Winnie the Pooh: Blood and Honey gets a disturbing new poster featuring a mallet-wielding Pooh and Piglet holding a knife standing over a body.
We also get a glimpse at Pooh behind the wheel of a car. We got a look at the fear-inducing retelling of the childhood tale earlier this year. The film has yet to get a trailer, but details were teased in May by director Rhys Frake-Waterfield. Pooh and Piglet feature as the main villains who have gone on a rampage after Christopher Robin abandons them to go to college.
The new key art for Winnie the Pooh: Blood and Honey promises that the horror film "ain't no bedtime story."
It’s always been just Pooh and Piglet. I’ve imagined, and got the actors, to portray that Pooh as the alpha of the two. Winnie the Pooh: Blood and Honey picks up with a grown-up Christopher Robin after abandoning Pooh Bear and Piglet many years prior. So they used to just go out and just target people to kill them, to eat them as a way of living … just food basically." So he’s the alpha male over Piglet, and he is always the one in charge of the camp. That's always been the way Disney has presented the character over the decades throughout its various Winnie the Pooh stories in different mediums. The key art, originally debuted at Dread Central, also features another image of Pooh in the woods with a knife in hand with a corpse at his feet, having just taken another victim.
Yes, a Winnie the Pooh horror movie is on the way, with the unofficial indie movie turning Pooh and Piglet into murderous monsters.
“Because they’ve had to fend for themselves so much, they’ve essentially become feral,” the filmmaker continued. And yes, that’s an evil Piglet on the art as well… Rhys Frake-Waterfield directed the film, and Dread Central has scored the poster art today.
The images depicted nightmarish versions of the beloved Pooh Bear and Piglet stalking their victims, clearly having traded in honey for blood. Now, Dread ...
Under Jagged Edge Productions, run by Waterfield and co-producer Scott Jeffrey, Blood and Honey's budget is a close-kept secret, but the director tells audiences not to expect a "Hollywood-level production." In a Toy Story 3 arc, Waterfield gives Pooh Bear a bit of an edge when his former owner no longer cares for his childhood toys, and since Piglet is typically game for whatever shenanigans Winnie the Pooh gets into, he's joining in on the rampage. It seems the film may be exactly what the images suggest: an eccentric and bloody re-imagining of a classic children's tale. Now in its post-production phase, Waterfield and the crew shot for only 10 days in a location in England, not far from the Ashdown Forest that inspired English author A.A. Milne's collection of short stories. This frightening new poster sees our rumbly-tumbly pal Winnie the Pooh (Craig David Dowsett) exchanging his honey pots for a sledgehammer dripping with blood. Now, Dread Central has shared an exclusive new poster for the film, and it is every bit as horrifying as you would expect.
Earlier this year, Winnie the Pooh and all related characters entered the public domain, allowing anyone to bring to life any story they'd like with the ...
Stay tuned for details on Winnie the Pooh: Blood and Honey. "It's scary but there's also funny bits because there's shots of Winnie the Pooh in a car and seeing him with his little ears behind the wheel and like slowly going over there [to kill her.]" And we wanted to go between the two," Waterfield recalled.
The movie follows Pooh and Piglet as they go on a rampage after being abandoned by their beloved owner, Christopher Robin.
The movie has, unfortunately, not announced a release date… Finally, any horror movie takes on a classic children’s tale will undoubtedly be both the best and worst thing to ever happen. Another certainty is that Disney is going to keep making Pixar sequels movies even though the nostalgia train has left the station.
The official poster art for 'Winnie the Pooh: Blood and Honey' has arrived to smash your childhood with a big scary mallet.
Rhys Frake-Waterfield is the filmmaker behind Winnie the Pooh: Blood and Honey, and we recently had the opportunity to pick his brains about the movie. Winnie the Pooh is a famous fictional teddy bear first created by author A.A Milne and illustrator E.H Shepard. Pooh would be turned into a household name in 1961 when Walt Disney Productions began making the character into films. Winne the Pooh: Blood and Honey went mega-viral after it first hit the internet, with online responses ranging from pure excitement to complete outrage.
The title character in the upcoming horror movie Winnie the Pooh: Blood and Honey is decidedly not the silly old bear you know and love.
"I've got lots of twisted and dark thoughts on what I want to put Pooh and Piglet through and what scenarios I want to put them in." They had to resort to eating Eeyore and then Christopher returns with his wife to introduce her to his old friends, and when that happens they get enraged when they see him, and all of their hatred that they've built up over the years unleashes and they go on this rampage." And as a newly released poster confirms, the maniacally grinning, sledgehammer-wielding creature is about as far removed from traditional representations of Christoper Robin's best pal as it's possible to imagine.
The first official poster for the upcoming slasher horror Winnie the Pooh: Blood and Honey have arrived online, featuring a new look at villains.
Originally created by author A.A. Milne and illustrator E.H. Shephard, Winnie the Pooh recently saw its copyright expire in 2021, with the rights to the characters no longer being held by Disney and entering the public domain. Not too much is known about Winnie the Pooh: Blood and Honey, but Waterfield has said in a previous interview with Variety that both Pooh and Piglet will be the main villains of the film, which will see both characters going on a “rampage” after being abandoned by a college-aged Christopher Robin. “Christopher Robin is pulled away from them, and he’s not [given] them food, it’s made Pooh and Piglet’s life quite difficult.” The first official poster for the upcoming slasher horror film Winnie the Pooh: Blood and Honey has arrived online, featuring a new look at the film’s menacing villains, Pooh and Piglet, based on the iconic characters of A.A. Milne and illustrator E.H. Shephard.
Here is the first spooky poster for 'Winnie the Pooh: Blood and Honey'. The iconic children's tale will be reinvented as a horror film for the first time ...
The government has taken a serious view of alleged mis-selling of courses by edtech firms. They are now so out of control that they are terrorising a group of females who live in a rural cabin. Piglet is depicted on a poster with a knife in hand, staring down at the body, and Pooh is seen with the bloodied hammer.
Winnie the Pooh: Blood and Honey is coming to slash, hack, and cannibalize your beloved childhood memories and we have the poster.
The poster for Winnie the Pooh: Blood and Honey has the titular character framed by an enormous, luminous moon and dark clouds. The blunt end of the peen hammer is dripping with blood, so it is probably that Winnie the Pooh: Blood and Honey does not involve the creatures of the Hundred Acre Wood doing construction wood. As one can see, Winnie the Pooh: Blood And Honey concerns a terrifying version of Pooh Bear, who is dominating the poster and holding a large peen hammer.
Winnie the Pooh: Blood and Honey is a dark and twisted adaptation of A.A. Milne's original stories. Here's everything to know about the slasher film.
"I've got lots of twisted and dark thoughts on what I want to put Pooh and Piglet through and what scenarios I want to put them in." It's gonna be a high priority." It didn't feature a lovable, cuddly teddy bear stuffed with fluff — but rather, a sledgehammer-wielding Pooh and an evil Piglet in an uninviting setting. "We've tried to be extremely careful," said Waterfield on the podcast. "When they see him, all of their hatred that they've built up over the years unleashes and they go on this rampage." "So they've gone back to their animal roots.