The definition of the word ‘heretic’ is as follows; to go against, to reject, to rebel against the standard order. Just as the description entails, directing duo Scott Beck and Bryan Woods’ new horror, ‘Heretic’, rebels against every expectation in favour of being a contemplative, at times challenging and overtly chilling tale of frightful depths. The film’s tagline is “question everything”, and of that you will…
The plot follows Sister Barnes (Sophie Thatcher) and Sister Paxton (Chloe East), two missionaries for the Mormon church who happen upon the house of the reclusive, Mr.Reed (Hugh Grant).
Without delay, Heretic makes its intentions clear. Whilst the film indeed drip feeds its terror bit by bit, Heretic does not hesitate in establishing a sense of intense unease from the outset, with all of its meticulous themes and fervently displayed aesthetics being immediately established. The combination of stunning, yet simple visuals and a deliberately monotonous and muted tone promptly sets the scene and introduces the running motifs throughout the film. In other words, just as the film visually affirms, the metaphorical exploration of dark labyrinths and weighty topics are hidden in the most unexpected of places. This aspect of layering the symbolism speaks to the philosophical-like structure of Heretic, which is further implemented by the heavy verbose-ridden script.
Keeping spoilers at bay, the aforementioned themes generally focus on religion and all of its connotations, which are cinematically interpreted by the seemingly unending monologues and conversations delivered by Thatcher, East and Grant. On the subject of the cast, both Thatcher and East fulfil their roles with such dynamic enchantment, hitting every mark and genuinely elevating the film to be the success that it is.
Whilst the on-screen missionaries excel in every sense of the word, the film would not be complete without the talents of Grant, who executes the elaborate role of Mr.Reed with an air of true dedication to the craft. Many will know and love Grant for his bumbling performances of a typical Brit in love (Four Weddings and a Funeral [1994] and Notting Hill [1999]), meaning that his portrayal of a creepy, dread-bearing man will definitely take viewers out of their comfort zone when they realise the true extent of his surprisingly varied artistry.
Heretic’s harrowing and poignant concepts that are laid bare throughout the film manage to avoid becoming redundant and too-wordy all at the hands of the exciting and at times literal twists and turns. Beck and Woods’ haunting take on nuanced topics does not become tiring as the film progresses; instead, the commentary becomes probing and thought provoking. As it stands, Heretic, is akin to that of a unique combination of both a complex conversational piece and an adventurous, heart-pounding horror that stands tall as one of 2024’s more interesting horror releases.
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Tony Todd’s extensive career traverses across film, television and theatre, with the actor surpassing over 100 credits. His remarkable decades-long career is a testament to his captivating, and at times chilling talents. His dedication for all things performance has crafted a devoted fan base who have followed his many powerhouse accounts in some of cinema’s most iconic roles.
It was during his university days studying theatre that Todd honed in on his overt stage presence, learning to immerse oneself in the role and become synonymous with the script – a facet that would long follow Todd throughout dozens of performances. It was in 1986 that Todd would get his ‘big break’ in Oliver Stone’s Platoon, the Academy Award winning film that saw Todd play the emotionally grounded Sergeant Warren. Shortly after, Todd’s on-screen presence began to thrive, picking up countless, yet still meaningful and powerful roles that would cement him as the icon that he remains today despite his passing on November 6th 2024.
In commemoration of who is unarguably one of horror’s greatest icons, Dead Northern presents a retrospective of Tony Todd’s career.
Night of the Living Dead (1990)
George A. Romero’s Night of the Living Dead (1968) is one of the most pinnacle horror films to grace the screen, which consequently means that initially the 1990 remake was received with quite the touch of contention. Despite the mixed reaction, the film has blossomed into a fan favourite, with the similarities of the original and remake being continually referred to. The textual difference between the two is minimal with the script and plot points essentially being a mirror image. Another similarity is the emotional depth and commentary within the film, with both features being reminiscent of societal inequities and systemic qualities. Such an emboldened film with all of these crucial elements needs a strong lead, which in 1968 was headed by the character of Ben (Duane Jones), who proved exceptional as the pragmatic source of compassionate authority of the story.
In other words, Todd had ‘big boots to fill’. Todd’s revisioning of the prominent ‘Ben’, infused that quintessential warmness and groundedness that Jones so brilliantly portrayed, but Todd added that theatrical flare of emotional intensity that spoke to his gravitas as a performer. He was a lead character in every sense. Todd’s ‘Ben’ dominated the screen, steering the narrative with his outwardly expressive acting that cinematically took over Todd; as if the two people, one fictitious and one real, fused to be one. Contemporaneous opinions towards Night of the Living Dead often cite Todd’s enigmatic spark that makes for an objectively entertaining watch.
Candyman (1992)
“Candyman, Candyman, Candyman, Candyman…” Todd’s biggest role is unarguably the titular, bee-swarming, dominating Candyman, the vengeful entity who viciously murders anyone who dares summon him by saying his name five times in front of a mirror.
The premise of Candyman first appeared in notorious horror writer Clive Barker’s anthology series ‘Books of Blood’, in the entry ‘The Forbidden’ (1985). The story was originally set in Barker’s native Liverpool, UK. and emulating the British class system as a horror vessel, however, after the rights were obtained director and writer Bernard Rose began to recognise similarities between the urban areas of Liverpool and housing projects in Chicago, Illinois. With the new setting came new opportunities to expand the story and reflect the area more appropriately, just as Barker’s original narrative mediated on the specificities within Liverpool at the time. The Americanisation of the story saw the real housing project ‘Cabrini-Green’ become the primary setting for the film to play out. The estate was a largely impoverished area that was essentially abandoned of care by the state, leading to high crime rates.
Through this modification, the lore behind Candyman changed. Candyman became the ghost of the 19th century born Daniel Robitaille, an African-American painter who was cruelly tortured to death by an angry lynch mob who cut off his hand with a rusted blade before covering him in honey and setting a swarm of bees on him. This death trap was the consequence of an interracial affair. Tragedy, injustice and ill-will anchors this story, consequently, whoever played Candyman needed an intrinsic aura of intensity, the ability to play a tarnished soul, one that is integral in its mission to inflict the most formidable of frights, whilst still maintaining a sincerity that is both hard and rare to achieve.
The studio originally sought after Eddie Murphy (which is retrospectively baffling after Todd’s signature spin on the role), yet they were unable to afford the actor’s salary. Whilst the studio hunted for blockbuster stars, Rose had another actor in mind who he saw in the TV movie ‘The Ivory Hunters’(1990); in fact the filmmaker was so set on this performer that he did not want to see anyone else audition. To no surprises, the person in question was none other than the soon-to-be Candyman himself – Tony Todd.
From day one Todd was dedicated to the role, he refused to make this ominous antagonist just another ‘boogeyman’, not another monstrous brick in the movie wall. Alternatively, Todd digested the heartfeltness behind the villainy and the stark, almightyness that came from Candyman’s reign of terror. Often, Todd would refer to his character as being tonally similar to ‘The Phantom’ from the famed and similarly artful, ‘The Phantom of the Opera’ musical – Todd really was ever the theatre fanatic!
Todd continued to play Candyman for 29 years, from the very first screen adaption all the way through to its sequel, ‘Candyman 2: Farewell to the Flesh’ (1995), the third and trilogy-making entry ‘Candyman 3: Day of the Dead’ (1999), followed by the franchises latest feature ‘Candyman’ (2021). It is quite the rarity for the same actor to play the same major movie villain for every franchise feature, but it is definitely not surprising, particularly considering that Todd possesses the unique capabilities of capturing a melancholic ferocity with a sense of genuinity. Not to mention Todd’s notorious physical stature, with his 6’5” height and broadness immediately dominating the frame with an uneasy sense of authority, alongside his deep voice that makes that classic Candyman catchline “Be My Victim” sound so haunting and bone chilling.
Final Destination (2000)
After the release of Candyman, Todd was adorned as a horror icon, amassing cameos in the likes of genre essentials ‘The Crow’ (1994) and ‘Wishmaster’ (1997), followed by a role in the first entry of the now major movie franchise ‘Final Destination’. Todd portrays William Bludworth, a mortician who can be described as one of the film’s critical players in the grand and complex lore behind the omniscient character of ‘Death’ within the films. Todd’s dramatic cadance and resonance transforms his role from being one of a simple ‘exposition teller’ to an amalgamated blend of a ‘voice of god’ being, a narrator and a cautionary figure, an oracle even.
Although his physical screen time is not excessive, Todd’s performance was commended by the films fandom, leading to him returning to the role for ‘Final Destination 2’ (2003) and ‘Final Destination 5’ (2011). Although he does not appear as Bludworth in the fourth entry, he does make a sneaky cameo in ‘Final Destination 3’ (2006) as the voice of an animatronic devil for the film’s rollercoaster opening scene. As of recent years, Todd reprised his role of the ‘death teller’ in the upcoming and long awaited ‘Final Destination: Bloodlines’ (2025). Bloodlines is said to have a different approach to the typical setup of the previous instalments, with the film being not necessarily a sequel, nor a prequel, but a slight reboot.
Todd’s character has been part of many Final Destination conspiracies, which include Bludworth being the evil mastermind behind the in-film ‘Death’s Design’ (which determines the entire plot device of one being unable to escape their fate). Lately fans have been speculating this theory even more in anticipation of ‘Bloodlines’ release, both due to it being revealed that the film will delve into Bludworth’s backstory, and due to the connection between Bludworth’s surname and the film’s title. Bloodlines? Bludworth? It’s a far fetched claim, but in the world of Final Destination, anything is possible.
Hatchet (2006)
Besides Final Destination, Todd made many appearances in a string of horror movies, including but not limited to: Murder Set Pieces (2004), Minotour (2006), Shadow Dead Riot (2006), Shadow Puppets (2007), The Eden Formula (2006), Dark Reel (2008), Bryan Loves You (2008), Nite Tales: The Movie (2008), Penance (2009) and The Graves (2009), and lastly, Adam Green’s, Hatchet (2006).
Hatchet saw Todd play the swamp tour guide on the Bayou, Reverend Zombie, which Todd played with a brilliantly sardonic tone. His take on the tour guide was brief, but effective enough to return as one of the lead character’s in its sequel Hatchet II (2010). The sequel sees Todd in a larger role as Rev. Zombie. This time his actions are akin to that of a domino effect that sets the entire plot in motion.
Todd’s capabilities as an actor has seen him lead diverse career that stands tall to this day, with his talents resembling that of a caldron mixing together the emotional sensibility of a stage actor who can dish out every line with such gravity, whilst also possessing that timeless physical dominance needed to play his in-depth characters. Despite Todd’s recent passing, it can be assured that his time on-screen will long live on.
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It goes without saying the entire selection for this years fest deserve recognition for their talents as film makers and artists. So narrowing this down to just a handful of award winners has been extremely difficult for this year’s judges panel!
With that said, lets take a look at all the incredibly deserving award winners from the 2024 Dead Northern Horror Film Festival!
Best Feature Film – Kill Your Lover
Directing duo Alix Austin and Keir Siewert delivered a gnarly, grotesque, and emotionally raw feat of tainted love, where body horror and a cerebral narrative collide together to create the must-see ‘Kill Your Lover’.
From the initial setup right up until the credits begin to roll, the entire film is slick with an uncomfortable sense of intimacy. Intimate through its nature of chronicling a toxic relationship. Intimate through its portrayal of up close and personal graphic body horror, and intimate in how it feels as if we have been positioned to voyeuristically gaze like a fly on the wall as Dakota and Axel experience the terrifying motions of their damning monstrosity.
Kill Your Lover is a standout feature and deserving winner that speaks to the creator’s exhilarating storytelling talents. From Austin’s incredible short horror ‘Sucker’ (2022), to Siewert and Austin’s team effort on the anthological entry ‘It’s Inside’ in Isolation (2021), it is a sure thing that this duo is one to watch.
(Directors Alix & Kier celebrating along side Cinematographer Oscar Garth)
Dead Northern Award (Best northern Submission) – All This Time
Writer and director Rob Worsey delivered a standout, complex and thought-provoking second feature that, alongside his zombie-themed feature debut, Among the Living (2022), proves that Worsey is a talent to be watched.
The film dabbles in equal amounts of trepidation, theatrical drama, and gothic horror to form an unholy trinity of emotively triggered fear. For instance, as we see Grace come to terms with the disturbed histories that lie in wait, not once does the film become gimmicky in its scares; instead, bouts of unease are stirred, and waves of darkness are weaponised, collectively espousing a film that is as tonally rich as it is visually impactful.
Worsey’s uncanny ability to stir tension and assemble well-crafted scares that linger like a troubling night-terror are at an all-time high throughout All This Time – A worthy winner of the Best Northern submission to the 2024 fest.
(Writer & Director Rob Worsey, Producer Kate Worsey with cast members Emily Rose Holt and Lyndsey Craine)
Best International Feature Film – The Stickman’s Hollow
The Stickman’s Hollow resembles a multifaceted labyrinth, feeding its complex story bit by bit, acting like a serpentine. It is the slow feed of a terrifying story, the intricate weaving of eerie details and the intimate mode of filmmaking that make this found footage horror unmissable and the jury’s top international submission for 2024.
Composing the heart of the film is all of the plentiful mystery, mythology and lore, which is made all the more effective due to its detailed backstory. The Stickman’s Hollow is based on a chilling true story from Director Jack Cox’s childhood of girl who became lost in the local Vancouver woods. And the story goes… the lost child was presumed to be dead, but after a year had passed there were reported sightings of a feral child roaming the forest and eating the remains of animal carcasses. Found near the spotted sightings were strange carvings of male figures, which all point to sinister misdeeds.
Whilst The Stickman’s Hollow is a fictional story, Cox based the tale on the countless, spine-chilling questions that arise when one thinks of a story of such calibre. What happened to the missing girl? How did the carvings come about? And why do missing persons cases in the backwoods go unsolved? Fictional or not, this is nightmare fuel!
Amplifying the intensity is the fact that the filming location is that of where the backstory occurred, conjuring a level of dread that is often difficult to capture on screen. Adding to the unease felt is the film’s found footage fashion that immediately immerses and stirs a level of uncomfortable immediacy. The suspense brought forth, the anxiety formulated and the foreboding alarm mould together throughout this noteworthy expedition into The Stickman’s Hollow.
Unfortunately the team couldn’t make the fest but look out for our interview with cast an crew coming soon to our socials and YouTube channel!
Best Short Film – Skulk
Claire (Elina Gavare) wakes in the night to the sound of screaming foxes. She remains annoyed yet unfazed at the common disturbance, that is, until she sees a strange figure outside her window. It’s not unusual to hear the screeching cries of foxes in the dead of night, with their innate raspy, almost-painful sounding screams being the nocturnal anthem of the British public.
However, does it ever cross one’s mind that what they think are foxes calling out could be human screams or something even worse? This is precisely what director Max Ward so effectively conveys in Skulk. In the wee small hours of the night, the mind plays tricks on us, and with imaginations running wild, our worst nightmare seems only around the corner, or in the case of Skulk, maybe it’s already inside…
This masterfully delivered short won over the jury with it’s fantastic performances, downright creepy cinematography and perfect delivery of horror.
Fresh Meat Award – The Bloke in the Boot
Northern city boy Mogg (Jude Pollitt) accidentally kills his driving examiner (Stewart James Barham) after a failed test, leaving him to call his lifelong friend Gaps (Oliver Barry-Brook). With a body stuffed in the boot, the pair embark on a road trip to Wales to dispose of the mess. Part situational horror, part traditional British comedy as we join Mogg and Gaps on what can be defined as one of the most stressful types of road trips.
This thoroughly entertaining short acts as an exaggerated imitation of Northern British bonds and colloquialisms, which are built upon by the film’s self-deprecating humour, which is sure to provide belly laughs amidst the dramatic thriller roots additionally explored. Another specificity not to miss is The Bloke in the Boot’s genuinely admirable visual work that displays the grand cinematic views that the UK has to offer.
With the brazen duo’s antics, the unapologetically hilarious British cynicism, and the impressive displays of the countryside’s landscape, The Bloke in the Boot stood out to the jury this year as an immensely talented group of filmmakers to keep your eye on.
(Cast member Jude Polllitt-Berthereau & Director Taylor Caddick celebrating their win on the Sunday of the fest)
Best Cinematography – The Rising of the Sap
Produced by the BFI is Susie Jones’ The Rising of the Sap, a folk horror short following Bea’s (Darci Shaw) unwitting journey into ‘The Rising’ and her mother Elizabeth’s (Joanna Scanlan) fight to stop it. Where this film flourishes is the performances, which work to elevate Jones’ outstanding story following the darkness found lurking within the human condition.
As the film unravels, the folkloric elements intertwine with the character study of Bea’s fascinations and Elizabeth’s troubles to create a horror saturated with paranoia, isolation, manipulation and deception. Adding to the thought-provoking narrative is the film’s masterly composition of evocative imagery that is both gritty and visceral yet charmingly suave and ultimately became the panel’s favourite for Best Cinematography of 2024.
Congratulations to the team and particularly Paul Mortlock – cinematographer on the production.
Best Performance – Becca Hirani – The Monster Beneath us
Bursting with tales of losing control and challenging reality, all entwined with a hint of familial trauma and ladened with a haunting gothic aesthetic that bodes stunning imagery and a grippingly tense atmosphere is Sophie Osbourne’s The Monster Beneath Us.
The Monster Beneath Us’ cunning ability to rouse great terror inch by inch is a testament to the film’s sundry charms, from the evocative performances and the thoughtful milieu of designs that echo the time period all the way through to the atmospheric soundscape that conspires with the harrowingly toned cinematography
Becca Hirani’s performance as Lady Grace Abbington captured the Jury’s attention for her fantastic portrayal of a mother consumed with grief and loss.
(Becca posing with her award on the Sunday of the fest)
Best Supporting Performance – Ellen Jane Thomas – Scopophobia
Scopophobia’s female driven cast with fleshed out, complex characters, gnarly (and unbelievably gory) practical effects, powerful scoring, immensely captivating visuals and directorial dynamics all amalgamate together to create one hell of a horrifying and wicked elixir pot that is a testament to the brilliance of independent horror filmmaking.
It’s within this elixir pot we see an outstanding performance from Ellen Jane Thomas as Mia!
(Ellen celebrating the win at the Dead Northern Awards party)
Best Special Effects – Black Hole Barry
Prior to Scott’s (Michael Batten) boyfriend Robin (Joseph Potter) moving in, he ventures out for one last wild night of freedom. Unbeknownst to him, his secret philandering will soon result in an almighty reckoning. The exceptional results of this demonic horror are a testament to independent filmmaking, with its extremely unique and unorthodox exaggeration of adulterous characters being a hilariously dark and twisted spin on genre cinema.
It was the uniquely designed demon that grabbed the attention of the Jury for this years special effects award!
(The Black Hole Barry team grabbing a photo before their screening at the fest)
Bloody Good Death Award – Little Brown Bird
On the shortest day of the year, the overworked farmer Kate (Eliza Butterworth) must care for her ailing father (John Rhys-Davies), who has dementia and is convinced that something is hunting them. Little Brown Bird is an emotionally charged film that tackles the living loss of a loved one through dementia, with the relationship between Kate and her father being a focal point for the affective narrative to flourish.
In tandem with the riveting, poignant story is the film’s moving scoring, which has a softness akin to a lullaby that works to further the dimensional relationship between the father-daughter bond amidst an air of uncertainty and mystery.
Without spoiling this fantastic film there is a whole bunch of gnarly kills that stood out to the jury and left us thoroughly entertained!
(Director Peter Rogers with his newly won trophy)
That’s a wrap on Dead Northern 2024, see you again next year!
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To be able to hold Freddy Krueger’s bladed glove, to sit and admire the luminescent glow of a real Lightsaber from the Star Wars universe in person, to be in reaching distance of the camera that shot the Alfred Hitchcock classic Vertigo (1958) is a dream of many cinephiles.
The fascination we hold dear towards movie memorabilia can blossom from a range of factors, whether it is because we still have a personal attachment to a beloved film from our childhood, or maybe it’s at the hands of a deep connection to a comfort film that we have watched time and time again.
Costumes, filming equipment, masks, and props, alongside an array of every niche object one could fathom, from the likes of genre essentials and cinematic universes, are not just meaningless articles that share a tie to media. In fact, it’s quite the contrary. As director and writer Juan Pablo Reinoso attests to throughout the documentary ‘Mad Props’, these pieces from the silver screen are inextricably tied to audiences’ sheer devotion and admiration towards the dazzling world of cinema.
Exploring ‘prop culture’ as a valuable and critical art form is Mad Prop’s host, Tom Biolchini, a self-proclaimed movie nerd who sets out to review the wide array of props that collectors have formed entire museums around. Many of these collections exhibited throughout the documentary can be defined as entire conglomerates due to the overt size and range of relics amassed over the years.
One particularly notable display comes from the Lyon located ‘Musée Cinéma et Miniature’, a French museum akin to that of a vault filled with a mix of the most unique and iconic artefacts from cinematic history. Whilst the specificities of the objects are best left to be self-discovered, the exhibition ranges from 1980s horror favourites to Hollywood blockbusters.
Alongside the countless displays of movie mementoes is a series of interviews between Biolchini and a whole host of industry specialists, prop connoisseurs and creators, as well as actors such as The Springwood Slasher himself, Robert Englund, Lance Henriksen, who notably played the android officer Bishop in the Alien franchise, followed by the multi-talented Mickey Rourke, star of 9 ½ Weeks (1986), Angel Heart (1987) and Sin City (2005) — to name a few.
Despite the examination of mass collecting, Mad Props does not abandon the individuals who see collecting as a hobby, saving up and then attending auctions and spending ‘hundreds, not thousands’ on treasured, sentimental pieces. Culminating a prop collection is for everyone, just as the passion behind collecting is ubiquitous.
It is this notion that forms the skeleton on which Mad Props is based upon. From the various legends featured through to the humble collectors, followed by the director and host himself, Mad Props is a love letter to cinema. This remarkable movie was created by fans and very much made for fans.
You can catch the film Sunday 29th September at this years festival, tickets here!
Shattering all predictions is David Yorke’s Safe, a microshort that stuns with its humour and dark wit as we follow a unique ‘home invasion’ by a knife-wielding masked killer. The clever amalgamation of horror and comedy is not an unfamiliar sight, yet Yorke’s ability to create thrilling scenes of intense horror with a left-field ending is a lesson in original, artful filmmaking.
Skulk (Directed by Max Ward)
Claire (Elina Gavare) wakes in the night to the sound of screaming foxes. She remains annoyed yet unfazed at the common disturbance, that is, until she sees a strange figure outside her window. It’s not unusual to hear the screeching cries of foxes in the dead of night, with their innate raspy, almost-painful sounding screams being the nocturnal anthem of the British public. However, does it ever cross one’s mind that what they think are foxes calling out could be human screams or something even worse? This is precisely what director Max Ward so effectively conveys in Skulk. In the wee small hours of the night, the mind plays tricks on us, and with imaginations running wild, our worst nightmare seems only around the corner, or in the case of Skulk, maybe it’s already inside…
Body Worn Video (Directed by Tony Hipwell)
From the filmmaker behind short films Standing Woman (2021), Bad Penny (2022) and the co-director of Zomblogalypse (2022) is Body Worn Video, a found footage horror. The film follows officers Cane (Oliver Devoti) and Adel (Chantelle Alle) as they answer a worrisome call concerning child abuse. Body Worn Video pulls a fast one with its unexpected genre twists that range from an occult-heavy ambush to a full monstrous assault. The effect of a body cam being the lens enhances the authentic and serious tone of the film, ensuring full immersion whilst the wildly nerve-wracking series of events unfold.
The Curse of the Velvet Vampire (Directed by Christoffer Sandau Schuricht)
Two horror fans meet in a cult video store to screen the mysterious film “The Curse of the Velvet Vampire”. This Danish short film has a movie-within-a-movie, meta-esque quality at the hands of the on-screen vampire film watched by the obsessed genre fans. As such, director Christoffer Sandau Schuricht peppers in plenty of cinematic detail, from the heavy stylisation that thrives with its ultraviolet lighting all the way to the vampiric infusion that is reminiscent of the beloved sleazy vampire sexploitation films of the 1970s.
Nervous Ellie (Directed by David Yorke)
The painfully shy Ellie (Kelsey Cooke) struggles to tame her nerves during a first date with Danni (Sophia Capasso), resulting in unforeseeable consequences. Award-winning filmmaker David Yorke succeeds once again in proving his stellar talents, with Nervous Ellie being a true feast to behold. As the film unfolds and its terrifying yet oddly stunning conclusion nears, the audience is treated to an immense performance from Cooke, the ‘Nervous Nellie’ herself. Although a short film, Nervous Ellie delivers a thrilling ending that the lucky viewers will long remember.
Black Hole Barry (Directed by Alejandro Alberol)
Prior to Scott’s (Michael Batten) boyfriend Robin (Joseph Potter) moving in, he ventures out for one last wild night of freedom. Unbeknownst to him, his secret philandering will soon result in an almighty reckoning. The exceptional results of this demonic horror are a testament to independent filmmaking, with its extremely unique and unorthodox exaggeration of adulterous characters being a hilariously dark and twisted spin on genre cinema.
The Mannequin (Directed by Emelie Dahlskog)
A hardworking seamstress (played by director Emelie Dahlskog) creates a mannequin based on her own form, but after a series of creepy events, she suspects that the mannequin has a mind of its own. The Mannequin taps into fears of existential angst, particularly how lack of progression in professional development can lead to deep-rooted anxiety over the self. This premise is materialised by the presence of the mannequin (Michelle Ljungcrantz), whose seemingly vacant appearance represents a lack of autonomy, as well as being a haunting, eerie force of horror.
What A Catch (Directed by Thomas Pickering)
A Victorian fisherman’s (Nathan Geering) late-night fishing trip takes a sinister turn. It’s of no surprise to learn that director Thomas Pickering is a lifelong cinema aficionado, with What A Catch being a clear love letter to the potency of the horror genre. The short film has a rare mix of slow burn patience in revealing its source of terror whilst still being maximalist in its portrayal of bloodied horror.
Little Brown Bird (Directed by Peter Rogers)
On the shortest day of the year, the overworked farmer Kate (Eliza Butterworth) must care for her ailing father (John Rhys-Davies), who has dementia and is convinced that something is hunting them. Little Brown Bird is an emotionally charged film that tackles the living loss of a loved one through dementia, with the relationship between Kate and her father being a focal point for the affective narrative to flourish. In tandem with the riveting, poignant story is the film’s moving scoring, which has a softness akin to a lullaby that works to further the dimensional relationship between the father-daughter bond amidst an air of uncertainty and mystery.
Do Not Open (Directed by Samuel Terence McNally)
Do Not Open follows three friends (John Sinclair Evans, Leah Rogers and Adam Deary) who head to a remote countryside house, only to discover that the house has another guest stalking them, a formidable creature that can only be seen when it wants to be. This incredible short film was shot and animated entirely on Super 8, which embodies a raw, nostalgic take that adds gravity to the ‘found footage’ rhetoric of the plot. Throughout, the diegetic lens captures an almost voyeuristic aura that emulates this idea of an omniscient creature lurking amongst the group.
You can catch the films Saturday 28th September at this years festival, tickets here!
Inspired by the works of Ladislas Starevich, the creator of the first puppet-animated film The Beautiful Leukanida (1912), is Les Bêtes, a haunting stop-motion horror akin to a dark fairytale that follows a mysterious rabbit who summons a myriad of wonderfully strange creatures. This four-year project, conceived by Michael Granberry, is entirely regenerative, with the short solely using recycled film and repurposing abandoned characters made for previous projects that never materialised. Granberry’s experience in the industry has seen him perform as a stop-motion animator in various award films such as Anomalisa (2015) and Tales of Halloween (2015), alongside the horror documentary Never Sleep Again: The Elm Street Legacy (2010) and Swallowed Souls: The Making of Evil Dead II (2011). The one-of-a-kind, outlandish aesthetic is made thanks to the improvisational development of the film, with the short having no script or storyboards; instead, Granberry gathers the intricate characters and allows a narrative to flow naturally. As such, Les Bêtes has an organic quality despite the fantastical elements, fashioning a final product reminiscent of a phantasmagorical fever dream.
VHX (Directed by Alisa Stern and Scott Ampleford)
The nostalgia-driven VHX delves into the life of forgotten VHS tapes that sit on a shelf, waiting for the day when they will be chosen and played once again. Little do they know, there’s a fate far worse than living a life in their cases. Director duo Alisa Stern and Scott Ampleford’s mutual admiration for physical media and corny horror cinema, alongside their shared appreciation for the effects that stop-motion animation has to offer, creates a unique, laugh-out-loud take on the trials and tribulations of a neglected home video. The anthropomorphic tapes are what make the top notch animation and creative script thrive, with the Toy-Story-like actions and quick-witted personas being a scarily accurate representation of what one would imagine a humanoid videotape would act like. Top all of this off with an ingenious twist; then you have a guaranteed crowd-pleaser.
Merkurio (Directed by Sébastien Pesle)
This wildly chaotic and maddeningly entertaining thriller follows a lusted-after gigolo (James Ferrux) whose seemingly harmless flirting with an older woman (Olga Martinez) unleashes a world of volatile mayhem. This folkloric comedy meets witchy horror is inspired by the Basque lore and mythology from the Spanish quarters, infusing elements of obscurity and mystique to create an alluringly dark short with the bones of gory horror cinema. These facets of wickedness result in intensely graphic scenes of visceral bloodshed that are made all the more beguiling by the black-and-white effect lashed over the entire film.
Fisitor (Directed by Llŷr Titus)
Stalked by grief after the tragic death of his husband, Loan’s (Gwïon Morris Jones) life has spiralled into misery. As though fate was not cruel enough, his despair is compounded by the haunting of an unearthly creature of Welsh folklore. Fisitor is agony personified—a nightmare screened. Loan has lived through a cataclysmic misfortune, and director Llŷr Titus has no qualms in displaying this heartache, with this fantastic and moving short being one of great affective magnitude. Fused with the narrative is the display of Welsh culture that bleeds throughout. The film embraces its cultural roots through its dialogue, which is composed entirely of the Welsh dialect, and its inclusion of homegrown mythology. Fisitor’s mythological diegesis is rife with haunting imagery and a dark, bleak gloom that melds an omniscient feel to the antagonistic force throughout this deeply impactful short horror.
Lord of the Free Range (Directed by Simon Dymond)
An unwilling to budge father’s (Richard Glover) rigid ways of thinking pushes away his family to a mysterious cult run by the elusive Father Magnolia (Dominic Garfield), who makes it his mission to worship a ‘resurrected’ chicken. What Lord of the Free Range boldly and wisely does is challenge the various forces of play throughout, with director Simon Dymond satirising the antagonist’s presence of the overtly carnivorous appetite from Tony whilst also lampooning the ludicrousness of the cult’s actions. Accompanying the witty story is the unquestionably admirable production value that hones in on a rich, distinctive style and aesthetic to enhance both the character of the film and the overall effect.
Demons in the Closet (Directed by James Smith)
Demons in the Closet recounts the imaginative claymation story of a resident whose closet is host to a labyrinth of demons. This genre-twisting short flips the script as it delivers a thrilling and unparalleled twist of fates within less than two minutes. The punchy gore and monster design collaborate to create a wealth of wacky and wicked creatures that speak to how the art of claymation allows for textural depth and a sense of individual, handcrafted work to shine.
You can catch the films Friday 27th September at this years festival, tickets here!
Estranged friends Nye (Steffan Evans) and Daf (Tomos Gwynfryn) go to collect a free armchair from a seemingly lonely, frail elder woman (Olwen Medi); however, when a cascade of sinister events unfold, the pair must fight to make it out alive. Collection Only defies expectations as this thoroughly creepy feature tackles more than just its immensely unsettling atmosphere, with the film exuding bouts of humour amongst its lead characters. It is made clear that the bond between Nye and Daf has deteriorated over time, leading to the distanced pair grappling with a lost friendship, all the whilst being tormented by an evil force.
Embrace (Directed by Axel Zeltser)
Inconspicuously lying in a Parisian alleyway is a bucket that Mélanie (Natte You) walks past every day unbeknownst; that is, until the ever-present bucket suddenly catches her eye. Although Embrace is a micro-short consisting of only two minutes, the film is significantly potent, with the visuals and lighting being grandiose and superb, alongside the vividly alarming and disturbed ending that grabs the viewer with a chokehold and refuses to let go.
Daughters of Evil (Directed by Adam Taylor and Natasha Malone)
In 1966, a nameless girl group consulted a spirit board to seek out the perfect band name – ‘Daughters of Evil’ (consisting of Natasha Malone, Jenessa Michelle Soto and Ariel Ditta). However, along with their new ensemble title, they were also possessed by demons. Decades later, YouTuber Vivian (Taylor Shaye) summons the demonic band back from the dead. Daughters of Evil is drenched in a hybrid swinging-sixties meets satanic-panic horror style. This distinctive aesthetic melts together the vibrant, exuberant rock-n-roll music culture of the time with a brutal, outlandish and, at times, grotesquely brilliant dose of devilish horror. Whilst the in-movie band started as a narrative force, the Daughters of Evil have since risen from the screen and are now a real band with a rockingly nefarious sound.
Dance with the Devil (Directed by Tim Khvan)
This mockumentary follows the geezer-like Father Marcus (Dean Kilby) and his intern Pete (Flinn Andreae), who provide domestic exorcists for the homes of London. Whilst exorcism-themed films tend to have a serious connotation about them, Dance with the Devil is a bonafide rib-tickling horror comedy that stands alongside acclaimed genre mockumentaries such as What We Do in the Shadows (2014) and Wellington Paranormal (2018-2022). There is a particular quirk to Dance with the Devil that makes it so rewatchable. It’s the casualness that the demon-fighting duo have to their rather serious profession, with the pair donning holy water filled water guns, requesting a ‘cuppa upon arrival at the most monstrous of situations, and the darkly macabre yet hilarious quips spoken so naturally by the utterly fantastic leads. If Dance with the Devil is anything to go by, director Tim Khvan has a very exciting filmmaking future ahead.
Easter Eggs (Directed by Lewis William Robinson)
A bizarre and spooky Easter Bunny (Tommy Walton) stalks a young man (Elijah James) who comes across a bundle of chocolate eggs, trapping him in the Bunny’s domain, a hellish, liminal space. Out of all the holiday figures, whether it’s the jolly Saint Nick or Valentine’s Cupid, the most unsuspecting antagonist force is that of the beloved Easter Bunny. However, abandon all happy memories of this furry friend as the director creates a freakish, uncanny, hellraising short that captures the Easter Bunny like never before. The Bunny’s abnormal territory is not what one would expect; instead, it is an oddity that is comparable to the dreamlike works of Lynchian cinema that challenges reality and transports the viewer into an unnatural landscape.
Match (Directed by Victor Basallote)
Bored and unable to sleep, Rachel (Adelaida Polo) takes to a dating app, leading to an accidental match with the possessive Zalir (Vanessa Orrego). Themes of obsession and overbearing domination run a mock throughout this sharp thriller, with Victor Basallote’s capacity to create terror through a minimalistic approach making the chilling atmosphere all the more sinister. Match thrives on a less is more approach where Zalir’s presence is continually suggested rather than overtly shown, creating a film that slowly builds until it reaches a menacing and unforgettable peak.
The Rising of the Sap (Directed by Susie Jones)
Produced by the BFI is Susie Jones’ The Rising of the Sap, a folk horror short following Bea’s (Darci Shaw) unwitting journey into ‘The Rising’ and her mother Elizabeth’s (Joanna Scanlan) fight to stop it. Where this film flourishes is the performances, which work to elevate Jones’ outstanding story following the darkness found lurking within the human condition. As the film unravels, the folkloric elements intertwine with the character study of Bea’s fascinations and Elizabeth’s troubles to create a horror saturated with paranoia, isolation, manipulation and deception. Adding to the thought-provoking narrative is the film’s masterly composition of evocative imagery that is both gritty and visceral yet charmingly sauve.
Five Turns (Directed by Sam Dixon and Sixto Perea Rubio)
The struggling Alyssa resorts to an atypical treatment to cure her condition. However, a caveat states she must only perform the treatment five times. Five Turns is deliberately ambiguous and perplexingly covert, leaving the viewer in the dark until the very last moment, where the bubbling tension and unease reaches a pinnacle peak, resulting in a nightmarish reveal. Directorial pair Sam Dixon and Sixto Perea Rubio join forces to conjure a short horror that has an immense visual appeal, with the rich cinematography combined with the bewitching, electrifying soundscape which fashions a film that is not to be missed.
Puzzle Box: The Glitch (Directed by Jack Dignan)
In 2023, director Jack Dignan released Puzzle Box, a terrifying found footage horror that explored demonic twists and turns under the guise of a claustrophobia-inducing found footage lens. Dignan is now back with a spin-off that utilises the brilliant labyrinth-like structure of Puzzle Box. Puzzle Box: The Glitch follows two friends (Noah Fowler and Elessa Donnelly) whose venture to buy drugs leads to an all-encompassing glitch. The premise of a disorientating, maze-like puzzle that ambushes, muddles and essentially tortures its victims is truly harrowing to consider, let alone be witness to. As the film becomes increasingly convoluted and complex, strong emotions of dread and uncomfortably thrive as the characters experience a situation that is derived from the most startling of nightmares.
You can catch the films Saturday 28th September at this years festival, tickets here!
The housebound Francine (Gracie LeClere) is gifted a case of matches by her controlling husband, Sebastian (James Viller), who owns various match manufacturer factories. However, she soon discovers that this gift holds a great curse as a dead girl, Vera (Amy Anderson), is resurrected each time a match is lit.
Britain circa the late 19th century was host to the ‘Matchgirl Strikes’, where the working women from London match factories instigated industrial action against unfair, frankly diabolical working conditions. Mark Patterson’s Strike is set against this monumental moment in history that seems rather fitting for the contemporaneous period. The synthesis of a period piece with a secondary narrative layer of a toxic relationship, combined with a mysterious air of supernatural power, is precisely what makes Strike the dramatic, compelling slice of cinema it is.
Patterson lays emphasis on Francine’s relationship with the controlling Sebastian, with the patriarchal figure stripping any agency away from his wife, isolating her from not just her abilities but also her potential. In a sense, Francine herself is akin to a ghost, with her true self and ability invisible in the eyes of her husband.
The delicate subject is handled with great respect by the stellar casting of both Viller and LeClere, the latter of which added such autonomy to her evolving character. The caveat of Francine’s story is that she is a wheelchair user, which for the tyrannical Sebastian means that he has further hold over his supposed beloved. LeClere herself is an ambulatory wheelchair user, meaning that she could give credence to the tenderness that her character requires.
The layered corpus of Strike explores the aspect of hauntology and how the symbolic presence of a ghostly apparition can act as a figurative vessel. The manifestation of Vera is one of great significance, as Patterson dismisses an archetypal ghostly disturbance in favour of the formation of a meaningful bond between Francine and her newfound, unexpected companion.
Strike distorts what is normally prophecy in terms of supernatural horror, with the film’s surprising story making continuous bold choices – which all collide to benefit and enrich this unmissable, important and stirring horror short feature.
You can catch the film Sunday 29th September at this years festival, tickets here!
Released by HorrorWeb Productions is The Black Quarry, a wild and sinister exploration into the dark side. The black metal band “Drown the Priest” travels to an abandoned quarry to shoot a music video as intense as their signature hardcore sound.
Unbeknownst to the band members, the lead singer has menacing motivations for using the defunct space as the location. However, what lurks beneath the quarry proves to be more malevolent than his twisted intentions.
This featurette serves as proof that director Corey Jason Trahan’s passion for all things horror and rock is no exaggeration as this epic and fiercely savage film is a whole experience. The Black Quarry hones in on its irreverent tone, with the absurd extremity of the characters and plot laying down a darkly humorous undertone that allows for the gritty, gnarly horror to glare through in devilishly rogue waves.
It would be sinful not to mention the practical effects that are straight out of a vibrant, bloody and graphic splatter B-movie from the 1980s – in the best way possible!
The film is host to a whole smorgasbord of gory effects that range from brutal face-pulls, decapitations and neck slits, all of which are brilliantly stomach-churning as the viewer is a witness to a whole bunch of sinew-showing, blood-spurting, entrail grabbing barrage of squeamish fun. To indirectly quote Drown the Priest guitarist Devon (Zach Beesley)- it is “metal as fxxk”.
You can catch the film Sunday 29th September at this years festival, tickets here!
Fear Cabin: The Last Weekend of Summer does not simply toy with expectations with a horror-cum-cabin fright fest. Instead, it completely dismantles and excitingly remixes events, creating a wild ride that goes full throttle from beginning to end.
A motley crew of friends head out to a remote cabin in the woods for a weekend of fun, drinking and standard debaucheries; however, the trip soon turns far from ordinary when the group begins to experience a world of terror as an unexpected guest joins them.
Director Brian Krainson delivers a pure, bone-chilling tale that offers a lineup of assorted frights, from ghouls and entities that create bumps in the night, all the way to displays of witchcraft and devilry that mingle to summon a dense, sinister atmosphere that unleashes bouts of havoc throughout the deadly weekend trip. Ultimately, the film’s acts of portrayed evil acts as pathways for the various motifs to rip through and percolate the unsettling rhetoric. Whilst the film’s spirit is rife with a nexus of intricate themes such as survival, isolation and fragility amidst moments of ghostly fear and so forth, what Fear Cabin: The Last Weekend of Summer ensures is that it does not become excessively heavy with all of its dense threads.
Although the jolting horror antics take centre stage throughout the film, Krainson infuses touches of light humour and strong writing to balance the grave velocity of what is at play throughout the narrative. It’s for this reason that the characters remain multidimensional rather than just channels for horror to seep through. Accordingly, the film builds upon the robust character arcs that surface from the group’s dynamic, with the escalating sense of panic and dread fueling waves of tension as the reality of the horrifying situation evolves and reaches a menacing peak.
The suspenseful flow of mystery is made all the more ominous on account of the cabin setting, which almost becomes a character within itself. The quiet backdrop of a rural cabin immediately forbodes in response to how the solitude of isolation can highlight an uneasy hostility. For instance, as the haunting antics unravel, the group grapple with the vulnerability that such a remote setting in tune with nature and all of its dark history provides. There is no immediate safety net outside of a typical suburban brick-and-mortar, and classically (but nevertheless still spine-tinglingly sinister), no one can hear you scream!
Fear Cabin: The Last Weekend of Summer is a fresh take on a beloved haunted cabin story that pays homage to the quintessential beauty of eerie, lodge-based horror but with a distinct, innovative flair that speaks to Krainson’s stellar filmmaking capacities. The film’s nuanced approach has great fun in pulling the plug and wiping away what we expect, alternatively delivering high-impact, unexpected thrills that both provide ample shrieks as we jump during startling moments, as well as experience lingering spells of dread and horror, akin to a troubled haunting that has the ability to stand the test of time.
You can catch the film Friday 27th September at this years festival, tickets here!
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