The Amazon series
Undone is the last significant film or television project I can think of that used rotoscoping to push the television medium forward, but an upcoming SXSW film is using that labor-intensive technique to capture a sense of the past.
The Spine of Night, a new ultra-violent fantasy horror film that debuts at next week’s virtual film festival, is made in the style of artists like Ralph Bakshi and Frank Franzetta and recalls projects like
Heavy Metal and
Richard E. Grant (
Lucy Lawless (
Patton Oswalt (
A.P. Bio), and more lend their voices to this movie. Take a look at the trailer below.
Marvelous Adult Animated Movies by Ralph Bakshi flickeringmyth.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from flickeringmyth.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Joe Manganiello is Max Fist, a hulking hobo who may or may not be a superhero trapped on Earth and stripped of his godlike superpowers. He gulps and snorts earthbound ambrosia like gut rot whiskey and crystal meth to reignite his ability to punch holes through space/time, but he merely scrapes his knuckles when pounding brick walls. He limps and growls through a Rick Grimes beard, reminisces about his life in the city of Chromium, a white Hancock who plummeted through a swirling vortex, such a feature of recent low-budget movies that promise Lovecraftian cosmic terror and cod – Nietzschean philosophy.
Interview: Larry Fessenden on Leading a Cult in DEMENTER, Onscreen Deaths & SXSW 2021
Drew Tinnin interviews indie horror icon Larry Fessenden about his upcoming cult horror DEMENTER! By Drew Tinnin
Appearing in a creepy cameo that casts a devilish shadow across the new Chad Crawford Kinkle project
Dementer, legacy artist and legitimate New York City film icon Larry Fessenden continues his steady ascent into true cult status. In our all-encompassing conversation below, we discuss the history of his company Glass Eye Pix, doing his voiceovers for
Dementer in a car, early NYC run-ins with Jim Jarmusch and Steve Buscemi, and the Fessenden death reel that’s annually updated on his birthday. (It’s March 23rd if you were wondering.)
Saturday Morning Superheroes Of The 1960s: The Animated Adventures of UNDERDOG, SUPERMAN And More
Even before the
Batman craze of the 1960s, superheroes were reigning supreme on Saturday morning animated series, and what follows is an in-depth look at 24 of them. Check it out.
EdGross |
3/4/2021
1.
Courageous Cat and Minute Mouse (1962 to 1963)
Batman creator Bob Kane came up with this idea about a crime-fighting cat and mouse that in many ways managed to capture the campy feel that would make up the Adam West Batman series four years later. Their rogues gallery includes The Frog, Harry Gorilla, Professor Shaggy Dog, Rodney Rodent, The Fox, The Great Hambone and Outrageous Cat (Courageousâ cousin).