Before I start this review of Warhammer: End Times – Vermintide, I should probably say that I’m not a huge Warhammer fan though it always intrigues me, and I dip into many of its games. What I am though is a fan of trying out new experiences. This is why I took part in the beta, and took the time to play Vermintide for review.
Set in Ubersreik, which is a town overrun by Skaven Verimintide gives you the ability to be one of five champions. All individual with their own styles of battle and abilities. Fighting against hordes of different Skaven their attacks are relentless as you battle to take back the town.
I probably played Warhammer: End Times – Vermintide wrong, I went at it alone for most of the time and decided to test the strength of the bots. While they often don’t provide the support I expect of them,...
Set in Ubersreik, which is a town overrun by Skaven Verimintide gives you the ability to be one of five champions. All individual with their own styles of battle and abilities. Fighting against hordes of different Skaven their attacks are relentless as you battle to take back the town.
I probably played Warhammer: End Times – Vermintide wrong, I went at it alone for most of the time and decided to test the strength of the bots. While they often don’t provide the support I expect of them,...
- 11/3/2015
- by Paul Metcalf
- Nerdly
Andrew Parkinson's (Little Deaths) first three films - I, Zombie; Dead Creatures; Venus Drowning - are getting a proper North American release on February 18th from Jinga Films, and we have the details here.
From the Press Release:
Collectors of rare horror DVD's are in for a real treat as Jinga prepares to release a trilogy of body horror films by veteran UK genre filmmaker Andrew Parkinson on February 18, 2014.
Recognized as one of the founding fathers of the 1990's British horror revival, the writer/director has re-mastered each DVD and packed it with added value, including behind-the-scenes footage and commentaries. Moreover, the trilogy includes the previously unreleased Venus Drowning, which received acclaim at Fantastic Fest in Austin.
I, Zombie: While on a trip to the countryside, a young man is bitten by a stranger. When he returns to the city, a slow degeneration begins. In order to survive he must eat human flesh.
From the Press Release:
Collectors of rare horror DVD's are in for a real treat as Jinga prepares to release a trilogy of body horror films by veteran UK genre filmmaker Andrew Parkinson on February 18, 2014.
Recognized as one of the founding fathers of the 1990's British horror revival, the writer/director has re-mastered each DVD and packed it with added value, including behind-the-scenes footage and commentaries. Moreover, the trilogy includes the previously unreleased Venus Drowning, which received acclaim at Fantastic Fest in Austin.
I, Zombie: While on a trip to the countryside, a young man is bitten by a stranger. When he returns to the city, a slow degeneration begins. In order to survive he must eat human flesh.
- 1/19/2014
- by Debi Moore
- DreadCentral.com
This week: Milla Jovovich goes to the heart of the Umbrella Corporation to stop the global zombie epidemic in "Resident Evil: Retribution," the fifth movie in the popular sci-fi action series that sees the return of original "Resident Evil" badass Michelle Rodriguez.
Also new this week is the Southern-fried pitch-black comedy "Killer Joe" starring Matthew McConaughey, the bike-messenger thriller "Premium Rush" with Joseph Gordon-Levitt, the romantic drama "The Words" with Bradley Cooper and the financial thriller "Arbitrage" with Richard Gere and Susan Sarandon.
'Resident Evil: Retribution'
Box Office: $42 million
Rotten Tomatoes: 31% Rotten
Storyline: In this fifth installment of the enduring zombie apocalypse series based on the video game, Alice (Milla Jovovich) escapes from her cell inside Umbrella's prime research facility and finds that old friends have become new enemies. Director Paul W.S. Anderson's "Retribution" brings back Michelle Rodriguez, Oded Fehr, Boris Kodjoe, Sienna Guillory and more from previous installments.
Also new this week is the Southern-fried pitch-black comedy "Killer Joe" starring Matthew McConaughey, the bike-messenger thriller "Premium Rush" with Joseph Gordon-Levitt, the romantic drama "The Words" with Bradley Cooper and the financial thriller "Arbitrage" with Richard Gere and Susan Sarandon.
'Resident Evil: Retribution'
Box Office: $42 million
Rotten Tomatoes: 31% Rotten
Storyline: In this fifth installment of the enduring zombie apocalypse series based on the video game, Alice (Milla Jovovich) escapes from her cell inside Umbrella's prime research facility and finds that old friends have become new enemies. Director Paul W.S. Anderson's "Retribution" brings back Michelle Rodriguez, Oded Fehr, Boris Kodjoe, Sienna Guillory and more from previous installments.
- 12/24/2012
- by Robert DeSalvo
- NextMovie
Montreal's Fantasia International Film Festival turns 15 years old this summer, and sandwiched between the official opening and closing films - Kevin Smith's horror bow Red State and the Guillermo del Toro-scripted and -produced remake of 1973's Don't Be Afraid of The Dark, respectively - will be more than 120 features, 240 short films, 110 invited guests hosting screenings of their films, and numerous special events including the bestowing of lifetime achievement awards and round table discussions. Below is just the tip of the iceberg in terms of what's on offer this year. Sticking to its familiar Asia-versus-the-rest-of-the-world format, the fest's occidental category of genre fare features such high-profile fare as the aforementioned opening and closing films, as well as the world premiere of The Theatre Bizarre, a 7 filmmaker, 4 country horror anthology that includes segments directed by such genre luminaries as make-up effects wizard Tom Savini (1990's Night of the Living Dead...
- 7/11/2011
- IONCINEMA.com
UK filmmakers Sean Hogan (Lie Still), Andrew Parkinson (Dead Creatures,Venus Drowning) and Simon Rumley (The Living and the Dead, Red White & Blue) combat boredom with filmmaking. Over a pint (or two) at the local pub, they each decided to write and direct their own short horror film with the intention of tying them together as a feature length anthology which would come to be Little Deaths. They never could have predicted how well their three stories would fit together. I had the chance to chat with Sean Hogan and Simon Rumley in Austin at SXSW a few months back and talked about (among other things) drinking, mixing horror with sex and censorship. Check out our full chat below. FEARnet - How did the idea of...
- 4/20/2011
- FEARnet
UK Fango correspondent Jay Slater has entered the world of fright filmmaking, and has done so as part of an exciting project: Little Deaths, an omnibus feature containing segments by three notable British filmmakers: Simon Rumley, whose brutal Red White & Blue is currently touring the festival circuit; Andrew Parkinson, the man behind the Fango Video releases I, Zombie and Dead Creatures; and Sean Hogan, who helmed The Haunting Of #24 and co-wrote last year’s Summer’S Moon. Slater, one of the project’s executive producers, passed on a bunch of exclusive pics, and he and the directors talked it up as well.
- 4/29/2010
- by gingold@starloggroup.com (Michael Gingold)
- Fangoria
The word “notorious” can be loosely tossed around when describing a filmmaker that veers even slightly outside of mainstream cinematic confines, but when applied to Bruce Labruce, the term couldn’t be more accurate. Scenes of hardcore gay porn, Nazi fetishism and explicit gore, either separately or brazenly combined, are just a few of the subjects Labruce explores in films like No Skin Off My Ass, Skin Gang, Super 8 1/2, Hustler White and The Raspberry Reich.
Labruce’s latest film, Otto; Or, Up With Dead People, is a meditation on homosexuality, cinema and intimate relationships through the filter of a zombie flick. The first of his films to employ a full-on horror convention (zombies), Otto furthers Labruce’s boundary pushing reputation. And yet, mainstream audiences have taken the bait. Yes, it’s true—Otto is the first zombie film with hardcore gay porn scenes to screen at Sundance.
Labruce generously took...
Labruce’s latest film, Otto; Or, Up With Dead People, is a meditation on homosexuality, cinema and intimate relationships through the filter of a zombie flick. The first of his films to employ a full-on horror convention (zombies), Otto furthers Labruce’s boundary pushing reputation. And yet, mainstream audiences have taken the bait. Yes, it’s true—Otto is the first zombie film with hardcore gay porn scenes to screen at Sundance.
Labruce generously took...
- 3/30/2009
- Fangoria
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