
Couple other images from production.
"Foresight Features has released the first still images from their upcoming film Monster Brawl, a monster wrestling horror-‐comedy starring Dave Foley, Robert Maillet, Art Hindle, Jimmy Hart, Herb Dean, Kevin Nash, Lance Henriksen and eight classic monsters.
The film depicts a fight-‐to-‐the-‐death wrestling tournament in an abandoned and cursed graveyard. Eight monsters are divided into two conferences: The Undead and The Creatures. The film centers on a main event television program called "Monster Brawl", hosted by play-‐by-‐play announcer Buzz Chambers (Dave Foley) and former champ and color commentator Sasquatch Sid (Art Hindle). The show is interlaced with dramatic back-‐stories that reveal the origins of each monster.
Writer & Director Jesse Thomas Cook: "Fans will want to see monsters fighting, as the title implies. But it was important to inject a dark and powerful storyline behind each monster. After all, the monsters are the main characters, and we want to know where they came from, how they got involved in this tournament, and for some, how they came back to life. The fight sequences will speak for themselves. Especially the grisly final showdown. But at the end of the day, the movie is about the story behind each fighter -‐ much like wrestling. Betrayals, heels, baby-‐faces, pre-‐fight trash talking. Otherwise it would be pure carnage. You can have all the wrestling moves you want, but without the story you have nothing. It's essentially good versus evil. I wanted to make a film that I would watch over and over again with friends when I was sixteen. Everyone can cheer for their favorite monster and experience the highs and lows that come with defeat and victory."
MONSTER BRAWL is a horror/comedy set in an abandoned, cursed graveyard, which hosts the televised wrestling TV show of the title. The contestants are assorted classic fiends divided into two leagues—The Undead and The Creatures—and include Frankenstein’s monster (Robert Maillet, 1st photo) and the Mummy (R.J. Skinner, 2nd photo). Seen in the 3rd photo are (left to right) Dave Foley as play-by-play announcer Buzz Chambers, Jason Brown as graveyard owner and prophetic doomsayer Cyril Haggard and THE BROOD’s Art Hindle as former champ and color commentator Sasquatch Sid Tucker. The matches are intercut with flashbacks to the fiends’ origins; the cast also includes real-life grappler Kevin Nash, manager Jimmy Hart and referee Herb Dean, along with Fango fave Lance Henriksen.
“Fans will want to see monsters fighting, as the title implies,” Cook (who wrote and directed Foresight’s first flick, the cannibalism shocker SCARCE, with John Geddes) tells us. “But it was important to inject a dark and powerful storyline behind each creature. After all, they’re the main characters, and we want to know where they came from, how they got involved in this tournament and, for some, how they came back to life. The fight sequences will speak for themselves—especially the grisly final showdown—but at the end of the day, the movie is about the story behind each fighter, much like in real wrestling. Betrayals, heels, babyfaces, pre-fight trash-talking—otherwise, it would be pure carnage. You can have all the moves you want, but without the story you have nothing. It’s essentially good vs. evil. I wanted to make a film that I would watch over and over again with friends when I was 16. Everyone can cheer for their favorite monster and experience the highs and lows that come with defeat and victory.”
Editing on MONSTER BRAWL, which sports makeup FX by The Gore Brothers (Jeff and Jason Derushie) will begin later this year—but first, Foresight will get rolling on EXIT HUMANITY, which Matt Wiele and Cook are producing with Geddes at the helm. Hindle’s in this one too, joined by genre stalwarts Bill Moseley and Dee Wallace, with shooting scheduled to begin October 18 north of Toronto. It’s an undead opus set during the Civil War, and Geddes says, “I wanted to bring something new to the zombie genre that I grew up watching. EXIT HUMANITY explores the powerful theme of survival amidst catastrophe.” Keep your eyes here for more on both BRAWL and EXIT in the near future!
Original article HERE
Reposted by
SounDude
Greenjah
Some of the area's most beautiful natural attractions, including Inglis Falls, could be taken over by blood, gore and death this spring and summer.
A production company has picked the area to film some scenes for their upcoming horror films.
Foresight Features, based in Collingwood, plans to shoot 10 films over the next five years, with Simcoe and Grey counties as the backdrop for much of their work.
Jesse Cook, the writer and director of the production company's upcoming film, Monster Brawl, said he hopes to use Inglis Falls for a film to be shot this summer and possibly for Monster Brawl in the spring."We are actually shooting 10 films in the local area, two this year," said Cook. "The first one, called Monster Brawl, will be gearing up in May."
Monster Brawl will be a horror comedy mockumentary about a monster fighting tournament including classic monsters such as Frankenstein, Dracula, the mummy and the zombie.
Canadian actor Art Hindle has signed with Foresight for Monster Brawl. Hindle is perhaps best know for his role in the movie Porky's, but has also appeared in other movies and television shows, including Dallas, Beverly Hills 90210 and Murder She Wrote.
"The bread and butter for the genre stuff is to enlist household names," said John Geddes, another writer, director and producer with Foresight.
The second film of 2010 will be shot sometime over the summer and will be a zombie film in the wilderness.
"We will be doing a good percentage of the shooting in and around the Grey County area," said Cook. "We want to use some of the stunning landscapes Grey County has to offer. Inglis Falls is one of the areas we are looking at."
Cook said there is a chance he could use the Inglis Falls area for scenes for Monster Brawl as well.
Cook said they are still raising the money needed to produce their films this year. So far they are about halfway to the $600,000 needed for the two films. They sell $5,000 units to individual investors.
"We can break even on a film in Canada just based on our broadcast deal, our DVD deal and our tax credit," said Cook.
Investors also get perks such as coming to the set, getting their names in the credits and invitations to the premiers and parties.
Geddes said they would also like to tap the local area for extra actors and crew positions such as production assistants.
Cook and Geddes, who are both Collingwood natives, said Foresight Features has been in the works for about a year, following up on the success they had with their first film, Scarce, which was taken to the Cannes Film Festival in France where it was sold to over a dozen territories. Scarce also appeared on the Super Channel.
Geddes and Cook began making short films together in 2004 and went to Los Angeles trying to raise money for a feature, but nothing materialized so they returned to the area to try to ply their trade locally. They managed to raise about $250,000 mostly from the Collingwood and The Blue Mountains area for Scarce, which was shot in the winter of 2007 at Metcalfe Rock in the Blue Mountains.
"We are hoping theatrical. We are hoping we can get the next indy hit and bring some press up to the area and maybe develop a local film festival or something like that," said Cook.
Geddes said the idea is to set up a studio in Collingwood and shoot all their films in the area, where it is a lot cheaper to produce movies, both logistically for the duo and because the Canadian government provides a tax credit for doing work outside of Toronto.
"We have the four seasons here. We have water, we have mountains, we have woods, we have town settings so it is a good place to shoot," said Cook. "There is a lot of infrastructure up here and a lot of talent up here and it is our home."
Reposted by Greenjah
Original article HERE
Dave Foley and Art Hindle have fond memories of the Georgian Triangle. The pair of actors were in Collingwood last week, filming scenes for the movie Monster Brawl, a picture being produced by local film company Foresight Features. The concept for the movie is a wrestling tournament between eight different monsters, including a Vampire, a witch, a mummy, Frankenstein, a zombie, a werewolf, Swamp Gut, and Cyclops.
Producer Jesse Cook called the movie a "fast-paced comedy."
Foley is best known for his work in television on CBC' s "Kids in the Hall" and the NBC series News Radio. Hindle is a veteran actor who has starred in a host of movies and television shows including Invasion of the Body Snatchers, Beverly Hills 90210, JAG, Due South, Porky's and Matlock.Foley said he lived in Creemore for five years when he was a teenager. He said his family was always moving but the village felt like home.
"Creemore is the longest we lived in one place," he said.In the film, Foley is Buzz Chapman, the play by play announcer for the tournament. Cook describes Foley's character as a "drunken Foster Hewitt."
Foley said he is combining the work of Hewitt and legendary sportscaster Howard Cosell for the role."I am using Howard Cosell's emphasis," he said. "When he has no control, where he puts the emphasis in a sentence."
Foley said he enjoyed the filming and likes the mixing of film genres."I love that with technology, it's possible for movies to be made like this," he said. "You don't have to have a big studio budget. It used to be, if you didn't have the money to make a movie, you couldn't."
Hindle's ties to Creemore go through his children. He said when his career was taking off and he'd have to spend a lot of time in Los Angeles, he wanted them to live in a place where they would be comfortable.A friend sold him on Creemore.
"I bought a house in Creemore," he said. "My kids wanted to live out in the country."Hindle said he's enjoyed coming back to the area, where he has spent a lot of time. He said he visited with friends he hasn't seen in years.
Hindle plays Foley's broadcast partner, a former wrestler named Sasquatch Sid."He's an ex-wrestler, he's seen it all," Hindle said. "He's a very colourful character."
Hindle praised the script, and is hopeful the producers of the film have success."This is a big step for the area," he said. "There is going to be a lot more films being made in the area."
Cook was part of the group who filmed the horror movie Scarce in 2007, which is currently being shown on Super Channel in Canada and is distributed on DVD by Anchor Bay Entertainment - one of the top companies in the horror film industry. He and partner John Geddes also visited the 2008 Cannes Film Festival to sell the film internationally.Monster Brawl is the first two films Foresight Features will be making in 2010.
The movie also stars Robert Maillet - who has starred in 300 and Sherlock Holmes, and professional wrestlers Kevin Nash and Jimmy "The Mouth of the South" Hart.