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It's Skeptik's turn at the wheel and we're covering Ryuhei Kitamura's 2001 action packed horror film, Versus! Get ready for all sorts of leather-clad characters, an irresponsible amount of sharp objects, and (strangest of all) gun-wielding zombies. It's all of our personal favorite childhood properties blended into one hell of a spectacle!TW: violence/gore, dismemberment, anything you considered "edgy" as a kid in this eraBe sure to sub to our YouTube channel for video episodes!https://youtube.com/@thedevilsworkpodcast?si=qi943o2VJRA5KxkzWatch PsydeShow on Twitch: twitch.tv/psydeshowJoin the discussion on Facebook (The Devil's Work Podcast) and Instagram @thedevilsworkpodEmail us your own reviews about the films or your thoughts on episodes at: thedevilsworkpodcast@gmail.com
It's not every day you get to talk to the director of not one, but two bad ass films. Ryuhei Kitamura joins us to talk about Godzilla Final Wars and Versus.
Welcome back for another slice of fun here at Filmed Obscura. Happy summer to all. The boys are back for another episode of randomness. This month, they had to audible because the special guest couldn't make the episode. In response, Justin stepped up for his next pick and brought some pure cinema gold. Don't fret, we will be doing Chris' pick next month guaranteed...with or without Mr. P. But for now, feast your ears on a movie experience that has serial killers, gatekeepers, the afterlife, The Book of Death, martial arts, sword fighting, sunglasses, leather jackets and pants, and PURE style. It's Justin's Star Wars...his words. So grab those beverages and enjoy Ryuhei Kitamura's Sky High (not the television show from Japan or the Kurt Russell, superhero high school vehicle). Go then!
linktr.ee/CatchingUpOnCinema Once again, it is “No Theme November” here at Catching Up On Cinema! We'll be reviewing whatever the f*ck we want for the next 4 weeks, so expect little to no consistency between picks this month. First up, Trevor conducts a solo review of Ryuhei Kitamura's, No One Lives (2012)! Starring Luke Evans, No One Lives (2012) is a bloody and stylish pseudo-slasher with a twist. Produced by WWE Studios, the film also features the former Funkasaurus, Brodus Clay, in a very small role. Fair warning, Trevor picked this one largely as an excuse to wax nostalgic and talk at length about the director, so feel free to skip the first half or so of the episode if all you want is a straightforward review of the movie itself. Follow us on Instagram @catchinguponcinema Follow us on Twitter @CatchingCinema
As an epilogue to Kaiju Conversation's Zombie Month, Rex and Elijah return to the mind of Versus director Ryuhei Kitamura to discuss not only the precursory short film Down to Hell, but also the various side stories attached to Versus.Kaiju Conversation is a podcast series diving into the world of tokusatsu featuring genres like science fiction, J-Horror, action, and comedy! From Godzilla, Gamera, and Ultraman to the deepest darkest places like Zeiram, Zebraman, and Tetsuo: The Iron Man.The podcast is hosted by Elijah Thomas and Jackson Gibbens. Email: kaijuconversation@gmail.comTwitter/Facebook: @kaiju_convers Instagram: kaiju_conversLinktree:https://linktr.ee/Kaiju_Convers YouTube:https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCuni8GjDt1abcYq39cOxzDw Discord Server:https://discord.gg/gEwRexe Merchandise:https://teespring.com/stores/kaiju-conversation • Host: Elijah Thomashttps://linktr.ee/ET13_PRODUCTIONS• Co-host/Editor: Jackson Gibbenshttps://linktr.ee/RexXenoOur special guests have been: Samson West, Daikaiju Legends, D Man1954, ProjectGodzilla, Deadzilla, Steven's Toy Reviews, Scrye Productions, Bianca Wallace, Benjamin Chaffins, Henry the Host, Travis Alexander, Connor Baxter, Nathan Marchand, Michael Hamilton, Matthew Blair, Frankie B. Washington, Mark Bailey, and Jack Hudgens.Don't forget to leave us a 5-star review!
In our 250th episode Mike, Rich and Steve wax lyrical about some of the stand-outs we've covered to date, before kicking off with four main reviews. As usual, click the link to see the trailer for each of the main films: We kick off with DANGEROUS WATERS (Signature Entertainment), in which a teen girl goes head-to-head with her mother's boyfriend on a sailing trip gone wrong! Next is THE PRICE WE PAY (101 Films), directed by Ryuhei Kitamura and stars Emile Hirsch, Stephen Dorff and Vernon Wells! 8 FOUND DEAD (High Fliers Films) centers around a remote holiday home harboring a couple of unwanted guests... and in THE DEVIL WENT DOWN TO ISLINGTON (Bulldog Film Distribution), a hapless music teacher sells his soul to the devil! Our Short Shot is DEAD ENDERS, a horror comedy which has just finished the festival circuit and is well worth checking out! Click the link to watch the whole film! Our DTV Throwback is FULL ECLIPSE, which has a great cast and was directed by the late Anthony Hickox. Clicking the link will take you to the whole film being hosted on Youtube. Follow the Short Shots TWITTER page, where we will be linking to a short film every day! Don't forget to also check out our main show, the DTV DIGEST on TWITTER and FACEBOOK!
In this episode, Arian and Chris discuss the break out film of Japanese director, Ryuhei Kitamura. Starting with his frist film, Down to Hell, which was the precursor to his breakout feature film: Versus. The duo break down both films before Chris goes off on a fanboy tangent about the career of Kitamura. Youtube: Twitter @TheKaijuKingdom Instagram.com/TheKaijuKingdom Facebook.com/TheKaijukingdomPodcast The show's theme is provided by "Karl Casey @ White Bat Audio
Edit: We've brought back this commentary classic from 2016 to give it a proper episode number while Jose is moving and we're putting final touches on our interview book. Thanks for joining us once again for our last audio commentary and stretch goal for the 2015 "Fundraiser III: Hell on Earth" Midnight Meat Train. Rob, Ryan and Jose get together to talk about this unflinching horror movie directed by Ryuhei Kitamura. Sponsor: Don Bertram's Celebrate Imagination Show Notes Regarding the Eight-Pointed Star Eight Pointed Stars – The eight pointed star appears in spiritual traditions from many different cultures across the globe. The eight pointed star began to appear in Islamic art in the Middle Ages. It is referred to as khatim or khatim-sulayman, meaning “seal of the prophets”. From The Meat packing district in the city. 24-hour neighborhood located on the far west side of Manhattan Location: Pico Rivera, California, USA (slaughterhouse scenes) Metro Station - 7th & Flower Streets, Downtown, Los Angeles, California, USA Metro Station - Vermont Avenue and Santa Monica Boulevard, Los Angeles, California, USA http://wheresthejump.com/jump-scares-in-the-midnight-meat-train-2008/ http://www.nysun.com/arts/midnight-meat-train-lionsgate-nearly-butchers-its/83002/ https://www.amazon.co.uk/Vinnie-grabbing-Gascoigne-testicles-Poster/dp/B004ZUP3EY https://clivebarkercast.com/2016/02/23/concept-art-from-the-midnight-meat-train/ https://clivebarkercast.com/2015/10/07/retro-review-the-midnight-meat-train/ Possible Midnight Meat Train Alternate Ending Image Keyart Movie Poster Image Ryan's signed and illustrated movie poster. The Clive Barker Podcast (or @Barkercast) is an independent editorial fan site and podcast that is not affiliated with or under contract by Clive Barker or Seraphim Films. This is a labor of love by the fans, for the fans. web www.clivebarkercast.com iTunes (Leave a review!), Stitcher,Libsyn, Tunein, Pocket Casts, Google Play, DoubleTwist and YouTube. Facebook and Join the Occupy Midian group Twitter: @BarkerCast | @OccupyMidian
Hello and welcome back to another episode of B Bin Horror! On this week's episode we talk about the 2008 Horror/Thriller, Midnight Meat Train. Midnight Meat Train was written by Clive Barker, directed by Ryuhei Kitamura and stars Bradley Cooper, Leslie Bibb, Brooke Shields, Roger Bart, Ted Raimi, Vinnie Jones and Rampage Jackson. On today's episode we talk about what we thought this movie would be like based on the name, Doug shares a story about scabies and how to deal with them and then we discuss the highs and lows of the film. If you like what you hear you can follow us on Instagram and Facebook @bbinhorror. You can also send us emails at bbinhorror@gmail.com.
Welcome to another episode of the Grim and Bloody Podcast! Today we present We present Ryuhei Kitamura - Director of The Midnight Meat Train ( starring a young Bradley Cooper) and Godzilla Final Wars. A true icon of the horror genre! Mr. Kitamura also just released The Price We Pay, starring Stephen Dorff and Emile Hirsch. Kevin Nickelson and Al Omega geek out over Godzilla:Final Wars, one of the stronger takes on the world's favorite kaiju. We also touch on Versus a low budget zombie film with high quality practical effects and a strong story inspired by Highlander, John Carpenter and Reservoir Dogs, with some Kung Fu Hustle to boot! This episode is sponsored by the Left Coast Entertainment Group. --- Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/grimandbloody/support
This week we're so delighted to welcome Ryûhei Kitamura to our show! He's the director behind Midnight Meat Train, Versus, Godzilla: Final Wars and so much more. His latest film The Price We Pay is currently available on VOD. We chat about Ryûhei's career, the changes they made to the ending of The Price We Pay and he shares so many fantastic stories about first coming to America, living in Australia and basically living at the movie theater. Don't miss this conversation.Then we dig into Phantasm, the movie that scared Ryûhei growing up. We talk about the Japanese poster, the programs they make for movies with the salacious details inside as well as the dreamlike nature of the film. You can follow Ryûhei on Instagram. And check out his site XROSSCOUNTER for cool merch.Follow Mary Beth, Terry and the Podcast on Twitter.Support us on Patreon!If you want to support our podcast, please please take a moment to go rate us on Spotify and give us a rating and review on iTunes. It really helps us out with the algorithms. We also have a YouTube channel! If you want to join our community on Twitter, go here. Get bonus content on Patreon Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
AJ Friar sits down with one of his favorite horror directors, Ryuhei Kitamura, to discuss his new horror film starring Stephen Dorff and Emile Hirsch called The Price We Pay. How exciting it was to get this film made with a quick turnaround and finding out Emile Hirsch was such a fan of his. Working on Versus and The Midnight Meat Train, while AJ tells Ryuhei Kitamura how he is a master at capturing gore and brutality on camera. InfamousHorrors #InafamousInterviews #RyuheiKitamura #Versus #LionsgateHorror #ThePriceWePay #StephenDorff #Horror #Thriller #Gore #Brutality #EmileHirsch #TheMidnightMeatTrain #CliveBarker #BradleyCooper #NewHorror #NewInterview #Youtube #Podcast #Lionsgate #HorrorPodcast #InterviewPodcast
On the heels of Books of Blood Vol. 1, Bryan and Joe return to unpack short story "The Midnight Meat Train" and its 2008/2009 film adaptation by Ryuhei Kitamura. Up for discussion: the use of the Fathers in both stories, changing Mahogany into a Vinnie Jones juggernaut, whether Maya (Leslie Bibb) is a victim of fridging, and the 3D & gory visuals.Wanna connect with the show?Bryan: @eviltaylorhicksJoe: @bstolemyremoteMusic Credit: Hellraiser Theme by Christopher YoungIf you like the podcast, please rate, review, and subscribe!Check out Anatomy of a Scream for more great content and the other Network pods Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
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Mike and Vyce are joined by the amazing Valerie Complex to talk Ryuhei Kitamura's bonkers Versus. And also some dude named Niles shows up.
This week G-Baby, the Usual Suspect Steve, and special guest Chris from the Channel 83 Podcast take the 444th portal to the Forest of Resurrection to discuss Ryuhei Kitamura's Versus from the year 2000. Side quests include Street Fighter the movie and it's Dee Jay problem, getting braced in Bulgaria, and a very special colloquial corner that will have you questioning Dr. Pepper and it's relation to space/time. Have you seen the Fifth Element? Let's wax this rival porpoise. #halfadrpepper #horror #spookyseason #versus #waxit Linktree - links to all episodes + social media Follow us on Twitter + instagram and leave us a rating/review, let us know how we're doing! Huge thanks to Chris for joining us and be sure to check out his show Channel 83 for all your obscure cinematic cravings wherever you get your podcasts. Channel 83 website: https://channel83.video/ Follow Channel 83 on Twitter @Channel83Pod
This week writers Matt Alt (Pure Invention: How Japan Made the Modern World) and Patrick Macias (TokyoScope: The Japanese Cult Film Companion) conclude their interview with Japanese filmmaker Ryuhei Kitamura and talk about his two new films THE PRICE WE PAY and THREE SISTERS OF TENMASOU and look back at his 2004 title Godzilla: Final Wars! NEWS Top Kadokawa execs arrested in widening Tokyo Olympics bribery scandal Japan metro websites hit, apparently by pro-Russia hacker group Suntory eyes U.S. canned cocktail push as young Japanese shun booze LINKS: Pure TokyoScope on YouTube Pure TokyoScope on Twitter Matt Alt on Twitter Patrick Macias on Twitter Visit www.tokyoscope.comfor merch Visit TokyoScope on Patreon for bonus episodes and content The podcast is produced by jaPRESS LLC©, and engineered and edited by Patrick Macias Theme song by Marxy
This week writers Matt Alt (Pure Invention: How Japan Made the Modern World) and Patrick Macias (TokyoScope: The Japanese Cult Film Companion) talk to Japanese filmmaker Ryuhei Kitamura (Versus, Azumi, Godzilla: Final Wars) about his recent release of the soundtrack to the 1983 film VILLAGE OF DOOM, inspired by the true events of the 1938 Tsuyama shotgun massacre in Okayama Prefecture Village Of Doom (1983) Director: Noboru Tanaka Cast: Masato Furuoya, Misako Tanaka, Kumiko Ohba Music: Masanori Sasaji The entire film is available to view with English subtitles via this link Soundtrack available from XROSSCOUNTER Wikipedia article on the Tsuyama Massacre LINKS: Pure TokyoScope on YouTube Pure TokyoScope on Twitter Matt Alt on Twitter Patrick Macias on Twitter Visit www.tokyoscope.comfor merch Visit TokyoScope on Patreon for bonus episodes and content The podcast is produced by jaPRESS LLC©, and engineered and edited by Patrick Macias Theme song by Marxy
It's the 30th episode (not including our three commentaries) of Filmed Obscura. Woohoo! Justin and Chris are super excited and wanted to do something different this time around. So they added an extended Spotlight segment of their top 5 obscure films with some honorable mentions. It's fun. Not to be overshadowed is their movie of the month: Ryuhei Kitamura's Aragami: The Raging God of Battle. It's punk, it's samurai, it's awesome. Watch it. Cheers to the 30th episode and here's to many more...enjoy!We are on social media! I will post more about punk rock samurai films!Filmed Obscura: @FilmedObscura on TwitterJustin: @rustyman_51 on Twitter and IGChris: @OldTerrifier on TwitterTheme song composed by artist Zagi2 courtesy of Freesound.org. :)
linktr.ee/CatchingUpOnCinema This week, Trevor sits down for a solo review of Ryuhei Kitamura's, Aragami (2003)! Produced as one half of the “Duel Project,” a collaboration between directors Ryuhei Kitamura and Yukihiko Tsutsumi, the film was constructed under a series of strict guidelines, namely: The film had to take place in a single location. The film had to feature a “duel” as part of it's main plot. The film had to be shot in one week. Starring Takao Osawa and Masaya Kato, Aragami (2003) concerns a young samurai being cared for an then forced to do battle with an immortal swordsman in the hopes that the latter can be freed from his mortal coil in glorious battle. Somehow managing to feel overlong at a scant 78 minutes in length, the film suffers from a repetitive midsection, but is otherwise a handsome and charismatic little action film that wears it's influences and enthusiasm on it's sleeves. Follow us on Instagram @catchinguponcinema Follow us on Twitter @CatchingCinema Like, share, subscribe, and we'll catch you next time!
Dustin and Seb lose their minds trying to unravel the chaos of Ryuhei Kitamura's GODZILLA: FINAL WARS.
We will never be able to escape the shadow of Clive Barker. Join us this week as we hop on the the express line to flavor town with Bradley Cooper in: The Midnight Meat Train.Music and sound effects provided by zapslat.com and bensound.com, and the theme song is "Graveyard Shift" by Kevin MacLeod. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
A judgment has been handed down in the Apple Vs Epic lawsuit. Now Apple has to allow third party payment systems. This could be the foot in the door to breaking Apple's monopolistic tactics.Concrete made from Astronaut blood is a potential solution to building on Mars. Let's hope it never gets to the point of keeping people locked up and farming them for building materials.Denis Villeneuve has joined the battle against Marvel movies turning everybody into zombies. A bit dramatic, but he's really not a fan. And his Dune movie is getting great reviews, so maybe he knows a thing or two.The Apple App Store Lawsuit : The Epic Conclusion & Star Grift Drama- https://www.gamesindustry.biz/articles/2021-09-17-the-epic-vs-apple-judgement-leaves-much-undecided-opinion- https://www.gamesindustry.biz/articles/2021-09-09-cloud-imperium-receives-asa-warning-over-marketing-concept-ships-in-star-citizenFrom the makers of Soylent Green comes Bloodcrete.- https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2021/09/210913135713.htm?fbclid=IwAR1Z3_WegQ3pQPBq7EZuZCP3KSTTy9l4H5mDsZCAR5kwcrXIKluLTbPuQBMAnother Director Slams Marvel Movies- https://thedirect.com/article/marvel-denis-villeneuve-movies-zombiesOther topics discussedSouth Korea bans Apple, Google from blocking third-party payments- https://www.gamesindustry.biz/articles/2021-08-31-south-korea-bans-apple-google-from-blocking-third-party-paymentsEpic Games v. Google (The events and initial actions on Epic's lawsuit against Google were brought on the same day as Epic's suit against Apple, but Google stressed the legal situation around their case is far different.)- https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Epic_Games_v._Apple#Epic_Games_v._GoogleEpic Games v. Apple (a lawsuit brought by Epic Games against Apple in August 2020 in the United States District Court for the Northern District of California, related to Apple's practices in the iOS App Store.)- https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Epic_Games_v._AppleFortnite - Nineteen Eighty-Fortnite - #FreeFortnite- https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=euiSHuaw6Q4Duke Nukem Forever (a first-person shooter video game developed by 3D Realms and published by 2K Games for Microsoft Windows, Mac OS X, PlayStation 3, and Xbox 360.)- https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Duke_Nukem_ForeverSilk Road (marketplace) (an online black market and the first modern darknet market, best known as a platform for selling illegal drugs.)- https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Silk_Road_(marketplace)alyankovic - "Weird Al" Yankovic - White & Nerdy- https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=N9qYF9DZPdwStar Citizen on Kickstarter- https://www.kickstarter.com/projects/cig/star-citizenElite Dangerous (Braben had previously discussed crowdfunding as a possible solution in April 2012. Public fundraising commenced in November 2012 using the Kickstarter website, the campaign lasting 60 days, with the aim being to raise £1.25m and deliver a finished game by March 2014. Braben described the campaign as a way of "test-marketing the concept to verify there is broader interest in such a game", in addition to raising the funds.)- https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Elite_Dangerous#FundingList of most expensive video games to develop (The following is a list of the most expensive video games ever developed, with a minimum total cost of US$50 million and sorted by the total cost adjusted for inflation.)- https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_most_expensive_video_games_to_developThe Great British Bake Off (a British television baking competition, produced by Love Productions, in which a group of amateur bakers compete against each other in a series of rounds, attempting to impress a group of judges with their baking skills. One contestant is eliminated in each round, and the winner is selected from the contestants who reach the finals.)- https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Great_British_Bake_OffI Made Meringues Out of My Own Blood and Ate Them- https://www.vice.com/en/article/7xgq4e/i-made-meringues-out-of-my-own-blood-and-ate-themThe Cask of Amontillado (a short story by American writer Edgar Allan Poe, first published in the November 1846 issue of Godey's Lady's Book.)- https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Cask_of_AmontilladoSoylent Green (a 1973 American ecological dystopian thriller film directed by Richard Fleischer, and starring Charlton Heston, Leigh Taylor-Young and Edward G. Robinson in his final film role.)- https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Soylent_GreenImmurement (a form of imprisonment, usually until death, in which a person is sealed within an enclosed space with no exits.)- https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ImmurementScott Dickerson's tweet about Marvel movies- https://twitter.com/scottderrickson/status/1438679063036502020?s=19&fbclid=IwAR22tA8qShtHB_WGGgMTU6tfaUi3PZnb2hYYYIfP0j1otOinqlwtkTFCMqQHot racking (the sanctioned practice within military organizations of assigning more than one crew member to a bed or "rack" to reduce berthing (sleeping) space.)- https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hot_rackingWii (a home video game console developed and marketed by Nintendo. It was first released on November 19, 2006, in North America and in December 2006 for most other regions. It is Nintendo's fifth major home game console, following the GameCube, and is a seventh generation home console alongside Microsoft's Xbox 360 and Sony's PlayStation 3.)- https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/WiiPissed Off Video Gamer Archive - Nintendo Shitcube Review (Original)- https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2asDPQrv0Nw&t=140sCartoon Time Machine (TNC Podcast)- https://anchor.fm/cartoontimemachineShout Outs 10th September 2021 – Spider-Man's First Appearance In Amazing Fantasy #15 Sells For Record-Setting Comic Book Price Of $3.6 Million - https://comicbook.com/marvel/news/spider-man-first-appearance-amazing-fantasy-15-record-setting-sale/Spider-Man is now the hero behind the biggest comic book sale in history. While Batman and Superman previously set records with the sales of their debut comics, Spider-Man has officially taken the crown, thanks to a recent sale by Heritage Auctions. Amazing Fantasy #15 is the first issue in which Spider-Man, Marvel's most iconic superhero, appeared in comics. A copy of the original issue was sold this week for a whopping $3.6 million, making it the most expensive single comic issue of all time. The 1962 Marvel Comics issue breaks a record that was set by DC's Superman debut earlier this year. An issue of Action Comics #1, which debuted in 1938, previously sold for $3.25 million, which was the biggest sale at the time. The issue of Amazing Fantasy #15 that broke the sales record this week is one of the highest-graded issues of that comic in the entire world. That specific issue is graded CGC 9.6, meaning it's in near mint condition. It is one of only four issues to receive that grading. There are no copies graded CGC 9.8, the next-highest grading on the scale.14th September 2021 – 20th anniversary of Gamecube released in Japan - https://www.kotaku.com.au/2021/09/the-nintendo-gamecube-turns-twenty-today/On September 14, 2001, the GameCube first went on sale for the first time in Japan. Two months later, on November 18, the console was released in North America. Facing off against the PlayStation 2 and the Xbox, the GameCube was the first Nintendo console to use optical discs — though, the console wasn't designed to play DVDs or CDs like its rivals could. While the console was no all-inclusive living room entertainment hub, the GameCube did the video gaming part extremely well and boasted a solid library, including Super Smash Bros. Melee, Metroid Prime, Pikmin, The Legend of Zelda: The Wind Waker, Super Mario Sunshine, Luigi's Mansion, Chibi-Robo!, and The Legend of Zelda: Ocarina of Time, among many others, such as third party exclusives like Star Wars Rogue Squadron II: Rogue Leader as well as Metal Gear Solid: The Twin Snakes, which was a Metal Gear Solid remake co-developed by Silicon Knights that featured new cutscenes by filmmaker Ryuhei Kitamura of Godzilla: Final Wars fame. One of the most last legacies of the GameCube has been its controller. This is a controller design so good — so perfect — that Smash pros were getting their old ones repaired and that Nintendo even re-released it just for Super Smash Bros. Ultimate for Nintendo Switch. Nintendo launched the Wii in 2006 and a year later, the previous gen console was discontinued. It wasn't the success that Nintendo hoped, but it occupies an important place in game console history.16th September 2021 – 100th anniversary of Sir Norman Brearley's first scheduled air service - https://www.abc.net.au/news/2021-09-16/brearley-commemorative-flight/100463236 A century after an accomplished young pilot made his mark on aviation history, 55 people have boarded 23 planes for a flight to commemorate his daring feat. The fleet departed Geraldton today as part of a tour following the route of Australia's first scheduled air service, which left the city for Derby on December 5, 1921, under the leadership of Major Norman Brearley. Later knighted for his services to aviation, Major Brearly had returned from the aerial battlefields of World War I with a swag of awards for bravery. He had survived being shot down in no man's land during the war and crawling back to English lines with bullet holes in both lungs. But the experience did little to dampen his enthusiasm for flying, and after the war he won a contract to launch the first scheduled air service in the country. The service was to change the lives of remote West Australians who had previously relied on boat and rail for mail and passenger transport.17th September 2021 – Home computing pioneer Sir Clive Sinclair dies passes away at 81 - https://www.theguardian.com/technology/2021/sep/16/home-computing-pioneer-sir-clive-sinclair-dies-aged-81 Sir Clive Sinclair, the inventor and entrepreneur who was instrumental in bringing home computers to the masses. Sinclair invented the pocket calculator but was best known for popularising the home computer, bringing it to British high-street stores at relatively affordable prices. Many modern-day titans of the games industry got their start on one of his ZX models. For a certain generation of gamer, the computer of choice was either the ZX Spectrum 48K or its rival, the Commodore 64. Elon Musk, the Tesla and SpaceX chief, commented on Twitter on an article calling Sir Clive the father of the ZX Spectrum: “RIP, Sir Sinclair. I loved that computer.” In the early 1970s he designed a series of calculators designed to be small and light enough to fit in the pocket at a time when most existing models were the size of an old-fashioned shop till. “He wanted to make things small and cheap so people could access them,” his daughter said. His first home computer, the ZX80, named after the year it appeared, revolutionised the market, although it was a far cry from today's models. At £79.95 in kit form and £99.95 assembled, it was about one-fifth of the price of other home computers at the time. It sold 50,000, units while its successor, the ZX81, which replaced it, cost £69.95 and sold 250,000. Many games industry veterans got their start typing programs into its touch-based keyboard and became hooked on games such as as 3D Monster Maze and Mazogs. Sinclair became a household name as his products flew off the shelves and was awarded a knighthood in 1983. But he would also become synonymous with one of his less successful inventions – the Sinclair C5 – which would cost him financially. He died from an illness related to cancer that he had for over a decade, in London.Remembrances14th September 1712 – Giovanni Domenico Cassini - https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Giovanni_Domenico_CassiniAn Italian (naturalised French) mathematician, astronomer and engineer. Cassini was born in Perinaldo, near Imperia, at that time in the County of Nice, part of the Savoyard state. Cassini is known for his work on astronomy and engineering. He discovered four satellites of the planet Saturn and noted the division of the rings of Saturn; the Cassini Division was named after him. Giovanni Domenico Cassini was also the first of his family to begin work on the project of creating a topographic map of France. The Cassini space probe, launched in 1997, was named after him and became the fourth to visit the planet Saturn and the first to orbit the planet. Cassini observed and published surface markings on Mars (earlier seen by Christiaan Huygens but not published), determined the rotation periods of Mars and Jupiter, and discovered four satellites of Saturn: Iapetus and Rhea in 1671 and 1672, and Tethys and Dione (1684).Cassini was the first to observe these four moons, which he called Sidera Lodoicea (the stars of Louis), including Iapetus, whose anomalous variations in brightness he correctly ascribed as being due to the presence of dark material on one hemisphere (now called Cassini Regio in his honour). In addition he discovered the Cassini Division in the rings of Saturn (1675). He shares with Robert Hooke credit for the discovery of the Great Red Spot on Jupiter (ca. 1665). Around 1690, Cassini was the first to observe differential rotation within Jupiter's atmosphere.Cassini initially held the Earth to be the centre of the Solar System, though later observations compelled him to accept the model of the Solar System proposed by Nicolaus Copernicus, and eventually that of Tycho Brahe. "In 1659 he presented a model of the planetary system that was in accord with the hypothesis of Nicolaus Copernicus. In 1661 he developed a method, inspired by Kepler's work, of mapping successive phases of solar eclipses; and in 1662 he published new tables of the sun, based on his observations at San Petronio." Cassini also rejected Newton's theory of gravity, after measurements he conducted which wrongly suggested that the Earth was elongated at its poles. More than forty years of controversy about the subject were closed in favour of Newton's theory after the measurements of the French Geodesic Mission (1736 to 1744) and the Lapponian expedition in 1737 led by Pierre Louis Moreau de Maupertuis Cassini was also the first to make successful measurements of longitude by the method suggested by Galileo, using eclipses of the Galilean satellites as a clock.Attracted to the heavens in his youth, his first interest was in astrology. While young he read widely on the subject of astrology, and soon was very knowledgeable about it; this extensive knowledge of astrology led to his first appointment as an astronomer. Later in life he focused almost exclusively on astronomy and all but denounced astrology as he became increasingly involved in the Scientific Revolution.In 1653, Cassini, wishing to employ the use of a meridian line, sketched a plan for a new and larger meridian line but one that would be difficult to build. His calculations were precise; the construction succeeded perfectly; and its success gave Cassini a brilliant reputation for working with engineering and structural works.In the 1670s, Cassini began work on a project to create a topographic map of France, using Gemma Frisius's technique of triangulation. The project was continued by his son Jacques Cassini and eventually finished by his grandson César-François Cassini de Thury and published as the Carte de Cassini in 1789 or 1793. It was the first topographic map of an entire country.Famous Birthdays14th September 1921 – Paul Poberezny - https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Paul_PobereznyAmerican aviator, entrepreneur, and aircraft designer. He founded the Experimental Aircraft Association (EAA) in 1953, and spent the greater part of his life promoting homebuilt aircraft. Poberezny is widely considered as the first person to have popularized the tradition of aircraft homebuilding in the United States. Through his work founding EAA and the organization's annual convention in Oshkosh, Wisconsin, he had the reputation of helping inspire millions of people to get involved in grassroots aviation. Many attribute his legacy with the growth and sustainment of the US general aviation industry in the later part of the 20th century and into the early 21st. For the last two decades of his tenure as chairman of the EAA from 1989–2009, he worked closely with his son, aerobatic pilot and former EAA president Tom Poberezny, to expand the organization and create several new programs within it, including an aviation education program for youth and the EAA Museum, among other initiatives. Poberezny was inducted into the National Aviation Hall of Fame in 1999, received the Wright Brothers Memorial Trophy in 2002, and was ranked fourth on Flying's list of the 51 Heroes of Aviation; he was the highest-ranked living person on the list at the time of its release. Poberezny founded the Experimental Aircraft Association out of his Hales Corners, Wisconsin home in 1953. It started as predominately an aircraft homebuilding organization in his basement, but later went on to capture all aspects of general aviation internationally.Poberezny flew over 500 aircraft types, including over 170 home-built planes throughout his life. He was introduced to aviation in 1936 at the age of 16 with the gift of a donated damaged WACO Primary Glider that he rebuilt and taught himself to fly. A high school teacher owned the glider and offered to pay Poberezny to repair it. He hauled it to his father's garage, borrowed books on building/repairing airplanes, and completed the restoration soon after. A friend used his car to tow the glider into the air with Poberezny at the controls; it rose to around a hundred feet when he released the tow rope and coasted to a gentle landing in a bed of alfalfa. A year later, Poberezny soloed at age 17 in a 1935 Porterfield and soon co-owned an American Eagle biplane.After returning home from World War II, Poberezny could not afford to buy his own aircraft, so he decided to build one himself. In 1955, he wrote a series of articles for the publication Mechanix Illustrated, where he described how an individual could buy a set of plans and build an airplane at home. In the magazine were also photos of himself fabricating the Baby Ace, an amateur-built aircraft (and the first to be marketed as a "homebuilt") that he bought the rights to for US$200 a few years prior. The articles became extremely popular and gave the concept of homebuilding worldwide acclaim.He designed, modified, and built several home-built aircraft, and had more than 30,000 hours of flight time in his career. Aircraft that he designed and built include:Acro Sport I & II"Little Audrey"Poberezny P-5 Pober SportPober Jr AcePober PixiePober Super AceHe was born in Leavenworth County, KansasEvents of Interest14th September 1914 – HMAS AE1, the Royal Australian Navy's first submarine, is lost at sea with all hands near East New Britain, Papua New Guinea. - https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/HMAS_AE1#Deployment_and_loss At 07:00 on 14 September, AE1 departed Blanche Bay, Rabaul, to patrol off Cape Gazelle with HMAS Parramatta. When she had not returned by 20:00, several ships were dispatched to search for her. No trace of the submarine was found, and she was listed as lost with all hands. The disappearance was Australia's first major loss of World War I. After the discovery of the submarine in December 2017, Rear Admiral Peter Briggs, retired, said the likely cause of its loss was a diving accident. He added: The submarine appears to have struck the bottom with sufficient force to dislodge the fin from its footing, forcing it to hinge forward on its leading edge, impacting the casing. On 14 September 2018, a team of researchers headed by the National Maritime Museum director Kevin Sumption concluded their investigation into the sinking of AE1. They concluded that a ventilation valve, which was likely open to make the tropical conditions a little more bearable while the submarine was cruising on the surface near the Duke of York Islands, was insecure when the submarine dived, causing a flood of the submarine's engine room and total loss of control of the AE1. The submarine subsequently sank below 100 metres and imploded, killing everyone on board instantly.14th September 2007 – The Dark Hour premiered in Spain - https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0484273/ On this day in 2007 (in Spain), The Dark Hour enjoyed its theatrical release. The SciFi/Horror starred Omar Muñoz and Pepo Oliva, and here's the plot summary : "The eight year old boy Jesús has been living in a crumbling underground facility since he was born with eight survivors of an apocalyptic war: the leader Maria and her lover Pablo; the gays Lucas and Mateo; the astronomer Magdalena and the teenager Ana; the soldier Pedro and the lonely Judas. They are permanently under surveillance, threatened by the contaminated mutants The Strangers and once a day they have to lock themselves in their rooms without heating to protect against the dangerous ghosts The Invisibles that attack in the Cold Hour. They cannot go to the surface, destroyed by a nuclear war. When they need supplies, medications and ammunition, they organize expeditions to a store. When the menace of The Invisibles affects the safety of the group of survivors, they need to reach the surface."IntroArtist – Goblins from MarsSong Title – Super Mario - Overworld Theme (GFM Trap Remix)Song Link - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-GNMe6kF0j0&index=4&list=PLHmTsVREU3Ar1AJWkimkl6Pux3R5PB-QJFollow us onFacebook- Page - https://www.facebook.com/NerdsAmalgamated/- Group - https://www.facebook.com/groups/440485136816406/Twitter - https://twitter.com/NAmalgamatedSpotify - https://open.spotify.com/show/6Nux69rftdBeeEXwD8GXrSiTunes - https://itunes.apple.com/au/podcast/top-shelf-nerds/id1347661094Instagram - https://www.instagram.com/nerds_amalgamated/Email - Nerds.Amalgamated@gmail.comSupport via Podhero- https://podhero.com/podcast/449127/nerds-amalgamated See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
Arrow Video with another amazing release of a Japanese classic.. This time of the cult classic Versus. One of the most batshit insane films you're ever going to see. And 20 years later, it has aged like a fine wine. Versus stars Tak Sakaguchi, Hideo Sakaki, Chieko Misaka, Kenji Matsuda, Yuichiro Arai, Minoru Matsumoto, Kazuhito Ohba, Takehiro Katayama, Ayumi Yoshihara, Shoichiro Masumoto, Yukihito Tanikadao, Hoshimi Asai, and more. Music by Nobuhiko Morino. Cinematography by Takumi Furuya. Written by Yudai Yamaguchi and Ryuhei Kitamura. Directed by Ryuhei Kitamura.
This week, Desmond and Tom kick off week 725 of Dread Media by taking a look at Joel Soisson and Patrick Lussier's Dracula 2000 trilogy. The original film, Dracula II: Ascension, and Dracula III: Legacy are all covered, along with the bonus film Dracula 3000 (if you can call that a bonus). And all this week's songs have been selected from the Dracula 2000 soundtrack: "Blind World" by Flybanger, "Bloodline" by Slayer, "Heads Explode" by Monster Magnet, "Metro" by System of a Down, "Avoid the Light" by Pantera, and "Your Disease" by Saliva. This week on Dread Media, we take a look at some single-location films. First up, Desmond and Duane review Ryuhei Kitamura's Downrange. Then, Desmond does a Dread Media Top 5 Single Location Films. Songs included: "Watch the Corners" by Dinosaur Jr., "Looking Down the Barrel of a Gun" by the Beastie Boys, "Bad Place Alone" by Alice Cooper, and "A Principle on Seclusion" by Lychgate. Send feedback to: dreadmediapodcast@gmail.com. Follow @DevilDinosaurJr and @dreadmedia on Twitter! Join the Facebook group! Support the show at www.patreon.com/dreadmedia. Visit www.desmondreddick.com, www.stayscary.wordpress.com, www.dreadmedia.bandcamp.com, www.kccinephile.com, and www.dejasdomicileofdread.blogspot.com.
This week on Dread Media, we take a look at some single-location films. First up, Desmond and Duane review Ryuhei Kitamura's Downrange. Then, Desmond does a Dread Media Top 5 Single Location Films. Songs included: "Watch the Corners" by Dinosaur Jr., "Looking Down the Barrel of a Gun" by the Beastie Boys, "Bad Place Alone" by Alice Cooper, and "A Principle on Seclusion" by Lychgate. Send feedback to: dreadmediapodcast@gmail.com. Follow @DevilDinosaurJr and @dreadmedia on Twitter! Join the Facebook group! Support the show at www.patreon.com/dreadmedia. Visit www.desmondreddick.com, www.stayscary.wordpress.com, www.dreadmedia.bandcamp.com, www.kccinephile.com, and www.dejasdomicileofdread.blogspot.com.
This week on Dread Media, we take a look at some single-location films. First up, Desmond and Duane review Ryuhei Kitamura's Downrange. Then, Desmond does a Dread Media Top 5 Single Location Films. Songs included: "Watch the Corners" by Dinosaur Jr., "Looking Down the Barrel of a Gun" by the Beastie Boys, "Bad Place Alone" by Alice Cooper, and "A Principle on Seclusion" by Lychgate. Send feedback to: dreadmediapodcast@gmail.com. Follow @DevilDinosaurJr and @dreadmedia on Twitter! Join the Facebook group! Support the show at www.patreon.com/dreadmedia. Visit www.desmondreddick.com, www.stayscary.wordpress.com, www.dreadmedia.bandcamp.com, www.kccinephile.com, and www.dejasdomicileofdread.blogspot.com.
On this episode we check out the hyper kenetic "Versus" in which Gangsters battle Zombies in the Forest of Resurrection which headed up a revived intrest in asian cinema when it was unleashed in 2000. We also look at the suprisingly career of it's director Ryuhei Kitamura, the rise and fall of Tartan's "Asia Extreme" Label, Elwood challanges Stephen to the Letterboxd game and more!! Check out our sponsor Yes Please Vintage Buy a coffee and support the show: https://ko-fi.com/acfilmclub
Guys, we got ADAM FUCKIN' GREEN ON THE SHOW TODAY!! Adam is a guy who needs no introduction; the man behind Holliston, Frozen, Spiral, Digging up the Marrow, and the beloved Hatchet series, Adam is a household name in annals of horror history and a downright awesome human being. I'm sure you already listen to his podcast The Movie Crypt, but if you don't, I highly recommend you do. Ok, this episode is amazing and clearly one of the best we've ever done. Adam slayed this interview and went above and beyond and completely over-delivered on the advice front. He is brutally honest about this industry and tells a bunch of wonderful and insightful stories about how he got started, pushing through hard times as a director, and Dee Snider. This episode is a little longer than most, but I promise you'll walk away smiling, inspired, and very informed. I loved this interview, and it's definitely one of the ones that I will listen to regularly. So, without further ado, here is the incredible Adam Green! Flex every opportunity. This goes out to those filmmakers out there who are not full-time yet. One of Adam's first jobs was editing videos for local businesses, videos that are typically pretty lame. But, he found an opportunity to use his directorial sensibility to make the videos great instead of shrugging the work off as part of his temporary day job. Instead, he channeled his passion into the work that was right in front of him, and as a result, that ad he edited was extremely popular and allowed Adam to hone his skills in what would have otherwise been a bland opportunity. Regardless of wherever you are in your filmmaking journey, find ways to flex your skills and passions with what you do instead of shrugging it off as unimportant. Ignorance is bliss. One of the things Adam really made an effort to convey is that throughout the course of his directorial journey, he knew very little about filmmaking but picked it all up as he went. Regardless of the fact that he didn't know what a feature or a reel was in the beginning, the consistent element of his origin story is that he constantly put one foot in front of the other, built momentum, and learned everything by doing. This is huge, as a lot of filmmakers feel intimidated and think they either need to go to film school or read dozens of books about filmmaking to get started. No. The best way to learn is to take consistent action, not by researching or feeling intimidated by your lack of knowledge. You don't have to know everything, or anything actually, but you do need to get moving. Giving others huge opportunities can be a huge opportunity for you. When Adam was selecting his production designer, he picked a greensman, someone who'd never done the job before. But since Adam's movie represented an enormous opportunity for him to excel and show what he's capable of, this guy over-delivered, and as a result, the production value of Hatchet was very high. This is what you want when you're working with low budgets; you want people who aren't in it for the money but for the opportunity to make something great with you. Your film could be a jumping-off point for someone's career, so don't always feel the need to crew your movie based on someone's IMDB credits. Observe their attitudes, your gut feeling about them, and really think about what your movie represents to them in terms of opportunity. Find people who have as much to prove as you do and it will not only save you money and boost your production value, but it'll create a wonderful adventurous spirit on set. Be cautious of favors. This is a complimentary point to the previous one. What you do not want on set is people who will begrudgingly do you favors and then constantly remind you of how much they usually get paid throughout the course of production. This is very toxic. Don't get me wrong, though; sometimes it's worth it to reach out to collaborators who are way out of your league, which was the case with both Ryan Spindell on Mortuary Collection and Ryuhei Kitamura with his first film Versus. But in any case, when selecting people to work with, it's critical to find that spirit of passion instead of people who are just in it for the money, which brings me to my next point. Create your own sandbox. Let's face it, anyone who's been in the Hollywood system will tell you it's infested with sharks, liars, assholes, and a lot of sociopathic personality types. It just is, but you shouldn't be daunted by this; instead, you should be vigilant about who you work with. Toxic personalities on set are awful and can ruin your set. Hollywood is a boulevard of broken dreams, and you're likely to come across a lot of people who are very bitter and envious and if you discover this, replace them immediately because they not only harm morale, they can actually try to sabotage your movie. Yes, that happens, multiple directors have mentioned it, and it's very insidious but true. What Adam does is he hyper-curates his production circles and tries to only work with people he knows & trusts or has great chemistry with. As a result, his sets are fun and harmonious, which significantly helps him get through more difficult productions. This is a key lesson so take note. Stop pirating movies! This doesn't apply to everyone but, some of you know who you are. If you like horror movies, support them by not pirating them. Illegally downloading movies is stealing, plain and simple, and no, it's not a victimless crime. The true victims aren't just the producers, writers, directors who bust their asses for years to make these movies, but it's us fans who ultimately suffer because there will be fewer horror movies because it drains money out of the industry. I'm going to go ahead and say it, if you steal horror movies, you can't call yourself a real horror fan. Real fans support the industry, so if this is you, knock that shit off and just pony up the money to watch the movies you love. Anyway, I don't want to end on a negative note, so I'll say, guys, this is my 80th episode and the end of Season 2 of the Nick Taylor Horror Show. I cannot thank you all enough for listening and for your support, and for sharing the show with your friends and filmmaking colleagues. Seriously, thank you guys so so much. We're going to take a brief hiatus before returning with Season 3 but in the meantime, be well, stay safe, and thank you as always for listening. ----- Produced by Simpler Media
#Japanuary-Spezial Munter und streitlustig geht es in das große (und sehr späte) Finale des #Japanuarys. Max, Robert und Michael sprechen über alles, was sie so im #Japanuary sahen und noch nicht besprachen. Besonders die ersten beiden haben da noch einiges vorzustellen und Michael findet im Laufe der Episode mehr und mehr Filme, die irgendwo noch gesehen und nicht besprochen wurden. Erstaunlich, erstaunlich. Und so gibt es eine große Debatte über Takashi Miikes Audition (nein, Michael findet das Verhalten des Protagonisten ganz und gar nicht ok, aber die Konsequenzen ebenso wenig), den ultimativen Klassiker Harakiri, zwei Kurzfilme von Ryuhei Kitamura, einige Obayashi-Filme, Four Days of Blood and Snow von Hideo Gosha, Seijun suzukis Pistol Opera, Lupin und mehr. Außerdem werden Vorfahren in der Vergangenheit getötet. Viel Spaß. Podcast herunterladen
What does it mean to see and capture the heart of a city? Bradley Cooper is on a mission to find out and the Fried Squirms are riding the subway right beside him as they check out the 2008 adaptation of the Clive Barker short story, The Midnight Meat Train. Listen to more Fried Squirms at www.friedsquirms.com Check out all earVVyrm podcasts at www.earvvyrm.com Email us at squirmcast@gmail.com
Cerise and Vicky are caught in a nuclear blast and grow to enormous size. Instead of using their power to level cities, they choose to rank five Godzilla movies, because they are nice. 9:39 – Godzilla vs Kong (2021, Adam Wingard) 30:53 – Godzilla (1954, Ishiro Honda) 48:39 – Ghidorah the Three Headed Monster (1964, Ishiro Honda) 1:06:00 – Godzilla (1998, Roland Emmerich) 1:28:30 – Godzilla Final Wars (2004, Ryuhei Kitamura)
VERSUS - THE CRYSTAL METH SCHOOL OF ACTING In an abandoned underground city at the Spanish coast, near Malaga, I found a USB stick containing 300 random movies from arthouse to weird, from obscure to notorious. Now, in Lockdown, it is time to watch and discuss them all in an international podcast project. Two Turks and a German, two filmmakers and a mystery man - Welcome to Mysterium Pictorum! In our second episode, we tackle VERSUS by RYUHEI KITAMURA. In this context, we discuss martial arts, no budget filmmaking, splatter, censorship, the German film industry, Japanese cinema in general, drugs substituting for drama schools, East-Asian feminism, film pitches of our own, and many more delightful topics! Listen, review & subscribe, if you like! We love you!
Season five of MONSTER ISLAND COMMENTARIES has arrived, and Travis & Luana start the new year with 2004's GODZILLA: FINAL WARS! They talk about the career of director Ryuhei Kitamura, the pop punk scene of the 2000s, live action adaptations of Dr. Seuss stories, and more! Plus, they sing a lot! NOTE: To sync this commentary with the movie, pause the movie at the beginning when the Toho Scope logo appears on-screen. A countdown to press the play button is included in the commentary's intro. Listen to our spinoff Movie Lobby Commentaries (and get cool perks) at patreon.com/micommentaries twitter.com/MICommentaries facebook.com/monstercommentaries monsterislandcommentaries@gmail.com Theme song by Pangolin (https://spoti.fi/2F6ll5L) Logo artwork by Andrew O. Ellis (http://andrewoellis.com) Outro music: “Way Back Home” The Crusaders
I was on Kaiju Transmissions last month for a post-Halloween show to talk about some of Ryuhei Kitamura’s early action/horror output, including: Down to Hell Versus Alive Aragami Longinus He’s a favorite director of mine, so it was great to … Continue reading →
El nuevo programa viene cargado de pura dinamita! Tres horas del mejor cine de acción y artes marciales, además de entrevistas con directores y escritores en la sección de noticias. Con Ignacio Serapio, quién nos presenta su nueva película, "Balas y Katanas, la película" (mejor nombre imposible). La presentación con Iván Fernández "Ronin" de su nuevo libro "Sho Kosugi, el Rey Ninja". Después de escuchar la entrevista correréis a comprar vuestro ejemplar, fijo. Vanguard, la última cinta de Jackie Chan en "Una bala en la recámara". Wolf Warrior, la película china que revolucionó todo el país, en "La opinión Ninja". Seized, el último trabajo de Isaac Florentine junto a Scott Adkins, en "El Final Round". Y lo nuevo de Ryuhei Kitamura, que lamentándolo mucho, se merece "El Katanazo" de este mes. Espero lo disfrutéis como yo haciéndolo. Saludos ninjas, shinobis! Vías de contacto: Twitter: @BalasKatanas Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/balaskatanas/ Mail: balaskatanas@gmail.com Instagram: @balaskatanas Youtube: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCgqKDtAJhDnjEGVrVa_jKFQ Discord: https://discord.gg/9PWhSAz Ivoox: https://www.ivoox.com/escuchar-balas-katanas_nq_195058_1.html Google Podcast: https://podcasts.google.com/?feed=aHR0cDovL2ZlZWRzLmZlZWRidXJuZXIuY29tL0JhbGFzWUthdGFuYXM Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/1O0T8L6SjFHVPbmKwyhFre?si=HzWHPofnSli7Hewi1V--Ug Tune In: https://tun.in/pjoRs
El nuevo programa viene cargado de pura dinamita! Tres horas del mejor cine de acción y artes marciales, además de entrevistas con directores y escritores en la sección de noticias. Con Ignacio Serapio, quién nos presenta su nueva película, "Balas y Katanas, la película" (mejor nombre imposible). La presentación con Iván Fernández "Ronin" de su nuevo libro "Sho Kosugi, el Rey Ninja". Después de escuchar la entrevista correréis a comprar vuestro ejemplar, fijo. Vanguard, la última cinta de Jackie Chan en "Una bala en la recámara". Wolf Warrior, la película china que revolucionó todo el país, en "La opinión Ninja". Seized, el último trabajo de Isaac Florentine junto a Scott Adkins, en "El Final Round". Y lo nuevo de Ryuhei Kitamura, que lamentándolo mucho, se merece "El Katanazo" de este mes. Espero lo disfrutéis como yo haciéndolo. Saludos ninjas, shinobis! Vías de contacto: Twitter: @BalasKatanas Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/balaskatanas/ Mail: balaskatanas@gmail.com Instagram: @balaskatanas Youtube: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCgqKDtAJhDnjEGVrVa_jKFQ Discord: https://discord.gg/9PWhSAz Ivoox: https://www.ivoox.com/escuchar-balas-katanas_nq_195058_1.html Google Podcast: https://podcasts.google.com/?feed=aHR0cDovL2ZlZWRzLmZlZWRidXJuZXIuY29tL0JhbGFzWUthdGFuYXM Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/1O0T8L6SjFHVPbmKwyhFre?si=HzWHPofnSli7Hewi1V--Ug Tune In: https://tun.in/pjoRs
If you're still not over the end of October, Byrd, Tom and Kevin are here to help with your Halloween hangover by talking about the horror-action mashups of director Ryuhei Kitamura. Before directing Godzilla: Final Wars, Kitamura had humble beginnings making low budget genre films. We discuss his early efforts, including the zombie/yakuza film Versus, the sci-fi/horror manga adaptation Alive, and the samurai/yokai battle Aragami. We also discuss some of his short films as well. But first, we talk about Kitamura's transition from the world of low budget horror films to Godzilla to mainstream Hollywood films, as well as whether or not he deserves his maligned reputation among Godzilla fans.
Acclaimed director Ryuhei Kitamura stops by to talk about his upcoming film The Doorman. He also takes a trip down memory lane and talks about Midnight Meat Train, Versus, and of course Godzilla: Final Wars. Action sequences, horror, working with MMA Fighters, and the greatest version of The Gigan on film is all covered. Ryuhei is a great director, and a great guy who really loves his fans --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/chronicleshistory/support
On this interview for The Outlaw Nation, John Rocha speaks with renowned French actor and international superstar Jean Reno about his latest film The Doorman starring Ruby Rose and Rupert Evans and directed Ryuhei Kitamura. They also speculate on a possible return to The Professional franchise, what his experience was like with Ruby Rose and director Ryuhei Kitamura, previews a new Spanish speaking project that will bring him back to his Spanish roots and more. So much is explored here as these two have a fun conversation about his career and his latest film. The Doorman from Lionsgate centers on a former soldier must save her niece and nephew from armed thieves planning to steal priceless art from a building in New York City. THE DOORMAN IS OUT NOW ON VOD AND DIGITAL. WATCH IT TODAY! Remember to LIKE and SHARE this video on your social media and to SUBSCRIBE to The Outlaw Nation channel below. Follow John Rocha: https://twitter.com/TheRochaSays Also, you can support John Rocha and The Outlaw Nation on his Patreon at: https://www.patreon.com/JohnRocha
Ryuhei Kitamura is a Japanese director of such movies as Versus, Clive Barker's Midnight Meat Train, No One Lives, Downrange, and the Mashit segment of Nightmare Cinema. Ryuhei's director origin story is pretty inspiring - when making his feature debut, Versus, he went through a brutal series of hardships but still managed to pull off an extremely impressive movie, loaded with highly complex zombie fight sequences and gore gags. One of the things that stands out in Ryuhei's career history is his relentlessness. Throughout his career, a multitude of things kept not working out, but he relentlessly pushed on and on until he became the director he is today. Overall, Ryuhei's story is a true tale of pioneering filmmaking, and he claims that one of the main things that got him through the challenges was his Samurai spirit, which we hear more about, as well as very entertaining stories about how much boldness can pay off as well as details about Ryuhei's collaboration with Clive Barker. All of this and so much more on this episode of The Nick Taylor Horror Show. Here are some key takeaways from this conversation with Ryuhei: Blame yourself. At his lowest point, when nothing was working out and Ryuhei could have blamed producers, actors, and the Hollywood system Ryuhei instead blamed himself. This was actually an act of self-empowerment, which enabled him to pull himself up by his bootstraps and make things happen because he knew nobody was coming to save him. When things go wrong, it's human nature to find things to blame it on, but instead, Ryuhei's story is a reminder to take full responsibility. Hollywood is a fickle beast, loaded with liars, sharks, and parasites. When the chips are down, take the blows, learn the lessons, get back up, and take ownership of all of it. The system owes you nothing; you have to fight for every inch you get. Be willing to throw it all away. This is an extremely hard lesson, but on Versus, after spending tens of thousands of dollars that he raised from friends and family, Ryuhei looked at what he had shot and realized it wasn't good enough. This led him to scrap 80% of the footage he spent months on grueling sets shooting. This is heartbreaking but an inevitable part of the journey. Yes, your material will never be perfect, but regardless of how hard you work on something or how much money you spent on it if the quality isn't there, it's time to scrap it and start over. You'll have to live with each and every frame of your movie for your entire life, so you really can't afford to put out anything that you're not happy with. Make outrageous demands, and you'll be surprised how often you get what you want. After talking to enough directors, I realized that movies are made up of a bunch of mini-miracles, and you have to believe they're possible first. After shooting Versus on a shoestring budget, Ryuhei boldly approached one of the top editors in Japan and asked him to edit his movie for free. The guy laughed at him at first, but Ryuhei's conviction persuaded him to do it. This substantially boosted the quality of Versus and put Ryuhei on the map, and he was eventually able to pay the guy back. To make a movie is literally to do the impossible with limited time and on a limited budget; often, the only thing that will get your movie made properly is your own boldness and determination to make the impossible possible. This means you have to be bold and make some preposterously outrageous demands, and when you do, you may be surprised how often people say yes. Despite the fact that Hollywood can be rough, don't forget there are angels as well as demons. You'd be surprised at how often people in the industry want to help filmmakers out because they all know how difficult the job is. This is both a matter of getting out of your comfort zone and also believing in the power of possibility. So if you identify an opportunity like this, ask for it, the worst they can do is say no. ----- Produced by Simpler Media
CRITICALLY ACCLAIMED sure does have some movies this week! Film critics William Bibbiani and Witney Seibold review the long-awaited sequel BILL AND TED FACE THE MUSIC, the Charles Dickens adaptation THE PERSONAL HISTORY OF DAVID COPPERFIELD, and the Megan Fox vs. Killer Lions movie ROGUE! Also this week on THE CRITICALLY ACCLAIMED STREAMING CLUB, Bibbs and Witney revisit the Ryuhei Kitamura's Clive Barker adaptation THE MIDNIGHT MEAT TRAIN, starring Bradley Cooper and Vinnie Jones! But first, and most importantly, a tribute to the late and unbelievably great actor Chadwick Boseman, the star of Black Panther, Get On Up and 42. Chadwick Boseman - 1:30 Bill and Ted Face the Music - 17:37 The Personal History of David Copperfield - 39:57 Rogue - 50:22 The Midnight Meat Train - 1:02:19 Subscribe on Patreon at www.patreon.com/criticallyacclaimednetwork for exclusive content and exciting rewards, like bonus episodes, commentary tracks and much, much more! And visit our TeePublic page to buy shirts, mugs and other exciting merchandise! Email us at letters@criticallyacclaimed.net, so we can read your correspondence and answer YOUR questions in future episodes! Follow us on Twitter at @CriticAcclaim, join the official Fan Club on Facebook, follow Bibbs at @WilliamBibbiani and follow Witney at @WitneySeibold, and head on over to www.criticallyacclaimed.net for all their podcasts, reviews and more!
Xavier and Mike are back with reviews for Uncle Peckerhead (2020) by Matthew John Lawrence and The Midnight Meat Train (2008) with Vinnie Jones and Bradley Cooper.
Dawn from the Anime Nostalgia Podcast joins us to review Ryuhei Kitamura's break out Japanese action film Versus! Review (39:48) Twitter Questions (2:32:05)
Dawn from the Anime Nostalgia Podcast joins us to review Ryuhei Kitamura's break out Japanese action film Versus! Review (39:48) Twitter Questions (2:32:05)
Oh man. It had to happen eventually. There had to come a time where Mitch and the guest would lost the thread and it would fall to Andy to endeavour to keep the show on the rails. As you can imagine, that doesn't go well! Find out in Episode 87 where your pals/hosts are joined by the director of the excellent short The Home (and many more)... It's L. Gustavo Cooper! His chosen film? Versus! Strap yourselves in, folks. This one is WILD! Coming from the nu-metal days of 2000 and from the mind of Ryuhei Kitamura who brought us Midnight Meat Train, No One Lives and Downrange, comes VERSUS, an absolute batshit bonkers mash-up of Samurai, Yakuza and zombie films with a supernatural edge that makes for a tricky but fun chat! Check it out and let us know YOUR thoughts via the usual channels! The synopsis is as follows: There are 666 portals to the other side, and somewhere in Japan lies the home of the 444th. It is here that Prisoner KSC2-303 escapes from his fellow inmates to rendezvous with a group of men who will lead him to safety. Huge thanks to Gustavo for joining us! Follow him on Instagram HERE! Please note that this episode contains strong language, conversations of an adult nature and EXTREMELY Scottish accents. Remember, you can keep up to date with our news by following us via the usual social media outlets: Facebook Twitter Instagram Plus you can drop us an email to stronglanguageviolentscenes@gmail.com. Strong Language & Violent Scenes theme by Mitch Bain. Edits & Artwork by Andy Stewart You should check out our episode partner Scotland: A History Podcast. Available wherever the best podcasts are found. Also, we love what we are doing and the response so far has been wonderful so if you enjoy what we do and want to help us continue to do it and help us to grow, then please consider sending us a few pounds via Paypal to stronglanguageviolentscenes@gmail.com! There is no lower or upper limit and every bit helps.
Episode 23 – The One With The Leftovers The festive season is at an end and New Years is fast approaching what better way to see the New Year in then listen to the latest episode of Kaiju Curry House! Ok, there are a load of better ways, but I’m just here to tell you...
Download the episode here!Welcome to episode 55 of Heroes Three Podcast. This week we step into the Forest of Resurrection to face the hyper zombie hordes in the most stylish way possible as we talk about Ryuhei Kitamura's major motion picture debut, Versus!Full cast and credits on IMDBHit us up on social media - Twitter Instagram Facebook EmailGrab your favorite H3 GIFs here - Heroes Three Giphy Heroes Three gfycatYudai Yamaguchi and Tak pay tribute to Wheels on Meals!Vintage Henshin gives you a crash course on Ultraman in the US!Soliloquy (Clint), 1971-2000 by Candice Brietz
We discuss this utterly insane action drama romance comedy from Ryuhei Kitamura. Follow the Twitter: Instagram:
This week the guys are jumping into Nightmare Cinema, a horror anthology with shorts directed by Alejandro Brugues, Joe Dante, Mick Garris, Ryuhei Kitamura, and David Slade. With a host of recognizable actors, and the almost unrecognizable Mickey Rouke, does this film rise above the dregs of other anthologies? Our weekly horror reviews are Slither, Session 9, Dracula AD: 1972, The Bees, The Loved Ones, Assimilate, Pumpkinhead, Prank Encounters, and Two Sentence Horror Stories.
Movie Meltdown - Episode 506 (For our Patreon "Horror Club") This episode our Halloween party continues as we discuss the 2018 horror anthology Nightmare Cinema. Directed by Joe Dante, Mick Garris, David Slade, Ryuhei Kitamura, Alejandro Brugués and hosted by Mickey Rourke as "The Projectionist"… so what do we think of this mixture of genre entries? Plus as we run down some of the more inappropriate things once aimed at children, we definitely mention… Are You Afraid of the Dark?, Courage the Cowardly Dog, EC Comics, Peanuts, Diff'rent Strokes, peanut butter kisses, Legends of the Hidden Temple, The Church, the next thing you know he's on the floor with Elvis's foot on his throat, severe meth psychosis, Doug Jones, yeah lots of questions - none of which were answered, Kit Kat, a bitchin’ rockabilly act, Philip Glass, Keith Emerson, Goblin, The Omen, creepy hallways with the blinky lights, Entertainment Tonight, The ABCs of Death, The Cryptkeeper, as a kid it scared the hell out of me as an adult it just confuses me, Masters of Horror, please got down in the basement… where my uncle died, The Exorcist, being best friends with Groucho Marx, Eye of the Beholder, Hocus Pocus, yanking out an IV, murder your sister... who cares, really high-quality Ghostbuster backpacks, Alice Cooper, a signature weird-ass dance, they didn't sugarcoat anything, Tenacious D, Lucio Fulci kind of insanity, we're going to go to our cousin's house... to not be traumatized, Rosemary's Baby, Mr. and Mrs. Van Pelt, that time I went to the psychiatric ward, a kid falls in a hole and dies, George Romero and is that ghost still paying property tax? “...especially in the media world we’re living in now… why an anthology movie?”
For Night Twenty of our Nights of Frights, I am joined by Marvin from, IOHO & Buddy Talks Podcast, to discuss one of his favorite movies, Versus. Find out what I thought and also why this early film in director, Ryuhei Kitamura, is one of Marvin's favorites!! #IOHO #Horror #Movies #Podcast #AdamAnalyzes #Tampa #October #Versus #RyuheiKitamura #31NoF --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/inourhonestopinion/support
"Don't touch my girl you fucking asshole!" In this episode we review Versus (2000) directed by Ryuhei Kitamura and starring Tak Sakaguchi.
All aboard to night number four! In tonight's episode we take a trip on director, Ryuhei Kitamura's adaptation of the Clive Barker short story, The Midnight Meat Train. Find out why you should definitely check out this underrated and almost forgotten film in the fourth night of IOHO's 31 Nights of Frights! #MidnightMeatTrain #IOHO #Horror #Movies #BradleyCooper #CliveBarker #RyuheiKitamura #Podcast #Lionsgate #October #AdamAnalyzes #31NoF --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/inourhonestopinion/support
Episode 14 Hi there Kaiju Curry House fans. Episode 14 is now available for you to listen to, “The One With CATTLE” can be downloaded and/or stream through your service provider of choice. This marks the first episode recorded in the same room, rather than over Skype! You might have seen the poll on the...
Based on Clive Barker’s short story, we checked out Midnight Meat Train! We attempt to suss out if this movie was released in 3-D (it wasn’t), why the Subway Butcher grows barnacles (unclear), and what city this takes place in (New York City...or Chicago. Actually, definitely Los Angeles. Maybe.) Check this movie out for the some of the “human” names that were definitely aliens in disguise and every time someone cries badly. Remember to rate and review, otherwise we’ll see you onboard the Midnight Meat Train. Stats/info: 2008, directed by Ryuhei Kitamura, starring Bradley Cooper, Leslie Bibb, and Vinnie Jones (Intro music from https://www.free-stock-music.com)
Four podcasters converge at a haunted movie theater owned by a creepy looking Projectionist. Once inside, they witness a series of events that shows them their deepest fears and darkest secrets. On Episode 361 of Trick or Treat Radio we discuss Nightmare Cinema, a new Horror Anthology featuring shorts from Horror masters Mick Garris, Joe Dante, Alejandro Brugués, Ryûhei Kitamura, and David Slade! We also discuss our favorite Horror Anthology short of all time! There are arguments, there is 80s nostalgia, there is a eulogy for one of our favorite comic imprints of all time, and there are hot takes! So grab your welding mask, watch your favorite horror anthology short and strap on for the world's most dangerous podcast!Stuff we talk about: The Wild 90s, tourrettes, shitty ratty shirts, sleeveless shirts - yes or no?, MZ putting the “un” in gun, Dr prescribed Vitamin D, parasols, John Travolta, Denver Colorado, RIP Vertigo, Helix, DC Comics, Animal Man, Transmetropolitan, Preacher, Seinfeld, Sandman, Garth Ennis, Superman’s dick, batshit crazy Frank Miller, 100 Bullets, DC Crossovers, Swamp Thing, Batman: Last Knight on Earth, Alex Ross, J.H. Williams III, Todd McFarlane, Greendale Mall, Dream Machine, Suncoast Video, throwing balls at your friend’s chins, Morbid Tales release date, Morbid Vision Films, Radio Silence, Ready or Not, Southbound, Mickey Rourke, Nightmare Cinema, Alejandro Brugues, Joe Dante, Ryuhei Kitamura, David Slade, Mick Garris, slasher tropes, 80s Nostalgia, McJowels, The Burbs, Nunsploitation F*ck Scene, Adam Godley, Bandersnatch, Patrick Wilson’s voice, Mick Garris’ hair, shit sandwich, Masters of Horror, horror anthologies, The Field Guide to Evil, Deep Murder, Jerry O’Connell, Christopher McDonald, Tales from the Crypt, Blind Alleys, Patrick McGee, Terror at 20,000 Feet, Twilight Zone, Creepshow, The Lonesome Death of Jordy Verrill, V/H/S/2, Safe Haven, Mo Brothers, Gareth Evans, Creepshow 2, Body Bags, The Eye, Father’s Day, Amicus, From Beyond the Grave, The Perfection, Us, Ravenshadow and Nathan Cotton Coy Vance Duke’s new podcast, The Alamo, good things from Texas, and urban sombreros.Support us on Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/trickortreatradioSend Email/Voicemail: mailto:podcast@trickortreatradio.comVisit our website: http://trickortreatradio.comUse our Amazon link: http://amzn.to/2CTdZzKFB Group: http://www.facebook.com/groups/trickortreatradioTwitter: http://twitter.com/TrickTreatRadioFacebook: http://facebook.com/TrickOrTreatRadioYouTube: http://youtube.com/TheDeaditesTVInstagram: http://instagram.com/TrickorTreatRadioSupport the show (https://www.patreon.com/trickortreatradio)
In this episode legendary director Ryuhei Kitamura calls into the podcast. Ryuhei chats it up about his early films, his thoughts on Godzilla and contributing ...
In this episode, Trevor introduces Kyle to the cinematic oeuvre of Ryuhei Kitamura by having him Catch Up On the Japanese indie actioner, Versus! Guns! Zombies! Swordplay! Innumerable references to other, better, American films! DEE-PACK-ITATIONS! *BONUS!* A couple of minutes of behind-the-scenes audio wherein Kyle and Trevor chat about horror films from their formative years, and the horrors of franchise films owned by multiple distribution groups!
On our second installment of Kaijju Corner, we discuss the latest trailer of “Godzilla King of The Monsters” and Ryuhei Kitamura's “Godzilla: Final Wars”. Twitter: @mrnazred Instagram: @mr.nazred email: nazredpodcast@gmail.com
Here we go! Kickstart your Frightfest weekend with a bang and, indeed, with Minisode 16! Topics include Sean Byrne's heavily metallic The Devil's Candy, the gory nonsense of Ryuhei Kitamura's sniper thriller, Downrange, Mitch finally checks out Netflix Original film, Calibre and discusses Unfriended: Dark Web! Also, we check in on Mitch's progress through the ShockWaves 100! ALSO, we have another installment of MITCH'S PITCHES! Due to his well documented ignorance towards films, Mitch is shown a film poster with all titles, taglines etc removed and tasked with attempting to decipher the plot. Will it go well? The poster image can be seen below with the image that Mitch was working from on the left... In addition to all this, we dig into your posts and messages in the Feedback section and also, as always, we announce the guest and film for this week and EPISODE 17! Also, our Podcast recommendation this week is CREEPY! Check it out. Please note that this podcast may contain strong language and even stronger Scottish accents. Remember, you can keep up to date with our news by following us via the usual social media outlets: Facebook Twitter Instagram Plus you can drop us an email to stronglanguageviolentscenes@gmail.com. Strong Language & Violent Scenes theme by Mitch Bain Edits & Artwork by Andy Stewart Also, we love what we are doing and the response so far has been wonderful so if you enjoy what we do and want to help us continue to do it and help us to grow, then please consider sending us a few pounds. There is no lower or upper limit and every bit helps.
Recorded LIVE from the Fantasia Film Festival in front of an audience of fans, Mick and his fellow Masters of Horror, Joe Dante, Ryuhei Kitamura and Alejandro Brugués talk the premiere of their new horror anthology feature, NIGHTMARE CINEMA. Joined by the film’s writers, Richard Christian Matheson, Sandra Becerril and Lawrence C. Connolly, and guest moderated by Tony Timpone, this is one sneak-peek you won’t want to miss.
We watched the 2017 Shudder exclusive Downrange by Ryuhei Kitamura. A carpool is halted by a flat tire, with a sniper picking them off one by one, the flat is the least of their worries. Thank you @geekswhoeat for recommending this... gem. Haven't seen the movie yet? Watch "Downrange" on Shudder, use the code FINALBOYS to get a free 30 days. .......................................................... Stay up to date and follow us on twitter and Instagram @thefinalboys Send us your spooky listener stories at www.thefinalboys.com Intro music done by @twin_crab
This week not all of us have Gambino fever (alright, it's everyone but Sam), we get to the bottom of what's up with the largest airport in the United States, & discuss a film of pinned down despair/terror, reviewing Ryuhei Kitamura's, Downrange. This episode is brought to you by http://Shudder.com , home to the largest and fastest-growing human-curated selection of high-quality, spine-tingling, and provocative films, TV series, and originals. Get 30 days free by entering promo code FRIGHTDAY at checkout. Want the next episode days before its wide release? Support us at http://patreon.com/frightday at the $4 level or above. Keep our mini-fridges full of blood...I mean...not blood...normal things that people drink...by going to http://shop.frightday.com Follow us in the shadows at the following places: http://frightday.com http://twitter.com/frightday http://facebook.com/groups/frightday http://instagram.com/frightday http://facebook.com/ffrightdayy
What is transportation horror, you ask? Well, it's a subgenre of horror that Tracy and Minki give a proper name to in order to best describe movies that don't end well for people traveling by planes, trains or automobiles. And funny enough, it seems Ryuhei Kitamura, the director of this episode's film, just looooooves creating films which put unsuspecting victims on a road to their certain demise. This particular movie will take you back to your college days, where you hitch a ride with 5 other college students who you don't know at all but who all happen to live near your hometown for break... Oh, you never did that? Yeah, nobody does that. But, this movie paints a picture of what it would be like to be stuck on a desolate road with "stranger friends" as a sniper begins picking them off, one by one. Why is he doing this? Who is this human hunter? What does he have against these millennials? Maybe it's that he hates how they carry selfie sticks in their back pocket. Who knows? One thing is for sure: you will never get the answers to these questions. So, don't look for them on your ride through this semi-gory, thin-on-story, action horror. Just put it in neutral and prepare to coast through this implausible, yet somewhat satisfying, road trip of death. Oh, and Tracy knows what she's talking about, because she just made another short film this past weekend. Total expert ;)
After Trick or Treat Radio’s massive 300th celebration, we have a much more low key episode this week. We discuss the Shudder exclusive, Downrange. This is the latest film from Ryuhei Kitamura, director of No One Lives, Midnight Meat Train and Versus. In addition, we solicited our listeners for some recommendations for films that are available through the various streaming platforms and we give our own as well! We also have a brief spoiler free discussion about Avengers: Infinity War, Dynamo explains what a Road Warrior pop is and we play some leftover voice messages from Episode 300! So grab your bulletproof vest, unleash the sidewinders and strap on for the world’s most dangerous talk radio show! Stuff we talk about: The Pan’s Labyrinth Episode, who’s got the longest hair on the show?, Man of Steel, Death of Superman, Brian Michael Bendis, why is Superman really that good?, what to do with 48 minutes, Ares has his own table, Avengers: Infinity War, Marz’s movie food haul, El Goro’s Talk Without Rhythm, Andy from Destroy the Brain, Cobra Kai, James Cameron, Black Panther, “Fast Tony”, Road Warriors pop, Captain America’s beard, Mick Foley winning the Heavyweight Title, the Montreal Screwjob, Tony Schiavone, Shudder, Infinity War spoiler, Mio, Downrange, Ryuhei Kitamura, No One Lives, Midnight Meat Train, Versus, #cockhair, selfie sticks, snipers, AS&S, Shudder, Psychokinesis, inconsistencies in film, cell phone usage in movies, a killer’s motive, politically charged films, The Nest, Thanos, Nightmare Cinema, Azumi, Lupin the 3rd, nihilistic films, Yo Quiero Taco Smell, Darkman, Fangoria, Destroythebrain, Ringu, We Need to Talk About Horror, “I picked Magic!”, Humble Eddie’s Top 5 Trick or Treat Radio reviewed films, unleash the sidewinders, The Chase, The Friends of Humble Eddie Coyle, Battle Royale, Godfather, Heathers, Oldboy, The Crying Game, Aftershock, Fear Inc., Hell House LLC, Lake Bodom, Among the Living, The Last Heist, Mindhunter, Raw Force, Beyond the Black Rainbow, Panos Cosmatos, Cobra, the most masculine film ever made, Mandy, Creep 2, Unsane, 47 Meters Down, Rob Zombie’s 31, A Quiet Place, Dearest Sister, We Are Twisted Fucking Sister, Iron Fist, Jessica Jones, David Tennant, Grady Hendrix, FMK Pinhead Candyman and Pennywise. Send Email/Voicemail: podcast@trickortreatradio.com Visit our website: http://trickortreatradio.com Use our Amazon link: http://amzn.to/2CTdZzK FB Group: http://www.facebook.com/groups/trickortreatradio Twitter: http://twitter.com/TheDeadites Facebook: http://facebook.com/TheDeadites YouTube: http://youtube.com/TheDeaditesTV Instagram: http://instagram.com/TheDeadites Buy our music on Bandcamp: http://thedeadites.bandcamp.comSupport the show (https://www.patreon.com/trickortreatradio)
Japanese Horror Master Ryuhei Kitamura is on the Post Mortem slab to discuss his new Shudder release, Downrange, along with his cult classics Versus, Godzilla: Final Wars, Clive Barker’s Midnight Meat Train and his upcoming collaboration with Mick — Nightmare Cinema!
Au programme de cet épisode 11 d’Harukiya : L’INSTANT PILULES où l’on parle de nos lectures en cours : Cyno : Happiness de Shuzo Oshimi Nico : Renjoh Desperado de Ahndongshik chez Kurokawa Otcho Stan : Magazine de prépublication Ki-oon NOS DEBATS (24MIN) : -KING OF EDEN de Takashi Nagasaki et Ignito, seinen en 1 tome en cours chez Ki-oon. -RADIANT de Tony Valente, global Manga en 8 tomes en cours chez Ankama. (46MIN) -RIVER’S EDGE de Kyoto Okazaki, seinen one shot chez Casterman Sakka. (1H10) -LE COUVENT DES DAMNÉS de Minoru Takeyoshi, seinen en 5 tomes en cours chez Glénat. (1H32) -L’ATELIER DES SORCIERS de Kamome Shirahama, seinen en 1 tome en cours chez Pika. (1H58) LE TOTALLY CRAZY, le moment extra-manga (2H12) : Nico : Hirune Hime, film d’animation de Kenji Kamiyama Inès : Ariel, recueil de poèmes de Sylvia Plath Stan : Films japonais au Festival du Film Fantastique de Gérardmer (Downrange de Ryuhei Kitamura et Avant que nous Disparaissions de Kiyoshi Kurosawa), Cyno : I Saw the Devil, film de Kim Jee-Woon. LES REMERCIEMENTS : Kensington Café, 12 rue de la Faïencerie à Nancy, où vous pouvez déguster les meilleurs cafés de Nancy. Atout Manga, 8 cour des Arts à Nancy, le manga shop qui fleure bon la passion et le bon son. Et Otcho Production pour la mise à disposition technique. Reportages, Docs, Teasers/Trailers, Films d’entreprise. www.otchoprod.com Et une grosse dédicace à Ben Peno l’artiste de l’ombre que vous pouvez retrouver sur Facebook.
It’s true, no one does.Featuring: Dave Roberts & Andi Preller Running Time: 1:47:08Topics • David is out this week, so Andi and Dave meet up to make fun of him and discuss Ryuhei Kitamura’s No One Lives and all the insanity that it brings to the table. Also some listener emails and horror news! FILMS DISCUSSED:
11/25/2016 Thanks for joining us once again for our last audio commentary and stretch goal for the 2015 "Fundraiser III: Hell on Earth" Midnight Meat Train. Rob, Ryan and Jose get together to talk about this unflinching horror movie directed by Ryuhei Kitamura. Sponsor: Don Bertram's Celebrate Imagination Show Notes Regarding the Eight-Pointed Star Eight Pointed Stars – The eight pointed star appears in spiritual traditions from many different cultures across the globe. The eight pointed star began to appear in Islamic art in the Middle Ages. It is referred to as khatim or khatim-sulayman, meaning “seal of the prophets”. From The Meat packing district in the city. 24-hour neighborhood located on the far west side of Manhattan Location: Pico Rivera, California, USA (slaughterhouse scenes) Metro Station - 7th & Flower Streets, Downtown, Los Angeles, California, USA Metro Station - Vermont Avenue and Santa Monica Boulevard, Los Angeles, California, USA http://wheresthejump.com/jump-scares-in-the-midnight-meat-train-2008/ http://www.nysun.com/arts/midnight-meat-train-lionsgate-nearly-butchers-its/83002/ https://www.amazon.co.uk/Vinnie-grabbing-Gascoigne-testicles-Poster/dp/B004ZUP3EY http://www.clivebarkercast.com/2016/02/23/concept-art-from-the-midnight-meat-train/ http://www.clivebarkercast.com/2015/10/07/retro-review-the-midnight-meat-train/ Possible Midnight Meat Train Alternate Ending Image Keyart Movie Poster Image Ryan's signed and illustrated movie poster. The Clive Barker Podcast (or @Barkercast) is an independent editorial fan site and podcast that is not affiliated with or under contract by Clive Barker or Seraphim Films. This is a labor of love by the fans, for the fans. web www.clivebarkercast.com iTunes (Leave a review!), Stitcher,Libsyn, Tunein, Pocket Casts, Google Play, DoubleTwist and YouTube. Facebook and Join the Occupy Midian group Twitter: @BarkerCast | @OccupyMidian
Welcome to Episode 3 of Hero Hero Ghost Show! This time around, we’re talking Ryuhei Kitamura’s chanbara-inspired bouillabaisse of weirdness, Versus. Is this the perfect introductory film to Japanese horror? What’s with the kicking guy? Is our lead character as feminist as he claims to be? Also, we talk the origins of the film and why it’s kitchen sink approach to filmmaking may work in its favor! Big thanks to Mike Maryman and be sure to check out Mike and the rest of the gang at Evil Episodes! You can see Kitamura’s short film upon which Versus is based here. If there’s a movie you’d like to hear us discuss, drop us a line here. Join us for more talk about Asian horror at www.facebook.com/groups/HeroHeroGhostShow Thanks for listening! Opening Song: Bright Light by Yui Suzuki Closing Song: Toumei Answer by Jin The post Hero Hero Ghost Show!: Episode 3 – Versus appeared first on Legion.
Don’t get Andi started on Christoph Waltz…Featuring:Andi Preller, Dave Roberts, David Hopkins, and special guest Theron Reynolds!Running Time: 1:55:22Topics • We’re joined by our fellow friend and horror lover Theron Reynolds to talk about Ryuhei Kitamura’s adaptation of Clive Barker’s The Midnight Meat Train! FILMS DISCUSSED: The Midnight Meat Train (2008)
Dave and James delve deep into darkness as the search for the true, dark soul of podcasting. Unfortunately, all they find is the Ryuhei Kitamura's 2008 Clive Barker adaptation The Midnight Meat Train. In addition to reviewing the film, they also discuss horror "brands."
We discuss The Midnight Meat Train, the 2008 movie version of Clive Barker's short story from The Books of Blood, directed by Ryuhei Kitamura. Why is Bradley Cooper following Vinnie Jones around? What the hell is going on onboard that train? Can there ever be too much gore when it's this much fun? www.hellraiserpodcast.com @HellraiserCast
El día de hoy hablamos de: The midnight meat train - una de terror-gore dirigido por Ryuhei Kitamura, protagonizada por Bradley Cooper. Batman: Arkham Asylum Gankutsuō - El conde de MonteCristo Galaxy Gear
Co-host Greg Green and I discuss Ryuhei Kitamura's Versus (2000). We went into this Japanese action/horror/gangster/zombie movie expecting it to be awesome. Sadly, we came out disappointed. We examine the nonexistent story, poorly developed characters, extreme lack of continuity and a sorely underused villain while also praising some of the cinematography and fight choreography. We'd also like to reiterate that Yellowstone National Park is NOT in Canada.
Welcome to Episode 005 of Dark Discussions, your place for the discussion of horror film, fiction, and all that’s fantastic. Once again Philip and Gordon discuss the flesh eaters known so affectionately as the walking dead and zombies. Within this episode, less familiar zombie films are brought to the attention to the listeners. Unlike the George A. Romero films and the other more well known franchises such as Resident Evil, zombie movies have been copied, ripped off, or simply reinvented by both great talents in the horror genre as well as the occasional hack. Our hosts discuss three films each that any horror or zombie aficionado should see if they haven’t seen yet. Gordon focuses on the smaller film where there is no zombie apocalypse in sight. His three recommendations are Grace, directed by Paul Solet and starring the beautiful Jordan Ladd; Deadgirl written by Troma veteran Trent Haaga; and an entry from across the pond in Norway entitled Dead Snow. Philip focuses on three older films filled with kinetic mayhem, a Spanish/English joint production sometimes known as The Living Dead at the Manchester Morgue; Ryuhei Kitamura of Midnight Meat Train renown and his extremely wild zombie film Versus; and Cannibal Ferox’s famed director Umberto Lenzi’s Nightmare City. But what about books and audio? Zombies are now appearing on page and paper, nook and nano. They’ve invaded libraries and computer desktops, perhaps easier than it had been for them to overrun malls, farm houses, and cemeteries. Our hosts talk about this new phenomena where zombie literature may have become as prolific as vampire and haunted house tales. Such authors and editors as Joe McKinney, Jonathan Maberry, Ben Tripp, Brian Keene, David Moody, Kim Paffenroth, and Stephen Jones are dissected. Titles as diverse as Stephen King’s The Cell, Jonathan Maberry’s Patient Zero, and Stephen Jones’ Zombie Apocalypse are dismembered. And a nod to the small publishing house Permuted Press gets a bite from our hosts. But wait, what was that you heard on your iPod? Zombie podcasts? Listeners beware, Dark Discussions welcomes you. As always we welcome your comments: darkdiscussions@aol.com (written email or attached mp3 files) WWW.DARKDISCUSSIONS.COM