Scream and Hide in Virtual Reality Films and Videogames This Halloween

We all love a little bit of a scare, scream and adrenaline rush. Virtual reality (VR) is particularly good at making viral videos when we see our friends and family members tremble, scream or fall off chairs. Be prepared to go through those same emotions in these latest experiences in VR and augmented reality (AR).

Dark Corner Tag Along

Dark Corner Studios are releasing international exclusives for horror fans to enjoy. All four of the films are available now through the Dark Corner app which you can get on Oculus Rift, Oculus Go, Samsung Gear VR, and Google Daydream headsets.

  • Tag Along – A blood-spattered haunted house story from Taiwan, director Pu-Yuan Cheng and producer Shin-Chi Chen have created a short horror experience that expands the mythology of this hit Taiwanese franchise. Get ready to enter the haunted home of the demon Mosien, if you dare…
  • Oh Deer – The first foray into VR for Swedish director Peter Pontikis, Oh Deer is a stark, minimalist POV experience. It’s an exercise in suspense and divided attention, placing the viewer in the perspective of a wounded animal as hunters close in from all sides.
  • Horomaru – An indie haunted house story from South Korea by director Jae-gyun Hong. Three young ghost hunters with plans to upload their 360 footage for viral internet views go exploring in an abandoned mansion. What they don’t realize is that the house used to host grisly sacrificial rites; “Horomaru” refers to “the ritual of sacrificing a living human to a ghost or demon.”
  • The Office – A popular horror short from the prolific European VR studio Inside360, directed by Miguel Temme. The viewer takes the POV of an office worker about to head home for the day…when suddenly mysterious things start to happen all around you.

WITHIN also has some premieres for their Fright Fest Collection with eight experiences, including five app premieres. These premieres will include:

  • The Caretaker​ – created by Jacob Wasserman, Adam Donald, and Ant Gentile of Hidden Content. This follows the mysterious occurrences at a strange hotel when a couple arrives to wait for a mechanic after their car breaks down on a cold winter night.
  • An Obituary​ – created by Jean Yoon, Kuk-seok Yang, and Jin-hee Kim. The experience charts the unsettling course of a funeral when the man attending realizes he is the sole mourner alongside the deceased’s grieving mother. Why is there nobody else in the village?
  • 11:57​ – is a first-person POV nightmare in which you are strapped to a chair in a dark cave. The experience revolves around your every move, but may leave you cowering under your bed.

Also available will be Dinner Party,​ the pilot episode of a new anthology series called, The Incident.​ Focused on actual supernatural events the first installment is based on the story of Betty and Barney Hill, an interracial couple who reported the first nationally known story of a UFO abduction in 1961.From WITHIN’s archives the Fright Fest Collection will include Greg Nicotero’s The Walking Dead, AMC’s The Terror, ​and Sergeant James. 

It’s not all about VR this season, AR app Noovie ARcade app have also been busy preparing audiences in cinema theatres with pre-show creepiness. Twenty minutes before a screening, audiences can download the Noovie ARcade app on Google Play Store and Apple App Store.

Then, they will be shown a slew of spooky imagery, such as a silhouette of a child on a swing, clutching a teddy bear. Strange, zombie-like creatures who move with a jerky, unnatural motion appear as ominous writing appears on a billboard, pleasing ‘Save Me!’. Alternatively you can also play AR games on the cinema screen like Cinevaders, Emoji Escape and Kernal Cannon.

The horror experience will be available at selected theatres from 6th October until 31st October, with over 20,800 movie screens taking part,  including big chains such as AMC, Cinemark, Regal Entertainment Group along with 55 regional and local cinemas and exhibitors.

Viveport_Halloween

If cinema or movies just aren’t immersive enough for you, and you’re looking for a little bit more interaction with your content. You can always head over to Viveport where they’re doing a 90% off massive Halloween sale. There’s a lot on offer, there’s even a ‘Free Frights’ category, you can select from various categories, with my personal favourite category “AHHH!”

KOBOLD If you’re looking for something that sits between a film and videogame you can always try Kobold. This experience is coming to the Oculus Rift and HTC Vive. Designed as a trans-media experience. Before entering VR you watch a short film which serves as an introduction into the world and characters and tells the backstory of a missing boy and his family.

In the VR experience you play an urban explorer investigating the mysterious case of the missing boy. With your torch in hand you look to discover the secrets of an abandoned villa in the middle of a dark forest in Germany. Featuring real locations that have been scanned for authenticity, KOBOLD offers players a fully interactive universe where they can pick up clues, solve a mystery and come face to face with an ancient evil.

Continue reading VRFocus to get the latest scares.

Dark Corner Releases 4 New Horror Films for Halloween

Dark Corner Studio was founded by a love of all things scary and frightening. The Los Angeles-based studio released its horror app of the same name for virtual reality (VR) headsets in 2017 to embrace the darker side of immersive film making, and October provides the perfect time for it to release new content. To celebrate Halloween, Dark Corner has released four new experiences to send shivers down your spine.

Dark Corner Oh Deer

For this spooky season horror fans will be able to enjoy the exclusive international release of Tag Along, animal POV experience Oh Deer, terrifying ghost story Horomaru, and The Office, a fun-filled horror short.

“VR filmmaking is now becoming so popular around the world that we are seeing an awesome surge in innovative and memorable experiences,” said Head of Content Teal Greyhavens in a statement. “These four films are so different, but each one of them is startling or thrilling in a way that we loved. I’m especially excited about our exclusive release of the Tag Along VR experience, a bloody and beautifully shot haunted house story that will definitely give you goosebumps.”

“October is our favorite time of year for Dark Corner, and we’re excited to expand our slate with these thrilling films, as well as continuing to forge new partnerships with other VR outlets and LBE venues all around the world,” added CEO Guy Shelmerdine.

Dark Corner Tag Along

A synopsis of the films are as follows:

  • Tag Along – A blood-spattered haunted house story from Taiwan, director Pu-Yuan Cheng and producer Shin-Chi Chen have created a short horror experience that expands the mythology of this hit Taiwanese franchise. Get ready to enter the haunted home of the demon Mosien, if you dare…
  • Oh Deer –  The first foray into VR for Swedish director Peter Pontikis, Oh Deer is a stark, minimalist POV experience. It’s an exercise in suspense and divided attention, placing the viewer in the perspective of a wounded animal as hunters close in from all sides.
  • Horomaru – An indie haunted house story from South Korea by director Jae-gyun Hong. Three young ghost hunters with plans to upload their 360 footage for viral internet views go exploring in an abandoned mansion. What they don’t realize is that the house used to host grisly sacrificial rites; “Horomaru” refers to “the ritual of sacrificing a living human to a ghost or demon.”
  • The Office – A popular horror short from the prolific European VR studio Inside360, directed by Miguel Temme. The viewer takes the POV of an office worker about to head home for the day…when suddenly mysterious things start to happen all around you.

All four of the films are available now through the Dark Corner app which you can get on Oculus Rift, Oculus Go, Samsung Gear VR, and Google Daydream headsets. For further content updates, keep reading VRFocus.

Embrace the Horror as 3 new VR Experiences are Coming to Dark Corner

Los Angeles-based virtual reality (VR) studio Dark Corner has been producing horror experiences for quite sometime now, with director and founder, Guy Shelmerdine creating films like Catatonic and Night Night. October 2017 saw the studio release its first VR app, combining all of its projects in one place. In the next few weeks the Dark Corner app library will be expanded further with three new experiences.

Campfire Creepers_Midnight March_(Future Lighthouse)_1

First on the list is the long-awaited release of Mule, a point-of-view (POV) experience that first premiered at Fantastic Fest in 2016 before heading to several other festivals in 2017. Mule is a dark, emotional, fast-paced ride that catapults the viewer through the frantic last moments of one very unfortunate man’s life and beyond, with Shelmerdine promising it will be “bigger, more immersive, and more terrifying” than Catatonic.

Then there’s Deerbrook, an acclaimed mystery thriller that launched at AFI Fest last year, featuring a cast including Ari Miller (Orphan Black) and Nicholas Campbell (Black Mirror). Directed by Grayson Moore, Jon Riera, Aidan Shipley and Connor Illsle, Deerbrook involves two strangers showing up at a family’s cottage claiming to have spent their childhood summers there, but their behaviour seems to be driven by something more sinister than nostalgia.

The last 360-degree film is Spacewalker, an immersive adventure tied to the new feature from producer Timur Bekmambetov (Wanted, Hardcore Henry), which invites you to step into the void alongside the first Russian cosmonaut to ever perform an external space walk in 1965.

Dark Corner App Screenshot Gallery6

Alongside the three new films will be an exclusive 360-degree trailer for Campfire Creepers, Alexandre Aja’s throwback anthology series starring Robert Englund (a.k.a. Freddie Krueger himself) which will world premiere at the Tribeca Film Festival next month. “When the kids at Camp Coyote are forced on a brutal midnight march by their sadistic counselors, one boy reaches his breaking point,” notes the official description. “He turns the tables on the bullies, revealing a surprising secret about himself in the process.”

The new films are due to be released on March 28th 2018. Featuring both free and paid content from Dark Corner Studio as well as other filmmakers, the Dark Corner app, is available for iOS, Android, Samsung Gear VR, Google Daydream, and Oculus Rift. For any further updates, keep reading VRFocus.

‘Dark Corner’ Creates a New Distribution Channel for Immersive Horror

The Dark Corner app is creating a new distribution channel for immersive horror experiences and 360-degree videos. Guy Shelmerdine and Teal Greyhavens are hoping that fans of the horror genre will be enthusiastic enough about the potential of VR to achieve new depths of terror that audiences will be willing to pay for 360 video experiences. Shelmerdine is featuring Dark Corner’s own creations including Catatonic and their latest nightmare-inspired Night Night, but also opening up a new marketplace for creators of horror content to sell and distribute their content.

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I had a chance to catch up with Shelmerdine and Greyhavens to talk about their journey from comedy into VR horror, how VR horror experiences have gone viral because of reaction videos, the new distribution channel they’re creating, and the storytelling components that make up a great horror experience.

 

Here’s an example of a reaction video that helps these types of experiences spread virally.

The horror genre also inspires people to look at their deepest fears, and to face their own mortality in a safe context. I believe that there are unknown thresholds of where an experience has been taken too far, and that it’s possible that VR experiences could generate new trauma in people. Shelmerdine and Greyhavens said that they haven’t seen this happen yet, but they’re also showing their experiences within a context where the reactions of other people make it clear what they might be getting into. There are ethical considerations of disclosing to someone the nature of content before they immerse themselves into a horror experience, and so receiving full consent is a responsibility for VR enthusiasts who are sharing this content with each other.

The depth of visceral emotions and embodied reactions from a VR horror experience go beyond what’s possible in any other medium. I’ve seen how these experiences that push the boundaries have inspired people to recreate traumatic experiences they’ve been through in order to find new ways of coping and generating new narratives about their trauma, which has yielded some surprising therapeutic and cathartic results.

While I’m personally more interested in the pro-social applications of VR, I can see how exploring darkness, mortality, and your deepest fears in VR can not only be wildly entertaining for some people, but also perhaps the most vital types of experiences that they need on a deeper level. There are deep risks to flooding your body and psyche with nightmare imagery, but it’s also possible to have radical breakthroughs that would’ve never been possible before.

You can download the Dark Corner app is available on Gear VR, Oculus Rift, Daydream, Android and iOS.


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The post ‘Dark Corner’ Creates a New Distribution Channel for Immersive Horror appeared first on Road to VR.

A World of Terror Awaits as Dark Corner Launches VR Horror App

Last month VRFocus reported on Los Angeles-based virtual reality (VR) studio Dark Corner announcing its latest horror film Night Night as well as the official unveiling of its dedicated VR horror app. Now in the run up to Halloween and for fans of all things scary, the studio has now launched the app publicly.

Initially featuring eight immersive experiences that are both cinematic and hair-raising, the Dark Corner app, built using Vusr by Secret Location, will include Catatonic, Knives, Sonar, The Invisible Man, Burlap, The Peeler, Mule and 1157, with Night Night available on 19th October.

Dark Corner App Screenshot Gallery6

“Dark Corner is the new destination for thrilling experiences helmed by some of the most innovative filmmakers working in VR today,” said director and founder, Guy Shelmerdine. “While most entertainment VR apps offer a mixed bag of content, our goal is to deliver a highly curated selection of exhilarating experiences to a specific audience that loves genre in all its forms.”

Featuring both free and paid content from Dark Corner Studio as well as other filmakers, the Dark Corner app, is available for iOS, Android, Samsung Gear VR, Google Daydream, and Oculus Rift.

“We don’t claim to have all the answers about the future of VR, but we do know that people love to be terrified when they put on a headset,” added Teal Greyhavens, Head of Content for Dark Corner. “Our model is about providing a consistent stream of cinematic experiences that emphasize storytelling and suspense, while remaining accessible and engaging for mainstream audiences.”

As further content is added to the Dark Corner app, VRFocus will let you know.

Catatonic Director’s Next Film ‘Night Night’ to Launch Dark Corner’s VR Horror app

Dark Corner, the Los Angeles-based VR studio founded by Catatonic and Mule director Guy Shelmerdine, has announced in conjunction with producing partner MPC VR its latest horror film Night Night will premiere at New York Film Festival 2017 this month. Additionally, the premiere will also serve as the launch pad for Dark Corner’s new VR app.

Directed by Shelmerdine, co-written by Teal Greyhavens, and co-produced by Dark Corner Studios, MPC VR and Unit Sofa, Night Night chronicles a boy’s journey into the nightmarish realm beyond his closet where killer clowns prowl and a world of terror beyond all imagination awaits.

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Still from VR experience Night Night. Courtesy of Dark Corner. Photo Credit: Matej Tresnak.

Built using Vusr by Secret Location, the Dark Corner app will initially feature eight immersive experiences that are both cinematic and hair-raising when it launches on 29th September: Night NightCatatonicMuleKnivesBurlapSonar, The Invisible Man, and 11:57.

“Dark Corner is the new destination for thrilling experiences helmed by some of the most innovative filmmakers working in VR today,” said Shelmerdine in a statement. “While most entertainment VR apps offer a mixed bag of content, our goal is to deliver a highly curated selection of exhilarating experiences to a specific audience that loves genre in all its forms.”

“We don’t claim to have all the answers about the future of VR, but we do know that people want to have their socks knocked off when they put on a headset,” added Teal Greyhavens, Head of Content for Dark Corner. “Our model is about providing a consistent stream of cinematic experiences that emphasize storytelling and suspense, while remaining accessible and engaging for mainstream audiences.”

The Dark Corner app, available for iOS, Android, Samsung Gear VR, Google Daydream, and Oculus Rift, will feature both free and paid content. For any further updates keep reading VRFocus.

The ‘Mule’ 360 Video Project Could Be VR’s Darkest Corner

The ‘Mule’ 360 Video Project Could Be VR’s Darkest Corner

At the Hollywood-focused conference this week, VR on the Lot, I sat in a coffin to try out the latest project from Dark Corner Studios, a company which bills itself “The Darkest Part of Virtual Reality.”

“Buried or cremated?” I was asked as I took a seat in the plush coffin.

I chose buried and put the headset on. Now from here on out I’m going to spoil pretty much the entire plot, because I think it represents a new kind of intimate horror worth discussing, and I’m not sure how many people are going to get the chance to see the project, or how many will actually want to see it. Both Dark Corner’s predecessor Catatonic and the one I experienced, Mule, are directed by Guy Shelmerdine, founder of the studio. Dark Corner pitches itself as specializing “in crafting experiences that transport the viewer to places they could never visit in real life — or wouldn’t dare to.” I think that’s a fair description.

So, SPOILER ALERT: Inside Mule I found myself naked with a woman in what looked like a cheap hotel. Then I had a heroin overdose, passed out, and was discovered by the hotel housekeeper. I died at the hospital, went to the afterlife and then the autopsy table, where drug dealers gutted me to find the drugs I’d apparently been carrying in my stomach. Then they had a funeral for me and I was buried, per my choice earlier.

I found myself laughing, my body tensing and arms folding across my stomach during the horrifying morgue/autopsy table scene. Being seated in the coffin is by design, propping my upper body up in a rough approximation of the ill-fated person I would become for a few minutes. I’ve used “I” to describe the first-hand experience so far, but that doesn’t accurately describe the feeling of being inside this headset and seeing this particular piece of content.

It was more like I was seeing through someone else’s eyes, knowing I’m not in huge danger and that in a few minutes I would return to the world I knew outside. In this mindset, I got a first-person ticket to this man’s sad, helpless and horrifying end. I couldn’t decide whether I should sympathize, empathize, judge harshly or just look away — and I found myself escaping via laughter. This was a very personal, fast-paced kind of horror I’d not experienced before.

Mule was filmed with a custom 360-degree camera rig featuring Sony A7Sii cameras, created in partnership with Radiant Images in Los Angeles. Visual effects were added by The Mill in Los Angeles.