by Seth Metoyer, MoreHorror.com
Trick or Treat? How about a treat since it's been a crappy economic year that we've all had to deal with. If you are looking for something to watch that you probably haven't seen in the horror genre, well, here's a Halloween treat for you.
The controversial indie film Kill Devil Hill (review) has been released for free online streaming via the small production company Jordanfilm Empirical Pictures. You can watch the film below the official press release and movie information below. Enjoy.
From The Official Release:
Orange County filmmaker’s controversial horror/thriller finds online home
Jordanfilm Empirical Pictures, a small production company specializing primarily in HD and 4K video post production, released the company’s first film, the horror short “Kill Devil Hill” as a free online stream. The film is a re-enactment of one of the most bizarre crimes in history; an...
Trick or Treat? How about a treat since it's been a crappy economic year that we've all had to deal with. If you are looking for something to watch that you probably haven't seen in the horror genre, well, here's a Halloween treat for you.
The controversial indie film Kill Devil Hill (review) has been released for free online streaming via the small production company Jordanfilm Empirical Pictures. You can watch the film below the official press release and movie information below. Enjoy.
From The Official Release:
Orange County filmmaker’s controversial horror/thriller finds online home
Jordanfilm Empirical Pictures, a small production company specializing primarily in HD and 4K video post production, released the company’s first film, the horror short “Kill Devil Hill” as a free online stream. The film is a re-enactment of one of the most bizarre crimes in history; an...
- 10/24/2011
- by admin
- MoreHorror
Reviewed by Elliot V. Kotek
(June 2011, screening at the 2011 Seattle International Film Festival)
Directed/Written by: Minh Duc Nguyen
Starring: Porter Lynn, John Ruby, Melinda Bennett and Long Nguyen
With a deft piece of editing, the opening montage of “Touch” delivers a promise that, despite a no-name cast and filmmaker, we’re in for something special about a very specific community.
A light comedy painted with brushstrokes of both drama and humor, the film’s core is constituted by Tam (Porter Lynn), a quiet nail technician who is a magician at bedazzling her client’s fingertips, and Brendan (John Ruby), a male mechanic embarrassed by his grease-stained hands who is seeking help with a condition that has become a point of consternation for his wife. From moment one of Brendan’s meeting Tam, it’s clear that Tam’s touch and attention, two things clearly missing from his relationship, enchant the first-timer.
(June 2011, screening at the 2011 Seattle International Film Festival)
Directed/Written by: Minh Duc Nguyen
Starring: Porter Lynn, John Ruby, Melinda Bennett and Long Nguyen
With a deft piece of editing, the opening montage of “Touch” delivers a promise that, despite a no-name cast and filmmaker, we’re in for something special about a very specific community.
A light comedy painted with brushstrokes of both drama and humor, the film’s core is constituted by Tam (Porter Lynn), a quiet nail technician who is a magician at bedazzling her client’s fingertips, and Brendan (John Ruby), a male mechanic embarrassed by his grease-stained hands who is seeking help with a condition that has become a point of consternation for his wife. From moment one of Brendan’s meeting Tam, it’s clear that Tam’s touch and attention, two things clearly missing from his relationship, enchant the first-timer.
- 6/2/2011
- by admin
- Moving Pictures Magazine
Reviewed by Elliot V. Kotek
(June 2011, screening at the 2011 Seattle International Film Festival)
Directed/Written by: Minh Duc Nguyen
Starring: Porter Lynn, John Ruby, Melinda Bennett and Long Nguyen
With a deft piece of editing, the opening montage of “Touch” delivers a promise that, despite a no-name cast and filmmaker, we’re in for something special about a very specific community.
A light comedy painted with brushstrokes of both drama and humor, the film’s core is constituted by Tam (Porter Lynn), a quiet nail technician who is a magician at bedazzling her client’s fingertips, and Brendan (John Ruby), a male mechanic embarrassed by his grease-stained hands who is seeking help with a condition that has become a point of consternation for his wife. From moment one of Brendan’s meeting Tam, it’s clear that Tam’s touch and attention, two things clearly missing from his relationship, enchant the first-timer.
(June 2011, screening at the 2011 Seattle International Film Festival)
Directed/Written by: Minh Duc Nguyen
Starring: Porter Lynn, John Ruby, Melinda Bennett and Long Nguyen
With a deft piece of editing, the opening montage of “Touch” delivers a promise that, despite a no-name cast and filmmaker, we’re in for something special about a very specific community.
A light comedy painted with brushstrokes of both drama and humor, the film’s core is constituted by Tam (Porter Lynn), a quiet nail technician who is a magician at bedazzling her client’s fingertips, and Brendan (John Ruby), a male mechanic embarrassed by his grease-stained hands who is seeking help with a condition that has become a point of consternation for his wife. From moment one of Brendan’s meeting Tam, it’s clear that Tam’s touch and attention, two things clearly missing from his relationship, enchant the first-timer.
- 6/2/2011
- by admin
- Moving Pictures Network
2010 - 12 mins. - Not Rated (Spoiler Alert)
D: Ace Jordan
C: Melinda Bennett, Taylor Graham, Aiden Miranda, Hunter Miranda
A father murders his two young sons after coming into contact with the skull of a bull head.
In Kill Devil Hill, we so boys being boys, father/mother/son interactions, then the father killing off his two sons. What exactly was the point? Kill Devil Hill pretty much just shows a father killing his two young sons and that's it. Nice topic to hang a short film around, huh? The narrative has no real purpose or drive other then to show this death sequence. Now the film is "based on an unsolved crime that triggered a bizarre series of murders through out North Carolina". It would have been nice if Kill Devil Hill had gotten into some of the mythology, if it had dug around into the ideology surrounding these series of events.
D: Ace Jordan
C: Melinda Bennett, Taylor Graham, Aiden Miranda, Hunter Miranda
A father murders his two young sons after coming into contact with the skull of a bull head.
In Kill Devil Hill, we so boys being boys, father/mother/son interactions, then the father killing off his two sons. What exactly was the point? Kill Devil Hill pretty much just shows a father killing his two young sons and that's it. Nice topic to hang a short film around, huh? The narrative has no real purpose or drive other then to show this death sequence. Now the film is "based on an unsolved crime that triggered a bizarre series of murders through out North Carolina". It would have been nice if Kill Devil Hill had gotten into some of the mythology, if it had dug around into the ideology surrounding these series of events.
- 3/27/2011
- by Big Daddy aka Brandon Sites
- Big Daddy Horror Reviews - Interviews
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