Cosplayers at the Colorado Festival of Horror are obsessed with the new horror movie icon Killr™, but "true believers" Rip and Kit are taking their fandom to frightfully lethal levels in the new three-issue comic book series True Believers. Written by Stephen Graham Jones and Joshua Viola with interior artwork by Ben Matsuya, True Believers #1 will debut exclusively at the real-life Colorado Festival of Horror from September 15th–17th before heading to Kickstarter via Hex Publishers, and we have an exclusive reveal of the character art for Rip, Kit, and Killr, as well as the image and summary for the "Kit's Playlist" soundtrack that's intertwined with the story of True Believers and includes unique takes on “Thriller,” “Cry Little Sister,” “Somebody's Watching Me," and more!
You can check out our exclusive character art reveals and soundtrack image below, as well as a press release with additional details, and here is...
You can check out our exclusive character art reveals and soundtrack image below, as well as a press release with additional details, and here is...
- 9/6/2023
- by Jonathan James
- DailyDead
When it comes to social-issue documentaries, Netflix has the market cornered. In recent years, the streaming platform’s original documentaries and docuseries have tackled everything under the sun, from business and politics to drug abuse and public-health crises.
For Netflix’s newest installment, “Recovery Boys,” Academy Award–nominated director Elaine McMillion Sheldon (“Heroin(e)”) delivers a revealing look at the opioid epidemic through the lens of four young men struggling to move on after years of addiction. Available to stream now on Netflix, the film tracks the men, newly sober, as they undergo a traumatic recovery process at a farming-based rehabilitation center and the distressing years that follow.
Today, with all eyes on the opioid crisis, Sheldon’s documentary provides something rare and valuable: an intimate study of progress and pain that serves to humanize rather than alienate. Here are five more Netflix documentaries that take a deep dive into contemporary social issues,...
For Netflix’s newest installment, “Recovery Boys,” Academy Award–nominated director Elaine McMillion Sheldon (“Heroin(e)”) delivers a revealing look at the opioid epidemic through the lens of four young men struggling to move on after years of addiction. Available to stream now on Netflix, the film tracks the men, newly sober, as they undergo a traumatic recovery process at a farming-based rehabilitation center and the distressing years that follow.
Today, with all eyes on the opioid crisis, Sheldon’s documentary provides something rare and valuable: an intimate study of progress and pain that serves to humanize rather than alienate. Here are five more Netflix documentaries that take a deep dive into contemporary social issues,...
- 7/6/2018
- by Indiewire Staff
- Indiewire
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