film REVIEW: A Lonely Place to Die
Graham Gough packs his rucksack for a date with Julian Gilbey’s 2011 British horror film A Lonely Place to Die.
Graham Gough packs his rucksack for a date with Julian Gilbey’s 2011 British horror film A Lonely Place to Die.
Dani puts on her ‘avant-garde’ hat and racks her brains over multi-instrumentalist, voice actor and alternative music demi-god Mike Patton’s soundtrack to Italian indie flick ‘The Solitude Of Prime Numbers’.
Resident thrash fiend Rob McAuslan takes on Vektor’s latest, Outer Isolation.
The OneMetal.com Music Team proudly presents their picks for the best releases of 2011.
Chris Ward checks out the British social networking-based thriller Panic Button. Just make sure you read the terms and conditions…
Robert Downey Jr. returns as Sherlock Holmes in A Game of Shadows, pitting his extraordinary skills against his arch-enemy Moriarty. Can the Hollywood retelling keep to basic tennets of what makes Sherlock Holmes a compelling hero or does Guy Ritchie spunk it up the wall again?
Christmas comes but once a year and brings with it the routine horror of spending time with your so-called loved ones while you all compete for heart disease and type two diabetes before lapsing into a gentle coma in front of a Bond movie. This year Oliver Longden suggests a few festive iPhone treats to keep you sane during this difficult time.
OneMetal favourites Hawk Eyes return with a short and sweet collection of new tracks. Rob McAuslan gets Mindhammered.
In this week’s edition of OneMetal’s Screen Test, Phil Whitehouse takes a look at the video for Welsh metalcore quintet Amongst Carrion’s ‘We That Should Not Be’, and witnesses Mother Nature taking terrifying, face-rapey revenge on those who would stab her rose gardens with shovels.
In his quest to play all the games that escape the mainstream gaze or critical acclaim, OneMetal’s Ryan Scully digs out Tom Clancy’s Shadow Wars for 3DS, one of the launch titles no-one bought.
Swedish quintet Blood Mortized return with ‘Bestial’, a 4-track EP of murky, chainsaw-guitar-weilding, clean singing-free old-school death metal. Phil Whitehouse goes appropriately feral.
Having been mightily impressed by Brooklyn based progressive/sludge/post-metal quintet Hull’s 2009 debut ‘Sole Lord’, Phil Whitehouse was looking forward to a trip ‘Beyond The Lightless Sky’ for the group’s second full-length. Read on to see if the band continued to impress.
Dave Fensome has a chat with Christopher Lee, drummer of much-missed LA rap/hardcore/metal act downset, about that beef with Zach De La Rocha, working with metal uber-producer Roy Z, and the possibility of a reunion.
Drone and post-rock aren’t the most obvious bedfellows but, as Dani discovered, they can produce some very interesting offspring. Follow her into strange territory to see if it’s the favourite son or the black sheep…
Chris Ward attempts a listen to The Path of Totality, the new dubstep-infused album from nu-metal survivors Korn.
It’s time to take on the acclaimed Kill List. Does this mix of social and actual horror deserve your attention or is it another forgettable low budget British horror?
France’s Uneven Structure have been a mainstay in several of the OneMetal writers’ CD players over the past few weeks, and with ‘Top 20 Albums of the Year’ lists beginning to emerge, chances are you’re about to hear a lot more about them.
Onemetal’s newest writer Colin Hamilton takes a look at Martin Scorcese’s Hugo.
Chris Ward ventures into the ice to take on The Thing – ooer!
Screen Test goes ‘Under Cover of Darkness’ with Chicago metal quartet Massakren and asks – can cheesy guitar solos and black metal grimness happily coexist?