Zombies: New Media, Cinema, and Performance
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Edmond Press
International Press International Sales Venice: wild bunch The PR Contact Ltd. Venice Phil Symes - Mobile: 347 643 1171 Vincent Maraval Ronaldo Mourao - Mobile: 347 643 0966 Tel: +336 11 91 23 93 Email: [email protected] Email: [email protected] Fax: 041 5265277 Carole Baraton 62nd Mostra Venice Film Festival: Tel: +336 20 36 77 72 Hotel Villa Pannonia Email: [email protected] Via Doge D. Michiel 48 Gaël Nouaile 30126 Venezia Lido Tel: +336 21 23 04 72 Tel: 041 5260162 Email: [email protected] Fax: 041 5265277 Silva Simonutti London: Tel: +33 6 82 13 18 84 The PR Contact Ltd. Email: [email protected] 32 Newman Street London, W1T 1PU Paris: Tel: + 44 (0) 207 323 1200 Wild Bunch Fax: + 44 (0) 207 323 1070 99, rue de la Verrerie - 75004 Paris Email: [email protected] tel: + 33 1 53 01 50 20 fax: +33 1 53 01 50 49 www.wildbunch.biz French Press: French Distribution : Pan Européenne / Wild Bunch Michel Burstein / Bossa Nova Tel: +33 1 43 26 26 26 Fax: +33 1 43 26 26 36 High resolution images are available to download from 32 bd st germain - 75005 Paris the press section at www.wildbunch.biz [email protected] www.bossa-nova.info Synopsis Cast and Crew “You are not where you belong.” Edmond: William H. Macy Thus begins a brutal descent into a contemporary urban hell Glenna: Julia Stiles in David Mamet's savage black comedy, when his encounter B-Girl: Denise Richards with a fortune-teller leads businessman Edmond (William H. -
Michael John Bateman Cce Editor Canadian and Uk Citizenship / Bc Resident / Iatse 891 / Acfc Online Reel
MICHAEL JOHN BATEMAN CCE EDITOR CANADIAN AND UK CITIZENSHIP / BC RESIDENT / IATSE 891 / ACFC ONLINE REEL TELEVISION NETWORK/CO DIRECTOR PRODUCERS MALIBU RESCUE Netflix Savage Steve Holland P: Amy Sydorick (Movie/Pilot) PROJECT MC2 S3 Netflix Various P: Mary Sparacio, (Series) Sadaf Cohen Muncy, Shauna Phelan THE CHRISTMAS CONSULTANT Lifetime Movie Network John Bradshaw P: Raymond Massey (Movie) GOOD MORNING KILLER (Movie) RPI Group Productions Maggie Greenwald EP: Frank Von Zerneck for TNT HICCUPS (Comedy Pilot) Penflo Production Inc. David Storey EP: Brent Butt, David Storey for CTV DO YOU KNOW ME? (Movie) Hallmark Ent/ Penelope Buitenhuis P: Robert Halmi Sr., Shan Tam, Lifetime Matthew O’Connor,Lisa Richardson LUNA: THE WAY HOME (Movie) CTV/ Screen Siren Don McBrearty P: Trish Dolman, Anne Marie LaTraverse A GIRL LIKE ME: Lifetime/Braun Ent/ Agnieszka Holland P: Zev Braun, Philip Krupp, THE GWEN ARAUJO STORY Sony Pictures Fran Rosati (Movie) FINAL DAYS: PLANET EARTH Hallmark Entertainment Rob Lieberman P: Robert Halmi Sr., (Mini Series) Matthew O’Connor KINGDOM HOSPITAL (Series) Sony Pictures/ Craig Baxley EP: Mark Carliner, Stephen King, Drama Fantasy Horror ABC Network Lars von Trier TOM STONE (Series) CBC Television Various P: Tom Cox, Doug McLeod Comedy THE OVERCOAT (Movie) Alliance/CBC Morris Panych P: Lael McCall, Richard Craven THE IMMORTAL (Series) Space Various P: Michael Grais Time Travel Sci Fi NOTHING TOO GOOD Alliance/CBC Various P: Charles Glazer, FOR A COWBOY (Series) Davie Barlow One hour Period Comedy DEAD MAN'S GUN S2 (Series, 22 ep) MGM/Showtime Various P: Larry Sugar, Henry Winkler Western Action Anthology **Winner American Heritage Award SO WEIRD (Series Pilot) Disney Channel Shawn Levy P: Larry Sugar, Henry Winkler Shawn Levy DEAD MAN'S GUN S1 (Series, 22 ep) Buena Vista/Showtime Various P: Larry Sugar, Henry Winkler Western Action Anthology **Winner American Heritage Award Represented by Barbara J. -
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE September 18, 2014 Press/Media Contact: Philip Sokoloff, (626) 683-9205
PHILIP SOKOLOFF Publicity for the theatre P.O. Box 94387 Pasadena, CA 91109-4387 (626) 683-9205 fax (626) 683-9172 e-mail: [email protected] FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE September 18, 2014 Press/media contact: Philip Sokoloff, (626) 683-9205 BACK FROM THE UNDEAD! STUART GORDON DIRECTS “RE-ANIMATOR™ THE MUSICAL” AT STEVE ALLEN THEATER; OPENS OCTOBER 17 FOR A HALLOWEEN RUN WHAT: “Re-Animator™ The Musical.” Revival of the award-winning musical hit. WHO: Book by Dennis Paoli, Stuart Gordon and William J. Norris. Music and lyrics by Mark Nutter. Adapted from the story by H.P. Lovecraft. Based on the film “H.P. Lovecraft’s Re- Animator” produced by Brian Yuzna. Musical director: Peter Adams. Choreography by Cynthia Carle. Directed by Stuart Gordon. Produced by Dean Schramm and Stuart Gordon. Presented by The Schramm Group LLC and Red Hen Productions in association with Trepany House. WHERE: The Steve Allen Theater, 4773 Hollywood Blvd., Hollywood, CA 90027. Parking lot behind building. WHEN: Previews Oct. 10, 11, 12 . Opens October 17, 2014, runs through November 2. Fridays through Sundays at 8:00 p.m. ADMISSION: $25. Previews $20. RESERVATIONS: 800-595-4849 ONLINE TICKETING: www.trepanyhouse.org * * * * * * “Re-Animator™ the Musical” has been re-animated, with new songs and new performers just in time for Halloween. “RE-ANIMATOR™ the Musical” tells the story of Herbert West, a brilliant young medical student who has created a glowing green serum that can bring the dead back to life. What should be a medical breakthrough results in hideous monstrosities and ghastly consequences. “I guess he just wasn’t fresh enough,” is West’s constant refrain in his quest for fresh subjects. -
"They're Us": Representations of Women in George Romero's 'Living
"They’re Us": Representations of Women in George Romero’s ‘Living Dead’ Series Stephen Harper In the opening scene of George Romero’s 1978 film Martin, a teenage sexual psychopath kills and drinks the blood of a young woman in her sleeper train compartment during a struggle that is protracted, messy and far from one-sided. Although women are often victims in Romero’s films, they are by no means passive ones. Indeed, Romero is seldom in danger of objectivising or pornographising his female characters; on the contrary, Romero’s women are typically resourceful and autonomous. This paper analyses some of Romero’s representations of women, with particular reference to the four ‘living dead’ films which Romero made over a period of more than thirty years. These are Night of the Living Dead (1968), Dawn of the Dead (1979), Day of the Dead (1985) and the 1990 remake of Night. [1] All of these films feature a group of human survivors in an America overrun by zombies. The survivors of Night hole up in a house; in Dawn the sanctuary is a shopping mall; while in Day, the darkest of the films, it is an underground military installation. Unsurprisingly, these savage and apocalyptic zombie films contain some of Romero’s most striking representations of active and even aggressive women. This in itself hints at a feminist approach. While Hollywood films typically eroticize and naturalise male violence and emphasise female passivity, Romero uses his zombies to undermine such assumptions. Romero’s female zombies are not only undead but virtually ungendered; for instance, they are responsible for as many acts of violence as their male counterparts. -
28 Days Later
28 DAYS LATER Written by Alex Garland CLOSE ON A MONITOR SCREEN: Images of stunning violence. Looped. Soldiers in a foreign war shoot an unarmed civilian at point- blank range; a man is set on by a frenzied crowd wielding clubs and machetes; a woman is necklaced while her killers cheer and howl. Pull back to reveal that we are seeing one of many screens in a bank of monitors, all showing similar images... Then revealing that the monitors are in a... INT. SURGICAL CHAMBER - NIGHT ...surgical chamber. And watching the screens is a... ...chimp, strapped to an operating table, with its skull dissected open, webbed in wires and monitoring devices, muzzled with a transparent guard. Alive. Behind the surgical chamber, through the wide doorframe, we can see a larger laboratory beyond. INT. BRIGHT CORRIDOR - NIGHT A group of black-clad ALF Activists, all wearing balaclavas, move down a corridor. They carry various gear - bag, bolt cutters. As they move, one Activist reaches up to a security camera and sprays it black with an aerosol paint can. INT. LABORATORY - NIGHT The Activists enter the laboratory. CHIEF ACTIVIST Fucking hell... The Chief Activist takes his camera off his shoulder and starts taking photos. The room is huge and long, and darkened except for specific pools of light. Partially illuminated are rows of cages with clear perspex doors. They run down either side of the room. In the cages are chimpanzees. 2. Most are in a state of rabid agitation, banging and clawing against the perspex, baring teeth through foam-flecked mouths. -
'The Whole Burden of Civilisation Has Fallen Upon Us'
‘The Whole Burden of Civilisation Has Fallen upon Us’. The Representation of Gender in Zombie Films, 1968-2013 Leon van Amsterdam Student number: s1141627 Leiden University MA History: Cities, Migration and Global Interdependence Thesis supervisor: Marion Pluskota 2 Contents Chapter 1: Introduction .............................................................................................................. 4 Theory ................................................................................................................................. 6 Literature Review ............................................................................................................... 9 Material ............................................................................................................................ 13 Method ............................................................................................................................. 15 Chapter 2: A history of the zombie and its cultural significance ............................................. 18 Race and gender representations in early zombie films .................................................. 18 The sci-fi zombie and Romero’s ghoulish zombie ............................................................ 22 The loss and return of social anxiety in the zombie genre .............................................. 26 Chapter 3: (Post)feminism in American politics and films ....................................................... 30 Protofeminism ................................................................................................................. -
ABSTRACT Title of Document: COMMUNICATING FEAR in FILM
ABSTRACT Title of Document: COMMUNICATING FEAR IN FILM MUSIC: A SOCIOPHOBIC ANALYSIS OF ZOMBIE FILM SOUNDTRACKS Pedro Gonzalez-Fernandez Master of Arts, 2014 Directed By: Dr. Patrick Warfield, Musicology The horror film soundtrack is a complex web of narratological, ethnographic, and semiological factors all related to the social tensions intimated by a film. This study examines four major periods in the zombie’s film career—the Voodoo zombie of the 1930s and 1940s, the invasion narratives of the late 1960s, the post-apocalyptic survivalist fantasies of the 1970s and 1980s, and the modern post-9/11 zombie—to track how certain musical sounds and styles are indexed with the content of zombie films. Two main musical threads link the individual films’ characterization of the zombie and the setting: Othering via different types of musical exoticism, and the use of sonic excess to pronounce sociophobic themes. COMMUNICATING FEAR IN FILM MUSIC: A SOCIOPHOBIC ANALYSIS OF ZOMBIE FILM SOUNDTRACKS by Pedro Gonzalez-Fernandez Thesis submitted to the Faculty of the Graduate School of the University of Maryland, College Park in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Master of Arts 2014 Advisory Committee: Professor Patrick Warfield, Chair Professor Richard King Professor John Lawrence Witzleben ©Copyright by Pedro Gonzalez-Fernandez 2014 Table of Contents TABLE OF CONTENTS II INTRODUCTION AND LITERATURE REVIEW 1 Introduction 1 Why Zombies? 2 Zombie Taxonomy 6 Literature Review 8 Film Music Scholarship 8 Horror Film Music Scholarship -
New Warner March Releases- the Lego Movie 2 3DBD
The Fastest Growing DVD, CD and Blu-ray Retail Catalog The future delivered now. Allied Vaughn. Powering today's leading entertainment supply chain. Volume 9 Issue 4 Congratulations go out to National Geographic and their Best Documentary win for "Free Solo" at the Oscars. We're proud to be distributing the title to our AV Retailers and Wholesalers, it's shaping up to be a major success for retailers. We're also proud of the significant growth in our documentaries and Independent film selections which underscores the advantages of a MOD release, always in stock, speed to market and broadest physical media choice for consumers. Check out all our new releases below and also the new March releases from Warner Archive, something there for every collector! Ask us how we can take your titles to market and grow your catalog sales. Richard Skillman Vice President Allied Vaughn Entertainment [email protected] Allied Vaughn Entertainment Main Page Allied Vaughn Entertainment Studio Catalog Allied Vaughn Entertainment Archives National Geographic's FREE SOLO Wins Best Documentary Congratulations National Geographic on its Academy Award winning documentary! 3/5/2019 024543470229 Free Solo (fka Solo) 2019 The stunning, intimate and unflinching Academy Award Winning portrait of free solo climber Alex Honnold as he prepares to achieve his lifelong dream: scaling the face of the world's most famous rock "the 3,200-foot El Capitan in Yosemite National Park" without a rope. Renowned filmmakers Elizabeth Chai Vasarhelyi and Jimmy Chin capture the death-defying climb with exquisite artistry and masterful, vertigo- inducing camerawork. Warner March Releases Announces along with "The Lego Movie 2: The Second Part" on 3D Blu- ray Warner delivers again with a full slate of New Hit 3D Blu-ray Major Features and remastered Hollywood classics. -
The Zombie in Popular Culture from "Night of the Living Dead" to "Shaun of the Dead"
Brigham Young University BYU ScholarsArchive Theses and Dissertations 2010-03-17 Ghouls, Hell and Transcendence: The Zombie in Popular Culture from "Night of the Living Dead" to "Shaun of the Dead" Jasie Stokes Brigham Young University - Provo Follow this and additional works at: https://scholarsarchive.byu.edu/etd Part of the Classics Commons, and the Comparative Literature Commons BYU ScholarsArchive Citation Stokes, Jasie, "Ghouls, Hell and Transcendence: The Zombie in Popular Culture from "Night of the Living Dead" to "Shaun of the Dead"" (2010). Theses and Dissertations. 2103. https://scholarsarchive.byu.edu/etd/2103 This Thesis is brought to you for free and open access by BYU ScholarsArchive. It has been accepted for inclusion in Theses and Dissertations by an authorized administrator of BYU ScholarsArchive. For more information, please contact [email protected], [email protected]. Ghouls, Hell and Transcendence: the Zombie in Popular Culture from Night of the Living Dead to Shaun of the Dead Jasie Stokes A thesis submitted to the faculty of Brigham Young University in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Master of Arts Carl Sederholm Charlotte Stanford Kerry Soper Department of Humanities, Classics and Comparative Literature Brigham Young University April 2010 Copyright © 2010 Jasie Stokes All Rights Reserved ABSTRACT Ghouls, Hell and Transcendence: the Zombie in Popular Culture from Night of the Living Dead to Shaun of the Dead Jasie Stokes Department of Humanities, Classics and Comparative Literature Master of Arts Considering the amount of media created around the zombie and the sustained interest in its role in our society, we can clearly see that a cultural phenomenon is underway, and it is important for us to question this phenomenon in order to gain some understanding of how and why its appeal has stretched so far. -
From Voodoo to Viruses: the Evolution of the Zombie in Twentieth Century Popular Culture
From Voodoo to Viruses: The Evolution of the Zombie in Twentieth Century Popular Culture By Margaret Twohy Adviser: Dr. Bernice Murphy A thesis submitted in partial fulfilment of the Degree of Master’s of Philosophy in Popular Literature Trinity College Dublin Dublin, Ireland October 2008 2 Abstract The purpose of this thesis is to explore the evolutionary path the zombie has followed in 20th Century popular culture. Additionally, this thesis will examine the defining characteristics of the zombie as they have changed through its history. Over the course of the last century and edging into the 21st Century, the zombie has grown in popularity in film, videogames, and more recently in novels. The zombie genre has become a self-inspiring force in pop culture media today. Films inspired a number of videogames, which in turn, supplied the film industry with a resurgence of inspirations and ideas. Combined, these media have brought the zombie to a position of greater prominence in popular literature. Additionally, within the growing zombie culture today there is an over-arcing viral theme associated with the zombie. In many films, games, and novels there is a viral cause for a zombie outbreak. Meanwhile, the growing popularity of zombies and its widening reach throughout popular culture makes the genre somewhat viral-like as well. Filmmakers, authors and game designers are all gathering ideas from one another causing the some amount of self- cannibalisation within the genre. 3 Table of Contents Introduction 4 Chapter One 7 Evolution of the Dead Chapter Two 21 Contaminants, Viruses, and Possessions—Oh my! Chapter Three 34 Dawn of the (Digital) Dead Chapter Four 45 Rise of the Literary Zombie Conclusion 58 Bibliography 61 4 Introduction There are perhaps few, if any fictional monsters that can rival the versatility of the humble zombie (or zombi)1. -
Beneath Still Waters: Brian Yuzna's Ritual Return in Indonesian Cinema
Beneath Still Waters: Brian Yuzna’s Ritual Return in Indonesian Cinema Xavier Mendik This article offers the first academic consideration of Brian Yuzna’s recent films created in Indonesia. Since the mid 1980s, Yuzna has worked extensively across the USA, Europe and the Far East (both as a director and producer), pioneering a distinctive international brand of horror cinema that combines social critique with explicit splatter. Despite his transnational credentials, Yuzna’s work in Indonesia has largely been ignored by those critics interested in reclaiming 1970s/80s genre entries as more ‘legitimate’ symbols of Indonesian cult cinema. However, by considering Yuzna’s 2010 title Amphibious, I shall argue that the film contains the elements of hybridity and generic impurity that critics such as Karl G. Heider have long attributed to Indonesian pulp traditions. Specifically, it shall be argued that the film’s emphasis on performativity, trickery and spectacle are used to evoke Indonesian myths rather than Americanised tropes of genre cinema. As well as considering the transnational elements to Amphibious, the article will also explore possible connections between abject constructions of the transformative female body in both Indonesian film and Brian Yuzna’s wider cinema. The article also features exclusive new interviews with Brian Yuzna and Amphibious screenwriter John Penney discussing the making and meaning of the film. Keywords: Brian Yuzna, Indonesian horror, Amphibious, transnational cinema . a cinema can be defined as transnational in the sense that it brings into question how fixed ideas of a national film culture are constantly being transformed by the presence of protagonists (and indeed film-makers) who have a presence within the nation, even if they exist on the margins, but find their origins quite clearly beyond it. -
Master Class with Andrea Martin: Selected Filmography 1 the Higher
Master Class with Andrea Martin: Selected Filmography The Higher Learning staff curate digital resource packages to complement and offer further context to the topics and themes discussed during the various Higher Learning events held at TIFF Bell Lightbox. These filmographies, bibliographies, and additional resources include works directly related to guest speakers’ work and careers, and provide additional inspirations and topics to consider; these materials are meant to serve as a jumping-off point for further research. Please refer to the event video to see how topics and themes relate to the Higher Learning event. Films and Television Series mentioned or discussed during the Master Class 8½. Dir. Federico Fellini, 1963, Italy and France. 138 mins. Production Co.: Cineriz / Francinex. American Dad! (2005-2012). 7 seasons, 133 episodes. Creators: Seth MacFarlane, Mike Barker, and Matt Weitzman. U.S.A. Originally aired on Fox. 20th Century Fox Television / Atlantic Creative / Fuzzy Door Productions / Underdog Productions. Auntie Mame. Dir. Morton DaCosta, 1958, U.S.A. 143 mins. Production Co.: Warner Bros. Pictures. Breaking Upwards. Dir. Daryl Wein, 2009, U.S.A. 88mins. Production Co.: Daryl Wein Films. Bridesmaids. Dir. Paul Feig, 2011, U.S.A. 125 mins. Production Co.: Universal Pictures / Relativity Media / Apatow Productions. Cannibal Girls. Dir. Ivan Reitman, 1973, Canada. 84 mins. Production Co.: Scary Pictures Productions. The Cleveland Show (2009-2012). 3 seasons, 65 episodes. Creators: Richard Appel, Seth MacFarlane, and Mike Henry. U.S.A. Originally aired on Fox. Production Co.: Persons Unknown Productions / Happy Jack Productions / Fuzzy Door Productions / 20th Century Fox Television. Club Paradise. Dir. Harold Ramis, 1986, U.S.A.