Nychff PosterThe New York City Horror Film Festival has announced four days of films! The film festival begins November 11th at the Tribeca Cinemas and included in the 2010 lineup are the following features: the kidnap thriller Bereavement, the mysterious Yellow Brick Road, the rock and roll musical Don't Go in the Woods, the French Film The Pack, the Pagan influenced Outcast, the gender bending Ticked Off Trannies with Knives, and two others. The horror short line-up is diverse, with over thirty four showings. The highlights of this second category include the Stephen King adaption "Flowers for Norma" "Monsters Down the Hall" which has been reviewed (here) and "Remote," which has also been reviewed (here). Have a full look at the schedule, in its entirety, below.
Day 1 (November 11th):
The synopsis for Bereavement:
"In 1989, six year old Martin Bristoll was kidnapped from his backyard swing in Minersville Pennsylvania. Graham Sutter,...
Day 1 (November 11th):
The synopsis for Bereavement:
"In 1989, six year old Martin Bristoll was kidnapped from his backyard swing in Minersville Pennsylvania. Graham Sutter,...
- 10/28/2010
- by 28DaysLaterAnalysis@gmail.com (Michael Allen)
- 28 Days Later Analysis
Hp's Slate was one of the early stars of The Year of the Tablet. Before anyone knew what the iPad would be, Hp and Microsoft introduced the Slate at January's Consumer Electronics Show. Microsoft's Steve Ballmer even did the actual introduction, so the Slate was guaranteed a ton of buzz.
But the Slate was actually a pretty traditional tablet--according to a leaked spec list, it ran the full desktop version of Windows 7 (possibly with a touch-oriented skin), and packed netbook internals, including an Intel Atom processor. In the wake of the iPad, the most successful tablet, well, ever, the public started to rethink the idea that tablets would be shrunken, keyboard-less PCs. The iPad was an overgrown smartphone, rather than a shrunken PC, and its success indicated to both the industry and the public that perhaps mobile OSes and mobile hardware would make for a better product.
Back in April,...
But the Slate was actually a pretty traditional tablet--according to a leaked spec list, it ran the full desktop version of Windows 7 (possibly with a touch-oriented skin), and packed netbook internals, including an Intel Atom processor. In the wake of the iPad, the most successful tablet, well, ever, the public started to rethink the idea that tablets would be shrunken, keyboard-less PCs. The iPad was an overgrown smartphone, rather than a shrunken PC, and its success indicated to both the industry and the public that perhaps mobile OSes and mobile hardware would make for a better product.
Back in April,...
- 7/22/2010
- by Dan Nosowitz
- Fast Company
Too bad this is only a short film, it looks so beautiful and the concept, while trendy at the moment, is so incredible, it just leaves me wanting more. Out of Spain and clocking in at 15 minutes, it's directed by Denis Rovira van Boekholt. It's his 3rd short, and he co-wrote it with Liliana Cabal. Someone give this cat some dough to make it into a feature!
The feared consequences of global warming are at their peak when one man crosses the New Sea trying to save his daughter from the clutches of death. A tale about going beyond the limits of the human race and survival of the species.
Trailer after the break. via Twitch
Official Website...
The feared consequences of global warming are at their peak when one man crosses the New Sea trying to save his daughter from the clutches of death. A tale about going beyond the limits of the human race and survival of the species.
Trailer after the break. via Twitch
Official Website...
- 3/30/2009
- QuietEarth.us
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