Uwe Boll - Upcoming Projects

Upcoming Projects

Uwe Boll's website now offers the opportunity for anyone to "co-produce" his upcoming film Blackout. In exchange for a gift of €33 (US$44), a donor will receive a limited edition DVD of the film and a signed certificate from the cast and crew.

In September 2010, a trailer for his new film, titled Auschwitz, about the concentration camp, was posted on YouTube. The trailer, in which Boll appears as an SS gas-chamber guard, contains explicit scenes of the brutalization and killing of concentration camp inmates. Boll has been quoted as saying that films such as Schindler's List "no longer had the ability to reach young people and that it was his duty as a German to make the film as a way of confronting the past."

Boll is the subject of a documentary film titled Raging Boll, directed by Dan Lee West, which premiered at the Austin Film Festival in October 2010.

The upcoming Italian zombie film Eaters is presented by Uwe Boll. Boll will also be producing the upcoming film Zombie Massacre based on the 1998 video game of the same name.

In March 2012 it was announced he had created a short horror movie to add to a collective effort. His movie, inspired by Josef Fritzl, focuses on parents with a daughter locked in a room, where they can partake in immoral acts against her.

Uwe Boll is also planning a fourth entry in the BloodRayne franchise in a contemporary setting involving her trying to live a normal life. Natassia Malthe is expected to return, and is expected to be loosely based on the video game Bloodrayne 2.

Vince Desi, the head of Running With Scissors, is currently in talks with Uwe Boll regarding a sequel to Postal.

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Famous quotes containing the word projects:

    One of the things that is most striking about the young generation is that they never talk about their own futures, there are no futures for this generation, not any of them and so naturally they never think of them. It is very striking, they do not live in the present they just live, as well as they can, and they do not plan. It is extraordinary that whole populations have no projects for a future, none at all.
    Gertrude Stein (1874–1946)