Nintendo Switch is about to get their first Mature-rated game! It comes in the form of the 1st Season of Batman: The Telltale Series!
While gamers are knee-deep in Batman: The Telltale Series Season 2 The Enemy Within on console, PC, and mobile, Nintendo is about to join the party with the first season of Batman: The Telltale Series on Nintendo Switch. On November 14, 2017, in North America, (November 17 for Europe and Asia) Nintendo Switch owners can experience one of the best series Telltale Games has produced. That's not hyperbole, either. Telltale Games released a trailer, announcing the release on Switch, featuring all the praise it earned when it came out.
"This will be Telltale's first Mature-rated title on the system, so we're really excited not only to have our game on Switch but also to approach a new audience with a game we're really proud of," said Executive Producer Sean O'Connor.
While gamers are knee-deep in Batman: The Telltale Series Season 2 The Enemy Within on console, PC, and mobile, Nintendo is about to join the party with the first season of Batman: The Telltale Series on Nintendo Switch. On November 14, 2017, in North America, (November 17 for Europe and Asia) Nintendo Switch owners can experience one of the best series Telltale Games has produced. That's not hyperbole, either. Telltale Games released a trailer, announcing the release on Switch, featuring all the praise it earned when it came out.
"This will be Telltale's first Mature-rated title on the system, so we're really excited not only to have our game on Switch but also to approach a new audience with a game we're really proud of," said Executive Producer Sean O'Connor.
- 11/9/2017
- by feeds@cinelinx.com (Matt Malliaros)
- Cinelinx
The Hacktivision guys (Doc Terror, artist Frank Browning, and musician Sean O'Connor) are at it again. The team that brought you Friday the 13th Lives, Zombie, and Demons is back, this time with trio of faux 8 bit games you are going to wish were real.
The 3 games come from the Italian Godfather of Gore, Luci Fulci; City Of The Living Dead, The Beyond, and House By The Cemetery. Here is the trailer:
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The idea for this trilogy (if it were real) would be you could purchase each game individual and enjoy it as such, but if you wanted the full experience, all three would be available in a limited edition package. Why would you want all three? Because the games are stackable, allowing for variations on game play that incorporate all three games.
Also, there would be a slew of cameos
Head on over to Doc Terror's blog for more on these games,...
The 3 games come from the Italian Godfather of Gore, Luci Fulci; City Of The Living Dead, The Beyond, and House By The Cemetery. Here is the trailer:
>
The idea for this trilogy (if it were real) would be you could purchase each game individual and enjoy it as such, but if you wanted the full experience, all three would be available in a limited edition package. Why would you want all three? Because the games are stackable, allowing for variations on game play that incorporate all three games.
Also, there would be a slew of cameos
Head on over to Doc Terror's blog for more on these games,...
- 7/15/2014
- by Chris Connors
- FEARnet
Doctor Terror's Blog of Horrors and the “Hacktivision” crew – the team who brought you some incredible dream mockups of retro horror games for the Nes console we'd all love to play for real – have outdone themselves today with the ultimate 8-bit tribute to the Friday the 13th franchise. Doc Terror, artist Frank Browning, and musician Sean O'Connor have joined forces again for this ambitious multimedia project entitled Friday the 13th Lives! The Ultimate Chapter. This dream game obviously blows the real-life Nes version right off the map by paying digital tribute to each and every iteration of the Friday the 13th brand... even the TV series is represented! The mockup includes a massive rule booklet – the most elaborate the team has designed so far – loaded with artwork, maps, characters and references to every aspect of the franchise, from the campers portrayed in the films to the many incarnations of Jason Voorhees.
- 9/14/2013
- by Gregory Burkart
- FEARnet
Bradley Rubenstein: Let's get the background stuff out of the way -- the rest will be more interesting. You are from Ohio. Was starting out there influential in any way other than making you want to leave?
Sean O'Connor: I started out experimenting in my hometown just out of high school and was heavily influenced by the music scene at the time. There was a little art scene booming in Cleveland at the time, and there still is, but I was really into artists like Derek Hess and other illustrators like that.
I almost flunked out of high school completely because I just didn't want to do any of the work. I was smart enough and able; I just didn't give a shit. I would skip class, go to the art room, dig through all my teachers' supplies, and just work on my own projects. My parents were...
Sean O'Connor: I started out experimenting in my hometown just out of high school and was heavily influenced by the music scene at the time. There was a little art scene booming in Cleveland at the time, and there still is, but I was really into artists like Derek Hess and other illustrators like that.
I almost flunked out of high school completely because I just didn't want to do any of the work. I was smart enough and able; I just didn't give a shit. I would skip class, go to the art room, dig through all my teachers' supplies, and just work on my own projects. My parents were...
- 8/19/2013
- by bradleyrubenstein
- www.culturecatch.com
Earlier this week we paid a visit to Dr. Terror's Blog of Horrors for a segment entitled “8 Bits From Hell,” in which Dr. Terror worked with artist and graphic designer Frank Browning (already a FEARnet fave for his work on all those horror ice cream flavors) and electronic musician Sean O'Connor to design vintage-style packaging, screenshots, instructions and 8-bit musical themes for imaginary early '90s-era Nes games that horror fans would have totally killed to possess. At that time we showcased a sweet game mockup based on Lucio Fulci's 1979 classic Zombie, but as we mentioned, that was only one of many splatter flicks to get the 8-bit treatment. Their second round of wish-fulfillment includes an homage to Lamberto Bava's Demons, and the distinctly '80s look of that film lends itself perfectly to the retro game vibe – all the way down to O'Connor's recreation of the main...
- 7/18/2013
- by Gregory Burkart
- FEARnet
While it breaks our retro hearts to know that there aren't legit Nes game versions of cult classics like Zombie, Suspiria or Demons, the folks at Dr. Terror's Blog of Horrors offer you the next best thing in the form of mock-up trailers, screenshots, box art and game play instructions based on those beloved Italian horror films. Taking a cue from actual Nes horror games like Friday the 13th, Jaws and A Nightmare on Elm Street, Dr. Terror and his collaborators, including artist Frank Browning (whose work we showcased most recently in our series of horror ice cream flavors for the blog Freddy in Space) and electronic musician Sean O'Connor, are posting a special week of their “8 Bits From Hell” series, showcasing Italian horror films with a gallery of 8-bit mock-ups for games we'd all kill to own. They've posted promo artwork, screenshots, theme music and even instructions for the...
- 7/16/2013
- by Gregory Burkart
- FEARnet
"With The Deep Blue Sea," writes Nick Pinkerton in the Voice, "the great British director Terence Davies returns to the postwar period — though in a sense, he has never left. Born in 1945, Davies's cinema is defined by a mixed pity and fondness for the world of yesterday, a past he seemingly finds impossible to put behind him or to do without. The era's hypocritical propriety and quivering repression has most frequently been held up for 'enlightened,' Pleasantville-style condescension, but Davies is a great historical filmmaker because he feels the period too intimately to mock its rituals and mores, knows that no progress occurs without loss."
A retrospective of Davies's work is running at New York's BAMcinématek through March 27, while Sing, Memory: The Postwar England of Terence Davies opens today at the Harvard Film Archive and runs through March 26. On March 28, The Long Day Closes (1992) opens for a week-long run at New York's Film Forum.
A retrospective of Davies's work is running at New York's BAMcinématek through March 27, while Sing, Memory: The Postwar England of Terence Davies opens today at the Harvard Film Archive and runs through March 26. On March 28, The Long Day Closes (1992) opens for a week-long run at New York's Film Forum.
- 3/19/2012
- MUBI
Director Terence Davies had no idea of Rachel Weisz's star power when he decided to cast the actress in new film The Deep Blue Sea .
Davies spotted the Brit as he watched her 1997 film Swept from the Sea, and was so impressed by her talent he called his manager to arrange a meeting with her, but was baffled to learn Weisz was already famous.
Producer Sean O'Connor tells Britain's Telegraph magazine, "Terence phoned his manager and said, 'I've just seen the most fantastic girl called Rachel Weisz, have you heard of her?' And his manager said, 'She's an Academy Award-winning actress...' But Terence doesn't know anything about that. He's really not interested."
Weisz jokes, "I'm not sure he knows who anyone is in colour movies."...
Davies spotted the Brit as he watched her 1997 film Swept from the Sea, and was so impressed by her talent he called his manager to arrange a meeting with her, but was baffled to learn Weisz was already famous.
Producer Sean O'Connor tells Britain's Telegraph magazine, "Terence phoned his manager and said, 'I've just seen the most fantastic girl called Rachel Weisz, have you heard of her?' And his manager said, 'She's an Academy Award-winning actress...' But Terence doesn't know anything about that. He's really not interested."
Weisz jokes, "I'm not sure he knows who anyone is in colour movies."...
- 11/21/2011
- WENN
Terence Davies' The Deep Blue Sea with Rachel Weisz, Tom Hiddleston hears Music. Adapted from the Terence Rattigan of 1952, The Deep Blue Sea tells of a wife of a British Judge (Rachel Weisz) who is caught in a self-destructive love affair with a Royal Air Force pilot (Tom Hiddleston). Sean O'Connor and Kate Ogborn produce the film which also stars Simon Russell Beale, Ann Mitchell, Harry Hadden-Paton, Sarah Kants, Jolyon Coy and Elisha Stimson. Variety reports that this is Music Box's first pickup of a film which is in English, after distributing the hugely popular adaptations of Stieg Larsson's novels in the films The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo, The Girl Who Played with...
- 9/19/2011
- Upcoming-Movies.com
Terence Davies' The Deep Blue Sea with Rachel Weisz, Tom Hiddleston hears Music. Adapted from the Terence Rattigan of 1952, The Deep Blue Sea tells of a wife of a British Judge (Rachel Weisz) who is caught in a self-destructive love affair with a Royal Air Force pilot (Tom Hiddleston). Sean O'Connor and Kate Ogborn produce the film which also stars Simon Russell Beale, Ann Mitchell, Harry Hadden-Paton, Sarah Kants, Jolyon Coy and Elisha Stimson. Variety reports that this is Music Box's first pickup of a film which is in English, after distributing the hugely popular adaptations of Stieg Larsson's novels in the films The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo, The Girl Who Played with...
- 9/19/2011
- Upcoming-Movies.com
The BFI London Film Festival, in its 55th year, will close its fifteen-day festival (October 12-27) with the UK premiere of Terence Davies' The Deep Blue Sea. Rachel Weisz, Tom Hiddleston and Simon Russell Beale star in the intense 50s drama, which will premiere in September in Toronto. Based on Terence Rattigan's play (here's a 1998 NYMag review), Weisz plays Hester Collyer, the wife of a high court judge (Beale), who leaves him for her lover (Hiddleston), an ex-raf pilot... The film's producers, Sean O'Connor and Kate Ogborn, are "deeply honored," adding that "it's very much a London-based film, so it feels just right for the film's first UK outing to be at this wonderful festival. It’s a particular pleasure for us to introduce a ...
- 8/30/2011
- Thompson on Hollywood
Tonight, Jason Momoa is on "Conan." I don't actually have any comments about that, I just figured I'd lead off with it because apparently Mr.Momoa is how you generate page views round these parts lately. Also the season finale of "Masterchef" which a lot of you apparently feel very strongly about and a few of those shows that revolve around auctions or pawn shops. I find it interesting that the American 'get rich quick' scheme seems to change every few years. Forever ago it was internet start ups, then more recently flipping houses, now it seems to be finding valuables in discarded or otherwise seemingly worthless junk. I'm sure that if I were a sociologist I'd find something significant there but I'm not. Y'all are free to discuss at will though. Here's your Tuesday night TV:
8:00pm: "Cupcake Wars" on Food Network
"It's Worth What?" on NBC.
"Masterchef" on Fox.
8:00pm: "Cupcake Wars" on Food Network
"It's Worth What?" on NBC.
"Masterchef" on Fox.
- 8/16/2011
- by Intern Rusty
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