Posts Tagged ‘horror film’
SLOIFF Radio Interview
Director/Producer Benjamin Dynice and Producer Austin O’Brien will be on the ‘Talk is Cheap’ radio show with Bill Benica today at 3:30pm in San Luis Obispo promoting the World Premiere of “Nowhere Road”. The show airs on 1340 AM.
The World Premiere screening will be held at 5pm at the Downtown Cinemas in San Luis Obispo, Ca. For more info, check out Screenings.
And check out the festival websites www.sloflimfest.org
San Luis Obispo International Film Festival Screening – Updated Location
Tickets are available now for the 2011 San Luis Obispo International Film Festival. Nowhere Road will be screening at 5pm at the Downtown Cinema. Seating is first come, first served. Get there early!
Tickets are available at the door $9 general and $7 for students starting at 4pm on Thursday. Pre-sale tickets are sold available online for multi-screening passes only. (6 screenings for 1 person) http://slofilmfest.org/2011/tickets.shtml
What: San Luis Obispo International Film Festival
Screening of “Nowhere Road”
Where: Downtown Cinema
888 Marsh St.
San Luis Obispo, CA 93401
When: Thursday, March 10th @ 5pm (get there early to get your tickets)
Afterwards, there will be a Q&A with Director, Benjamin Dynice and Producer, Austin O’Brien.
Nowhere Road to Screen at the Beverly Hills Shorts Fest
Nowhere Road will screen in the Beverly Hills Shorts Festival on March 12th at the Wilshire screening room. We will be in the Horror Thriller Program which starts at 9pm!
Tickets are on sale now at http://www.beverlyhillsshortsfestival.com/schedule.htm
When: Saturday, March 12th @ 9pm
What: Beverly Hills Shorts Festival
Screening of “Nowhere Road”
Where: Wilshire Screening Room
8670 Wilshire Blvd, Suite 112
Beverly Hills, CA 90211
Ryan Parrott – The Story of Nowhere Road
Unlike most genres, horror has that rare quality where being absolutely dreadful can sometimes be a blessing. It’s a genre that seems to openly bathe in its clichés, lovingly embrace its stock characters, and bask in its ridiculous debauchery and excess. It can be terrifying, hilarious or even prophetic at times and its ability to bleed and seep into almost every other genre is second to none.
With that in mind, Nowhere Road was an experiment in taking the traditional horror vocabulary and turning it against the audience. The characters, settings, and events depicted are all standard horror movie staples, but it was my hope that the final combination of blood and guts would end up being greater than the sum of its parts. Otherwise, it’s just another bad horror movie… which could be good.
And I love bad horror movies.