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DEAD BY DAWN 30th April - 3rd May 2009 All screenings in Cinema One Thursday 30 April THE ROOM + Guests + BLOOD RIVER 2315 – 0130 Friday 1 May WHAT YOU MAKE IT Shorts + feature FROM INSIDE I LIVE IN THE WOODS + NEXT FLOOR + WISH + ZOMBIE FLESH EATERS + Q&A THE FORBIDDEN DOOR COLD STORAGE + Q&A TAMAMI: THE BABY’S CURSE Saturday 2 May NIGHT OF THE HUNTER CUTTING EDGE Short Film Competition THE PEARCE SISTERS + Guest + SAUNA CREEPS + Q&A HOW MY DAD KILLED DRACULA + NIGHT OF THE All-Nighter: PIB & POG + LAST OF THE LIVING OCULUS + DEAD SPACE: DOWNFALL THERE ARE MONSTERS + BRAINDEAD Sunday 3 May MISERY Classic Shorts Programme DAWNING HOME MOVIE idiocy Give -aways, shit film amnesty & general sleep -deprived HEART OF KARL + LES DENTS DE LA NUIT 1300 – 1445 1515 – 1715 1800 – 2000 2045 – 2245 2315 – 0100 1300 – 1435 1515 – 1715 1800 – 1945 2045 – 2300 0000 – 0145 0230 – 0430 0445 – 0645 1400 – 1600 1630 – 1730 1915 – 2030 2130 – 2255 2330 – 0000 0000 – 0150 Some times may be subject to slight change ts of the festival until 3am Filmhouse has a late licence for all four nigh Welcome to Dead by Dawn! As a discovery festival, the programme is full of the very finest new independent horror. As we are devoted fans of classic cinema, there’s also a selection of some of our enduring favourites and for those of you who like your nightmares bite-sized, we bring you a glorious collection of shorts, including some of the biggest hits from past festivals. From the squirm-inducing agonies of DIY surgery to death-by-cutlery, from a blood-drenched postapocalyptic wasteland to Santa-cide, it’s all here. We hope you have a great festival! Adèle Adèle Hartley Festival Director We’d like to thank all these organisations for their support: Catalogue designed by Andy Lobban at Nonimage.com James James McKenzie Chief Operations Officer, Filmhouse Misery Stephen King adaptations are, I reckon, like little girls with curls – when good, they are very, very good and when bad, they go beyond horrid. Misery joins the shorter, better list and remains, for me, one of those films that still makes me squirm, even though I know exactly what’s lurking in store. Cruelty has become so common and the element with which to outdo the competition in so many contemporary horror films that I wanted to go back to a movie that puts cruelty and torture in an intimate, isolated context, rendering it more subtle, more effective and ultimately more disturbing than anything with a contraption, a timer and the kind of editing that only serves to fast-track a migraine. Kathy Bates turns in a sublime performance as Annie Wilkes, devoted admirer of both Paul Sheldon and of his creation, Misery Chastain. Having ticked the secluded-writer box by locking himself away to finish a new novel, Sheldon (James Caan) is driving back towards civilisation when his car skids on ice and lands upside down in a snowdrift in a blizzard. His chances of rescue seem slim. Regaining consciousness in Annie’s home, it first appears that luck is on his side. In a casual conversation with his apparent saviour, Paul confides that he’s killed Misery off in the latest book and that’s when he finds his recuperation will come at a cost. Bates has the extraordinary and deeply unsettling talent to switch from a skipping, gleeful, adoring fan to a creature of such fury that I love to watch the black clouds darken her eyes and hear her voice change pitch and feel some of Sheldon’s adrenaline and panic over what she might do next. USA / 1990 / 107 mins Director: Rob Reiner Producers: Rob Reiner, Andrew Scheinman Writer: Stephen King (novel), William Goldman (screenplay) Music: Marc Shaiman DoP: Barry Sonnenfeld Editor: Robert Leighton F/X: Howard Berger, Bruce S. Fuller, Robert Kurtzman, Rick LaLonde, Greg Nicotero Cast: James Caan, Kathy Bates, Richard Farnsworth, Frances Sternhagen, Lauren Bacall, Graham Jarvis, Jerry Potter, Tom Brunelle, June Christopher Yudai Yamaguchi’s latest film, Tamami: The Baby’s Curse or Akanbo Shojo belongs to the rarefied subgenre of monster baby films, for which, luckily, I have a soft spot. Akanbo Shojo successfully mixes the gross-out oddity of imports like Devil Fetus with the more emotional horror of Larry Cohen’s It’s Alive, while adding a strand of jealous rivalry from sibling-based horror films like Basket Case and the Shaw’s Siamese Twins. Yoko has been missing since she was separated from her father, Keizo Nanjo, during an attack in the last days of the war. Nanjo now lives in semi-seclusion with his collection of European medieval artefacts (including a healthy selection of battle axes and the acid used to polish them, extraneous items which ought to set a horror fan’s radar pinging). The only other inhabitants seemingly are his mad wife Yuko and frigid housekeeper. Akanbo Shojo actually plays to some extent like a creative collection of gothic and modern horror’s greatest hits. There’s the mad shut-in relative as in Wuthering Heights; frequent use Nevertheless, Yoko quickly comes to suspect the presence of another member of the family - a mysterious baby whose presence is denied by all members of the household. She Raimi of Japan. Previous films like Cromartie High School and Battlefield Baseball shared hyper-stylized school settings, while Meatball Machine prefigured the Cronenbergian body horror of this film. Here, though, Yamaguchi’s pairing with legendary horror manga author Kazuo Umezu (known for visceral but cerebral works like Drifting Classroom – viewers of Uzumaki will recognize his influence on that story’s author, Junji Ito) leads to a more controlled and atmospheric piece. It may not be Bava, but it is a nod in that direction. For a film that wears its penury on its sleeve, Akanbo Shojo is a remarkably Tamami: The Baby’s Curse of the subjective Evil Dead cam; and a malevolent housekeeper straight out of Rebecca. Fortunately, good use is made of these influences, which are incorporated instead of being highlighted. Like so many films, we are only given a brief prelude in the ‘normal world’ before moving into the realm of horror. Once Yoko arrives at her destination, the Nanjo property in the middle of the woods, the rules of the real world are left behind and she is trapped in Yamaguchi’s surreal and nightmarish territory. is attacked on her first night in the mansion when she wanders into the wrong room – an attack soon followed by crying sounds, bloody claw marks on walls, and a beheaded doll. Inconveniently, the baby turns out to be Yoko’s mutant sister Tamami who likes to lurk in the walls and rip people’s faces off. Tamami’s intentions toward her sister are unclear for a while but eventually the two sisters are locked in a struggle to the death.. Yamaguchi is an interesting director – his commitment to slapstick, gore and sci-fi make him something of the Sam handsome production. Yes, the effects are cheap, but they are not shoddy – Yamaguchi continues his impressive track record of making a lot out of very little. The effects and the story actually come together quite nicely to create an effective horror experience. While the film is probably not intended to be serious, Yamaguchi keeps his tongue planted firmly in cheek, allowing Akanbo Shojo to enjoy a certain wackiness while retaining the necessary atmosphere. From a review by David Austin at Cinema Strikes Back www.cinemastrikesback.com Japan / 2008 / 100 mins Director: Yûdai Yamaguchi Producer: Shin Torisawa Writers: Hirotoshi Kobayashi, Kazuo Umezu F/X: Yoshihiro Nishimura, Tsuyoshi Kazuno Cast: Asami, Atsuko Asano, Keisuke Horibe, Etsuko Ikuta, Itsuji Itao, Nako Mizusawa, Gorô Noguchi, Takumi Saito, Teru CUT TING EDGE SHORTS MAMA THE KILLER un-nerved when a stranger comes It’s a small town, so a local clerk is all thought was just another tourist. calling, inquiring after someone they , the stranger becomes even more Tracking him to the only B&B in town determined not to leave town with unfinished business USA / 2007 / 8 mins Director: David A. Nelson YOU BETTER WATCH OUT store he work at the department One night when Santa has finished need to share with him their encounters two brothers who feel the s mornings. It seems that some own memories of long past Christma disappointments just don’t fade with time. Australia / 2008 / 22 mins Director: Steve Callen HOLD YOUR FIRE a fog-covered battlefield targets A ghostly soldier wandering through more dangerous than originally a Japanese girl who turns out to be foreign hospital, he lives with the anticipated. Years later, in a tomb-like legacy of that encounter. USA / 2008 / 8 mins Director: Wes Benscoter erate sister who urges her to leave Lili is abruptely awakened by her desp to grab their pet and creep out the house. The girls have enough time back, waiting for them downstairs into the dark stairwell. Someone is and nothing could be more important than getting out the house. Spain / 2008 / 3 mins Director: Andres Muschietti THE UGLY FILE a living taking pictures of children. Photographer Roy Hubbard makes ren but it’s a commission from child These, however, are no ordinary etion and willing. Want to see discr a client who pays very well for his what’s in The Ugly File? USA / 2009 / 10 mins Director: Mark Steensland ADVANTAGE a big night out and decide to sneak A young couple stumble home after they can make out undisturbed. into a suburban tennis club, thinking played, and how can you win when But this is a place where games are you don’t know the rules? Australia / 2007 / 11 mins Director: Sean Byrne LF WHEELCHAIR WEREWof O mutilated KIRKSDALE amongst ancient oaks, rests In the deep south of 1960’s Florida, d mental asylum, it was intended Kirksdale Hospital. A plantation turne environment to ease their inner to provide patients with a calm, rural turmoil. Unfortunately for a new female patient arriving with her police escort, things have not been town, leaving a trail An evil werewolf terrorizes a small tity. Who could it be? Almost nobodies but not a single clue to his iden monster! one can escape the clutches of this USA / 2008 / 3 mins Director: Joe Avella running smoothly at Kirksdale. USA / 2007 / 22 mins Director: Ryan Spindell with the The Horribly Slow Murderer pon Extremely Inefficient Weatless murderer of all time. r with what could be the most relen The epic story of one man’s encounte USA / 2008 / 10 mins Director: Richard Gale LES DENTS DE LA NUIT Luxembourg/Belgium/France / 2008 / 85 mins Directors: Stephen Cafiero, Vincent Lobelle Producers: Walid Ben Youssef, Thierry de Ganay, David Gauquie Writers: Jean-Patrick Benes, Stephen Cafiero, Vincent Lobelle, Allan Mauduit Music: Gast Waltzing DoP: Olivier Cocaul Editor: Stéphane Pereira F/X: Jérémy B. Caravita, Pierre Olivier Persin Cast: Patrick Mille, Frédérique Bel, Julie Fournier, Vincent Desagnat, Sam Karmann, Hélène de Fougerolles, Antoine Duléry, Gilles Gaston-Dreyfus, Tchéky Karyo When a lounge lizard spots a vulnerable Alice sobbing at the bar over yet another break-up, he passes her an invite to a very exclusive event – La Nuit Medicis. Her friends Sam and Prune are never comfortable with the idea of missing a party and are ecstatic when they see what she’s got - these parties are the stuff of legend and an invite is rarer than gold-dust. It is not something they intend to miss. Sam and Prune soon connive to get themselves invited too and it’s not long before all three are on their way, by private helicopter, with only a tiresome civil servant Edouard for company. All the guests arrive in similar style, including the beyond-sleazy Serge Krinine, dentist to the stars, and Jessica, a gangster’s moll who would win awards, if being spoiled and thick was worthy of a prize. On arrival at the spectacular castle on an obligatory dark and foreboding mountaintop, Sam, Prune and Alice find there are two entrances, but their invite only grants access to one. Heading for the bar and the dancefloor, Sam is so intrigued by the forbidden VIP area that he is willing to try almost anything to get in. Unfortunately for our three friends, they are about to discover what really goes on behind closed doors on this very special night, when their host and his closest friends have just one night to slake their thirst. Co-directors Vincent Lobelle and Stephen Cafiero got the job because the producers thought they would ‘combine an Anglo-Saxon intelligence and visual bravado with unusual casting, while adding just the right dose of madness.’ Judge for yourself whether they fulfilled their job spec. Hélène de Fougerolles says, of playing Jessica, ‘She (Jessica) is a perfect moron, and she’s fantastic to play. If you have to interpret an idiot, you might as well do it as plainly as possible!’ BRAINDEAD The Citizen Kane of Oedipal zombiecannibal-comedy-love stories. Kiwi auteur Peter Jackson takes the shopworn flesh-eating zombie genre by its rotting horns, adds a dash of Monty Python, and comes up with a film so gleefully over-the-top that it’s decidedly hard not to gag while you’re laughing yourself incontinent. Rivers of gore, entrails, and ambulating body parts surround poor nebbish Lionel (Balme), a mama’s boy whose mama (Moody) just happens to have been bitten by a Sumatran Rat Monkey and consequently degenerates into a flesh-hungry omnivore with a keen knack for oozing pus in front of the houseguests. Before you can say George Romero, she’s snacking on the neighbors, and Lionel’s up to his neck in overly-mobile cadavers. Though he tries valiantly to keep them sedated, it’s not long before all hell breaks loose in a 30-minute climax that makes Re-Animator look like Captain Kangaroo on a bad hair day. Add to this Lionel’s newfound love interest, Paquita (Penalver), his scheming uncle Les (Watkin), and a zombie infant that makes abortion seem like a really, really good idea, and you have quite literally the most disgusting comedy ever. Jackson, obviously aware of the clichéridden dangers of “horror comedies,” chucks convention and good taste out the window and goes for the gusto (or is that “gutso”?) with uncanny results. The film moves from gag to gore to gag again like a rocket from the crypt and never lets up - just when you think you’ve seen the worst, Jackson tops himself and there you are squirming in your seat again (and loving every minute of it). Sick. Perverse. Brilliant. From a review by Marc Savlov for The Austin Chronicle New Zealand / 1992 / 104 mins Director: Peter Jackson Producers: Jim Booth, Jamie Selkirk Writers: Stephen Sinclair, Frances Walsh, Peter Jackson Music: Peter Dasent DoP: Murray Milne Editor: Jamie Selkirk F/X: Richard Taylor, Steve Ingram, Bob McCarron Cast: Timothy Balme, Diana Peñalver, Elizabeth Moody, Ian Watkin, Brenda Kendall, Stuart Devenie, Jed Brophy, Stephen Papps, Murray Keane, Glenis Levestam, Lewis Rowe, Elizabeth Mulfaxe, Harry Sinclair, Davina Whitehouse, Silvio Famularo, Brian Sergent, Peter Vere-Jones I can positively guarantee that no other film in the Festival this year will simultaneously recall the films of Andrei Tarkovsky and Eli Roth – let alone to such powerful and riveting effects. Antti-Jussi Annila’s Sauna marries these two divergent approaches to cinematic narrative in a way not seen since, well, his previous film, Jade Warrior, which sought a middle way between Chinese historical martial arts films and Kaurismäkiinspired Finnish slacker road movies. Like any decent transcendentalist horror film, Sauna is set at a particular, contested moment in history. It is 1595. Brutal wars have just ended in an uneasy peace between Protestant Sweden and Orthodox Russia. Finland has been trampled over and buried. The film concerns the spiritual defeats of two conquered Finnish brothers, one a hardened near-psychopathic war hero, the other a gentle scientist in an age with no use for such men. They find themselves in the swampy interior, demarcating the new border with a unit of sadistic Russians. The film begins with a moment of affection marred by an act of cruelty. This is an act that will haunt the brothers as their travels take them into eerier territory. When they reach an undocumented town, populated by an ethnically indistinct but practically childless sect, the brothers’ spiritual anxieties escalate, awakening a dark force that feeds off bloody borderlands and the moral vacuums such locales create. The centre of this force is in an otherworldly structure, a kind of protosauna appropriately housing a vengeful Scandinavian demon. Annila is a master of shifting tone. The early scenes have an alienating coldness about them, as we come to know these pitiful siblings. While their spiritual prison begins to make its weight felt, the film takes on an intense claustrophobia and an almost unbearable sadness, alleviated only by the onset of extremely violent, haunting horror, featuring imagery that will occupy your nightmares for days. This is a director who has something new and fresh to say about the formal properties of genre, and his film is a case study in the modernist project of creating and releasing existential anxiety. Noah Cowan, Toronto International Film Festival 2008 Finland / 2008 / 85 mins Director: AJ Annila Producers: Jesse Fryckman, Tero Kaukomaa Writer: Iiro Küttner Music: Panu Aaltio DoP: Henri Blomberg Editor: Joona Louhivuori Cast: Ville Virtanen, Tommi Eronen, Viktor Klimenko, Rain Tolk, Kari Ketonen, Sonja Petäjäjärvi, Vilhelmiina Virkkunen, Taisto Reimaluoto, Ismo Kallio, Kati Outinen, Dick Idman, Ivo Kubecka HOME MOVIE The Poes are your average, middleclass American family, living in a remote area of upstate New York. Clare is a psychiatrist. David is a Lutheran minister. Ten-year-old twins Jack and Emily (played brilliantly by actual brother and sister Austin and Amber Williams) are out of their minds. Clare recently bought a video camera to document her sessions, but neither parent can resist co-opting it to use for home movies. Everything we see is limited to what they have shot of each other. And it isn’t pretty. Their footage at first seems fairly typical until Jack throws a rock into his father’s face. Shortly afterward, a tender moment is interrupted when Emily quietly kills a frog. Listening to the parent’s conversations, we begin to realize that the Poe children have always been violent. And it appears that their behaviour has lately been getting far more dangerous. After a particularly savage incident (trust me, it will freeze your blood), Clare tries to do home counselling with her own children as patients, but this fails miserably. Medicine fails. Religion fails. The children are utterly, irrevocably cruel — the very definition of the word ‘evil’, in fact — and there is absolutely nothing their parents can do except continue documenting their behaviour. The most mature and provocative entry yet in the current wave of ‘reality horror’ filmmaking, HOME MOVIE takes us into the troubled household of the idealized American familynext-door, laying bare their darkest power struggles and most disturbing transgressions. Ferociously smart and frightening, it recalls the ’70s cycle of horror films that deconstructed the family unit in horrifically revealing ways (think THE BROOD, IT’S ALIVE...), told with a millennial verité aspect that lends chilling potency to everything. It’s an unbelievable accomplishment for first-time writer/ director Christopher Denham, burning USA / 2008 / 80 mins Director: Christopher Denham Producers: William M. Miller, Andrew van den Houten, Robert Tonino Writer: Christopher Denham Music: Ryan Shore DoP: William M. Miller Editor: John T. Miller Cast: Adrian Pasdar, Cady McClain, Amber Joy Williams, Austin Williams with genuine horror and enforced by perfect performances that never fail to convince. The film is also shot through with fascinating subtext and grisly irony. For one, the camera itself is an agent of empowerment, those holding it attaining a degree of control that they clearly lack without it. Denham also cleverly fleshes out his film’s twins-oriented universe with the use of reciprocating situations and iconography. You won’t consciously recognize it at first, but these devices are employed from the very first moments, and they are ingenious. HOME MOVIE goes places few modern horror films dare. If you’re a parent, or for that matter anyone that has ever tried to forgive a loved one who’s done something indefensible, it will absolutely mortify you. —Mitch Davis, Fantasia Film Festival www.fantasiafest.com Dawning takes place at a Northern Minnesota lake cabin where a brother and sister (Najarra Townsend) visit their father and step-mom. As the first night unfolds with uncomfortable small-talk and tension, tragedy strikes as the beloved family dog is found wounded. Almost immediately, a stranger, potentially under the spell of some unseen ‘presence’, appears in the cabin and tells the family that he has come to save them...but from what? The man’s arrival upsets what at best was only a tentative balance and the pretence at civility begins to crumble. Soon, their lack of trust in each other and their inability to cope with any new pressure exposes their weaknesses and what the stranger has started, whatever is waiting in the dark may finish. Filled with the chaotic and unknown, ‘Dawning’ takes a cerebral approach to horror which your average hack-andslash film just doesn’t provide. Instead of relying on action-fueled horror movies and shock gimmicks, Dawning relies on atmosphere and mood to lend tension to an already troubled family, surrounding them with no answers... except that we all die. Gregg Holtgrewe was born and raised in Moorhead, Minnesota and started making movies at the age of 14. After graduating from college in 2000, Holtgrewe moved to Minneapolis, Minnesota to continue his filmmaking career. In 1999 Gregg won a ‘Best Director’ award for his short film ‘The Party Gnome’ and has since made two features and six shorts which have screened at various festivals around the United States. This will be the first screening for a film by Holtgrewe outside of the U.S. and he looks forward to encountering a new audience. Colin Covert of the Minneapolis StarTribune says, “I loved Holtgrewe’s mastery of suspense technique. From the opening road-to-the-woods shots, to the claustrophobia of the cabin, to the fear of the dark in the outdoors, holding some shots a few beats too long, cutting others abruptly...Holtgrewe gave the piece a skin-crawly feeling just through solid craftsmanship. I liked the lack of music,and the atmosphere of uncertainty throughout the piece. I thought the acting was generally strong. The way each major character succumbed to stress according to his/her individual weakness was intriguing.” USA / 2005 / 70 mins Director: Gregg Holtgrewe Producers: Gregg Holtgrewe, Brendan Reynolds, Danny Salmen, Michael D. Howe Writers: Gregg Holtgrewe, Matthew Wilkins Music: Nick Mortek DoP: Thomas ‘TJ’ Schwingle Editor: Mike Kolloen F/X: Jennifer M Kelly Sound Mixer: Tom Hambleton, C.A.S. Cast: Najarra Townsend, Jonas Goslow, Christine Kellogg-Darrin, David Coral, Danny Salmen “Well, I got good news and bad news, girls. The good news is your dates are here. The bad news is they’re dead.” 1986. It’s Pledge Week and shy dweeb Chris Romero and his wisecracking disabled pal ‘J.C.’ Hooper are cruising the various frat houses when Chris spots (and instantly falls head over heels for) sorority girl Cindy Cronenberg. In true Animal House nerdmovie-style our hapless geeks reckon the only way to get Chris nearer the girl of his dreams is to try and pledge to the Beta House fraternity. Of course it’s home to the hardiest of bullish jocks and when their initiation ceremony plans go horribly wrong (a failed attempt to steal a corpse from the college morgue, “at least we don’t have to have sex with a farm animal”) the laughs and gore come thick and fast in this comedy splatter zombie gem. Part 1950’s sci-fi B movie, part 1980’s teen frat house comedy and homage to all things horror, Fred Dekker’s NIGHT OF THE CREEPS is a true sleeper horror comedy classic and very much deserved of its Dead By Dawn Classics screening this weekend. On paper, NIGHT OF THE CREEPS could very well look to be a catalogue of groan-worthy plagiaristic stereotypical 1980’s Z-Grade fodder. Sure, they named most of the lead characters, as a wink to genre fans, after many of the fields favourite directors - Landis, Raimi, Romero but that doesn’t justify why the film was often overlooked on its original release. Happily on closer inspection (some 23 years on) you’ll soon find that NIGHT OF THE CREEPS is in fact a loving and well crafted tribute to our beloved genre that pleases no end. Dekker’s script is both enthralling and fun with some great character development; geek double team Romero and Hooper’s dialogue is up there with the best of John ‘Breakfast Club’ Hughes work pre-dating the whole ‘bromance’ concept by some years but it’s Tom Atkins performance as embittered angry cop Detective Ray Cameron that truly steals the show. Every time he opens his mouth another piece of verbal cinematic gold is thrown onto the screen. Essentially though, and perhaps most importantly for all die-hard horror-loving Dead By Dawn regulars, NIGHT OF THE CREEPS delivers from the word go with pure genre entertainment and enough blood and gore to keep even the most hardened of splatter fans sated (and keep a close eye onscreen as even genre legend Dick Miller makes a cameo appearance). As Detective Cameron would say, “thrill me.” Alan Simpson, SexGoreMutants Dead by Dawn would like to thank Sony for making this screening possible We are delighted to welcome director Fred Dekker to Dead by Dawn USA / 1986 / 88 mins Director: Fred Dekker Producers: Charles Gordon, Donna Smith Writer: Fred Dekker Music: Barry De Vorzon DoP: Robert C. New Editor: Michael N. Knue F/X: Howard Berger, Robert Kurtzman, David B. Miller Cast: Jason Lively, Steve Marshall, Jill Whitlow, Tom Atkins, Wally Taylor, Bruce Solomon, Vic Polizos, Allan Kayser, Ken Heron, Alice Cadogan, June Harris, David Paymer, David Oliver, Evelyne Smith NIGHT OF THE creeps COLD STORAGE Clive (Searcy), a mentally disturbed mountain man, meets Melissa, the girl of his dreams, and commits to spending the rest of his life with her. Unfortunately, she’s already dead, having suffered a fatal injury in a car accident near Clive’s isolated shack. Still, Clive isn’t the sort of guy to let a little thing like decomposition get in the way of happiness. Nor will he allow anyone else to get between him and his true love, especially the living who might come looking for her, such as her strong-willed sister and her looking-to-reconcile ex-boyfriend. This is a movie that could easily have been yet another slasher movie about city folk meeting hicks in the backwoods who - when they aren’t breeding with their sisters - are killing strangers who happen along. Thankfully, director and coscreenwriter Tony Elwood created a far better film than that. In fact, he used the rural setting of the film as a means to make it even more suspenseful by playing against the typical Hollywood image of anything outside Chicago, Los Angeles, or New York City. By making Rainerspoint a typical small town inhabited mostly by friendly people, Elwood makes the creep factor (and ultimately the horror factor) of the happenings at Clive’s shack that much more frightening and intense. The weirdness of Clive isn’t diluted by surrounding him with equally weird and scary neighbours - with one exception - and that neighbour is probably worse than Clive. Elwood further deploys set and lighting design to contrast the normality and the town with Clive’s private world in the forest; the scenes in the town are all in clean, brightly lit places and the sun always seems to be shining on the street, but Clive’s place is full of filth, deep and dark shadows and it always seems to be overcast or raining. It’s a powerful approach, and it’s one that shows that productions and scripts developed with thought and care will deliver powerful experiences no matter what the budget. Nick Searcy gives a spectacular performance as the deranged Clive that makes us feel sympathy even when his behaviour becomes inexcusable. It’s a performance that displays acting of a calibre that is all-too-rarely seen. From a review by Steve Miller for Rotten Tomatoes Tony D. Elwood began polishing his craft at the age of 11, starting with the production of Super 8 films. Tony knew as soon as he projected his first roll of film that he was going to become a filmmaker. He began his professional career at the age of 17, while still in high school, as a cel painter for an animation company in Charlotte, North Carolina. This whet his appetite, causing him to move into the field of special effects, an area where his expertise is still called upon today. Tony’s FX credits include Evil Dead II, Cat’s Eye, Now and Then, and The Journey of August King. He soon began to experiment with his own films, producing and directing over seven short films, all dealing with the genres he knows best: horror, mystery and suspense. In 1989, Tony raised the funds to produce his first feature film, Killer. Killer went on to great success, grossing more than 50 times its production costs, allowing Tony to produce his second feature film, Road Kill. Cold Storage is Tony’s third directorial effort. He also co-produced the low budget sci-fi/horror film Night Feeders, and has directed numerous commercials and music videos. USA / 2006 / 92 mins Director: Tony Elwood Producers: Paul Barrett, Tony Elwood, Bert Hesse Writers: Tony Elwood, Mark Kimray Music: David Helpling DoP: Lyn Moncrief Editor: Tony Elwood F/X: Scott Kiesling Cast: Nick Searcy, Matt Keeslar, Joelle Carter, Brett Gentile, Casey Leet, Jeffrey Pillars, Terry Loughlin, Rebecca Koon We are delighted to welcome director Tony Elwood and producer Paul Barrett to Dead by Dawn CLASSIC SHORTS Over recent years, the shorts programmes at this festival have increased in popularity, allowing me to continue to expand the number included each year and also to run special screenings like the retrospectives for film-makers like Rob Morgan and Sam Walker. There are now three sections at every Dead by Dawn. The main section includes all the short films shown accompanying feature films and the Cutting Edge Short Film Competition is designed to showcase debut and emerging directors. When the What You Make It programme was introduced, it was designed to screen films which might not traditionally be defined as horror, but which are unsettling, disturbing or twisted in their own right. As part of this year’s festival, I figured that it was time to revisit some of the best shorts we’ve shown over the last 16 years. It’s by no means a definitive list, of course, as I chose some of my favourites, but I hope some of your favourites are in there, too! Rather than spoil the surprise, I’m keeping the line-up a secret but you can pick up a listing of all the titles shown from the Dead by Dawn desk after the screening. their way to deliver the good news of Summer’s pregnancy to her parents, one of their tires blows out and leaves them stranded in the middle of nowhere. Though Clark is sure he packed the spare, none is to be found in the trunk, so they make their way to the small town of Blood River, about 5 or 6 miles from their accident. Shortly after they arrive in the ghost town, a drifter named Joseph (Howard) also wanders into the town. At first he seems like he just wants to help the couple, but as soon as he gets Summer alone, he lets her know his true intentions: Adam Mason is a unique case study in independent filmmakers; to date, each one of his movies, Broken, The Devil’s Chair and now Blood River, has had production values far greater than the budget Mason had access to. He’s also a filmmaker willing to take chances and create something outside of typical mainstream horror films. Because of that it seems he’s never been too concerned with making something commercially viable, but rather the kinds of films he would want to see, and it’s sad how rare a trait that is in our genre today. Blood River is his latest foray into indie cinema that looks anything but indie, and it is by far his crowning achievement to date. It is a texturally rich film that is absolutely gorgeous to behold thanks to its bleak desert setting brought to life by the formidable skills of cinematographer Stuart Brereton, who helped shoot Devil’s Chair and is DP on Mason’s latest, Luster, as well. As happy couple Summer and Clark (Panzer and Duncan, respectively) make their way across the desert on What’s so great about Blood River, and to a lesser extent all of Mason’s films, is that nothing is spelled out for the audience. Your hand is not held nor your steps guided through this plot; there is a thick layer of ambiguity shrouding everything, from characters to situations, that allows the viewer to come to his or her own conclusion as to what is really happening. Even though solid answers are never given and an easy way out is never even explored, let alone taken, there was enough to keep me enthralled from start to finish. Though the build-up to Joseph’s arrival takes a little longer than I would have liked, once he is with the couple and hell follows on his heels, any missteps made previously can be forgiven. Of course, such a lofty film could never be pulled off if the talent involved wasn’t up to snuff, but that’s not a concern at all. All three leads turn in fantastic performances, no easy task considering the wide range of emotions each one of them has to hit upon throughout. Mason’s casting choices have always been solid for the most part, but the way this trio pulls off such an emotionally draining slice of cinema is the best I’ve seen yet. Hopefully some wise distributor will be picking up Blood River soon, and when they do, with any luck they’ll be smart enough to realize this is a film that needs to be seen on the big screen; even the best home theatre system would not be able to do it the full justice it deserves. No matter the fate of Blood River, it is very clear that Mason is director who makes brave, risky decisions regarding his art and thankfully has all the talent and resources to hedge his bets every time. From a review by Johnny Butane for Dread Central www.dreadcentral.com USA / 2009 / 104 mins Director: Adam Mason Producers: Shaked Berenson, Timothy Patrick Cavanaugh, Mary Church, Patrick Ewald, Lee Librado, Adam Mason Writers: Simon Boyes, Adam Mason DoP: Stuart Brereton Editor: Adam Mason Original Score: Martin Grech F/X: Tristan Versluis, Sam Meyer Cast: Andrew Howard, Tess Panzer, Ian Duncan, Sarah Essex, Dillon Borowski, Sandy ‘Red Dog Lil’ Johnson A New York harbour turns into a bloodbath when a seemingly abandoned ship from the desolate island of Matoul arrives to dock and unleashes a bald, flesh-eating zombie on the investigating police officers. The boat’s origin catches the interest of snoopy young Anne Bowles (Farrow, Mia’s look-alike sister who appeared in ‘Anthropophagous’ (aka ‘The Grim Reaper’) and the excellent ‘Fingers’) and reporter Peter West (McCulloch), who discovers that Anne’s father is now on the same island at the mercy of some mysterious, sinister force. Soon the New Yorkers set off for the sunny seas and encounter a vacationing couple on a boat, Brian (Cliver) and uninhibited scuba diver Susan (Gay) who tangles with a hungry shark and an even hungrier aquatic zombie. Their arrival at Matoul reveals a wasteland thanks to rampant contagion and all the zombies rising out of the ground, with the only scientific aid provided by the suspicious Dr. Menard (‘The Haunting’’s Johnson, looking more than a little soused) whose wife (the show-stopping Karlatos) ends up on the wrong end of a massive wooden splinter. Soon the island is consumed by increasingly ancient, hungry corpses bursting from the earth, leaving our heroes scrambling for a way home and hurling Molotov cocktails at the rapidly growing army of the undead. Lucio Fulci’s most famous contribution to the horror genre still ranks as one of the goriest features ever released to mainstream audiences. Originally released under the title ‘Zombi 2’ in Italy, Fulci’s epic was intended as a pseudo-sequel to George Romero’s profitable living dead classic, ‘Dawn of the Dead’ (released in Europe as ‘Zombi’) and was released stateside as ‘Zombie’ by Jerry Gross complete with an effective ad campaign emphasizing the graphic, unrated levels of gore on display. However, Fulci drops Romero’s satiric, modernist approach and goes straight for the jugular (literally in one scene) with a primal story more indebted to traditional voodoo-inspired classics like ‘White Zombie’. Actingwise the film is middling at best; Farrow and McCulloch have little to do besides look neurotic, and Johnson skulks about in a haggard fashion and grumbles about the dead disturbing his work. However, the film still possesses a palpable sense of decay and doom that casts an eerie spell to this day; despite a draggy first third, Fulci really delivers the goods with this one, and the final two acts are an admirable escalation of pure nightmare on film. The nasty but bloodless final scene in particular still offers a vicious, apocalyptic punchline. This first and most widely recognized of Fulci’s zombie canon features all of his regular contributors: gifted cinematographer Sergio Salvati, doing his usual stellar scope work; composer Fabio Frizzi, providing a foot-stomping main theme so catchy it later resurfaced near the end of Fulci’s ‘City of the Living Dead’; and gory FX favourite Giannetto De Rossi (‘Haute Tension’), pumping out enough of the red stuff to keep the Red Cross in stock for months. Review by Nathaniel Thompson; this is an edited extract from the book DVD Delirium Volume 1 Redux, published by FAB Press. Dead by Dawn is delighted to welcome Ian McCulloch as our guest this year Italy / 1979 / 91 mins Director: Lucio Fulci Producers: Fabrizio de Angelis, Ugo Tucci Writers: Elisa Briganti, Dardano Sacchetti Music: Giorgio Tucci, Fabio Frizzi DoP: Sergio Salvati Editor: Vincenzo Tomassi F/X: Giovanni Corridori, Gino De Rossi, Roberto Pace Cast: Tisa Farrow, Ian McCulloch, Richard Johnson, Al Cliver, Auretta Gay, Stefania D’Amario, Olga Karlatos ZOMBIE FLESH-EATERS S When the idea for Dead Space: Downfall hit my radar, I must admit I was quite worried. A feature length animated film tie-in prequel to a video game? While intriguing, it could have gone horribly wrong, possibly ending up as an eighty-minute commercial brought to us by the fine folks at EA Games. Yet, the company had other ideas. They wanted to release something visceral and not just a quick cash in. To help make this task a reality, they brought aboard animation veteran Chuck Patton to take the directorial helm and comic book geniuses Jimmy Palmiotti and Justin Gray to do the screenplay. The end result? It’s dead on, baby! USA / 2008 / 74 mins Director: Chuck Patton Producers: Joe Goyette, Jim Wyatt Writers: Justin Gray, Jimmy Palmiotti Music: Seth Podowitz F/X: Brent M. Bowen, Rick Moser Cast: Kirk Baily, Jeff Bennett, Bruce Boxleitner, Jim Cummings, Grey DeLisle, Nika Futterman, Kelly Hu, David Allen Kramer, Maurice LaMarche, Phil Morris, Bob Neill, Shelly O’Neill, Jim Piddock, Kevin Michael Richardson, Lia Sargent, Hal Sparks, Keith Szarabajka We meet the crew of the USG Ishimura as they head off to check out what’s happened on a remote planet that is home to a deep space mining colony. The residents have inadvertently unearthed a huge religious relic that is thought to provide proof of the existence of God. The big problem at hand? This thing is anything but holy. From within the relic a dormant strain of body possessing aliens emerge, and as a result absolute and total carnage ensues. The Ishimura is decimated. Twisted, once human monsters roam its high-tech halls, and that, my friends, is exactly where the video game takes up. Let me start by saying this ... Wow. If you’re going into this expecting some cutesy bit of sci-fi anime, you’re in for a shock. There’s nothing bright and sunny about Dead Space: Downfall. It’s brutal, unrelenting, and savage. Bodies are torn, eviscerated, and mutilated with the kind of reckless abandon you’d expect from Ed Gein on supercrack. This is no kids’ show. Patton, Palmiotti, and Gray are obviously not content with just pushing the proverbial envelope; they are here to push it, paint it red with gore, and then tear the fucker in half. Holy shit, have they succeeded! While mainly targeting the gamers out there who will no doubt be picking up Dead Space, this feature transcends that audience by delivering a slice of animated horror that stands on its own as one hell of a ride. Not since the original Heavy Metal and Vampire Hunter D have I seen an animated film so provocative. Kudos to all those involved and again ... Wow. Dead Space: Downfall is the animated surprise shocker of the year. Filled with twists, turns, and more hard core gore scenes than you could ever imagine, this interstellar spooker belongs in your horror collection. Here’s to the possibility of a sequel that will reunite Patton, Palmiotti, and Gray. Now if you’ll excuse me, there’s some strategic dismemberment action waiting for me in my 360! Fuck yeah! From the review by Uncle Creepy for Dread Central www.dreadcentral.com Charles Laughton’s ‘The Night of the Hunter’ is one of the greatest of all American films, but has never received the attention it deserves because of its lack of the proper trappings - great directors, actors who come draped in respectability and prestige, a realistic setting - but ‘Night of the Hunter’ is an expressionistic oddity, telling its chilling story through visual fantasy. Yet what a compelling, frightening and beautiful film it is! And how well it has survived its period. By setting his story in an invented movie world outside conventional realism, Laughton gave it a timelessness. The town it takes place in looks as artificial as a Christmas card scene, the family’s house with its strange angles inside and out looks too small to live in, and the river becomes a set obviously artificial. Everybody knows the Mitchum character, the sinister ‘Reverend’ Harry Powell. Even those who haven’t seen the movie have heard about the knuckles of his two hands, one with the letters H-A-T-E tattooed on them, the other L-O-V-E. Many movie lovers know by heart the Reverend’s famous explanation to the wide-eyed boy (‘Ah, little lad, you’re staring at my fingers. Would you like me to tell you the little story of right-hand/left-hand?’). And the scene where the Reverend stands at the top of the stairs and calls down to the boy and his sister has become the model for a hundred other horror scenes. But does this familiarity give ‘The Night of the Hunter’ the recognition it deserves? I don’t think so because those famous trademarks distract from its real accomplishment. It is one of the most frightening of movies, with one of the most unforgettable of villains, and on both of those scores it holds up well after four decades. The story, somewhat rearranged: In a prison cell, Harry Powell discovers the secret of a condemned man (Peter Graves), who has hidden $10,000 somewhere around his house. After being released from prison, Powell seeks out the man’s widow, Willa Harper (Shelley Winters), and two children, John (Billy Chapin) and the owl-faced Pearl (Sally Jane Bruce). They know where the money is, but don’t trust the ‘preacher’. But their mother buys his con game and marries him, leading to a tortured wedding night inside a high-gabled bedroom that looks a cross between a chapel and a crypt. Charles Laughton showed here that he had an original eye, and a taste for material that stretched the conventions of the movies. It is risky to combine horror and humour, and foolhardy to approach them through expressionism. For his first film, Laughton made a film like no other before or since, and with such confidence it seemed to draw on a lifetime of work. Critics were baffled by it, the public rejected it, and the studio had a much more expensive Mitchum picture (‘Not as a Stranger’) it wanted to promote instead. But nobody who has seen ‘The Night of the Hunter’ has forgotten it, or Mitchum’s voice coiling down those basement stairs: ‘Chillll . . . dren?’ Read Roger Ebert’s full review of this classic at www.rogerebert.suntimes.com Directors: Charles Laughton, Robert Mitchum Producer: Paul Gregory Writers: Davis Grubb (Novel), James Agee, Charles Laughton (Screenplay) Music: Walter Schumann DoP: Stanley Cortez Editor: Robert Golden Photographic F/X: Louis De Witt, Jack Rabin Cast: Robert Mitchum, Shelley Winters, Lillian Gish, James Gleason, Evelyn Varden, Peter Graves, Don Beddoe, Billy Chapin, Sally Jane Bruce, Gloria Castilo the Night of the Hunter F R O M USA / 2008 / 71 mins Director: John Bergin Producer: Brian McNelis Writer: John Bergin Music: David Edwards, Jeff Rona Sound Design: Dustin Blegstad Cast: Corryn Cummins I N S I D E The world is a scorched and brutal place, nothing but wreckage after the inevitable arrival of the nuclear apocalypse. Twisted metal, crumbled buildings, carcasses of man and animal litter the ground. The seas have turned to blood, the sky has turned to ash. All that remains of humanity are the passengers of a solitary train pushing onward, ever onward, through the devastation. Nobody knows where they are going or even why, all they know is that there is no going back. This is the world of FROM INSIDE, a world that we share with one passenger on the train—a pregnant woman robbed of everything and everyone valuable in her life by the apocalypse, struggling to come to terms with what it means to bring a new life into such a hopeless world. Coming from the mind of John Bergin, FROM INSIDE is a bleak but powerful vision of the world to come, a cautionary tale against the myth of progress and blind faith in our political masters. Bergin himself is a sort of multi-pronged artist—a musician who appeared on the soundtrack to THE CROW and who has done collaborative work with Jarboe from Swans, Bergin is also a highly soughtafter graphic designer and visual artist who spent years animating FROM INSIDE himself on his home computer, using the imagery from his own graphic novel of the same name as a starting point. A powerful debut feature, FROM INSIDE marks its creator as one of the most unique and potent voices to emerge in American animation in years. Review by Todd Brown for Fantasia 2008 www.fantasiafest.com MAIN SHORTS HEART OF KARL Karl can be a little too much to handle and one day his brother abandons him in a foul institution, just to get some breathing space. When he returns, he and Karl find their exit blocked by an endless sea of freakish inmates and staff. Canada / 2008 / 19 mins PIB & POG ce Two characters in what is ostensibly a children’s programme experien ly desperate other terrible jealousy when one has a beautiful seashell the wants to play with. UK / 1994 / 6 mins Director: Peter Peake Director: Steven Kostanski THE PEARCE SISTERS Lol and Edna Pearce are a couple of weather-lashed old spinsters who live on a remote and austere strip of coast. They scrape out a truly miserable existence from the sea in a tale of love, loneliness, guts, gore, nudity, violence, smoking and cups of tea. We are delighted to welcome Luis Cook to Dead by Dawn UK / 2007 / 9 mins HOW MY DAD KILLED DRACULA It’s Hallowe’en and over their haul of candy, four boys discuss a terrible secret. Two of the boys swear their father killed Dracula, but their cousins see it for what it can only be - a Hallowe’en wind up. The father has no choice but to show them the truth. USA / 2008 / 14 mins Director: Sky Soleil Director: Luis Cook THERE ARE MONSTERS THE ROOM Sam wakes in a locked, dingy room, the floor streaked with blood. A microphone allows her to communicate with her unseen captor and a camera watches her every move. Sam cannot remember how she came to be in the room and no amount of pleading gets her any closer to When a little girl appears in their garden, Garth and Maddie think it’s nothing more than a curious local kid. When Garth goes shopping, however, something odd seems to be happening in the grocery store. USA / 2008 / 10 mins Director: Jay Dahl being released. We are delighted to welcome Diego and Andres Meza-Valdes to Dead by Dawn USA / 2007 / 21 mins Directors: Andres Meza-Valdes, Diego Meza-Valdes WHAT YOU MAKE IT NEXT FLOOR During an opulent and luxurious banquet, complete with hordes of to servers and valets, eleven pampered guests participate in what appears universe, e grotesqu and absurd this In carnage. ic be ritualistic gastronom an unexpected sequence of events destabilizes the endless symphony of abundance. Canada / 2008 / 11 mins Director: Denis Villeneuve I LIVE IN THE WOODS A woodsman’s frantic journey, driven by happiness, slaughter and poetry into a confrontation with America’s god. USA / 2008 / 4 mins Director: Max Winston WISH Two girls, knowing they will be home alone for the evening, have invited a couple of boys round. Although everyone’s nervous the drink makes things a little easier but this is still a game where nobody wins. UK / 2007 / 8 mins Director: Matt Day New Zealand would seem to be the ideal place to ride out the end of the world, at least it is for the survivors in Last of the Living, a shameless zombie-comedy that unleashes a plague of flesh-munching undead onto the Garden City. Post-apocalyptic life is sweet for Christchurch’s only survivors, bickering friends Morgan and Ash and unreformed rock’n’roller Johnny. With their pick of well-appointed houses to occupy, free rein at the local PakN-Save and ample free time to play videogames or read a good book, life could be worse. In fact, aside from the odd zombierelated problems it’s the lack of dating opportunities that most irks our heroes. So when a beautiful young scientist shows up, they’re quickly enlisted into her risky scheme to save the world. New Zealand / 2008 / 88 mins Director: Logan McMillian Producers: Logan McMillan, Michael D. Sellers, Jamie R. Thompson Writer: Logan McMillan Music: Ben Edwards, Kurt Preston DoP: Kirk Pflaum Editor: Logan McMillan Cast: Morgan Williams, Robert Faith, Mark Hadlow, Emily Paddon-Brown, Ashleigh Southam My thanks to all those without whom… Mike Adams, Joseph Alberti, Joko Anwar, Joe Avella, Kathleen Barber, David Barclay, Paul Barrett, Conor Barry, Axel Behrens, Wes Benscoter, Shaked Berenson, John Bergin, Eleanor Bird, Ali Blaikie, David Boyd, Sylvie Bringas, Lisa Brown, Matt Brown, Helen Brunsdon, John-Paul Burgess, Johnny Butane, Steve Callen, Anne-Claire Caurier, Ali Clark, Lucy Cleary, Luis Cook, Eddie Cousins, Morvern Cunningham, Jay Dahl, Matt Day, Rianne de Vries, Fred Dekker, Christopher Denham, Phil Dennett, Craig Docherty, Donna du Carme, Tony Elwood, Harvey Fenton, Jayne Fortescue, Richard Gale, Pablo Gomez, Sarah Gyldenvand, Justine Hall, Alasdair Hamilton, Anna Higgs, Gregg Holtgrewe, Robert Howie, Kier-la Janisse, Sarah Jex, Nik Jardine, Claire King, Steven Kostanski, Neil Lamb, Louise Lauder, Tim League, Jenny Leask, Danny Lennon, Andy Lobban, Adam Lowe, Seth McAnespie, Ally McCrum, Donna McCrum, Ian McCulloch, James McKenzie, Allan Macraild, Natalie Martin, Lara Matthews, Jerome Mazandarani, Andres Meza-Valdes, Diego Meza-Valdes, Brenda Mills, Richard Moore, Rob Morgan, Emma Morton, Txema Muñoz, Edward Murphy, David Nelson, Peter Peake, Chris Rice, James Rice, Ewan Robertson, Alan Simpson, Jenni Sitonen, Paul Smith, Sky Soleil, Ryan Spindell, Mark Steensland, Travis Stevens, Essi Suomela, Sheila Timothy, Anthony Timpson, Akiko Uchida, Theresa Valtin, Andrew van den Houten, Jovanka Vuckovic, Marc Walkow, Rod White, Max Winston and the SB, of course. We’d like to thank all the producers, distributors and sales agents for their assistance in putting this year’s programme together. Thanks also to all the Front of House and Bar staff at Filmhouse cos they are just magic. And thanks to you for making the effort to be here. To anyone I’ve missed out – your help and support does not go unnoticed or unappreciated. The Forbidden Door The director of KALA is back and boy is this one twisted. Like a 19th century gothic novel adapted by Alfred Hitchcock and directed by David Lynch, this movie about a sculptor and the horrible things he does to become successful is one of the sickest, slickest, kinkiest movies we’ve ever screened. Graceful, gliding, with a Saul Bass-inspired opening credits sequence and a Bernard Herrmannesque score we feel confident when we say you’ve never seen evil look quite so beautiful. From the Subway Cinema review for the New York Asian Film Festival Indonesia / 2009 / 115 mins Director: Joko Anwar Producer: Sheila Timothy Writer: Joko Anwar, based on the novel by Sekar Ayu Asmara Music: Bembi Gusti, Haris Khaseli, Aghi Narottama, Gascaro Ramondo DoP: Rahmat Syaiful Editor: Wawan I. Wibowo Cast: Fachry Albar, Marsha Timothy, Ario Bayu, Tio Pakusodewo, Henidar Amroe, Verdi Solaiman, Putri Sukardi, Ade Firza Paloh, Atiqah Hasiholan