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eckva-net · 3 months
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Some reference images for the archival team
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blueiskewl · 2 years
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Winnie the Pooh: Blood and Honey
First look at the up-coming children's classic turned horror movie.
Is nothing sacred!?
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randomestfandoms-ocs · 4 months
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Happy Birthday Danielle Scott! (January 9th)
I like large parties. They're so intimate. At small parties there isn't any privacy.
Tag List: @airwolf92 – want to be added?
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computerpeople · 1 year
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a little ref for danielle
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rookie-critic · 1 year
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Winnie the Pooh: Blood and Honey (2023, dir. Rhys Frake-Waterfield) - review by Rookie-Critic
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On January 1, 2022, the classic Winnie-the-Pooh character lineup became public domain, meaning anyone and everyone could use the names and likenesses of these characters without any threat from Disney of legal action. Of course, less than half a year later, it was announced that an independent British director would be making a horror film based off the property, and thus Winnie the Pooh: Blood and Honey was born. I love stuff like this: I think it's hilarious, I think it's fun, and, if done right, it can be genuinely good to boot. I was excited going into the film, and was ready to see Pooh Bear and Piglet go on a Roger Corman-esque, Birdemic-y B-movie murder spree. That definitely happens, although the results were definitely mixed at best.
I'll start with the positives this time, and say the most impressive thing by far in this is the Winnie the Pooh head. From what little promotional material I'd seen prior to watching the movie, Pooh and Piglet's heads kind of just looked like rubber Halloween masks, which can provide a lot of hilarious campy fun, so I wasn't complaining, but that's not what they ended up being at all. Pooh's head reads as fully animatronic; the ears wiggle, the mouth moves, the area around the eyes moves, it helps bring so much personality to the this murderous version of the character. Piglet's is a little less impressive and doesn't have as much articulation as Pooh's does, so he definitely feels a little more mask-y, but like I said before, that provides its own level of campy charm. I'll also give the actors credit: I wouldn't call the acting in this movie good, by any means, but for something like this you're normally getting the bottom of the barrel scrapings and some truly horrible performances, but these weren't terrible. Nikolai Leon, who plays Christopher Robin, I especially took note of. Again, it wasn't "good" acting, but I was surprised by how not awful it was.
Sadly, I think the good stops there. I had a good handful of issues with Blood and Honey, and none of them have to do with the quality of the film's technical side. Yes the CG blood was bad, yes the camerawork was sloppy, blah blah blah, whatever. This is the Winnie the Pooh slasher flick, I'm not looking for Lawrence of Arabia. There are two big problems with this film. One is that, even taking into consideration an almost entirely female cast and the fact that this is a horror movie, the film seems maliciously cruel towards women. The second is that, for something with as hilarious of a concept as this and that seemingly had some decently creative ideas, the kills and the scares were kind of boring. As far as that first problem goes, this is something we've seen time and time and time again in horror, especially in slasher films. There are a lot of tired, sexist tropes that just don't seem to die, and Blood and Honey contributes to a lot of them. I actively rolled my eyes multiple times, including an incredibly uncomfortable scene in which a female character with no arc and no defining characteristics is brutally killed in a gruesome way that, to me, went on for way too long, with some incredibly unnecessary nudity thrown in for good measure. It's not as bad as THAT kill scene from the first Terrifier film, but it wasn't fun to watch, nonetheless. Our main character, who surprisingly isn't Christopher Robin (another issue I had), is given this empathetic and traumatic backstory that Frake-Waterfield had absolutely no interest in weaving into the larger narrative, which really begs the question as to why we even bothered with anyone other than Pooh, Piglet, and Christopher Robin to begin with. The central group of women really only exist as cannon fodder for our beloved children's story characters, and the setup as to why this had happened to the furry residents of the Hundred-Acre Wood was interesting enough to be able to carry a 90-ish minute film by itself. Instead, we get something that's largely a "paint-by-numbers" B-movie slasher film, which leads me into my second problem from earlier; the movie as a whole, and specifically the kills, feel really uninspired. There are moments where there seem to be sparks of creative instinct (Pooh has the absolutely wild ability to control the bees that inhabit the Hundred-Acre Wood, there's a scene in which Pooh whips Christopher Robin with the nail end of Eeyore's tail, stuff like that), but these ideas go largely unexplored. Instead, we're relegated to watching Piglet and Pooh chase after our protagonists with chains and sledgehammers for most of the film, and that's really too bad.
I don't mean to rant and make it seem like I'm taking the Winnie the Pooh horror film too seriously, because I definitely was not, but I feel like there are ways to make these really low-concept, dumb-but-fun, shtick-y horror films not suck, and it's not even that hard. Just be creative, have fun, and stay away from harmful and tired genre tropes, simple. While this film certainly had fun, and was running at maybe 20% creativity, it just couldn't accomplish what it set out to do.
Score: 4/10
Currently only in theaters.
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cinemedios · 1 year
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Así se vivió la premiere mundial de 'Winnie the Pooh: Miel y Sangre' en México
El director Rhys Frake-Waterfield, el elenco y equipo detrás de 'Winnie the Pooh: Miel y Sangre' estuvieron presentes en el evento.
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moviesandmania · 11 days
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SPIDERS ON A PLANE Arachnids attack passengers! Trailer
Spiders on a Plane is a 2024 horror film about a cluster of arachnids that attack passengers on an aeroplane. Directed and co-produced by Ben J. Williams from a screenplay by Ben Daly. Also produced by Tyler-James. Executive produced by ITN Distribution’s Stuart Alson and Nicole Holland. The Jagged Edge Productions movie stars Danielle Scott, Lila Lasso, Wayne Dobson, Jase Rivers, Phillip…
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movienized-com · 2 months
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Monsternado
Monsternado (2023) #TylerJames #MayKelly #DanielleScott #MichaelSSiegel #JaseRivers #LilaLasso Mehr auf:
Jahr: 2023 Genre: Action / Horror Regie: Tyler-James Hauptrollen: May Kelly, Danielle Scott, Michael S. Siegel, Jase Rivers, Lila Lasso, Simon Ellis, Amanda Jane York, Hannah Pauley, Kento Yoshioka, Ben J. Williams, Chloe Karr, Lora Hristova, Mirella Camillo … Filmbeschreibung: Im Bermuda-Dreieck hat sich ein Tornado gebildet, der von prähistorischen Monstern befallen ist und sich seinen Weg…
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therealmrpositive · 5 months
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Winnie The Pooh: Blood and Honey (2023)
In today's review I find a big surprise in the woods. As I attempt a #positive review of the 2023 slasher film Winnie The Pooh Blood and Honey #NikolaiLeon #FrederickDallaway #MariaTaylor #NatashaRoseMills #AmberDoigThorne #DanielleRonald #NatashaTosini
Isn’t the public domain wonderful? The ability to walk on the shoulders of giants and build ideas is what helped the undead that Romero made to evolve into a cultural behemoth or keep the ideas of long-gone authors cemented into the modern repertoire. In 2023, utilising the recently public domain stories of A. A. Milne, an independent filmmaker turned the loveable woodland residents of the…
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gbhbl · 8 months
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Horror Movie Review: Mary Had A Little Lamb (2023)
Mary does exist, but the real threat comes from the hulking beast of a man that she calls ‘Lamb.’
The success of 2022’s Winne the Pooh: Blood and Honey was always going to spark a ton of imitators and slowly, but surely, it’s beginning to happen. That film has seen a slew of creators wondering what innocent child-friendly thing can they take and transform into a horror movie. Fairytales, legends, and now, even nursery rhymes. Mary had a little lamb, Its fleece was white as snow. Everywhere…
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enchantedbook · 18 days
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'Boatman' by Scott Daniel Ellison
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eckva-net · 3 months
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some tragic lovers + their boss
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jmunneytumbler · 1 year
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Oh Bother, It's Time for 'Winnie-the-Pooh: Blood and Honey'!
Oh Bother, It's Time for 'Winnie-the-Pooh: Blood and Honey'!
NOT PICTURED: Winnie the Pooh (CREDIT: Altitude Films/Screenshot) Starring: Nikolai Leon, Maria Taylor, Craig David Dowsett, Chris Cordell, Natasha Rose Mills, Amber Doig-Thorne, Danielle Ronald, Natasha Tosini, Paula Coiz, May Kelly, Danielle Scott Director: Rhys Frake-Waterfield Running Time: 84 Minutes Rating: Unrated Release Date: February 15, 2023 (Theaters) I think Christopher Robin took a…
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deviika · 1 year
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F. Scott Fitzgerald // Daniel Kahneman
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computerpeople · 1 year
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spare andrew and/or danielle headcanons ?? 🤲
danielle
She tends to mother Shelby due to their young age and her experience as a mother, and Shelbys lack of parents.
Her and Andrew used to be pretty close, he's close with her kids and often babysits them.
She's very active for a TV archivist and prefers to spend her time outside.
A lot of her rot infection came off as mental illness, especially after Andrew died. The assumption was she had some sort of degenerative disorder.
She's one of those moms with a fancy SUV and expensive doggy dinners you'd see on tiktok
She does genuinely really like Shelby. Buys them lunch and tells them she's proud of them... I think a lot about her immediate tone telling Shelby shes "not mad at them" after asking them to come to her office
She's really into old tv dramas. That woman consumes more TV then you could ever imagine.
She struggles a lot with work, due to unmedicated ADHD and tends to be pretty scattered and 'off task' but when focused she kicks ass.
Andrew
He's somewhere inbetween Shelby and Danielles age, older than Shelby, probably in his later twenties.
He can be rather intense, he's very stubborn and set in his ways and very very confident in himself, or at least comes off that way. Whether it be confidence or a projection of confidence.
He's as stubborn as a mule when it comes to something he's certain about, but otherwise, he's actually really chill.
Autistic as shit this guy cannot let things go.
He gives me the energy of like "tortured genius" so he's probably a computer literature academic, probably really really good with math.
He has a cat, it's big and fat and kind of like, darkish orange? He tends to over feed it and spoil it.
He sometimes brings food in for Shelby, he realized they usually don't have a lot of money to treat themself so he does it pretty frequently.
He and Shelby were friends before the archival project, which is where he got Shelbys resume from.
He desperately needs glasses but does he wear them?.... whos to say.
He's wracked by nightmares and migraines. When they're flairing up and he's sleep deprived, or in pain, he can be really snappy. Super aggressive.
He's gay
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jaeausten · 3 months
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The Franciscans have an astonishing library. Since you are so fond of reading, I though you might join me?
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