Monday, September 11, 2006
By: MrDisgusting
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Today the first poster and more details were revealed for the Trapped Ashes horror anthology, which features films by Joe Dante, Ken Russell, Sean Cunningham, Monte Hellman and John Gaeta. The three installments, which star Henry Gibson, John Saxon, Jayce Bartok, Amelia Cooke and Lara Harris are entitled The Girl With Golden Breasts, My Twin The Worm and Jibaku. Read on for the poster, details on the film from TIFF and a story on the next anthology entitled The Knives.
From TIFF: Six strangers (including cult actor John Saxon!) are invited to tour the legendary back lot of Ultra Studios, one of Hollywood's most venerated movie companies. Before long, the party, along with their eccentric guide (beloved character actor Henry Gibson), find themselves trapped on the set of the infamous House of Horrors, used for the notorious sixties thriller Hysteria. A sinister force will only allow them to live if they recount their most terrifying stories, just like the characters in the movie…
Comprised of five vignettes by five unique filmmakers with their own twisted, perverse visions, Trapped Ashes follows the tradition of classic anthology horror films like Tales from the Crypt and Kwaidan, weaving yarns of the surreal, erotic and terrifying.
In the outlandish entry "The Girl with Golden Breasts" by Ken Russell, a struggling actress's breast augmentation garners more than just attention. Sean Cunningham's "Jibaku" has a married couple discovering the body of a Buddhist monk by a remote ancient temple. The corpse makes his way into their (erotic) dreams and lures them into the dark land of the dead.
In "Stanley's Girlfriend," Monte Hellman spins a tale of two ambitious filmmakers in fifties Hollywood who become unlikely friends, until a mysterious beatnik beauty begins to date one of them - to gruesome effect. Academy Award®-winner John Gaeta tells of a young expecting mother with a six-foot-long tapeworm growing inside her along with her baby in "My Twin, The Worm."
The narrative thread tying them all together - the quandary of the captive storytellers - is directed by Joe Dante.