Your new movie Babezilla vs the Zombie WHorde - in a few words, what is it about? Its about a shapeshifting lizard woman who is called on by the president to stop not only a zombie horde of whores but also the drug manufacturing pimps who created them.
With Babezilla vs the Zombie WHorde being a zombie movie, is that a genre at all dear to you, and some of your genre favourites? And what can you tell us about your approach to the zombie genre? I do love the zombie genre because its so easy to make the idea silly. Most of the serious zombie films are even a bit silly. The movie that got me interested in horror and horror comedy is the first favorite that comes to mind, Return of the Living Dead. Theres also a special place in my heart for Biozombie. In this movie I went for the simplistic funny and cheap zombies. We just quickly slapped on some Night of the Living Dead ghoul makeup. Just on their faces of course. (Other) sources of inspiration when writing Babezilla vs the Zombie WHorde? A big source of inspiration for this movie was Full Moon Features. Not only for the sexy content but also for the speed in which they turn movies out. I had a goal for this movie to make it cheap, quick, and dirty. I came up with the concept in late July and we had DVDs for sale the first week of September. Do talk about your movie's brand of humour for a bit! The humor definitely draws from bad movies that were meant to be serious. Its stupid humor. The type that will have one type of person rolling on the floor and make another type of person annoyed.
A few words on your overall directorial approach to your story at hand? Beyond all the silliness and gratuitous nudity its really a feminist movie. All the women, even the zombies, are in a position of power over the men. All the men in the movie are portrayed as stupid and believe they have a right to use the women. This ultimately ends with the death of every man in the movie other than the president who asks for Babezillas help and praises her for it. Many of your actresses, and especially your lead Stephanie Love, show quite a bit of skin in Babezilla vs the Zombie WHorde - so how hard was it casting your movie with that in mind? Not hard at all! Stephanie Love was always going to play Babezilla. I wrote the role specifically for her. She had worked with me before on After School Lunch Special II: Sloppy Seconds opposite Lloyd Kaufman. I knew what she would be willing to do so I had fun and just wrote based on that. As for the other women, the policy at HojBob Productions is pretty simple: You dont have to do nudity but its always welcomed. I dont push anyone to do it but they all know coming in what the movies are like, and most of them are more than willing. Im also all about showing different body types. All boobs are good boobs and the world needs to see some variety. Talking about cast, what can you tell us about the actors in your movie, and why exactly these people?
Some are actors Ive worked with before, some are friends, and some just answered the call to an online request for actors and extras. Do talk about the shoot as such, and the on-set atmosphere? With this movie everything was pretty fast paced. Most things were done in one take. We do keep it light and fun. There wasnt much time to rehearse, and a lot of people didnt really know what we were shooting till they got to the set. Even with the rush everyone was able to laugh and have a good time with it. The $64-question of course, where can Babezilla vs the Zombie WHorde be seen? As of right now the only place to watch is by ordering a DVD from HojBob.com - Ill make digital copies available soon and it will be streaming on Troma Now sometime in the near future. There is one theatre showing scheduled for November 27th at the Alamo Drafthouse in Omaha, Nebraska. Anything you can tell us about audience and critical reception of Babezilla vs the Zombie WHorde? I honestly havent heard many bad things about it. I think from the title and concept people are going in somewhat knowing what to expect. Basically dont watch it if you dont like cheesy movies with a ton of nudity.
Any future projects you'd like to share? Right now Im working on a Christmas movie called Maul Santa, and I have a ton of other ideas just waiting to come to life. What got you into filmmaking in the first place, and did you receive any formal education on the subject? I think just watching indie films like Troma movies mostly. For a long time I thought Id like to make movies if I had the time and money. Then one day I was watching Troll 2 and I thought, Screw time and money. I can do this. No real formal education other than a high school class about video production. I learned from doing it. What can you tell us about your filmwork prior to Babezilla vs the Zombie WHorde? Ive made two other feature length films. After School Lunch Special and After School Lunch Special II: Sloppy Seconds. Both featured Lloyd Kaufman. The second one had Mark Torgl who played Melvin the mop boy in the Toxic Avenger. Other than that Ive done a handful of shorts and a 40 minute collaboration during Covid quarantine. How would you describe yourself as a director? Im pretty easy going. I like to plant seeds and see where the actor takes the character. I only give suggestions if they seem to need help or if I have an idea I really want to come through.
Filmmakers who inspire you? Lloyd Kaufman of course. Super nice guy. Frank Henenlotter, early Peter Jackson, Charles Band, John Waters. Your favourite movies? Its so hard to pick favorites because I know Ill leave out something good. Ill just go with Street Trash, Terror Firmer, Return of the Living Dead. ... and of course, films you really deplore? Dramas. There is enough drama in the world. I want to watch a fun movie. Your/your movie's website, social media, whatever else? HojBob.comTwittter: @HojBobProdInstagram and Facebook: @Hojbobproductions
In APA, in-text citations are inserted in the body of your research paper to briefly document the source of your information. Brief in-text citations point the reader to more complete information in the reference list at the end of the paper.
If you refer to the author's name in a sentence you do not have to include the name again as part of your in-text citation. Instead include the date after the name and the page number (if there is one) at the end of the quotation or paraphrased section. For example:
Hunt (2011) explains that mother-infant attachment has been a leading topic of developmental research since John Bowlby found that "children raised in institutions were deficient in emotional and personality development" (p. 358).
When you are citing two different sources that share the same author and year of publication, assign lowercase letters after the year of publication (a, b, c, etc.). Assign these letters according to which title comes first alphabetically. Use these letters in both in-text citations and the Reference list.
Unfortunately citing only once at the end of the paragraph isn't enough, as it doesn't clearly show where you started using information from another person's work or ideas. The good news is you can avoid having to write full in-text citations each and every time by using a lead-in to your paragraph. For a detailed example of how to use lead-in sentences, please see Rasmussen College's FAQ page.
For example, suppose you are reading an article by Brown (2014) that cites information from an article by Snow (1982) that you would like to include in your essay. For the reference list, you will only make a citation for the secondary source (Brown). You do not put in a citation for the primary source (Snow) in the reference list. For the in-text citation, you identify the primary source (Snow) and then write "as cited in" the secondary source (Brown). If you know the year of the publication of the primary source, include it in the in-text citation. Otherwise, you can omit it. See below for examples.
Note: If you don't have the publication date of Snow's article, you just omit it like this:
According to a study by Snow (as cited in Brown, 2014), 75% of students believe that teachers should not assign nightly homework.
If you would like to cite more than one source within the same in-text citation, simply record the in-text citations as normal and separate them with a semi-colon. List the sources alphabetically by author's last name or first word used from the title if no author is given, in the same order they would appear on the References List.
Paraphrasing is used to show that you understand what the author wrote. You must reword the passage, expressing the ideas in your own words, and not just change a few words here and there. Make sure to also include an in-text citation.
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