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The special effects spectaculars of my younger days were ‘event’ movies. Special summer must sees that provided experiences that mere mortals couldn’t emulate. It seemed that fantasical visions were the sole property of shadowy figures, working in the semi-darkness in the Industrial Light & Magic bunker.

CGI, with the increasing power and cheapness of home computers, is no longer the soul preserve of large entertainment corporations. When Pixar first introduced cinema audiences to computer animated angle poise lamps in 1986, it was a breakthrough moment and when Dinosaurs were finally brought to life in Jurassic Park without the need to superglue a horn on an Iguanas forehead, cinema audiences exhaled a collection gasp of astonishment but. like all technologies, as prices fell, it became more democratic.

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Convincing CGI creations are now routinely found in TV shows and with the aid of an Apple Mac, filmmaker Gareth Edwards manages to create a realistic world in the midst of a potential apocalypse with technology available on the high street and software downloadable by all. I’m not saying that talent isn’t a massive factor because of course it is. When a similar revolution in music tech caused a flowering of dance and electronic music in the 90s, it resulted in a lot of innovative music and a lot of poor quality, functional party muzak. Likewise in film, having the tools doesn’t mean you can build a shed. What easy access to convincing CGI offers is an open canvas for ideas. Easy access to special effects software allows the imagination free reign to create which, at a time when mainstream film is suffering an acute bout of sequelitus and remake fever, can only be a good thing.

For me the most amazing thing is how far it’s all come. I know some people decry CGI, especially when it comes to the gorier end of horror FX, but at the end of the day, as the means to paint what the imagination sees becomes available to anyone with an interest, the power to tell stories is closer to really creative people instead of accountants. When Jurassic Park was realised, the giant lizards blew me away. Now they look a little Playstation 2. What will a filmmaker be able to create on a laptop next year, let alone in five?

Monsters (cert. 12) will be released on DVD (£17.99) and Blu-ray (£19.99) by Vertigo Films on 11th April 2011. Special Features include: audio commentary by Gareth Edwards, Scoot McNairy and Whitney Able; Behind the Scenes featurette; Editing Monsters featurette; Monsters VFX featurette; “Factory Farmed” – short film by Gareth Edwards.

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WHAT ONCE CREATED LIFE ON EARTH IS ABOUT TO WIPE IT OUT!

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Misha Collins (Supernatural), Hill Harper (CSI: NY), Torri Higginson (Stargate: Atlantis) and Peter Wingfield (Holby City; Highlander: The Source) face the ultimate doomsday scenario in Stonehenge Apocalypse, a sci-fi fantasy thriller in which the world’s favourite megalithic stone circle proves to be much more than just a prehistoric burial site popular with tourists.

When Jacob Glaser, a disgraced award-winning scientist turned conspiracy theorist and pseudo-science radio talk show host, is alerted to unusual electromagnetic energy fields occurring throughout the globe, his initial investigations lead him to Stonehenge. Somehow, the stones have begun to move independently and are building up enough energy to vaporise humans within a certain range.

Jacob’s unfounded theory is that Stonehenge is the key part of a massive alien terraforming machine connected to other historical sites around the world that are now in the process of modifying the planet for new forms of life, to the detriment of humans.

Meanwhile, in the US state of Maine, a former colleague of Jacob’s has discovered an underground pyramid linked to the ongoing events at Stonehenge and is actively working towards the destruction of mankind in the hopes that he and his followers can survive the coming apocalypse and be the rulers of the next era of life on earth.

When Jacob discovers the existence of a key that he believes is capable to switching off the doomsday machine, he sets about getting his hands on it before the military can commence a series of planned nuclear air strikes on the sites responsible for the electromagnetic emissions that have begun to signify the end of humankind.




Stonehenge Apocalypse (cert. 15) will be released on DVD (£9.99) by Anchor Bay Entertainment on 28th February 2011. Extras include: Behind the Scenes featurette and trailer.

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