Award-winning writer and director, Brett Truett, has teamed up with renowned artist and animator, Francisco Enciso, to create HELL ON EARTH – an animated rock opera series for mature audiences. It features beautiful anime-style animation, an epic story infused with dark wit, and some killer rock and roll. Truett's Production Company, Mythicnet, is currently hosting a fundraising campaign on Indiegogo.com to raise money to bring this ambitious project to life.
The demons are released when an antimatter bomb, created in the wake of a revolutionary scientific breakthrough, blows a hole in the universe, opening a portal to Hell. The demons seem unstoppable until the mysterious Geomancer, like a modern-day pied piper, proves that they can be subdued by live rock and roll. The tale focuses on the struggles for power within the group holed up in the dam as well as the constant threat they face from the demons whenever they venture outside. They also face frequent attacks from other groups of humans trying to get inside the safety of the dam which, along with a few other sites around the world, possesses an unexplainable power to repel the demons. The music will include some original songs and the producers plan to try and license music by rock bands across the spectrum, including tracks by AC/DC, Led Zeppelin, Black Sabbath, Judas Priest, The Rolling Stones, Audioslave, Hole, The Killers, Nine Inch Nails, Wolfmother, and Smashing Pumpkins.
Hell On Earth co-creator Brett Truett started his career as an actor and director in the avant-garde theater scene in Seattle during the peak of the city's creative renaissance of the nineties. He moved to Los Angeles in 1999 to become famous and promptly decided that he'd rather shave his head and join a cult than subject himself to the horror that is the pursuit of an acting career in Los Angeles. So, in short order, he transformed himself into a post-production wonk.
He began editing music videos and concerts for a wide range of high-profile music acts including No Doubt, 50 Cent, and Queens of the Stone Age until he moved into television where he continues to make his living finishing shows like Arrow, Revolution, and Weeds. Brett has also made a a name for himself as an independent filmmaker -- he produced a successful, critically acclaimed educational DVD of Shakespeare's Macbeth in 2002, and made the award-winning short film, Splitsville, that swept the festival circuit in 2007, winning several awards and qualifying for Academy Award consideration. He also edited and acted in the independent feature, Raising Genius, starring Justin Long, Stephen Root and Wendy Malick.Videos