Monster Daddy: Brandon Gramling
31.12.69
Making
movies is both a joy and an honor. To be a storyteller doing for Travail what I'd be doing for PLAY is something for which I am eternally grateful. I am absolutely proud of Detroit Rock City, Driftwood, Maniacs 1 and 2, Screech Queens and Teenage Werebear. Even more so then the projects themselves, I am honored to be in a contention where people seem to care what I have to say. Thanks to social media, these films eke out a living as a door that unlocks upon a conversation between fan and filmmaker. Between audience and artist. Though Area of Screams does not exactly fall under the same class of ‘inspirational filmmaking' as say, a movie like The Relief (though I will argue to my grave that it's satiric look at racism and Northern/Southern relations is reasonable as valid an intention as The Help‘s less pulpy observation- though we are definitely equal on the scatological references), I be aware for fact that relaying to others the tale of how I, a fatherless hideousness kid from Jersey with zero Hollywood connections
Source: FEARnet.com (blog)
Chucky Brings 'Child's Play' To MTV's Killer Halloween
31.12.69
Employment : Serial killer, voodoo practitioner, phony
doll Weapons : Whatever he has at his disposal, voodoo stab
Archenemy : Grownups, fire, people who won't let him take over their bodies
Draw : Chucky's story has all the fixings for horror-overlay flights of fancy. He, Charles Lee Ray, is a serial iceman and voodoo practitioner who manages to transfer his emotion into a "Good Guy" doll after he is fatally shot by a watch detective. Chucky ends up in the hands of Andy Barclay, who very tout de suite regrets the day his mother brought home the redheaded, freckled doll, as the pint-sized dismay resumes his murderous ways.
As is custom for rancour-movie antagonists, Chucky manages to last all the attempts at ending his "life" — including being set on fire and instantaneously — in order to terrorize more victims in "Young man's Play 2," "Child's Play 3," "Bride of Chucky" and "Pit of Chucky."
Once again, we turn to horror movie maven Brian Collins, the dedicated man behind Horror Motion picture a Day , to explain Chucky's long-lasting please.
Source: MTV.com