Latest news with #AshleyGreene


Buzz Feed
3 days ago
- Entertainment
- Buzz Feed
The Cast of The Ritual Tries To Decode Internet Slang
From 'raw, next question' to 'reheating nachos,' we handed the internet's newest slang to Dan Stevens, Ashley Greene, and Abigail Cowen to see if they could make sense of the internets most viral phrases. The Ritual opens everywhere June 6. Get your tickets now: The Ritual Trailer: #DanStevens #AshleyGreene #AbigailCowen #InternetSlang #BuzzFeedCeleb #TheRitual


Geek Tyrant
09-05-2025
- Entertainment
- Geek Tyrant
New Trailer Supernatural Horror Film IT FEEDS - "It's Worse of You're Afriad" — GeekTyrant
Here's a new trailer for chilling supernatural horror thriller It Feeds , which stars Ashley Greene ( Twilight ) and Shawn Ashmore ( Frozen ).This trailer highlights audience reactions to the film, and it looks like it will deliver a fun horror movie experience! In the film: 'After a young girl bursts into their home psychiatry practice claiming an entity is feeding on her, Jordan and her clairvoyant mother must find a way to stop the force before the girl is taken completely.' The movie comes from director Chad Archibald, and it serves at the first movie in a planned 10-movie production slate from Productivity Media Inc (PMI) and Black Fawn Films. It's said to be a 'unique brand of genre films that will not only engage and terrify but pull at the heart strings of our audience.' The director shared in a statement: 'This slate won't just include horror films — there will be content specifically crafted for today's audiences, blending genres to shock and surprise viewers.' It Feeds is not avilable to watch in theaters,


The Guardian
05-05-2025
- Entertainment
- The Guardian
It Feeds review – spooky supernatural chiller that loads up on tasty jump-scares
There are two species of beastie horror: your robust, reality-tethered monster movie starring a hungry shark, rogue crocodile or big snake, and the more supernatural kind in which the malevolent entity is not human, but perhaps more human-ish – your Babadooks, Bughuuls and Nosferati. It Feeds is in the latter category, about a shadowy thing whose MO is attaching to people and, per the title, feeding on them. He'll seem familiar if you're au fait with the likes of The Conjuring and Insidious, but he is at least neatly realised by the FX team. Heading the human cast is Ashley Greene, known to Twilight fans as peppy clairvoyant vampire Alice Cullen. She is once more tapping into the supernatural here as psychic psychiatrist Cynthia Winstone, who is able to perceive the entity and is terrified of getting involved – although given the demands of the genre, we know that she will have to eventually. Also reporting for duty is former X-Man Shawn Ashmore, playing a twitchy father whose daughter (Shayelin Martin) is seeking deliverance from entity-based longueurs. In 2015, the breakout horror hit It Follows creeped audiences out via a supernatural game of tag with a shape-shifter whose attentions were sexually transmitted. It Feeds isn't officially related but, in both its title and the idea of an unknown thing targeting people in a particular sequence, there are echoes. One for the jump-scare crowd, It Feeds is light on gore but heavy on the dark spooky wraith guy with thin, sinister fingers. It may not stick around in your memory with the persistence demonstrated by the entity towards its victims, but it passes the time chillingly enough. It Feeds is on digital platforms from 12 May.


Perth Now
04-05-2025
- Entertainment
- Perth Now
Ashley Greene's first horror movie was Interview with the Vampire
Ashley Greene's first experience of the horror genre was 'Interview with the Vampire'. The 38-year-old star features in the new horror flick 'It Feeds' and explained how it was seeing the 1994 movie – which starred Tom Cruise and Brad Pitt – as a child that first sparked her interest in scary films. Speaking to The AU Review, Ashley said: "The first scary-ish movie for me was 'Interview with the Vampire'. I was very young, and I know it's not traditional horror, but my mom wasn't happy about it. I was at my cousin's house and we watched it. I really liked it." The 'Twilight' actress later started watching horror films alone in her house as she grew older but lived to regret tuning into 'The Strangers'. Greene recalled: "I kind of got away from (the genre) for a little bit, but I liked it until I moved into my own house and I was then very specific about the horror movies I would watch. Like, I watched 'The Strangers' and, Jesus Christ, why did I do that? "'Why are you doing this? Because you were home', or whatever that line is, like, oh my God. I'm never leaving my house again!" In 'It Feeds', Ashley plays a clairvoyant therapist who must confront her past trauma to help save a girl who is being haunted by a malevolent spirit and acknowledged the challenge of finding the emotion to reflect the film's plot. She said: "I think it's always challenging to trust myself and just let go in these spaces, and not to continue to live in a space that we've been talking about. Like, we now have the ability to just leave things on set and to separate ourselves from that. "I do find there's always this moment of me going, like, 'Oh, no, what if I don't get there? Because it is such an abnormal space, how do you fake adrenaline?' "I find that I'm really big on preparation work, so that when I get to set I can know I've done all the work and whatever is going to happen is going to happen. It's always a little scary to ask if you're going to make it believable for the audience." Ashley likened acting to working "in therapy" as she builds an entire life and background for the character she plays on screen. She explained: "I always say when I'm working on these things it's like I'm in therapy. I'm in talk-therapy with myself, or whoever I'm working with, because I think you're just going through your life and connections and these characters' worlds. The way I work is that I create this whole backstory for these characters. "The first time you read a script is when you get such an honest response. You wonder how you connect. It's such a release."