Above Pic: Marissa Merrill, (C) Aaron Paul Rogers 2012. Exclusive, for Dan's Movie Report. All photos on this page can be made to wallpaper size, in the windows operating system. Left click to enlarge image, right click on enlarged pic, then select view image and bam, full sized Marissa, on your desktop!
Greetings to my readers worldwide! I have had so many requests for Dead Season actress Marissa Merrill wallpaper photos over the past few months. I now present to my esteemed readers, a feast for the eyes on this page. I am planning over the next few weeks and throughout 2013 to partner with several cool photographers to present the finest photos of Marissa available. The first photographer on the site is Aaron Paul Rogers, not only does he have an eye for beauty, his distinct locations, talented make-up artists, and unique ideas for conceptual designs, make for dynamic photographic shoots. In 2012, he worked with Marissa in Mohave, with Make-up artist Linda Ly, with a variety of poses and ideas. Also assisting Aaron on the shoot were Jonathan Nellis, and Jesse Leon. Aaron can be found through his official site @ http://www.foedo.com/
Marissa has of course official Facebook and twitter pages @ https://www.facebook.com/theMarissaMerrill
https://twitter.com/MarissaMerrill
Above Pics: Marissa Merrill, (C) Aaron Paul Rogers 2012. Exclusive, for Dan's Movie Report.
Saturday, January 5, 2013
Friday, January 4, 2013
Tim Man Interview!! Happy New Year! A Dan's Movie Report Exclusive!
Updated 4-13-13 Get Some Tim Man Action Filmed on Galaxy Phone!: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=v7OIGPMQeis
Chat about pre-production work for the fight scenes in Kill 'em All, Tim Man the fight choreographer and Tim Man as "The Kid"
I had roughly around 1 month of prep time with Kill em all.
To make the choreography, train the actors, train the stunt guys, set up the stunts etc... So it was quite a lot for such a small amount of time, with that amount of action. Most of the actors in the movie didn't have any martial art / screen fighting experience, so I had to make the fights as easy as possible yet still try to make them look like professionals.
I didn't really read the script before saying yes to the project. I had just finished an Italian movie, the first Italian (comedy)martial art movie,
and went from there to Thailand.
I was just suppose to do the fight/stunt coordination for Kill em all, but they had a problem finding the Kid, so I ended up doing that part as well. It's a little bit heavy to do 3 jobs at the same time. But I had just done it with the Italian movie I worked on so I was already used not to sleep anything at all.
How
long did the fight choreography take prior to shooting?
The shooting was fast I think 1 month of shooting. So it was a bit stressful, but it often is when the budget isn't so high.
The shooting was fast I think 1 month of shooting. So it was a bit stressful, but it often is when the budget isn't so high.
Working
with a legend like Gordon Liu, describe the experience, did you feel
more pressure working with him?
Gordon is an legend, he did movies before I was even born. Gordon is a very experienced actor/martial artist and an easy guy to work with.
But no I didn't feel any pressure working with him, but I respect him a lot.
Gordon is an legend, he did movies before I was even born. Gordon is a very experienced actor/martial artist and an easy guy to work with.
But no I didn't feel any pressure working with him, but I respect him a lot.
Sadly
Joe Lewis recently passed, please share a story from the set of Kill
'em All about Joe.
Joe Lewis was the greatest, such a funny guy he was. Always happy, smiling, telling jokes, he lit up the whole set with his presence.
Now Joe was almost 70 years old, have that in mind, and he still pulled of some hardcore fighting, no stunt double for him. That's all him in there.
We filmed with the small Canon 5D, but I think Joe never understood where the hell that freaking camera was. He was always asking me where is the camera even though it was next to his face. He probably went around wondering where that big camera was hiding.
Joe Lewis was the greatest, such a funny guy he was. Always happy, smiling, telling jokes, he lit up the whole set with his presence.
Now Joe was almost 70 years old, have that in mind, and he still pulled of some hardcore fighting, no stunt double for him. That's all him in there.
We filmed with the small Canon 5D, but I think Joe never understood where the hell that freaking camera was. He was always asking me where is the camera even though it was next to his face. He probably went around wondering where that big camera was hiding.
Did
actors Joe and Gordon also contribute to their fight scenes by
working with some of the moves? If so, share some of their input.
Gordon didn't have any input on the fights, he was happy to do what I showed him, but all I had to do was to show him the moves once and he remembered them. Joe had some input, though we couldn't use them. He wanted to do some real fight techniques, 5 head buts in a row with a hard take down ripping the arm of his opponent haha. But it was not for this movie he probably would have destroyed the guy he would have done that with. Joe was a real fighter I would feel sorry for the guy trying to rob this old man.
Gordon didn't have any input on the fights, he was happy to do what I showed him, but all I had to do was to show him the moves once and he remembered them. Joe had some input, though we couldn't use them. He wanted to do some real fight techniques, 5 head buts in a row with a hard take down ripping the arm of his opponent haha. But it was not for this movie he probably would have destroyed the guy he would have done that with. Joe was a real fighter I would feel sorry for the guy trying to rob this old man.
The
fighting looked convincing on Kill 'em All, were some scenes much
more difficult to shoot than others, maybe describe one of the more
challenging ones, set-up time, rehearsing etc...
None of the fight scenes was really hard to film, film wise. BUT we didn't have much time. so it was always stressed, no time for breaks. It was just action, take after take, as much as possible to make it in time. It's not the best or safest way to do. I prefer not to do it like this. It's a lot of pressure and it gets all the fighters involved a bit moody and irritated when something goes wrong or someone forgets.
None of the fight scenes was really hard to film, film wise. BUT we didn't have much time. so it was always stressed, no time for breaks. It was just action, take after take, as much as possible to make it in time. It's not the best or safest way to do. I prefer not to do it like this. It's a lot of pressure and it gets all the fighters involved a bit moody and irritated when something goes wrong or someone forgets.
Working
with several different sized actors and actress (Zom) Ammara Siripong,
describe some of the challenges of creating a believable fight scene
when a 110 pound woman fights a 200 pound man.
Well first of I don't think the fight is really believable it's a movie. The guy is huge and the editing was pretty bad on this one. It could have been so much better with an experienced martial art editor for example.
Well first of I don't think the fight is really believable it's a movie. The guy is huge and the editing was pretty bad on this one. It could have been so much better with an experienced martial art editor for example.
Speaking
of Ammara, she is really talented, what ideas did she bring to Kill
'em All fight scenes, including the scene with Gordon?
Zom is amazing yes. She knew nothing before Kill em all. I remember when I first saw her. I was thinking oh my god it's not gonna work. I need a good stunt double for her. But she trained really hard, every day for 1 month. She surprised me a lot. I'm proud of how she performed.
Zom is amazing yes. She knew nothing before Kill em all. I remember when I first saw her. I was thinking oh my god it's not gonna work. I need a good stunt double for her. But she trained really hard, every day for 1 month. She surprised me a lot. I'm proud of how she performed.
After you watched the final edit of Kill 'em All were you happy with the fight scenes, maybe chat about something you would have liked to change?
I
was really depressed when I saw Kill em all to be honest. I had
higher expectations. To be honest, and probably if the editor reads
this he will try to end my carer. But the editing was so bad, so
awful! Every fight scene has one punch cut, one kick cut, one move
cut. He even cuts in some power moves WHO THE HELL DOES THAT AND
FUCKING WHY?!? Let the performer finish the move damn it! He even cut
to some stupid angels that doesn't show the hit or to a close up
during a kick. In the fight scene between Me and Joe Lewis for
example the last kick I do on Joe is a jump split sidekick with a
real impact sending Joe Lewis in to the wall. First of Joe did that
for nothing he took a hard hit and fell in to the wall and he was
almost 70 years old, why the hell would someone want to cut behind
the shoulder hiding the move and hiding the impact and the crash in
to the wall? All this cuts destroys the rhythm. Sure if it was an
indian movie or an movie with actors that cant fight or fight bad,
then maybe many cuts can save the action. But in a movie like this it
destroys it. Originally the movie was suppose to be edited in
Thailand with the director supervising, if that would have been the
case the movie would have been 10 times better. But I guess they
decided to let the wrong editor in America get a hold of the scenes.
On
to the next project, ready for Ninja 2, when does pre-production and
filming begin?
I'm working on Ninja 2 as we speak. I'm done with the pre work, just starting to train the actors. Shooting will start January 14th.
Any
ideas and concepts you can share about Ninja 2?
I can't tell you anything about the movie except that the movie is filled with action and that it will be great (yet another couple of sleepless nights though)! And you will see my ugly face in this movie as well.
Hopefully the future will bring more acting roles and choreographing roles. I like both acting roles and choreographing roles but if I had to choose I would probably go for choreographing. It's nice to be infront of the camera but it's hard work specially if you doing martial arts flicks. Choreographing is hard as well but more headache hard than physically hard. And when you do both acting and choreo' at the same time is energy demanding, but you feel great when it's a wrap.
Tim,
and that is a wrap, haha, thanks again to take time out of your busy schedule to conduct the
interview.
Thanks for your time.
For more info on Tim, check his IMDB page below, and watch for future updates from Ninja 2, on your home for action, Dan's Movie Report!
http://www.imdb.com/name/nm1940624/
Like Tim on Facebook, https://www.facebook.com/mastunts
Tim Man Training Reel! https://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_embedded&v=wXvPnDvLq1o
Tim Man Showreel: Kick your browsers to:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lPmUuUUhCys
For my take on Kill 'em All, blast your browsers to: http://dansmoviereport.blogspot.com/2012/12/kill-em-all-movie-review.html
Thanks for your time.
For more info on Tim, check his IMDB page below, and watch for future updates from Ninja 2, on your home for action, Dan's Movie Report!
http://www.imdb.com/name/nm1940624/
Like Tim on Facebook, https://www.facebook.com/mastunts
Tim Man Training Reel! https://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_embedded&v=wXvPnDvLq1o
Tim Man Showreel: Kick your browsers to:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lPmUuUUhCys
For my take on Kill 'em All, blast your browsers to: http://dansmoviereport.blogspot.com/2012/12/kill-em-all-movie-review.html
Monday, December 31, 2012
State Of Emergency Movie Review
Above Pic: Poster for State Of Emergency
State Of Emergency is a tale of an chemical explosion then an outbreak in Montgomery County. Rather than focusing on the wide scale, State Of Emergency zeros in on the lives of a few individuals and their personal plight with the zombies. Harkening back to old school films, this film relies on the build up, rather than the overt blood and gore of typical zombie films.
State of Emergency opens with the lead Jim (Jay Hayden) watching the outbreak unfold in front of his TV. Eventually Jim tries to get out of town, flagging down the passing military helicopters. They fly on by, but he gets a phone call from another individual holed up in a well stocked warehouse.
Above Pic: An infected gets a whack on the back, to no effect.
The chemicals turn the infected into monsters, beings with central nervous system infections. These creatures are not only able to run, they have fighting ability, as they are not dead turned to life, but disease ridden. Sadly the makeup on the few who were infected is sparse, but seems to be enough to distinguish them from the "normal" folk.
As much as I enjoyed the premise and build-up, State Of Emergency is more of a study on personal relationships, rather than a true zombie nightmare, and the intensity level seems a bit dialed down. Because the outbreak is in a rural area it is believable that only a few infected persons would be around.
The acting in State Of Emergency is decent, nothing amazing, but nothing to detract from the story. There is a lot of dialogue in the film considering they type of movie it is and for the most part, the rather inexperienced cast seems to pull it off, however, more of a sense of urgency would probably have heightened the film's pacing.
The action in the last 30 minutes of State of Emergency picks-up. I liked the character development, and plot direction in the film, and with a few more dollars, I envision writer/directorTurner Clay, would have been able to add a few more elements, characters, and accoutrements to the State Of Emergency.
State of Emergency rates a 6 out of 10, a definite rent, worthy of a watch.
For more info check out the official site @ http://www.soemovie.com
State Of Emergency is a tale of an chemical explosion then an outbreak in Montgomery County. Rather than focusing on the wide scale, State Of Emergency zeros in on the lives of a few individuals and their personal plight with the zombies. Harkening back to old school films, this film relies on the build up, rather than the overt blood and gore of typical zombie films.
State of Emergency opens with the lead Jim (Jay Hayden) watching the outbreak unfold in front of his TV. Eventually Jim tries to get out of town, flagging down the passing military helicopters. They fly on by, but he gets a phone call from another individual holed up in a well stocked warehouse.
Above Pic: An infected gets a whack on the back, to no effect.
The chemicals turn the infected into monsters, beings with central nervous system infections. These creatures are not only able to run, they have fighting ability, as they are not dead turned to life, but disease ridden. Sadly the makeup on the few who were infected is sparse, but seems to be enough to distinguish them from the "normal" folk.
As much as I enjoyed the premise and build-up, State Of Emergency is more of a study on personal relationships, rather than a true zombie nightmare, and the intensity level seems a bit dialed down. Because the outbreak is in a rural area it is believable that only a few infected persons would be around.
The acting in State Of Emergency is decent, nothing amazing, but nothing to detract from the story. There is a lot of dialogue in the film considering they type of movie it is and for the most part, the rather inexperienced cast seems to pull it off, however, more of a sense of urgency would probably have heightened the film's pacing.
The action in the last 30 minutes of State of Emergency picks-up. I liked the character development, and plot direction in the film, and with a few more dollars, I envision writer/directorTurner Clay, would have been able to add a few more elements, characters, and accoutrements to the State Of Emergency.
State of Emergency rates a 6 out of 10, a definite rent, worthy of a watch.
For more info check out the official site @ http://www.soemovie.com