Briefly: Zero Charisma has to be my most anticipated film for the remainder of 2013, and this trailer is absolutely wonderful.

Following the poster release earlier this week, Nerdist today debuted a phenomenal new trailer for the comedy. Zero Charisma premiered at this year’s SXSW, and has been garnering universal acclaim ever since. Our very own Jonathan London even said that “Zero Charisma is one of the best Geek culture films of all time.” Yep, it’s that good (check out his full review here).

Sadly, I still haven’t had an opportunity to see the film. That’s all set to change next month however, as Zero Charisma is scheduled to hit VOD and iTunes on October 8th, before beginning its theatrical run on October 11th. I can’t freaking wait.

Take a look at the new trailer below, and let us know just how much you want to see the film!

As the strict Game Master of a fantasy role-playing game, Scott (Sam Eidson) leads his friends in a weekly quest through mysterious lands from the safety of his grandmother’s kitchen. But his mastery of his own domain starts to slip—along with everything else in his life—when neo-nerd hipster Miles (Garrett Graham) joins the game, winning over the group with his confident charm and dethroning Scott with an unexpected coup. Caught in delusions of grandeur, Scott must roll the dice and risk everything to expose Miles as the fraud he believes him to be. A darkly comedic fable of epic proportions, Zero Charisma is an ode to nerds from every realm.

Briefly: Preceding a brand new trailer that’s set to be released on Monday, Nerdist today debuted a phenomenal new poster for Zero Charisma.

Zero Charisma premiered at this year’s SXSW, and has been garnering universal acclaim ever since. Our very own Jonathan London even said that “Zero Charisma is one of the best Geek culture films of all time.” Yep, it’s that good (check out his full review here).

Sadly, I still haven’t had an opportunity to see the film. That’s all set to change next month however, as Zero Charisma is scheduled to hit VOD and iTunes on October 8th, before beginning its theatrical run on October 11th. I can’t freaking wait.

For now, take a look at the new poster below. We’ll be sure to share the new trailer when it’s released on Monday, and be sure to watch for more Zero Charisma in the coming weeks!

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The wide release of Fede Alvarez’ anticipated horror remake Evil Dead is just around the corner. The film premiered just a few weeks back at SXSW 2013, and while Evil Dead has been mostly revered (check out Jonathan’s review here), it also holds its fair share of contrasting opinions (check out a second opinion from Brent Moore here).

Via World Star Hip Hop, today saw a new red band clip released for the film. It’s bloody, gory, and not for the faint of heart, but if you’re looking forward to the film, you’re going to love it.

Watch the clip below, and let us know what you think! Grossed out? Don’t say I didn’t warn you! Evil Dead hits theatres on April 5th.

 

In the much anticipated remake of the 1981 cult-hit horror film, five twenty-something friends become holed up in a remote cabin. When they discover a Book of the Dead, they unwittingly summon up dormant demons living in the nearby woods, which possess the youngsters in succession until only one is left intact to fight for survival.

If you weren’t in attendance at this year’s SXSW (check out our two contrasting reviews here and here), you haven’t yet seen Evil Dead. To make the wait for the film’s release just a little bit sweeter, Sony has just released both eight new images from the film, AND over 20 minutes of behind the scenes footage.

 

Check everything out below, and let us know what you think! Evil Dead hits theatres on April 5th. Excited?

 

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UPDATE: The behind-the-scenes footage has been taken down, so here’s five minutes of B-Roll! There are probably some light spoilers in here, you’ve been warned!

 

 

In the much anticipated remake of the 1981 cult-hit horror film, five twenty-something friends become holed up in a remote cabin.  When they discover a Book of the Dead, they unwittingly summon up dormant demons living in the nearby woods, which possess the youngsters in succession until only one is left intact to fight for survival.

With just a few more weeks until Evil Dead releases across North America, Tristar today released three new images from the anticipated film.

 

Take a look at them below, and let us know what you think! Evil Dead hits theatres on April 5th; once you’ve seen it, be sure to let us know whether you loved it or not!

 

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Source: ShockTillYouDrop

If you’re a regular around these parts, the title Milo may ring a bell; Jonathan spoke rather highly of the film (among others) on last week’s live episode.

 

Milo premiered at last week’s SXSW, and is an original horror-comedy that blends the gory elements of a classic critter film with the lighthearted comedy of an unlikely friendship. According to the press release, Milo was one of the most talked about films of the festival.

 

Magnet Releasing announced today that they’ve picked up the North American distribution rights to the film, and will be releasing Milo later this year.

 

If you were at the festival and managed to see the film, let us know what you thought! We’ll be keeping you updated on Milo as we learn more!

 

Duncan’s (Ken Marino) life is a real pain in the ass.  Tormented by manipulative, crooked boss (Patrick Warburton), a nagging mother (Mary Kay Place), a deadbeat new age dad (Stephen Root), and a sweet, yet pressuring, wife (Gillian Jacobs), his mounting stress starts to trigger an insufferable gastrointestinal reaction.  Out of ideas and at the end of his rope, Duncan seeks the help of a hypnotherapist (Peter Stormare), who helps him discover the root of his unusual stomach pain: a pintsized demon living in his intestine that, triggered by excessive anxiety, forces its way out and slaughters the people who haveangered him.  Out of fear that his intestinal gremlin may target its wrath on the wrong person, Duncan attempts to befriend it, naming it Milo and indulging it to keep its seemingly insatiable appetite at bay.

 

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A few weeks ago we had filmmakers Katie Graham and Andrew Matthews on the show to talk about their SXSW film Zero Charisma, the story of a tabletop RPG obsessed 20-something living with his grandmother who begins to lose control of his gaming group (and more) when a new table member threatens to sway his carefully crafted social order. At the time, I didn’t know Katie and Andrew, and they didn’t know me, but I really responded to the sincerity, and humor, of the Zero Charisma trailer and wanted to help them with their IndieGogo campaign to finish the film before the premiere. Sure, I had fears that most trailers are better than their actual films and that Zero Charisma might follow in a long line of indie films about our geek culture, and specifically the tRPG sub-culture, that have missed the mark. And every single one of them, from The Gamers to Role Models, have missed that mark, choosing the safety of goofing on the film’s subjects to actually compelling the audience to feel for them.

And not to say that it’s an easy temptation to avoid. We geeks and our and social idiosyncrasies are so particular that it’s just easier to point a camera at what’s loud and funny than what’s true. We spend so much time in fantasy (especially when tabletop roleplaying is concerned), that it’s almost always more appealing to narrate the fantasy of our lives than the oftentimes painful inadequacies underneath. But something in the trailer for Zero Charisma and its anger possessed main character of Scott, told me that Katie and Andrew’s film might just avoid those trappings and get right to the heart of the cultural and social re-appropriations that fantasy culture is all about. Going in to the film’s premiere on Monday night, and as the lights dimmed in the theater, I had hope (for all us geeks).

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I’m happy to report that my hope in Zero Charisma was beyond well placed. Katie, Andrew and company knocked this one out of the park. Before there was even an image on screen, the music hit and I knew I was in good hands. The first thing that you hear is shrieking fantasy metal. I let out a loud “fuck yes” (which most at the after party admitted to hearing… sorry!). I’m a huge Luca Turilli and Rhapsody fan and the music that starts Zero Charisma off was right in line with the heavy metal songs of wizards and fantasy that inhabit his music. I even let out another shout when an extra in the film wore a Rhapsody shirt later on. The movie opened up and there was Scott, alone and head banging down a grocery aisle stocking up on snacks for his gaming like a playable character would on questing supplies. The journey was about to begin and I was thrilled knowing that I was in good hands.

The actual plot of Zero Charisma is simple. Scott lives with his grandmother and runs a tabletop RPG a few times a week for his similarly geeky group of friends. He invests everyting into the game and the experience he is creating. So when one of the longtime players drops out, it leaves Scott (and his sidekick Wayne), searching for a replacement. They find their fifth player in Miles, a hipster geek who is just looking for a group of guys to play with. Miles brings beers (and levity) to their first game, and quickly becomes its most popular and successful member and Scott’s alpha grip on the game begins to erode. Scrambling to keep the script that he’s written for everyone else on track, Scott wrestles to take back control and things go from bad to worse.

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 And that’s what Katie and Andrew got the most right: the personal nature of who we are. The group of gamers are a surrogate for Scott’s powerless role in a family that doesn’t really exist. His father is non-existent and his mother abandoned him long ago to move out of state. His Grandmother has had to look out for him long past the expiration date on his social maturation and he is angry. The failings of others in his life, and subsequently the excuses that have led to his own, have turned Scott into a short fuse who doesn’t see the dangers in scripting friend’s lives or trying to control others. From the opening metal music, he is both alone and ready to explode and watching newcomer Sam Eidson portray him is awesome. Sam’s not an actor playing a geek. He is a geek, and he gets the pain that makes our lots in life so compelling and Katie and Andrew don’t avoid going there. In fact, they go there a lot.

Other reviewers have said that when Scott’s mother shows up halfway through the film, that it feels like a plot device, because she only shows up to complicate things for Scott and his grandmother. I think those viewers need to re-role their Perception checks because you don’t need to hit a 20 to realize how wrong this is. The very antagonist of Scott’s fantasy quest is The Goblin Queen, a shadowy matriarch of a dark kingdom who rules from a distant tower. He’s enlisted his friends in helping him destroy the Queen and when that obsessive goal is challenged by Miles “just wanting to have fun”, Scott’s fuse is lit. Everything Scott does in the film is informed by the pain he feels towards his mother’s abandonment, and her showing up only makes a bad situation worse as he scrambles for a way to cope with a rapidly deteriorating social order that he had only a fabricated control of in the first place. Andrew’s script is fantastic on a character level and I urged he and Katie to continue Scott’s story in whatever other ways they could.

I know I’ve given a pretty serious review for a movie that is being showcased as a comedy. And I don’t want to give you the wrong impression. Zero Charisma is hilarious. The crowd responded vocally to the many jokes in the film and I watched it in a constant state of losing my shit laughing. If I hadn’t had to return to Los Angeles, I would have caught the rest of the screenings in Austin, I am that obsessed with the film. I even B-lined it for the filmmakers and gave them a hug for how incredibly moving the movie is. It just does so many things right in regards to a subject matter that we care so much about (almost similar to Scott’s obsession!). From skewering hipsters for their misappropriation of Geek culture (that scene in amazing) to our intensely passionate debates (like if the USS Enterprise is faster than the Millennium Falcon), Zero Charisma does everything right. The comedy flies pretty frequently but never at the expense of what makes Zero Charisma work the most: its sincerity.

As I said to Katie and Andrew Monday night, I’ve been attending the SXSW Film Festival since it began playing films in 1994 and this is one of my favorite SXSW films that I’d ever seen. But beyond that, and probably more importantly, Zero Charisma is one of the best Geek culture films of all time. We will definitely be championing it here on Geekscape. Come to think of it, I can’t think of a quest more worthy of the undertaking.

At last year’s South by Southwest, the Joss Whedon/Drew Goddard instant horror classic Cabin in the Woods played the Paramount theater to a packed and rapturous audience. It was a movie about that audience. A movie that pulled back the curtain, revealed the tricks, and asked, “Why are we here?”.

 

Our 'Cabin in the Woods' showrunners.
Our ‘Cabin in the Woods’ showrunners.

 

It feels a bit strange then to be back a year later in the same theater with the same audience and watching a ‘cabin in the woods’ horror movie. Evil Dead, disregarding its pedigree, is a movie that would have been concocted by the string pullers in Cabin. It is a movie whose only purpose is to indulge its audience. It succeeds and was greeted with the same enthusiastic approval, but it still struck me as odd and got me thinking about the nature of fandom and what exactly a horror movie is supposed to be these days.

 

If you have no interest in my personal ramblings on the subject, I’ll get the review proper out of the way here so you can go about your lives. If you’re on a site like this, you already know about Evil Dead or, at the very least, the concept of a ‘cabin in the woods’ horror flick. Some kids go out to a secluded cabin, usually for the purposes of drinking and fucking, they encounter some evil shit, someone does something stupid, everyone dies. This is that movie, except this time their reasoning is an undercooked DIY rehab plan for an addict friend instead of the usual partying.

 

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Evil Dead wastes very little time with exposition or character development and jumps right into the mayhem, and it is indeed mayhem. This is an over the top fun gore fest the likes of which we haven’t seen in decades. If you’re only interested in seeing blood splatter in inventive ways, there is no way you’ll leave disappointed. Apparently, the initial rating of the film was NC-17, and it’s easy to see why. What we saw was the R rated cut but let me assure you it does not feel compromised. I can’t imagine what they were forced to cut given what they were allowed to keep in. It’s fun and refreshing, which is slightly troublesome.

 

It’s also incredibly slick looking. Director Fede Alvarez takes plenty of cues from Sam Raimi and injects the film with plenty of energy without quite going full cartoon. It’s an admiral job of keeping the kinetic fun house vibe of the original series while also having the sheen of a studio flick with a budget. It’s worth noting that practical effects prevail here, with CG used fairly sparingly.

 

 

The lovely Jane Levy
The lovely Jane Levy

 

The actors all do a serviceable job of screaming and spewing viscera, but lead actress, and potential franchise star, Jane Levy is the only one allowed to really shine. No one is really given enough meat to chew on, metaphorically speaking. There’s plenty of literal meat. Levy is the only one with a real central conflict, as an addict trying to kick the habit and mend a broken relationship with her brother, but it’s just an excuse to get to the bloodshed. It’s not important and therefore doesn’t pay off in a satisfactory way.

 

It’s a lowest common denominator movie, but I liked it. I actually liked it a lot, and thats my problem. Is this good enough? I recognize it as an empty piece of fan service but I was entertained, so why try harder? Why care about theme and characterization when empty indulgence brings down the house?

 

The poster for the original film.
The poster for the original film.

 

You may be saying to yourself, ‘Well, it’s not like the original Evil Dead was anything different.’ You would be partly correct. Raimi’s classic barely had a skeleton of a plot and no concern for character. The only reason it’s protagonist became an icon is due to the idiosyncrasies and charm of Bruce Campbell. But the thing people forget about that first film is how god damn INSPIRING it is.

 

The Evil Dead, like many no budget horror films of the time, succeeds solely on the blood, sweat, tears, and imagination of a small group of people. There wasn’t endless studio money, there weren’t experienced cast or crew. It was just some kids with a dream. You can watch it and be amazed at their ingenuity and resourcefulness and think ‘Maybe I could do that’. Horror and exploitation cinema was really “indie” before that was a buzz word. Before Clerks and Slackers, there was The Evil Dead.

 

 

Sam Raimi on the set of 'The Evil Dead'
Sam Raimi on the set of ‘The Evil Dead’

 

It’s no coincidence that many of our visionary directors got their start in low budget horror. It’s the perfect playground. You can do whatever you want. Find a voice. And you can do it cheap and without the burden of expectation.

 

No one is going to walk away from this new iteration with that inspiration. You can’t do what this movie does without the resources. It loses some magic as a result. It’s a product instead of a labor of love.

 

But horror movie audiences have been all too eager to praise the product for years. It’s hard to think of a less discerning crowd. It seems just about any horror movie gets love just by existing. It doesn’t have to be good, it just has to cater. I’ve definitely fallen victim to this myself. Oh its got practical effects and a cameo from Tom Savini? Give it all the stars. Hell, I had a framed picture of Bruce Campbell displayed as if it was a family photo in my college apartment.

 

This blind adulation was on full display during Friday night’s screening, and I found it quite sad. There was no way the audience wasn’t going to love it, it caters as hard as it can. A shot of a chainsaw or a recognizable line of dialog insures that it will be beloved. I can’t help but feel we should require more. That we should force filmmakers to try harder. That we should desire horror to be about something other than shameless pandering.

 

Until that day, though, we have Evil Dead.

 

For another opinion, check out Jonathan’s review here!

 

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Right off the bat, put your fears aside about the new re-imagining of Evil Dead, because the movie rocks. And then prepare to have a whole bunch of new fears put right back… because it’s terrifying in the greatest way you can imagine. For over two decades we’ve been wanting a return to the Evil Dead franchise, but was what we wanted the serious horror of the original film or the colorful, comic book personality of the second and third? Or, like the evil book bound in human flesh that starts off each Evil Dead film, were things really best left untouched altogether? The idea of a revisitation to The Evil Dead has been with us so long that many of us no longer knew what we wanted. Luckily, Fede Alvarez’s “rebirth” (as he stated to a packed house last night) of the franchise in Evil Dead (just Evil Dead, to separate it from the previous The Evil Dead films) answers all of these questions in the best, most carefully designed way possible.

 

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I’m as scared of ruining some of the great moments in the film as I was sitting in my seat watching it but I’ll give you the broad axe strokes. This is a completely new story, with a new cast of characters… who through their dealings with the book happen to sometimes run along similar actions to the events of the original (in some of the most satisfying ways). The movie is very much a straight horror, but that doesn’t mean that there aren’t moments in which we see story elements or imagery from the first three films. The line between remake and original is walked so well that when the movie establishes itself as its own original story it’s refreshing and is allowed to cut loose in a lot of brutal and modernized ways. The last twenty years of horror trends, from the torture porns to the found footages to the Japanese films, have educated this new Evil Dead, and like the original did, it knows what it is, knows the landscape that it exists in and rises above anything else currently out there. This is the best (and coolest) horror movie I’ve seen in years and people in the theater were crawling out of their skin during more moments than I can count (I enjoyed watching the audience’s anguish and elation almost as much as I did the film).

 

Again, the characters are new, with a new band of fresh faced 20-somethings brought to the remote cabin for some time away from the city. But unlike the previous group’s weekend of drinking and smooching, this new group is driven by the need to intervene in their friend Mia’s addiction to heroine. Early on, as they watch Mia drop the last of her drugs down a well, they swear that no matter how bad her withdrawal systems get, they will not leave the cabin until she’s really clean… which obviously works to keep them there until long after the book has been discovered and it is much too late for any of them to leave.

 

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I loved this new grounded take. Not only did it work to humanize the characters beyond what we typically see in most cabin horror films, but it set up a lot of the mechanics of the story perfectly. The characters aren’t motivated to stay in the cabin just to artificially service the story (usually long past the point of common sense). They’re motivated by a real need that they are all focused on. And once the book has been activated, when the evil spirits of the Evil Dead begin to manipulate Mia, her first cries for help and possessed actions are written off as withdrawal symptoms or an attempt to get the group to abandon their intervention so she can return to the city and relapse. Really, the entire cast is great and do a solid job of making these characters believable even as the actions of the plot start to fly off the rails. Jane Levy as Mia and Shiloh Fernandez as her brother David really center the story with their family history of tragedy and estrangement. And when each of them are asked to step up and play the action hero, they do it fantastically. Unlike the literally fashioned, but still enjoyable, character stereotypes of last year’s Cabin in the Woods, Evil Dead does a great job of having you root for each of the central five characters, and when they fall victim to its horrors, every terribly brutal event is both horrifying and heart breaking.

 

And the movie is horrifying. It’s violent. It’s visceral. At times it is completely unrelenting. Evil Dead does not waste time getting to the point at all, and you’ll be satisfied by how soon after you’re sitting in your seat that you are reacting in terror. The story is economic and the scares are loud. Again, I’m desperately trying not to spoil how awesome so many of these moments are. Just think of it like this: in almost every horror films, you have heightened moments of horror that are alleviated by lower scenes of inter-character drama that help invest in the story. Well, this film is revved up early, and the rest of it roars like a chainsaw. The heightened moments of complete terror, with violently, brutal imagery and intense sound design, are only alleviated by smaller horrific scenes and desperate character moments. There really isn’t any part of this film that feels like a safe respite in any way. It epitomizes “edge of your seat” and should be seen in a crowded theater in the best way possible. People reacted to this film in a huge way.

 

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I’d love to spoil some of the details of the film, to tell you about all of the ways that it pays fantastic homage both literally and spiritually to the originals. I’d love to share these things with you if only to exercise some of the insanity that I experienced for myself. I’m still making sense of some of it and need help understanding (and appreciating) how a film this brutally graphic and violent possibly got released in this PG-13 day and age. But I won’t. I can’t. The best way to see this movie is to go in completely fresh, with only your love of the originals as your guide. This really was the best possible reinterpretation of the original The Evil Dead. Producers Sam Raimi, Rob Tapert, Bruce Campell and the rest of Ghost House Pictures really hit this one out of the park for both longtime fans and a new generation and they’ve proven themselves yet again to be master manipulators at the tops of their game. And as refreshing as that is, they’ve also put on notice anyone in Hollywood who wants to take something like a Friday the 13th or Nightmare on Elm Street franchise and simply repackage old ideas with a modern style. The success of these “rebirths” lies in their spirit, and that’s something that you can’t just point a music video director at and hope it survives. Fede Alvarez and company knocked this one out of the park in gut-wrenching fashion, through the story’s many twists and turns, surprises and scares, and I’m happy to report that the spirit of The Evil Dead absolutely lives on.

 

Looking for a second opinion? Check out KeyserSoze’s contrasting review here!

 

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