Thirty-eight years after gifting the world a really cool slasher called The Mutilator (pick up a copy Here), writer/director Buddy Cooper has finally gotten around to making a sequel to the film… and over the weekend, he took to social media to unveil the first official poster for Mutilator 2! You can take a look at the poster at the bottom of this article.
Cooper notes that “the woman bound to the nasty looking piling” on the Mutilator 2 poster is Olivia, played by Eva Hamilton of Death Kiss. Producer Jeff Seemann added that “the ocean water was in the 40s when Eva stepped into it for this scene.” So it definitely sounds like it’s a moment worth promoting on the poster.
The original The Mutilator (a.k.a. Fall Break) had the following synopsis:
Years after the accidental death of his wife, a deranged man starts to slice and...
Cooper notes that “the woman bound to the nasty looking piling” on the Mutilator 2 poster is Olivia, played by Eva Hamilton of Death Kiss. Producer Jeff Seemann added that “the ocean water was in the 40s when Eva stepped into it for this scene.” So it definitely sounds like it’s a moment worth promoting on the poster.
The original The Mutilator (a.k.a. Fall Break) had the following synopsis:
Years after the accidental death of his wife, a deranged man starts to slice and...
- 12/12/2022
- by Cody Hamman
- JoBlo.com
“The whole point of this movie is to make sense of the noise. So we had to establish noise,” says “Everything Everywhere All at Once” supervising sound editor Brent Kiser. Time traveling through the multiverse is a central concept in the Daniels’ maximalist film, but the directors were adamant about a “lo fi” quality to the sound. So Kiser and sound effects editor Andrew Twite gave the cacophonous design a warm, familiar feeling. “We’re living in a Windows 95 world,” quips Kiser. Watch the exclusive video interview above.
See Son Lux interview: ‘Everything Everywhere All at Once’ composers
“There was a natural rhythm to the movie,” explains Twite, describing the specific ways in which the movie was edited. “The sound design was naturally able to follow those beats as well,” he continues, “it was a great lesson for us in timing and rhythm.” The sonic landscape of the film would...
See Son Lux interview: ‘Everything Everywhere All at Once’ composers
“There was a natural rhythm to the movie,” explains Twite, describing the specific ways in which the movie was edited. “The sound design was naturally able to follow those beats as well,” he continues, “it was a great lesson for us in timing and rhythm.” The sonic landscape of the film would...
- 12/5/2022
- by Sam Eckmann
- Gold Derby
Ted Kotcheff's 1989 comedy "Weekend at Bernie's" was considered outrageous at the time. Andrew McCarthy and Jonathan Silverman play a pair of low-level insurance wonks who, in the course of their daily work, find a mysterious "mistake" on the books. It seems that someone has been committing fraud. When they take it to their boss Bernie (Terry Kiser), he invites them to his beach house as thanks for figuring it out. Bernie is, of course, the perpetrator and intends to murder them. Before he can, however, Bernie is killed by a vengeful mob boss (Bernie was sleeping with the mob boss' sister). When the McCarthy and Silverman characters arrive, they find Bernie dead, surmise that foul play is afoot, and figure they have to protect themselves from any further mob violence ... by pretending Bernie is still alive.
The bulk of the movie involves McCarthy and Silverman hoisting around a dead body,...
The bulk of the movie involves McCarthy and Silverman hoisting around a dead body,...
- 11/5/2022
- by Witney Seibold
- Slash Film
What if you died but could somehow manage to still entertain guests at your exclusive beach house party, mark up the price for your Porsche by 20 grand and sell it, and perform in the bedroom like you never have before ... all while evading a hitman? That's the 1989 dark comedy "Weekend at Bernie's" in a nutshell. Terry Kiser stars as the titular character, which means he plays a corpse for most of the film. And almost the entire film uses Kiser playing dead. However, his co-star Andrew McCarthy revealed that there is one scene in which a real body wasn't used. (Side note: we talked to Andrew McCarthy about his memoir and '80s nostalgia in 2022.)
In "Weekend at Bernie's," Larry (McCarthy) and Richard (Jonathan Silverman), two young professionals looking to climb the corporate ladder at their New York City insurance company, show their boss, Bernie Lomax, that someone within the company has committed insurance fraud.
In "Weekend at Bernie's," Larry (McCarthy) and Richard (Jonathan Silverman), two young professionals looking to climb the corporate ladder at their New York City insurance company, show their boss, Bernie Lomax, that someone within the company has committed insurance fraud.
- 11/5/2022
- by J. Gabriel Ware
- Slash Film
Ridiculously absurd. Cartoonish. Offensive, maybe? Those are just a few words to describe "Weekend at Bernie's," the 1989 dark comedy about two young professionals --Larry (Andrew McCarthy) and Richard (Jonathan Silverman) -- who drag their dead boss' corpse around an island to avoid being taken out by a hitman. Even some of the movie's cast members thought the idea was asinine. But it appears their attitudes changed when they started filming the movie, according to Andrew McCarthy's recollections (via The Hollywood Reporter):
"We thought it was funny s*** as we were doing it ... There's the old saying, 'If it's funny to you on set, it ain't going to be funny on screen,' but we found it really f****** funny. We loved Bernie, and we just wanted to do more s*** to him. So a lot of the s*** we just thought of on set. I love 'Bernie's.' I think it's great.
"We thought it was funny s*** as we were doing it ... There's the old saying, 'If it's funny to you on set, it ain't going to be funny on screen,' but we found it really f****** funny. We loved Bernie, and we just wanted to do more s*** to him. So a lot of the s*** we just thought of on set. I love 'Bernie's.' I think it's great.
- 10/31/2022
- by J. Gabriel Ware
- Slash Film
Former Survivor: Redemption Island contestant Ralph Kiser has died at the age of 56.
Kiser passed away on Wednesday morning after suffering a heart attack, his family tells The Sun.
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Survivor superfan Michael Allbright also shared the news in a Facebook post on Wednesday.
“I have some unfortunate news for the Survivor community,” Allbright wrote. “Ralph Kiser passed away unexpectedly from a heart attack this morning.
Kiser passed away on Wednesday morning after suffering a heart attack, his family tells The Sun.
More from TVLineLittle House on the Prairie's Hersha Parady Dead at 78Star Trek: Strange New Worlds' First Two Episodes to Air on CBS Next MonthWWE Hall of Famer Terry Funk Dead at 79 - Ric Flair and Mick Foley Pay Tribute
Survivor superfan Michael Allbright also shared the news in a Facebook post on Wednesday.
“I have some unfortunate news for the Survivor community,” Allbright wrote. “Ralph Kiser passed away unexpectedly from a heart attack this morning.
- 4/20/2022
- by Keisha Hatchett
- TVLine.com
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