Showing posts with label NETFLIX. Show all posts
Showing posts with label NETFLIX. Show all posts

Monday, October 16, 2023

DEL TORO GETS GREEN LIGHT FOR 'FRANKENSTEIN'


Acclaimed filmmaker Guillermo del Toro has waited for many years to film some of his projects, and more than one will probably never see the light of day. Thanks to the continuing surge of horror films, Netflix has agreed to back his version of FRANKENSTEIN. Judging from what we've seen so far with del Toro's work, we can hope that his vision stays true. If anybody can do it, he can.

Guillermo del Toro’s ‘Frankenstein’ Adds Christoph Waltz to Cast
By Meagan Navarro | October 6, 2023 | Collider.com

Guillermo del Toro is working on his own adaptation of Mary Shelley’s Frankenstein for Netflix with an all-star cast. Collider reports today that del Toro confirms actor Christoph Waltz (Inglorious Basterds, Alita: Battle Angel) has joined the lineup.

The outlet reports that del Toro confirmed the casting news at the 10th-anniversary screening of Pacific Rim, where the filmmaker told audiences, “I’m doing Frankenstein. We’re working on it. We start shooting in February, and it’s a movie I have been wanting to do for 50 years since I saw the first Frankenstein. I had an epiphany, and it’s basically a movie that required a lot of growth and a lot of tools that I couldn’t have done 10 years ago. Now I’m brave or crazy enough or something, and we’re gonna tackle it. It’s Oscar Isaac, Andrew Garfield, Christoph Waltz, Mia Goth, and we’re working on it.”

“He’ll reunite with renowned composer and frequent collaborator Alexandre Desplat for the score and also produce with another usual partner of his Gary Ungar. With a team and cast coming together, everything is falling into place for the highly-anticipated project to begin filming in February,” Collider also reported.

Mia Goth (Pearl), Oscar Isaac (“Moon Knight”), and Andrew Garfield (The Amazing Spider-Man) were previously rumored to have joined this project back in March, though Netflix declined to comment or confirm the casting news.

The acclaimed filmmaker previously collaborated with Waltz on his stop-motion adaptation of Pinocchio, where Waltz voiced the evil showman Count Volupe.

Del Toro is writing and directing Frankenstein for Netflix, with his specific approach completely under wraps at this time. 

Guillermo del Toro won four Academy Awards for The Shape of Water in 2018, essentially giving his unique, romantic spin on the Creature from the Black Lagoon. With Frankenstein up next, he’s building his very own army of Universal Monsters. We’ll keep you posted as we learn more about the project.

Thursday, May 11, 2023

JUNE IN MAY


Another serving of big Macumba Love here today. B-movie actress June Wilkinson showed up in a lot of men's magazines in her heyday. Here she is in RAGE (Vol. 1 No. 1, September 1960).



BONUS! Here are two more articles from the same magazine. The first is about the seedy past of New York's Times Square. While not mentioned in the story (since it happened some years later), the area was plagued by a serial killer in the 1970's. NETFLIX is streaming a documentary of these events from its Crime Scene series, "The Times Square Killer".

Following is a confessional by a woman (supposedly) who tells the tale of how women are lured into making "stag" films.














Tuesday, November 1, 2022

DEL TORO'S 'CABINET': FIRST IMPRESSIONS


Do we need another horror anthology TV show? Yes! Especially if it comes from the imaginative mind of Guillermo del Toro. By the time you read this Netflix will have released all eight of the episodes of what promises to be an exceptional new series, CABINET OF CURIOSITIES.


I have watched the first few and they are all, in varying degrees, pretty damn well done. The first thing that struck me is how great the visuals are. Gorgeously filmed with interesting color palettes, as well as light and shadow all superlatively utilized. Second, the choice of stories are a pleasant surprise, with the first one, "Lot 36" penned by del Toro himself. Second is "Graveyard Rats", originally published in WEIRD TALES (March, 1936) by author, Henry Kuttner. The third is "The Autopsy", written by Micheal Shea. It is interesting to note that both Kuttner and Shea were involved with furthering the so-called "Cthulhu Mythos". Kuttner was a contemporary of H.P. Lovecraft and corresponded with him as well as wrote numerous tales of Lovecraftian "Cosmic Horror". Shea wrote his own tribute to Lovecraft in the novel, THE COLOR OUT OF TIME in 1984. Science fiction editor and author T.E.D. Kline compiled a list of "The 13 Most Terrifying Horror Stories" -- Shea's "The Autopsy" is number eleven.


If there was a weakest story out of the three, I'd have to say it was "Lot 36". Still an absorbing story, the acting was a bit overwrought for my taste. Kuttner's "Graveyard Rats" has to be the creepiest of the trio and "The Autopsy" was over-the-top gory that rivals some of the worst seen in the new film, TERRIFIER. That it starred the great F. Murray Abraham helped it immensely. And, man, the monsters in these are awesome, CGI'd or not.


All-in-all, I enjoyed these as much and in many ways more than all the other TV horror anthologies that have come before it, and I am looking forward to viewing the rest of the series, especially the Lovecraft adaptations.

Oh, and in case you are wondering what T.E.D. Kline's thirteen most terrifying horror stories are ...

THE 13 MOST TERRIFYING HORROR STORIES, Selected by T.E.D. Klein from THE TWILIGHT ZONE MAGAZINE (August, 1983)
  1. Casting the Runes by M.R. James
  2. The Novel of the Black Seal by Arthur Machen
  3. The Willows by Algernon Blackwood
  4. The Dunwich Horror by HPL
  5. Bird of Prey by John Collier
  6. Who Goes There? by Don A. Stuart (John W. Campbell) Antarctic horror, the genesis of The Thing.
  7. They Bite by Anthony Boucher
  8. Stay off the Moon! by Raymond F. Jones
  9. Ottmar Balleau X 2 by George Bamber
  10. First Anniversary by Richard Matheson
  11. The Autopsy by Michael Shea
  12. The Trick by Ramsey Campbell
  13. To Build a Fire by Jack London
And a peek at a review of the Lovecraft story, "Pickman's Model", from Nerdist.com (spoilers ahead!):


CABINET OF CURIOSITIES OFFERS ONE OF THE BEST LOVECRAFT ADAPTATIONS OF ALL TIME
by Kyle Anderson | Oct 27 2022 | Nerdist.com

H.P. Lovecraft is a, shall we say, divisive literary figure. Largely a shut-in during his life, he harbored deep xenophobia and racist beliefs that couldn’t help but work their way into his writing. Because he was terrifying of everything, he pioneered a kind of all-encompassing horror that many, including me, find undeniably fascinating. Guillermo del Toro is a similar Lovecraft enthusiast and in his anthology series Cabinet of Curiosities, he’s given us two adaptations. While Catherine Hardwicke’s “Dreams in the Witch House” is a suitably macabre affair, it’s Keith Thomas’ “Pickman’s Model” that stood out the most. It is one of the very best Lovecraft adaptations I’ve ever seen.

The thing about Lovecraft and his fiction is that it’s easy to focus only on the giant tentacled monsters aspect. They’re giant and have tentacles; it’s easy to get distracted. But the crux of his version of horror is not that there are massive, incomprehensible monsters, it’s what knowing the truth would do to the puny human mind. What is the implication that hideous eldritch abominations lurk just outside of our field of perception? Knowledge isn’t power; it’s debilitating terror.


The episode—based on Lovecraft’s 1926 story of the same name—follows Thurber (Ben Barnes), a collegiate art student and well-to-do chap whose life and sanity find themselves on the rocks after meeting Richard Upton Pickman (Crispin Glover). Pickman is an artist of rare skill but whose works seemingly horrible nightmarish fantasy creatures and events. Macabre, gory, generally upsetting. To most in the realism-focused art world of the 1920s, the paintings are flights of dark fancy. To Thurber, they are profoundly upsetting.

Pickman recognizes Thurber’s keen eye and wishes for his “friend”‘s opinion. Pickman tells us that his many-times-great grandmother was a witch who died of hanging in Salem during the trials. His portrait of her “last supper” is particularly gruesome. Thurber then experiences terrible dreams and visions. From the very first time Thurber sees Pickman’s “stronger work,” it’s as though a veil lifts and he sees the darker aspects of the world. Thurber sees a man (whom he later learns is his fiancée’s father) in a carriage with a woman. The woman’s chest is covered in black veins while a mysterious gash bleeds from the back of the man’s head. Thurber can no longer pretend not to see the rot just underneath the pleasant surface of the world.


Years go by and Pickman turns about in Thurber’s life again. This time, Pickman is even more determined for Thurber to come see his new paintings. He even makes a surprise appearance at Thurber’s house, talking to his wife and son. Thurber, of course, knows Pickman’s art is cancerous, but little does he know how much. Eventually, Thurber goes to Pickman’s house and enters his cellar to find a well in the floor. From the well, the creatures Pickman painted actually appear. They signify a new dawning, Pickman says. They are his family. Pickman’s model is a real creature.

This revelation is one of Lovecraft’s best, up there with the endings of “The Outsider” and “The Rats in the Walls.” The horrible creatures aren’t imaginary. Pickman’s power as an artist is that he can perfectly depict reality, the rot and horror underneath the veneer of modernity. The more he hones his craft, the closer he gets to absolutely reality. Pickman thinks Thurber will understand, but obviously he does not. Or maybe he does too well. Either way, Thurber shoots Pickman.

This doesn’t end the horror, of course. The episode’s grand finale is that it continues on just a little bit more than the written story does. Thurber’s colleague has gone mad staring at Pickman’s art and, very soon after, so does Thurber’s wife. She gouges her own eyes out and cooks their son in the oven. It’s a truly disturbing final act, and proof that the art (in this case, depicting eldritch horrors beneath the surface) doesn’t die with the artist. Thurber could withstand this truth; others not so much.

It’s this that really makes this version of “Pickman’s Model” so powerful. The truth of these horrible creatures and their eventual rise is there, whether Pickman paints them or not. Unlike what G.I. Joe used to say, knowing is not half the battle. Knowing either brings madness or despair. Cosmic horror at its very finest.

Monday, February 14, 2022

NETFLIX 'HOUSE OF USHER' NOW IN PRODUCTION


I was a little reluctant in getting enthusiastic when I first heard that Edgar Allan Poe's THE FALL OF THE HOUSE OF USHER was getting remade until I found out who was making it. After the binge-worthy MIDNIGHT MASS and the anxious anticipation of MIDNIGHT CLUB, writer/director Mike Flanagan might just pull off an interesting adaptation.

Here's the 411:

‘The Fall of the House of Usher’ Netflix Series: What We Know So Far
by Jacob Robinson | January 21st, 2022 | what's-on-netflix.com

Mike Flanagan, the incredible mind behind some of Netflix’s best horror shows is returning once again to adapt another classic horror novel. With Midnight Club deep into post-production, Mike Flanagan’s attention is firmly on the limited series The Fall of the House of Usher which begins filming in January 2022.

The Fall of the House of Usher is an upcoming Netflix Original horror series written, directed, and produced by Mike Flanagan.

The series will be produced by Mike Flanagan’s and Trevor Macy’s Intrepid Pictures, the same production behind all of Flanagan’s movies and TV shows.

What is the production status of The Fall of the House of Usher?
Official Production Status: Filming (Last Updated: 09/12/2021)

Thanks to the information listed by Production Weekly we can confirm that filming is scheduled to begin in Vancouver, Canada, on Monday, January 24th, 2022. Filming will take place over the course of four months, and is currently scheduled to end on Wednesday, May 25th, 2022.

Confirmation that filming had gotten underway came from several actors posting on social media about the project. Kate Siegel posted on January 26th pointing at a sign with the logo for the new series on it.

What is the plot of The Fall of the House of Usher?
Written by Edgar Allan Poe, The Fall of the House of Usher and Other Tales was first published in 1839 in Burton’s Gentleman’s Magazine. The short story was then included in Allen Poe’s collection of published short stories in the book Tales of the Grotesque and Arabesque.

Other than Midnight Mass, all of the television shows written, directed, and produced by Mike Flanagan have been adaptations of horror novels
  • The Haunting of Hill House, Shirley Jackson, 1959
  • The Turn of the Screw*, Henry James, 1898
  • The Midnight Club, Christopher Pike, 1994
 *The Turn of the Screw was adapted into the television series The Haunting of Bly Manor

Here’s a logline that’s been released about what we can expect:
The drama is based on multiple works from Edgar Allan Poe, it features themes of madness, family, isolation, and metaphysical identities. The Fall of the House of Usher is narrated by a man who has been invited to visit his childhood friend Roderick Usher. Usher gradually makes clear that his twin sister Madeline has been placed in the family vault not quite dead. When she reappears in her blood-stained shroud, the visitor rushes to leave as the entire house splits and sinks into a lake.


Who is in the cast of The Fall of the House of Usher?
Mike Flanagan is extremely well known for working with actors on multiple projects. That’s absolutely going to be the case for The Fall of the House of Usher with numerous faces from the likes of The Haunting of Hill House and more recently Midnight Mass returning here.

Let’s run through the cast now and we’ll walk you through the frequent Mike Flanagan players and those who are new to the Flanagan universe seperately.

Returning Players for The Fall of the House of Usher
Among the cast members who are returning from other Mike Flanagan projects include:
  • Carla Gugino (Lead in Gerald’s Game, played Olivia Crain in Hill House, Older Jamie in Bly Manor, and a very brief appearance in Midnight Mass)
  • Kate Siegel (Erin Greene in Midnight Mass, Viola in Bly Manor and Theodora Crain in Hill House)
  • Zach Gilford (Riley Flynn in Midnight Mass. Will also appear in Flanagan’s There’s Something Wrong with the Children)
  • Annabeth Gish (Dr. Sarah Gunning in Midnight Mass, Mrs. Dudley in Hill House)
  • Henry Thomas (Ed Flynn in Midnight Mass, Henry Wingrave in Bly Manor. Also appeared in Gerald’s Game and Doctor Sleep)
  • Samantha Sloyan (Bev Keane in Midnight Mass, Leigh Crain in Hill House)
  • Rahul Kohli (Sheriff Hassan in Midnight Mass, Owen in Bly Manor)
  • Michael Trucco (Wade in Midnight Mass)
  • T’Nia Miller (Hannah Grose in Bly Manor)
Other Cast Members Confirmed for The Fall of The House of Usher:
  • Mary McDonnell will play Madeline Usher described as smart and self-possessed. Known for Battlestar Galactica and Donnie Darko.
  • Mark Hamill will play Arthur Pym who is the family attorney. Known for Star Wars.
  • Frank Langella will play Roderick Usher. Best known for Frost/Nixon and The Trial of the Chicago 7.
  • Paola Nuñez will star and best known for Bad Boys for Life and The Son.
When is the Netflix release date of The Fall of the House of Usher?
With filming taking place between January and May 2022, it’s highly unlikely we’ll see The Fall of the House of Usher released in 2022. It’s more than likely we’ll see the series drop sometime in early 2023.