Killer Collectibles highlights five of the most exciting new horror products released each and every week, from toys and apparel to artwork, records, and much more.
Here are the coolest horror collectibles unveiled this week!
Terrifier Shirt from Terror Threads
Halloween may be Art the Clown’s holiday of choice, but this year he’s ringing in Christmas with Terror Threads. A holiday-themed Terrifier design by Yannick Bouchard is available on T-shirts (34.99) and long sleeves (44.99) for three days only. They’ll ship by December 1.
Train to Busan 4K Uhd from Kino Lorber
Train to Busan speeds onto 4K Ultra HD (with Blu-ray) on December 6 via Well Go USA. This is a good excuse to own one of the best zombie movies of the decade before the American remake, The Last Train to New York, drops next year.
The record-breaking 2016 South Korean film is directed by Yeon Sang-ho and written by Park Joo-Suk.
Here are the coolest horror collectibles unveiled this week!
Terrifier Shirt from Terror Threads
Halloween may be Art the Clown’s holiday of choice, but this year he’s ringing in Christmas with Terror Threads. A holiday-themed Terrifier design by Yannick Bouchard is available on T-shirts (34.99) and long sleeves (44.99) for three days only. They’ll ship by December 1.
Train to Busan 4K Uhd from Kino Lorber
Train to Busan speeds onto 4K Ultra HD (with Blu-ray) on December 6 via Well Go USA. This is a good excuse to own one of the best zombie movies of the decade before the American remake, The Last Train to New York, drops next year.
The record-breaking 2016 South Korean film is directed by Yeon Sang-ho and written by Park Joo-Suk.
- 11/11/2022
- by Alex DiVincenzo
- bloody-disgusting.com
When David Cronenberg accepts his Golden Lion for Lifetime Achievement at the Venice Film Festival, the occasion will be marked by a screening of one of his 21 films. Cronenberg’s selection? “M. Butterfly,” his 1993 adaptation of David Henry Hwang’s Tony-winning play, about the decades-spanning love affair between a cross-dressing Chinese opera singer and the French diplomat unaware of his lover’s gender identity.
It’s a surprising choice, but then surprises are to be expected from the 75-year-old Canadian auteur, who has consistently evaded predictability across a five-decade career. “M. Butterfly” is rarely spoken of by critics as one of Cronenberg’s essential, or indeed quintessential, works: Reviews at the time were cool, and the film hasn’t built much of a revisionist following since. Yet Cronenberg is said to consider it among his most personal films. On closer inspection, you can see why. In an oeuvre that has...
It’s a surprising choice, but then surprises are to be expected from the 75-year-old Canadian auteur, who has consistently evaded predictability across a five-decade career. “M. Butterfly” is rarely spoken of by critics as one of Cronenberg’s essential, or indeed quintessential, works: Reviews at the time were cool, and the film hasn’t built much of a revisionist following since. Yet Cronenberg is said to consider it among his most personal films. On closer inspection, you can see why. In an oeuvre that has...
- 9/3/2018
- by Guy Lodge
- Variety Film + TV
After a two-day trial in central California, the stepmother of an Oregon boy missing since 2010 was found not guilty Wednesday of a misdemeanor charge unrelated to the disappearance.
Terri Horman was charged with grand theft of a firearm in August 2015 after her roommate accused her of stealing it from their home in Marysville, Calif. From the beginning, she maintained she was innocent.
“Hopefully, this will allay some of her detractors now that she’s been found not guilty of this offense,” her attorney Adam Richards tells People.
Horman — who was charged in Yuba County under her maiden name, Terri Moulton...
Terri Horman was charged with grand theft of a firearm in August 2015 after her roommate accused her of stealing it from their home in Marysville, Calif. From the beginning, she maintained she was innocent.
“Hopefully, this will allay some of her detractors now that she’s been found not guilty of this offense,” her attorney Adam Richards tells People.
Horman — who was charged in Yuba County under her maiden name, Terri Moulton...
- 6/30/2017
- by Elaine Aradillas
- PEOPLE.com
'Long Overdue' Arrests Made of 2 Men, Now 65, in 1973 Slaying and Sexual Assault of California Girls
The families of two California girls found dead in 1973 have waited nearly 43 years for answers and justice. Authorities tell People they got some of that this week with the "long overdue" arrest of two suspects in the double homicide. William Lloyd Harbour and Larry Don Patterson were arrested Tuesday in Linda, California, and Oakhurst, Oklahoma, respectively, the Yuba County Sheriff's Office said in a news release. Sheriff spokeswoman Leslie Carbah tells People the near-simultaneous arrests were coordinated to avoid having one suspect potentially tip off the other. The men are cousins, Carbah says. Harbour and Patterson, both 65, were 22 when they allegedly killed Valerie Janice Lane,...
- 9/14/2016
- by Adam Carlson, @acarlson91
- PEOPLE.com
'Long Overdue' Arrests Made of 2 Men, Now 65, in 1973 Slaying and Sexual Assault of California Girls
The families of two California girls found dead in 1973 have waited nearly 43 years for answers and justice. Authorities tell People they got some of that this week with the "long overdue" arrest of two suspects in the double homicide. William Lloyd Harbour and Larry Don Patterson were arrested Tuesday in Linda, California, and Oakhurst, Oklahoma, respectively, the Yuba County Sheriff's Office said in a news release. Sheriff spokeswoman Leslie Carbah tells People the near-simultaneous arrests were coordinated to avoid having one suspect potentially tip off the other. The men are cousins, Carbah says. Harbour and Patterson, both 65, were 22 when they allegedly killed Valerie Janice Lane,...
- 9/14/2016
- by Adam Carlson, @acarlson91
- PEOPLE.com
At home with Festa del Cinema Artistic Director Antonio Monda Photo: Anne-Katrin Titze
From playing a role in Wes Anderson's The Life Aquatic With Steve Zissou, having recent Le Conversazioni with Joyce Carol Oates, Stephen Sondheim, Zadie Smith, Patrick McGrath, Isabella Rossellini, Salman Rushdie, Julie Taymor, Jeffrey Eugenides, Marina Abramovic and Daniel Libeskind, to co-founding Open Roads: New Italian Cinema, with this year's highlights including Ivano de Matteo's The Dinner (I Nostri Ragazzi) and Lamberto Sanfelice's Chlorine (Cloro), starring Sara Serraiocco - Antonio Monda has done a great deal already. Now, he is appointed the Artistic Director of the Rome International Film Festival.
Isabella Rossellini with Antonio Monda in the Morgan Library & Museum Green Room Photo: Anne-Katrin Titze
After Antonio had just returned from the Cannes Film Festival, we spoke about the challenges he looks forward to, how Gay Talese and Jonathan Franzen surprised him, a Renzo Piano connection,...
From playing a role in Wes Anderson's The Life Aquatic With Steve Zissou, having recent Le Conversazioni with Joyce Carol Oates, Stephen Sondheim, Zadie Smith, Patrick McGrath, Isabella Rossellini, Salman Rushdie, Julie Taymor, Jeffrey Eugenides, Marina Abramovic and Daniel Libeskind, to co-founding Open Roads: New Italian Cinema, with this year's highlights including Ivano de Matteo's The Dinner (I Nostri Ragazzi) and Lamberto Sanfelice's Chlorine (Cloro), starring Sara Serraiocco - Antonio Monda has done a great deal already. Now, he is appointed the Artistic Director of the Rome International Film Festival.
Isabella Rossellini with Antonio Monda in the Morgan Library & Museum Green Room Photo: Anne-Katrin Titze
After Antonio had just returned from the Cannes Film Festival, we spoke about the challenges he looks forward to, how Gay Talese and Jonathan Franzen surprised him, a Renzo Piano connection,...
- 6/9/2015
- by Anne-Katrin Titze
- eyeforfilm.co.uk
Stephen Sondheim and Joyce Carol Oates in conversation before Antonio Monda's Le Conversazioni Photo: Anne-Katrin Titze
Following his fall 2014 Le Conversazioni with Zadie Smith (White Teeth) and Patrick McGrath (Asylum and Spider), Antonio Monda invited Joyce Carol Oates and Stephen Sondheim to discuss films that influenced their lives and work.
Henry Hathaway's Niagara, Francis Ford Coppola's The Conversation, Martin Scorsese's Raging Bull and Elia Kazan's On The Waterfront were chosen by Joyce Carol Oates.
George Stevens' The More The Merrier, Mike van Diem's Character (Karakter), Krzysztof Zanussi's The Contract and Alfred Hitchcock's Shadow Of A Doubt were picked by Stephen Sondheim.
Le Conversazioni and Rome Film Festival Artistic Director Antonio Monda Photo: Anne-Katrin Titze
Marilyn Monroe, Dustin Hoffman, Katharine Hepburn, Jean Arthur, Walk Don't Run with Cary Grant, Privacy, Gene Hackman, West Side Story, Vertigo, The Rules Of The Game, Marlon Brando,...
Following his fall 2014 Le Conversazioni with Zadie Smith (White Teeth) and Patrick McGrath (Asylum and Spider), Antonio Monda invited Joyce Carol Oates and Stephen Sondheim to discuss films that influenced their lives and work.
Henry Hathaway's Niagara, Francis Ford Coppola's The Conversation, Martin Scorsese's Raging Bull and Elia Kazan's On The Waterfront were chosen by Joyce Carol Oates.
George Stevens' The More The Merrier, Mike van Diem's Character (Karakter), Krzysztof Zanussi's The Contract and Alfred Hitchcock's Shadow Of A Doubt were picked by Stephen Sondheim.
Le Conversazioni and Rome Film Festival Artistic Director Antonio Monda Photo: Anne-Katrin Titze
Marilyn Monroe, Dustin Hoffman, Katharine Hepburn, Jean Arthur, Walk Don't Run with Cary Grant, Privacy, Gene Hackman, West Side Story, Vertigo, The Rules Of The Game, Marlon Brando,...
- 5/10/2015
- by Anne-Katrin Titze
- eyeforfilm.co.uk
Starred Up director David Mackenzie on working with Jack O'Connell, Ben Mendelsohn and Rupert Friend: "All the actors were allowed to explore. They weren't being funneled. There was a creative heart." Photo: Anne-Katrin Titze
David Mackenzie's humane look at the tortured prison system in Tribeca Film's Starred Up stars Jack O'Connell, Ben Mendelsohn and Rupert Friend with a screenplay by prison system therapist Jonathan Asser. In New York, the morning before the opening of his film, the director and I discussed the spell of John Boorman's Point Blank, which stars Lee Marvin, making Perfect Sense, Patrick McGrath's Asylum, and Charles Laughton's The Night Of The Hunter with Robert Mitchum's knuckles exploring the meaning of love and hate.
Even before we see, we hear the prison. Sounds foreboding and leaden, metal gates slamming shut, steps with the weight of heavy hearts. The spirit of place is one of terror.
David Mackenzie's humane look at the tortured prison system in Tribeca Film's Starred Up stars Jack O'Connell, Ben Mendelsohn and Rupert Friend with a screenplay by prison system therapist Jonathan Asser. In New York, the morning before the opening of his film, the director and I discussed the spell of John Boorman's Point Blank, which stars Lee Marvin, making Perfect Sense, Patrick McGrath's Asylum, and Charles Laughton's The Night Of The Hunter with Robert Mitchum's knuckles exploring the meaning of love and hate.
Even before we see, we hear the prison. Sounds foreboding and leaden, metal gates slamming shut, steps with the weight of heavy hearts. The spirit of place is one of terror.
- 8/27/2014
- by Anne-Katrin Titze
- eyeforfilm.co.uk
By Lee Pfeiffer
Criterion has released a true oddity: a French horror film from 1960 by director Georges Franju titled Eyes Without a Face. The B&W film was notable in its day for being a rare excursion into a genre that most New Wave French filmmakers had studiously avoided. The intriguing plot centers on Dr. Genessier (Pierre Brasseur), a notable plastic surgeon who is pioneering breakthrough methods of reconstructing the faces of people who have suffered grievous injuries and disfigurements. On the surface, Genessier follows the norms of traditional medical research: publishing papers and giving lectures relating to his findings. However, the painstaking process of getting formal acceptance and approval of new medical theories is not for him. He has an urgent need to pursue his theories outside of accepted medical practices. His daughter Christiana (Edit Scob) was severely injured in a car crash that he was responsible for. Wracked by guilt,...
Criterion has released a true oddity: a French horror film from 1960 by director Georges Franju titled Eyes Without a Face. The B&W film was notable in its day for being a rare excursion into a genre that most New Wave French filmmakers had studiously avoided. The intriguing plot centers on Dr. Genessier (Pierre Brasseur), a notable plastic surgeon who is pioneering breakthrough methods of reconstructing the faces of people who have suffered grievous injuries and disfigurements. On the surface, Genessier follows the norms of traditional medical research: publishing papers and giving lectures relating to his findings. However, the painstaking process of getting formal acceptance and approval of new medical theories is not for him. He has an urgent need to pursue his theories outside of accepted medical practices. His daughter Christiana (Edit Scob) was severely injured in a car crash that he was responsible for. Wracked by guilt,...
- 4/20/2014
- by nospam@example.com (Cinema Retro)
- Cinemaretro.com
I hadn't heard of Georges Franju's Eyes Without a Face until last year, following a screening of Holy Motors in Cannes when someone noted how Edith Scob was wearing a similar white mask (see here) to the one she wore throughout all but a few minutes of Eyes, where she plays the scarred daughter of a high profile Paris surgeon (Pierre Brasseur). Come to learn, the film's influence is more widespread than that, including films such as Pedro Almodovar's Skin I Live In, the mask for Michael Myers in John Carpenter's Halloween and even Tim Burton's Batman as Jerry Hall wears a mask to cover her face playing The Joker's secret lover, Alicia Hunt. Little did Alicia know, her plunge out the window was decided almost 30 years earlier. Described as a horror, the adjectives "lyrical" and poetic are also associated with this film and both are incredibly appropriate.
- 10/8/2013
- by Brad Brevet
- Rope of Silicon
Blu-ray & DVD Release Date: Oct. 15, 2013
Price: Blu-ray $39.95
Studio: Criterion
The eyes have it: Edith Scob stars in Eyes Without a Face.
The 1960 horror film Eyes Without a Face was directed by the highly regarded French filmmaker Georges Franju (Judex).
The movie tells the story of a brilliant, obsessive doctor (Pierre Brasseur, Children of Paradise), who, at his secluded chateau in the French countryside, attempts a radical plastic surgery to restore the beauty of his daughter’s (Edith Scob, Summer Hours) disfigured face. The horrifying price of his mission comes in the form of the faces of other young women, whom he kidnaps so he can use their own features to replace those of his daughter’s.
Eyes Without a Face is rare in horror cinema for its odd mixture of the ghastly and the lyrical, and it has been a major influence on the genre in the decades since its release.
Price: Blu-ray $39.95
Studio: Criterion
The eyes have it: Edith Scob stars in Eyes Without a Face.
The 1960 horror film Eyes Without a Face was directed by the highly regarded French filmmaker Georges Franju (Judex).
The movie tells the story of a brilliant, obsessive doctor (Pierre Brasseur, Children of Paradise), who, at his secluded chateau in the French countryside, attempts a radical plastic surgery to restore the beauty of his daughter’s (Edith Scob, Summer Hours) disfigured face. The horrifying price of his mission comes in the form of the faces of other young women, whom he kidnaps so he can use their own features to replace those of his daughter’s.
Eyes Without a Face is rare in horror cinema for its odd mixture of the ghastly and the lyrical, and it has been a major influence on the genre in the decades since its release.
- 7/25/2013
- by Laurence
- Disc Dish
David Cronenberg has made a riveting urban road movie of Don DeLillo's prophetic novel
David Cronenberg made his name directing body horror movies of an often emetic kind that seemed aimed at drive-in audiences. But underneath the urge to shock there has always been as great an interest in mental transformations as in physical ones, and his movies nowadays seem closer to the art house than the grind house. Following his versions of William Burroughs's Naked Lunch, Jg Ballard's Crash and Patrick McGrath's Spider, his elegant, eloquent adaptation of Don DeLillo's Cosmopolis is the fourth time he's brought a work of literary fiction to the screen. And once again, it's both faithful to the text and a film that's very much Cronenberg's own.
Cosmopolis was published in 2003, and although on its first page DeLillo specifically states that the setting is April 2000, it was read at the time as a post-9/11 novel.
David Cronenberg made his name directing body horror movies of an often emetic kind that seemed aimed at drive-in audiences. But underneath the urge to shock there has always been as great an interest in mental transformations as in physical ones, and his movies nowadays seem closer to the art house than the grind house. Following his versions of William Burroughs's Naked Lunch, Jg Ballard's Crash and Patrick McGrath's Spider, his elegant, eloquent adaptation of Don DeLillo's Cosmopolis is the fourth time he's brought a work of literary fiction to the screen. And once again, it's both faithful to the text and a film that's very much Cronenberg's own.
Cosmopolis was published in 2003, and although on its first page DeLillo specifically states that the setting is April 2000, it was read at the time as a post-9/11 novel.
- 6/16/2012
- by Philip French
- The Guardian - Film News
Actor-director Sergio Castellitto has been named president of the International Jury of the International Rome Film Festival (Oct. 28-Nov. 5).
Other members of the jury include: journalist and writer Natalia Aspesi (Italy), winner of the Pietro Bianchi Award for film criticism; director Ulu Grosbard (United States /Belgium), who has directed feature films such as “Falling in Love” with Meryl Streep and “True Confessions” featuring Robert De Niro; writer Patrick McGrath (United Kingdom), author of best sellers such as “Asylum” and “Spider”; director Edgar Reitz (Germany), who wrote the series “Heimat,” and Olga Sviblova (Russia), director of the Multimedia Arts Museum in Moscow.
Other members of the jury include: journalist and writer Natalia Aspesi (Italy), winner of the Pietro Bianchi Award for film criticism; director Ulu Grosbard (United States /Belgium), who has directed feature films such as “Falling in Love” with Meryl Streep and “True Confessions” featuring Robert De Niro; writer Patrick McGrath (United Kingdom), author of best sellers such as “Asylum” and “Spider”; director Edgar Reitz (Germany), who wrote the series “Heimat,” and Olga Sviblova (Russia), director of the Multimedia Arts Museum in Moscow.
- 9/21/2010
- Moving Pictures Magazine
Rome -- Italian actor Sergio Castellitto, who won the best actor prize at last year's International Rome Film Festival, will head the main competition jury at this year's edition of the five-year-old event, organizers said Tuesday.
Castellitto, who was a member of the Cannes jury two years ago, won the Rome festival's top acting prize last year for his role as a single father in "Alza la testa" (Raise Your Head).
The festival also announced the rest of the six-person jury: U.K.-based writer Patrick McGrath, German director Edgar Reitz, Belgian director Ulu Grosbard, Italian writer and journalist Natalia Aspesi, and Olga Sviblova, director of the Multimedia Arts Museum in Moscow. The jury will select the winner of the Marcus Aurelius Award for best film, best actor, best actress, and the special jury prize.
"The jury is composed of extraordinarily personalities and it will be a great pleasure and...
Castellitto, who was a member of the Cannes jury two years ago, won the Rome festival's top acting prize last year for his role as a single father in "Alza la testa" (Raise Your Head).
The festival also announced the rest of the six-person jury: U.K.-based writer Patrick McGrath, German director Edgar Reitz, Belgian director Ulu Grosbard, Italian writer and journalist Natalia Aspesi, and Olga Sviblova, director of the Multimedia Arts Museum in Moscow. The jury will select the winner of the Marcus Aurelius Award for best film, best actor, best actress, and the special jury prize.
"The jury is composed of extraordinarily personalities and it will be a great pleasure and...
- 9/21/2010
- by By Eric J. Lyman
- The Hollywood Reporter - Movie News
Walker gets up to speed with movies
Following in the footsteps of Bruce Weber (Let's Get Lost), Anton Corbijn (Control) and Sam Taylor-Wood (Nowhere Boy), I hear the latest photographer to move from stills to the film camera is the extravagant Tim Walker. Known for his lavish locations and modern baroque style, Walker is shooting his film debut, a short called The Lost Explorer, based on a novel by Patrick McGrath. The film will star Toby Stephens and Jessica Hynes, right, as well as 14-year-old newcomer Olympia Campbell as an adolescent girl who discovers an otherworldly explorer at the end of her garden.
Walker's film is a new project for producers Rory Aitken and Ben Pugh, the team behind the impressive urban drama Shifty. After the stripped-down realism of that film, this richly imaginative work represents a new challenge for the producing duo: one scene calls for a room filled with hundreds of canaries.
Following in the footsteps of Bruce Weber (Let's Get Lost), Anton Corbijn (Control) and Sam Taylor-Wood (Nowhere Boy), I hear the latest photographer to move from stills to the film camera is the extravagant Tim Walker. Known for his lavish locations and modern baroque style, Walker is shooting his film debut, a short called The Lost Explorer, based on a novel by Patrick McGrath. The film will star Toby Stephens and Jessica Hynes, right, as well as 14-year-old newcomer Olympia Campbell as an adolescent girl who discovers an otherworldly explorer at the end of her garden.
Walker's film is a new project for producers Rory Aitken and Ben Pugh, the team behind the impressive urban drama Shifty. After the stripped-down realism of that film, this richly imaginative work represents a new challenge for the producing duo: one scene calls for a room filled with hundreds of canaries.
- 2/21/2010
- by Jason Solomons
- The Guardian - Film News
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