Subscribe To The New Arrow In The Head Show Youtube Channel Here!
As announced earlier this week, The Arrow in the Head Show – which used to be released through the JoBlo Horror Originals YouTube channel – has now migrated over to its own YouTube channel. Today, we have the first new episode since the big move, and in this one hosts John “The Arrow” Fallon and Lance Vlcek are joined by Tyler Nichols to discuss the 1992 film Hellraiser III: Hell on Earth (watch it Here).
JoBlo and Arrow in the Head readers might know Tyler Nichols from the reviews he writes for the site, or from the JoBlo Horror Originals videos he writes, narrates, and/or produces.
This episode of The Arrow in the Head Show is certainly not a Hellraiser III lovefest. In fact, The Arrow opens the conversation by comparing the first two Hellraiser movies to filet mignon and...
As announced earlier this week, The Arrow in the Head Show – which used to be released through the JoBlo Horror Originals YouTube channel – has now migrated over to its own YouTube channel. Today, we have the first new episode since the big move, and in this one hosts John “The Arrow” Fallon and Lance Vlcek are joined by Tyler Nichols to discuss the 1992 film Hellraiser III: Hell on Earth (watch it Here).
JoBlo and Arrow in the Head readers might know Tyler Nichols from the reviews he writes for the site, or from the JoBlo Horror Originals videos he writes, narrates, and/or produces.
This episode of The Arrow in the Head Show is certainly not a Hellraiser III lovefest. In fact, The Arrow opens the conversation by comparing the first two Hellraiser movies to filet mignon and...
- 9/17/2022
- by Cody Hamman
- JoBlo.com
Filmed largely in a Monroeville shopping mall over four months in late 1977/early 1978, George A. Romero’s “Dawn of the Dead” was a grungy, dangerous and seemingly miraculous shoot. Ralph and Bob Langer, two zombie extras in the film, captured the insanity on Super 8 cameras to produce a jaw-dropping behind the scenes look.
Read More: Criticwire Classic of the Week: George A. Romero’s ‘Dawn of the Dead’
A walking tour of the Monroeville mall, the Langer doc offers unfettered access to prepping the zombies for the camera and the stunts Romero’s team orchestrated to pull off some spectacular deaths.
Some highlights from the shoot to watch out for: Watching the crew place real explosives on the back of the actors’ heads (much to the Langers’ astonishment), seeing Tom Savivi before his fame apply makeup and talk about his work like it was nothing, pulling the Langers’ camera away...
Read More: Criticwire Classic of the Week: George A. Romero’s ‘Dawn of the Dead’
A walking tour of the Monroeville mall, the Langer doc offers unfettered access to prepping the zombies for the camera and the stunts Romero’s team orchestrated to pull off some spectacular deaths.
Some highlights from the shoot to watch out for: Watching the crew place real explosives on the back of the actors’ heads (much to the Langers’ astonishment), seeing Tom Savivi before his fame apply makeup and talk about his work like it was nothing, pulling the Langers’ camera away...
- 6/20/2016
- by Russell Goldman
- Indiewire
Clayton Hill, a former member of the Nation of Islam and currently incarcerated at a federal prison in Chicago, has come forward and told HipHopDX.com that he played an accessory to the murder of rapper Notorious Big after the fact, and knows who shot and killed the rapper.
Big, or Christopher Wallace, was killed while driving away from a party in Los Angeles on March 9, 1997. Hill claims that, acting under orders from a higher-up at Muhammad Mosque #15 in Atlanta, he met at a Greyhound station a man from Los Angeles who called himself Dawoud Muhammad and took from him possession of a firearm that he claimed he used to shoot the rapper.
"[Dawoud Muhammad] stated to me that he was on the run for the murder [of The Notorious B.I.G.]," Hill told HipHopDx.com. "He disclosed that he was the shooter of The Notorious B.I.G. because he (Dawoud) was a former Blood gang member and was paid to do so.
Big, or Christopher Wallace, was killed while driving away from a party in Los Angeles on March 9, 1997. Hill claims that, acting under orders from a higher-up at Muhammad Mosque #15 in Atlanta, he met at a Greyhound station a man from Los Angeles who called himself Dawoud Muhammad and took from him possession of a firearm that he claimed he used to shoot the rapper.
"[Dawoud Muhammad] stated to me that he was on the run for the murder [of The Notorious B.I.G.]," Hill told HipHopDx.com. "He disclosed that he was the shooter of The Notorious B.I.G. because he (Dawoud) was a former Blood gang member and was paid to do so.
- 7/5/2011
- by Jordan Zakarin
- Huffington Post
For most people, The Notorious B.I.G.‘s death is the subject of endless speculation, debate and what is probably P. Diddy‘s single greatest song to date. For Chicago inmate Clayton Hill, Notorious B.I.G.’s killer is allegedly just a matter of remembering the details. Hill is now alleging that it was fellow Nation of Islam member Dawud Mahammad who ended the rapper’s life in 1997, while acting as a hit man. “[Dawoud Muhammad] stated to me that he was on the run for the murder [of The Notorious B.I.G.],” Hill told HipHopDX. “He disclosed that he was the shooter of The Notorious B.I.G. because he (Dawoud) was a former Blood gang member and was paid to do so.”
Hill’s claims paint an elaborate plot involving the Nation of Islam, aliases and transporting the murder weapon across statelines. Earlier this year the Lapd began investigating new evidence which “reinvigorated” Biggie Smalls’ unsolved murder case. Since...
Hill’s claims paint an elaborate plot involving the Nation of Islam, aliases and transporting the murder weapon across statelines. Earlier this year the Lapd began investigating new evidence which “reinvigorated” Biggie Smalls’ unsolved murder case. Since...
- 7/5/2011
- by Halle Kiefer
- TheFabLife - Movies
Horror fanatics are still buzzing like chainsaws over the Academy Awards’ genre montage. Anywhere there could be a conversation about it online, there was one. Many were upset over the Twilight ‘tweens’ participation, as if their mere presence sent a message about the state of scary in Hollyweird, USA.
A few seemed happy, though, to just get a glimpse of their beloved Evil Dead and Texas Chainsaw Massacre 2 if only for a few seconds. But many called the selections generic and thoughtless, demanding the likes of Demons and TerrorVision instead (well, maybe not TerrorVision; that was just me).
How about Henry: Portrait of a Serial Killer? Re-Animator? It’s Alive? Tombs of the Blind Dead? Coffin Joe? No list is perfect, but with a bit more care and a phone call to any one of us, the Oscars could have elevated that section into a real scream. Or maybe they...
A few seemed happy, though, to just get a glimpse of their beloved Evil Dead and Texas Chainsaw Massacre 2 if only for a few seconds. But many called the selections generic and thoughtless, demanding the likes of Demons and TerrorVision instead (well, maybe not TerrorVision; that was just me).
How about Henry: Portrait of a Serial Killer? Re-Animator? It’s Alive? Tombs of the Blind Dead? Coffin Joe? No list is perfect, but with a bit more care and a phone call to any one of us, the Oscars could have elevated that section into a real scream. Or maybe they...
- 3/9/2010
- by Heather Buckley
- DreadCentral.com
When you go to many various conventions, you start to see a lot of the same smiling faces over and over again. As a result you become a road family of sorts. Clayton Hill had a smile I'll never forget, and it's with a very heavy heart that we report he is no longer with us.
Clayton broke into showbiz around the age of six and has been working within it ever since, whether behind or in front of the camera. Fans will best remember him as the "Sweater Zombie" in George A. Romero's Dawn of the Dead.
Clayton died last night, July 25th, in Pittsburgh, Pa, following a stroke. We here at Dread Central would like to take this time to remember him as the consummate professional that he was and to offer our sincerest condolences to his many friends, family, and constituents, especially his partner in life and love,...
Clayton broke into showbiz around the age of six and has been working within it ever since, whether behind or in front of the camera. Fans will best remember him as the "Sweater Zombie" in George A. Romero's Dawn of the Dead.
Clayton died last night, July 25th, in Pittsburgh, Pa, following a stroke. We here at Dread Central would like to take this time to remember him as the consummate professional that he was and to offer our sincerest condolences to his many friends, family, and constituents, especially his partner in life and love,...
- 7/27/2009
- by Uncle Creepy
- DreadCentral.com
Well folks, the 2008 ZombieFest (official site) has just announced their first round of guests, and it's a good announcement. The first round includes original Dawn of the Dead zombies Sharon Ceccatti Hill (the Nurse Zombie) and Clayton Hill (the Sweater Zombie). Also onhand will be Sam Nicotero, whose films include Children of the Living Dead and The Mothman Prophecies. Also announced is Bram Stoker Award-winning author Mike Arnzen. But that's not all. The big news is that the original Bmf, the greatest zombie killer in the world, will also be in attendance at the mall where he first encountered the living dead. That's right, I'm talking about Ken-Motherfucking-Foree.
Zombiefest is a free event this year, running from October 24th to October 26th inside the zombie-historic Monroeville Mall, and will coincide with "World Zombie Day," for which more than fifty cities worldwide have coordinated a zombie walk Sunday morning in an...
Zombiefest is a free event this year, running from October 24th to October 26th inside the zombie-historic Monroeville Mall, and will coincide with "World Zombie Day," for which more than fifty cities worldwide have coordinated a zombie walk Sunday morning in an...
- 9/15/2008
- by Sifu Scott
- DreadCentral.com
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