From author of the popular Clown in a Cornfield books comes Adam Cesare’s Influencer, a new horror novel that actually began its life as an Audible Original. But the paperback adaptation of the tale is said to be “new and expanded,” and it’s releasing October 1 Union Square & Co.
Bloody Disgusting has been exclusively provided with the cover reveal for Cesare’s Influencer, which features art by Tomasz Majewski. Check it out below and read on for more.
Cesare tells Bloody Disgusting, “I’m really proud of it. It’s a little bit more hardcore and disturbing than the Clown books, kind of a YA American Psycho/Funny Games/Silence of the Lambs cocktail, not really any of those things, but a tough book to comp out, since the plot is ‘a sociopathic instagram poet thinks he’s the next Charles Manson.’
“It was originally released as an Audible...
Bloody Disgusting has been exclusively provided with the cover reveal for Cesare’s Influencer, which features art by Tomasz Majewski. Check it out below and read on for more.
Cesare tells Bloody Disgusting, “I’m really proud of it. It’s a little bit more hardcore and disturbing than the Clown books, kind of a YA American Psycho/Funny Games/Silence of the Lambs cocktail, not really any of those things, but a tough book to comp out, since the plot is ‘a sociopathic instagram poet thinks he’s the next Charles Manson.’
“It was originally released as an Audible...
- 5/8/2024
- by John Squires
- bloody-disgusting.com
This Halloween brings a third feature from Graham Jones whom Variety calls “a very talented director”.
The Green Marker Scare is an Irish horror movie animated by children that contains virtually no sex or violence but which according to Jones may be even scarier as a result.
“Explicit or effects-driven stuff has never interested me as a filmmaker,” Jones says. “It’s always been my sense that what you don’t show is more powerful. I’d wager… More...
The Green Marker Scare is an Irish horror movie animated by children that contains virtually no sex or violence but which according to Jones may be even scarier as a result.
“Explicit or effects-driven stuff has never interested me as a filmmaker,” Jones says. “It’s always been my sense that what you don’t show is more powerful. I’d wager… More...
- 10/22/2012
- by HorrorNews.net
- Horror News
Jude Rogers salutes a film charting the struggle of indie record shops and their unsung owners
The British independent record shop hasn't had the rosiest time recently. More than 500 of them have closed in recent years, their racks emptied of glossy sleeves, peeling posters and lapel badges. This makes the arrival of a profitable film about them even more special. Last Shop Standing was crowd-funded by music fans and made in a month, and it has a history as heartfelt and ramshackle as the shops that it celebrates.
Released on DVD and on a screening tour of record shops and art centres this month, Last Shop Standing features cameos from Johnny Marr, Billy Bragg and Paul Weller – but this isn't a film about them. It's a film about Diane from Liverpool, owner of Musical Box, remembering the first Elvis single shocking her mother. It's about Brylcreemed octogenarian Laurie from Dales Records in Tenby,...
The British independent record shop hasn't had the rosiest time recently. More than 500 of them have closed in recent years, their racks emptied of glossy sleeves, peeling posters and lapel badges. This makes the arrival of a profitable film about them even more special. Last Shop Standing was crowd-funded by music fans and made in a month, and it has a history as heartfelt and ramshackle as the shops that it celebrates.
Released on DVD and on a screening tour of record shops and art centres this month, Last Shop Standing features cameos from Johnny Marr, Billy Bragg and Paul Weller – but this isn't a film about them. It's a film about Diane from Liverpool, owner of Musical Box, remembering the first Elvis single shocking her mother. It's about Brylcreemed octogenarian Laurie from Dales Records in Tenby,...
- 9/10/2012
- by Jude Rogers
- The Guardian - Film News
Upgrading fixed line broadband access in rural areas is a waste of money because it will only benefit the "wealthy", a Labour MP has claimed. Graham Jones, the MP for Haslingden and Hyndburn, said that deprived and poor people "do not live in rural Lancashire". The Conservative-run Lancashire Council is investing £32m in upgrading broadband so that homes and businesses in rural parts of the country can access fast internet. But Jones feels that this is a 'rural Tory broadband issue', and the investment would be better passed to "industrial areas where the benefits would have been far greater". He added: "I look around the Ribble Valley and parts of Wyre and see a large population of retirees and wealthy escapees. "People whom it has to be said have made a choice to live away from urban areas, away from advantages of an urban area. (more)...
- 6/1/2012
- by By Andrew Laughlin
- Digital Spy
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