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Timber Falls



Last Updated: 12/18/2007

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Status: Single
State: WV
Country: US
Signup Date: 11/9/2007

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Friday, December 07, 2007 

Category: Movies, TV, Celebrities
LiveMansion.com, who has been good to this film, has some nice things to say about Timber Falls.

Say what you will about comet strikes, alien invasions, or even nuclear war, for my money there's nothing more terrifying than the thought of being held captive by crazy people who pervert religion, and subjective morality to justify purpose (i.e., Fox and Friends).

Click here for the complete review.

Monday, December 03, 2007 

Category: Movies, TV, Celebrities
ShockTilYouDrop.com's Ryan Rotten interview with Tony Giglio is now online! Visit ShockTilYouDrop.com for the complete interview.

Exclusive Interview: Tony Giglio of Timber Falls
Source: Ryan Rotten
December 3, 2007


"You might be over survival horror like your previous night's fling, but survival horror isn't done with you. A bloody slice of counter-programming called Timber Falls arrives in theaters this month to do battle with the holiday fare inundating the big screen with good cheer and happy thoughts. Brianna Brown and Josh Randall star as a young couple who set out on a backpacking excursion in the mountains only to fall victim to a pair of bible-thumping locals and a deranged killer who looks like Cropsy of The Burning's long lost sibling. The man behind this "Hills Have Eyes" and "Texas Chainsaw Massacre" amalgam is director Tony Giglio, making his horror debut after helming the wartime thriller In Enemy Hands and Chaos starring Jason Statham and Ryan Phillippe."

ShockTillYouDrop.com: After so many years of being a fan, how did this leap into horror come about?
Tony Giglio:
My agency had done a really good job of setting up screenings of "Chaos" and I had some meetings that put me close to some jobs ["Resident Evil: Extinction" and "Aliens vs. Predator - Requiem"]. [Producer] Arnold Rifkin's company signed a deal with a company called A-Mark to do five low-budget horror movies and I wanted to get back to my horror roots, the stuff I had been inspired by early on with my career and Sam Raimi. At the time, I was getting sent scripts I didn't like and scripts I liked but I couldn't get the jobs for - basically I wasn't getting the jobs because the number one response was that I had never done a genre picture. I really hated hearing that - I was bumping around genres, but sometimes they wanted to have the security that I had done something in this genre before. Rifkin didn't care, he said, If you like this script and can turn it into what you need it to be, then you've got the job.
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