Home Artists Posts Import Register

Content

Avia Richards wages a one-woman war against the evil demons hidden amongst us. We head into the 2000s for this Patreon request as review Avia Vampire Hunter. (2005) 

Buy Avia Vampire Hunter (UK) https://amzn.to/3iQrMO5 (USA) https://amzn.to/3BFhY1S 

Buy Robin's books (UK) https://amzn.to/2F7Blbf (USA) https://amzn.to/3kmGMD3

Facebook: http://on.fb.me/RvhRdc  

Twitter: https://twitter.com/DarkCorners3 @DarkCorners3  

 Summary: Avia Richards wages a one-woman war against the evil demons hidden amongst us waiting to kill the next person they see. Armed only with a Samurai sword she boldly hunts them down putting her life on the line in a do or die battle, but it may be her own personal demons that may do her in.

Files

avia

Comments

Anonymous

Of the many, MANY low-budget films I have watched over the past year, 2019's "Sator," an incredible, almost single-handed effort of writer/director/cinematographer/composer/set designer/editor Jordan Graham is one where budget, and massive changes in story, are almost completely transparent in the final film. It doesn't look cheap, even though it was made for nigh on nothing, and the story of its making is as fascinating as the tale that the film itself spins.

Stephen Crane

I'm not sure if Targets by Peter Bogdanovich counts. Maybe, if pushed I'll suggest Clerks.

Anonymous

Great review, this looks like a 15 year old YouTube serial stitched together. As for low budget that got it right, and I know I've mentioned it before, but 'The Hummer' AKA 'Trip with the Teacher'. Actually this could have fit into the first director thing. It was made on a shoe string by dancer and choreographer Earl Barton, who had spent his downtime on movie sets learning everything he could. So he produced, filmed, edited, directed and wrote it. Plus would drive the cast to the location in the school bus used in the film. The cast all did their own costumes and makeup and the whole thing was done in 13 days. It isn't a masterpiece but it is a good serial killer slasher that clearly made a good profit and has a cult following, however the distributor Crown International used creative accounting so Barton never made any money and he never made another film, returning to the dance world.

Anonymous

The obvious zero budget masterpiece for me is 'El Mariachi' but there's another that's always stayed with me from the early days of home video rental called 'The Tomorrow Man' from 1978. Having just looked it up, it was apparently a pilot for an unmade TV series which doesn't sound very hopeful, but I really liked it at the time. The director went on to make 'The Gate' from 1987 which was decent low-budget fun. I'd like to see 'The Tomorrow Man' again but I'm guessing I would most likely be more than a little disappointed!

Anonymous

Terrible movie, bad acting....no matter how low the budget they didn't get their money's worth.

Anonymous

What about Phantasm? Mad Max 1? Repo Man? Jubilee?

Anonymous

This film is an object lesson about the difference between a good idea and a good story. Just about every terrible, horrible, no good, very bad film I've seen had at least one tiny nugget of a good or original concept rolling around in the dross, but all it does is highlight how hamfistedly ghastly the execution can get.

Anonymous

The first feature I worked on cost £4000 and it got released internationally. Just shows that any clueless monkey can make a movie by accident these days.

Anonymous

Another vote for El Mariachi. Rodriguez's calling card to the big time.