The latest to pop onto the radar is Extraterrestre, by Spanish director Nacho Vigalondo.
The Spanish writer-director, who made 2007’s time-travel mind-melter Timecrimes, cites Philip K. Dick’s Ubik as inspiration for the film.
Hinting at the film’s premise, he writes on his blog, roughly translated: “What if the apocalypse, instead of being a global blow, is a terminal accumulation of domestic disasters?”
Then there’s Seres: Genesis, centered on a little girl (played by Luisa Guerrero) who pays a high price after surviving a collision with an extraterrestrial spacecraft.
Distributed by 24 frames, writer-director Angel Mario Huerta’s movie opened in Mexico last weekend and heads for U.S. theaters next year.
Seres: Genesis is the first installment of a planned trilogy based on the Spanish-language graphic novel series Seres: Genesis from Mexican publisher Huma Comics. (The books are slated for English-language publication in October.) Seres: Genesis will be followed by sequels subtitled Evolution and Extinction.
24 frames’ director of development Jesús di Sica touted a sequence involving alien possession as “one of the creepiest and most memorable moments in recent sci-fi movie history” in a press release about the upcoming film.
Also filmed in Mexico is the compelling Monsters, set for Oct. 29 release in the United States. The movie, by British director Gareth Edwards, enlists a supporting cast of amateur Mexican actors to tell the story of two Americans crossing through an “infected zone” on their way to the U.S. border.
[Extraterrestres photos via cineblog.blogs.sapo.pt]
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See Also:
- Monsters' Lo-Fi Sci-Fi Draws Heavily on Reality
- Vintage Mexican Sci-Fi Beams a Blast From the Past, con Queso
Authors: Hugh Hart