60-second claymation Evil Dead is as good as the real thing

I like The Evil Dead, but the problem with full length movies is you have to watch them, which requires sitting still and paying attention for a really, really long time. That’s why I think this sixty-second remake is perfect. And the claymation style looks right at home if you remember some of the effects from the original.
The movie was made for a contest for Empire magazine. If you like it, you have until March 12th to vote for it–click over to the Empire site and cast your vote.
There’s a sixty-second version of A Nightmare on Elm Street too, and although it’s got some impressive recreation of Freddy’s glove and his phone-sex gag (see image to the right), it’s nowhere near as satisfying as this one.
Evil Dead remake with clay and done in 60 seconds, made for the Empire Jameson competition 2010. http://www.missinghead.co.uk
Get original monster artwork on the cheap from Monster By Mail
Here’s a cheap way to get some original art: for $25, cartoonist Len Peralta will draw you a monster based on your suggestion, then mail it to your home address. Add ten bucks more and he’ll film it and send you a link where you can watch the magic happen on YouTube. You’ll probably want to spend that extra ten bucks–just look at these examples below:
Catch up on old Freddy before new Freddy stabs you in the gut

The Freddy Krueger film reboot is almost here, so now’s your last chance to experience old-school Freddy before he’s turned back into a truly frightening, evil monster. The very first Nightmare positioned Freddy as a boogey-man for teenagers, someone who was actually terrifying and not just campy. Then all the other movies happened, and Freddy became a sort of malicious clown of death, a bachelor uncle turned serial killer.
I’m not sure how I feel yet about the new version–it looks scary and serious, but it also looks like it falls into a lot of modern horror movie traps: the use of video diaries and websites to make it contemporary, too much reliance on scenes from the original, and an affiliation with Michael Bay. I do like that Jackie Earle Haley is playing Freddy, but honestly in the trailer he sounds so much like Rorschach that I’m worried I’ll keep thinking of Watchmen as I watch it.
Redneck bar wipeout from “Near Dark”
My favorite scene from one of the best vampire movies of my childhood. Rediscovered via Cinematical.
“His bite was outta site!”
It is a stormy night without rain in 1780! At Castle Dracula! The wicked Count is entertaining royalty from “the dark continent,” as he calls it, as if he thinks he’s some sort of colonial patriarch, and yet he refuses to do proper business with the Africans. In fact, he supports slavery! Who knew the Count was a slave owner? No, none of this makes any sense, but blaxploitation films are not revered for their plots. What matters is the Count bites this “dark prince,” and thus creates BLACULA, the film world’s only black vampire (to my knowledge) until Vamp came along in 1986.
Below is the opening sequence to the movie:
Why resurrect Blacula now? Because Amok Time and Sideshow Replicas have released a 12″ articulated replica of the Prince (see photo at top of post). What makes this figure rock is he’s got three interchangeable heads, including my favorite, the rotted corpse look. Every doll should come with this, particularly Bratz dolls. What makes this not so special is the price is $65, which puts it out of the reach of all but serious collectors.
Oh well, even if you can’t afford it, click through and take a look at the awesome work that went into modeling the three heads.
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