Saturday, October 31, 2009
PIMP MY UNDERPASS (5)
Happy Halloween!
And in the spirit of said holiday, Summit is putting "Katumbas" online, in its entirety, here.
Feel free to check it, at least until November 6, when I understand it will dissolve into the aether.
If you like what you read, then please check out Underpass, now available out there "... in bookstores, newsstands and wherever Summit magazines are sold."
P175!! Full color!!
Go!!
(Underpass cover by Carl Vergara; "Katumbas" cover page art by Ian Sta. Maria.)
Tuesday, October 20, 2009
OUTPOST
(Review)
In the dark heart of war-ravaged Eastern Europe, where the constant sound of distant gunfire is a grim reminder of the savage violence that resides within men, an engineer (Julian Wadham, from the Exorcist prequels) on retainer for some undisclosed company, hires a hastily-assembled squad of mercenaries led by Punisher Mark 3 himself, Ray Stevenson, to protect him as he surveys some recently-acquired “real estate” for “minerals.”
That’s the set-up for Steve Barker’s feature debut, Outpost, and it starts off promisingly enough, though ultimately, doesn’t quite get the job done.
Now, I’ve long had a fascination with the possibilities in the collision of war and the occult, and the relatively slow burn of Outpost’s script—by Rae Brunton, from a story by Kieran Parker, Barker, and Brunton—works in the film’s favour, allowing the audience fleeting glimpses of some of the characters, as soldiers and as men. (Though Wadham’s engineer, Hunt, stubbornly remains more plot function than actual person.)
In addition, credit must also be given to casting director Kate Plantin, who has assembled a cast who decidedly do not cut the photogenic Hollywood soldier of fortune figure. There’s nary a ripped, gym-toned body nor young, pretty boy stud to be seen here. Just grizzled veterans who’ve seen far too much, who aren’t exactly the type young ladies would take home to meet their mothers.
For all the checks in its plus column though, Outpost doesn’t really live up to its promise, and when the nature of the unstoppable enemy is revealed, the proceedings gradually revert to a vaguely mechanical (and vaguely familiar) rhythm; you just know how things will turn out in this little corner of Hell.
The film’s rather unimaginative coda also plays as a tired little echo of many a horror film before it.
Still, much of Outpost is a sight better than most of the recent “horror during war” movies. Disappointing entries that come to mind include Alex Turner’s Red Sands (set in modern-day Afghanistan), Rob Green’s The Bunker (WWII), and Kong Soo-chang’s R-Point (the Vietnam war).
Actually, the only one I’ve seen recently that I truly love is Daniel Myrick’s The Objective (also using the Middle Eastern conflict as backdrop).
If only Outpost hadn’t buckled, it could have enjoyed some rarefied company.
The fact that a sequel (Outpost II: Black Sun) has been announced leaves me rather ambivalent. If it’s going to be more of the same, I think I’ll pass.
If Barker (who returns as director) intends to step up his game though, then Black Sun could be worth a look.
We’ll just have to wait and see, won’t we?
Parting shot: A review of The Objective can be found in the Archive.
(Outpost UK quad courtesy of impawards.com.)
A Rundown of the 13 Best Horror Movies I’ve Seen in the Past Year
[13 of 13]
THE LAST HOUSE ON THE LEFT (March 2009)
… Dennis Iliadis’ grimly violent The Last House on the Left—a reworking of Wes Craven’s infamous debut feature— [is] certainly a very adult and ballsy piece that effortlessly leapfrogs over its recent remade ilk and is officially the first 70’s/80’s horror remake that I’m actually satisfied with.
Read the entire review here.
Parting shot: Well, that’s it for this year’s list. Let’s see what the next dozen months have to offer horrorwise, so we can see how those titles will impact 2010’s rundown.
Happy Halloween!
(The Last House on the Left OS courtesy of bloody-disgusting.com.)
Sunday, October 18, 2009
A Rundown of the 13 Best Horror Movies I’ve Seen in the Past Year
[12 of 13]
THE CHILDREN (December 2008)
As if the French weren’t bad enough, the holiday season gets yet another kick in the nuts in Tom Shankland’s shocking The Children.
Read the entire review here.
(The Children UK quad courtesy of shocktillyoudrop.com.)
PIMP MY UNDERPASS (4)
Thanx are in order…
To everyone at Summit, for making it possible; to the Underpass crew, for concocting a particularly formidable brew; to Ella & Sally and the Visprint crew; to the Komikon organizers; to Ruey, for the much-appreciated words; to absolutely everyone who stopped by to pick up copies (not just of Underpass, but of the novellas as well) and have them signed (seeing that vintage copy of Flashpoint was a blast!); to those who threw out questions at the Q&A; and to Budj, for persistence which paid off…
Many, many, many thanx.
Now, as per the press release, Underpass, the “graphic anthology featuring dark fantasy stories from some of today's greatest Pinoy comics creators” will henceforth “… be available in major magazine shops.”
Check it out, please.
(Underpass cover by Carl Vergara.)
Friday, October 16, 2009
A Rundown of the 13 Best Horror Movies I’ve Seen in the Past Year
[11 of 13]
SPLINTER (October 2008)
Toby Wilkins’ Splinter is a frisky blast of low budget horror that grabs you from the get-go… and introduces us to one of the freakiest cinematic beasties from 2008.
Read the entire review here.
(Splinter OS courtesy of shocktillyoudrop.com.)
Thursday, October 15, 2009
A Rundown of the 13 Best Horror Movies I’ve Seen in the Past Year
[10 of 13]
DEAD SET (October 2008)
[Dead Set is] a thrilling and gory look at the collision of catastrophe and entertainment, where the idea of reality television as goldfish bowl is taken to its bleakest extreme.
Read the entire review here.
Parting shot: Yes, this initially burst onto the scene as a 5 episode TV series, but, a) there was a feature-length cut subsequently aired, which joined the episodes into one unholy union, and so Dead Set does technically exist as a feature; b) it is available on DVD, so you can watch all 5 episodes consecutively, as if it were a movie; and c) this is a hell of a lot better than many a zombie movie lurching out there in the multiplex wilds.
(Dead Set DVD cover art courtesy of dvdactive.com.)
Monday, October 12, 2009
A Rundown of the 13 Best Horror Movies I’ve Seen in the Past Year
[9 of 13]
DEADGIRL (September 2008)
[Deadgirl] doesn’t mess about, and rather single-mindedly, goes straight for the gut, and, in a very welcome surprise, also goes for the heart. For anyone who’s survived the psychic minefield of high school, there are some rather familiar feelings on display here, amidst all the blood and gore.
Read the entire review here.
(Deadgirl OS courtesy of bloody-disgusting.com.)
Friday, October 9, 2009
PIMP MY UNDERPASS (3)
“KATUMBAS” PREVIEW
As per instructions, here’s a widdle preview of “Katumbas”…
Look! Press release!!
Set to launch this coming KOMIKON 2009 (October 18, Megatrade Hall 1, SM Megamall), Underpass is a graphic anthology featuring dark fantasy stories from some of today's greatest Pinoy comics creators.
Sim by Gerry Alanguilan
Judas Kiss by David Hontiveros, Budjette Tan and Oliver Pulumbarit
Katumbas by David Hontiveros and Ian Sta. Maria
The Clinic by Budjette Tan and Ka-jo Baldisimo.
The full-color anthology, which is Summit Media's first foray into Philippine-produced comics, will retail for P250. After the Komikon, Underpass will be available in major magazine shops.
Hope to see you at the Komikon!
(Underpass cover by Carl Vergara; “Katumbas” pages from Underpass [art by Ian Sta. Maria].)
PIMP MY UNDERPASS (2)
“JUDAS KISS” PREVIEW
As per instructions, here’s a widdle preview of “Judas Kiss”…
Look! Press release!!
Set to launch this coming KOMIKON 2009 (October 18, Megatrade Hall 1, SM Megamall), Underpass is a graphic anthology featuring dark fantasy stories from some of today's greatest Pinoy comics creators.
Sim by Gerry Alanguilan
Judas Kiss by David Hontiveros, Budjette Tan and Oliver Pulumbarit
Katumbas by David Hontiveros and Ian Sta. Maria
The Clinic by Budjette Tan and Ka-jo Baldisimo.
The full-color anthology, which is Summit Media's first foray into Philippine-produced comics, will retail for P250. After the Komikon, Underpass will be available in major magazine shops.
Hope to see you at the Komikon!
(Underpass cover by Carl Vergara; “Judas Kiss” pages from Underpass [art by Oliver Pulumbarit].)
PIMP MY UNDERPASS (1)
I and some friends and stalwarts who frequently haunt the gutters of the four-colour page have been busy of late with publishing powerhouse Summit, on a little something called Underpass.
It’s a horror anthology in comic book form with four tales, two of which I’ve had my grubby hand in.
Before getting into the nitty gritty though, in the grand tradition of AICN’s Herc…
Look! Press release!!
Set to launch this coming KOMIKON 2009 (October 18, Megatrade Hall 1, SM Megamall), Underpass is a graphic anthology featuring dark fantasy stories from some of today's greatest Pinoy comics creators.
Sim by Gerry Alanguilan
Judas Kiss by David Hontiveros, Budjette Tan and Oliver Pulumbarit
Katumbas by David Hontiveros and Ian Sta. Maria
The Clinic by Budjette Tan and Ka-jo Baldisimo.
The full-color anthology, which is Summit Media's first foray into Philippine-produced comics, will retail for P250. After the Komikon, Underpass will be available in major magazine shops.
Now, to wit, and in alphabetical order, there’s “Judas Kiss,” which is based on a short story of mine, and signals my third collaboration with Oliver Pulumbarit, he of Lexy, Nance & Argus fame, and whom I first worked with on our National Book Award-nominated Dhampyr.
As you can see, Trese’s Budjette Tan also had his own grubby hand in this one, breaking up the original prose into manageable, panel-sized gobbets, before I swooped in for the final finessing.
“Judas Kiss” is a tale of sex, horror, and spectral revenge, not necessarily in that order.
And then there’s “Katumbas,” a story I wrote for the kick-a$ Ian Sta. Maria, who’s responsible for the design of Habagat, who can be found righting wrongs in embarrassingly skin-tight spandex in my online novel, Pelicula (sequestered at http://www.davidhontiveros.com/).
“Katumbas” places Ian’s Kadasig (a shirtless, tattooed mofo who deals with all manner of demonic and spectral mischief) front and centre, and in it, we’ve begun to lay the cosmological foundations for the world Kadasig operates in.
The other stories are “The Clinic” (by Trese duo Budjette Tan and Ka-jo Baldisimo) and “Sim” (by Gerry Alanguilan, of Wasted fame).
I imagine they’ll be pimping Underpass in their own corners of cyberspace as well, so you could check those out for more details.
For my part, I shall feature widdle previews of “Judas Kiss” and “Katumbas” in subsequent posts.
Once more, Underpass will be unleashed at the 5th Annual Komikon, on October 18, 2009, Sunday, at the SM Megamall Megatrade Hall 1.
If basking in the warm, irradiated glow of comics and cosplay is your thing, please drop by. There’ll be appearances and autograph signings, for starters.
Well, I imagine what’s quite enough pimping for one post.
Hope to see you at the Komikon, where I yearn to witness the poltergeist-like effect of seeing Underpass flying off the shelves…
(Underpass cover by Carl Vergara; “Judas Kiss” and “Katumbas” title pages from Underpass.)
A Rundown of the 13 Best Horror Movies I’ve Seen in the Past Year
[8 of 13]
VINYAN (August 2008)
Fabrice Du Welz’s Vinyan… [is] another film from the Belgian writer/director that stretches the boundaries of the modern horror film.
Read the entire review here.
(Vinyan French OS courtesy of impawards.com.)
A Rundown of the 13 Best Horror Movies I’ve Seen in the Past Year
[7 of 13]
EDEN LAKE (May 2008)
… Eden Lake is still a particularly brutal bit of horror, which takes place in a world where justice—worldly or cosmic—does not seem to exist, and where the comeuppances happen to those who, arguably, deserve it the least.
Read the entire review here.
(Eden Lake UK quad courtesy of shocktillyoudrop.com.)
A Rundown of the 13 Best Horror Movies I’ve Seen in the Past Year
[6 of 13]
THE OBJECTIVE (April 2008)
… The Objective is ultimately about a government’s hunger for power, and how all else falls by the wayside in light of that all-encompassing yearning for the upper hand.
Read the entire review here.
(The Objective OS courtesy of shocktillyoudrop.com.)
A Rundown of the 13 Best Horror Movies I’ve Seen in the Past Year
[5 of 13]
SURVEILLANCE (February 2008)
Though this is nominally a thriller, as with most of her father’s work, [Jennifer] Lynch’s Surveillance does what the best horror movies should do, unsettle, disturb its audience.
Read the entire review here.
(Surveillance OS courtesy of impawards.com; design by Jeremy Saunders.)
Wednesday, October 7, 2009
A Rundown of the 13 Best Horror Movies I’ve Seen in the Past Year
[4 of 13]
LÅT DEN RÄTTE KOMMA IN
(LET THE RIGHT ONE IN) (January 2008)
[Låt den rätte komma in is] quite simply a fascinating and darkly alluring cinematic experience unlike any other.
Read the entire review here.
(OS courtesy of impawards.com.)
A Rundown of the 13 Best Horror Movies I’ve Seen in the Past Year
[3 of 13]
THE BRØKEN (January 2008)
[Director Sean] Ellis succeeds in doing, with a tremendous and confident flourish, what those [other] films so clearly failed to do: present us with an involving, creepy, and ultimately disconcerting narrative that plays on certain common fears.
Read the entire review here.
(The Brøken French OS courtesy of beyondhollywood.com.)