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Raven Banner Entertainment Sinister Cinema Series Launch John Dies at the End – March 27, 2013 Publicity Summary

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John Dies at the End - March 27

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Page 1: Sinister Cinema Launch Publicity Summary

 

Raven  Banner  Entertainment  Sinister  Cinema  Series  Launch  

John  Dies  at  the  End  –  March  27,  2013  Publicity  Summary  

Page 2: Sinister Cinema Launch Publicity Summary

Interviews  Completed:        Thursday  March  14     The  Hollywood  Reporter  (online)             Interviewed:  Raven  Banner      Monday  March  18     Postmedia  Network  (print/online)             Interviewed:  Raven  Banner,  Don  Coscarelli               Proud  FM  (radio)             Interviewed:  Raven  Banner    Monday  March  25     The  Canadian  Press  (print/online)  

Interviewed:  Raven  Banner,  Cineplex  and  Don  Coscarelli    

 The  Edge  1102  –  Fearless  Fred  (radio)  

          Interviewed:  Don  Coscarelli               City  TV               Interviewed:  Don  Coscarelli      Tuesday  March  2  6       Global  TV  –  The  Morning  Show             Interviewed:  Don  Coscarelli                 680  News  Radio             Interviewed:  Don  Coscarelli    

            Toro  Magazine  (online)             Interviewed:  Don  Coscarelli                 The  Suburban  (print)             Interviewed:  Don  Coscarelli    

Page 3: Sinister Cinema Launch Publicity Summary

     Tuesday  March  26     Humble  &  Fred  Radio             Interviewed:  Don  Coscarelli    

  Examiner.com  (online)             Interviewed:  Don  Coscarelli                 BloodyDisgusting.com  (online)             Interviewed:  Don  Coscarelli        Wednesday  March  27     Newstalk  1010  Radio             Interviewed:  Don  Coscarelli    

            InnerSPACE  TV             Interviewed:  Don  Coscarelli                 Fangoria  (print/online)             Interviewed:  Don  Coscarelli    

 MSN  Entertainment  (online)  

          Interviewed:  Don  Coscarelli               Electric  Sheep             Interviewed:  Don  Coscarelli    

            Rue  Morgue  Radio             Interviewed:  Don  Coscarelli                 CBC  Radio  –  Here  &  Now             Interviewed:  Don  Coscarelli    

Page 4: Sinister Cinema Launch Publicity Summary

 Cineplex,  Raven  Banner  to  Showcase  Indie  Horror  Films  at  Canadian  Multiplex    http://www.hollywoodreporter.com/news/cineplex-­‐raven-­‐banner-­‐showcase-­‐indie-­‐428956    By:  Etan  Vlessing  |  March  15,  2013.    The Sinister Cinema series will kick off with a nationwide screening of Don Coscarelli’s "John Dies At The End," which stars Paul Giamatti.  TORONTO – Genre distributor Raven Banner and Canadian exhibition giant Cineplex Entertainment have partnered for a nationwide showcase of indie horror films that have difficulty getting theatrical distribution. Cineplex already gets alternative opera and live theater productions into its multiplexes through its Front Row Center-branded programming block as it looks to diversify away from studio tentpoles to drive ticket sales. Now Michael Kennedy, executive vp of filmed entertainment at Cineplex, has lined up arthouse horror films from Raven Banner that have proved themselves on the festival and frightfest circuit, only to get crowded out of multiplexes. “We’re trying to bring extra elements, bring in the director, show extra content after the film. We want to provide an experience, almost a theatrical experience,” Kennedy said of getting indie genre films to breakout of the arthouse circuit. The monthly Sinister Cinema series will start March 27 with a screening in 25 theaters of Don Coscarelli’s John Dies At The End, which stars Paul Giamatti and was picked up by Raven Banner in Berlin. The launch event will include a Q&A with Coscarelli and Giamatti. Raven Banner inked the deal with Cineplex for block distribution of its art house horror films after earlier cutting a genre DVD distribution pact with Anchor Bay Canada. Raven Banner managing partner Michael Paszt said the Cineplex releasing deal gives his distribution outfit the scale to make indie horror titles possible overground hits at the multiplex. “We’ve been playing films across Canada, but Cineplex takes our titles into one series, gives them a brand and puts a spotlight on it,” he explained. Other quirky features to play as part of the Sinister Cinema series include a May 9 date for Rodrigo Gudiño’s The Last Will and Testament of Rosalind Leigh, which stars Vanessa Redgrave, a May 30 screening for American Mary, by Jen Soska and Sylvia Soska, and Ryuhei Kitmaura’s No One Lives, to air on June 19.  

Page 5: Sinister Cinema Launch Publicity Summary

 This  article  can  also  be  seen  in  the  following  outlets:        

http://www.sportballa.com/2013/03/michael-kennedy/banner-canadian-indie-showcase-multiplex-raven-cineplex-films-horror

http://flair.wittysparks.com/article/0bfYdSk4tFcDk/cineplex-­‐raven-­‐banner-­‐showcase-­‐indie-­‐horror-­‐films-­‐canadian-­‐multiplex      

 http://www.allvoices.com/news/14243771-­‐cineplex-­‐raven-­‐banner-­‐to-­‐showcase-­‐indie-­‐horror-­‐films-­‐at-­‐canadian-­‐multiplex  

 http://www.movieswithbutter.com/Uncategorized/Cineplex-­‐Raven-­‐Banner-­‐to-­‐Showcase-­‐Indie-­‐Horror-­‐Films-­‐at-­‐Canadian-­‐Multiplex      

Page 6: Sinister Cinema Launch Publicity Summary

 

Cineplex,  Raven  Banner  launch  Sinister   http://www.screendaily.com/news/distribution/cineplex-­‐raven-­‐banner-­‐launch-­‐sinister/5052955.article    By:  Jeremy  Kay  March  14,  2013.    The  Canadian  theatre  chain  Cineplex  Entertainment  and  Toronto-­‐based  Raven  Banner  has  teamed  up  to  present  a  series  of  arthouse  genre  cinema  in  25  sites  across  Canada.    Sinister  Cinema  will  include  unique  content  and  in  some  cases  special  appearances,  including  live  Q&A  sessions  with  directors,  pre-­‐recorded  interviews  and  other  programming  to  be  announced.    Titles  in  the  inaugural  series  include  John  Dies  At  The  End,  No  One  Lives  and  American  Mary.    “It’s  a  real  honour  for  us  to  work  with  Cineplex,”  said  Raven  Banner  managing  partner  Michael  Paszt.  “Sinister  Cinema  will  expose  Canadians  to  a  different  type  of  horror  film  –  one  that  falls  outside  the  typical  realm  of  larger  distributors.”    “Today’s  announcement  is  a  big  win  for  Canadian  horror  fans,”  said  Pat  Marshall  vp  of  communications  and  investor  relations  at  Cineplex  Entertainment.  “We  know  fans  of  this  genre  are  going  to  be  incredibly  excited  about  this  new  series.”      This  article  can  also  be  seen  in  the  following  outlets:      

   http://www.movieswithbutter.com/Uncategorized/Cineplex-­‐Raven-­‐Banner-­‐launch-­‐Sinister  

Page 7: Sinister Cinema Launch Publicity Summary

 

Raven Banner, Cineplex launch monthly horror series http://playbackonline.ca/2013/03/14/raven-­‐banner-­‐cineplex-­‐launch-­‐monthly-­‐horror-­‐series/  By:  Danielle  Ng  See  Quan  |  March  14,  2013.  

Sinister  Cinema,  bringing  indie  horror  films  to  the  big  screen  for  Canadian  cinemagoers,  will  kick  off  with  Don  Coscarelli’s  John  Dies  At  The  End  (pictured)  on  Mar.  27. Sinister  Cinema  is  coming  to  25  Cineplex  theatres  across  Canada.    The  new  monthly  horror  series,  a  partnership  between  Toronto-­‐based  

distributor  Raven  Banner  Entertainment  and  Cineplex  Entertainment’s  Front  Row  Centre  Events,  is  a  “cutting-­‐edge  series  of  art  house  quality  genre  cinema,”  according  to  a  release.    The  series,  which  will  bring  indie  horror  films  to  the  big  screen  for  Canadian  cinemagoers,  will  also  include  unique  content  and  at  various  times,  live  Q&A  sessions  with  directors.    “Sinister  Cinema  will  expose  Canadians  to  a  different  type  of  horror  film  –  one  that  falls  outside  the  typical  realm  of  larger  distributors,”  said  Michael  Paszt,  managing  partner  of  genre  sales,  distribution  and  production  co  Raven  Banner  in  a  statement.    Sinister  Cinema  will  kick  off  with  John Dies At The End  on  March  27.    The  film,  based  David  Wong’s  horror  novel,  follows  two  college  dropouts  who  attempt  to  save  humanity  from  the  oncoming  horror  incited  by  the  drug-­‐like  properties  of  soy  sauce,  which  lets  users  drift  across  time  and  dimensions,  rendering  them,  in  some  cases,  no  longer  human.  John Dies At The End  is  written  and  directed  by  Don  Coscarelli  and  stars  Paul  Giamatti,  Clancy  Brown  and  Glynn  Turman.    Rue  Morgue  Cinema’s  The Last Will and Testament of Rosalind Leigh  will  hit  screens  May  9,  while  IndustryWorks  Pictures’  American Mary,  directed  by  Canadian twin sisters Jen and Sylvia Soska,  will  screen  May  30. No One Lives,  from  Pathe  and  WWE  Studios  and  which  screened  at  TIFF  last  year,  will  screen  June  19.  Select  Cineplex  theatres  in  B.C.,  Alberta,  Saskatchewan,  Manitoba,  Ontario  and  Quebec  will  host  the  Sinister  Cinema  series.  

Page 8: Sinister Cinema Launch Publicity Summary

  Cineplex targets horror, genre fans with edgy 'Sinister Cinema' By: Cassandra Szklarski, The Canadian Press March 31, 2013.

A Cineplex Odeon theatre is pictured in North Vancouver in this 2012 file photo. (Jonathan Hayward/THE CANADIAN PRESS) TORONTO -- Options are limited for art-house horror fan Connor Marsden. The off-beat fare he prefers is not the kind of material that generally screens at the local multiplex, forcing him to hunt down edgy titles at film festivals, rep cinemas and DVD stores. And yet, this week he found himself in the most unlikely of places to get his horror fix -- at the towering Cineplex theatre in downtown Toronto where small movies are getting a big push by the mammoth film chain. Surrounded by like-minded genre junkies, the 23-year-old settled into one of the theatre's stadium seats to check out the psychedelic trip "John Dies At the End," directed by Don Coscarelli. "Usually this type of stuff doesn't play at Cineplex -- it's like you get the big studio horror movies but that's about it," Marsden said of the chain's bid to corner an alternative audience. "I think this is really cool." Cineplex is betting that other devoted cult-film devotees feel that way, too.

Page 9: Sinister Cinema Launch Publicity Summary

Its new film series Sinister Cinema promises to bring cutting-edge indies to 25 theatres from British Columbia to Quebec, and with them a celebratory film-festival vibe targeting the horror genre's young and passionate following. "The success of these films at film festivals is proof to us that there's definitely a market out there for them," says Mike Langdon, director of communications for Cineplex Entertainment. "They're an opportunity for us to bring a different type of moviegoer into the theatre." In Toronto, the screening of "John Dies At the End" included a greeting from Coscarelli, trailers for similarly bloody features headed to Cineplex, a kitschy short film before the main feature (the demented spoof "Bio-Cop") and then a Q&A with the director to cap things off. The monthly program's first four films come from the Toronto-based distribution company Raven Banner Entertainment, which specializes in genre fare. Managing partner Andrew Hunt praises Cineplex for bringing lesser-known titles to a broader audience, even if it's only for one night a month. Raven Banner typically works with small independent movie houses that specialize in niche programming but there are fewer and fewer of them around, he says. "There are some great rep theatres in Canada but there's a lot less of them than there was five years ago and 10 years ago," says Hunt, adding that audience interest is nevertheless still there. "(Sinister Cinema) is going to be getting out obviously the hardcore fans of genre films, and also the people who would probably love to go to a great film festival like TIFF Midnight Madness or Fantasia in Montreal but maybe they live in a city where they can't get there." Coscarelli says it's a great boost for filmmakers like him who generally have to hustle for even the smallest distribution deals. "It's a really daring move on their part to try to open up the market," says Coscarelli, who earned a dedicated following for helming genre classics "Phantasm," "The Beastmaster" and "Bubba Ho-Tep." "It's a courageous move on the part of Cineplex because a lot of exhibitors are accused of being stodgy and not up-to-the-times and they're stepping up there and taking a risk." He notes the industry is dominated by studio films, filling chain cinemas with a relatively homogenous slate of big-budget tent-poles. "There's not the diversity that there was when I was younger, certainly in terms of movies that are available to us." Langdon says Sinister Cinema is part of a swath of diverse programming known as its Front Row Centre Events series, which puts "non-Hollywood programming" including 3D sporting events, live opera, dance and music concerts on the big screen. Themed programs include Cineplex's Classic Film Series, which offers old faves including "African Queen," "Singin' in the Rain," and "Sunset Boulevard," for $6; and Family Favourites, which offers kid-friendly flicks like "Free Willy," "Curious George" and "Big" for $2.50.

Page 10: Sinister Cinema Launch Publicity Summary

Each Monday there's a crowd favourite, such as "Aliens," "Taxi Driver" or "Full Metal Jacket." For those theatres that specialize in second-run and avant-garde fare, the Cineplex experiment is definitely not welcome. "It's the one thing we do well and the chains are now trying to steal that one thing from us," says Lee Demarbre, programmer at Ottawa's single-screen Mayfair Theatre. Nevertheless, he argues that chains will never be able to match the ability of independents to connect with audiences. He bemoans the quality of digital projections at the big chains, as opposed to the dying 35-millimetre format: "Watching a digital copy of a movie is quite literally like going on Google and looking at the Mona Lisa." And he suspects that audiences wouldn't have as much fun at a big-box venue. "We're showing 'John Dies at the End' at the end of the week and I'm sure we'll get a better crowd than they will.... We've got a punk rock crowd," he says. "These cinemas are designed to be box-seaters all crammed together in one building and it totally defeats the idea of the way to watch and listen to a movie. Slope floors in a cinema were built for a reason. Stadium seating in a cinema completely defeats the way you listen to and look at a movie. Most times, you're sitting behind the rear speakers. That's disgusting." The "hardcore genre fans" might pause before heading to Cineplex to catch a gorefest, agrees Dave Alexander, editor and chief of Rue Morgue magazine. "They feel sort of a sense of ownership as if the big guys are coming in and taking this kind of cool thing that only they know about away from them," says Alexander, whose horror-themed publication runs a national horror expo, a film production arm and film series. But overall, he says the average movie fan doesn't really care where they see the movie -- just as long as they get the chance to see it. "Everything is so in flux that we need to try different methods, whether it's a one-night screening at a multiplex or a week-long run at a rep cinema," he says. "In general, I think the divisions between the more mainstream film culture and the cult film culture have really kind of collapsed. If you look at all the classic kind of cult films that are being remade for mainstream audiences such as 'Evil Dead' for example, you could just see that those divisions are kind of becoming more and more irrelevant." Langdon says the Front Row Events series has already brought back film fans who abandoned theatrical releases for various reasons. "You'll get someone coming in to see a classic film series presentation who hasn't been to the movies in years and they'll say, 'Hey, what you guys have going on here is really neat,"' he says. "We have seen some guests ... impressed by how cinema has changed over the years and how theatres have changed over the years with digital projection and improvements in audio, surround sound and all those things."

Page 11: Sinister Cinema Launch Publicity Summary

And if rep theatres are feeling left out, Raven Banner suggests the Cineplex experiment can actually help them promote their classic marquee by building audience nostalgia in general. Documentary filmmaker Morgan White is skeptical of that claim, noting that the big chains have been squeezing rep theatres out business for decades. "They have a marketing ability that no independent theatre has," notes White, whose documentary "The Rep" is all about dying rep theatres and is looking for an independent theatre to give it a home. "It's taking business, or the business model, from the repertory cinemas away from them and putting it into Cineplex, or into the corporate theatres. They're simply stealing the idea of a repertory cinema and they're also stealing some of the programming. Because if you look at the stuff that Cineplex is playing it's the tried-and-true repertory content that all of the other cinemas make money off of -- like '80s movies and things like 'The Godfather."' Coscarelli admits its tough for rep cinemas but says there's no stopping change in the industry. For him, scoring a theatrical release offers a "badge of honour" and the greater likelihood of press attention and further sales. "If there's an appearance of legitimacy that it is an actual movie that shows in theatres then you have the ability to exhibit it on all your other streams like DVD or video-on-demand or iTunes," he says. Depending on where you live, there are a growing number of ways to catch beloved favourites with fellow enthusiasts. IMAX recently screened a special 3D version of the '80s classic "Top Gun" in February. And in Toronto, the company 360 Screenings offers a hybrid of live theatre and cinema that features a performance drawn from a classic film, followed by a screening of that film in a heritage or unique city building. White says such screenings are a welcome alternative to the weekly blockbuster. "The motto of the film industry seems to be: re-make and re-purpose everything," he says. "I could care less about a re-make of a classic film that I love, I'd much rather watch that classic film." Marsden says the Sinister Cinema series allowed him to catch "John Dies At the End" after he missed it at last September's Toronto International Film Festival, when it screened as part of the Midnight Madness program. "I was so upset that night. I was like, 'Man, I'm never going to see it, I will never see it on a big screen.' And now I got to and I'm happy," he says, hoping Sinister Cinema expands to more showings. "It'd be nice if it was a weekly thing even or every couple of weeks. That'd be awesome." Upcoming Sinister Cinema films include "The Last Will and Testament of Rosalind Leigh" on May 9, "American Mary" on May 30 and "No One Lives" on June 19.  

Page 12: Sinister Cinema Launch Publicity Summary

This  article  can  also  be  seen  in  the  following  outlets:      

http://www.680news.com/2013/03/31/cineplex-theatres-target-horror-and-genre-fans-with-edgy-film-series/

http://www.vancouversun.com/entertainment/movie-guide/Cineplex+theatres+target+horror+genre+fans+with/8175464/story.html

http://www.thespec.com/whatson/artsentertainment/article/911044--cineplex-theatres-target-horror-and-genre-fans-with-edgy-film-series

http://www.winnipegfreepress.com/breakingnews/cineplex-theatres-target-horror-and-genre-fans-with-edgy-film-series-200786461.html

 http://www.ctvnews.ca/entertainment/cineplex-targets-horror-genre-fans-with-edgy-sinister-cinema-1.1218080

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Sinister  Cinema  -­‐  the  plot  to  bring  smaller  movies  to  bigger  audiences  http://www.ottawacitizen.com/entertainment/movie-­‐guide/Sinister+Cinema+plot+bring+smaller+movies+bigger+audiences/8117769/story.html    By  Jay  Stone,  Postmedia  NewsMarch  19,  2013    

 Writer-­‐director  Don  Coscarelli's  film  John  Dies  at  the  End  kicks  off  the  Sinister  Cinema  series,  playing  in  Ottawa  on  March  27  at  two  theatres.  Photograph  by:  Larry  Busacca,  Getty  Images  Files  ,  Postmedia  News    "So  I  hear  the  Raven  Banner  guys  are  going  to  do  something  different,"  says  Don  Coscarelli,  and  he  knows  all  about  different.  He's  the  director  of  such  offbeat  horror  films  as  Bubba  HoTep,  the  story  of  how  Elvis  Presley  and  John  F.  Kennedy  are  alive  and  living  in  an  old  folks'  home  that  is  being  menaced  by  a  re-­‐animated  Egyptian  mummy.  

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 It's  a  classic.    Coscarelli's  new  movie,  John  Dies  At  The  End,  has  its  own  charms:  two  college-­‐age  slackers  ingest  a  strange  street  drug  called  Soy  Sauce  that  allows  them  to  drift  into  parallel  worlds,  filled  with  giant  spiders  and  gruesome  insects  out  of  the  David  Cronenberg  slime  factory.    There's  a  man  with  a  flying  moustache,  a  monster  made  of  meat  from  the  freezer  and  a  door  that  cannot  be  opened  because  its  handle  has  been  transformed  into  a  large  penis.    It  is  totally  demented,  enough  so  that  Coscarelli  can  say:  "I  think  I'm  going  to  back  off  a  little  bit  on  the  demented.    "I  think  I  can  safely  say  that  my  next  movie  will  be  a  little  more  restrained  than  John  Dies  At  The  End.  I've  had  enough  for  a  lifetime  of  edgy  weird  bizarre  stuff."    It  is,  however,  the  opening-­‐night  film  in  a  bold  experiment:  Sinister  Cinema,  a  program  to  bring  movies  such  as  John  Dies  At  The  End  out  of  the  late-­‐night  ghetto  of  film  festivals  and  put  them  into  communities  across  Canada.    Four  films  -­‐  distributed  by  Raven  Banner,  a  Toronto  company  that  handles  genre  titles  -­‐  will  kick  it  off  at  25  Cineplex  theatres,  including  two  in  Ottawa  (SilverCity  in  Gloucester,  Coliseum  on  Carling).    "I've  never  played  that  many  theatres  in  a  single  night,"  says  Coscarelli,  who's  also  known  for  the  Phantasm  series  of  fantasy  horror.    "It's  a  grand  experiment.  Interesting  to  see  how  it  works  out."    The  idea  is  to  try  to  replicate  the  mood  of  Midnight  Madness,  a  Toronto  Film  Festival  program  that  shows  edgy,  horror  movies  to  young  audiences  who  typically  pack  the  theatres  and  respond  happily  -­‐  and  noisily  -­‐  to  the  mix  of  violence,  irony  and  cult  appeal.    "We're  trying  to  emulate  the  festival  vibe,"  says  Jim  Flet,  a  managing  director  of  Raven  Banner.  "Everyone  in  the  theatre  is  jazzed  about  the  film,  they're  fans  of  genre  and  you  feed  in  the  extras."  The  extras  will  include  shorts  before  the  main  feature,  question-­‐and-­‐answer  sessions  with  talent  from  the  film  at  some  venues  and  filmed  interviews  with  the  directors.    The  short  to  be  shown  before  John  Dies  At  The  End  is  Bio-­‐Cop,  a  mock  five-­‐minute  trailer  by  Steven  Kostanski  about  a  policeman  who  is  mutilated  in  a  lab  accident  and  rendered  indestructible  ("You  have  the  right  to  remain  dead.")    Sinister  Cinema  is  designed  to  find  bigger  audiences  for  smaller  movies,  and  while  they  are  shown  for  only  one  night,  some  will  also  open  later  for  short  runs,  or  may  have  encore  presentations  if  they're  popular.    John  Dies  At  The  End,  which  screens  March  27,  is  based  on  an  online  book  by  Jason  Pargin,  an  editor  at  the  humour  website  Cracked.com  writing  under  the  pseudonym  David  Wong.    

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Coscarelli  heard  about  it  because  he  bought  books  on  the  Amazon  website  and  Amazon  has  a  robotic  artificial  intelligence  that  monitors  the  preferences  of  its  clients.  One  day,  the  robot  sent  him  an  email  saying  that,  based  on  what  he  enjoyed  before,  he  might  like  this  new  book.    "It's  a  freaky  concept,"  he  says  by  phone  from  Los  Angeles.  "It  probably  would  make  for  a  great  movie  in  itself  ...  If  Philip  K.  Dick  was  still  alive,  he  could  write  a  great  short  story  about  it."    The  film,  which  stars  newcomers  Chase  Williamson  and  Rob  Mayes  as  the  young  heroes,  also  features  Paul  Giamatti  as  a  journalist  who  is  hearing  the  story.  Giamatti,  who  also  helped  produce  the  film,  is  a  fan  of  Bubba  HoTep,  and  once  told  an  interviewer  that  Coscarelli  was  one  of  the  directors  he's  always  wanted  to  work  with.    The  other  launch  films  for  Sinister  Cinema  don't  have  such  an  exotic  provenance,  but  they  come  close.  Two  are  Canadian:  The  Last  Will  And  Testament  of  Rosalind  Leigh  (May  9),  which  stars  Vanessa  Redgrave,  was  directed  by  Rodrigo  Gudino,  publisher  of  the  Toronto  horror  magazine  Rue  Morgue;  and  American  Mary  (May  30)  -­‐  about  a  medical  student  who  undergoes  messy  surgeries  to  earn  money  -­‐  was  made  by  Jen  and  Sylvia  Soska,  sisters  from  Vancouver  known  as  The  Twisted  Twins.    The  fourth  film  is  No  One  Lives  (June  19)  by  Japanese  director  Ryuhei  Kitamura,  about  a  girl  who  is  the  only  survivor  of  a  massacre  and  is  then  taken  hostage  by  bandits  who  don't  know  who  they're  messing  with.    Tickets  are  available  at  participating  theatre  box  offices  and  online  at  cineplex.com/events.  ©  Copyright  (c)  The  Ottawa  Citizen    This  article  can  also  be  seen  in  the  following  outlets:      

   http://o.canada.com/2013/03/18/john-­‐dies-­‐at-­‐the-­‐end-­‐is-­‐sinister-­‐cinima/  

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Canada!  Cineplex  Entertainment  and  Raven  Banner  Launch  New  Horror  Series  “Sinister  Cinema”  http://www.fangoria.com/new/canada-­‐cineplex-­‐entertainment-­‐and-­‐raven-­‐banner-­‐launch-­‐new-­‐horror-­‐series-­‐sinister-­‐cinema/    in:  Fango  Local,Movies/TV,News  |  March  13,  2013  -­‐  4:46  pm  |  by:  admin  |  1  Comment    

 Cineplex  Entertainment’s  Front  Row  Centre  Events  and  Raven  Banner  have  teamed  up  to  bring  Canadian  genre  fans  a  chance  to  see  some  of  the  biggest  titles  of  last  year’s  fest  circuit  on  the  big  screen  with  their  new  monthly  series  Sinister  Cinema,  kicking  things  off  with  Don  Coscarelli’s  JOHN  DIES  AT  THE  END,  Rodrigo  Gudiño’s  THE  LAST  WILL  AND  TESTAMENT  OF  ROSALIND  LEIGH,  The  Soska  Sisters’  AMERICAN  MARY  and  Ryuhei  Kitamura’s  NO  ONE  LIVES.  The  films  will  be  playing  in  multiplexes  across  Canada  starting  March  27th  (full  list  of  venues  below).    From  the  official  press  release:  Sinister  Cinema  will  bring  a  series  of  independent  horror  films  to  25  Cineplex  theatres  across  Canada.  The  films  will  include  unique  content,  and  in  some  cases,  special  appearances,  including  live  question  and  answer  sessions  with  directors,  pre-­‐recorded  interviews  and  more.  “It’s  a  real  honour  for  us  to  work  with  Cineplex,”  said  Raven  Banner’s  Managing  Partner,  Michael  Paszt.    

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 “Sinister  Cinema  will  expose  Canadians  to  a  different  type  of  horror  film  –  one  that  falls  outside  the  typical  realm  of  larger  distributors.”  “Today’s  announcement  is  a  big  win  for  Canadian  horror  fans,”  said  Pat  Marshall,  Vice  President,  Communications  and  Investor  Relations,  Cineplex  Entertainment.  “We  know  fans  of  this  genre  are  going  to  be  incredibly  excited  about  this  new  series.”    SINISTER  CINEMA  LAUNCH  FILMS:  March  27,  2013  –  John  Dies  At  The  End  In  John  Dies  at  the  End,  it’s  all  about  the  soy  sauce,  a  drug  that  promises  an  out-­‐of-­‐body  experience.  Users  drift  across  time  and  dimensions.  But  some  come  back  no  longer  human.  Suddenly,  a  silent,  otherworldly  invasion  is  underway,  and  mankind  needs  a  hero.  What  it  gets  instead  are  John  (Rob  Mayes)  and  David  (Chase  Williamson),  a  pair  of  college  dropouts  who  can  barely  hold  down  jobs.  Can  they  stop  the  oncoming  horror  in  time  to  save  humanity?  No.  No,  they  can’t.  Adapted  from  David  Wong’s  audacious  horror  novel,  John  Dies  at  the  End  is  written  and  directed  by  Don  Coscarelli  and  also  stars  Clancy  Brown,  Glynn  Turman  and  Paul  Giamatti.  About  the  director:  Born  in  Tripoli  in  1954  and  raised  in  Southern  California,  Coscarelli  made  his  first  feature  length  film,  Jim,  the  World’s  Greatest,  when  he  was  19.  However,  Coscarelli  is  best  known  for  Phantasm  and  its  successful  sequels,  which  spawned  a  rabid  cult  of  fans  worldwide.  With  Phantasm,  he  created  one  of  the  most  original  myths  in  modern  horror,  and  in  2002,  turned  Elvis  into  the  protagonist  of  the  fantastic  odyssey  Bubba  Ho-­‐Tep,  for  which  he  received  the  Bram  Stoker  Award  for  best  screenplay.    May  9,  2013  –  The  Last  Will  and  Testament  of  Rosalind  Leigh  (Rue  Morgue  Cinema)  The  feature  film  directorial  debut  of  Rue  Morgue  magazine  founder  and  publisher,  Rodrigo  Gudiño,  stars  Aaron  Poole  and  Academy  Award  winner  Vanessa  Redgrave.  The  Last  Will  and  Testament  of  Rosalind  Leigh  tells  the  story  of  Leon,  an  antiques  collector  who  inherits  a  house  from  his  estranged  mother,  only  to  discover  that  she  had  been  living  in  a  shrine  devoted  to  a  mysterious  cult.    “Magnificent.  A  whole  new  direction  in  which  to  take  the  narrative  experience  in  filmmaking.”  –  Clive  Barker    About  the  director:  Rodrigo  Gudiño  is  founding  editor  and  president  of  the  Rue  Morgue  horror-­‐themed  entertainment  empire.  He  has  been  at  the  helm  of  the  company  since  its  inception  in  1997  and  is  the  publisher  of  Toronto-­‐based  Rue  Morgue  magazine  and  senior  coordinator  of  the  Rue  Morgue  Festival  of  Fear  National  Horror  Expo.  Gudiño  directed  three  highly  acclaimed  short  films,  including  The  Facts  In  the  Case  of  Mister  Hollow.  His  shorts  were  selected  in  more  than  50  international  film  festivals,  have  garnered  more  than  25  awards,  and  were  nominated  at  Canada’s  Genie  Awards.    May  30,  2013  –  American  Mary  From  IndustryWorks  Pictures  comes  one  of  the  year’s  most  horrific  highlights,  American  Mary  tells  the  story  of  broke  med  student  Mary  Mason  (Katharine  Isabelle)  who  grows  increasingly  disenchanted  with  medical  school  and  the  doctors  she  once  admired.  The  allure  of  easy  money  sends  a  desperate  Mary  through  the  messy  world  of  underground  surgeries  that  leaves  more  marks  on  her  than  her  so-­‐called  freakish  clientele…  Smart,  sexy,  funny  and  stunning  to  look  at,  American  Mary  features  a  standout  lead  performance  from  horror  icon  Katharine  Isabelle  (‘Ginger  Snaps’,  ‘Insomnia’,  ‘Freddy  vs.  Jason’),  and  notable  performances  by  Antonio  Cupo  (‘Bomb  Girls’,  ‘Dark  Angel’,  ‘Elegy’),  Paula  Lindberg  (‘Fringe’,  ‘Supernatural’,  ‘Iron  Man  the  TV  series’),  David  Lovgren  (‘Masters  of  Horror’,  ‘Supernatural’,  ‘Stargate:  

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Atlantis’)  and  newcomers  Tristen  Risk  as  the  disturbingly  loveable  Beatress  and  Twan  Holliday  as  Mary’s  confidant,  protector  and  bff  Lance.  A  film  not  to  be  missed  and  what  and  reviewers  are  calling  ‘A  true  Modern  Day  Horror’.    About  the  Directors:  Canadian  twin  sisters,  Jen  and  Sylvia  Soska,  aka  The  Twisted  Twins,  started  off  studying  at  a  film  school  where  they  made  a  short  that  would  be  the  embryo  of  their  first  feature  film  ‘Dead  Hooker  in  a  Trunk’  which  earned  the  attention  of  filmmaker  Eli  Roth.  With  some  insight  from  IndustryWorks,  ‘Dead  Hooker  in  a  Trunk’  landed  in  the  worldwide  hands  of  IFC  for  their  IFC  Midnight  Series.  For  their  follow  up  film,  American  Mary,  the  twins  came  armed  with  horror  and  sci-­‐fi  industry  talent  bringing  the  most  unique  characters  to  life,  the  undeniably  skilled  Director  of  Photography  Brian  Pearson  (‘Drive  Angry’,  ‘I  Robot’,  ‘Final  Destination  5’,  ‘My  Bloody  Valentine’),  and  a  top  notch  crew,  making  American  Mary  the  year’s  most  talked  about  horror  film.    June  19,  2013-­‐  No  One  Lives  From  Pathe  and  WWE  Studios  –  Fourteen  students  appear  brutally  murdered  and  the  crime  scene  offers  no  clues  as  to  the  whereabouts  of  the  one  person  who  could  be  the  only  survivor,  a  young  woman  named  Emma.  Months  later,  bandits  attack  a  young  couple’s  car,  only  to  discover  the  frightened  Emma.  Rubbing  their  hands  at  the  prospect  of  ransom  payday,  they  don’t  realize  that  those  who  appeared  to  be  prey  are  far  less  defenseless  than  they  seem.  Director  Ryuhei  Kitamura  continues  his  American  adventure  with  No  One  Lives,  a  violent  and  ingenious  thriller,  manipulating  all  the  genre  conventions  past  and  future  to  his  taste.  About  the  director:  Ryuhei  Kitamura  –  Osaka,  1969.  One  of  the  cult  names  in  contemporary  Japanese  cinema,  Kitamura  drew  the  attention  of  genre  fans  with  the  ultragore  and  hyper-­‐kinetic  Versus.  Other  titles  in  his  filmography  are  Alive,  Azumi,  Sky  High,  Godzilla:  Final  Wars,  and  The  Midnight  Meat  Train.    Tickets  are  available  now  at  participating  theatre  box  offices  and  online  at  cineplex.com/events.  The  following  is  a  complete  list  of  participating  theatres:    British  Columbia  Odeon  Victoria  Cinemas  –  Victoria,  BC  Galaxy  Cinemas  Nanaimo  –  Nanaimo,  BC  Colossus  Langley  Cinemas  –  Langley,  BC  Cineplex  Odeon  Park  &  Tilford  Cinemas  –  North  Vancouver,  BC  Cineplex  Odeon  International  Village  Cinemas  –  Vancouver,  BC  Alberta  Scotiabank  Theatre  Edmonton  –  Edmonton,  AB  Scotiabank  Theatre  Chinook  –  Calgary,  AB  Saskatchewan  Galaxy  Cinemas  Regina  –  Regina,  SK  Galaxy  Cinemas  Saskatoon  –  Saskatoon,  SK  Manitoba  SilverCity  Polo  Park  Cinemas  –  Winnipeg,  MB  Ontario  Cineplex  Odeon  Devonshire  Mall  Cinemas  –  Windsor,  ON  SilverCity  London  Cinemas  –  London,  ON  

Galaxy  Cinemas  Waterloo  –  Waterloo,  ON  Cineplex  Odeon  Winston  Churchill  Cinemas  –  Oakville,  ON  SilverCity  Hamilton  Cinemas  –  Hamilton,  ON  Cineplex  Cinemas  Mississauga  –  Mississauga,  ON  Cineplex  Odeon  Queensway  Cinemas  –  Toronto,  ON  Colossus  Vaughan  Cinemas  –  Vaughan,  ON  SilverCity  Fairview  Mall  Cinemas  –  Toronto,  ON  Cineplex  Odeon  Yonge  &  Dundas  Square  Cinemas  –  Toronto,  ON  Cineplex  Odeon  Eglinton  Town  Centre  Cinemas  –  Scarborough,  ON  Coliseum  Ottawa  Cinemas  –  Ottawa,  ON  SilverCity  Gloucester  Cinemas  –  Ottawa,  ON  SilverCity  Sudbury  Cinemas  –  Sudbury,  ON  Quebec  Cineplex  Odeon  Forum  Cinemas  –  Montreal,  QC  

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  Raven  Banner  &  Sinister  Cinema  Unleashes  American  Mary  Across  Canada    http://www.horror-­‐movies.ca/2013/03/raven-­‐banner-­‐sinister-­‐cinema-­‐unleashes-­‐american-­‐mary-­‐across-­‐canada/    By:  Deth_Banger      March  14th,  2013    I’m  pretty  sure  many  of  my  Canadian  friends  were  wondering  just  when  they  were  going  to  get  some  American  Mary  love.  But  with  a  bit  of  patience  it  appears  as  if  you  Canucks  are  in  for  one  heck  of  a  treat  as  Raven  Banner  is  set  to  unleash  Jen  &  Sylvia  Soska’s  American  Mary  throughout  Canada  as  part  of  the  Sinister  Cinema’s  Horror  Series.    But  get  this,  as  part  of  Raven  Banner’s  Sinister  Cinema’s  Horror  Series,  you  will  also  get  to  witness  John  Dies  At  The  End,  The  Last  Will  and  Testament  of  Rosalind  Leigh  and  WWE’s  No  One  Lives.  So  head  on  down  below  for  all  the  details  and  locations  these  film  will  be  playing  across  Canada.    So,  in  short,  this  is  fucking  awesome!  What  are  you  waiting  for?  Go  get  your  tickets  now.  “Cineplex  Entertainment’s  Front  Row  Centre  Events  and  Raven  Banner  announce  the  launch  of  Sinister  Cinema,  a  cutting-­‐edge  series  of  art  house  quality  genre  cinema.  Sinister  Cinema  will  bring  a  series  of  independent  horror  films  to  25  Cineplex  theatres  across  Canada.  The  films  will  include  unique  content,  and  in  some  cases,  special  appearances,  including  live  question  and  answer  sessions  with  directors,  pre-­‐recorded  interviews  and  more.    “It’s  a  real  honour  for  us  to  work  with  Cineplex,”  said  Raven  Banner’s  Managing  Partner,  Michael  Paszt.  

Page 20: Sinister Cinema Launch Publicity Summary

“Sinister  Cinema  will  expose  Canadians  to  a  different  type  of  horror  film  –  one  that  falls  outside  the  typical  realm  of  larger  distributors.”    “Today’s  announcement  is  a  big  win  for  Canadian  horror  fans,”  said  Pat  Marshall,  Vice  President,  Communications  and  Investor  Relations,  Cineplex  Entertainment.  “We  know  fans  of  this  genre  are  going  to  be  incredibly  excited  about  this  new  series.”    Tickets  are  available  now  at  participating  theatre  box  offices  and  online  at  cineplex.com/events.  The  following  is  a  complete  list  of  participating  theatres:    British  Columbia  Odeon  Victoria  Cinemas  –  Victoria  Galaxy  Cinemas  Nanaimo  –  Nanaimo  Colossus  Langley  Cinemas  –  Langley  Cineplex  Odeon  Park  &  Tilford  Cinemas  –  North  Vancouver  Cineplex  Odeon  International  Village  Cinemas  –  Vancouver  Alberta  Scotiabank  Theatre  Edmonton  –  Edmonton  Scotiabank  Theatre  Chinook  –  Calgary  Saskatchewan  Galaxy  Cinemas  Regina  –  Regina  Galaxy  Cinemas  Saskatoon  –  Saskatoon  Manitoba  SilverCity  Polo  Park  Cinemas  –  Winnipeg  Ontario  Cineplex  Odeon  Devonshire  Mall  Cinemas  –  Windsor  SilverCity  London  Cinemas  –  London  Galaxy  Cinemas  Waterloo  –  Waterloo  Cineplex  Odeon  Winston  Churchill  Cinemas  –  Oakville  

SilverCity  Hamilton  Cinemas  –  Hamilton  Cineplex  Cinemas  Mississauga  –  Mississauga  Cineplex  Odeon  Queensway  Cinemas  –  Toronto  Colossus  Vaughan  Cinemas  –  Vaughan  SilverCity  Fairview  Mall  Cinemas  –  Toronto  Cineplex  Odeon  Yonge  &  Dundas  Square  Cinemas  –  Toronto  Cineplex  Odeon  Eglinton  Town  Centre  Cinemas  –  Scarborough  Coliseum  Ottawa  Cinemas  –  Ottawa  SilverCity  Gloucester  Cinemas  –  Ottawa  SilverCity  Sudbury  Cinemas  –  Sudbury  Quebec  Cineplex  Odeon  Forum  Cinemas  –  Montreal”  The  list  and  time  of  films  are  as  follows:  March  27,  2013  –  John  Dies  At  The  End  May  9,  2013  –  The  Last  Will  and  Testament  of  Rosalind  Leigh  May  30,  2013  –  American  Mary  June  19,  2013-­‐  No  One  Lives  

   This  article  can  also  be  seen  in  the  following  outlets:    

   http://newsinmovies.com/2013/03/raven-­‐banner-­‐sinister-­‐cinema-­‐unleashes-­‐american-­‐mary-­‐across-­‐canada-­‐horrormovies-­‐ca    

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Fests  offer  a  feast  of  horror,  sci-­‐fi  and  music  films  http://www.thestar.com/entertainment/movies/2013/03/21/fests_offer_a_feast_of_horror_scifi_and_music_films.html  By:  Jason  Anderson  |  March  21,  2013.  Freaky  horror  John  Dies  at  the  End  kicks  off  a  horror  program.  Meanwhile,  CMW  and  the  Canadian  Film  Festival  continue.    

 Chase  Williamson  in  John  Dies  at  the  End.    JOHN  DIES  AT  THE  END:  Pairing  the  director  of  Phantasm  and  Bubba  Ho-­‐Tep  with  one  of  the  last  decade’s  wildest  horror  novels  is  the  kind  of  chocolate-­‐and-­‐peanut-­‐butter  combo  that  no  cult-­‐movie  fan  can  resist.  Sure  enough,  John  Dies  at  the  End  —  director  Don  Coscarelli’s  new  adaptation  of  the  book  by  David  Wong  (a  penname  for  Jason  Pargin)  —  contains  more  than  enough  weirdness  to  sate  the  appetites  of  

adventurous  viewers.  They’ll  get  a  chance  to  partake  when  Coscarelli’s  film  launches  Sinister  Cinema,  a  monthly  program  of  fresh  genre  flicks  presented  by  Cineplex  and  Raven  Banner.      A  worthy  selection  from  last  year’s  Midnight  Madness  at  TIFF,  John  Dies  at  the  End  stars  Chase  Williamson  and  Rob  Mayes  as  paranormal  investigators  whose  already  shaky  grasp  on  reality  loosens  further  after  they  encounter  a  bizarre  drug  nicknamed  “soy  sauce.”  The  particular  brand  of  chaos  that  ensues  involves  everything  from  telekinetic  dogs  to  monstrous  insect  creatures  to  a  skeptical  reporter  played  by  Paul  Giamatti  (a  big  Coscarelli  fan,  the  actor  is  also  one  of  the  movie’s  executive  producers).    Coscarelli  will  be  ready  to  hopefully  explain  what  it  all  means  when  he  does  a  Q&A  after  John  Dies  at  the  End’s  screening  at  the  Cineplex  Odeon  Yonge-­‐Dundas  location  on  March  27  at  9:30  p.m.  The  movie  plays  March  27  at  six  more  Cineplex  theatres  in  the  GTA,  with  encore  screenings  to  follow  at  Yonge-­‐Dundas  on  April  1  and  4.  Upcoming  selections  for  Sinister  Cinema  include  American  Mary  and  The  Last  Will  and  Testament  of  Rosalind  Leigh.    

Page 22: Sinister Cinema Launch Publicity Summary

ALUCINE:  Now  in  its  13th  year,  aluCine  showcases  new  works  by  filmmakers  and  artists  working  in  Latin  America,  Canada  and  just  about  anywhere  else  Spanish  may  be  spoken.  Exhibitions,  performances,  talks  and  workshops  complement  an  intriguing  slate  of  screenings  at  AGO’s  Jackman  Hall,  the  theatre  at  the  Artscape  Wychwood  Barns  (601  Christie  St.)  and  the  Toronto  Free  Gallery  (1277  Bloor  St.  W.)  The  four-­‐day  program  opens  on  March  27  with  the  Canadian  premiere  of  La  Playa  D.C.,  an  arresting  feature  about  a  Bogota  street  youth’s  search  for  his  missing  brother  that  garnered  considerable  acclaim  for  Colombian  director  Juan  Andres  Arango  Garcia  at  Cannes  last  year.  It  screens  at  7  p.m.  at  Jackman  Hall  with  The  French  Tomb,  a  long-­‐lost  13-­‐minute  doc  on  the  Afro-­‐Cuban  dance  of  the  title  that  was  co-­‐directed  by  legendary  cinematographer  Néstor  Almendros.  AluCine  continues  to  March  30.    CMW  AND  CANADIAN  FILM  FESTS:  There’s  no  shortage  of  worthy  options  for  festival-­‐goers  this  weekend  thanks  to  two  big  events.  The  CMW  Film  Fest  continues  with  a  strong  slate  of  new  music  docs.  Scholars,  students  and  survivors  of  the  local  punk  scene  will  most  definitely  be  at  TIFF  Bell  Lightbox  when  The  Last  Pogo  Strikes  Again  —  a  212-­‐minute  (!)  history  of  Toronto’s  role  in  the  snottiest  of  musical  movements  —  makes  its  world  premiere  on  Saturday  at  12:30  p.m.  Equally  anticipated  is  Big  Star:  Nothing  Can  Hurt  Me,  a  new  portrait  of  one  of  rock’s  least  fortunate  bands.  It  plays  Lightbox  on  Saturday  at  9:15  p.m.  Meanwhile  at  the  Royal,  the  Canadian  Film  Festival  continues  with  a  patriotic  program  of  shorts,  features  and  documentaries.  The  movie  most  deserving  of  your  hard-­‐earned  loonies  is  The  Disappeared,  a  starkly  powerful  feature  by  Halifax’s  Shandi  Mitchell  about  six  fishermen  stranded  off  the  East  Coast.  It  makes  its  Toronto  premiere  on  Friday  at  7  p.m.  Closing-­‐night  honours  at  the  CFF  goes  to  Mr.  Viral,  a  satire  of  the  ad  world  by  Toronto’s  Alex  Boothby.  It  plays  Saturday  at  8:30  p.m.    SCI  FI  FILM  LAB:  Science  fiction  cinema  gets  the  love  it  deserves  at  a  new  series  presented  by  the  online  SF  lit  magazine  AE  and  the  Martians  and  Monsters  film  fest.  Pairing  much-­‐loved  movies  with  talks  by  many  of  Toronto’s  best  science  fiction  authors,  the  Sci  Fi  Film  Lab  launches  March  28  at  7:30  p.m.  with  a  screening  of  the  1995  anime  milestone  Ghost  in  the  Shell  and  a  lecture  by  author  Madeleine  Ashby  at  Big  Picture  Cinema  (1035  Gerrard  St.  E.).  Canadian  SF  king  Robert  J.  Sawyer  is  on  deck  for  the  April  25  screening  of  the  Brit  cult  flick  Quatermass  and  the  Pit.    THERMAE  ROMAE:  A  bawdy  comedy  about  bathhouses  set  in  modern  Tokyo  and  ancient  Rome,  Thermae  Romae  was  one  of  Japan’s  biggest  box-­‐office  hits  last  year.  Local  viewers  who  missed  it  at  TIFF  can  catch  it  at  the  Japanese  Canadian  Cultural  Centre  (6  Garamond  Court)  on  March  28  at  7  p.m.  Attendees  will  also  be  the  first  to  hear  about  the  lineup  for  the  annual  Toronto  Japanese  Film  Festival,  which  returns  in  June.    SCIENCE  AT  THE  MOVIES:  A  1986  comedy  that  introduced  Ally  Sheedy  to  a  sentient  robot  named  Johnny  Five,  Short  Circuit  is  the  latest  selection  for  a  new  program  by  the  University  of  Toronto  and  the  Treehouse  Group  on  science-­‐themed  movies.  After  the  screening,  host  Dan  Falk  will  be  joined  by  U  of  T  professors  Diana  Raffman  (Philosophy)  and  Sheila  McIlraith  (Computer  Science).  This  brainy  affair  takes  place  March  26  at  5:45  p.m.  at  the  Bloor  Hot  Docs  Cinema.    EPICURE’S  REVUE:  The  Revue’s  films-­‐for-­‐foodies  series  has  a  distinctly  Gallic  flavour  for  this  month’s  edition.  On  March  28  at  6:45  p.m.,  a  screening  of  Entre  Les  Bras  —  a  documentary  about  a  French  chef’s  efforts  to  pass  his  Michelin  three-­‐star  restaurant  down  to  his  son  —  is  accompanied  by  a  talk  by  Christophe  Measson,  a  French-­‐born  and  Toronto-­‐based  restaurateur,  pastry  chef  and  George  Brown  instructor.  Barque  and  Mildred’s  Temple  Kitchen  are  just  two  of  the  restos  providing  tasty  items  to  hungry  patrons.  

Page 23: Sinister Cinema Launch Publicity Summary

Cineplex launches monthly art house horror series

A Cineplex Odeon is pictured in North Vancouver, B.C., on Tuesday, May 15, 2012. (The Canadian Press/Jonathan Hayward) TORONTO -- A new film series promises to bring cutting-edge art house horror movies to a theatre near you. Cineplex Entertainment and the Toronto-based distribution company Raven Banner have teamed up to launch the monthly indie program Sinister Cinema. Organizers say the program will expose Canadians to a different type of horror film not usually shown by the larger distributors. The series will include special appearances, live question-and-answer sessions with directors and pre-recorded interviews. The films include "John Dies At The End" on March 27, "The Last Will and Testament of Rosalind Leigh" on May 9, "American Mary" on May 30 and "No One Lives" on June 19. The series will run in 25 theatres across Canada.  

Page 24: Sinister Cinema Launch Publicity Summary

This  article  can  also  be  seen  in  the  following  outlets:    

http://www.cp24.com/cineplex-­‐launches-­‐monthly-­‐art-­‐house-­‐horror-­‐series-­‐1.1196022  

http://metronews.ca/scene/595695/cineplex-­‐launches-­‐monthly-­‐horror-­‐series/      

 http://www.timescolonist.com/entertainment/movies/cineplex-­‐launches-­‐monthly-­‐horror-­‐series-­‐of-­‐indie-­‐art-­‐house-­‐genre-­‐movies-­‐1.91242      

 http://www.horrorsociety.com/2013/03/14/new-­‐monthly-­‐indie-­‐art-­‐house-­‐programming-­‐from-­‐cineplex/        

Page 25: Sinister Cinema Launch Publicity Summary

Canada to get a big dose of genre films courtesy of Sinister Cinema  http://www.joblo.com/horror-­‐movies/news/canada-­‐to-­‐get-­‐a-­‐big-­‐dose-­‐of-­‐genre-­‐films-­‐courtesy-­‐of-­‐sinister-­‐cinema    By:  Eric  Walkuski  |  March  14,  2013.  Sinister  Cinema,  a  cutting-­‐edge  series  of  art  house  quality  genre  cinema  in  Canada.  You  lucky  Canucks!    Sinister  Cinema  will  bring  a  series  of  independent  horror  films  to  25  Cineplex  theatres  across  Canada.  The  films  will   include  unique  content,  and  in  some  cases,   special  appearances,  including  live  question  and   answer  sessions  with  directors,  pre-­‐recorded  interviews  and  more.    Things  kick  off  on  March  27th  with  Don  Coscarelli's  JOHN  DIES  AT  THE  END.  On  May  9th  comes  THE  LAST  WILL  AND  TESTAMENT  OF  ROSALIND  LEIGH  (from  Rue  Morgue's  Rodrigo  Gudino).  May  30th  brings  the  Soska  Sisters'  AMERICAN  MARY.  Then  on  June  19th,  you'll  get  to  experience  WWE's  NO  ONE  LIVES,  starring  Luke  Evans  (pictured  above).    “It’s  a  real  honour  for  us  to  work  with  Cineplex,”  said  Raven  Banner’s  Managing  Partner,  Michael  Paszt.  “Sinister  Cinema  will  expose  Canadians  to  a  different  type  of  horror  film  –  one  that  falls  outside  the  typical  realm  of  larger  distributors.”    “Today’s  announcement  is  a  big  win  for  Canadian  horror  fans,”  said  Pat  Marshall,  Vice  President,  Communications  and  Investor  Relations,  Cineplex  Entertainment.  “We  know  fans  of  this  genre  are  going  to  be  incredibly  excited  about  this  new  series.”      This  article  can  also  be  seen  in  the  following  outlets:    

 http://regator.com/p/259647024/canada_to_get_a_big_dose_of_genre/  

Page 26: Sinister Cinema Launch Publicity Summary

 

THE LAST WILL AND TESTAMENT OF ROSALIND LEIGH HITS CINEPLEX NATIONWIDE  http://www.rue-­‐morgue.com/2013/03/the-­‐last-­‐will-­‐and-­‐testament-­‐of-­‐rosalind-­‐leigh-­‐hits-­‐cineplex-­‐nationwide/  By:  Jessa  Sobczuk  |  March  16,  2013.   Rue Morgue Cinema’s The Last Will and Testament of Rosalind Leigh hits Cineplex theatres nationwide May 9, part of Cineplex Entertainment’s and Raven Banner’s new ground-breaking Sinister Cinema series. The 25-theatre series is promoting quality genre cinema, shining a spotlight on art house horror in a big way.

“It’s a real honour for us to work with Cineplex,” said Raven Banner’s Managing Partner, Michael Paszt in the press release. “Sinister Cinema will expose Canadians to a different type of horror film — one that falls outside the typical realm of larger distributors.” “Today’s announcement is a big win for Canadian horror fans,” adds Pat Marshall, Vice President of Communications and Investor Relations at Cineplex Entertainment. “We know fans of this genre are

going to be incredibly excited about this new series.” Other films in the cross-Canada screenings include Don Coscarelli’s John Dies at the End (March 27), the Soska Twin’s American Mary (May 3) and Ryuhei Kitamura-Osaka’s No One Lives. The series will also include special appearances in some cities, as well as recorded interviews and live Q&A sessions with directors whenever possible. Tickets are now available at participating Cineplex box offices, or online at cineplex.com/events.

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SINISTER CINEMA FILM SERIES KICKS OFF WITH JOHN DIES AT THE END! http://www.rue-­‐morgue.com/2013/03/sinister-­‐cinema-­‐film-­‐series-­‐kicks-­‐off-­‐with-­‐john-­‐dies-­‐at-­‐the-­‐end/  By:  April  Snellings  |  March  26,  2013.    

If you’ve never seen John Dies at the End the way it deserves to be seen – in a theatre, on a big screen, with an audience of rowdy fans – here’s your chance. Raven Banner Entertainment is kicking off its Sinister Cinema series on Wednesday, March 27 with screenings of Don Coscarelli’s trippy monster show in 25 cities across Canada. Check out the event’s official Facebook page for all the info you need. And if you’re headed to Facebook any ol’ way, you might as well toss your rat in the thing for a chance to win dinner with Don Coscarelli himself! You probably won’t die at the end, but if things get out of hand and you do… well, what a way to go, right? Keep an eye on Raven Banner’s Facebook page for info about future Sinister Cinema screenings, which will include the Soska Twins’ American Mary, Ryuhei Kitamura’s No One Lives, and even The Last Will and Testament of Rosalind Leigh, the debut feature from Rue Morgue Cinema’s very own Rodrigo Gudiño.

 

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Cineplex’s alternative programming gets Sinister  http://www.thesuburban.com/article.php?id=1206&title=Cineplex%E2%80%99s-­‐Alternative-­‐Programming-­‐Gets-­‐Sinister    By:  Walter  J.  Lyng    |  March  27,  2013.    If  you’ve  ever  perused  the  new  releases  in  the  horror  section  of  a  video  rental  store,  Netflix  or  any  other  video  on  demand  service,  you’ll  undoubtedly  come  across  many  titles  that  you  never  noticed  at  your  local  multiplex.  In  most  cases,  that’s  because  they  either  had  an  extremely  limited  theatrical  release  or  none  at  all.  But,  in  today’s  rapidly  evolving  world  of  film  distribution,  the  fact  that  a  film  will  go  ‘straight  to  video,’  isn’t  necessarily  indicative  of  its  quality.      Recently,  Cineplex  Entertainment  announced  that,  in  conjunction  with  Toronto-­‐based  distribution  company  Raven  Banner,  several  new  independent  horror  gems  will  get  their  time  to  shine  on  the  big  screen  as  part  of  a  new  monthly  series  entitled  Sinister  Cinema.    “Cineplex  has  been  doing  great  stuff  with  their  alternative  distribution,”  says  Raven  Banner  managing  partner  Michael  Paszt.  “As  a  Canadian  distributor,  we’ve  been  waving  the  banner  for  genre  films.  Cineplex  saw  that  and  they’ve  been  looking  for  something  a  little  bit  different.”    The  series  will  run  in  25  theatres  across  Canada  with  Cineplex  Odeon  Forum  Cinemas  (formerly  known  as  AMC  Forum  22)  getting  the  honours  of  the  soul  participating  theatre  in  Quebec.    “For  us,  it’s  fantastic  because  it  takes  these  films,  which  are  very  unique  midnight  madness-­‐type  titles,  and  puts  the  spotlight  on  them,”  says  Paszt.  “That  was  the  whole  idea  behind  them.”    The  series  will  kick  off  on  Wednesday,  March  27  with  John  Dies  at  the  End,  a  genre-­‐bending  tale  based  on  the  novel  by  David  Wong,  starring  Paul  Giamatti  and  directed  by  Don  Coscarelli.    “Don  Coscarelli  is  a  real  horror  icon  and  there  was  a  series  that  came  out  a  few  years  ago  called  The  Masters  of  Horror,”  says  Paszt.  “Coscarelli  directed  the  inaugural  film  so  when  we  launched  this  series,  we  thought  we’d  acknowledge  him  as  well.”    As  Paszt’s  partner  Andrew  Hunt  explains,  theses  screenings  won’t  be  just  like  any  other  trip  to  the  cinema.    “The  idea  is  to  bring  this  film  festival-­‐like  experience  to  the  screenings  so,  with  John  Dies  at  the  End,  we’re  actually  going  to  be  opening  with  the  short  film  Bio  Cop  by  Steven  Kostanski,”  he  says.  “Then  we  have  a  taped  Q&A  with  Paul  Giamatti  and  Don  Coscarelli  which  will  follow  the  feature.”    Other  films  in  the  series  will  include  The  Last  Will  and  Testament  of  Rosalind  Leigh  on  May  9,  American  Mary  on  May  30,  and  No  One  Lives  on  June  19.  For  more  information,  visit  www.cineplex.com  

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Raven  Banner  Launches  Impressive  Canadian  Distribution  Model:  Sinister  Cinema  MOVIES  Posted  by  MrDisgusting  on  March  13,  2013  @  11:54pm  |  4  Comments  Category:  Movies  /  News  

http://bloody-­‐disgusting.com/news/3223423/raven-­‐banner-­‐launches-­‐impressive-­‐canadian-­‐distribution-­‐model-­‐sinister-­‐cinema/  

Cineplex  Entertainment’s  Front  Row  Centre  Events  and  Raven  Banner  announce  the  launch  of  Sinister  Cinema,  a  cutting-­‐edge  series  of  art  house  quality  genre  cinema.  Sinister  Cinema  will  bring  a  series  of  independent  horror  films  to  25  Cineplex  theatres  across  Canada  including  Don  Cosacrelli’s  John  Dies  at  the  End,  The  Last  Will  and  Testament  of  Rosalind  Leigh  ,  American  Mary,  and  WWE’s  No  One  Lives.  The  films  will  include  unique  content,  and  in  some  cases,  special  appearances,  including  live  question  and  answer  sessions  with  directors,  pre-­‐recorded  interviews  and  more.  Tickets  are  available  now  at  participating  theatre  box  offices  and  online  at  cineplex.com/events.  The  following  is  a  complete  list  of  participating  theatres…    British  Columbia  Odeon  Victoria  Cinemas  –  Victoria,  BC  Galaxy  Cinemas  Nanaimo  –  Nanaimo,  BC  Colossus  Langley  Cinemas  –  Langley,  BC  Cineplex  Odeon  Park  &  Tilford  Cinemas  –  North  Vancouver,  BC  Cineplex  Odeon  International  Village  Cinemas  –  Vancouver,  BC    Alberta  Scotiabank  Theatre  Edmonton  –  Edmonton,  AB  Scotiabank  Theatre  Chinook  –  Calgary,  AB  Saskatchewan  Galaxy  Cinemas  Regina  –  Regina,  SK  Galaxy  Cinemas  Saskatoon  –  Saskatoon,  SK    Manitoba  SilverCity  Polo  Park  Cinemas  –  Winnipeg,  MB    Ontario  Cineplex  Odeon  Devonshire  Mall  Cinemas  –  Windsor,  

ON  SilverCity  London  Cinemas  –  London,  ON  Galaxy  Cinemas  Waterloo  –  Waterloo,  ON  Cineplex  Odeon  Winston  Churchill  Cinemas  –    Oakville,  ON  SilverCity  Hamilton  Cinemas  –  Hamilton,  ON  Cineplex  Cinemas  Mississauga  –  Mississauga,  ON  Cineplex  Odeon  Queensway  Cinemas  –  Toronto,  ON  Colossus  Vaughan  Cinemas  –  Vaughan,  ON  SilverCity  Fairview  Mall  Cinemas  –  Toronto,  ON  Cineplex  Odeon  Yonge  &  Dundas  Square  Cinemas  –  Toronto,  ON  Cineplex  Odeon  Eglinton  Town  Centre  Cinemas  –  Scarborough,  ON  Coliseum  Ottawa  Cinemas  –  Ottawa,  ON  SilverCity  Gloucester  Cinemas  –  Ottawa,  ON  SilverCity  Sudbury  Cinemas  –  Sudbury,  ON    Quebec  Cineplex  Odeon  Forum  Cinemas  –  Montreal,  QC  

 Sinister  Cinema  –  Launch  Films  

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   March  27,  2013:  John  Dies  At  The  End  In  John  Dies  at  the  End,  it’s  all  about  the  soy  sauce,  a  drug  that  promises  an  out-­‐of-­‐body  experience.  Users  drift  across  time  and  dimensions.  But  some  come  back  no  longer  human.  Suddenly,  a  silent,  otherworldly  invasion  is  underway,  and  mankind  needs  a  hero.  What  it  gets  instead  are  John  (Rob  Mayes)  and  David  (Chase  Williamson),  a  pair  of  college  dropouts  who  can  barely  hold  down  jobs.  Can  they  stop  the  oncoming  horror  in  time  to  save  humanity?  No.  No,  they  can’t.  Adapted  from  David  Wong’s  audacious  horror  novel,  John  Dies  at  the  End  is  written  and  directed  by  Don  Coscarelli  and  also  stars  Clancy  Brown,  Glynn  Turman  and  Paul  Giamatti.    About  the  director:  Born  in  Tripoli  in  1954  and  raised  in  Southern  California,  Coscarelli  made  his  first  feature  length  film,  Jim,  the  World’s  Greatest,  when  he  was  19.  However,  Coscarelli  is  best  known  for  Phantasm  and  its  successful  sequels,  which  spawned  a  rabid  cult  of  fans  worldwide.  With  Phantasm,  he  created  one  of  the  most  original  myths  in  modern  horror,  and  in  2002,  turned  Elvis  into  the  protagonist  of  the  fantastic  odyssey  Bubba  Ho-­‐Tep,  for  which  he  received  the  Bram  Stoker  Award  for  best  screenplay.    

   May  9,  2013:  The  Last  Will  and  Testament  of  Rosalind  Leigh  (Rue  Morgue  Cinema)  The  feature  film  directorial  debut  of  Rue  Morgue  magazine  founder  and  publisher,  Rodrigo  Gudiño,  stars  Aaron  Poole  and  Academy  Award  winner  Vanessa  Redgrave.  The  Last  Will  and  Testament  of  Rosalind  Leigh  tells  the  story  of  Leon,  an  antiques  collector  who  inherits  a  house  from  his  estranged  mother,  only  to  discover  that  she  had  been  living  in  a  shrine  devoted  to  a  mysterious  cult.  “Magnificent.  A  whole  new  direction  in  which  to  take  the  narrative  experience  in  filmmaking.”  –  Clive  Barker  

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About  the  director:  Rodrigo  Gudiño  is  founding  editor  and  president  of  the  Rue  Morgue  horror-­‐themed  entertainment  empire.  He  has  been  at  the  helm  of  the  company  since  its  inception  in  1997  and  is  the  publisher  of  Toronto-­‐based  Rue  Morgue  magazine  and  senior  coordinator  of  the  Rue  Morgue  Festival  of  Fear  National  Horror  Expo.  Gudiño  directed  three  highly  acclaimed  short  films,  including  The  Facts  In  the  Case  of  Mister  Hollow.  His  shorts  were  selected  in  more  than  50  international  film  festivals,  have  garnered  more  than  25  awards,  and  were  nominated  at  Canada’s  Genie  Awards.    

   May  30,  2013:  American  Mary  From  IndustryWorks  Pictures  comes  one  of  the  year’s  most  horrific  highlights,  American  Mary  tells  the  story  of  broke  med  student  Mary  Mason  (Katharine  Isabelle)  who  grows  increasingly  disenchanted  with  medical  school  and  the  doctors  she  once  admired.  The  allure  of  easy  money  sends  a  desperate  Mary  through  the  messy  world  of  underground  surgeries  that  leaves  more  marks  on  her  than  her  so-­‐called  freakish  clientele…  Smart,  sexy,  funny  and  stunning  to  look  at,  American  Mary  features  a  standout  lead  performance  from  horror  icon  Katharine  Isabelle  (‘Ginger  Snaps’,  ‘Insomnia’,  ‘Freddy  vs.  Jason’),  and  notable  performances  by  Antonio  Cupo  (‘Bomb  Girls’,  ‘Dark  Angel’,  ‘Elegy’),  Paula  Lindberg  (‘Fringe’,  ‘Supernatural’,  ‘Iron  Man  the  TV  series’),  David  Lovgren  (‘Masters  of  Horror’,  ‘Supernatural’,  ‘Stargate:  Atlantis’)  and  newcomers  Tristen  Risk  as  the  disturbingly  loveable  Beatress  and  Twan  Holliday  as  Mary’s  confidant,  protector  and  bff  Lance.  A  film  not  to  be  missed  and  what  and  reviewers  are  calling  ‘A  true  Modern  Day  Horror’.About  the  Directors:  Canadian  twin  sisters,  Jen  and  Sylvia  Soska,  aka  The  Twisted  Twins,  started  off  studying  at  a  film  school  where  they  made  a  short  that  would  be  the  embryo  of  their  first  feature  film  ‘Dead  Hooker  in  a  Trunk’  which  earned  the  attention  of  filmmaker  Eli  Roth.  With  some  insight  from  IndustryWorks,  ‘Dead  Hooker  in  a  Trunk’  landed  in  the  worldwide  hands  of  IFC  for  their  IFC  Midnight  Series.  For  their  follow  up  film,  American  Mary,  the  twins  came  armed  with  horror  and  sci-­‐fi  industry  talent  bringing  the  most  unique  characters  to  life,  the  undeniably  skilled  Director  of  Photography  Brian  Pearson  (‘Drive  Angry’,  ‘I  Robot’,  ‘Final  Destination  5’,  ‘My  Bloody  Valentine’),  and  a  top  notch  crew,  making  American  Mary  the  year’s  most  talked  about  horror  film.    

 June  19,  2013:  No  One  Lives  

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From  Pathe  and  WWE  Studios  –  Fourteen  students  appear  brutally  murdered  and  the  crime  scene  offers  no  clues  as  to  the  whereabouts  of  the  one  person  who  could  be  the  only  survivor,  a  young  woman  named  Emma.  Months  later,  bandits  attack  a  young  couple’s  car,  only  to  discover  the  frightened  Emma.  Rubbing  their  hands  at  the  prospect  of  ransom  payday,  they  don’t  realize  that  those  who  appeared  to  be  prey  are  far  less  defenseless  than  they  seem.  Director  Ryuhei  Kitamura  continues  his  American  adventure  with  No  One  Lives,  a  violent  and  ingenious  thriller,  manipulating  all  the  genre  conventions  past  and  future  to  his  taste.    About  the  director:  Ryuhei  Kitamura  –  Osaka,  1969.  One  of  the  cult  names  in  contemporary  Japanese  cinema,  Kitamura  drew  the  attention  of  genre  fans  with  the  ultragore  and  hyper-­‐kinetic  Versus.  Other  titles  in  his  filmography  are  Alive,  Azumi,  Sky  High,  Godzilla:  Final  Wars,  and  The  Midnight  Meat  Train.    This  article  can  also  be  seen  in  the  following  outlets:      

 http://sinistremag.com/index.php/2013/03/raven-­‐banner-­‐et-­‐cineplex-­‐entertainments-­‐front-­‐row-­‐lancent-­‐sinister-­‐cinema/      

   

Our  crowded  screens  Film  festivals,  special  screenings...  and  Paul  Giamatti?  By  Norman  Wilner  https://www.nowtoronto.com/movies/story.cfm?content=191750    If  you  make  it  through  the  weekend,  there’s  one  more  thing  you  should  know  about.  A  new  monthly  series  called  Sinister  Cinema  launches  Wednesday  night  at  Cineplex  theatres  across  Canada,  dedicated  to  giving  indie  horror  titles.  The  inaugural  screening  is  Don  Coscarelli’s  John  Dies  At  The  End,  screening  Wednesday  at  9:30  pm.  Now,  the  movie  did  not  especially  impress  my  colleague  Glenn  Sumi  when  he  saw  it  at  TIFF  last  year,  but  this  is  likely  to  be  the  only  chance  you’ll  have  to  watch  Paul  Giamatti  stammer  out  the  secrets  of  the  universe  in  a  theatre  before  it  comes  to  disc  next  month.  So,  you  know,  if  that’s  a  thing.  

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Cineplex Entertainment and Raven Banner Launch Sinister Cinema Film Series http://www.dreadcentral.com/news/64633/cineplex-­‐entertainment-­‐and-­‐raven-­‐banner-­‐launch-­‐sinister-­‐cinema-­‐film-­‐series    By  Doctor  Gash    March  14th,  2013    O Canada, you guys are in for it now. All across your beautiful nation Cineplex Entertainment and Raven Banner are preparing to launch a monthly horror series. Say hello to Sinister Cinema ya hosers. (Sorry, had to do it). Films currently scheduled to be screened through Sinister Cinema are John Dies at the End, The Last Will and Testament of Rosalind Leigh, American Mary and No One Lives. Read on for the details and participating theaters. From the Press Release Cineplex Entertainment's Front Row Centre Events and Raven Banner announce the launch of Sinister Cinema, a cutting-edge series of art house quality genre cinema. Sinister Cinema will bring a series of independent horror films to twenty-five Cineplex theatres across Canada. The films will include unique content, and in some cases, special appearances, including live question and answer sessions with directors, pre-recorded interviews and more. "It’s a real honor for us to work with Cineplex," said Raven Banner's Managing Partner, Michael Paszt. "Sinister Cinema will expose Canadians to a different type of horror film – one that falls outside the typical realm of larger distributors."

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"Today’s announcement is a big win for Canadian horror fans," said Pat Marshall, Vice President, Communications and Investor Relations, Cineplex Entertainment. "We know fans of this genre are going to be incredibly excited about this new series. " Tickets are available now at participating theatre box offices and online at Cineplex.com. The following is a complete list of participating theatres: British Columbia Odeon Victoria Cinema, Victoria, BC Galaxy Cinemas Nanaimo, Nanaimo, BC Colossus Langley Cinemas, Langley, BC Cineplex Odeon Park & Tilford Cinemas, North Vancouver, BC Cineplex Odeon International Village Cinemas, Vancouver, BC Alberta Scotiabank Theatre Edmonton, Edmonton, AB Scotiabank Theatre Chinook, Calgary, AB Saskatchewan Galaxy Cinemas Regina, Regina, SK Galaxy Cinemas Saskatoon, Saskatoon, SK Manitoba SilverCity Polo Park Cinemas, Winnipeg, MB Ontario Cineplex Odeon Devonshire Mall Cinemas, Windsor, ON SilverCity London Cinemas, London, ON

Galaxy Cinemas Waterloo, Waterloo, ON Cineplex Odeon Winston Churchill Cinemas, Oakville, ON SilverCity Hamilton Cinemas, Hamilton, ON Cineplex Cinemas Mississauga, Mississauga, ON Cineplex Odeon Queensway Cinemas, Toronto, ON Colossus Vaughan Cinemas, Vaughan, ON SilverCity Fairview Mall Cinemas, Toronto, ON Cineplex Odeon Yonge & Dundas Square Cinemas, Toronto, ON Cineplex Odeon Eglinton Town Centre Cinemas, Scarborough, ON Coliseum Ottawa Cinemas, Ottawa, ON SilverCity Gloucester Cinemas, Ottawa, ON SilverCity Sudbury Cinemas, Sudbury, ON Quebec Cineplex Odeon Forum Cinemas, Montreal, QC

Sinister Cinema Launch Films March 27, 2013 - John Dies At The End In John Dies at the End, it's all about the soy sauce, a drug that promises an out-of-body experience. Users drift across time and dimensions. But some come back no longer human. Suddenly, a silent, otherworldly invasion is underway, and mankind needs a hero. What it gets instead are John (Rob Mayes) and David (Chase Williamson), a pair of college dropouts who can barely hold down jobs. Can they stop the oncoming horror in time to save humanity? No. No, they can't. Adapted from David Wong's audacious horror novel, John Dies at the End is written and directed by Don Coscarelli and also stars Clancy Brown, Glynn Turman and Paul Giamatti.

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May 9, 2013 - The Last Will and Testament of Rosalind Leigh The feature film directorial debut of Rue Morgue magazine founder and publisher, Rodrigo Gudiño, stars Aaron Poole and Academy Award winner Vanessa Redgrave. The Last Will and Testament of Rosalind Leigh tells the story of Leon, an antiques collector who inherits a house from his estranged mother, only to discover that she had been living in a shrine devoted to a mysterious cult. May 30, 2013 - American Mary From IndustryWorks Pictures comes one of the year's most horrific highlights. American Mary tells the story of broke med student Mary Mason (Katharine Isabelle) who grows increasingly disenchanted with medical school and the doctors she once admired. The allure of easy money sends a desperate Mary through the messy world of underground surgeries that leaves more marks on her than her so-called freakish clientele...Smart, sexy, funny and stunning to look at, American Mary features a standout lead performance from horror icon Katharine Isabelle (Ginger Snaps, Insomnia, Freddy vs. Jason), and notable performances by Antonio Cupo (Bomb Girls, Dark Angel, Elegy),Paula Lindberg (Fringe, Supernatural, "Iron Man" the TV series), David Lovgren ("Masters of Horror," "Supernatural," "Stargate: Atlantis’) and newcomers Tristan Risk as the disturbingly loveable Beatress and Twan Holliday as Mary's confidant, protector and bff, Lance. A film not to be missed and what and reviewers are calling 'a true modern day horror.’ June 19, 2013 - No One Lives From Pathe and WWE Studios, fourteen students appear brutally murdered and the crime scene offers no clues as to the whereabouts of the one person who could be the only survivor, a young woman named Emma. Months later, bandits attack a young couple's car, only to discover the frightened Emma. Rubbing their hands at the prospect of ransom payday, they don’t realize that those who appeared to be prey are far less defenseless than they seem. Director Ryuhei Kitamura continues his American adventure with No One Lives, a violent and ingenious thriller, manipulating all the genre conventions past and future to his taste. This  article  can  also  be  seen  in  the  following  outlets:      

 http://www.imdb.com/news/ni49039400/      

 http://xnews.jp/_en/rss.php?query=20130315034408.145525      

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Sinister Canadian Cinema http://www.heroesandhellions.com/daily-­‐debriefing/sinister-­‐canadian-­‐cinema/    By  Dr.  Know  on  March  15th,  2013  Good  news  for  horror  fans  in  Canada.  If  you  have  been  dying  to  see  some  of  the  buzz  titles  from  festival  circuits  or  limited  release  films  that  haven’t  been  playing  at  a  theater  near  you  then  fear  no  more;  your  day  just  got  a  helluva  lot  better!  Cineplex  Entertainment  and  Toronto-­‐based  sales  outfit  Raven  Banner  Entertainment  have  just  done  you  a  solid  and  created  Sinister  Cinema,  an  ongoing  monthly-­‐esque  series  of  screenings  at  25  screens  across  the  country.  Films  included  in  the  launch  of  this  exciting  new  series  include  American  Mary,  The  Last  Will  and  Testament  of  Rosalind  Leigh  and  No  One  Lives.  Check  out  the  full  press  release  to  see  which  screen  nearest  you  is  playing  John  Dies  At  The  End  on  March  27th!  Cineplex  Entertainment  and  Raven  Banner  Launch  New  Monthly  Horror  Series  Sinister  Cinema  brings  the  best  in  genre  horror  to  the  Canadian  big  screen  (Toronto,  ON  –  March  14,  2013)  –  Cineplex  Entertainment’s  Front  Row  Centre  Events  and  Raven  Banner  announce  the  launch  of  Sinister  Cinema,  a  cutting-­‐edge  series  of  art  house  quality  genre  cinema.    Sinister  Cinema  will  bring  a  series  of  independent  horror  films  to  25  Cineplex  theatres  across  Canada.  The  films  will  include  unique  content,  and  in  some  cases,  special  appearances,  including  live  question  and  answer  sessions  with  directors,  pre-­‐recorded  interviews  and  more.  “It’s  a  real  honour  for  us  to  work  with  Cineplex,”  said  Raven  Banner’s  Managing  Partner,  Michael  Paszt.  “Sinister  Cinema  will  expose  Canadians  to  a  different  type  of  horror  film  –  one  that  falls  outside  the  typical  realm  of  larger  distributors.”  “Today’s  announcement  is  a  big  win  for  Canadian  horror  fans,”  said  Pat  Marshall,  Vice  President,  Communications  and  Investor  Relations,  Cineplex  Entertainment.  “We  know  fans  of  this  genre  are  going  to  be  incredibly  excited  about  this  new  series.”  Tickets  are  available  now  at  participating  theatre  box  offices  and  online  at  cineplex.com/events.  Here’s  the  skinny  on  the  Canadian  theaters  on  board  for  Sinister  Cinema:  British  Columbia  Odeon  Victoria  Cinemas  –  Victoria,  BC  Galaxy  Cinemas  Nanaimo  –  Nanaimo,  BC  Colossus  Langley  Cinemas  –  Langley,  BC  Cineplex  Odeon  Park  &  Tilford  Cinemas  –  North  Vancouver,  BC  Cineplex  Odeon  International  Village  Cinemas  –  Vancouver,  BC  

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Alberta  Scotiabank  Theatre  Edmonton  –  Edmonton,  AB  Scotiabank  Theatre  Chinook  –  Calgary,  AB  Saskatchewan  Galaxy  Cinemas  Regina  –  Regina,  SK  Galaxy  Cinemas  Saskatoon  –  Saskatoon,  SK  Manitoba  SilverCity  Polo  Park  Cinemas  –  Winnipeg,  MB  Ontario  Cineplex  Odeon  Devonshire  Mall  Cinemas  –  Windsor,  ON  SilverCity  London  Cinemas  –  London,  ON  Galaxy  Cinemas  Waterloo  –  Waterloo,  ON  Cineplex  Odeon  Winston  Churchill  Cinemas  –  Oakville,  ON  SilverCity  Hamilton  Cinemas  –  Hamilton,  ON  Cineplex  Cinemas  Mississauga  –  Mississauga,  ON  Cineplex  Odeon  Queensway  Cinemas  –  Toronto,  ON  Colossus  Vaughan  Cinemas  –  Vaughan,  ON  SilverCity  Fairview  Mall  Cinemas  –  Toronto,  ON  Cineplex  Odeon  Yonge  &  Dundas  Square  Cinemas  –  Toronto,  ON  Cineplex  Odeon  Eglinton  Town  Centre  Cinemas  –  Scarborough,  ON  Coliseum  Ottawa  Cinemas  –  Ottawa,  ON  SilverCity  Gloucester  Cinemas  –  Ottawa,  ON  SilverCity  Sudbury  Cinemas  –  Sudbury,  ON  Quebec  Cineplex  Odeon  Forum  Cinemas  –  Montreal,  QC    This  article  can  also  be  seen  in  the  following  outlets:      

 http://twitchfilm.com/2013/03/cineplex-­‐entertainment-­‐and-­‐raven-­‐banner-­‐launch-­‐new-­‐monthly-­‐horror-­‐series-­‐sinister-­‐cinema.html    

         

http://www.imdb.com/news/ni49042005/  

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John Dies at the End balances horror and humour Director Don Coscarelli intrigued by notions of reality

http://entertainment.ca.msn.com/movies/features/john-dies-at-the-end-balances-horror-and-humour

Paul Giamatti with director Don Coscarelli. Photo: Evans Vestal Ward, Magnet Releasing

Given  that  he  was  about  to  make  a  low-­‐budget  horror-­‐comedy  featuring  meat  monsters,  flying  moustaches,  girls  exploding  into  snakes,  and  door  knobs  turning  into  penises,  the  biggest  challenge  writer-­‐director  Don  Coscarelli  faced  in  making John Dies at the End was  finding  an  affordable  actor  who  could  hold  his  own  against  Paul  Giamatti.  (The  actor  not  only  co-­‐stars  in  Coscarelli’s  adaptation  of  the  cult  David  Wong  novel  but  also  executive  produced  it.)  Fortunately,  Coscarelli  found  the  veteran  actor’s  foil  in  newcomer  Chase  Williamson.    “That  would  be  considered,  for  me,  the  white  knuckle  ride  of  the  movie,”  he  says.  “Because  what  if  he  wilted  and  folded  under  pressure?  And,  thank  God,  he’s  just  a  tough  kid;  ice  water  in  his  veins.  And,  at  the  same  time,  Paul  is  not  a  prima  donna  in  any  way  and  actually  sought  Chase  out  beforehand  and  came  over  to  my  house,  and  the  two  of  them  were  running  lines  together  out  in  the  backyard.”  

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Coscarelli  was  back  in  Toronto  last  week  to  promote John Dies at the End’s  participation  in Sinister Cinema,  a  new  initiative  by  Cineplex  and  Toronto-­‐based  indie  film  distributor  Raven  Banner  to  screen,  in  theatres  across  Canada,  oddball  horror  movies  that  would  normally  go  straight  to  VOD  or  DVD/Blu-­‐ray.  He  was  also  here  last  September,  when John Dies played  in  the  Midnight  Madness  portion  of  the  Toronto  International  Film  Festival.  Anchor  Bay  releases  the  film  April  2nd on  DVD  and  Blu-­‐ray.    John Dies at the End stars  Williamson  and  Robb  Mayes  (The Client List)  as,  respectively,  best  friends  Dave  and  John.  Their  encounter  with  a  strange  drug  called  Soy  Sauce  leaves  them  with  the  ability  to  see  beyond  our  normal  reality.  Giamatti  stars  as  Arnie  Blondestone,  a  reporter  Dave  has  contacted  in  order  to  tell  his  story  of  inter-­‐dimensional  travel,  psychic  dogs,  hot  one-­‐handed  girls,  and  all  manner  of  weird  monsters.    Coscarelli  first  became  aware  of  Wong’s  book  through  an  Amazon.com  recommendation.  Loving  what  he  was  reading,  he  immediately  had  a  “hunch  it  was  going  to  make  for  a  good  movie.”  He  also  saw  as  a  role  for  Giamatti,  with  whom  Coscarelli  was  working  at  the  time  to  mount Bubba Nosferatu: Curse of the She-Vampires,  a  sequel  to  his  last  film,  2002’s Bubba Ho-Tep.  (That  now  cult  classic  cast  Bruce  Campbell  (The Evil Dead)  as  a  retirement-­‐age  Elvis  battling  an  ancient  mummy  in  a  nursing  home.  Giamatti  would  have  played  Col.  Tom  Parker,  Elvis’s  real-­‐life  Svengali-­‐like  manager,  in  the  sequel.)  The  oddity  of  Wong’s  book  was  exactly  what  attracted  Coscarelli.    “The  way  the  funding  system  works  in  the  traditional  Hollywood  system  is  that  they  are  looking  for  someone  to  repeat  their  success,”  he  says.  “So  a  lot  of  the  time  you  will  go  and  see  movies  and  the  plot  unfolds  in  a  very  predictable  fashion.  Because  we  are  all  such  avid  consumers  of  movies  and  television,  we’ve  seen  every  plot  again  and  again  and  again  in  their  permutations.  So  you  pick  up  a  book  and  you  read  something  that’s  surprising,  like  ‘oh,  that’d  be  pretty  cool  if  you  could  make  a  movie  that  had  a  surprise  that  would  make  audiences  sit  up  a  little  bit.’”    Now  it  is  a  matter  of  getting  audiences  to  see  the  film.  While  he  hopes  audiences  seek  out John Dies in  any  format,  Coscarelli  encourages  fans  of  weird  movies  to  see  them  in  theatres  whenever  possible.  “I  think  there’s  a  magnification,  an  amplification  of  the  experience,”  he  says.  “I  remember  seeing The Exorcist in  a  huge  audience  in  Los  Angeles,  and  it  was  really  terrifying.  The  whole  audience  losing  control  is  a  pretty  wild  thing.”    Hopefully  audiences  will  get  to  see  more  Dave  and  John,  preferably  on  the  big  screen.  Wong’s  sequel, This Book Is Full of Spiders: Seriously, Dude, Don’t Touch It,  came  out  last  fall,  and  Coscarelli,  who  has  made  three  follow-­‐ups  to  his  best-­‐known  film,  1979’s Phantasm,  is  obviously  not  adverse  to  sequels,  especially  if  “the  stars  aligned”  and John Dies made  some  money.    “I  like  sequels.  Let’s  be  straight:  they’ve  been  there  from  the  beginning  of  genre  movies,  and  you  could  say  that  some  early  ones... Bride of Frankenstein might  be  better  than  the  original Frankenstein,  so  there’s  no  curse  there. Aliens may  be  better  than Alien,  depending  on  your  point  of  view.”  Both Phantasm and John Dies feature  conventional  notions  of  reality  breaking  down  for  their  respective  protagonists.  Why  that  fascination  for  Coscarelli?    “A  lot  of  folks  take  their  attitude  to  life  from  religion;  others  take  it  from  science.  I’m  very  interested  in  hard  science,”  he  says,  pointing  to  the  God  particle  and  membrane  theory  as  examples  of  mind-­‐blowing  ideas  that  inform  his  curiosity  about  the  universe.  “You  read  the  stuff  and  it’s  almost  overwhelming.  You  lose  your  balance  and  you  want  to  sit  down.”  On  that  note:  would  Coscarelli  take  the Soy Sauce if  it  meant  getting  a  glimpse  behind  the  scenes  of  reality?    “It’s  hard  to  tell  because  some  of  the  people  it  chooses,  it  kills,  so  I’d  have  to  ponder  on  that.  I  think  if  I  knew  I  wasn’t  going  to  be  killed  I  might,  absolutely.  To  have  that  ability  to  see  that  which  is  veiled  to  me  would  be  an  awesome  experience.”  

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DON  COSCARELLI  POSTED  BY:  Jesse  Skinner    |  March  27,  2013  |  Comments  |  Bio  |  More  from  this  contributo  

http://www.toromagazine.com/culture/radar/9ca46599-­‐c084-­‐ae64-­‐a1c4-­‐8d95887de153/Don-­‐Coscarelli-­‐/    

The  psychedelic  horror-­‐comedy  from  cult  movie  icon  Don  Coscarelli  (the  Phantasm  series,  Bubba  Ho-­‐Tep),  based  on  the  book  by  Jason  Pargin,  is  as  wild  and  unpredictable  as  they  come.  It’s  the  story  of  Dave  and  John,  two  slackers  whose  ingestion  of  a  hallucinogen  called  “Soy  Sauce”  sends  them  shifting  through  alternate  dimensions  of  time  and  space.    

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 That’s  only  one  way  of  describing  what  actually  happens  in  the  movie.  To  say  more  would  ruin  its  fun.  But  enjoy  this  spoiler-­‐free  interview  with  Cascorelli,  who  told  us  about  translating  the  twisted  text,  and  how  the  movie  was  pitched  to  him  by  a  robot.      I  haven’t  seen  a  movie  as  unpredictable  as  John  Dies  at  the  End  in  a  long  time.  I  truly  didn’t  know  where  it  was  going  from  scene  to  scene.    I’ll  take  that  as  a  compliment.  It’s  actually  quite  astonishing  how  predictable  many  movies  are.  Most  of  the  time  you  know  what  the  next  plot  turn  is  going  to  be.  I  tend  to  enjoy  movies  where  I  can’t  predict  that,  though  a  lot  of  people  don’t.  For  some  people,  it’s  too  much  of  a  conundrum.      Have  a  lot  of  the  screenings  you’ve  attended  gotten  a  divided  reaction  from  the  audience?  There’s  no  question,  we’ve  had  really  passionate  supporters  and  some  people  don’t  get  it  at  all.  Looking  back  atPhantasm  and  Bubba  Ho-­‐Tep  there  was  the  same  reaction,  but  people  seem  to  have  revisited  those  movies  over  time  and  grown  to  appreciate  them.  I  think  John  Dies  at  the  End  will  hold  up  to  scrutiny.      What  did  you  initially  think  of  Jason  Pargin's  book?    I  was  thinking  “movie!”  from  page  one.  It’s  got  a  great  opening  and  just  keeps  going  from  there.    I  think  this  is  the  first  movie  decided  on  by  a  robot.  I  got  recommended  the  book  on  Amazon,  from  one  of  their  “robots”  who  told  me  if  I  liked  this  zombie  book  I’d  bought,  I’d  love  John  Dies  at  the  End.  I  immediately  bought  the  book.  Those  very  sophisticated  algorithms  that  Amazon  has  perfected  are  out  there  searching  the  web,  recording  everything  I’ve  bought  and  clicked  on.  The  robot  thought  that  me,  horror  filmmaker  Don  Cascorelli,  would  love  it  —  and  the  robot  was  right.      I  thought  many  Hollywood  movies  were  decided  on  by  robots.    [Laughs]  Yeah,  they  sometimes  seem  to  be  written  in  a  very  robotic  way,  anyway.    I  contacted  Jason  and  was  emailing  him  for  months.  Finally  he  got  back  to  me  and  I  asked  him,  “What  took  you  so  long  to  respond?”  He  thought  it  was  a  prank!  Me  contacting  him  about  the  first  book  he’d  ever  written  ...  thought  it  was  one  of  his  friends.      

As  a  screenwriter  /  adapter  what  were  your  most  significant  changes?    The  book  and  the  movie  are  different  in  terms  of  scope.  We  had  finite  means  as  to  what  we  could  do.  The  book  had  sections  that  were  great  conceptually,  but  unfilmable.  At  one  point,  Dave  goes  to  bed  with  this  girl  he  has  a  crush  on,  then  wakes  up  and  looks  in  the  mirror,  and  six  months  have  passed.  He  looks  around  and  realizes  he’s  now  married.  I  couldn’t  figure  out  how  to  fit  that  in  the  movie.  If  people  had  reservations  about  the  movie  being  incomprehensible,  if  we’d  actually  just  “filmed  the  book”,  they  would  not  have  accepted  it  at  all.      

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It  sounds  like  you  knew  instinctively  what  would  work  for  a  movie  while  you  were  reading  the  book.    Yeah.  I  only  had  to  fill  in  some  plot  to  wrap  up  everything  conclusively.      Feel  free  to  plead  the  fifth  on  this,  but  considering  an  important  plot  device  in  the  movie,  what  experience  do  you  have  with  hallucinogens?    I  dabbled  in  my  youth  but  I’ve  never  been  a  guy  to  drop  acid  every  other  week.    But  I  am  interested  in  different  levels  of  reality.  In  high  school  I  was  a  nut  for  Philip  K.  Dick  books,  which  were  all  about  looking  beyond  the  surface  of  what  is  happening.  My  favourite  was  Time  Out  of  Joint.  It’s  about  this  guy,  a  bit  of  a  loser,  who  makes  his  living  playing  this  newspaper  contest.  Somehow  he  has  the  ability  to  do  it  perfectly  and  survives  on  winning  it.  Eventually  he  discovers  he  has  a  psychic  ability  and  gets  involved  in  an  (interplanetary)  war.      There  are  parallels  to  John  Dies  at  the  End  —  both  seem  to  be  about  men  with  special  gifts  they  may  not  actually  want.    Yeah!  I  hadn’t  even  thought  that.  But  yeah,  it’s  something  thrust  on  them.    

   

John  Dies  at  the  End  will  be  released  on  DVD  April  2  via  Anchor  Bay.  Don  Coscarelli  will  attend  a  screening  /  Q&A  of  the  film  in  Toronto  -­‐  March  27,  AMC  Yonge  and  Dundas  @  9:30  p.m.  

   

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   http://www.citynews.ca/2013/03/26/entertainment-­‐city-­‐mar-­‐26-­‐2013/      

       

   https://soundcloud.com/gatpr-­‐1/director-­‐don-­‐coscarelli-­‐talks  

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   Tue,  Mar26:  Don  Coscarelli,  director  and  writer  of  John  Dies  at  the  End,  talks  about  his  movie  which  he  has  described  as  “hide-­‐under-­‐the-­‐bed  scary”  and  “laugh-­‐out-­‐loud-­‐funny”  http://globalnews.ca/video/429291/john-­‐dies-­‐at-­‐the-­‐end      

   

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Interview:  Don  Coscarelli,  “John  Dies  at  the  End”  Leslie  James  March  27,  2013  10:34  am  

Sinister  Cinema,  a  new,  “kind-­‐of”  monthly  series  showcasing  cutting-­‐edge  art  house  horror  flicks,  kicks  off  March  27  at  select  Cineplex  theatres.  Film  critic  Leslie  James  spoke  with  Don  Coscarelli,  the  writer-­‐director  of  “John  Dies  At  The  End”,  which  launches  the  series,  and  comes  out  on  Blu-­‐ray  and  DVD  next  week.    

   This  article  can  also  be  seen  in  the  following  outlets:      

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 http://www.570news.com/2013/03/27/interview-­‐don-­‐coscarelli-­‐john-­‐dies-­‐at-­‐the-­‐end-­‐2/    

http://www.660news.com/2013/03/27/interview-­‐don-­‐coscarelli-­‐john-­‐dies-­‐at-­‐the-­‐end-­‐2/      

 http://www.889news.com/2013/03/27/interview-­‐don-­‐coscarelli-­‐john-­‐dies-­‐at-­‐the-­‐end-­‐2/      

 http://m.1310news.com/2013/03/27/interview-­‐don-­‐coscarelli-­‐john-­‐dies-­‐at-­‐the-­‐end-­‐2/      

 http://www.957news.com/2013/03/27/interview-­‐don-­‐coscarelli-­‐john-­‐dies-­‐at-­‐the-­‐end-­‐2/  

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John Dies at the End ...  

Posted 3/27/2013 3:23:00 PM ...  is a movie from Don Coscarelli. It's  based  on  a  book  of  the  same  name  by  Jason  Pargin.  http://www.edge.ca/Blogs/FearlessFred/BlogArchive.aspx?BlogID=1001092&ArchiveDate=03/27/13

AND Don is doing a Q&A TONIGHT!!!!!! after the 9:30pm screening of John Dies at the End at Cineplex Yonge and Dundas as part of the Sinister Cinema launch. If you are a horror fan you will want to talk to the man.

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Cineplex kicks of Sinister Cinema series this week with ‘John Dies at the End’  http://www.criticizethis.ca/2013/03/cineplex-­‐kicks-­‐of-­‐sinister-­‐cinema-­‐series-­‐this-­‐week-­‐with-­‐john-­‐dies-­‐at-­‐the-­‐end.html    By:  Dave  Voigt    March  26,  2013.  

 With  independent  cinemas  forced  to  close  in  the  face  of  switching  to  digital  projectors,  the  venues  for  genre  and  alternative  theatrical  releases  were  beginning  to  get  pretty  darn  thin.  Thankfully,  the  fine  folks  at  Cineplex  Entertainment’s  Front  Row  Centre  Events  and  Raven  Banner  Entertainment  are  kicking  off  the  Sinister  Cinema  series  this  week  and  are  bringing  the  art-­‐house/genre  experience  to  the  multiplex.    As  part  of  Sinister  Cinema,  25  Cineplex  theaters  across  Canada  will  be  treated  to  a  series  of  some  of  the  best  independent  horror  films  on  the  market  today.  These  screenings  won’t  just  be  about  the  movie  itself,  but  the  experience.  Each  screening  will  feature  added  content,  too,  such  as  special  appearances,  live  Q&A  sessions  with  filmmakers  along  with  pre-­‐recorded  interviews,  and  so  much  more.  Simply  a  great  series,  particularly  for  horror  fans  who  don’t  necessarily  live  in  a  bigger  city  and  get  to  experience  films  like  this  on  the  big  screen  or  during  a  festival  type  experience.    

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The  series  kicks  off  with  a  bang  with  Don  Coscarelli’s  John  Dies  at  the  End,  which  is  about  a  silent,  but  deadly  invasion  from  another  dimension  as  a  mysterious  drug  only  known  as  “Soy  Sauce”  grabs  a  hold  of  the  population  promising  some  out  of  body  experience.  The  effects  are  more  than  anyone  imagined  as  a  lot  of  people  change  into  something  not  quite  human.  John  Dies  at  the  End  kicked  off  its  run  in  the  world  as  part  of  last  year’s  Midnight  Madness  programme  at  the  Toronto  International  Film  Festival,  and  while  it  had  a  short  run  south  of  the  border,  this  is  the  only  theatrical  screening  that  will  have  been  in  Toronto  (and  maybe  even  Canada)  since  TIFF.    In  town  to  help  promote  the  event  and  the  upcoming  DVD/Blu-­‐ray  release  on  April  2,  I  got  the  chance  to  talk  to  Don  Coscarelli  about  the  launch  of  Sinister  Cinema,  his  experiences  during  TIFF,  and  the  interesting  time  period  we  are  heading  into  for  theatrical  exhibitors  and  the  chance  for  some  indie  horror  to  reach  a  broader  audience.    This  is  your  first  time  back  to  Toronto  for  John  Dies  at  the  End  since  TIFF  right?  Yes,  we  got  to  play  at  Midnight  Madness  this  past  year  and  what  a  glorious  event  that  truly  was.  This  year  was  just  great  and  I  actually  came  in  a  few  days  early  since  I  thought  I  had  press  to  do,  which  actually  wasn’t  there,  but  on  the  plus  side  I  got  to  see  all  these  great  movies  at  Midnight  Madness.  I’d  be  there  every  night  and  Colin  (Geddes),  the  programmer,  is  such  a  good  guy  and  treated  me  so  well.  I  got  to  see  another  film  playing  later  on  in  the  Sinister  Cinema  series  called  No  One  Lives,  the  Ryuhei  Kitamura  film,  which  is  great.  I  saw  Lords  of  Salem,  where  Rob  Zombie  did  a  great  job  and  I  thought  Sheri  Moon  was  excellent  in  it.  I  also  got  to  see  Aftershock,  the  Eli  Roth  film,  and  that  was  just  such  great  earthquake  mayhem  and  a  lot  of  fun.    I  don’t  want  to  call  you  an  ‘indie’  filmmaker  since  that  term  has  just  been  done  to  death,  but  you  don’t  really  work  inside  the  studio  system  and  your  films  don’t  always  get  a  real  theatrical  run.  That  is  all  very  true.    With  so  many  of  the  smaller  theaters  and  rep  houses  having  to  close  because  of  the  switch  to  digital  projectors,  is  it  encouraging  for  you  as  a  filmmaker  to  see  a  large  chain  like  Cineplex  launch  this  series?  It  seems  really  fantastic.  The  fact  that  they  are  embracing  and  taking  it  across  the  country  in  25  different  theatres  is  great.  It’s  a  really  interesting  time  that  we  are  living  in  because  I  remember  that  even  when  we  were  making  John  Dies  at  the  End  we  were  preparing  that  we  need  to  be  going  to  35mm  film  prints  and  then  about  half-­‐way  through  post  production  the  digital  conversion  for  exhibitors  had  happened  so  quickly  that  there  really  just  wasn’t  any  point.  Times  are  changing,  but  we  are  rolling  with  them  and  trying  something  different,  which  is  really  kind  of  cool  because  it’s  going  to  be  out  in  a  lot  of  theaters,  but  then  within  the  week  it  will  be  available  on  DVD,  Blu-­‐ray,  and  on  demand.  We  had  a  similar  situation  in  the  U.S.  with  the  VOD  running  concurrent  to  the  theatrical.  I  think  what  is  most  important  for  me  at  least,  especially  having  gone  through  some  difficult  times  myself,  is  that  “back  in  the  day”  there  was  a  term  that  was  used  —  “Direct  to  DVD”,  or  worse,  “Direct  to  Video”,  and  if  you  had  one  of  those  you  were  just  considered  a  pariah  and  nobody  wanted  you.  Nowadays  the  way  the  different  outlets  are  all  being  worked  concurrently  it’s  actually  a  pretty  cool  thing.    John  Dies  at  the  End  screens  Wednesday,  March  27  at  select  Cineplex  theatres.  For  more  info  on  it  and  other  films  in  the  Sinister  Cinema  series,  visit  cineplex.com.  

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RAVEN BANNER PRESENTS: A MAJOR THEATRICAL GENRE SERIES ON - 25 CANADIAN SCREENS - By Greg Klymkiw

 Raven  Banner  Launches  Exciting  Genre  Film  Series  Across  Canada  

by  Greg  Klymkiw  

Raven  Banner,  the  exciting  genre-­‐friendly  company  that  specializes  in  strategic  project  management  of  innovative  independent  motion  pictures  is  launching  an  extremely  exciting  series  for  genre  fans  in  Canada.  Sinister  Cinema  is  a  brand  new  monthly  showcase  of  what  promises  to  be  some  very  cool  horror  movies.  In  addition  to  the  movies,  there  will  be  a  grand  sense  of  showmanship  allowing  for  added  value  goodies  (consider  it  DVD/Blu-­‐Ray  extras  -­‐  LIVE  at  Big-­‐Screen  venues).  Personal  appearances,  Live  Q  &  A's  and  exclusive  pre-­‐recorded  intros  plus  interviews  are  just  some  of  the  planned  delights  to  enhance  the  movie-­‐going  experience.  The  movies  will  screen  at  25  Cineplex  Entertainment  screens  across  Canada.  

The  venues  are:    Lotus  Land  

Odeon  Victoria  Cinemas  –  Victoria,  BC  Galaxy  Cinemas  Nanaimo  –  Nanaimo,  BC  Colossus  Langley  Cinemas  –  Langley,  BC  

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Silvercity  Riverport  Cinemas  –  Richmond,  BC  Cineplex  Odeon  International  Village  Cinemas  –  Vancouver,  BC  (NOTE:  Dope  Smoking  not  allowed  in  cinemas,  so  toke-­‐up  before  you  enter  the  premises  and/or  discreetly  utilize  the  handicapped  crappers.  Do  not  forget  to  disarm  smoke  detectors  and  sprinklers.)      Stevie  Harper  KKK  Headquarters  Scotiabank  Theatre  Edmonton  –  Edmonton,  AB  Scotiabank  Theatre  Chinook  –  Calgary,  AB  (NOTE:  Cross  Burnings  not  allowed  indoors.  Moonshine  not  for  sale  in  cinemas,  but  can  be  smuggled  in.)    Armpit  of  Canada  Galaxy  Cinemas  Regina  –  Regina,  SK  Galaxy  Cinemas  Saskatoon  –  Saskatoon,  SK  (NOTE:  You  must  leave  your  livestock  tethered  to  the  front  of  the  cinemas.  Feel  free  to  smuggle  in  your  own  smoked  hog  ears  for  good  eatin'  during  the  show.)    Second  Biggest  Armpit  of  Canada  SilverCity  Polo  Park  Cinemas  –  Winnipeg,  MB  (NOTE:  The  rest  of  the  province  is  mosquito-­‐ridden  swamp  land  populated  by  inbreds  who  do  not  watch  movies  or  do  much  of  anything  besides  fight  and  fornicate  in  the  winter  and  fish  with  dynamite  charges  and  big  nets  in  the  summer  -­‐  beer  included.)    Centre  of  the  Known  Universe  (and  

surrounding  environs)  Cineplex  Odeon  Devonshire  Mall  Cinemas  –  Windsor,  ON  SilverCity  London  Cinemas  –  London,  ON  Galaxy  Cinemas  Waterloo  –  Waterloo,  ON  Cineplex  Odeon  Winston  Churchill  Cinemas  –  Oakville,  ON  SilverCity  Hamilton  Cinemas  –  Hamilton,  ON  Cineplex  Cinemas  Mississauga  –  Mississauga,  ON  Cineplex  Odeon  Queensway  Cinemas  –  Toronto,  ON  Colossus  Vaughan  Cinemas  –  Vaughan,  ON  SilverCity  Fairview  Mall  Cinemas  –  Toronto,  ON  Cineplex  Odeon  Yonge  &  Dundas  Square  Cinemas  –  Toronto,  ON  Cineplex  Odeon  Eglinton  Town  Centre  Cinemas  –  Scarborough,  ON  Coliseum  Ottawa  Cinemas  –  Ottawa,  ON  SilverCity  Gloucester  Cinemas  –  Ottawa,  ON  SilverCity  Sudbury  Cinemas  –  Sudbury,  ON  (NOTE:  Torontonians  proclaim  that  Toronto  is  the  Centre  of  the  Known  Universe.  Most  of  us  know  better  -­‐  especially  all  the  venues  OUTSIDE  the  GTA)    La  Belle  Province  Cineplex  Odeon  Forum  Cinemas  –  Montreal,  QC  (NOTE:  French  people  do  not  like  horror  movies  as  they  are  all  Catholic.  The  few  who  do  are  politely  asked  to  leave  their  separatist  literature  at  home  and  refrain  from  screaming  "Je  me  souviens!"  every  ten  fucking  minutes.)

   And  now,  the  MOVIES.  I've  seen  two  of  them  and  THEY  FUCKING  ROCK!!!  My  critical  accolades  or  lack  thereof  are  not  available  for  the  rest  at  press  time.  

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 My  Review  of  "John  Dies  at  the  End"  is  available  by  clicking  HERE  

 

March  27,  2013:  Don  (Phantasm,  Bubba  Ho-­‐Tep)  Coscarelli's  blackly  humourous  fright-­‐fest  John  Dies  At  The  End  

 

 

 

 

 

 

May  9,  2013:  Rue  Morgue  founder  and  publisher  Rodrigo  Gudiño's  feature  debut  The  Last  Will  and  Testament  of  Rosalind  Leigh  

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May  30,  2013:  The  Best  Fucking  

Horror  Movie  of  2012,  American  Mary

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

June  19,  2013:  Sicko  Ryuhei  (The  Midnight  Meat  Train)  Kitamura's  No  One  Lives  

           

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The  Twisted  Twins  Terribly  Terrific  Title,  ‘American  Mary’  US/CANADA  Release  date  announced  http://abortmag.com/2013/03/the-­‐twisted-­‐twins-­‐terribly-­‐terrific-­‐title-­‐american-­‐mary-­‐us-­‐release-­‐date-­‐announced/  

 AMERICAN  MARY  now  has  a  solid  US  release  date.  The  film  will  be  available  throughout  the  US  on  VOD  on  May  16th  this  year  and  will  have  a  limited  theatrical  release  on  May  31st.  This  release  comes  from  ScreamFest’s  XLrator  Media  label.    The  Official  trailer  is  now  live  on Apple Trailers  American  Mary  will  be  hitting  theatres  across  Canada  part  of  Raven  Banner  Entertainment  and  Cineplex’s  Sinister  Cinema’s  Horror  Series  which  will  be  a  line  up  of  some  ridiculously  cool  horror  films  that  you  should  grab  your  buddies  to  totally  see  in  theatres  this  year!  “Fucking  amazing.  Extraordinary.  A  really  superb  picture.  Katharine  Isabelle  is  awesome.  She  gives  a  wonderfully  modulated  performance.  It’s  disgusting  and  distressing  and  the  makeup  is  brilliant.  It  made  me  think  about  the  effects  of  horror.  Why  is  has  done  what  it  does  to  us  and  why  it  continues  to  move  us.”  ~  

Clive  Barker  CANADA  Cineplex  Entertainment’s  Front  Row  Centre  Events  and  Raven  Banner  announce  the  launch  of  Sinister  Cinema,  a  cutting-­‐edge  series  of  art  house  quality  genre  cinema.  Sinister  Cinema  will  bring  a  series  of  independent  horror  films  to  25  Cineplex  theatres  across  Canada.  The  films  will  

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include  unique  content,  and  in  some  cases,  special  appearances,  including  live  question  and  answer  sessions  with  directors,  pre-­‐recorded  interviews  and  more.    “It’s  a  real  honour  for  us  to  work  with  Cineplex,”  said  Raven  Banner’s  Managing  Partner,  Michael  Paszt.  “Sinister  Cinema  will  expose  Canadians  to  a  different  type  of  horror  film  –  one  that  falls  outside  the  typical  realm  of  larger  distributors.”    “Today’s  announcement  is  a  big  win  for  Canadian  horror  fans,”  said  Pat  Marshall,  Vice  President,  Communications  and  Investor  Relations,  Cineplex  Entertainment.  “We  know  fans  of  this  genre  are  going  to  be  incredibly  excited  about  this  new  series.”    Tickets  are  available  now  at  participating  theatre  box  offices  and  online  at  cineplex.com/events.  The  following  is  a  complete  list  of  participating  theatres:    British  Columbia  Odeon  Victoria  Cinemas  –  Victoria  Galaxy  Cinemas  Nanaimo  –  Nanaimo  Colossus  Langley  Cinemas  –  Langley  Cineplex  Odeon  Park  &  Tilford  Cinemas  –  North  Vancouver  Cineplex  Odeon  International  Village  Cinemas  –  Vancouver  Alberta  Scotiabank  Theatre  Edmonton  –  Edmonton  Scotiabank  Theatre  Chinook  –  Calgary  Saskatchewan  Galaxy  Cinemas  Regina  –  Regina  Galaxy  Cinemas  Saskatoon  –  Saskatoon  Manitoba  SilverCity  Polo  Park  Cinemas  –  Winnipeg  Ontario  Cineplex  Odeon  Devonshire  Mall  Cinemas  –  Windsor  SilverCity  London  Cinemas  –  London  Galaxy  Cinemas  Waterloo  –  Waterloo  Cineplex  Odeon  Winston  Churchill  Cinemas  –  Oakville  

SilverCity  Hamilton  Cinemas  –  Hamilton  Cineplex  Cinemas  Mississauga  –  Mississauga  Cineplex  Odeon  Queensway  Cinemas  –  Toronto  Colossus  Vaughan  Cinemas  –  Vaughan  SilverCity  Fairview  Mall  Cinemas  –  Toronto  Cineplex  Odeon  Yonge  &  Dundas  Square  Cinemas  –  Toronto  Cineplex  Odeon  Eglinton  Town  Centre  Cinemas  –  Scarborough  Coliseum  Ottawa  Cinemas  –  Ottawa  SilverCity  Gloucester  Cinemas  –  Ottawa  SilverCity  Sudbury  Cinemas  –  Sudbury  Quebec  Cineplex  Odeon  Forum  Cinemas  –  Montreal”  The  lineup  goes  like  this  –  March  27,  2013  –  John  Dies  At  The  End  May  9,  2013  –  The  Last  Will  and  Testament  of  Rosalind  Leigh  (Rue  Morgue  Cinema)  –  I  saw  this  at  Whistler  and  it’s  fucking  brilliant.  May  30,  2013  –  American  Mary  June  19,  2013-­‐  No  One  Lives  

 Copyright  ©  2004-­‐2013  ABORT  Magazine.  All  Rights  Reserved.  Reproduction  of  this  publication,  in  whole  or  in  part,  in  any  form  or  medium  without  express  written  permission  from  Abort  Media  Publishing  Corporation  (AMP  Corp.)  is  prohibited.  All  use  is  subject  to  our  Terms  of  Use.      

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Raven  Banner  and  Cineplex  Entertainment's  Front  Row  launch  Sinister  Cinema  http://sinistremag.com/index.php/2013/03/raven-­‐banner-­‐et-­‐cineplex-­‐entertainments-­‐front-­‐row-­‐lancent-­‐sinister-­‐cinema/  By:  Alexandre  Duguay  |  March  14,  2013.  Sinister  Cinema,  is  not  it  a  pretty  good  name  here?    We  would  have  liked  it  in  connection  with  our  beloved  magazine,  but  rather  it  is  an  initiative  set  up  by  Raven  Banner  in  conjunction  with  Cineplex  Entertainment's  Front  Row  Centre  Events.      In  this  way,  Sinister  Cinema  propose  a  series  of  genre  films  screened  in  more  than  twenty  Cineplex  theaters  across  Canada,  including  Cineplex  Forum  in  Montreal.    However,  moviegoers  will  be  on  the  lookout  for  feature  films  will  be  released  only  once  in  the  late  evening.    However,  it  was  announced  that  some  of  these  screenings  could  include  special  appearance,  question  and  answer  sessions  or  pre-­‐recorded  interviews.    

 The  film  will  launch  the  series  Sinister  Cinema  is  JOHN  DIES  AT  THE  END  filmmaker  Don  Coscarelli  (Phantasm,  Bubba  Ho-­‐Tep).    The  screening  will  take  place  on  March  27  at  21:30.      Subsequently,  the  kind  of  movie  lovers  will  have  the  opportunity  to  see:      

 May  9,  2013:  The  Last  Will  and  Testament  of  Rosalind  Leigh  Rodrigo  Gudiño  (founder  of  Rue  Morgue  magazine)    

   May  30,  2013:  American  twins  Mary  Jen  and  Sylvia  Soska,  also  known  under  the  pseudonym  The  Twisted  Twins.        June  19,  2013:  No  One  Lives  Ryuhei  Kitamura  (Azumi,  The  Midnight  Meat  Train  ).        American  Mary    Source:  Bloody-­‐Disgusting

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 Sinister  Cinema  Series  Monthly  March  27  -­‐  June  19  2013  at  a  Cineplex  Odeon  Near  You  http://www.artandculturemaven.com/2013/03/sinister-­‐cinema-­‐series-­‐monthly-­‐march-­‐27.html    From  a  media  release:    Cineplex  Entertainment  and  Raven  Banner  Launch  New  Monthly  Horror  Series    Sinister  Cinema  brings  the  best  in  genre  horror  to  the  Canadian  big  screen  March  27  -­‐  June  19,  2013    •  Tickets  are  available  now  at  participating  theatre  box  offices  and  online  atcineplex.com/events.    • Check for participating theatres in BC, Alberta, Manitoba, Ontario & Quebec    (Toronto,  ON)  – Cineplex  Entertainment’s  Front  Row  Centre  Events  and  Raven  Banner  announce  the  launch  of  Sinister  Cinema,  a  cutting-­‐edge  series  of  art  house  quality  genre  cinema.    

 Sinister  Cinema  will  bring  a  series  of  independent  horror  films  to  25  Cineplex  theatres  across  Canada.    The  films  will  include  unique  content,  and  in  some  cases,  special  appearances,  including  live  question  and  answer  sessions  with  directors,  pre-­‐recorded  interviews  and  more.    “It’s  a  real  honour  for  us  to  work  with  Cineplex,”  said  Raven  Banner’s  Managing  Partner,  Michael  Paszt.  

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“Sinister  Cinema  will  expose  Canadians  to  a  different  type  of  horror  film  –  one  that  falls  outside  the  typical  realm  of  larger  distributors.”    “Today’s  announcement  is  a  big  win  for  Canadian  horror  fans,”  said  Pat  Marshall,  Vice  President,  Communications  and  Investor  Relations,  Cineplex  Entertainment.    “We  know  fans  of  this  genre  are  going  to  be  incredibly  excited  about  this  new  series.”    Sinister  Cinema  –  Launch  Films    

March  27,  2013  -­‐  John  Dies  At  The  End  In  John  Dies  at  the  End,  it’s  all  about  the  soy  sauce,  a  drug  that  promises  an  out-­‐of-­‐body  experience.    Users  drift  across  time  and  dimensions.  But  some  come  back  no  longer  human.  

Suddenly,  a  silent,  otherworldly  invasion  is  underway,  and  mankind  needs  a  hero.  What  it  gets  instead  are  John  (Rob  Mayes)  and  David  (Chase  Williamson),  a  pair  of  college  dropouts  who  can  barely  hold  down  jobs.  Can  they  stop  the  oncoming  horror  in  time  to  save  humanity?  No.  No,  they  can't.    Adapted  from  David  Wong’s  audacious  horror  novel,  John  Dies  at  the  End  is  written  and  directed  by  Don  Coscarelli  and  also  stars  Clancy  Brown,  Glynn  Turman  and  Paul  Giamatti.    About  the  director:    Born  in  Tripoli  in  1954  and  raised  in  Southern  California,  Coscarelli  made  his  first  feature  length  film,  Jim,  the  World’s  Greatest,  when  he  was  19.  However,  Coscarelli  is  best  known  for  Phantasm  and  its  successful  sequels,  which  spawned  a  rabid  cult  of  fans  worldwide.  With  Phantasm,  he  created  one  of  the  most  original  myths  in  modern  horror,  and  in  2002,  turned  Elvis  into  the  protagonist  of  the  fantastic  odyssey  Bubba  Ho-­‐Tep,  for  which  he  received  the  Bram  Stoker  Award  for  best  screenplay.      

 May  9,  2013  -­‐  The  Last  Will  and  Testament  of  Rosalind  Leigh  (Rue  Morgue  Cinema)  The  feature  film  directorial  debut  of  Rue  Morgue  magazine  founder  and  publisher,  Rodrigo  Gudiño,  stars  Aaron  Poole  and  Academy  Award  winner  Vanessa  Redgrave.    The  Last  Will  and  Testament  of  Rosalind Leigh  tells  the  story  of  Leon,  an  antiques  collector  who  inherits  a  house  from  his  estranged  mother,  only  to  discover  that  she  had  been  living  in  a  shrine  devoted  to  a  mysterious  cult.    “Magnificent.  A  whole  new  direction  in  which  to  take  the  narrative  experience  in  filmmaking.”  –  Clive  Barker    About  the  director:  Rodrigo  Gudiño  is  founding  editor  and  president  of  the  Rue  Morgue  horror-­‐themed  entertainment  empire.  He  has  been  at  

the  helm  of  the  company  since  its  inception  in  1997  and  is  the  publisher  of  Toronto-­‐based  Rue  Morgue  magazine  and  senior  coordinator  of  the  Rue  Morgue  Festival  of  Fear  National  Horror  Expo.  Gudiño  

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directed  three  highly  acclaimed  short  films,  including  The  Facts  In  the  Case  of  Mister  Hollow.  His  shorts  were  selected  in  more  than  50  international  film  festivals,  have  garnered  more  than  25  awards,  and  were  nominated  at  Canada’s  Genie  Awards.    May  30,  2013  -­‐  American  Mary  From  IndustryWorks  Pictures  comes  one  of  the  year’s  most  horrific  highlights,  American  Mary  tells  the  story  of  broke  med  student  Mary  Mason  (Katharine  Isabelle)  who  grows  increasingly  disenchanted  with  medical  school  and  the  doctors  she  once  admired.  The  allure  of  easy  money  sends  a  desperate  Mary  through  the  messy  world  of  underground  surgeries  that  leaves  more  marks  on  her  than  her  so-­‐called  freakish  clientele...  Smart,  sexy,  funny  and  stunning  to  look  at,  American  Mary  features  a  standout  lead  performance  from  horror  icon  Katharine  Isabelle  (‘Ginger  Snaps’,  ‘Insomnia’,  ‘Freddy  vs.  Jason’),  and  notable  performances  by  Antonio  Cupo  (‘Bomb  Girls’,  ‘Dark  Angel’,  ‘Elegy’),  Paula  Lindberg  (‘Fringe’,  ‘Supernatural’,  ‘Iron  Man the  TV  series’),  David  Lovgren  (‘Masters  of  Horror’,  ‘Supernatural’,  ‘Stargate:  Atlantis’)  and  newcomers  Tristen  Risk  as  the  disturbingly  loveable  Beatress  and  Twan  Holliday  as  Mary’s  confidant,  protector  and  bff  Lance.  A  film  not  to  be  missed  and  what  and  reviewers  are  calling  ‘A  true  Modern  Day  Horror’.    About  the  Directors:  Canadian  twin  sisters,  Jen  and  Sylvia  Soska,  aka  The  Twisted  Twins,  started  off  studying  at  a  film  school  where  they  made  a  short  that  would  be  the  embryo  of  their  first  feature  film  ‘Dead  Hooker  in  a  Trunk’  which  earned  the  attention  of  filmmaker  Eli  Roth.  With  some  insight  from  IndustryWorks,  ‘Dead  Hooker  in  a  Trunk’  landed  in  the  worldwide  hands  of  IFC  for  their  IFC  Midnight  Series.  For  their  follow  up  film,  American  Mary,  the  twins  came  armed  with  horror  and  sci-­‐fi  industry  talent  bringing  the  most  unique  characters  to  life,  the  undeniably  skilled  Director  of  Photography  Brian  Pearson  (‘Drive  Angry’,  ‘I  Robot’,  ‘Final  Destination  5’,  ‘My  Bloody  Valentine’),  and  a  top  notch  crew,  making  American  Mary  the  year’s  most  talked  about  horror  film.    June  19,  2013-­‐  No  One  Lives  From  Pathe  and  WWE  Studios  -­‐  Fourteen  students  appear  brutally  murdered  and  the  crime  scene  offers  

no  clues  as  to  the  whereabouts  of  the  one  person  who  could  be  the  only  survivor,  a  young  woman  named  Emma.  Months  later,  bandits  attack  a  young  couple’s  car,  only  to  discover  the  frightened  Emma.  Rubbing  their  hands  at  the  prospect  of  ransom  payday,  they  don’t  realize  that  those  who  appeared  to  be  prey  are  far  less  defenseless  than  they  seem.    Director  Ryuhei  Kitamura  continues  his  American  adventure  with  No  One  Lives,  a  violent  and  ingenious  thriller,  manipulating  all  the  genre  conventions  past  and  future  to  his  taste.    About  the  director:  Ryuhei  Kitamura  -­‐  Osaka,  1969.  One  of  the  cult  names  in  contemporary  Japanese  cinema,  Kitamura  drew  the  attention  of  genre  fans  with  the  ultragore  and  hyper-­‐kinetic  Versus.  Other  titles  in  his  filmography  are  Alive,  Azumi,  Sky  High,  Godzilla:  Final  Wars,  and  The  Midnight  Meat  Train.   We were lucky enough to have Don Coscarelli in the studio, the man who created Beastmaster and Bubba Ho-Tep!

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 Thursday, March 28, 2013

A Second Look at John Dies at the End http://www.skonmovies.com/2013/03/a-­‐second-­‐look-­‐at-­‐john-­‐dies-­‐at-­‐end.html  

http://www.imdb.com/title/tt1783732/I  don't  often  watch  films  multiple  times  in  the  cinema.    In  fact,  I  can  probably  still  count  the  number  of  times  I’ve  done  so  on  one  hand.    However,  there  are  some  films  that  I  feel  obliged  to  give  another  go  around.  One  such  film  is, which  I  “saw”  when  it  played  as  the  closing  film  of  Midnight  Madness  at  the  TIFF  2012.    I  put  “saw”  in  brackets,  because  I  was  quite  fatigued  during  the  screening  and  there  were  many  moments  I  would  start  dozing  off.    I  managed  to  see  enough  of  the  film  togenerate an opinion of  it,  but  I  still  felt  a  bit  upset  that  I  wasn’t  able  to  stay  awake  for  the  whole  film.    As  such,  I  took  advantage  of  the  fact  that  it  was  having  it’s  only  major  Canadian  screening  tonight  as  part  of  Cineplex’s  new  “Sinister  Cinema”  series.    After  seeing  the  film  for  the  second  time,  I  thought  that  I  would  reflect  on  how  my  thoughts  of  the  film  have  changed  now  that  I’ve  seen  it  fully  awake.    This  is  not  really  a  second  review,  but  more  observations  after  rewatching  the  film  with  somewhat  lower  expectations  the  second  time  around.    I’ll  probably  start  off  by  saying  that,  for  the  most  part,  my  overall  opinion  of  the  film  has  not  changed  all  that  much.    I  still  think  that  it’s  merely  an  OK  film,  even  though  there  are  a  few  highly  enjoyable  sequences.    The  first  and  third  acts  are  probably  the  strongest  of  the  film  and  it  is  in  the  second  act,  where  things  lull  around  the  most.    In  fact,  I  have  to  say  that  the  sequence  with  the  “Meat  Monster”  at  the  start  of  the  film  is  probably  my  favourite  sequence  and  it  was  quite  hard  to  top  (though  an  ultra-­‐gory  animated  sequence  comes  at  a  close  second).    I  commented  in  my  review  that  I  found  the  plot  hard  to  follow,  though  I  hypothesized  that  it  was  because  I  was  falling  in  and  out  of  sleep.    Well,  now  that  I’ve  seen  the  whole  film  fully  awake,  I  can  confidently  say  that  this  was  indeed  the  case.    The  film  is  still  very  weird  and  quite  hard  to  fully  grasp,  however  I  had  a  much  better  time  understanding  exactly  what  was  going  on.    In  fact,  I  noticed  things  that  I  haven’t  before  (such  as  the  brief  cameo  by  Angus  Scrimm,  who  played  the  villainous  Tall  Man  in  director  Don  Coscarelli’s films).  Overall,  I  would  say  that  I  am  happy  that  I  decided  to  go  see  a  second  time.    While  I  don’t  expect  I  will  make  the  habit  of  rewatching  films  in  theatres  a  regular  occurrence,  there  is another Midnight Madness film that  I  saw  in  2011,  which  is  finally  being  released  this  summer.    In  that  case,  I  want  to  see  the  film  again  just  because  I  enjoyed  it  so  much.  However,  that’s  for  another  time…   The title John Dies at the End tells the viewer far less than they might think. There’s no guarantee John will be dead

or alive at the end — or if he’ll even be in our universe at all.

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John  Dies  At  The  End  (2012)  –  Don  Coscarelli  Posted  by TD Rideout on April 2, 2013  http://themindreels.com/tag/sinister-cinema/

Phantasm,  Bubba  Ho-­‐Tep,  yup,  even  Beastmaster…  Don  Coscarelli  has  always  been  a  cult  fave  director,  and  he’s  had  my  attention  since  1982,  when  I  saw  Beastmaster  on  First  Choice  (on  one  of  the  free  weekends).    I  remember  as  a  kid  sitting  in  my  bedroom  in  CFB  Borden,  reading  comics  on  my  rug,  and  seeing  an  ad  for  something  called  Phantasm  II  on  the  inside  back  cover  of  whatever  issue  I  was  reading  (amazing  that  I  can  remember  the  ad,  but  not  what  comic  I  was  reading…).  I  was  younger  then,  and  hadn’t  quite  begun  to  foster  my  love  of  horror  films,  that  didn’t  happen  until  my  late  teens…  And  honestly  some  of  the  images  were  a  little  spooky,  there  was  this  silver  ball  in  the  picture  with  prongs  thrusting  out  of  them,  a  reflection  of  a  young  man  in  woman  on  it,  and  the  ball  was  held  by  this  towering,  evil-­‐looking  man.  I  was  nowhere  near  ready  for  it.  Years  later  when  I  started  working  in  a  video  store,  as  most  film  buffs  do  (who  didn’t  want  to  watch  tons  of  movies  for  free!?)  I  was  finally  ready,  and  entered  the  world  of  the  Tall  Man.  It  was  at  that  moment  that  Coscarelli  had  a  fan  in  me.  Bubba  Ho-­‐Tep  merely  cemented  that  in  to  place,  building  on  the  already  solid  foundations.  I  remember  hearing  

about  it…  Bruce  Campbell  as  an  elderly  Elvis?  SOLD!  It’s  also  still  my  favorite  film  of  Don’s.  Then  rumors  began  to  circulate  about  this  odd  book  called  John  Dies  At  The  End  by  David  Wong,  I  googled  it,  searched  for  it,  heard  Coscarelli’s  name  was  attached  to  it,  finally  found  it,  and  loved  every  minute  of  it.  I  missed  it  at  TIFF,  literally  by  moments,  and  I  had  been  waiting,  hoping  to  hear  something  about  a  release  that  I  would  be  able  to  see…  And  it  finally  happened.  Raven  Banner  Entertainment,  Anchor  Bay  Canada  and  Cineplex  presented  their  inaugural  screening  of  Sinister  Cinema  (a  great  bunch  of  titles  being  screened  make  sure  you  check  it  out!).  So  I  was  cordially  invited  last  week,  along  with  a  

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number  of  my  fellows  to  have  a  meet  and  greet  with  Don  Coscarelli,  who  was  warm,  funny  and  gracious  with  everyone  he  got  to  chat  with,  and  then  join  him  at  the  Yonge  &  Dundas  Cineplex  for  a  screening  of  John  Dies  At  The  End.  

 By  his  own  admission,  Don  has  made  a  weird  film.  I  can  say  this,  it  will  be  destined  to  become  a  cult  favorite  like  his  other  films.  They  always  seem  to  exist  on  the  edges  of  pop  culture,  a  touchstone,  a  test  of  geek  knowledge.  Personally  I  think  that  adds  more  charm  to  his  films,  knowing  that  not  everyone  will  see  them,  or  even  like  them,  it  makes  it  more  precious,  more  special  for  the  fans  that  do  embrace  it.    And  this  one  is  bound  to  do  that!  

Dave  Wong  (Chase  Williamson)  is  chatting  with  a  reporter,  Arnie  (Paul  Giamatti)  about  his  friend  John  (Rob  Mayes),  their  hobby/business  as,  well,  monster  hunters  and  paranormal  experts,  a  dog,  his  girlfriend  Amy  (Fabianne  Therese)  and  a  new  drug  known  as  Soy  Sauce,  that  will  change  your  perception  of  reality  for  the  rest  of  your  life,  and  maybe  after.    To  try  and  explain  it  all  would  ruin  the  experience,  though  fans  of  the  book  may  be  a  little  disappointed  that  it’s  not  all  there.  But  what  is  there  is  delightfully  odd,  laugh  out  loud  funny,  mind-­‐bending,  and  occasionally  a  little  freaky.  

The  film  also  has  some  very  welcome  appearances  by  Clancy  Brown,  and  for  once,  a  Doug  Jones  not  completely  encased  in  prosthetics!    There  is  a  Lovecraftian  monster,  bizarre  creatures  that  look  like  they  escaped  from  a  Cronenberg  movie,  including  one  made  out  of  slabs  of  meat,  a  drug  that  seems  to  be  alive,  a  cop  (Glynn  Turman)  who  finds  himself  in  the  middle  of  something  

he  doesn’t  understand,  phantom  limb  syndrome,  alternate  realities,  and  things  you  can  only  see  out  of  the  corner  of  your  eye.    It’s  a  very  dense  world,  and  it  may  be  off-­‐putting  to  those  who  aren’t  used  to  Coscarelli’s  films,  but  the  camaraderie  between  Dave  and  John  makes  for  a  fun  time,  they’re  just  a  couple  of  guys  who  take  everything  in  stride,  and  consequently  allows  for  a  lot  of  enjoyment  of  the  world(s)  they  exist  in.  If  you  want  something  odd,  something  a  little  unusual,  or  even  downright  weird,  check  this  one  out.  

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John  Dies  At  The  End  is  available  from  Anchor  Bay  Canada  today,  and  David  Wong’s  new  book,  This  Book  is  Full  of  Spiders  is  available  now.  

 Hockey  great  shows  artistic  skill      

Memories  of  ice  hockey  and  neon  lights  make  way  for  spring  time      

By Ronda Payne, Langley Advance  http://www.langleyadvance.com/sports/Hockey+great+shows+artistic+skill/8130711/story.html#ixzz2QyDTfDYR

CINEMA  SINISTER  Indie  horror  films  make  their  way  to  Cineplex  Colossus  Langley  Cinemas  with  unique  content  and  some  special  appearances,  including  question  and  answer  sessions  with  directors,  pre-­‐recorded  interviews,  and  other  tidbits.  This  monthly  horror  series  is  a  collaboration  between  Cineplex  Entertainment's  Front  Row  Centre  Events  and  Raven  Banner  to  bring  art  house  quality  films  to  the  big  screen  in  25  communities.  "Sinister  Cinema  will  expose  Canadians  to  a  different  type  of  horror  film  -­‐  one  that  falls  outside  the  typical  realm  of  larger  distributors,"  said  Raven  Banner's  managing  partner  Michael  Paszt.  Films  include  John  Dies  at  the  End  on  March  27,  The  Last  Will  and  Testament  of  Rosalind  Leigh  on  May  9,  American  Mary  on  May  30,  and  No  One  Lives  on  June  19.  Tickets  are  now  available  at  the  Colossus  box  office  as  well  as  online.  

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American  Mary’s  Canadian  Release!    http://www.littlemissrisk.ca/miss-­‐risk/american-­‐marys-­‐canadian-­‐release/  By:  Little  Miss  Risk  March  15,  2013.    Listen,  when  you  do  a  major  motion  picture  that’s  your  first  major  role,  you  can  talk  about  it  as  much  as  you  want.  I’m  on  cloud  nine  right  now…  from  the  desks  of  the  Twisted  Twins  headquarters,  the  details  of  the  Canadian  screening  dates…    

   “American  Mary  will  be  hitting  theatres  across  Canada  part  of  Raven  Banner  Entertainment  and  Cineplex’s  Sinister  Cinema’s  Horror  Series  which  will  be  a  line  up  of  some  ridiculously  cool  horror  films  that  you  should  grab  your  buddies  to  totally  see  in  theatres  this  year!  “Fucking  amazing.  Extraordinary.  A  really  superb  picture.  Katharine  Isabelle  is  awesome.  She  gives  a  wonderfully  modulated  performance.  It’s  disgusting  and  distressing  and  the  makeup  is  brilliant.  It  made      me  think  about  the  effects  of  horror.  Why  is  has  done  what  it  does  to  us  and  why  it  continues  to  move  us.”  ~  Clive  Barker    Cineplex  Entertainment’s  Front  Row  Centre  Events  and  Raven  Banner  announce  the  launch  ofSinister  Cinema,  a  cutting-­‐edge  series  of  art  house  quality  genre  cinema.  Sinister  Cinema  will  bring  a  series  of  independent  horror  films  to  25  Cineplex  theatres  across  Canada.  The  films  will  include  unique  content,  and  in  some  cases,  special  appearances,  including  live  question  and  answer  sessions  with  directors,  pre-­‐recorded  interviews  and  more.  “It’s  a  real  honour  for  us  to  work  with  Cineplex,”  said  Raven  Banner’s  Managing  Partner,  Michael  Paszt.  

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“Sinister  Cinema  will  expose  Canadians  to  a  different  type  of  horror  film  –  one  that  falls  outside  the  typical  realm  of  larger  distributors.”  “Today’s  announcement  is  a  big  win  for  Canadian  horror  fans,”  said  Pat  Marshall,  Vice  President,  Communications  and  Investor  Relations,  Cineplex  Entertainment.  “We  know  fans  of  this  genre  are  going  to  be  incredibly  excited  about  this  new  series.”  Tickets  are  available  now  at  participating  theatre  box  offices  and  online  at  cineplex.com/events.  The  following  is  a  complete  list  of  participating  theatres:    British  Columbia  Odeon  Victoria  Cinemas  –  Victoria  Galaxy  Cinemas  Nanaimo  –  Nanaimo  Colossus  Langley  Cinemas  –  Langley  Cineplex  Odeon  Park  &  Tilford  Cinemas  –  North  Vancouver  Cineplex  Odeon  International  Village  Cinemas  –  Vancouver    Alberta  Scotiabank  Theatre  Edmonton  –  Edmonton  Scotiabank  Theatre  Chinook  –  Calgary    Saskatchewan  Galaxy  Cinemas  Regina  –  Regina  Galaxy  Cinemas  Saskatoon  –  Saskatoon    Manitoba  SilverCity  Polo  Park  Cinemas  –  Winnipeg    Ontario  Cineplex  Odeon  Devonshire  Mall  Cinemas  –  

Windsor  SilverCity  London  Cinemas  –  London  Galaxy  Cinemas  Waterloo  –  Waterloo  Cineplex  Odeon  Winston  Churchill  Cinemas  –  Oakville  SilverCity  Hamilton  Cinemas  –  Hamilton  Cineplex  Cinemas  Mississauga  –  Mississauga  Cineplex  Odeon  Queensway  Cinemas  –  Toronto  Colossus  Vaughan  Cinemas  –  Vaughan  SilverCity  Fairview  Mall  Cinemas  –  Toronto  Cineplex  Odeon  Yonge  &  Dundas  Square  Cinemas  –  Toronto  Cineplex  Odeon  Eglinton  Town  Centre  Cinemas  –  Scarborough  Coliseum  Ottawa  Cinemas  –  Ottawa  SilverCity  Gloucester  Cinemas  –  Ottawa  SilverCity  Sudbury  Cinemas  –  Sudbury    Quebec  Cineplex  Odeon  Forum  Cinemas  –  Montreal

 The  lineup  goes  like  this  -­‐    March  27,  2013  –  John  Dies  At  The  End  May  9,  2013  –  The  Last  Will  and  Testament  of  Rosalind  Leigh  (Rue  Morgue  Cinema)  –  I  saw  this  at  Whistler  and  it’s  fucking  brilliant.  May  30,  2013  –  American  Mary  June  19,  2013-­‐  No  One  Lives  Do  not  miss  these  screenings,  brings  as  many  people  as  you  know.  Your  support  will  show  that  there  is  a  place  in  theatres  for  original  horror  films  like  this  and  that  is  does  have  an  audience.  A  huge  and  humble  thanks  to  Raven  Banner  and  Cineplex  for  putting  these  films  on  the  big  screen.  We  couldn’t  be  more  excited  for  this  honor  and  especially  to  have  AMERICAN  MARY  included  amongst  films  we  love  so  much,  particularly  The  Last  Will  And  Testament  Of  Rosalind  Leigh.  Fatally  Yours,  Jen  and  Sylv”    This  entry  was  posted  in  Miss  Risk.  Bookmark  the  permalink  

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John Dies at the End Directed by Don Coscarelli  http://exclaim.ca/Reviews/Film/john_dies_at_end-­‐directed_by_don_coscarelli_2    By  Scott  A.  Gray  |  March  26  2013    

 

 Considering  the  prodigious  lunacy  of  its  source  material,John  Dies  at  the  End  could've  been  handled  with  greater  finesse  by  a  more  resourceful  director,  or  at  least  one  with  access  to  larger  funds.    

The  sheer  scope  of  the  story's  random,  demented  imagination  and  the  ambivalent  attitude  of  its  protagonists  towards  bizarre,  otherworldly  creatures,  events  and  pompous  prophecies,  however,  still  brand  this  cinematic  translation  (and  truncation)  a  

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uniquely  funny  and  irreverent  horror/comedy  crossbreed.    Phantasm  and  Bubba  Ho-­‐Tep  director  Don  Coscarelli  demonstrates  his  limited  vision,  choosing  to  steamroll  through  the  safest,  most  basic  version  of  the  plot  possible,  at  great  expense  to  the  clarity  of  themes  and  comprehensive  character  motivations,  not  to  mention  vital  twists,  deeply  imbedded  satire  and  a  shitload  of  insane  visuals  bursting  from  David  Wong's  novel.  Said  book  is  about  two  buddies  who  get  caught  up  in  an  inter-­‐dimensional  conspiracy  after  coming  in  contact  with  a  sentient,  reality-­‐altering  drug  dubbed  "Soy  Sauce,"  which  effectively  "Billy  Pilgrims"  its  users.    Restructuring  the  temporally  promiscuous  account  to  fit  the  conveniently  provided  framing  device  of  the  author  describing  his  unbelievable  story  to  a  sceptical  reporter  is  just  one  of  the  many  ways  this  adaptation  betrays  the  renegade  spirit  of  this  paranoid  delusional  substance  abuse  allegory.  Coscarelli's  greatest  transgression  though,  is  the  relegation  of  Amy  —  the  movie's  only  significant  female  character  —  to  little  more  than  a  handy  (no  pun  intended  —  she  only  has  one)  prop.    Without  a  grounded  feminine  counter-­‐balance  to  all  the  bawdy,  boyish  humour,  the  story  plays  like  a  rudderless  male  daydream,  especially  when  the  discomfort  these  listless  homophobes  would  have  felt  walking  a  gauntlet  of  wizened  penises  is  mitigated  by  the  selective  decision  to  only  feature  topless  women  in  frame.    As  far  as  the  performances  go,  Clancy  Brown  and  Doug  Jones  (Pan's  Labyrinth,  most  creature  fetish  suits  in  Guillermo  del  Toro's  films)  are  perfectly  cast,  but  largely  under-­‐used.  However,  Paul  Giamatti  fits  the  role  of  stereotypical  reporter  Arnie  like  a  tailored  speedo  and  the  decision  to  cast  relative  unknowns  Chase  Williamson  and  Rob  Mayes  as  juvenile  slacker  paranormal  activity  magnets  Dave  and  John  was  a  sound  one.    Fans  of  the  book  will  have  strongly  coloured  expectations,  but  regardless  of  your  familiarity  with  the  secrets  of  The  Sauce,  this  movie  feels  extremely  rushed  and  thrifty,  and  moreover,  like  something  very  important  is  missing:  namely,  its  heart  and  purpose.    Even  so,  if  you  haven't  read  the  book,  you'll  find  a  lot  of  random  zaniness  to  enjoy.  If  you  have,  you'll  likely  end  up  wondering  what  someone  like  Sam  Raimi  or  Richard  Kelly  could  have  accomplished  with  the  same  material.        

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'John Dies at the End' actually doesn't and is a fair bit of fun  

• NEW ON DVD & BLU-RAY | APRIL 3, 2013 | BY: DAVID VOIGT

Things  are  getting  a  little  trippy  on  the  next  trip  to  the  video  store  as  the  latest  from  an  indie  horror  icon  hits  the  shelves  to  help  you  get  your  freak  on.  After  bowing  at  TIFF  with  a  stop  by  the  'Sinister  Cinema';  new  on  DVD  &  Blu-­‐Ray  is  a  cult  story  about  the  perils  of  a  drug  like  you've  never  seen  before  and  sorry  about  the  spoilers  but  "John Dies at the End".    Based  on  the  novel  by  David  Wong;  we're  talking  about  a  drug  that  promises  an  out-­‐of-­‐body  experience  with  each  hit.  On  the  street  they  call  it  Soy  Sauce,  and  users  drift  across  time  and  dimensions.  However  some  who  come  back  are  no  longer  human.  Suddenly  a  silent  otherworldly  invasion  is  underway,  and  mankind  needs  a  hero.  What  it  gets  instead  is  David  and  John  (Chase  Williamson  and  Rob  Mayes),  a  pair  of  college  dropouts  who  can  barely  hold  down  jobs.  Can  these  two  stop  the  oncoming  horror  in  time  to  save  humanity?  No.  No,  they  can't.  

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Throw  out  any  hopes  of  a  linear  narrative  or  traditional  storytelling  on  this  one,  however  "John  Dies  At  The  End"  still  manages  to  be  a  mind  bending  trip  that  was  a  lot  of  fun  leaning  more  on  the  comedy  then  it  did  the  horror.  Writer/director Don Coscarelli a  horror  veteran  of  films  like  "Phantasm"  and  "Bubba  Ho-­‐Tep"  knows  the  perfect  blend  of  gore  and  humor  and  he  keeps  the  gags  and  the  body  count  going  at  a  pretty  healthy  clip.  While  the  story  does  get  a  little  too  wrapped  up  into  itself  making  it  more  than  a  little  hard  to  follow  with  enough  exposition  for  people  to  shake  a  stick  at,  it's  not  the  kind  of  movie  that's  necessarily  about  the  story  and  its  resolution  but  instead  a  film  about  the  journey  to  get  there.  Coscarelli  knows  how  to  set  up  his  audience  perfectly  to  just  go  limp  and  have  fun  with  it  all,  a  well  executed  film  with  some  solid  performances  to  help  bring  it  home.      

John Dies at the End    Relative  unknowns  Chase  Williamson  as  our  hero  David  and  Rob  Mayes  as  John  slide  into  the  lead  roles  reasonably  well  and  have  a  very  likable  on  screen  charisma  and  chemistry  with  one  another.  You  can't  always  cast  name  actors  in  roles  like  these  ones,  but  when  the  actors  have  a  sense  of  the  material  and  embrace  it  whole  heartedly,  it  helps  the  material  immensely.  As  Arnie  Blondstone, Paul Giamatti is  obviously  having  a  great  deal  fun  with  it  all  as  the  guy  who  hears  all  about  our  hero's  story  and  since  Giamatti  also  served  as  

an  executive  producer  on  the  film  you  can  believe  that  this  is  the  kind  of  material  that  is  right  up  this  man's  alley.  Some  familiar  faces  show  up  in  the  supporting  cast  in  the  form  of  Clancy  Brown,  Daniel  Roebuck,  Doug  Jones  and  Glynn  Turman  as  hero  go  along  on  their  journey  and  honestly  the  fun  that  you  can  tell  they  are  all  having  is  infectious  and  we  as  audience  quickly  buy  in  to  the  universe  that  these  actors  are  building.    Special  features  on  the  DVD  include  a  feature  length  commentary  track  with  Don  Coscarelli,  producer  Brad  Baruh  along  with  stars  Chase  Williamson  and  Rob  Mayes,  Deleted  Scenes,  Getting  'Sauced':  The  Making  of  "John  Dies  at  the  End",  along  with  a  look  at  the  casting  sessions  for  the  film,  a  featurette  about  the  different  creatures  in  the  film  and  a  Fangoria  interview  with  Paul  Giamatti.  When  all  is  said  and  done,  "John  Dies  at  the  End"  is  a  fun  entry  into  the  canon  of  the  films  of  Don  Coscarelli  that  provides  more  genuine  laughs  then  it  does  deaths,  so  while  any  hard  core  creature  feature  and  horror  fans  might  be  a  little  disappointed  with  this  one  with  its  non-­‐linear  narrative  that  turns  in  on  itself  quite  a  few  times  it  is  still  more  then  work  a  look  as  long  as  you  don't  take  anything  that  goes  on  in  it,  all  that  seriously.    3  out  of  5  stars.              

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Publicity  handled  by  GAT  PR