Arts & Entertainment
Wrestlers Bludgeon Zombies, Zombies Eat Promoter
Cody Knotts is at it again, this time mixing two pop culture genres for what might be a no-brainer for success.

A promotional test shoot for βPro Wrestlers vs. Zombiesβ at West Newton Gym had at least 100 fans booing and cheering Saturday as a tag-team wrestling match turned into a zombie-laden royal rumble.
The zombie actors showed infected bite marks and plenty of blood from the previous βvictims.β Their lurching pace made easy and apt targets for wrestlersβ rope leaps and drop kicks. After the two fan favorites beat back the swarm of zombies, the βevilβ promoter, Derek βDr. Feelbadβ Widziszewski, was thrown to the ravenous mob. Most of the show was improvised, with no noticeable hitches or lags in action.
Fans who turned out for the two-hour test shoot will be used in a short trailer to promote casting and financial support for the final feature. They may also be used in the final film in either the opening or closing credits, promoter Derek Widziszeski said. Fans stayed afterward for a traditional RWA (Renegade Wrestling Alliance) match that was not filmed.
βIt was our idea to see zombies with good, old American violence,β said Cody Knotts, film director and organizer of Principalities of Darkness, LLC. βEvery zombie movie has zombies getting shot in the head, or people doing martial arts β¦ but what about good American fisticuffs? Thatβs what led to the wrestler idea,β
Knotts was a former candidate for state legislator, and former editor and owner of The Weekly Recorder, but has now moved on to follow his creative muses in filmmaking.
βPro Wrestlers vs. Zombiesβ is the second of two ongoing projects Knotts has filmedβthe first, writing, directing, and starring in The trailer is here, with the feature release aimed for March 16, according to Knotts.
The budget for the feature film is aimed at $4 million, with major fundraising efforts under way now, according to Camera Bartolotta, Principalities of Darkness financial officer.
Β βCody will bring this in under budget. Heβs really good at controlling expenses,β Bartolotta said.
Cost is a factor for shooting locations, too, with most filming planned to take place in West Virginia. Knotts wants to take advantage of leftover film grants in the state.
βWest Virginia has a 31 percent tax creditβPennsylvaniaβs is 25 percent. I love my state, but this is business.
βWeβve looked at Moundsville State Penitentiary. Weβve looked at Bethany Collegeβ(that) has one of Americaβs only walled-in cemeteries, which we think would just be awesome to shoot. Weβd love to film at Bethany. Itβd be nice to give our alma mater some love.
βShane Douglas and I both went to Bethanyβ¦ he was a senior when I was a freshman,β Knotts said.
Shane Douglas, known to fans as βThe Franchise,β is helping with choreography and casting direction, yet will not be in the final film. Local actors and wrestlers from West Virginia and Pennsylvania will be used in the feature.
βHe canβt be in the film because heβs SAG (Screen Actors Guild) and weβre not doing a union shoot β¦ weβd have to pay a lot of fines. We want to use local people. We donβt want to ship them in from L.A. for something these guys do everyday.β
This isnβt supposed to be a campy throwback.Β The premise of the film is like any other zombie film with relatively ordinary folks fending off the zombie hordeβthey just happen to be pro wrestlers who are believably all in one place when the epidemic breaks, Knotts said.
βPro Wrestlers vs. Zombiesβ will begin major filming as soon as they hit near or on their budget, which is about halfway there, Knotts said.
Knotts has multiple projects going on, one in which heβs serving as producer. βThe film is a comedy, a $2.5 million side production.Β Itβs called βCommuters.β Hopefully weβll be filming in about seven weeks.β
The premise? It involves tampons, alcohol and a non-traditional way for men to become inebriated.
Thereβs more in the works for Knotts and horror films.
βItβs called βBreeding Farmβ. Itβs terrifying. We havenβt said much about it publicly yet, but people at the Pittsburgh Horror Film Festival compared it to βHuman Centipede.β This is far worse, as far as terrorβ¦ itβs not a grotesque film. This is about the idea of whatβs happening to people. Our villain doesnβt hurt people as much as they are forced to comply.β