Introducing Necropit – Barbarians, Demons, and Another Dimension.

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Horror Books Indie Horror

Necropit is an original, beautifully drawn comic book. You can find issue one and soon other issues at http://necropit.storenvy.com/

First off tell me a bit about yourself, who are you?

I write and illustrate the Lords of the Necropit comic zine. It chronicles a barbarian’s attempt to escape from an extra-dimensional fighting pit run by necromancer-demons. As for me, I love horror VHS tapes, old off-brand toys, unsuccessful video game systems, things like that. I’m into flea markets and thrift stores. I post about the comic book on Instagram @necropit. I also have a store at http://www.necropit.com.

Original art by Necropit

What inspired you to start creating Necropit?

I love old school RPGs and one of the things I really love about them is the art. Often the art was amateurish but had a cool earnest charm to it.  Check out WTF, Traveller Art!? for some extreme examples. But it’s not just in RPGs – you see it in heavy metal, which has a visual element that is sort of parallel to RPGs. You’ve got the cover of the first Slayer album – a lot of old thrash. Sometimes there’s power in someone just doing the best they can despite their limitations. So over time you have this really great stuff that’s made of these illustrations and it creates a certain vibe that I really like.  I wanted to take that feeling and push it as far as I could take it.

What has been the biggest challenge creating your own story and world? 

The biggest challenge was just putting it out there. You create this stuff and you don’t know if people will like it. The story and world are things that have been bouncing around my head for a long time so they weren’t the biggest hurdle. Just deciding it was time to make something for other people to see was the biggest challenge.

What’s next now that the first comic is out? 

Original art by Necropit

Issue 2 is done and I’m going to be printing it soon.  I held off for a bit because of the Corona Virus but it seems like shipping out these small parcels isn’t going to be a problem. So look for that by mid-April. I’m going to have a comic strip in the upcoming third issue of Lurker magazine,(http://lurkermagazine.com/) which is a really cool publication that covers heavy metal, dungeon synth and tabletop gaming.I’m also writing and illustrating an RPG zine that’s a short standalone adventure.  This coronavirus has really screwed up my creative rhythm and my ability to logistically get anything done so it might take a while for that to come out. I have demon medallions up on my site that I cast in resin. I really want to take my characters in that direction – making action figures out of them. I came up with the idea for a comic at the same time as I did a toy line. That’s why it’s called Lords of the Necropit, as a kind of shoutout to Masters of the Universe. I like the 5.5 inch He Man toys. Especially the ones made by other companies like Remco and Sungold. A lot of cool artists are making toys in that vein, and I think they’re a really fun way to get your characters out into the world in a really satisfying way. I’ve really just been amazed at the response to the action figures and medallions that I’ve made – I never really imagined anyone would want to buy them, but they’ve sold. It’s just cool to see other people appreciating what you’re putting out there. 

What inspired your art style? 

I’ve always been into underground comics, Rat Fink, gross out toys like Mad Balls.  Maybe six years ago I started drawing a lot and following other artists on Tumblr and I got into a bunch of weirdo artists. Sean Aaberg definitely comes to mind. More recently I started really appreciating the heavy blacks and the stark white contrast of death metal album covers. I got really inspired by the board game Cave Evil.  All that sort of sloshed around in my mind and turned into Necropit. It was really cool because the Emperors of Eternal, the publishers of Cave Evil, actually asked to carry the comic in their store https://store.cave-evil.com/ . It should be available there soon. That was really cool.

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Original art by Necropit

I bet you are also into horror yourself. What are your go to horror movies and comics?

I’m all over the place when it comes to horror. I love 80s horror. Alien’s Deadly Spawn is one of my favorites because the creature design is so rad. I love the Sleepaway Camp movies, Killer Klowns, Critters – a lot of stuff with great practical effects from that era. The only recent horror movie to blow me away was Midsommar. As for comics, I’ve been away from comics for a long time. I used to love EC comics, Mad Magazine, Groo, Ninja Turtles, Ralph Snart, 

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Q&A with Author Jon Richter and His New Book “Auxiliary”

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Horror Books Indie Horror

Hi Jon.  First of all… who the heck are you?

I’m a dark fiction writer, which means I hop around genres including crime, fantasy, science fiction and (of course) horror.  My most recent book was a collection of short horror fiction called Jon Richter’s Disturbing Works (Volume Two), and my next novel London 2039: Auxiliary is my first foray into the world of cyberpunk, to be released on 1st May.

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I live in London where I write whenever I can, so I’m currently immersed in the unfolding coronavirus lockdown – looking on the bright side, it’s great inspiration for all the dark fiction writers out there, and we’ll all be happy to keep producing things for people to read while in isolation!

Do you consider cyberpunk to be a horror genre?

It’s primarily a science fiction subgenre of course, but cyberpunk definitely shares many characteristics with the best horror stories: a dark and dystopian setting, frightening technology, and usually a grisly murder or three for the hardboiled protagonist to unravel (all definitely features of my own book!)

There is a very real risk that our emerging technologies lead to feelings of social isolation, as well as the nebulous dread associated with watching the world changing rapidly around us, perhaps soon bringing us face-to-face with alarmingly lifelike robots and AIs… but until these creations are perfected, the creatures crawling up out of the Uncanny Valley are certain to disturb and unsettle us in the years to come.

Do you think our society is inevitably heading towards this sort of dystopian outcome?

I think some elements of the traditional cyberpunk setting are unavoidable, specifically increasing joblessness and public disillusionment as more and more jobs are able to be performed by machines.  Soon, these won’t be limited to repetitive factory jobs; driverless cars are much safer than their human-piloted counterparts, as well as being cheaper to run, so I think it’s inevitable that taxi and long haul drivers will soon feel the squeeze.  Even writers like myself have much to fear, with neural networks being developed that can learn how to write their own novels!

My favourite current example of terrifying AI technology is www.thispersondoesnotexist.com, where an ‘adversarial’ neural network has learned how to produce fake images of imaginary people from scratch.  It’s definitely worth checking out, although I don’t know which are worse: the ones that are utterly indistinguishable from real photographs, or the ones that are ever so slightly ‘off’…

Do you think it’s inevitable that humans are made ‘obsolete’ by their own robots and AIs?

I think society will need to fundamentally change to adapt to a situation where the majority, not the minority, of tasks are performed by our machines.  This means that most people will not need to work – and this doesn’t necessarily have to be a bad thing.

If governments can implement something like Universal Basic Income (the idea behind UBI is that everyone gets a basic salary, enough to live on, regardless of whether they are rich or poor, in work or out of work – the government will be able to afford this because productivity and economic output will still be high, it will just be being delivered by machines instead of people), that will ensure people can survive without working, but the bigger change will need to be a cultural one.  Our society values hard work, and deems those that don’t work for a living to be lazy or deserving of criticism unless they have a ‘valid excuse’; we will need to change these attitudes, so that instead of valuing hard work, we perhaps value friendliness, family relationships, or creative endeavours.

I do think though that, unless there is an abandonment of the capitalist model, it is naïve to suggest that there will always be jobs for humans.  Our economic model motivates companies to cut costs, and – bluntly – machines are cheaper and more reliable.

There are lots of horror stories featuring misbehaving AIs – did they help to inspire your book?

Oh, absolutely!  The two most famous are probably HAL9000 from 2001: A Space Odyssey and the Terminator movies’ main antagonist Skynet, although my personal favourite is the Allied Mastercomputer (AM) from Harlan Ellison’s short story I Have No Mouth And I Must Scream.  Rather than a cold, heartless machine whose decisions are based on extreme rationality or simple malfunction, sentient computer AM has developed an utter and deep-rooted hatred for its human creators.  The 45-second rant at the beginning of the video game adaptation of the story is fantastic (‘there are 387.44 million miles of printed circuits in wafer thin layers that fill my complex.  If the word hate was engraved on each nanoangstrom of those hundreds of millions of miles it would not equal one one-billionth of the hate I feel for humans at this micro-instant. For you.  Hate. Hate!!!’) and, as I later found out, voiced by none other than Harlan himself!

However, I wanted to approach my own story a little differently, and create a sinister AI overseer that differed from these insubordinate supercomputers in a couple of ways.  TIM (The Imagination Machine) is a neural network that uses statistical analysis and probability rather than possessing ‘true’ sentience. Like the system I mentioned earlier that has been ‘trained’ to generate human faces by simply feeding it trillions of images until it can replicate them, parrot-fashion, TIM is able to ‘mimic’ human behaviour, making predictions, holding conversations and managing complex operations and public services.  But is this true intelligence? Or is it something different? Either way, we are well on the road to creating it.

Following on from this, the second difference is that TIM is most definitely not evil.  It is a character in the novel – probably my favourite one – that does what it thinks is right, exactly like humans do.  This includes reacting when its survival is threatened, in exactly the way it has been taught to.

Or so it says.

What else inspired you to write the book?

I’ve always been a massive cyberpunk fan, although interestingly this didn’t start with either of the two convergent genre ‘originators’ (William Gibson’s Neuromancer or seminal movie masterpiece Blade Runner) but instead with Sega Megadrive classic Flashback.  Other favourite works include both of the Ghost In The Shell animes (the underrated sequel is incredible; steer clear of the recent Hollywood movie though) and the fantastic Blade Runner sequel, Blade Runner 2049, as well as the brilliant Altered Carbon books by Richard K Morgan.

My vision for London 2039: Auxiliary was to create a more realistic, nearer-future vision of what life might be like as technologies like robots and AI become increasingly advanced… but still grounded in present day reality.  Most people therefore still live in the same houses, travel the same roads, eat the same sorts of food (albeit now delivered by the courier robots that have put supermarkets out of business); having said that, one recent technological innovation I particularly enjoyed researching was that of synthetic or ‘cultured’ meat…

This is a very real new technology, where stem cells extracted from animals are grown in vats into large harvests of flesh; this lab-grown meat is microscopically identical to the animal it came from.  It isn’t merely ‘like chicken’; it is chicken, or whatever animal was used as the source.  (There’s a mind-blowing video on YouTube where the presenter eats chicken nuggets while the chicken itself wanders around, happy and unharmed, in the background!)

If scientists can reduce the (currently astronomical) costs of this process, it will be a huge benefit to society in terms of eliminating the massive carbon output of the farming industry, as well as removing the need for us to kill animals in order to eat them.  But it may be some time before people can truly become accustomed to the idea of eating meat grown in a laboratory…

One final thought experiment I explore in the book is this: if the source animal doesn’t need to be harmed, why would we need to stick to traditionally farmed meats like chicken and beef?  The future could bring us panda steaks, tiger fillets, or even (gasp) human burgers! And, of course, why settle for just any old human, when you could have meat grown from the cells of your favourite celebrities?

Beyonce brisket, anyone?

Which parts did you find the hardest to write?

I actually find it much easier to imagine new worlds, characters and technologies while writing than I do to base things in existing reality, so the hardest parts of any writing project for me are always the ones that are necessarily ‘tethered’ to the real world!  Geographical stuff e.g. where things are in London is an example of something I find a real chore to adhere to, although some of the necessary research for any dark fiction project can be hugely entertaining (my Google search history about murder weapons and suchlike would probably get me arrested!)

How do you go about writing: any weird habits or routines?  Do you have the entire book planned out before you start, or do you just ‘wing it’?

I always work on a laptop so I can constantly slice, dice and dissect what I’m writing as I go – conventional wisdom says you’re supposed to just ‘spew out’ your first draft and then edit it later, but I find this impossible!  I always try to have a plan for the entire book, including every chapter, but this tends to quickly disintegrate once I get going… as an example, in my second crime thriller, Never Rest, about halfway through the novel the protagonist meets the shady owner of the private island where the story takes place.  Until I actually started writing this chapter, I had no intention of giving the owner a monstrous, terrifying, Hound-Of-The-Baskervilles-style pet dog… but then it just sort of happened!  This meant I had to mangle my existing story plan to ensure the vicious canine was in some way incorporated in the book’s ending, which on this occasion made it much more exciting… but ‘pantsing’ doesn’t always work out that well!

This is a horror site after all, so what are some of your favourite horror novels and movies?

My favourite book is Mark Danielewski’s House Of Leaves.  I’m a huge fan of books that mess about with genre conventions and adopt an innovative ‘mixed media’ style, and this demented creation completely blew my mind.  I won’t spoil its wildly original story here, but suffice to say I can’t recommend it highly enough; it’s also a great example of the power of slowly-building dread, as opposed to cheap scares and ‘gross-outs’, in crafting truly brilliant psychological horror.

In terms of favourite horror movies, I’m going to praise the recent output of Robert Eggers, specifically The Witch and The Lighthouse.  These are both truly unsettling, unpredictable masterpieces, and again demonstrate the skilful wielding of slowly-ratcheted tension – the oppressive, dread-infused atmospheres of both movies seem to seep out of the screen into your living room.

Many thanks Jon.  Where can readers get a copy of London 2039: Auxiliary, or check out more of your stuff?

It’s been an absolute pleasure!  London 2039: Auxiliary is available now for preorder – you can find it on Amazon in either paperback or for your eReader device here: https://geni.us/auxiliarym

You can also find my other books on Amazon if you search for my name, or check out my website at www.jon-richter.com for more information (click the ‘R.U.I.N’ button for an interesting little side story…)  Finally, I’m on Twitter @RichterWrites or Instagram @jonrichterwrites if you want to see and hear more of my ramblings, usually just about nerdy stuff or my futile attempts at becoming a good long-distance runner!
Oh yes, almost forgot: I also co-host the Dark Natter podcast where me and my pal Liam dissect our favourite works of dark fiction every fortnight.  You can find it on Spotify, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcast fix.

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New Horror: Wicked Awake by Merril David

Categories
Horror Books Indie Horror

Author Merril David’s new book Wicked Awake is available for pre-order on ebook Amazon.com now and following shortly after in real-life print. Here is the kicker, it’s about an outbreak! We had a chance to chat with him about his forthcoming novel.

PB: So this is a virus outbreak story, have you had any new thoughts after what has been going on with Corona Virus?

MD: I’m starting to think I should have addressed the whole issue of a world without toilet paper. That in itself might make for a scarier read than the infected zombies I write about. In my story, I mention how as the ‘Infection Armageddon’ goes on, the affected areas begin to experience the loss of utility services, cell towers go down and streets become impassable. Gasoline and fuel shortages occur, and the media as we know it today no longer exists. Newspapers become a thing of the past, as do the major outlets who broadcast across the TV and internet. Information is dispersed through You Tubers and then disseminated over short wave radio to the many who have no internet service. So, I’m already working on book two. I’m considering having my main character, Jake Hathaway, living off the grid and incapacitated by the paper cuts on his ass from having to wipe with copy paper.

PB: You worked in Law enforcement for over 20 years. How has that influenced the story and your writing?

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MD: My protagonist, Jake Hathaway, was a Marine and then goes on to become a Dallas Police Officer. He promotes to be a Sergeant and is also a training officer, then a K9 handler. Another of the featured characters is a rookie officer, Kelvin “Mack” McElroy, who was trained by Jake.

 I include several scenes in the novel based upon things I or my co-workers actually experienced. I also touch a little bit upon how being a police officer has changed over the years. Right after the 9/11 tragedy, cops and firemen were considered to be heroes. Parents encouraged their kids to wave at us and be friendly with us. Nowadays cops are hated and targeted. Firemen are still loved (apparently I chose the wrong career), but not the police. Kids are told to question all authority, especially Law Enforcement. 

And I get it, I think politics and some of our past leaders are partly to blame, although I’m not going to act like I don’t realize there are some very bad officers out there who have done some really fucked up things. In my book, I mention one seasoned training officer in particular who acts as if he is untouchable, above the law. But for every bad cop like that exists, I would say there’s another nine who are honest and professional. 

Also, keep in mind that even the cop haters are the first to call 9-1-1 for help when their house is being burglarized or their car is getting jacked. That being said, I don’t want readers to think that my whole book is all just zombies and cop talk. I believe I injected a good amount of humor into the story as well. So much so, that one person who read my book so far commented that it is “extremely clever and brisk-paced. The narrative is witty, even when horrifying.” I like that he chose those two words WITTY and HORRIFYING to describe my work, as this is exactly what I was aiming for.

If I was a rock group instead of an author, I might be compared to the band Tragedy, a metal band that put their own spin on Bee Gees songs. Or better yet, I might be more like that Death Metal Band that plays Weird Al Yankovic tunes. Is there such a band? There should be! But I also attempted to make WICKED AWAKE smarter than the average zombie book by applying a great level of detail, science, and research into it. Hopefully, I have succeeded!

PB: What inspired you to write this story?

MD: I have always loved horror shows and movies, but my favorite genre has been zombies. I would load up on Walking Dead and the movies, always telling my wife and kids how those stories could have been better (like the zombies in World War Z were way too fast, everyone knows the real DEAD are slow! Ask George Romero). So my wife suggested that since I was such an expert, I should write my own novel. At first, I thought she was joking, but she wasn’t- so I did it!

PB: What has been the biggest challenge in getting the book done?

MD: The biggest challenge was not in writing the story itself, but it has been all of the related things I have had to do since its completion. I was clueless when it came to editing and formatting and such. I never took typing in school (I just showed my age there, I think now they call it keyboarding, right?). So I type like a cop, driving down the road, left hand on the steering wheel and right hand holding a coffee (doughnut in my mouth) while using my right pinky finger to type license plate numbers into the mobile data terminal. 

But even more difficult has been this whole querying process; contacting literary agents and book publishers day and night, sending them query letters and synopsis’. Some ask for a small sample of the book while some like to see the entire manuscript. And many of them want to see that you have some sort of social media presence and even a marketing plan. I wasn’t prepared for this; I had a Facebook account just to spy on my teen-aged daughters but I wasn’t actively posting my meals on there or anything like that. So now I am doing Instagram and Twitter, taking lessons from my kids on how to use them. I already got blocked by the Facebook police after I made 700 friends in a matter of six hours (they said I broke some FB rule!? I was just being overly friendly. Isn’t that the objective?) Anyways, this is all new to me but it’s all good, I’m learning a lot as I go along.

PB: You must be a horror fan! What are a few of your favorite horror movies and books?

MD: Growing up, I loved watching horror and Sci-Fi type programs on TV and going to the theater or renting movies (again aging myself! For those who remember Blockbuster). I was also very into Marvel Comics (never got into DC for some reason) and horror novels. Some of my favorite television programs were the Incredible Hulk (with Bill Bixby and, of course, Ferrigno) and the Twilight Zone, as well as reruns of the original Planet of the Apes movies (not really feeling the re-makes). Some of my favorite movies were the Friday the 13th series (until Jason went into outer space, then they lost me), Halloween, Freddy vs Jason was greatness! I also loved Nightmare on Elm Street, The Fly with Jeff Goldblum, Fire in the Sky (an alien abduction film that was supposedly based on true events), those bizarre Faces of Death films.

I also dug the People Under the Stairs, the Ring, the Strangers, the Saw movies, Hellraisers, The Exorcist, Jeepers Creepers, Joyride, and of course everything zombie; Evil Dead, World War Z, Zombie Land, Shaun of the Dead, I Am Legend, Army of Darkness. Some of the novels I have enjoyed the most are The Strand, Andromeda Strain, Max Brooks’ World War Z and Zombie Survival Guide, Bird Box, The Amityville Horror, The Shining. I just started to read Mark Tufo’s Zombie Fallout and enjoying it greatly!

You can find and follow David here:

Twitter– https://twitter.com/merrill19673060

Website – https://1merrilldavid.wixsite.com/wickedawake

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A Samurai Faces His Demons in a Short Film Based on Classic Japanese Mythology

Categories
Indie Horror Scary Movies and Series

Have you ever had a dream that felt so real….

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In it’s short 6 and 1/2 minutes ONI takes you on an adventure through a dream, demon awakened from a cursed samurai sword, and a sword fight. It’s beautifully done and worth every second. Bravo to the creators who did this with next to nothing in their budget.

“Oni” is the latest from Anthony Pietromonaco, co-produced by Manifest Film LLC and Louvard Entertainment, and sponsored by Samuraiswords.store. Actors Toru Uchikado (Castlevania, Heroes Reborn, Westworld) and Masashi Odate (The Last Samurai, Letters from Iwo Jima) are the leads.

Original character design by Jaremy Aiello (Star Trek, Annabelle, Mortal Kombat) and Tanner White (Bone Tomahawk).

The film follows a young man, the real-life descendent of the hero “Momotaro” from the classic Japanese folktale, as he confronts a demon trapped within a cursed sword.

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“We wanted to figure out a way to make a classic folktale (one known to nearly all Japanese people) present in modern-day western culture, ” says Pietromonaco. “The basic premise is that the historical figure “Momotaro” used an ancient sword to seal the gateway to a Japanese demon world. Thousands of years later, an American soldier finds the sword amidst the rubble of a temple during WW2 and brings it home to the states – not knowing what it really is. His grandson inherits the sword, and demons (Oni) within start to wreak havoc in an attempt to escape once again.”

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The film was made as a proof of concept with an extremely limited budget, a cast/crew of less than 10 people, and was a labor of love for all involved. The film features some impressive visuals from the same team behind the starwarsdarklegacy.com fan film.

You can view the complete film here – https://youtu.be/zI9In0EvpH0

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New Indie Horror film Body Farm Coming March 1st 2020

Categories
Indie Horror

We had a chance to catch up with co-directors and co-stars Nicholas LaMantia and Brandon Keenan about their upcoming feature film “Body Farm.”

What inspired the story behind Body Farm? 
Brandon Keenan: Back in 2007 I had someone bring up the topic of a Body Farm in Tennessee. I started researching it and once I saw the reality of what the place was in just pictures alone I had churned up the idea f making a movie based around a place like this. The idea that human beings that donate their bodies to science and have their bodies put into studies that seem horrific to any outsider was enough to get the creative juices flowing. 6 Months later I had a full script. 

What are your favorite horror films? 
Brandon: I love Saw, Hostel, High Tension (French Film), and a lot of old horror films. Scary horror films for me are ones that could actually happen. I appreciate science fiction films as well such as Ghostbusters, Alien, and War of the Worlds. 
Nicholas: I would say that I truly enjoy films that may not classify as straight-up horror but have horror elements. Silence of the LambsOld Boy (2003), and Shutter Island stand out as heavy influences on me. I like character studies, but I also enjoy films that treat the location as a character which heavily influenced my direction of Body Farm.  

Any advice for new horror filmmakers after making your first feature film?
Brandon: Grab a camera and start shooting. I’ve been filming small videos since I was a little boy and ultimately there is just myself with a creative mind. I would encourage others to work with what you have. You don’t need big budgets or a huge studio backing to make a movie. 
Nicholas: Do not forget the story. Simple is best, and you are not better than your audience. People connect with simple stories that are told by interesting characters. The easiest part of making a good film is a good script. It is your blueprint. I can not build a house without blueprints. I would have a random pile of lumber and nails. I need the blueprint to organize it. A script is the same way.  

What as the hardest scene to get and how did you make it happen? 
Brandon: The gun shot scene! We had one take.
Nicholas: Oh, yeah! The bloody (both British and literal definitions of the word) gun shot scene was nail-biting, nerve-wracking, and nauseating. 

Any other interesting facts or funny stories from making the film you want to share? 
Brandon: My weight went up and down during those 2.5 years. Literally from 245lbs to 270lbs. I didn’t make it easy for continuity to say the least. Nick had to keep a scruffy beard and long hair for all of it as well and he did a much better job on that end! LOL.
Nicholas: There was so much sugar-based, fake blood in one scene that the sugar melted under the lights and then caramelized. This process froze the actor, who was laying in the gallons of fake blood, to the floor. It took quite a bit of warm water to remove the actor from the floor. 

Body Farm a joint production by KVT Productions and Nickel 17 Films, will be available on Amazon Prime, Direct TV, Google Play, iTunes, and Microsoft TV & Movies on March 1st. 

Body Farm Trailer

Body Farm follows an independent film company that sends a videographer ahead of a story. She goes to investigate a body farm where human decomposition is researched. The footage that is sent back leads the rest of her team to follow her footsteps where they uncover a grisly medical abyss. 

Co-directors and co-stars Nicholas LaMantia and Brandon Keenan shot the film over twenty days over the course of two and a half years to complete the 75-minute film in their feature-film directing debut. 

Both filmmakers have been active in the Pittsburgh-area film community for over ten years, but this is their first independently-produced feature film. 

Completely self-funded, the $35,000 production used mostly Pittsburgh-based actors and crew members as they shot in Western Pennsylvania, New York, in the mountains of North Carolina and at the West Virginia State Penitentiary. 

The film also features a cameo from Richard Christy (The Howard Stern Show, Guardians of the Galaxy: Vol. 2). 

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