Sunday, 28 June 2020

Stay Frosty For The Full Aliens Boardgame Experience


It's time to lock and load, Gale Force Nine announced this weekend that the the complete "Aliens boardgame experience" will all be released this year, starting with the core game in October.

Two expansions (Aliens: Ultimate Badasses and Aliens: Get Away From Her, You B***h!) will follow later in the year, adding to the experience with new characters, missions, and game mechanics.

Here's a tease, from GF9, of what these all include:
Aliens: Another Glorious Day In The Corps
• Play iconic characters
• Recreate awesome scenes from the movie
• Quick and easy rules
• Dynamic co-op gameplay
• And all the Aliens you can kill!

Aliens: Ultimate Badasses
• Increase your Fireteam with six new Characters
• Gain Experience cards to give your Characters new abilities.

Aliens: Get Away From Her, You B***h!
• Play as the Alien Hive
• New campaign missions and locations from the movie
• Recreate the epic duel between Ripley and the Alien Queen

Thursday, 18 June 2020

Osprey Games' Official Announcement For Release Of Those Dark Places


Osprey Games released the following press release today:
Osprey Games is delighted to announce that in November 2020 we will be publishing Those Dark Places: Industrial Science Fiction Roleplaying by Jonathan Hicks, with illustrations by Nathan Anderson.

Inspired by the aesthetic of iconic science-fiction thrillers such as Ridley Scott’s Alien and the Dead Space video games, this highly thematic RPG thrusts players into deep space; a grim, dark, claustrophobic setting that constantly hints at danger.

A sleek ruleset keeps players focused on the story as they venture into shadowy corners of space that no-one has ever explored and face the unknown.

“I've written various articles, reviews, and interviews for the RPG industry for more than a decade, so of course I jumped at the chance to write a full game about my favourite genre,” commented author Jonathan Hicks, “I've always leaned towards rules-light systems so that the story takes precedence and the atmosphere is allowed to flourish. With Those Dark Places I hope gaming groups can take the simple rules and the evocative setting, run with it, and create their own stories of horrors in the stars... whether real or imagined. With Nathan Anderson's wonderful artwork and Osprey Games' excellent production values, I'm excited to see this come alive!”

Senior Games Developer, Filip Falk Hartelius, added that “Those Dark Places is a game dripping with atmosphere, capturing the frailty of human existence amidst the uncaring vastness of spaces. Whether you are deep in the political intrigues of a dystopian future or facing terrifying cosmic horror, Those Dark Places is constantly gripping, tense, and transporting.”

Those Dark Places is a rules-light, story-focused roleplaying game about the darker side of space exploration and the people who travel the stars in claustrophobic, dangerous conditions. Starships, stations, and outposts aren't havens of safety with clean, brightly lit corridors – they're potential deathtraps, funded by budget-conscious corporate interests and running on stale, recycled air and water. The stars may be the future of humanity, but they are also home to horrors and terror the human mind cannot comprehend.

Friday, 12 June 2020

Event Horizon To Get 'Definitive' Blu-Ray Re-Release In The States


I have a great deal of fondness for Paul W.S. Anderson‘s 1997 Event Horizon and so am delighted to report that it's getting (in the States, at least) a 'definitive' Collector’s Edition Blu-ray release this Autumn.
In the year 2047 a group of astronauts are sent to investigate and salvage the long lost starship "Event Horizon". The ship disappeared mysteriously 7 years before on its maiden voyage and with its return comes even more mystery as the crew of the "Lewis and Clark" discover the real truth behind its disappearance and something even more terrifying.
Currently scheduled for a September 27 street date, from Scream Factory, the new Event Horizon blu-ray can be pre-ordered here .

The first 500 orders will include an exclusive limited-edition 18” x 24” rolled poster of the exclusive new cover illustration by Joel Robinson.

The disc will come with a double-sided sleeve, with the reverse featuring Event Horizon's original theatrical artwork.

On the Scream Factory Facebook page, the company also says:
"New extras are in progress and will be announced on a later date.

We can confirm today that we are doing a new 4K scan of the film!

As for any much-inquired-about additional footage (in addition to what's be presented on prior releases), we are looking into it as best we can.

We welcome any leads you may have alongside our efforts.
"
It is believed they are referring to a legendary 130-minute rough cut of the movie that was shown to test audiences and deemed to have "excessive gore".

As well as more gruesome death scenes, this cut expanded on the character backstories and the nature of the Hell dimension.

Sadly, Anderson has long maintained that much of this footage is long lost.

Tuesday, 9 June 2020

DC Showcase: Adam Strange


The recently released Blu-Ray of Justice League Dark: Apokolips War includes an animated extra feature that could be of interest to Aliens fans.

The animated short film DC Showcase: Adam Strange revolves around an incident at a mining colony with more than a passing resemblance to a Weyland-Yutani "shake and bake" enterprise, from the construction of the buildings, and the outfits worn, to the vehicles employed on site.

The plot, too, is very much an Aliens homage, with miners accidentally opening up a previously-unknown nest of insectoid xenomorphs and releasing them on them on the colony.

However, unbeknown to the colonists, instead of Ellen Ripley they have the sometime superhero Adam Strange (voiced by Charlie Weber) in their midst.

Having been whisked away from his adopted homeworld of Rann by the fickle Zeta-Beam, Strange has been stranded on this distant colony.

The loss of his family - and realisation that he may never see them again - has pushed him over the edge and Strange has become the town drunk.

The colonists have no idea who this derelict really is, until he is stirred from his drunken depression by the existential threat of the awakened monsters.

While the flashbacks explaining how Adam got where he is at the start of the story are very "comic book superhero", the majority of the DC Showcase short is pure Aliens.

And who doesn't love a "mysterious drifter saves the day" story?

Tuesday, 2 June 2020

Underwater (2020)


What a year 2020 is shaping up to be for movies inspired by the works of the father of modern horror, HP Lovecraft.

First we had Richard Stanley's incredible Color Out Of Space, directly based on one of Lovecraft's stories, and now we have the undersea action-horror Underworld, which - although not based on any particular story - certainly has a very strong connection to his broad oeuvre of cosmic nightmares.

An unexpected earthquake disrupts the integrity of the world's deepest mining operation, almost seven miles below the Pacific Ocean, in the Mariana Trench, causing the structure to start collapsing.

The few surviving crew members - including Captain Lucien (Westworld's Vincent Cassel), engineer Norah (Kristen Stewart), Emily Haversham (Iron Fist's Jessica Henwick), Laim Smith (The Newsroom's John Gallagher Jr), and Paul Abel (Deadpool's T.J. Miller) - have to find a way to safety.

With the escape pods lost, the survivors realise the only way out is to go down to the sea bed and walk to the drill head, where there are additional escape pods.

Only, they soon discover that there is "something else" in the water, something from deep below the ocean floor, that has been disturbed by their drilling.

Released this week via the Sky Store, Underwater is a phenomenal action horror flick, with an all-star cast and a genuinely terrifying scenario.

Directed by William Eubank, who brought us 2014's brilliant The Signal, from a script by Adam Cozad and Brian Duffield, there's an old fashioned quality about the movie, in that it doesn't hang around before getting to the inciting incident.

In fact, it came so fast and without warning that at first I thought Norah was dreaming, but then I suddenly realised this was real, shit was going down.

I know Kristen Stewart can be a controversial figure in some quarters, but she is magnificent in Underwater, selling her role completely and making us really care about her fate.

If you only know her from the flaccid Twilight flicks, put your prejudices aside and enjoy her cracking lead performance here.

There's no avoiding the fact that Underwater presents its horror DNA loud and proud, with obvious nods to the Alien franchise (the control room some of the characters are first encountered in looks very Nostromo-esque), The Abyss (of course), and Pacific Rim, but also films like The Descent and even 1970s disaster movies.

However, what elevates it above all - and makes it my current contender for the "film of the year" - is the monstrous Lovecraftian aspects sown into the final third of the movie.

Nothing is stated outright - it would make no internal sense to do so - but if you're a fan of HP Lovecraft's Cthulhu Mythos you'll know what's going on.

There are few better set-ups to a Lovecraftian tale than man poking his nose where it doesn't belong.

And even if you're not a Cthulhu aficionado, it's still one hell of a monster movie.

I can imagine Underwater will be a somewhat acquired taste, though, as the intense horror is heightened by the fact that for extended periods of time we - the audience - can't tell what exactly is happening, echoing the state of confusion and disorientation of the characters.

We just have to surrender ourselves, and accept that William Eubank knows what he's doing and will get us where he needs us to be to grasp the full-extent of the story.

The director is superb at maintaining the internal reality, the verisimilitude, of the dreadful situation the underwater scientists find themselves in.

And this obfuscation and vaguery only accentuates the Lovecraftian influences on this tale, with the protagonists stumbling upon indescribable entities whose motivations are wholly alien to them.

In my books, Underwater definitely demands repeat viewings and should be regarded as an instant monster movie classic