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Digital Zombie For Haunted House

Real supernatural hunters?

I know they exsist, please don`t answer telling me they don`t. If you are a hunter, please let me know and tell me everything about yourself that you can. Anything that you don`t want to post, please message me or I will message you and give you my email address.

Thank You!

What is in the Erebus haunted house in Pontiac, Michigan?

Hi
just went last night(i live about 15 min from it).
i was very anxious. ASked everyone how was it? i almost didnt go! it was fun!
it is nothing like people make it out to be, it looks intimidating more than anything. it really wasnt all that scary. you wont pee your pants unless you have to go. there is someone ready to jump around ever corner really. but they arent frightening other than one or two of them. all the props that touch you are foam. nothing hurts. only in one area do actors touch you. the things jumping out at you- people, not overly scary looking for most. props- a dinasour jaw that lunges at you as if to bite you, a giant tarantula, a zombie, a semi comes driving at you blowing horns, stops. other animatronics. the worst is the swamp. looks cool at first then you have to go through inflatables on both sides of you and an actor jumps from there. oh and a shaky elevator. the worst part is a pitch black room then the lights turn on and there are actors of zombies surrounding you, about eight, some on the floor grabbing at your legs, some standing lunging at you, all screaming. also air blasters, men with chainsaws, also alot of darkness. it is frightening but fun. you do get seperated voluntarily. you have to go through a door into a closet sized room, the sterilizer. no more than two or three people will fit. you will have to seperate if tye group is large. it is not as bad as it is madde out to be. and i am 15 and a woss when it comes to haunts!! nothing hurts unless you bump your head on the ceiling where the ceiling is two or three feet tall. also it is loud you may get a headache!

What are some movie/TV tropes that have been overused?

In my opinion it is the Zombie apocalypse one. Every zombie movies is the same and this trope has been very overused. In every zombie show or movies the plot is literally this. The zombies have been made by some bad experiment or by some bad cure and one person is immune to the zombies so they have to take his blood to make a vaccine. This trope has been used in games as well.

Is The movie carriers a horror film?

Yeah, its actually pretty decent, too.

This question may sound odd but here it goes. I have an interest in retro media. Is there any way I can watch TV with a fuzzy picture and audio that sounds old? Particularly on an old TV.

The answer is yes. I work at a rather nice haunted house attraction as the head electronics designer where we did exactly what you are wanting to do. We took a digital copy of an old Lucy show and we broke into with a “Zombie outbreak alert” in the “Front room” on an old Fifties black and white tv which we had gutted and placed a flat screen in. It looks and works great.Oddly enough, it was not me who came up with it. It was the graphics designer who used a software program to do all the magic.However, I just Googled “How to add static to a tv picture” and got the following link. I assume there are many other software solutions too.https://www.google.com/search?q=...One edit: I just noticed that the OP wants to do this on an old TV, so if they don’t want to hollow one out and replace it with a flat screen, etc, they might want to do what was my first instinct when we first tackled this problem. I wanted to play the content through a media player that had an rf output and simply weaken the signal with attenuation until static was achieved. We also could have adjusted the old fine tuning control on the tv itself to achieve various bad/low quality picture conditions.Lastly, one could even do this with a player that has a video composite output and run that through their own rf modulator which is still commonly available and very inexpensive, (under $20.00)..

Has a film ever required the projectionist to add additional special effects as it was being projected?

The original version of House on Haunted Hill required the projectionist (or another movie theater employee) to hoist a skeleton with red glowing eyes on a wire and float it over the audience while a skeleton appeared on screen at the same time.The Tingler was another horror movie in which Vincent Price would warn moviegoers about the "tingler," a parasitic creature that attaches to the human spinal column and feeds on human fear. According to the movie, the only way to get rid of the tingler was to scream at the top of your lungs. A vibrating motor was installed in movie theaters to make patrons think that they had been attacked by the "tingler," at which point the theater was supposed to fill with screams. (As Brian Cady's answer might already lead you to guess, both of these films were directed by William Castle, each released in 1959.)The 1960 film Scent of Mystery used the gimmick of Smell-O-Vision, which released odors into the theater at appropriate plot points using the theater's air conditioning ducts. The gimmick was a complete fiasco because it made hissing noises whenever a new odor was released. In addition, the odors, which were designed to heighten appreciation of the plot (e.g., a villain was identifiable by the scent of pipe smoke), often went off at the wrong time. The travelogue Behind the Great Wall of China entered American theaters just a few weeks before Scent of Mystery, using a rival technology called AromaRama, which also released scents into the theater via the air conditioning system. In contemporary press coverage, Variety called the competition between Behind the Great Wall of China and Scent of Mystery "the battle of the smellies."The Incredibly Strange Creatures Who Stopped Living and Became Mixed-Up Zombies advertised a gimmick called Hallucinogenic Hypnovision. At some point during the movie, a hypnotic black and white spiral would start spinning on screen, which would be the signal for employees from the movie theater to start running up and down the aisles with rubber masks on. You know, because of the zombies... or something.The experimental filmmaker Morgan Fisher made a film in 1976 called Projection Instructions, which consisted of nothing but frames of white text on a black background that provided instructions for the projectionist to carry out, sort of like this:

Trying to remember an old NES game's title?

Um, The only thing that comes to mind is Circus Caper.

It could also be Circus Charlie.

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