Bare Ruined Films
Independent Filmmaking in Los Angeles, CA
Tuesday, December 01, 2009
HMAD presents DR.GIGGLES
One of the subjects of my documentary, Brian Collins (HorrorMovieADay.com) is showing a revival screening of DR.GIGGLES at the New Beverly Cinema in Los Angeles. 11:59 p.m. on Saturday, December 12th. Phil Blankenship of the New Bev (and Amoeba Records) co-presents the movie. Should be lots of fun with a rowdy crowd.
Monday, July 20, 2009
Jeffrey Combs in NEVERMORE
There are many great things about living in Los Angeles, but the chance to see work by some of my favorite artists -- work that won't happen anywhere else, most likely -- is at the top of the list. Last weekend I saw a production of NEVERMORE...AN EVENING WITH EDGAR ALLAN POE at the Steve Allen Theater in Hollywood. It's a one-man play performed by Jeffrey Combs, directed by Stuart Gordon, and written by Dennis Paoli. Those three made one of my all-time favorite films -- RE-ANIMATOR -- in 1985 and they're still doing great work today. Don't miss it if you're in the area. It runs for two more weeks. (http://www.steveallentheater.com/nevermore)
BROKEN AUGUST : Done.
BROKEN AUGUST is done. This week we'll make all our masters and deliver our, uh, deliverables. Soon we'll burn DVDs for cast & crew and send 'em out. At the moment there's no plan for a premiere, but that could change...
Friday, May 01, 2009
BROKEN AUGUST effects work
We're doing a bit of painstaking effects work that -- if done properly -- you will never notice in the movie. Such is life. And we're 99% there. The audio mix is approved and done. We have a 38 GB quicktime file of the finished movie, yet these two effects shots linger on. I'm doing them myself, so I have no one else to blame for the delay, but at least we're very, very close.
Monday, April 20, 2009
Clive Barker
This is not strictly Bare Ruined Films-related, but I met my hero Clive Barker a few weeks ago.
I've been a fan of his since I read The Books of Blood in 1986, based mostly on the Stephen King quote on the front -- "I've seen the future of horror and his name is Clive Barker." I may have also read a review of the Books in Fangoria around that time. In any case, I was hooked. His short stories "Dread," "The Yattering and Jack," "In the Hills, the Cities," and most definitely "The Midnight Meat Train" were a revelation to me. I also LOVED his novels The Damnation Game, Weaveworld, The Great and Secret Show and the novellas Cabal, In the Flesh and The Inhuman Condition.
I was fortunate enough to edit all the DVD special features for Barker's most recent film,* The Midnight Meat Train, but I had never met him in person. So when the Fangoria Weekend of Horrors convention offered up a two-hour lecture about "writing horror" by Mr. Barker, I signed up immediately. I was there at the convention doing research for the Horror Doc (which is titled now: The Horror of It All: Why We Love Scary Movies) and shooting the "zombiewalk," which involved hundreds of people dressed like zombies walking around downtown LA together. It was an awesome sight. The lecture turned out to be two hours of questions and answers, but it was fantastic to hear Mr. Barker's thoughts on the craft. Inspiring. And he thanked me and told me that "Many people have come up to me to say how much they loved the piece about me painting," referring to Clive Barker: The Man Behind the Myth, which I edited/produced. I told him how meaningful it was for me to work on those DVD pieces, and that was that.
On a related note, I also saw the newest Barker-approved movie: Anthony DiBlasi's Dread. This was a big one for me. I was actually a little pissed off that anyone but me was directing that movie, as the short story it was based upon was hands down my favorite Barker short, and it's the one I've revisited the most over the years. But the film is wonderful. It's a classic. In the top 5% of all horror films, period. I loved it, and can't imagine a better film being made from that amazing short story. Kudos to Mr. DiBlasi -- who wrote the screenplay and directed -- for expanding the story and changing some elements, but making the film absolutely true to the spirit of the original. It's an amazingly faithful adaptation, even if some of the details are a bit different. And, actually, the film is even darker than the Barker story, which is a fucking feat. His vision as a director is as assured as PT Anderson's, and I do not say that lightly. Dread is a beautiful, sickening, heartbreaking, scary movie. It's wonderful. It also doesn't have distribution yet, but I suspect it will be out in the fall.
* It's Barker-approved. The Hellraiser sequels (beyond part 2) and many of the movies that have Barker's name on them are apparently not things that Barker will claim as his own.
I was fortunate enough to edit all the DVD special features for Barker's most recent film,* The Midnight Meat Train, but I had never met him in person. So when the Fangoria Weekend of Horrors convention offered up a two-hour lecture about "writing horror" by Mr. Barker, I signed up immediately. I was there at the convention doing research for the Horror Doc (which is titled now: The Horror of It All: Why We Love Scary Movies) and shooting the "zombiewalk," which involved hundreds of people dressed like zombies walking around downtown LA together. It was an awesome sight. The lecture turned out to be two hours of questions and answers, but it was fantastic to hear Mr. Barker's thoughts on the craft. Inspiring. And he thanked me and told me that "Many people have come up to me to say how much they loved the piece about me painting," referring to Clive Barker: The Man Behind the Myth, which I edited/produced. I told him how meaningful it was for me to work on those DVD pieces, and that was that.
On a related note, I also saw the newest Barker-approved movie: Anthony DiBlasi's Dread. This was a big one for me. I was actually a little pissed off that anyone but me was directing that movie, as the short story it was based upon was hands down my favorite Barker short, and it's the one I've revisited the most over the years. But the film is wonderful. It's a classic. In the top 5% of all horror films, period. I loved it, and can't imagine a better film being made from that amazing short story. Kudos to Mr. DiBlasi -- who wrote the screenplay and directed -- for expanding the story and changing some elements, but making the film absolutely true to the spirit of the original. It's an amazingly faithful adaptation, even if some of the details are a bit different. And, actually, the film is even darker than the Barker story, which is a fucking feat. His vision as a director is as assured as PT Anderson's, and I do not say that lightly. Dread is a beautiful, sickening, heartbreaking, scary movie. It's wonderful. It also doesn't have distribution yet, but I suspect it will be out in the fall.
* It's Barker-approved. The Hellraiser sequels (beyond part 2) and many of the movies that have Barker's name on them are apparently not things that Barker will claim as his own.
Tuesday, February 17, 2009
BROKEN AUGUST sound mix
Yesterday I heard the near-final mix of Broken August that my amazing friend Martin Carrillo has cooked up. I also saw the movie on a ten-foot wide screen at a friend's studio. It was a really invigorating experience. This whole short has happened in lightning-fast time (August 2008 - Februay 2009, start to finish), but the intense periods of working hard followed by dull periods of waiting do eventually take a toll. I've moved on to the Horror Doc in some ways, but it was great to jump back into Broken August mode and see the film with somewhat fresh eyes. We're almost done.
Thursday, January 29, 2009
BROKEN AUGUST music / HORROR DOC
BROKEN AUGUST is nearing the end, people! We have our music -- by Kevin Manthei (Invader Zim) and Kevin Riepl (Gears of War) -- and I completely love it. We have locked, onlined, and color-corrected picture. Martin Carrillo (Paradise Lost: Shadows & Wings) will have a sound mix for us in the next couple of weeks and we will be done. Can't wait for the world to see this one. It's sort of deranged and not necessarily a fun thing to sit through, but it's honest and I think everyone can relate to it in some small way. We're hoping to have a premiere in Hollywood in March, along with three other Dirty Little Films projects.
HORROR DOC. This is an untitled documentary I've started. It's an attempt to figure out why we love horror movies. I'm slowly beginning to understand my own reasons for loving horror films, but I think everyone has their own take on it. The goal is to be able to cut together a 7-minute promo reel for the project in the next few months to judge the project's viability. And to see if I'm having fun directing my first documentary.
HORROR DOC. This is an untitled documentary I've started. It's an attempt to figure out why we love horror movies. I'm slowly beginning to understand my own reasons for loving horror films, but I think everyone has their own take on it. The goal is to be able to cut together a 7-minute promo reel for the project in the next few months to judge the project's viability. And to see if I'm having fun directing my first documentary.
Friday, September 19, 2008
REBORN
My feature script Reborn, an adaptation of H.P. Lovecraft's "The Thing on the Doorstep," was called a "perfect updating" by the folks at the H.P. Lovecraft Film Festival. Above, you'll find the Mike Mignola (Hellboy)-designed poster for this year. The press release is here:
http://hplfilmfestival.com/news/2008/09/19/stop-presses-may-i-have-envelope-please
More news about Broken August in a moment...
http://hplfilmfestival.com/news/2008/09/19/stop-presses-may-i-have-envelope-please
More news about Broken August in a moment...
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