Stars: Stacy Aung, Heidi Hemlock, Brian Easter Jr., Marlene Mc’Cohen, Samuel Code, Randy Oppenheimer, Jessie Vane, Veronica Ricci | Written by Dennis Devine, Drake Cola | Directed by Dennis Devine
If you’re familiar with Sterling Films then you’ll know what you’re getting into as soon as you see their name during the opening credits for Fangs Out (not to be confused with Fanged Up). For those that aren’t, it means a micro to no budget film shot in someone’s backyard with no production values to speak of. For fans of microbudget films, it doesn’t necessarily mean a bad film, but if you can’t deal with this level of DIY cinema you’ll want to find something else to watch.
For those that stick with it, Fangs Out follows four friends, Madison, Allana (Heidi Hemlock) and her boyfriend (Brian Easter Jr.) and Skylar as they head to Mexico for Spring Break.
If you’re familiar with Sterling Films then you’ll know what you’re getting into as soon as you see their name during the opening credits for Fangs Out (not to be confused with Fanged Up). For those that aren’t, it means a micro to no budget film shot in someone’s backyard with no production values to speak of. For fans of microbudget films, it doesn’t necessarily mean a bad film, but if you can’t deal with this level of DIY cinema you’ll want to find something else to watch.
For those that stick with it, Fangs Out follows four friends, Madison, Allana (Heidi Hemlock) and her boyfriend (Brian Easter Jr.) and Skylar as they head to Mexico for Spring Break.
- 5/23/2023
- by Jim Morazzini
- Nerdly
It is no secret that the genre of horror is saturated, like a wet diaper, with films that should never really have been made, films that are so bad they’re, well, bad. I know that sometimes a film is made that is often a train-wreck yet manages to be entertaining, but surrounding those films exists a bunch of motion picture atrocities that fail on all levels, and those are the films I’ll be looking at in this column. Now, you might not agree with the films I mention here, you might even be a fan of some of them, and that’s fine, this is merely my personal opinions on what I feel are the true horror’s of the horror genre, the poison in the water supply that made me, when I saw them, want to Linda Blair my guts against the nearest wall. These are in...
- 7/3/2014
- by Chris Cummings
- Nerdly
The Blood Stream mines the Internet for horror gold so you don’t have to, delivering streamable horror titles never before featured on Dread Central. Occasionally I’ll dredge up something good, maybe even great. To find those gems, I’ll have to sift through a lot of breathtakingly bad cinema. Enjoy!
This week my choice came down to two movies directed by a prolific no-budget auteur named Dennis Devine: Don’t Look in the Cellar and Alice in Murderland. (Fun fact: In 2000 Devine directed a movie called Bloodstream. Full circle!) Knowing both movies would likely be nigh unwatchable, I decided to choose whichever was shorter. As a result, I won’t be looking in the cellar this week. At 87 minutes it's a full minute longer than Alice and who has time for that?
The story, insofar as it's coherent, is this: A seven-woman sorority decides to throw a...
This week my choice came down to two movies directed by a prolific no-budget auteur named Dennis Devine: Don’t Look in the Cellar and Alice in Murderland. (Fun fact: In 2000 Devine directed a movie called Bloodstream. Full circle!) Knowing both movies would likely be nigh unwatchable, I decided to choose whichever was shorter. As a result, I won’t be looking in the cellar this week. At 87 minutes it's a full minute longer than Alice and who has time for that?
The story, insofar as it's coherent, is this: A seven-woman sorority decides to throw a...
- 6/16/2014
- by adamdileo
- DreadCentral.com
FEARnet has acquired two new upcoming horror films form Moving Pictures Film and TV.
Look for Deadfall Trail and Demon Kiss on the horror VOD network.
Plot details for both:
Deadfall Trail is a thriller that follows a group of friends as they embark on a three-week survival trip and peyote vision quest, and are ultimately forced to confront the darkest corners of their morality and mortality. Roze wrote and directed the film.
In Dennis Devine's Demon Kiss, a demon is summoned and possesses the body of the intended sacrifice victim.
...
Look for Deadfall Trail and Demon Kiss on the horror VOD network.
Plot details for both:
Deadfall Trail is a thriller that follows a group of friends as they embark on a three-week survival trip and peyote vision quest, and are ultimately forced to confront the darkest corners of their morality and mortality. Roze wrote and directed the film.
In Dennis Devine's Demon Kiss, a demon is summoned and possesses the body of the intended sacrifice victim.
...
- 4/3/2011
- by brians
- GeekTyrant
FEARnet has acquired two upcoming horror films from Moving Pictures Film & TV. Deadfall Trail and Demon Kiss will air on the genre VOD network. The former is a thriller that follows a group of friends as they embark on a three-week survival trip and peyote vision quest, and are ultimately forced to confront the darkest corners of their morality and mortality. Roze wrote and directed the film. Watch the trailer below. In Dennis Devine's Demon Kiss , a demon is summoned and possesses the body of the intended sacrifice victim.
- 4/3/2011
- shocktillyoudrop.com
A look at what's new on DVD today:
"Tesis" (1996)
Directed by Alejandro Amenabar
Released by Widowmaker Films
Long out of print, "The Others" director Alejandro Amenabar's debut about a grad student's discovery of a snuff film is being remastered and rereleased by Widowmaker Films.
"Alice in Murderland" (2011)
Directed by Dennis Devine
Released by Brain Damage Films
A year after Tim Burton's "Alice in Wonderland" scared the bejeezus out of kids in multiplexes everywhere, this horror take on Lewis Carroll's classic fairy tale aims to do so intentionally on DVD players around the country.
"America, America" (1963)
Directed by Elia Kazan
Released by Fox Home Entertainment
Elia Kazan's most personal film based on the story of his uncle's immigration to the United States from Turkey, where as a Greek his family is persecuted, was already released as part of last year's Kazan boxed set, but now will be...
"Tesis" (1996)
Directed by Alejandro Amenabar
Released by Widowmaker Films
Long out of print, "The Others" director Alejandro Amenabar's debut about a grad student's discovery of a snuff film is being remastered and rereleased by Widowmaker Films.
"Alice in Murderland" (2011)
Directed by Dennis Devine
Released by Brain Damage Films
A year after Tim Burton's "Alice in Wonderland" scared the bejeezus out of kids in multiplexes everywhere, this horror take on Lewis Carroll's classic fairy tale aims to do so intentionally on DVD players around the country.
"America, America" (1963)
Directed by Elia Kazan
Released by Fox Home Entertainment
Elia Kazan's most personal film based on the story of his uncle's immigration to the United States from Turkey, where as a Greek his family is persecuted, was already released as part of last year's Kazan boxed set, but now will be...
- 2/6/2011
- by Stephen Saito
- ifc.com
This week's DVD and Blu-ray offerings are no longer a cash-sucking onslaught like the last few weeks, which does make it easier for our wallets.
First up, Centurion, Neil Marshall's fun epic, is finally available for us to take home, and we can definitely recommend it with good conscience. Also, series and movies from TV and their dead-tree companions are out, and they are surprisingly decent in this batch. (Well, one re-release is surely capitalizing on the popularity of its actor, and we bet you can figure out which one that is.) Finally, don't forget the duo release of a couple of Roger Corman flicks!
Centurion
Directed by Neil Marshall
In Centurion (review), the Roman Empire stretches from Egypt to Spain, and East as far as the Black Sea. But in northern Britain, the relentless onslaught of conquest has ground to a halt in the face of the guerrilla...
First up, Centurion, Neil Marshall's fun epic, is finally available for us to take home, and we can definitely recommend it with good conscience. Also, series and movies from TV and their dead-tree companions are out, and they are surprisingly decent in this batch. (Well, one re-release is surely capitalizing on the popularity of its actor, and we bet you can figure out which one that is.) Finally, don't forget the duo release of a couple of Roger Corman flicks!
Centurion
Directed by Neil Marshall
In Centurion (review), the Roman Empire stretches from Egypt to Spain, and East as far as the Black Sea. But in northern Britain, the relentless onslaught of conquest has ground to a halt in the face of the guerrilla...
- 11/1/2010
- by kwlow
- DreadCentral.com
Nick Martorelli, PhiladelphiaIf I had to estimate, I would say approximately 90 percent of my acting career is spent performing shows that someone, somewhere, has already done—starting in high school with the obligatory "Oklahoma!" and "Our Town," continuing all the way through to a recent run in "A Midsummer Night's Dream." In fact, 18 of the 22 shows on my résumé are not original productions. Thankfully, most of my on-camera work has been original, and I will not argue that point. But when it comes to live productions, I would guess a lot of actors are in the same boat. Which makes my January project even more interesting to me.Every Tuesday in January, I met with a talented group of artists to develop "The Golden Ladder," a new play by local playwright Quinn D. Eli. In the show, I play a character named Kit. He and his wife, Ginny, are preparing for a dinner party.
- 2/3/2010
- backstage.com
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