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As announced earlier this month, The Arrow in the Head Show – which used to be released through the JoBlo Horror Originals YouTube channel – has migrated over to its own YouTube channel. Today, a new episode of the show was released, and in those one hosts John “The Arrow” Fallon and Lance Vlcek are looking back at the ten dismissed 1988 sequel Fright Night: Part 2, which crashed and burned at the box office with a measly 2.9 million box office haul.
Directed by Tommy Lee Wallace, who takes over from the first film’s Tom Holland, Fright Night: Part 2 features young Charley Brewer, fresh out of psychiatric hospital, and the vampire hunting former TV show host Peter Vincent facing more thirsty vampires.
The film stars William Ragsdale and Roddy McDowell, reprising the roles they made famous in the first film, alongside Traci Lind,...
As announced earlier this month, The Arrow in the Head Show – which used to be released through the JoBlo Horror Originals YouTube channel – has migrated over to its own YouTube channel. Today, a new episode of the show was released, and in those one hosts John “The Arrow” Fallon and Lance Vlcek are looking back at the ten dismissed 1988 sequel Fright Night: Part 2, which crashed and burned at the box office with a measly 2.9 million box office haul.
Directed by Tommy Lee Wallace, who takes over from the first film’s Tom Holland, Fright Night: Part 2 features young Charley Brewer, fresh out of psychiatric hospital, and the vampire hunting former TV show host Peter Vincent facing more thirsty vampires.
The film stars William Ragsdale and Roddy McDowell, reprising the roles they made famous in the first film, alongside Traci Lind,...
- 10/8/2022
- by Chris Bumbray
- JoBlo.com
The production pace of network TV is not for the faint of heart. With merely a week — sometimes even less — to produce an hourlong episode of television, there’s even more pressure to make sure the usual flurry of moving parts comes together in a safe and coherent way.
Now, imagine being the people in charge of a sequence where trained performers dangle out of the back of a moving helicopter — that has to be done quickly, safely, and convincingly, too. For stunt coordinators like Peewee Piemonte and Julie Michaels of the CBS show “Seal Team,” that’s the part of the job they live for. The penultimate episode of the show’s second season featured a Special Patrol Insertion/Extraction (Spie) maneuver, with a half-dozen team members connected to a rope rig, hanging over the valley below.
“It was something we talked about from back in the pilot. We thought,...
Now, imagine being the people in charge of a sequence where trained performers dangle out of the back of a moving helicopter — that has to be done quickly, safely, and convincingly, too. For stunt coordinators like Peewee Piemonte and Julie Michaels of the CBS show “Seal Team,” that’s the part of the job they live for. The penultimate episode of the show’s second season featured a Special Patrol Insertion/Extraction (Spie) maneuver, with a half-dozen team members connected to a rope rig, hanging over the valley below.
“It was something we talked about from back in the pilot. We thought,...
- 8/20/2019
- by Steve Greene
- Indiewire
The Emmy nominees in the drama/limited series/TV movie stunt coordination category had challenges ranging from creating epic battles and burning a city (HBO’s “Game of Thrones”) to flying stunt performers more than 700 feet off the ground (CBS’ “Seal Team”). Every stunt comes with risks requiring precision, experience and a lot of trust — and not only between the stunt performers and coordinators. The entire production team puts its faith in stunt coordinators who must work safely, efficiently, and in a budget-conscientious manner — all while turning in work that inspires heart-stopping emotion. What is most important to these coordinators is safety; they take great pride in what they can pull off for the camera in scenarios allowing the action to jump off the page — and plenty of helicopters.
“The Blacklist”
(NBC)
As a stunt coordinator, Cort L. Hessler III feels he is best known for “real car crashes, real fights,...
“The Blacklist”
(NBC)
As a stunt coordinator, Cort L. Hessler III feels he is best known for “real car crashes, real fights,...
- 8/8/2019
- by Jarrett Hill
- Variety Film + TV
Television stuntwork has come a long way in the past decade and half, both in the quality and quantity of the action sequences seen on the small screen and the appreciation they get from the Television Academy. The first Emmy for stunt coordination was handed out in 2002; in 2013 it was split into two awards categories: one for drama, limited series or movies, and another for comedy or variety program.
While small-screen stunts are now arguably of movie quality, TV shows aren’t as action-packed as their big-screen counterparts. Typically, an hour-long episode has one or two big stunt set pieces and a fight sequence or two. But those episodes are shot on eight to 10-day schedules.
Season two of Netflix’s “Jessica Jones” had the title character, played by Krysten Ritter, doing everything from running out of an exploding building one step ahead of a fireball, with her best friend on her shoulders,...
While small-screen stunts are now arguably of movie quality, TV shows aren’t as action-packed as their big-screen counterparts. Typically, an hour-long episode has one or two big stunt set pieces and a fight sequence or two. But those episodes are shot on eight to 10-day schedules.
Season two of Netflix’s “Jessica Jones” had the title character, played by Krysten Ritter, doing everything from running out of an exploding building one step ahead of a fireball, with her best friend on her shoulders,...
- 6/1/2018
- by Todd Longwell
- Variety Film + TV
The Phoenix Film Festival has picked Judas Kiss to screen in its opening weekend, in a primetime slot on Friday, April 1.
The event, which begins with an exclusive party the night before, is a partnership between the 11-year-old mainstream festival, Phoenix Pride and the Desperado Gay and Lesbian Film Festival.
We’re thrilled that Judas Kiss’ screening is the result of a collaboration by these community organizations, and that our film gets such a great platform to attract a broad audience.
According to the Phoenix Film Festival website, Judas Kiss will screen at 7:25 pm on Friday, April 1, at the Harkins Scottsdale/101 Theatre 7.
Check out the listing and add it to your calendar if you’re attending the festival. Doing those things increases our “buzz” score on the festival website, which could bring more people to the screening. Right now, we’re No. 3 — help make us No. 1!
We’re planning...
The event, which begins with an exclusive party the night before, is a partnership between the 11-year-old mainstream festival, Phoenix Pride and the Desperado Gay and Lesbian Film Festival.
We’re thrilled that Judas Kiss’ screening is the result of a collaboration by these community organizations, and that our film gets such a great platform to attract a broad audience.
According to the Phoenix Film Festival website, Judas Kiss will screen at 7:25 pm on Friday, April 1, at the Harkins Scottsdale/101 Theatre 7.
Check out the listing and add it to your calendar if you’re attending the festival. Doing those things increases our “buzz” score on the festival website, which could bring more people to the screening. Right now, we’re No. 3 — help make us No. 1!
We’re planning...
- 2/27/2011
- by carlos
- doorQ.com
If you were the kind of little girl who loved jumping out of trees, having play sword fights, and wearing costumes, then envy Jessica Harbeck, a professional stuntwoman. Not only does she get paid to be (fake) punched in the face and kicked around, she has a blast doing it. AfterEllen.com talked to Jessica about her work, being a woman in one of Hollywood's oldest boys' clubs, and her Best. Day. Ever. Hint: It involves lingerie and a football.
Jessica Harbeck: Stuntwoman
AfterEllen.com: The first thing a lot of people will probably wonder is how do you become a stuntwoman? It's not like you can major in it in college.
Jessica Harbeck: Getting into stunts is different for each person in the business. I got really lucky. I moved out here with the intention of getting into stunts, after finishing school in Boulder, Colorado.
Ae: What...
Jessica Harbeck: Stuntwoman
AfterEllen.com: The first thing a lot of people will probably wonder is how do you become a stuntwoman? It's not like you can major in it in college.
Jessica Harbeck: Getting into stunts is different for each person in the business. I got really lucky. I moved out here with the intention of getting into stunts, after finishing school in Boulder, Colorado.
Ae: What...
- 12/29/2010
- by Dara Nai
- AfterEllen.com
In the race to build the first affordable electric car, one company is taking an unusual approach: they're not treating it as a race at all. "We don't want to be the first, or the biggest. We just want to be the best," says Mike McQuary, CEO of Wheego electric vehicles .
The Atlanta-based startup will begin selling its first electric vehicle, a small, functional buggy called the Whip, this August in a handful of dealerships around the country. It'll cost around $19,000, minus a newly-revised $7,500 tax credit just announced by the IRS. Despite its price, the Whip is up against a bevy of capable competitors: fellow startups like Tesla, Coda and Zap, to say nothing of the big boys Nissan, Gm, Toyota and Honda.
McQuary has been here before; as the founder of MindSpring, the early Internet service provider, he faced -- and withstood -- crushing opposition from ISPs like At&T,...
The Atlanta-based startup will begin selling its first electric vehicle, a small, functional buggy called the Whip, this August in a handful of dealerships around the country. It'll cost around $19,000, minus a newly-revised $7,500 tax credit just announced by the IRS. Despite its price, the Whip is up against a bevy of capable competitors: fellow startups like Tesla, Coda and Zap, to say nothing of the big boys Nissan, Gm, Toyota and Honda.
McQuary has been here before; as the founder of MindSpring, the early Internet service provider, he faced -- and withstood -- crushing opposition from ISPs like At&T,...
- 7/6/2009
- by Chris Dannen
- Fast Company
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