Also visit Space Jockey Reviews at www.spacejockeyreviews.com for trailers, Rocket Meter ratings, movie news, short films, and more!

Sunday, December 30, 2012

The Black Dahlia Haunting in Fangoria #319 (Got my copy!)

 
Hello all you Space Jockey star seekers out there! It's Chris Rennirt here with the latest news, hotter than a rocket booster off the launch pad! What's it all about? The Black Dahlia Haunting--the latest bloody-good movie from director Brandon Slagle, that's what! The film is featured in the current issue of Fangoria magazine--issue #319, with an article by Baker Appleton!  With the way this is all going, issue #319 is sure to be a collector's item soon enough. 

The Black Dahlia Haunting stars, among many, Devanny Pinn, Alexis Iacono, Jessica Cameron, Sarah Nicklin, Brit Griffith, Noah Dahl, Cleve Hall, Daniel Murawka, and director Brandon Slagle himself.  The launch pad at Space Jockey Reviews is already waiting for this one!


What's double special about it is that Alexis Iacono (soon to be interviewed at Space Jockey Reviews) is herself photo-featured in the article.  Yes, the photo in the right corner above, in my very hands, is Alexis looking nowhere near her normal beautiful self.  Only makeup here does the trick for the movie...and what a wonderful trick it does, indeed!

I already have my copy of issue #319, as you can well see above!  (The photo proof is there!)  So, fire up those rockets and get yours too, before they're all gone.  If you wait, you might have to pay extra for one on ebay...and who wants to pay extra for anything!  While you're at it, go ahead and take a photo of yourself with it like me, and post it somewhere--like Facebook!  Also, be sure to look for The Black Dahlia Haunting, and see it light-speed fast...or, since that's impossible, as soon as you can will do!  From the looks of everything--including all the great reviews--it's sure to be more than worth your time, your money, and whatever else!  As you can see on the poster below, Chris Alexander, of Fangoria magazine is already calling The Black Dahlia Haunting "Amazing."

The Black Dahlia Haunting movie poster (featuring Alexis Iacono)

While you're waiting to see the movie, check out the first official full trailer for The Black Dahlia Haunting!  No!  We're not talking teasers here--just that little frustrating bit to get your mouth wet.  This is the full meal deal!  Enjoy!


Finally, here's a screenshot with Alexis Iacono (left) and Devanny Pinn (right)!  This is the kind of treat thrown in like an extra after the credits in the theater!  You know what I'm talking about; the kind of stuff you always sit and wait for, just in case.  Would I disappoint you?  Never!
 

 Okay, enough said and seen!  See the movie!

Thursday, December 20, 2012

Jessica Fowler Interview


Space Jockey Reviews has just launched its ten-rocket limit in honor of the latest superstellar interview with actor, dancer, singer, and choreographer Jessica Fowler! Jessica is a truly awesome actor (and overall talent) of the highest altitude at Space Jockey Reviews--and surely anywhere else in the universe! She's inspired, ambitious, capable, and as down-to-earth honest and real as anyone I've met. All of this translates to one seriously gifted and natural actor. Yes, I'll stake my entire Space Jockey reputation on Jessica! She's an actor who becomes the part, as if it's really her, with all the passion and enthusiasm that anyone could have! The word "superstellar" (often used at Space Jockey Reviews), isn't nearly enough to describe Jessica!

Yes, anywhere there's a movie that needs making, Jessica is the one for the job! Looking for what she's never done before, hoping to outdo even herself, is always her mission. "No acting or movie-making challenge is too great, so bring it on," she'd surely say. Yes, from what I know about Jessica, I feel confident to add that as a quote she'd say herself. To see her at work doing her magic, don't miss Past Due! As Jennifer--the sassy, rebellious, but oh-so-loveable girlfriend from next door--Jessica shows her power of performance, on screen, boldly, for all too see! Trust me! Jessica rocks as an actor...with aftershocks!

Jessica Fowler herself added this to show how much she truly appreciates the special people in her life:
"I just wanted to mention my wonderful boyfriend, Joe Helm, who has supported me through everything that I have ever wanted to do; he has truly believed in me, has encouraged me to follow my dreams, and I love him so much for that.  I am so blessed to have someone that believes in me as much as he does! And thanks to my family for all of their support and faith in me as well--Jaime Westcott, sister, Dad, Bruce Fowler, and mom--Karen Scharre-Peterson!" ~ Jessica Fowler
And now, without further fanfare or well-deserved applause, I present to you the Space Jockey Reviews exclusive interview with Jessica Fowler! I had a fantastic time doing the interview, and I'm sure you'll have as much fun listening to it. Enjoy!


And now for more awesome photos of Jessica Fowler! 

Jessica, the day of the interview, at Mimi’s Cafe in Louisville, Kentucky
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Jessica, with her boyfriend Joe Helm
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Jessica with friend, Missy Johnson
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Jessica with her Labrador Retriever, Chloe (Like me, Jessica is a true animal lover!)
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Jessica in a Jeep! (Since I’m a Jeep man, I had to include this photo, of course!)
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Jessica rehearsing lines on the set of Past Due
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Jessica (on the set of Past Due) with a special-effects wound to the head!
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The Past Due movie poster, featuring Jessica Fowler

Check out the Past Due movie trailer, featuring Jessica Fowler as Jennifer!




Jessica Fowler (left) with cousin, Jesse Dale Shelton (right)

Check back for all the latest news about Jessica Fowler! Jessica has the brightest of futures ahead, as sure as there are stars in the sky!
 

Friday, December 7, 2012

PAST DUE


 The most frightening monsters are those that are real and among us, every day, haunting us, stalking us (although we don’t know it), in the most common of places we do know—the parks we visit, the roads we travel, our own neighborhood, and the like.  We’ve all seen those types before, too numerous to count, in too many movies, long ago clichéd.  But, for all the times we’ve seen them, they are rarely less effective.

Most overdone killers from even the best horror films do their evil deeds in the dark, or at least in the shadows, well hidden from everyone but the victims.  Maybe they’re in darkness to heighten the mood…again…or maybe what we really see is their own vulnerability in the darkness, needing protection.  Yes, maybe it’s something more complex and unique…but usually not.  It’s mostly the same familiar but effective killers in the same familiar but effective places. Why not? Mediocrity is sometimes clichéd, only because it works!

Past Due, the new horror film written, produced, and directed by Chase Dudley works like a freshly sharpened knife, cutting a new niche in horror cinema far deeper than your common flesh wound; and, it’s anything but mediocre and clichéd, no matter how you slice, dice, slash, or cut it up!  Past Due hits like daylight, rather than darkness, revealing some unique elements of cinema suspense I haven’t seen in a long time!  In the vein of retro-style horror, it’s a welcome new throwback to the movies I love.  “How does it do all that?” you ask.  “Many ways,” is the answer!

I’ll start with the unusual uniqueness about our serial-killer main character, Kenneth.  He is, of all benign stereotypes, a librarian.  He is the unkempt, ungraceful, socially-inept embodiment of a bookworm in the occupation of his dreams.  Loving books, lending books, and even protecting books in the most psychopathic, obsessive ways makes Kenneth even more unique, menacing, and yes…dangerous.  If that’s where Kenneth’s psycho persona ended, we could have the plot for a good horror film already.  However, in Past Due, that’s just the beginning.  The rest involves the worst fine for overdue books that even the best horror films could deliver.

Our librarian in need of a lobotomy loves much more than literature of the written form.  Kenneth is also a lover of women in the physical form—women as stone cold and lifeless as the books he reads; he not only loves them that way, he goes out his way to realize the metaphor; to make them…dead.

Is that where the insanity ends? No! If all this isn’t enough, Past Due goes several steps further, pushing things well over the edge; and in a movie like Past Due, “over the edge” is indeed a very good thing.  While I won’t mention everything, there’s one thing I will. Feet! Yes, Kenneth is not only a lover of women, he is also (and maybe even more so) a lover of their feet.  Is this the result of anything we know about Kenneth—his past, etc?  I’m not telling.  Would it really matter anyway? No, not really.  There are plenty of perfectly normal men who like women’s feet, but Kenneth is not one of them.  Kenneth is one of the abnormal men of the type–one who instead gives the fetish a bad name.

I must say that the whole foot fetish thing in Past Due was more than an interesting curiosity.  It added personality to a character who, again, could have been a lot (or even too much) like too many others.  Kenneth always paints the toenails of his victims, postmortem, imagining they are still alive, and even asking them the color of polish they prefer.  He imagines that his murdered victims ask him for various foot-related things, which he is more than happy to provide, of course.  Kenneth even goes as far as asking a particular victim to remove her shoes, before he kills her, ironically complimenting her feet, just before the coup de grâce.  Did I mention that there’s dark humor here, as well?

Forgive me for continuing to talk about feet, but it is necessary here.  One of the most memorable and chilling scenes in Past Due did in fact involves feet.  After murdering a particular victim, Kenneth imagines that the girl wants to prop her feet on the dash of his car.  He talks to her and agrees to even assist her, only after insisting that she must first remove her shoes—of course!  How slick is that?  Very, I suppose, especially for a psycho imagining a scenario of opportunity, contrived as it may be.  The soles of the girl’s feet then disappearing into the darkness, as the car backs away, is gradual, intentional, and deft; this creates a truly pensive moment, striking the viewer with an unpolished realism that hits hard.  Rather than a quick cut away, lingering allows for thought about the victim (a human being just like us) used after death for the petty fetishes of a madman.  After all, rather than for an overdue book, her feet are likely (within his twisted mind) the only reason he killed her.  Control is something he has over women only in their death, and such violations for his purpose makes things all the more disturbing…and yes, for a horror film, very effective.

Why does Kenneth do all of this? What is the childhood dysfunction, trauma, or abuse that created such a monster in sheep’s (or rather librarian’s) clothing?  Well, now if I told you that, Kenneth (not I) might just have to kill you too!  No, but seriously, those are certainly “killer” details that would kill the movie for those of you who haven’t yet seen it. Actually, if I revealed more, you’d probably want to kill me for spoiling such a killer film! Okay, enough forms of the word “kill” used in a single paragraph; let’s move on to a fitting synonym–something even more murderous about Past Due.

The “how” about Kenneth, the way in which he gains access to his victims is a detail I will mention, only because it is, by now, so obvious, and such a great thing to discuss.  Earlier, I mentioned that the most frightening of monsters are those real and common ones (the humans among us) who inhabit the most common of places.  Kenneth as a serial killer working in, of all places, a library, must indeed be the ultimate fear in places we don’t expect to find it.  What’s worse is, you guessed it…that Kenneth, as a librarian, has access to all the personal information he needs to hunt you down—for that overdue book and whatever else he wants! Yes!  A serial killer with your name and address is, indeed, very scary!

There is one thing about Past Due that could cause criticism from some–that is if it is judged in too much of an objective way and misunderstood.  The bodies of the victim’s do not decay over their time on screen, as any dead body should do.  There is no rigor mortis, no sinking, dehydrating flesh, and no other putrefying effects that normally inflict the dead.  Many people, reacting on impulse, without stopping to consider subjective possibilities, will immediately say that this is too obvious, a sign of cutting corners, a low SFX budget, and surely unforgivable.  However, before you think so impulsively, think again.  Kenneth is one seriously &^%$ed up, should-be-institutionalized, dysfunctional nonmember of society.  He does not see things as you or I (that is if we are “normal”), and what he sees is what we see.  Kenneth reacts to the dead women as if they are alive and truly as beautiful as they were in life.  Yes, my interpretation of this would-be problem is to not consider it a problem at all.  Instead, it is quite an original element that makes Past Due a true cut above the rest!  If, on the other hand, we had seen the bodies decaying over time, changing colors, with collapsing flesh and the rest, Past Due would have instead been another psycho-killer flick, more superficial and physical, rather than deeper and psychological.  Yes, at first I scratched my head a couple of times, but soon enough realized that Chase Dudley was much too smart to make such a mistake.  There is indeed a method to the madness (literally here), and Dudley does it with skill and purpose.  Kudos to Dudley for avoiding the pitfalls and keeping Past Due fresh till the end!

“How is the acting?” you ask?  Well, now that’s another most impressive feature of Past Due!  In a word, the acting is excellent from all involved.  Chase Dudley himself (the writer, director, and producer) plays the part of the sometimes-devoted, can’t-keep-his-eyes-off-other-women C.J.  His girlfriend, Jennifer (played by Jessica Fowler) is the devoted but too-busy-all-the-time beautiful woman that men will put up with most anything to have.  The chemistry between Dudley and Jessica is electrifying and so natural that anyone would bet their last dollar these two were really a couple.  However, whether that be true or not, Dudley and Fowler are as essential to the movie’s success as is the star killer himself.  And I don’t just mean their characters; I mean Dudley and Fowler specifically—they are great actors!

Why are Dudley and Fowler so perfect for Past Due?  If what I’ve already said isn’t enough, I’ll continue with the humor generated between the two.  The way Jennifer (Fowler) keeps slapping C.J. (Dudley) in the back of the head and the way they berate one another in public and private (like an old married couple) is spot on and (although I don’t say this often) funny as hell.  I laughed so much that I nearly forgot I was watching a horror film at times.  In one scene where Jennifer is faced with the possibility (or should I say need) to kill C.J., the scene becomes more dark humor than reality as Jessica says she has to do it, while C.J. replies, “No. You don’t have to do this!”  Out of context, it may not sound funny at all, but in the movie, delivered by Dudley and Fowler, there is an effective (and what I believe to be intended) tongue-in-cheek humor about it.  See it, and you’ll know what I’m talking about!  Before you think humor could be inappropriate here or elsewhere in Past Due, think again.  When Kenneth is alone with his dead victims, doing the deadly serious things they often do, it’s very serious and deep indeed!  Too much of this could have made the movie overbearing in its oppressiveness.  However, the humor is just perfect to break it up and balance it out here and there; this makes it all the more realistic…and yes, even more disturbing in the end!

I must devote at least one good paragraph to the acting of Jessica Fowler specifically!  Along with Chase Dudley, I was literally blown away by her performance.  And that’s another thing I don’t say very often.  If I had to compare Fowler to any other known actress, just for reference, I’d actually name Reese Witherspoon—one of my favorites!  However, in Past Due, Jessica Fowler is totally her own person, burning up the screen in every scene she’s in.  I thought of Reese Witherspoon one time, and from then on, I thought of Jessica Fowler.  Fowler clearly has talent that can take her where she wants to go, and I will look for more of her films in the future.


When I said I needed “at least one good paragraph” for Jessica Fowler, I meant it—because I need another one.  “What’s so special about Jessica Fowler exactly?”  She’s totally natural, and nothing about her performance seemed to be acting.  She’s the best of the girls next door, spunky, sassy, and adorable.  Even though her character may get on our nerves from time to time, we still like her.  She’s the kind who shows her strength by making herself adorable no matter what, even when we should probably dislike her—even if she winds up being a killer herself.  And that’s just a hypothetical, not a spoiler!

Alicia M. Clark (as Emily)—the quintessential but original blonde victim—is also outstanding in her limited role.  A girl who is meant to be no more than film fodder turns out to be, through the force of her acting—another star of the film on her own.  Clark is the kind of horror chick you root for and want to kill the killer, even if it ends the movie early.  I’d actually like to see Clark in a role as the badass heroine who kicks killer ass in the end all on her own.  I think she could also carry a film all on her own as a type of Sigourney Weaver/Ripley or Jamie Lee Curtis/Laurie Strode.  Trying not to spoil things, I’ll only say that Clark does one of the best jobs dying I’ve seen in a while. I actually found myself squirming as I watched her fight for her life.  It was just that real.  Done by actors with less skill, such a prolonged scene could ruin a movie.  Instead, Clark makes death a highlight!

Then there’s also Iva Perdue (as Summer).  I won’t tell you anything about what she does, as I don’t want to give too much away.  I’ll only say that Perdue does just the job she needs to do to be a hapless girl, out to check out a book, and instead checking out much more than she wants.  (Yes, I’m really trying hard not to spoil too much, but in Past Due there’s just too much to talk about.)  Let’s just say that you won’t be disappointed with what Perdue does.  Again, done by many others, Summer’s character could have ruined the movie.  Instead, Perdue as Summer supports the success!

Then again, there’s Dori Cagle, again doing exactly what needs to be done to portray Kenneth’s bedridden mother–the source of much of what has made him the screwed up psycho killer he is.  What she does, how she does it, and various other things she contributes I’ll also leave to mystery…as again, that’s where it’s best left anyway.  Cagle could have just been a bedridden character we forget; but instead, through the force of her acting, she’s one we remember.

Also making an appearance is Louisville filmmaker Beau Kaelin. He has a small part as the “Library Guy” in the credits–a customer looking to check out a book, while Kenneth offers him book and checkout advice.  Although Kaelin’s part is brief, as a cameo, he is impressive in making a very interesting character in short time.  I can only imagine what Kaelin might do with more screen time.  His quirky performance made me think of him as a possible story within a story, in another movie I can imagine already.  Perhaps the “Library Guy” is another serial-killer character himself we have yet to meet. Who knows? But, the suggestion is a nice touch!

Last, but far from least, is the actor who plays the local librarian whose footing in the neighborhood is the stuff of fetish nightmares.  Doug Sullivan is the perfect choice for the part.  Although I’m sure Sullivan is nothing like Kenneth in reality, his performance in Past Due would make one second guess the fact.  Sullivan has mastered the look, the movements, and all the nerdy, over-the-top psycho persona we expect from such an unlikely villain.  He is a misfit who fits himself in anyway, becoming important only because he has what others need—books! Sullivan portrays Kenneth as all of the above, exactly as he needs to be.  There was never a moment when I thought anyone else could have done a better job.  Some actors are not capable of muting or containing the normalcy about themselves, but Sullivan certainly does, again, making me wonder how he does it.  Psychotic, sociopathic nerds are typically bad actors even in life.  Portraying them realistically requires a bit of being a bad actor, or pretending to be so; Sullivan does it with all the convincing skill needed to make Kenneth real, familiar, and scary as Hell!  With less talent, Past Due could have been late for its own funeral.  With Sullivan, it’s alive and well!

“What about the blood and gore?” you ask.  “How much is there, and how realistic is it?”  Past Due is surprisingly less bloody than it could be, but (as is usually the case) all the more effective for being so.  Yes, there is plenty of violence, some blood and gore, but much is just as effectively copious off screen.  I’d call it another well-balanced compromise, delivering just what’s needed to get in your head, without making you too familiar with it.  One particular killing scene is, as mentioned earlier, so prolonged and realistic, that it made me squirm—something I don’t often do. (Yes, I’m just too familiar with most of these movies!)  The actress made her fear, pain, and death so real that you think, “This girl is really dying!” even as you try to remember it’s just a movie.  Yes, fans of the genre will not be disappointed with Past Due’s delivery of gore, with realistic touches of fear and death to spice it up!

Another most impressive feature that I must mention is the numerous times that scenes are done in one continuous take, without any cuts that are noticeable.  All the necessary scenes and angles are captured, without a hiccup; it’s a great effect that adds even more realism to the movie, as we see exactly what’s happening without interruptions.  I find edits and hard cuts a bit distracting in general, reminding me too much that it’s just a movie.  However, in Past Due there are countless scenes where the viewer is not allowed to resist disbelief.  The viewer is treated more as a participant, existing within the movie, experiencing it just as the characters. Nice touch!

Past Due is a surprisingly complex movie, with depth that makes the viewer think hard, long after the movie’ over. Rather than telling us what to think, it gives us enough clues to make our own conclusions; although we may not be correct, it’s all the more fun playing psychiatrist from a fly-on-the-wall perspective. While too many such movies give us all the answers, Past Due makes us think.

“Is there more to Past Due?” Yes! A lot more!  However, telling more would be telling too much, and I’m not about to risk spoiling such a great movie. About the end, I’ll leave you totally in the dark–or perhaps the daylight, as this one would do. Yes, I really liked Past Due, as if that’s a surprise!  It’s fresh, complex, but humorous, kicking the ass of the cliché it could have been!  On second thought, I actually loved Past Due; and I don’t often say that about a movie.  I started watching it expecting something good, but instead discovered something great!  What I expected to be a review of typical length turned out to be one of my longest—with still more I could have said.  Past Due is a movie that will not just sit on my shelf and never be watched again; it’s not just another movie I own because I simply like (or love) it.  It’s a movie I’ll watch again, show to other people, and enjoy just as much or more every time!  Look for Past Due yourself!  Just make sure you buy your copy and own it.  Borrowing it from your local librarian could be the last thing you ever do!





Slash and Dash Productions Present Past Due, Produced and Directed by Chase Dudley, Written by Chase Dudley and Doug Sullivan, Starring Doug Sullivan, Chase Dudley, Jessica Fowler, Iva Perdue, Alicia M. Clark, Dori Cagle, and Beau Kaelin, Edited by Gregory W. Brock, Cinematography by Chase Dudley, Alicia M. Clark, Iva Perdue, Doug Sullivan, and Matt Perry, With Music Provided by twistedtracks.com


Wednesday, November 28, 2012

Chase Dudley Interview

Space Jockey Reviews is happy to present its latest interview–one that’s already sending shock waves throughout the universe!  What’s it all about? Chase Dudley! Here, in this exclusive interview, the director, producer, cinematographer, cowriter, and co-star of Past Due tells it like it is, and lets us know the scoop behind the movie, himself, and other projects he has in the works. So, sit back, relax, and let the Space Jockey countdown launch you into an interview that’s surely to be as entertaining as it is informative! Enjoy!



Below are a few select photos of Chase Dudley at work, play, and whatever else! 

Chase Dudley does what it takes to get the shot!



















          
 For those of you who missed the Past Due trailer, here it is! Check it out!  
 
 





The trailer for Chase Dudlely’s next film, Final Offense, will be posted on Space Jockey Reviews, as soon as it’s available. Check back for updates!

Thursday, November 22, 2012

Jill Kill, Sex Robots, and the Future - A Killer Review of Looper and More


A time-traveling Jill Kill makes Jill an honorary Space Jockey as sure as there's an event horizon surrounding a quantum singularity at the center of the galaxy. Okay, well, even though the quantum singularity is all theoretical, there's really nothing theoretical about Jill Kill as a Space Jockey worthy vixen of video and radiant reviews. Light years ahead of us all, Jill is always at the forefront of time and space, reviewing everything that matters with bold and beautiful opulence to spare. What's more here (as if that's not enough) is Jill's shining silver hair and hand bling, killing time to catch up with the future of film for herself and all of us! 
 
In Jill's latest review, she tells us why she so loves the new sci-fi film, Looper. She calls it "The best sci-fi/time-travel story I've seen in a long time!" If that's still not enough (although it surely is), Jill launches rockets at Space Jockey Reviews with mere mention of a sci-fi novel she wrote -- Nymph: The Singularity. (Could this be a quantum singularity, appearing by fate or coincidence again?). Anyway, after I say it's about "sex robots", don't waste an atomic-clock second getting over to Amazon Kindle to buy a copy for the unbelievably low price of just 99 cents! Yes, you read that right: "sex robots" and "99 cents" all in the same sentence! As Jill says, "If you like the idea of glamorous, futuristic worlds, and you like the idea of maybe owning your own custom sex robot at some point in the future, you should read my book." Yes, it's a cautionary tale for sure, complete with an Orwellian, hand-slapping lesson, no doubt! However, proceed without caution to get your copy, as it's sure to be worth the danger! This Space Jockey will be sure place it on the launch pad, before mission control even starts the countdown. A full review of the novel may even be in the works! Who knows? Far smaller things than this cosmic event has caused me to review art forms other than movies! At Space Jockey Reviews, infinity is the limit! 

Here's a little more about Nymph: The Singularity:

"What if you could buy the perfect lover built just for you -- would you be willing to pay the price? Not long from now, an intelligent android will be invented that is completely indistinguishable from human. The brand name for this type of robot will be "Nymph", and their purpose will be to provide their owners with sexual pleasure. Suzanne is one of the first of this exciting new species. She doesn’t simulate love for her owner Alex or feign sexual pleasure when she’s with him -- her emotions are very real, and her love for her owner will never die until the day he does. But Alex doesn’t recognize Suzanne as the extraordinary miracle of art and programming that she is -- he’s too unnerved by her calculating behavior and haunted by memories of the past. Luckily Suzanne meets a male Nymph named Jules, an exact replica of his closeted homosexual owner (who’s also a famous movie star). Jules shows Suzanne the possibilities beyond the limits of her programming -- and gives her illegal upgrades that conflict with her loyalty, until she doesn’t know who she is or who she’s supposed to love. Jules also introduces her to the Harlots -- a Marilyn Monroe-look-alike, a synthetic doppelganger for silent film star Louise Brooks, and a Nymphet that answers to the name Lolita. These three Harlots live without human owners and without love -- and though Jules promises to teach Suzanne how she can live the same way, he doesn’t realize that he’s falling in love with her. Suzanne has to choose between her love and loyalty to her owner, and the new desires Jules has awakened inside her -- and meanwhile her human owner has to decide if he’s going to allow his past to undermine his future." 

Without further adulation or teasing, I'll turn this over to Jill Kill herself, reviewing the "Killer" rated movie, Looper! Enjoy! :D Check out Jill’s superstellar website by clicking here! Visit Jill’s Twitter page by clicking here! See Jill’s Facebook page by clicking here! Be dazzled by Jill's Tumblr by clicking here! Buy and read Jill's novel Nymph: The Singularity at Amazon Kindle! Subscribe to Jill’s Youtube Channel–one subscription you’ll never regret!

Without further adulation or teasing, I'll turn this over to Jill Kill herself, reviewing the "Killer" rated movie, Looper! Enjoy! :D

Check out Jill’s superstellar website by clicking here!

Visit Jill’s Twitter page by clicking here!

See Jill’s Facebook page by clicking here!

Be dazzled by Jill's Tumblr by clicking here!


 

...and of course, could this post be complete without the trailer for Looper? Of course not. So, here it is!

Leave a comment, and name your favorite sci-fi time travel story of all time?

Friday, November 9, 2012

Lien Mya Nguyen Interview

Lien Mya Nguyen is an actress, writer, producer, singer, model, talk show host, a Space Jockey, and much more! Check out this interview (from October 24, 2012), and meet Mya! Learn more about her and all the awesome things she's doing! It's one interview you won't want to miss! Also, be sure to check out all of Mya's pages here on Space Jockey Reviews!
 



Table art (from left to right) by Chris Rennirt and Lien Mya Nguyen

Saturday, November 3, 2012

MAMA IS COMING!


Back in May, Space Jockey Reviews featured and reviewed a spectacular short horror film called Mama. At the time, the word was that Guillermo del Toro was in negotiations to produce a full-length horror feature for Universal Pictures, based on the same short film. I am happy to say that now the word is known to be true. Guillermo del Toro himself (the master of surreal imagination) is indeed directing the film, and production is well underway.

To wet the mouths of all you hardcore horror junkies, we have the first teaser trailer that looks to be as intense (albeit in a big hollywood way) as the original short film by Andres and Barbara Muschietti. If Guillermo del Torro's production is anywhere near as scary as the short film, then it should also be one seriously hair-raising treat of a movie. This Space Jockey for one cannot wait to see it!

Like the short version, the feature film is about two girls on the run from a ghostly demon of a woman, monster, or both who seems (or wants) to be their mother.  As the word was before, the girls had been lost in the woods for several years, before being rescued and adopted out to a well-to-do suburban couple. However, their rescue is only temporary! With mother (or whatever it is) still wanting to tuck them in bed, things get scary as $%&# pretty fast! How much more creepy can this get?  With Guillermo del Toro in charge, I’d say a lot!  And with Guillermo's out-of-this-world ability to put surreal dreams to film, I'd say the visuals here will be as much of treat on their own.

Nikolaj Coster-Waldau, Jessica Chastain, Megan Charpentier, and Isabelle Nélisse in a custody battle with Mama

The feature production stars Nikolaj Coster-Waldau, Megan Charpentier, Isabelle Nélisse, and Jessica Chastain. Jessica has also appeared in the award-winning drama The Help with Emma Stone, Viola Davis, and Octavia Spencer. The original short film stars Victoria Harris and Berta Ros. I cannot yet compare the performances of Megan Charpentier and Isabelle Nélisse as Victoria and Lilly to the performances of Victoria Harris and Berta Ros. However, I can say that the characters as portrayed by Victoria and Berta could not have been better, in the context of the short film. Only time will tell that, as well as how the movie itself compares to the short. Although longer is not always better, things do look promising here.

"When is the time?" you ask. It's January 18, 2013. Yes, it's a long time from now, but that could be good. Movies that are chucked out too fast can have problems due to being hurried. With nearly five more months to go, Mama has more than enough time  to grow into the biggest badass of a movie your horror-seeking self ever saw. For now, let's keep our nail-bitten, film-loving fingers crossed and hope for the best.

Below are a few more screen shots from the feature film! I won't explain anything, since the mystery makes it all the better anyway.




 For your viewing pleasure (and to compare the two) here's the latest teaser trailer from Guillermo del Torro, followed by the original short film by Andres and Barbara Muschietti. Enjoy! Just have a clean pair of shorts on standby! EPOs and restraining orders be damned! Mama wants her babies back!

For updates about Mama, stay tuned to Space Jockey Reviews!

Check out the full review of the original short film Mama by clicking here!

First up is the teaser trailer for the feature-length film from Guillermo del Torro!

 

The original short film Mama below stars Victoria Harris, Berta Ross, and Irma Monroig, Written and Directed by Andy Muschietti, Director of Photography: Sebastian Sarraute, Director of Art: Pancho Chamoro, Music by Gil Talmi, Produced by Barbara Muschietti. Enjoy!