Ryuhei Kitamura
An international one-sheet for the next flick from WWE Films, No One Lives, has arrived, and as always we have it for you right here with no count outs or disqualifications. Dig it!
Though we're still disappointed we're not getting See No Evil 2, we've got the first official still for the next flick from WWE Films, No One Lives. Read on for the details.
Pathe International just released the first ever teaser art for the latest film from the WWE and Midnight Meat Train director Ryuhei Kitamura, No One Lives, and it's ready to turn your world upside down!
One slasher I refuse to get behind is Gregory Dark’s See No Evil. It was a good try, albeit one that never really came together. But that’s not stopping WWE Films from trying their hand at horror once again, this time with a survival horror story with some slasher elements.
Though we're still disappointed we're not getting See No Evil 2, casting is moving along quite nicely on the next flick from WWE Films. Read on for the details.
It's been a while since the WWE has dabbled in the horror genre. The first time was for the inexplicably watchable flick See No Evil starring the Big Red Machine, Kane. Sensing a profit to be made, McMahon is heading back to the dark side.
Reviewed by Gareth Jones
Starring Mitsuru Fukikoshi, Issei Ishida, Shintaro Matsubara, Airi Nakajima
Directed by Tak Sakaguchi
Distributed by MVM Entertainment
More news out of Cannes. A new slasher is getting set to bring his special brand of slaughter to horror fans, and one hell of a director is said to be getting behind the project.
After tackling Clive Barker's work with The Midnight Meat Train, director Ryuhei Kitamura is now moving on to another literary genius ... Stephen King as Our Thing Productions is readying a live action adaptation of the Nightmares and Dreamscapes zombie tale "Home Delivery".
Wondering what's next for Midnight Meat Train director Ryuhei Kitamura? Gale Anne Hurd’s Valhalla Motion Pictures has something of Biblical proportions.
Reviewed by Uncle Creepy
Starring Brooke Shields, Ted Raimi, Roger Bart, Peter Jacobson, Vinnie Jones, Bradley Cooper, Leslie Bibb
Directed by Ryuhei Kitamura
After severely mistreating it theatrically, then sort of making up for it by giving it a good run on Fearnet, Lionsgate is finally bringing Midnight Meat Train into the station with standard and Blu-ray DVD releases on February 17th, 2009!
All right, so Midnight Meat Train didn’t get the kind of theatrical play that would’ve made sense, but at least you won’t have to wait for the eventual DVD to check it out, as long as you get FearNet, that is.
It’s been awfully quiet from the Clive Barker camp on Lionsgate’s decision to put Midnight Meat Train (review), the first of many planned adaptations of Barker’s Books of Blood stories, into second-run dollar theaters instead of giving it a real theatrical release.
General society has a tendency to judge the horror community unfairly. Sure, some of us look a little different or, hell, even act a little differently, but in all honesty this small sect is comprised of some of the most loving and passionate individuals that I have had the pleasure of meeting. When we suffer a tragedy or are dealt an injustice, we rally around each other.
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