Stars: A.J. Cook, Sebastian Roché, Vik Sahay, Stephanie Lemelin, Simon Quarterman, Brian Scott O’Connor, Camelia Maxim | Written by William Brent Bell, Matthew Peterman | Directed by William Brent Bell
It’s not often you can sit down to watch a werewolf movie and say you were truly surprised by what you saw. I think the last time I can recall feeling the same way was upon seeing Ginger Snaps for the first time. But I can honestly say I was totally surprised by Wer. Even more so given that this film was written and directed by William Brent Bell, the man behind the godawful found footage horror The Devil Inside!
When something slaughters a family camping in the French countryside, the freakishly large and powerful Talan Gwynek (Brian Scott O’Connor) is arrested for the crime. While as his public defender Kate (A.J. Cook) argues his case, she begins to...
It’s not often you can sit down to watch a werewolf movie and say you were truly surprised by what you saw. I think the last time I can recall feeling the same way was upon seeing Ginger Snaps for the first time. But I can honestly say I was totally surprised by Wer. Even more so given that this film was written and directed by William Brent Bell, the man behind the godawful found footage horror The Devil Inside!
When something slaughters a family camping in the French countryside, the freakishly large and powerful Talan Gwynek (Brian Scott O’Connor) is arrested for the crime. While as his public defender Kate (A.J. Cook) argues his case, she begins to...
- 10/22/2015
- by Phil Wheat
- Nerdly
Director: Faye Jackson Writer(s): Faye Jackson Starring: Constantin Barbulescu, Camelia Maxim, Catalin Paraschiv Vampires seem to be the new black these days, with multiple prime time television shows featuring vampires and an onslaught of vampire movies; but what differentiates Strigoi from all of the other vampire-related entertainment out there is that there is nothing sexy or seductive about Strigoi. Written and directed by Faye Jackson, Strigoi focuses more on another common trait of vampire tales – the metaphor – and in Strigoi the metaphor appears to be political (bloodsucking communist landowners). Vlad (Catalin Paraschiv) has returned home to Romania, after living in Italy for a while. While living with his grandfather, Vlad stumbles upon a mysterious death that has been ruled accidental but reeks of foul play – it also seems someone forged Vlad’s name on the autopsy report. Curious about apparent cover-up, Vlad commences an investigation. The obvious bad...
- 10/21/2009
- by Don Simpson
- SmellsLikeScreenSpirit
St. Moritz Productions jut released this brand new movie poster from the upcoming horror comedy “Strigoi” written and directed by Faye Jackson (Resurrecting Bill, Lump) and starring Constantin Barbulescu (BloodRayne, Hellraiser: Deader), Camelia Maxim (Ils), Catalin Paraschiv (Pumpkinhead: Ashes to Ashes, Return of the Living Dead: Rave to the Grave), Rudi Rosenfeld (Madhouse, The Midas Touch) and Dan Popa. The principle photography took place in Romania. Synopsis: When the villagers killed Constantin Tirescu, they thought it was justice. Vlad Cozma thinks it was murder. Now Constantin thinks pickles might go nice with blood. Stay tuned to Shockya.com for the latest movie news and more from “Strigoi”.
- 1/18/2009
- by Brian Corder
- ShockYa
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