Win 1 of 5 THE GIRL IN THE PHOTOGRAPHS DVDs!
A Picture Is Worth A Thousand Screams.
When a bored young woman in a sleepy country town receives a series of photographs of viciously murdered women, the Police can’t tell whether they are real or staged. There are no bodies or any evidence to match these “crimes”. Are they the work of deranged mind or of a serial killer? It doesn’t matter to sleazy celebrity photographer Peter Hemmings, who’s been inspired by their “artistry” and comes to town to investigate. What develops then is a macabre thriller with a sense of style, a sense of humour and a brutal body count.
From Executive Producer Wes Craven and staring Harold & Kumar’s Kel Penn, THE GIRL IN THE PHOTOGRAPHS sure sounds like it’ll be fun!
Courtesy of Defiant Screen Entertainment, we have five DVDs of THE GIRL IN THE PHOTOGRAPHS to giveaway. All you need do using the comments field below is tell us in 25 words or less what your favourite Wes Craven film is and why?
Winners will be drawn on Friday August 26th at 11:59AM AEST, contacted via email and published right here on Monday August 29th 10:00AM AEST.
Winners: S.Morrison, H.Wall, S.Corrigan, K.Stubbs & D.Bucknell.
My favourite Wes Craven film is Scream 2 for its increase in humour and violence along with cleverly subversive commentary on sequels
Nightmare on Elm Street since it was the first movie i saw of his
Deadly Friend is Wes Craven’s best solely for the scene where Kristy Swanson smashes Anne Ramsay’s head with a basketball. Pure glorious 1980’s gore
Scream is up there, one of the first movies that scared the bejesus out of me as a kid and made me love horror!
The hills have eyes because it’s a classic story of inbred mutants living in mountains that I’ve always found creepy!
Favourite Wes Craven film is THE HILLS HAVE EYES because I think Michael Berryman is the most unique looking person I have ever seen.
My favourite is Craven’s 1972 “The Last House On The Left”, a brutally powerful film, controversial yes, but such an importantly influential horror!
My favourite is Craven’s 1972 ‘The Last House On The Left’, a brutally powerful film, controversial yes, but such an importantly influential horror!
Scream. Not only is it a very good horror film, it is also a whole lot of fun.
A NIGHTMARE ON ELM ST. It first introduced me to the master of horror’s work and scared the crap out of me. A terrific premise that is a part of the legendary horror genre
A NIGHTMARE ON ELM ST first introduced me to the master of horror and scared me sh&*less. A terrific premise that is legendary