[Editorial] Nightstream Film Festival 2021
Through a collaborative effort from some of the most hard-working genre festival programmers, NIGHTSTREAM presents a thrilling, virtually accessible film festival featuring some of the best short and feature films in the genre world today.
Produced by the Overlook Film Festival, North Bend Film Festival, Brooklyn Horror Film Festival, and the Boston Underground Film Festival, NIGHTSTREAM offered amazing bonus content including interviews with Malignant writer Akela Cooper and Don Mancini (Chucky), short videos from dozens of filmmakers, screenwriters, fiction writers, and film critics discussing their favorite horror films, including Ghouls Magazine’s very own Zöe Rose Smith who eloquently explains her undying love for Tom Six and his brilliant and disturbing Human Centipede 2. Shout out to Stephen Graham Jones (My Heart is a Chainsaw) for presenting the most interesting, poetic, and hypnotic perspective on Scream – needless to say, the man should be narrating his own audiobooks.
NIGHTSTREAM featured some familiar titles to those who have tracked other genre festivals this season, including such popular features as We’re All Going to the World’s Fair and Woodlands Dark and Days Bewitched: A History of Folk Horror and well-known short Koreatown Ghost Story which was boosted by a fun turn from Margaret Cho. But there were also a few standout features and shorts that have received less watercooler buzz and definitely deserve a moment in the light.
One of my personal favorites of the festival comes from Jean-Christophe Meurisse with the pitch-black comedy Bloody Oranges. There is a uniquely French acerbic tone that lends itself to the nihilistic feel of the ensemble storytelling, with colliding narratives that are equal parts hilarious, heartbreaking, and demented. The film takes a surprising turn in the third act with a painfully real abduction and a most perfect revenge scene, and only in a French film does a rape scene intersplice with a rock dance and feel completely natural. The storylines come together perfectly to pull back a specific cultural curtain that many in political power would wish to remain closed.
Poser, directed by Ori Segev and Noah Dixon, is a beautiful portrait of young creatives, punks and anarchists, outcasts, and those outcast from even the outcasts. Lennon (Sylvie Mix) is a girl seeking her place within a world she desperately wishes to belong to, not unlike most people searching for their tribe. When she encounters rising social media and pop star Bobbi Kitten, a friendship that begins as mutual interest quickly descends into dangerous obsession. Poser taps into that elusive feeling of coolness, the feeling that’s fleeting at best but can be captured on a single fateful night out with the group one has only gazed at from afar. The film features some seriously infectious original music and, no matter how dark things get for Lennon and Bobbi, Poser is a love letter to independent music and the creative souls who yearn only to find themselves through their passion.
As someone who only ever knew GWAR through the 1995 masterpiece Empire Records (“Hey Mark. You love GWAR. Why don’t you join the band!”) I did not expect to be so entertained, or so moved, by director Scott Barber’s This is GWAR. The documentary, which won the top honour with the Audience Award for feature film, is an explosive look at the talented and complicated musicians behind the masks and makeup of GWAR.
In the short film blocks, there were loads of standouts, as it seems short-form film has become more impressive as limitations are lifted and attention spans are tightened. It’s difficult to narrow down favorites, but a few stood out amongst the crowd as truly innovative and exciting.
Tied for first place in the Audience Award for short film, Chris McInroy’s Guts is a testament to the value of humor and gore in short horror. Following a man whose guts are outside of his body as he navigates an especially difficult day at work, Guts is side-splittingly funny and extremely gross. The perfect combination. McInroy said of his win, “A bonus of a streaming festival is when you watch something like Guts you’re probably pretty close to a bathroom if you need to hurl.”
Another highlight was Ilja Rautsi’s Night of the Living Dicks, a cross between Night of the Living Dead, Invasion of the Body Snatchers, and They Live for the nonbinary crowd. If that doesn’t pique your interest, nothing will. The film is disgusting and beautiful, a real piece (or is it penis?) of cinema.
Australian filmmaker Carl Firth tackles an Aboriginal folk horror tale with The Moogai. In 15-minutes, Firth builds tension and subverts expectations as a couple brings home their newborn baby and must immediately defend themselves against the ominous creature who lurks in the darkest corners. A wonderful lead performance from Shari Sebbens elevates The Moogai to the creepiest levels of folk horror.
Other standouts include Michael Anthony Kratochvil’s atmospheric Sweet Mary, Where Did You Go, horror with a sci-fi bend. Dan Repp and Lindsay Young’s Martyrs-esque film Cutter is an examination of guilt and self-harm. A hopeful examination of racism and ancestral trauma in Inheritance from Annalise Lockhart. And finally Sleep Talker, also from Carl Firth, stands as the short most likely to be made into a kick-ass feature, as it contains one of the most terrifying and uncanny entities witnessed in some time.
Overall, NIGHTSTREAM was a rip-roaring good time, went off without a hitch, and exposed the genre world to ever more fascinating, exciting, and promising talent that should without a doubt be given all the money and resources to create whatever the hell they want.
When people think of horror films, slashers are often the first thing that comes to mind. The sub-genres also spawned a wealth of horror icons: Freddy, Jason, Michael, Chucky - characters so recognisable we’re on first name terms with them. In many ways the slasher distills the genre down to some of its fundamental parts - fear, violence and murder.
Throughout September we were looking at slasher films, and therefore we decided to cover a slasher film that could be considered as an underrated gem in the horror genre. And the perfect film for this was Franck Khalfoun’s 2012 remake of MANIAC.
In the late seventies and early eighties, one man was considered the curator of all things gore in America. During the lovingly named splatter decade, Tom Savini worked on masterpieces of blood and viscera like Dawn of the Dead (1978), a film which gained the attention of hopeful director William Lustig, a man only known for making pornography before his step into horror.
Looking for some different slasher film recommendations? Then look no fruther as Ariel Powers-Schaub has 13 non-typical slasher horror films for you to watch.
Even though they are not to my personal liking, there is no denying that slasher films have been an important basis for the horror genre, and helped to build the foundations for other sub-genres throughout the years.
But some of the most terrifying horrors are those that take place entirely under the skin, where the mind is the location of the fear. Psychological horror has the power to unsettle by calling into question the basis of the self - one's own brain.
On Saturday, 17th June 2023, I sat down with two friends to watch The Human Centipede (First Sequence) (2009) and The Human Centipede 2 (Full Sequence) (2012). I was nervous to be grossed out (I can’t really handle the idea of eating shit) but excited to cross these two films off my list.
Many of the most effective horror films involve blurring the lines between waking life and a nightmare. When women in horror are emotionally and psychologically manipulated – whether by other people or more malicious supernatural forces – viewers are pulled into their inner worlds, often left with a chilling unease and the question of where reality ends and the horror begins.
Body horror is one of the fundamental pillars of the horror genre and crops up in some form or another in a huge variety of works. There's straightforward gore - the inherent horror of seeing the body mutilated, and also more nuanced fears.
In the sweaty summer of 1989, emerging like a monochrome migraine from the encroaching shadow of Japan’s economic crash, Shin’ya Tsukamoto’s Tetsuo: The Iron Man shocked and disgusted the (very few) audiences originally in attendance.
Whether it's the havoc wreaked on the human body during pregnancy, emotional turmoil producing tiny murderous humans or simply a body turning on its owner, body horror films tend to be shocking. But while they're full of grotesque imagery, they're also full of thoughtful premises and commentary, especially when it comes to women, trauma, and power.
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EXPLORE
Now it’s time for Soho’s main 2023 event, which is presented over two weekends: a live film festival at the Whirled Cinema in Brixton, London, and an online festival a week later. Both have very rich and varied programmes (with no overlap this year), with something for every horror fan.
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A Quiet Place (2018) opens 89 days after a race of extremely sound-sensitive creatures show up on Earth, perhaps from an exterritorial source. If you make any noise, even the slightest sound, you’re likely to be pounced upon by these extremely strong and staggeringly fast creatures and suffer a brutal death.
If you like cults, sacrificial parties, and lesbian undertones then Mona Awad’s Bunny is the book for you. Samantha, a student at a prestigious art university, feels isolated from her cliquey classmates, ‘the bunnies’.
The slasher sub genre has always been huge in the world of horror, but after the ‘70s and ‘80s introduced classic characters like Freddy Krueger, Michael Myers, Leatherface, and Jason, it’s not harsh to say that the ‘90s was slightly lacking in the icon department.
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Being able to see into the future or back into the past is a superpower that a lot of us would like to have. And while it may seem cool, in horror movies it usually involves characters being sucked into terrifying situations as they try to save themselves or other people with the information they’ve gleaned in their visions.
Both the original Pet Sematary (1989) and its 2019 remake are stories about the way death and grief can affect people in different ways. And while the films centre on Louis Creed and his increasingly terrible decision-making process, there’s no doubt that the story wouldn’t pack the same punch or make the same sense without his wife, Rachel.
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