Following the showing of Where the Skin Lies at Horror-on-Sea I got a chance to talk with producer Joy Harrison, actress Georgia Winters and director Michael Boucherie about the confinements of living together and filming on set in the house, finding the right cast and dealing with builders.
Photo courtesy of J.Douglas Imagery
Is this the premiere today?
Joy – No, we premiered back in August at film at Frightfest, so we premiered in London, but we are very happy to be down at Southend-on-Sea for our second festival.
Michael – It’s nice because it is an intimate festival
Joy – It’s a fans festival, the people here really love the genre so its great. So, you enjoyed it?
It was excellent. I thought it was one of the most emotional films of the festival so far. It’s quite intense and towards the end it gets really emotional with the characters.
Photo courtesy of J.Douglas Imagery
Is this the premiere today?
Joy – No, we premiered back in August at film at Frightfest, so we premiered in London, but we are very happy to be down at Southend-on-Sea for our second festival.
Michael – It’s nice because it is an intimate festival
Joy – It’s a fans festival, the people here really love the genre so its great. So, you enjoyed it?
It was excellent. I thought it was one of the most emotional films of the festival so far. It’s quite intense and towards the end it gets really emotional with the characters.
- 2/15/2018
- by Philip Rogers
- Nerdly
Where the Skin Lies is new tense horror from director Michael Boucherie, which has been selected to play at the Horror-on-Sea Film Festival on Sunday 28th January. I got chance to ask Michael a few questions about the inspirations for the film, the writing process with his brother David Boucherie, and creating something which stands out in the horror genre.
What can we expect from the film Where the Skin Lies?
Well, it all starts innocent enough. Everyone is getting along just fine, at least on the surface. But as this is a horror film, you can expect things to go downhill rather quickly. Although there are some gruesome events, it’s not a splatter movie. The horror really comes from the people you consider to be friends. You’ll find yourself having shifting allegiances to these different characters as it is revealed, through horrific occurrences, what’s lying just beneath their skin.
What can we expect from the film Where the Skin Lies?
Well, it all starts innocent enough. Everyone is getting along just fine, at least on the surface. But as this is a horror film, you can expect things to go downhill rather quickly. Although there are some gruesome events, it’s not a splatter movie. The horror really comes from the people you consider to be friends. You’ll find yourself having shifting allegiances to these different characters as it is revealed, through horrific occurrences, what’s lying just beneath their skin.
- 12/28/2017
- by Philip Rogers
- Nerdly
Pertwee! Daleks! Quarries! Exclamation points! Classic Doctor Who. This would mark the last time that Jon Pertwee.s Doctor would encounter his greatest nemesis. Maybe not the best Dalek story, but certainly has its good points. The Doctor (Jon Pertwee) and Sarah Jane (Elisabeth Sladen) are traveling in the Tardis when it suffers an unexpected power failure and arrives on the planet Exxilon. They.re not the only ones stranded as they find a group of Marine Space Corps, Dan Galloway (Peter Lamont), Capt. Richard Railton (John Abineri), Peter Hamilton (Julian Fox), Jill Tarrant (Joy Harrison), and the wounded Commander Stewart (Neil Seiler), searching for a cure to a plague sweeping the galaxy. The mineral that will stop the...
- 7/27/2012
- by Jeff Swindoll
- Monsters and Critics
I can only concur with Shadowlocked colleague John Bensalhia as regards the Jon Pertwee 1973 Doctor Who outing Death To The Daleks; in his review he says..
"Death To The Daleks does run, for the most part, on tried and tested lines. But it's still very enjoyable, and what’s more, does offer some interesting novelties."
Chief among which novelties are Daleks that can't exterminate. Well, not initially, anyway. When The Doctor and Sarah Jane (ah Liz, how empty the commentary room is without you!) get pulled into the energy-draining field of a savage planet that displays the remnants of an apparently dead but illustrious ex-civilisation, they find themselves far from lonely. Dodging mysterious bands of archers, our heroes are separated almost immediately for a first episode that, as the commentary notes, is extraordinarily light on dialogue and dark of picture.
Before too long it's clear that a huge and strangely...
"Death To The Daleks does run, for the most part, on tried and tested lines. But it's still very enjoyable, and what’s more, does offer some interesting novelties."
Chief among which novelties are Daleks that can't exterminate. Well, not initially, anyway. When The Doctor and Sarah Jane (ah Liz, how empty the commentary room is without you!) get pulled into the energy-draining field of a savage planet that displays the remnants of an apparently dead but illustrious ex-civilisation, they find themselves far from lonely. Dodging mysterious bands of archers, our heroes are separated almost immediately for a first episode that, as the commentary notes, is extraordinarily light on dialogue and dark of picture.
Before too long it's clear that a huge and strangely...
- 5/28/2012
- Shadowlocked
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