Fans of the Addams family and their values can get their hands on Cavity Colors' "Family Creeps" apparel for the next 72 hours. Also in this round-up: details on Mondo's Hardcore Henry poster and Christopher Lombardo and Jeff Kirschner's book, Death by Umbrella: The 100 Weirdest Horror Movie Weapons.
Addams Family-Inspired Apparel: From Cavity Colors: "FAMILY CREEPS is ON SALE NOW!
Available for 72 HOURS ONLY! ? All new T-shirts, Tanktops, Girl shirts, & Baseball Tees! After 72 hours, this design will vanish forever! Don't miss out on this family gathering of spooky proportions!
Retail price: $25.00."
To learn more, visit:
Mondo's Hardcore Henry Poster: From the Press Release: "Austin, TX - March 24, 2016 - The Alamo Drafthouse is excited to announce director Ilya Naishuller's rip-roaring debut feature HARDCORE HENRY as the latest Drafthouse Recommends title.
Shot entirely from the first-person perspective, HARDCORE HENRY is an unapologetically violent, breakneck and exuberant experience. Truly, it's a film like none other. And members of Alamo Victory - the company's free rewards program - will be among the first to get their adrenaline pumping by experiencing it for themselves with special free sneak preview screenings at select locations on March 28th and 29th, 2016. They will also receive a stunning Mondo-designed poster for free from artist Cesar Moreno. HARDCORE HENRY will open at Alamo Drafthouse locations nationwide the following week, on April 8th, 2016."
---------
Death by Umbrella: The 100 Weirdest Horror Movie Weapons: From Amazon: "'Use the combos, keep the feet light. This is it.'
That's boxing champ, Julius, psyching himself up for a showdown with, of all people, unstoppable killer Jason Voorhees in Friday the 13th Part VIII: Jason Takes Manhattan. Perhaps not familiar with the fact that a goalie mask is meant to stop rock hard vulcanized rubber flying at 100 mph, his fists prove laughably ineffective. Jason's though, are anything but. He punches Julius's head clean off with one right cross.
A fist might seem like unconventional weaponry compared with the knives and axes usually deployed by unspeaking, unfeeling, unstoppable killers in horror films. And it is. But it doesn't even scratch the surface when it comes to weird ways people have been killed in horror. Horror movie victims have had ears of corn buried in their backs, they've been decapitated by basketballs, lacerated by avant-garde sculptures, skewered by mounted deer antlers, bludgeoned by pogo sticks, and punctured with unfurled umbrellas.
Death by Umbrella! The 100 Weirdest Horror Movie Weapons showcases these oddball deaths and some even stranger ways killers have gone about their grisly business - MOs that would leave even the most seasoned coroner shaking their head provided, of course, that it's still attached, in the world of horror, no one is safe.
Authors Christopher Lombardo and Jeff Kirschner are Toronto horror journalists and hosts of the Really Awful Movies Podcast, a weekly celebration of low-budget genre film. They also review horror films new and old at ReallyAwfulMovies.com."
To learn more, visit:
Tamika hails from North Beach, Maryland, a tiny town inches from the Chesapeake Bay.She knew she wanted to be an actor after reciting a soliloquy by Sojourner Truth in front of her entire fifth grade class. Since then, she's appeared in over 20 film and television projects. In addition to acting, Tamika is the Indie Spotlight manager for Daily Dead, where she brings readers news on independent horror projects every weekend.
The first horror film Tamika watched was Child's Play. Being eight years old at the time, she remembers being so scared when Chucky came to life that she projectile vomited. It's tough for her to choose only one movie as her favorite horror film, so she picked two: Nosferatu and The Stepford Wives (1975).
Tamika hails from North Beach, Maryland, a tiny town inches from the Chesapeake Bay.She knew she wanted to be an actor after reciting a soliloquy by Sojourner Truth in front of her entire fifth grade class. Since then, she's appeared in over 20 film and television projects. In addition to acting, Tamika is the Indie Spotlight manager for Daily Dead, where she brings readers news on independent horror projects every weekend.
The first horror film Tamika watched was Child's Play. Being eight years old at the time, she remembers being so scared when Chucky came to life that she projectile vomited. It's tough for her to choose only one movie as her favorite horror film, so she picked two: Nosferatu and The Stepford Wives (1975).