Horrors March forth ! – Carrion film downloads

As of March 4th 2009 the first three ‘Penny dreadful’ animations from Carrion film – the rarely UK seen  ‘The Vampire‘ (2004), the award nominated ‘Scayrecrow‘ (2008) &  new festival favourite ‘The Screaming skull‘ (2008) –  will be available to download for the very first time.

Each film will be available from the shop as an mp4 video; an ideal portable format and compatible for iPod, iTunes and laptop viewing. For a limited time each animation will cost only £2.99 to purchase and keep, that’s less than the cost of a screening ticket.

Director Ashley Thorpe had this to say: “I’m very excited actually, this is the first time that these films have truly been let loose and this style of commerce, the inexpensive download, is the closest thing to a modern ‘Penny dreadful’ type of distribution. The Penny dreadfuls would be bought for pennies and then handed round, increasingly dog-eared reader to reader, but the stories – the good ones at least – would spread like wildfire. Now the devoted or just plain curious can dowload and share these in much the same way. It’s fantastic and it’s just scraping the surface. We’ve got some very special things on the horizon…”

Details of ‘Scayrecrow‘ and ‘The Screaming skull‘ can be found posted throughout our archives, ‘The Vampire‘ however may be new to many. Ashley Thorpe explained:  “It was my first attempt of tackling this kind of material in this way. I was trying to find a way of combining  still images with a dynamic soundtrack, like a musical storybook. It was first and foremost going to be a comic that had an animation as an extra. It has animated elements, but it was a test really and people were very supportive…I was especially lucky – and I don’t think it hurt getting this one into festivals – that my photographer knew Derren Brown and he persuaded him to cameo as a vampire! Blink and you miss him…but he’s there.”

After the initial run of downloads further releases can be expected later in the year, including further vintage material from the vaults and subsequent ‘Penny dreadful’ releases such as ‘The Hairy hands.’

‘Scayrecrow’ nominated for Media Innovation award

Carrion film is celebrating ‘Scayrecrow‘ being nominated for the 2009 Media Innovation Awards as part of the ‘Best independent Film / Video category.

The awards recognise the innovative use of media, music and design across the South West region. Entries were invited from companies across the whole of the South West (including collaborations with the BBC and the Open University) and Karen Stockdale of award organisers, the Plymouth media partnership, says she’s delighted at the quality and diversity of the submissions this year, “The judges really had their work cut out deciding which entries to shortlist.

The quality of entries was very high and the fact that the short-listed companies come from all over the region, from Poole to Dorset to Falmouth in Cornwall and from Bristol to Plymouth proves that the South West region is a centre of excellance for media and design.”

Scayrecrow‘, for the un-initiated, is a Hammer inspired animation about a ghostly Highwayman, written and directed by  Ashley Thorpe. It is set in England in 1742 – wherein the daring robberies of Joshua Rookwood are the talk of all of England. No-one it seems is safe on the Kings highways from the notorious highwayman and his fearful alter-ego ‘The Scayrecrow‘. Rookwood’s motives however are not mere brutality and greed. Every full moon, after robbing the gentry of their riches, Rookwood steals away to deliver the choicest of the booty to his love, the serving girl Eleanor Tawney. As the reward for his capture grows ever large, these moonlit rendezvous attract unwanted attention…and slowly and surely plans are drawn against them…

The animation was co-funded by the Exeter Phoenix and Devon County Council, and was made during 2008. The film features a dynamic score by composer Mick Grierson. Ashley recenly commented on the film in an interview with Lee Morgan (D & C Film):

“I’ve always been completely fascinated by highwaymen,” says Ashley, and he recalls ’70s National Trust ads for historic sites, which would have the highwayman rushing past in all his regalia. But the spectacle has largely been overlooked, Adam Ant aside. “In theory they are the closest thing to a British Western.”

As of March 4th the film will be available as a download directly from www.carrionfilms.co.uk (more to be announced shortly!)

The winners of the Media Innovation Awards will be announced at a gala award ceremony to be held at the Ashton Gate Stadium in Bristol on the 12th of March.

The Hairy Hands

If you cast your mind back to the shoot of The Screaming skull you may recall that all of the Penraddon manor bedroom sequences were shot at the beautiful ‘Two Bridges hotel‘. Yet, as one ghostly legend was being crafted therein, a little further down a nearby Dartmoor road, a quite different supernatural visitation was believed to befall the unsuspecting traveller…’The Hairy Hands‘.

Comic asides, since the early twentieth century, drivers and cyclists have reported suffering unusual accidents whilst travelling the stretch of road (the B3212) between Postbridge and Two Bridges. In many cases, the victims reported that their vehicle had swerved violently off the side of the road, as if something had taken hold of the wheels and wrenched it out of their control.

In most instances, the victims ran into a verge and survived. Their experiences remained a local curiosity, until June 1921, when Dr. E.H. Helby, the medical officer for Dartmoor prison was actually killed when he lost control of his motorcycle and sidecar. His two daughters survived. Shortly after Dr Helby’s death, there was another incident in which a coach driver lost control, injuring several passengers who were thrown out of their seats. Then, on August 26 1921, an army Captain reported that a pair of invisible hands had taken hold of him and forced his motorcycle off the road. After such a bout of such bizarre ‘attacks’ it didn’t take long before the story was picked up by the London newspapers and the story became a nationwide sensation.

Though horror cinema has had its share of disembodied creeping hands (Amicus studios ‘Doctor Terrors house of Horrors’ and Oliver Stone’s ‘The Hand‘ starring Michael Caine are but two notables) the actual story of ‘The Hairy Hands‘, and its core myth (often linked to a mining explosion or a local murder on the particular stretch of road) has hitherto largely been ignored outside the region that spawned it….until now.

Whilst ‘Spring heel Jack‘ continues its ambitious pre-production, Ashley Thorpe will shoot ‘The Hairy Hands‘ until finance  is secured. “Don’t fret, ‘Spring heel Jack’ is absolutely in pre-production, but it’s the most ambitious one yet and it needs more time and love than the previous two to make it work and really do the script justice.”

‘The Hairy hands‘ will star Carrion film regular Ed Berry and aims, according to its director, to be “a chilling horror short that takes place entirely within a moving vehicle…”

Ashley Thorpe : An interview and an Echo

D & C Film : The horror of Ashley Thorpe

This week D & C film is running a week long horror special ‘hosted’ by Carrion film director Ashley Thorpe. Today sees an overview on the director by Lee Morgan and then every day next week a piece will be published on the films that continue to inspire his work. Lee Morgan had this to say:

Ashley Thorpe will take us by the hand and lead us through his top five horror films over the next five days. He will go through each movie and explain why they keep him – and us – shivering on the edge of the seat. But first, here’s the low-down on the filmmaker who puts horror into animation.

Ashley Thorpe’s horror is more scalpel than sledgehammer. His animations have a refreshingly classic feel, not least through the meticulously researched material and his unabiding love of horror in all its purest, and least pure, forms.

To make a ham-fisted attempt to continue the scalpel metaphor, his films and the surgical implement both make you think of similar wounds. Maybe it’s because you have the feeling that Jack the Ripper is hacking away in the background of the Penny Dreadfuls (or Penny Bloods) that are one of the inspirations of Ashley’s work.”

The article features snippets of interviews, stills and links to trailers. The first horror that will be discussed is Ridley Scott’s ‘Alien‘.

Link: http://www.devon-cornwall-film.co.uk/2009/02/01/the-horror-of-ashley-thorpe-the-animator-talks-to-dcfilm/

Interview with Express & Echo

On Thursday 5th February Carrion film Director Ashley Thorpe was interviewed by the Express & Echo. The full page article covered his influences, family and plans for the future.

He said: “When I was a kid growing up in Devon I was surrounded by ghost stories, local legends and folk songs about monsters, and I was lucky enough to be surrounded by people keen to tell them, especially to a wide-eyed child.

“I was fed a constant diet of vengeful ghosts, highwaymen and deals with the devil in the Dartmoor fog. I subsequently grew up feeling that everyone else knew stories such as The Screaming Skull and The Lambton Worm.

“But I soon realised that many of these stories, and the stories that the tellers had been told as children, were slipping away from us, becoming esoteric. As I travelled further afield, it became clear that many people had never heard of these tales at all.

“So with the Carrion film project I’m now aiming to take these neglected aspects of English folklore and re-invent them for the 21st century audience as digital animations.”