More on Duo Larry Fesseden and James Felix McKenney
Posted by dominie in Events, Films, Interviews on September 26th, 2008
Join Larry Fessenden and James Felix McKenney on Fangoria Radio tonight, September 26. Debbie Rochon will host an interview session with the Fessenden and McKenney on their upcoming horror slates: Satan Hates You, I Sell The Dead, Hypothermia, and possible future features in the collaboration of Glass Eye Pix with Dark Sky Films. The show starts here 10:00pm Eastern on Sirius Satelite Radio Channel 102.
More on the upcoming releases:
Satan Hates You from writer-director James Felix McKenney, is a graphic horror film that tells the stories of two individuals and their personal struggles with Lucifer himself. Starring Don Wood (TV’s Colonial House, In a Fix), Christine Spencer (Automatons), Angus Scrimm (Phantasm, TV’s Alias), Reggie Bannister (Phantasm, Bubba Ho-Tep), Michael Berryman (One Flew Over the Cukoo’s Nest, The Hills Have Eyes), Debbie Rochon (Romeo and Juliet, Terror Firmer), and Larry Fessenden, the film boasts a large ensemble cast, mixing well-known genre names with MonsterPants regulars. The feature wrapped principle photography (which as been going on intermittently since 2005) on July 2nd and producer Fessenden has eyes set for festival release in mid 2009.
Satan Hates You has two storylines going all the while with demons provoking the characters to remain on with Satan. One is a man who struggles with his desire to kill. The second centers on a young girl who falls to the wayward side of life, but ultimately redeems herself when she meets a televangelist she later finds out is actually an angel.
Automatons from Glass Eye Pix and MonsterPants is now available on DVD in the US and Canada. The film has been making its run through festivals, with the next feature in Rome, Italy at Suburbia! NoBudgetFilmFestival on Tuesday, September 30 and in Melbourne, Australia at the 9th Annual Melbourne Underground Film Festival Wednesday, October 15. See here for more details.
“Somewhere in the distant future, the Girl is alone. She is the last of her people, the others having died in a generations-long war that the girl continues to fight with the assistance of a group of antiquated robot helpers and soldiers.
Her only connection to her long-dead people is a collection of recorded journal entries made by the scientist who cared for her as a baby. His is the only friendly human face she’s ever seen. The regular transmissions from her enemy’s leader are always filled with threats and taunts. The girl responds to these invasions by attack of her own, carried out by her mechanical soldiers on the contaminated surface where no human can survive.
Men started this war. The machines will finish it.”