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Dead Northern 2024 Festival Review – Demonic Shorts

Collection Only (Directed by Alun Rhys Morgan)

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!

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Dead Northern 2024 Festival Review – Student Shorts

Tasty Tongue (Directed by Pearl Zheng) 

A-Zhe has a bitter soul (Shang-Ting Chung), continuously cursing others, but when he encounters Mia (Wen-Ling Cheng), a beautiful and mysterious woman, he develops a grotesque appetite for human tongues. The curiously disturbed story of A-Zhe is one of great significance, with director Pearl Zheng basing the film on an urban legend from her hometown.

She notes that she composed this moral tale of A-Zhe’s sour disposition by piecing together a more complex and whole story, with Zheng’s creative zing adding a newfound depth to this nauseating saga of events. Fleshing out the film are the visual effects that provide an immersive experience as we become lured into the bloodied carnage throughout this eclectic and unique short horror. 

Wick (Directed by Kayling Taylor)

In Wick, a perilous candle is bound to a young girl’s life, and if the flame is extinguished, she will meet a deadly fate. This gripping tale of cursed embers is fraught with tension and unexpected surprises that reach out and unnerve from deep within. Wick is darkly original, with its ominous and subversive result speaking to the creativity of student filmmakers.

Director Kayling Taylor is not afraid of taking the unbeaten path as the short film continuously throws the viewer through the myriad of unexpected twists and turns that Wick so creatively enacts. The film’s impressive capabilities are made all the more moving at the hands of Taylor’s outstanding directorial efforts, with the young filmmaker being only twelve years of age! With the likes of the unmissable Wick, Taylor is destined for a thriving future in the world of filmmaking. 

Strings (Directed by Ava Pearson, Eleanor Smith and Nina Zandvliet) 

In a bid to reconnect their childhood friendship, Sally (Calypso Lewis) and Poppy (Coco Jones) venture to Sicily on a dream summer vacation. However, when Poppy’s abrasive friend Alex (Ashton Hunt) joins the trip and creates a hostile dynamic, Sally finds herself becoming increasingly drawn to a lone puppet found at the villa. Strings operates on a less is more approach where implications and subtleties dredge up an intense horrifying energy that enforces the idea that what the viewer is unable to see is far more terrifying than the outward motions of overblown displays.

Underneath the surface, Strings is an examination of the constraints that lurk within coercive relationships, particularly how one’s identity can be clouded or even lost in toxic friendships. This poignant exploration uses the guise of horror and its ability to fashion insightful thematics with chilling, intense displays of eeriness to create a short film that is both meaningful and impactful. 

Did You Get That? (Directed by Jude Brownhill) 

Budding presenter Ross (Robyn Misha) is having doubts about having nonbeliever Sean (Bob Tapper) as their co-host on their supernatural investigation show. However, hosting dynamics are the least of their concern when they encounter a deadly force whilst investigating reports of a demonic presence known as ‘The Mammon’. Jude Brownhill’s previous credits include the experimental horror short The Lacuna Virus (2022), which showcased Brownhill’s creative flair in horror creation. His latest short feature, Did You Get That? expands upon his ability to stir distinct one-of-a-kind pieces that do not just stand out but also stimulate a sense of expressionism that prides itself on evocative vividness and unexpectedness. As such, what Did You Get That? conveys is a bold, monstrous affair that offers a cinematic insight into the haunting world of paranormal activity.

The format of an on-screen supernatural show is reminiscent of meta-esque filmmaking, allowing no space for predictability as Brownhill scripts in plenty of self-awareness and quips as Ross and Sean film their show. Did You Get That? is a memorable and effective exercise into analogue horror that perfectly balances explorations into otherworldly creatures while grounding itself as a tale of gritty realism. 

Next Please (Directed by Eva Bonnevits) 

Next Please traverses the intersection between animation and horror, exploring how the infinite capabilities of art-based filmmaking allows for unconstrained and unconventional storytelling due to the medium’s infinite flexibility. The short tackles the dreaded premise of a hellish doctor’s appointment that never ends. Eva Bonnevits’ undeniable talents are brimming with an energy that infuses Next Please with a form of kinetic yet dreaded terror where hyperbolic animations and powerful effects create a film that can only be described as a kaleidoscopic nightmare.

With animated art, anything is possible, which subsequently allows for the results to have no bounds. Next Please thrives within this notion, with every image belonging to a larger series of disturbing stills that form together to create an undeniably unnerving short surrealist film that cinematically represents the terrifying, illogical visions that come from the subconscious psyche. 

Dead Body (Directed by J Taylor-Jones) 

Dead Body is a soul-gripping, deliberately confrontational and conversational review into an incredibly worthy and critical truth. Director J Taylor-Jones is open about their filmmaking statement, declaring that media is a vessel for them to explore the corporeal, affective processes of personhood that come with being transgender. As such, Dead Body follows a non-binary individual (played by the stellar Andrew Houghton) who must survive the night as they become trapped by an antagonistic presence.

The ominous, metaphorical narrative is complemented by the standout visual palette that is weaponised throughout the film, with the striking crimson lighting melting with the viciously theatrical orchestral soundscape to create an end product that does not just startle and scare but also provokes an introspective reaction that ensures that Dead Body will not be forgotten.

The Bloke in the Boot (Directed by Taylor Caddick) 

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 is a must-watch for any audience member. 

The Journey Home (Directed by Noah Lei Underwood) 

The intense voyage of showcasing feelings of dysphoria and monstrosity that The Journey Home takes the viewer on is not to be underestimated. Director Noah Lei Underwood showcases two characters, ‘The Man’ (Louis Norton) and ‘The Creature’ (played by director Lei Underwood), who intertwine to exhibit what it means to feel trapped, caged and ensnared by one’s own flesh.

The film uses facets of nature and surrealism bundled up in a monstrous carcass to create a spectacle worthy of critical acclaim. Here, horror becomes a conduit that employs body horror and its gritty means of fleshy displays of violence to translate the complexity of the trans experience to a wider audience, lending crucial, deserted gravity to a situation that is often overlooked.

You can catch the films Friday 27th September at this years festival, tickets here!

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Dead Northern 2024 Festival Review – Strike

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!

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Dead Northern 2024 Festival Review – The Black Quarry

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!

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Dead Northern 2024 Festival Review – Fear Cabin: The Last Weekend of Summer

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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Dead Northern Festival 2024 Review – The Healing

The Healing makes two things clear: be careful who you trust, and be careful of what you trust. This tense and unnerving descent into chaos is an exercise into the dark underbelly that seedily lies amidst seemingly tranquil and ‘healing’ situations…

The film follows Lyuba (Alyona Mitroshina), who, in a bid to escape from her abusive relationship to Sergey (Vyacheslav Chepurchenko), heads off to a weekend retreat with her friends Sveta (Victoria Skitskaya) and Zoya (Ekaterina Solomatina). The retreat seems warm and welcoming at first, a chance for Lyuba to distance herself from her troubles; however, when she becomes anxious and starts hallucinating and wants to leave the increasingly strange retreat, Lyuba fears that what’s waiting on the outside is far worse. 

Troublesome woes of domesticity are trickled through The Healing with an appropriateness that gives credence to the gravity of the situation. As Lyuba’s experiences with Sergey are revealed, it becomes clear that matters such as unsettling manipulation and loss of autonomy are central to the film’s effectiveness. The Healing joins the likes of Silent House (2011), Midsommar (2019) and The Invisible Man (2020), where scenes showcasing the erosion of reality speak to underlying concepts that arise from traumatic relationships. Whilst the magnetisation of horror and terror play prominent roles in keeping The Healing entertaining, what director Den Hook ensures is a level of sincerity and solemnity in showcasing such an emotionally deep and courageous film. 

Adjacent to the intense core of The Healing is the film’s isolated setting, which is almost a character within itself. The remote destination of the retreat replicates an intense feeling of remoteness, which outwardly represents the serenity that such a supposed haven should have. Yet, the vast openness of untamed woodlands teeming with towering trees and sweeping landscapes exploits the psychological paradox of the film. The seemingly endless spaces of land harness a form of affective, emotional claustrophobia, where despite the purported freedom of the sanctum, there is an evocative sense of inescapable surveillance from both Lyuba’s introspective visions and the followers from the retreat. 

The Healing elevates the already powerful ambience through its parading of subjective reality with the assistance of Lyuba’s intense visions, which she experiences throughout the film. The film often wears a cognisant coat by virtue of Lyuba’s apparitions that embody both a sense of fantasia, alongside startling spells of disorienting horror. The amalgamation of surrealism and unsettling horror lines the film’s double edged sword, with the almost ethereal-like illusions drawing the viewer in, only to stun and disconcert when the reveries quickly become dark, crazed and twisted. 

The combined powerful cerebral knowingness of the narrative and the aesthetically striking nature of The Healing works to create a richly detailed and rigorous end product in its means to engage, alert and disturb.

You can catch the film Saturday 28th September at this years festival, tickets here!

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Dead Northern Festival 2024 Review – Kill Victoria

Drowning in sordid secrets and lies, hellbent on delivering devilish antics and driving tension to a delightfully unbearable peak is Kill Victoria. 

This thrilling rollercoaster follows a group of friends composed of couples Paula (Sara Canning) and Pete (Michael Xavier), Jacky (Gia Sandhu) and Nigel (Robin Dunne), along with the incessantly single Nick (Aaron Poole). The familiar dynamic soon changes when Nick finally becomes engaged to Victoria (Laura Vandervoort). Upon the group’s chemistry changing with Victoria’s arrival, the foursome begin joshing as to how they would kill Victoria in order to get prior-engaged Nick back. However, when the whole group departs on their annual weekend trip, secrets arise and trouble begins as Victoria uncovers a horrifying secret that changes the course of their lives forever. 

This wickedly devious film weaponises an iceberg approach, where the surface level is host to a barrage of entertaining and gripping sequences filled with edgy escapades and enthralling twists and turns. However, diving beneath the exterior reveals various levels of sophisticated plot points that work to meticulously craft a fleshed out, complex piece of cinema. Beginning with the peripheral factors: Kill Victoria equips a vivid visual palette that truly captures director Robin Dunnes (who also stars as Nigel) and cinematographer’s Justin Yaroski’s talents of creating a world that immerses the viewer into the compelling nature of the film.

For instance, throughout Kill Victoria, the camera often shows Individual close up shots of each character in moments of contemplation and understanding, piecing together the gravity of the situation they find themselves in. Not only do these moments of individualism look absolutely stunning with the almost Chiascuro-esque lighting burning a sense of emotional intensity onto the screen, but it also speaks to how the film unveils the uncomfortable reality of self-serving relationships. 

Dunne, also serving as the writer, took inspiration from his own life experiences to write the script, with him brilliantly, boldly, and bravely being open about how his own encounters with past relationships helped form the basis for the film. In Dunne’s director statement, he notes how a partnership in his mid-twenties resulted in his friends and family drawing back from him, not because of disdain, but because he had changed at the hands of his kinship. In a beautiful way that is admirable from Dunne, this film replicates a universal experience that many will appreciate as a life lesson, a plight that touches on themes of personal-centeredness, self-doubt and the lies that we tell ourselves that twist and conform until they resemble the truth. 

Such a dense film relies on the vitality that excellent performances provide. In the case of Kill Victoria, this entirely true. Every single actor thrives in this dramatic character study, employing dimensionality to their on-screen personas and perfectly portraying gutsy yet hearty characters. Coupling this is the film’s applaudable way that it slowly reveals its true colours. Not everything is laid bare and spelled out, alternatively, we are slowly fed information piece by piece, building a slow burning tension that erupts when the real ferocity of the story is revealed. 

Kill Victoria is an intricate and nuanced piece of genre cinema that will continually leave the audience guessing and wanting more, leaving a lingering mark on the lucky viewers. 

You can catch the film Sunday 29th September at this years festival, tickets here!

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Dead Northern Festival 2024 Review – Scopophobia

Scopophobia: the daunting fear of being watched. This anxiety-inducing sense of being eyeballed by someone or something is what filmmaker Aled Owen’s feature chronicles and captures throughout the intense, cryptic and thrilling Scopophobia

Rhiannon (Catrin Jones), Erin (Emma Stacey), Mia (Ellen Jane-Thomas) and Sam (Bethany Williams-Potter), a once tight-knit group of friends, reunite in their home town of Milton, Wales, ten years after tragedy struck the group. However, amidst the merriment of the reunion, secrets arise, and terror ensues. 

This grassroots horror feature is an independent horror in every respect. From the fundraising campaigns to the budding cinema-centric crew (all of whom are a group of passionate, talented individuals), along with the production being filmed on home soil, is all part of what makes Scopophobia the authentic, creative horror it is. The film weaponises the freedom that comes with indie filmmaking, with Scopophobia flaunting an innovative remixing of traditional narrativisation, throwing viewers onto the unbeaten path more than once, conjuring masses of grippingly suspenseful sequences where riveting unpredictability thrives.

The rampant twists and turns are best kept stowed away until the lucky viewer watches them unravel on the big screen. As a rule of thumb – leave any expectations at the door and enjoy the electrifying ride from start to finish.

Just one of the many ways Scopophobia excels is the film’s epic scoring. Featuring throughout is a powerful synth-focused sound, mixed with a pulsing beat that is reminiscent of that nostalgia-driven 1980s sound, but  without being an imitation. In fact, the music has an entirely original undertone that compliments Scopophobia’s organic distinctiveness.

This retro but futuristic style was produced and composed by Welshmen Lloyd Morgan, also known as DJ Keltech, whose noteworthy arrangements work to propel the electrifying film to an even higher level. Joining the soundtrack is GG Fearn, a dark pop musician whose shadowy, Celtic-driven songs permeate Scopophobia  and provide a source of punchy, haunting and baroque flair to the film. 

Both artists were found either through previous connections or social media, which speaks to the entire homegrown quality that Scopophobia rightly prides itself on. The film is heavy on its regional talent, with many of the cast, like the sound artistry, being acquaintances in some form prior to filming. 

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. 

Catch the film Saturday 28th September at the 2024 festival, tickets and details here.

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Dead Northern Festival 2024 Review – 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. 

The film chronicles three connected chapters following a series of people who learn the hard way about the mysterious and horrific truth behind the terrifying ‘Stickman’s Hollow’, a seemingly quaint lake that brings about hell for anyone who dares to trail its path. 

Writer and director Jack Cox is an expeienced filmmaker who began his years behind the camera working on small-budget cinema with New Horizons, the Roger Corman founded company, before moving onto a successful career in animation. Having spent years in the animation field, Cox has traversed back to horror, and with The Stickman’s Hollow, its evident that the horror genre will be all the better for it. 

The film’s ambitious premise of dissecting the lore of ‘The Hollow’ into three parts, is part of what grants the outcome as being a standout piece that thrives in originality. In other words, not at one single moment does the threat of a predictable ending arise. The first of the triptych-like structure follows a young family who venture off camping, settling at the ominous Stickman’s Hollow for some recreational fishing, however, it’s not long before strange whisperings and disturbing events culminate into an almighty finale.

The second entry takes us on the journey of a priest who is tasked with treating the roots of a family whose daughter appears possessed, which ends in a genuinely startling, fierce tragedy, and a series of questions as we begin to piece together the enigma behind the ‘urban-legend-esque’ terror of The Stickman’s Hollow. As the film nears its boiling point, we are delivered the third and final act that boldly connects the three episodes, and offers a gut-punch of an ending that leaves you craving more and more of this striking horror.

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 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. 

You can catch the film Friday 27th September at this years festival, tickets here!

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Dead Northern Festival 2024 Review – All This Time


All This Time
chronicles the infinite time loop that Grace (Emily Rose Holt) has found herself trapped in. Joined by an elusive vampire, Elias (Dan de Bourg), Grace must unravel a string of veiled secrets to escape the treacherously eerie time glitch and return to normality.

Writer and director Rob Worsey delivers 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. 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.

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. 

As teased above, All This Time is steeped in a gothically minded atmosphere where the isolation of grandness meets a shadowy, stunningly designed sense of unmistakable dread. In its iconographical form, All This Time employs its grandiose setting, impressive costume design and haunting, moody lighting to showcase its gothic roots, which all combine to create a film that is worthy of watching with the volume off just to absorb the sheer ‘look’ of it all. 

Matching the mysterious ambience is the film’s brilliant performances from the likes of Rose Holt and de Bourg, alongside the excellent Emma Pallant. Independent cinema has a habit of bringing about the most spiffing of exhibitions of talent, with All This Time being no exception to this rule. Throughout the entire runtime, the executions are all acted out with such compelling authenticity that draws the audience in and has them hanging on to every last word.

Shifting onto the horror elements, All This Time makes use of its groundhog-like narrative to conjure a sting of anxiety that innately wizzes up an unnerving sense of being trapped, contained and unable to make sense of everyone and everything.

On a theoretical plane, this inability to flee has the power to be suffocating and grim, but Worsey boldly propels this notion by infusing a vampiric spin. Fanged fiends, bloodsuckers, ‘The Count’, Dracula – however these immortal creatures have been cinematically developed before, All This Time, decides to take a unique spin on the vampire tale through its utilisation of a character-study based approach to storytelling. Keeping spoilers tightly under wraps – what can be commended is how the film continuously toys with the motives of the characters. Rarely do we know what to believe and who to trust throughout the running enigma of it all.

In total, All This Time will both move and provoke, pervade and resonate. Ultimately, this is not a film to be missed.

You can catch the film Friday 27th September at this years festival, tickets here!