After many years in the making, TYRANNY is finally having its debut.
The story is about a young artist from San Francisco named Daniel McCarthy, who volunteers for a brain mapping experiment at Berkeley University in November 1999. During the experiment, he has a vision of what he believes to be the future - whether that is the near future or distant future, he doesn't know. In fact, he doesn't really remember what he saw at all, he only has the random scribbles he jotted down on a piece of paper when the experiment was over. It is now that his quest begins and he must solve the mysterious puzzle of his own making.
Now enter Isabelle Lorenz, a young graduate student from Berkeley who is invited to one of Daniel's art exhibits. The two are immediately drawn to each other. They both feel something larger than themselves pulling them together. Is it fate, or something else? Daniel begins to realize there is more to meeting Isabelle than random chance as he discovers that she was part of his vision...in some way...if he could only remember...
But that is simply how it all starts. What comes next is full of very strange people and twisted events, political chaos and corporate takeovers, international conspiracies and traveling across the globe with an underground group of revolutionaries ... much more could be revealed about the story, but, that wouldn't be much fun now would it?
Below are stills from "TYRANNY" the series, Starring: John Beck Hofmann as Daniel McCarthy, Kieren van den Blink as Isabelle Lorenz, Mikael Forsberg as Pavel, Olga Kurylenko as Mina Harud, Sasha Townsend as Demas, Mimi Ferrer as Myra, Sarah Coleman as Ariel Huckster, Aric Green as Ethan Chambers, Bitsie Tulloch as Alex, Rachel Toles as Camille, Scott Nichols as Paul, and Enrico Piazza as Dr. Malik.
KAIDAN is the term used for the Japanese ghost stories, and, extensively, for the J-Horror culture. The Buddhist moralizing stories were rapidly transformed into international shockers; people wanted more frightening monstrosities and oddness, with no direct connection with the Western horror.
Manga, anime, movies and the subcultures developed around them competed in shicks and panic. If you really want to know why on the Japanese horror movies is written 18+, take a look at the next issue of Otaku Magazine. Nevertheless, is our duty to warn you that all who looked inside certain pages of this issue have disappeared shortly after. Still, it might be just a story to send the children to sleep for good.
Woah, Tyranny is awesome! It was better then I expected. The first two episodes were cool, but its just the begenning and I know its going to get a whole lot cooler!
This movie/webisode looks very intriguing. I have faith that it will be quite amazing. You have full support from me, and I will get word out to as many people as possible about it.