the Japanese cult film pool with Tomoo Haraguchi’s upcoming kaiju film Death Kappa. And, yes, Haraguchi has turned everybody’s favorite friendly little turtle spirit into a fearsome giant killer. Don’t know Haraguchi’s name? You probably know his work. The man has done effects work for the likes of Kore-Eda (Air Doll) and Tsukamoto (Bullet Ballet) while designing creature effects for high profile films like Ashura and Uzumaki and you want kaiju cred? How about a bit of Gamera? This man knows his stuff, no doubt about it.
And while Haraguchi is still relatively early in the production of his latest directorial effort he has already put together an introductory promo that showcases both the miniature sets that will be...
And while Haraguchi is still relatively early in the production of his latest directorial effort he has already put together an introductory promo that showcases both the miniature sets that will be...
- 7/28/2009
- by Todd Brown
- Screen Anarchy
Facets/Tidepoint Pictures
Higuchinsky absolutely blew me away with Uzumaki in 2000 and this hour long made for TV production was made at the same time and was written by the creator of the Uzumaki manga, Junji Ito, so checking it out, despite reports of how uneven Higuchinskys work has been since then, was a given. But unfortunately the results are well…uneven. I liked this when I wanted to love it. But I did like it enough to heartily recommend it to anyone who, like me, wishes there were a surrealistic companion piece to Uzumaki. It brought to mind Lars Von Triers The Kingdom because of its hospital setting but ultimately this was a Lovecraftian immersion into the mystery of human identity, and the fear of cosmic chaos.
A doctor dealing with a deformed patient who is afraid of sleep is astonished to learn of the existence of long dreams...
Higuchinsky absolutely blew me away with Uzumaki in 2000 and this hour long made for TV production was made at the same time and was written by the creator of the Uzumaki manga, Junji Ito, so checking it out, despite reports of how uneven Higuchinskys work has been since then, was a given. But unfortunately the results are well…uneven. I liked this when I wanted to love it. But I did like it enough to heartily recommend it to anyone who, like me, wishes there were a surrealistic companion piece to Uzumaki. It brought to mind Lars Von Triers The Kingdom because of its hospital setting but ultimately this was a Lovecraftian immersion into the mystery of human identity, and the fear of cosmic chaos.
A doctor dealing with a deformed patient who is afraid of sleep is astonished to learn of the existence of long dreams...
- 4/17/2009
- by Canfield
- Screen Anarchy
What begins as one man’s fascination with spirals soon infects a whole town as it becomes ominously besieged by the shape.
In the last few years Japan has shown itself to be somewhat of a leading light when it comes to horror films. Whether it be ghastly gore or ghostly goings on, this nation has brought some innovative terrors our way. But if the post-Ringu style knock-offs has become a little stale to you then Uzumaki could well be right up your street. Combining the arty/surreal/horror/strange town movie elements to full effect, director Higuchinsky shows us all once more that the Japanese still have some terrifying tricks up their sleeves.
Ok, I know that the idea of a town, er, spiraling out of control doesn’t sound all that horrific or, for that matter, believable, but Uzumaki is both of these things. Taking a subtle, creeping...
In the last few years Japan has shown itself to be somewhat of a leading light when it comes to horror films. Whether it be ghastly gore or ghostly goings on, this nation has brought some innovative terrors our way. But if the post-Ringu style knock-offs has become a little stale to you then Uzumaki could well be right up your street. Combining the arty/surreal/horror/strange town movie elements to full effect, director Higuchinsky shows us all once more that the Japanese still have some terrifying tricks up their sleeves.
Ok, I know that the idea of a town, er, spiraling out of control doesn’t sound all that horrific or, for that matter, believable, but Uzumaki is both of these things. Taking a subtle, creeping...
- 3/20/2009
- by Fiona
- Latemag.com/film
Argentine director Esteban Sapir’s sophomore feature La Antena (The Aerial, 2007) is densely marbled with cinematic citation, juggling freely the silent film conventions gleefully mined by Guy Maddin, with clear tips of the hat to Georges Méliès’ La Lune à un mètre (Man in the Moon, 1898) and Fritz Lang’s Metropolis (1927), and more veiled references to Alex Proyas’s Dark City (1998), Higuchinsky’s spiraling nightmare Uzumaki (2000), and the numerically confused plot contrivances of Pen-Ek Ratanaruang’s 6ixtynin9 (1999). Its kinetic and innovative use of intertitles reminds of Timur Bekmambetov’s Nochnoy dozor (Nightwatch, 2004) and its criticism of consumerist society and television brainwashing harbors a cautionary touch of John Carpenter’s They Live (1988).
Which is not to say La Antena is derivative. It achieves a singularly unique and vibrant synergy through its rampant citations in what Hollywood Reporter’s Gregory Valens describes as “a poetic attempt to recreate a world through the...
Which is not to say La Antena is derivative. It achieves a singularly unique and vibrant synergy through its rampant citations in what Hollywood Reporter’s Gregory Valens describes as “a poetic attempt to recreate a world through the...
- 7/13/2008
- by Michael Guillen
- Screen Anarchy
Sorry it's so late, folks, but there's lots of horror DVDs to choose from coming your way this Tuesday, June 24th, so I hope you’ve been saving your cash!
Cannibal Terror (1980)
Directed by Alain Deruelle
One of the original Video Nasties! This French/Spanish co-production follow a pair of idiotic thieves and their large-breasted accomplice as they kidnap the daughter of a local tycoon and decide that the cannibal-infested jungle is the best hiding spot. True, no one would look for them there! Pretty soon they’re either being eaten alive or trying to escape from being eaten alive. Buy it here!!
The Chilling (1989)
Directed by Deland Nuse & Jack A. Sunseri
Now, I can see the benefits of having a cryogenics lab, freezing bodies to preserve them and bring them back when a cure is found for whatever is making them sick, but you’d hope they’d have...
Cannibal Terror (1980)
Directed by Alain Deruelle
One of the original Video Nasties! This French/Spanish co-production follow a pair of idiotic thieves and their large-breasted accomplice as they kidnap the daughter of a local tycoon and decide that the cannibal-infested jungle is the best hiding spot. True, no one would look for them there! Pretty soon they’re either being eaten alive or trying to escape from being eaten alive. Buy it here!!
The Chilling (1989)
Directed by Deland Nuse & Jack A. Sunseri
Now, I can see the benefits of having a cryogenics lab, freezing bodies to preserve them and bring them back when a cure is found for whatever is making them sick, but you’d hope they’d have...
- 6/23/2008
- by Johnny Butane
- DreadCentral.com
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