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Adrian Halen

Horrornews.net is a popular Horror Genre site. HNN is a full featured Horror resource that focuses on News, Upcoming Horror Film Releases, Reviews, Articles, Interviews, Art, Trailers and Industry Features. Adrian Halen is HNN's lead reviewer with over a decade of reviews under his belt HNN is aimed at providing one of the Top resources for the film and book reviews to consumers by covering a large spectrum of Horror titles combined with Cult films, Asian Horror and Extreme Underground Films.

Devils lurk within ‘The Barrens’

Darren Lynn Bousman certainly is busy these days, word comes over on new feature titled “The Barrens” which takes on the famed  legend of The Jersey Devil. True Blood fans will be happy to see more of actor Stephen Moyer. Synopsis Despite their reluctance, Richard Marlow (Moyer) takes his wife, Cynthia (Kirshner); their young son, Danny; and his teenage daughter, …

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New York Comic-con advance presentaion on ‘The Avengers’

MARVEL STUDIOS TO PRESENT EXCLUSIVE LOOK AT MARVEL’S THE AVENGERS AT NEW YORK COMIC CON Producer Kevin Feige and Select Cast Members to Appear Saturday, October 15th in the IGN Theater – Presented by Sprint! New York Comic Con (NYCC) is proud to announce Marvel Studios, for the first time ever, will participate in this October’s NYCC. Marvel Studios will …

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’30 Minutes or Less’ November Blu-ray announcment

Hilarious All-Star Cast Features Jesse Eisenberg, Danny McBride, Aziz Ansari and Nick Swardson From the Director of Zombieland Outrageous Special Features Include Deleted Scenes, Outtakes, Behind-the-Scenes Featurettes and a Picture-in-Picture Cast & Crew Commentary! Action-Comedy of the Year Arrives on Blu-ray and DVD November 29th Jesse Eisenberg (The Social Network, Zombieland) and Danny McBride (TV’s “Eastbound and Down,” Pineapple Express,) …

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Blackmail (1992): Sometimes a Cigar is a Hitch(c**ktail)

Alfred Hitchcock’s Blackmail marked the first time, in British cinematic history, that sound was used for an entire feature film. The infamous American musical The Jazz Singer (1927) has been cited as the first film to use dialogue; however, Al Jolson’s notorious film barely passes as a “talkie” as it incorporated only a “few” lines of dialogue. When considering the inability to …

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