The Scary Bits: Dead Set, Voices & the Meat Train
Filed under: Horror, The Scary Bits
So our good pal Peter Hall was traveling overseas, and this is how you know that "Horror Geeks" is a really awesome fraternity: He bought me a copy of the E4 horror mini-series Dead Set! Created by the insanely clever Charlie Brooker, Dead Set is about the zombie apocalypse as seen through the cameras of a Big Brother broadcast. It's a five-part mini-series that runs about 140 minutes in total -- and man, it's really something special. Knowing a bit about Brooker's snarky ways, I was half-expecting this to be a jokey sort of zombie affair, but no way man: This is full bore horror, and it's one of the best serious zombie movies of the last twenty years. As far as I know, Dead Set is not currently available through a R1 distributor, but if any horror movie is worth the few extra bucks, it's this one. Damn good stuff, well done Charlie, and thanks Pete! (Offical Dead Set website right here!)
Looks like After Dark has chosen their final film for next January's event. It will be a Korean chiller called Voices. The rest of the slate (which includes Weinberg-approved titles like Dying Breed and The Broken) can be perused via Bloody-D's handy new breakdown. And speaking of cool horror flicks I've seen at festivals, the director of Creep and Severance will be doing a dark ages apocalypse story called Black Death. Coooool.
And while I was pleased to see a DVD announcement for The Midnight Meat Train, I got a very nice surprise once I checked out the DVD cover! Cool! Thanks to Twitch, we now have some more details on the R1 Cold Prey (Norwegian slasher flick) DVD. Anchor Bay will be releasing the DVD on January 20. And while the new cover for Ben Rock's Alien Raiders doesn't exactly adhere to the movie ... it's still pretty nifty-looking. Lastly, yikes. Check out the eyeballs on Dorothy Mills!
Do you think romantic horror flicks should have their own film festival? Why the hell not? How about short films that combine Christmas and carnage? Absolutely. Ooh, get this: The Vault of Horror polled a few dozen of the most prolific horror bloggers (ahem) and managed to put together a really fine list called, well, The Top 50 Horror Films of All Time. Damn good list, in my opinion, even if #9 should be about 8 spots higher.
Ah, and what would turkey weekend be without some Uwe Boll news? Dread Central has info on Dr. Boll a) losing a lawsuit, B) starting in on two new movies, and C) getting his very own film festival?? Ha!
Reader Comments (Page 1 of 1)
11-28-2008 @ 7:51PM
rai said...
Dead Set
I watched this originally on British tv over 5 nights, the series based in the british Big Brother house was fantastic with its dark humor, full on gore, and the Big Brother producer is a character you want killed (in the show of course), as he is a nasty piece of work, but funny! If you live overseas, get this on R2 dvd now, best zombie after Shaun of the Dead.
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11-28-2008 @ 8:17PM
MCW said...
There is a dead link in this sentence, Scott (Double http://):
"... once I checked out the DVD cover! Cool!"
I enjoyed this film a lot. It's a shame that Lions Gate royally screwed it over. I recommend everyone see it on Blu-ray when it comes out. I'm definitely going to get it for my collection.
- http://UncoveredFilms.blogspot.com
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11-28-2008 @ 10:32PM
Peter Hall said...
Holy shit, Christopher Smith is doing Black Death? If it's still starring Sean Bean and the incredibly gorgeous Lena Headey I am so effin' sold.
Not that I wasn't sold on Smith alone, but Lena Headey....
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11-28-2008 @ 10:58PM
Mr.R said...
Wouldn' t 28 days later be considered a horror flick? I thought those zombie like attack moments were truly creepy. Oh, and I find the Exorcist to still be the scariest movie ever, more than Halloween. Just my two cents added to The Thing deserving a better spot.
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