Angel Of Death Director Paul Etheredge Interviewed At Comic-con

In Search Of Heroes Program International

“In Search Of Heroes” interview of Paul Etheredge, by Nathan Turner, was amazing. Paul’s answers were inspirational and thoughtful. He enjoyed the interview immensely.
The “In Search Of Heroes Program” interview of Paul Etheredge, by recent UCSD San Diego College graduate and actor Nathan Turner dressed as a pirate, was amazing.  Nathan’s realistic pirate accent had him in stitches. Paul’s answers to the heroes questions were entertaining and inspirational.

Paul is the writer, producer and director for the movie, “Buried Alive.” He is currently writing the thriller “Dead On Arrival.” He was also the director for the movie “Angel Of Death”

Paul worked closely with Zoe Bell and Ted Raimi who starred in the “Angel Of Death”  and award-winning comic book writer Ed Brubaker (“Incognito”, “The Death Of Captain America”, “Daredevil”).

“Angel of Death” was produced in the gritty, stylish thriller genre about a very “bad girl” gone “good” in the honorable tradition of “Grindhouse”, “Kill Bill” and “Sin City”. It is a story of a sexy assassin who kills without remorse, until one botched hit changes everything.

Caught off guard, Zoe’s character is stabbed in the head and inadvertently murders a young girl. The blade is removed, but the damage is done. Zoe’s character’s mind is now filled with visions of past victims.

She was originally the hunter and now becomes the haunted. This killing machine is plagued with remorse. She tracks down her ruthless bosses before they kill her. She slaughters the evil henchmen, giving them their just rewards.

Nathan Turner: Hello. We are here at the San Diego Comic-Con interviewing Paul Etheridge. Paul tell us a little bit about yourself.

Paul Etheredge: Hi, I’m Paul Etheredge. I am the director and producer of Sony’s Crackle.com’s “Angel Of Death” starring Zoe Bell. We are premiering the feature version at the Comic-Con. Looking forward to it, seeing what the audience reaction is to the big, high action assassin movie.

Nathan Turner: Wonderful, Paul, wonderful. Tell the people a little bit about your involvement in this project and how everything went, and how you enjoyed working on it.

Paul Etheredge:  Enjoyed it very much! It was a pretty amazing experience with an excellent crew and fantastic contribution from the actors. Lots of stress though, for a small film with a small budget, but we managed to squeeze everything out of every dollar. It was pretty wonderful.

Nathan Turner: Wonderful, wonderful, Paul. We have a couple of questions for you here today. First one is “What in your definition is a Hero?”

Paul Etheredge:  I think a Hero is someone who inspires you to look inside yourself, find ways to better yourself; and also find ways to look outside of yourself and be a tool at bettering your world, honestly.

Nathan Turner: How does one become a Hero?

Paul Etheredge:  I strive to figure that out myself. It’s a tricky road. I am not sure exactly. I think it involves a lot of selfless thinking. It’s a challenge.

Nathan Turner: Right. Now Paul, who are the Heroes in your life who have impacted and influenced you?

Paul Etheredge:  Wow…many of my teachers while growing up, people who have given me kernels of interest and allowed me to kind of locate what my life pursuits are. Not many politicians these days, unfortunately. The president, though, I am curious about him. Scientists very often, environmentalists, those are all important people to me.

Nathan Turner: Alright. Good Paul. Who do you believe are the unsung Heroes, the ones who go unnoticed?

Paul Etheredge:  Fireman are unsung but not necessarily unnoticed. I do believe that teachers are very often. They are gateways for us as children and the world at large. They are often undervalued I think.

Nathan Turner: Thank you Paul. Thank you for talking to us today.