
Auteur
Horror · Comedy · Drama
Overview
A documentarian sets out on a quest to find a fabled horror film director, who mysteriously vanished before completing what was to be his masterpiece.
Top Cast


Tom Sizemore
Tom Sizemore
Self
Tom Sizemore
Self
B.J. Hendricks
B.J. Hendricks
Jack Humphreys
B.J. Hendricks
Jack Humphreys
Ian Hutton
Ian Hutton
Charlie Buckwald
Ian Hutton
Charlie Buckwald


Madeline Merritt
Madeline Merritt
Kate Rivers
Madeline Merritt
Kate Rivers


Eli Jane
Eli Jane
Allison Marx
Eli Jane
Allison Marx


Matt Mercer
Matt Mercer
Bruce Chaplin
Matt Mercer
Bruce Chaplin


Ace Marrero
Ace Marrero
Marcus Newman
Ace Marrero
Marcus Newman


Elina Loukas
Elina Loukas
Nadine Fides
Elina Loukas
Nadine Fides
Valerie Mulligan
Valerie Mulligan
Leslie Hawthorne
Valerie Mulligan
Leslie Hawthorne
Steve Phelan
Steve Phelan
Brian/Priest
Steve Phelan
Brian/Priest
Similar Movies

In Spring 2010, a group of eight young people disappeared in the valley of Baserca, a province of Lleida. The news caused a local uproar and the authorities investigated the case with discretion. With no clues to the culprits, they decide to seek help from the media. Five months later, the program “L’Empremta” will air the chilling facts in a documentary. It’s time the legend became reality, but with a chilling argument that differs significantly from the original legend.

In this spoof of "March of the Penguins," nature footage of penguins near the South Pole gets a soundtrack of human voices. Carl and Jimmy, best friends, walk 70 miles to the mating grounds where the female penguins wait. The huddled masses of females - especially Melissa and Vicki - talk about males, mating, and what might happen this year. Carl, Jimmy, and the other males make the long trek talking about food, fornication and flatulence. Until this year, Carl's sex life has been dismal, but he falls hard for Melissa. She seems to like him. A crisis develops when Jimmy comes upon something soft in the dark. Can friends forgive? Does parenthood await Carl and Melissa?

What question has plagued mankind more than the mystery—and terror—of death? This forbidden pursuit has driven Dr. Frances B. Gröss to the brink of madness, but in his obsession, he has amassed a uniquely comprehensive collection of films that depict life in its final, grueling moments. From the savagery of cold-blooded murder to the perverse realities of war, tragic accidents, and the everyday lives of those who collect, dissect, and bury the dead, this descent into morbidity lays bare a truth that all of us will one day face.

In the city that never sleeps, Olivia is taking the modeling world by storm. A cover girl in the making, Olivia is booking big clients and bringing her YouTube audience along for the ride. With newly earned cash, she moves into a fashionable loft apartment. Its glossy facade, however, conceals a sinister secret born years before. Suddenly overwrought, her tenuous grip on reality begins to slip away. Beautiful, yet increasingly unstable, Olivia makes a shocking choice that leads to a battle for her soul.

Gory real-life footage of blood and guts on the German Autobahn, drug smugglers getting blown away, a parachutist landing in a crocodile pit, torture and murder in El Salvador, a PCP addict getting stoned, a videotaped rape/murder, a car thief getting ripped apart by two junkyard dogs, and much more.

Contains more than 50 separate scenes of blood-chilling horror, none of which have ever been seen by the public, depicting a cremation, an electrocution, a terrorist destroyed by his own bomb, the massacre of a Columbian wedding party, the drawing and quartering of a Russian peasant and a man-eating tiger turning on its trainer.

State of Bacon tells the kinda real but mostly fake tale of an oddball group of characters leading up to the annual Blue Ribbon Bacon Festival. Bacon-enthusiasts, Governor Branstad, a bacon queen, Hacksaw Jim Duggan, members of PETA, and an envoy of Icelanders are not excluded from this bacon party and during the course of the film become intertwined with the organizers of the festival to show that bacon diplomacy is not dead.















