Connect with us

Movies

FanTasia Film Festival Announces Slate of Films!

Published

on

Due to a veritable deluge of feature presentations, the FanTasia Film Festival is extending its 13th edition for two extra days and will therefore be taking place from July 9th to the 29th at Concordia University’s Hall Theatre. As North America’s largest genre film festival, Fantasia will once again make good on its promise to deliver diversity, innovation, entertainment, food for thought and a good dose of eccentric and biting humour. Beyond the break you can dig on a list of films playing at the festival, click any link to find more information on each.

2009 LINE-UP

The past 12 months have been a treasure trove for sharp, individualistic visions of the unusual. Keep your hands on the bars as we give you a quick tour of some of what we’ve got in store for you.

From Ireland, we have the Canadian Premiere of Conor McPherson’s haunting supernatural drama THE ECLIPSE, hot off winning an award at the Tribeca Film Festival. France brings us David Morley’s anticipated feature debut MUTANTS (North American Premiere). Also from France comes Michel Houellebecq’s POSSIBILITY OF AN ISLAND (North American Premiere), the gifted author’s long-awaited directorial debut. UK filmmaker Adam Mason continues to amaze with the intense BLOOD RIVER (Canadian Premiere), a film reminiscent of both Donald Cammell and Richard Stanley. The UK also brings forth a pair of unsettling Clive Barker Adaptations – Anthony DiBlasi’s DREAD (World Premiere) and John Harrison’s BOOK OF BLOOD (North American Premiere). Belgium’s Polanski-esque LEFT BANK (Canadian Premiere) is a phenomenal slow-burn body-horror film, directed by Pieter Van Hees. From the USA, Michael Dougherty’s much-loved TRICK `R TREAT stars Anna Paquin and Brian Cox, and has become a fan favourite at every festival it’s screened. Also from the US is Robert Masciantonio’s NEIGHBOR (World Premiere), easily the most extreme film we’ve seen all year- imagine AUDITION crossed with IN THE REALM OF THE SENSES! Another US film you don’t want to miss is Danny Kuchuck & John Weiner’s award-winning time-travel thriller CRYPTIC (Canadian Premiere). A couple find themselves in a fight against nature – while stranded in the Grand Canyon – in Richard Harrah’s US thriller THE CANYON (World Premiere). Brazil’s audacious EMBODIMENT OF EVIL (Canadian Premiere) marks the return of the great José Mojica Marins and is a new height in the annals of South American surrealist horror, well-worthy of the red carpet gala it received at the Venice Film Festival.

Children can be scary little beasts, and this year’s festival showcases a trio of films that pull out all stops to illustrate this. In Paul Solet’s GRACE (Montreal Premiere), a young woman carries a dead baby to term, with results that had numerous people fainting in their seats when the film launched at Sundance earlier this year. Tom Shankland’s UK shocker THE CHILDREN (North American Premiere) pits parent against child in a gruelling fight for survival. It’s one of our favourite horror films of the year. Jaume Collet-Serra’s ORPHAN sees a mysterious young girl visiting hell upon her new adoptive family.

Radical independent triumphs are exploding throughout the festival like land mines of inspiration. Dominic Murphy’s WHITE LIGHTNIN’, a major discovery at Sundance and Berlin, rockets the meth-fuelled life and crimes of dancing outlaw Jesco White. Another Sundance (not to mention SXSW) hit, David Russo’s IMMACULATE CONCEPTION OF LITTLE DIZZLE (International Premiere) , features pregnant male characters giving birth to marine creatures. It very well may be this generation’s REPO MAN. Also from the US is Alejandro Adams’s CANARY, an unforgettable film that every Soderbergh fan should consider a must-see. Another US must is Marcel Sarmiento and Gadi Harel’s undead exploration of misogyny, the controversial DEADGIRL (Montreal Premiere). Buddy Giovinazzo’s hard-hitting LIFE IS HOT IN CRACKTOWN (International Premiere) plays like a strung out version of Altman’s SHORT CUTS by way of LAST EXIT TO BROOKLYN. Simon Ennis’ Canadian Slamdance hit YOU MIGHT AS WELL LIVE (Canadian premiere) proves that mental illness can be fun. France lands a powerhouse punch with Pierre Laffargue’s BLACK (Canadian premiere), starring MC Jean Gab’1. Another Gallic must-see is Nicolas Alberny & Jean Mach’s subversive 8th WONDERLAND (Canadian Premiere), in which progressives from every part of the world unite online to create a virtual country and challenge the G8, with harrowing results. SANS DESSEIN (World Premiere) sees adored Quebecois comedy collective Deadcat Films deliver on the promise of their many shorts with a madcap feature debut. Also from Quebec, we’ve got A QUELLE HEURE LE TRAIN POUR NULLE PART, Robin Aubert’s experimental and existential India-lensed road movie. Tearing straight out of South Africa, Mark Lebenan’s adrenalized SLAM-BANG (World Premiere) is a Michael Mann-esque thriller with spirit and guts.

The theme of vengeance has resurfaced in world cinema with white hot fury, and is reflected in our lineup with a blistering pair of films from Australia and Canada – respectively, Steven Kastrissios’ award-winning THE HORSEMAN (Canadian Premiere) and Andrew Hunt’s SWEET KARMA (World Premiere). Interestingly both films deal with lone protagonists – a middle-aged, male exterminator in the former, a young female immigrant in the latter – who wage war against the underground sex trades in their communities.

Esther Gronenborn’s German thriller THE KAIFECK MURDER (Canadian Premiere) is a triumph of atmosphere and mood. Uwe Boll does an extreme career makeover with the harrowing prison drama STOIC (North American Premiere), a co-production between Canada and the US. Speaking of Canada, we’ll be hosting the Canadian Premiere of Max Perrier’s THE ANTE, a low- budget Montreal crime film that turned many a head at Slamdance. Denmark gives us a crime film of a different breed with Henrik Ruben Genz’s fascinating neo-Noir TERRIBLY HAPPY (Canadian Premiere), winner of the Crystal Globe at the Karlovy Vary Film Festival.

The Comedy/Horror subgenre has never been stronger. Witness Glenn McQuaid’s I SELL THE DEAD (Montreal Premiere), a brilliant Victorian-era tale of grave-robbing and the supernatural that stars Dominic Monaghan, Larry Fessenden and Ron Perlman, and ranks with the best of Tim Burton. Nazi Zombies from Norway are here to change your outlook on Norwegian cinema in Tommy Wirkola’s Sundance smash DEAD SNOW (Canadian Premiere). What do you get when the director of JESUS CHRIST VAMPIRE HUNTER teams up with Sasha Grey, David Hess and Michael Berryman to shoot a wacked-out tribute to `60s splatter pioneer HG Lewis? You get SMASH CUT (World Premiere), the latest from Canada’s Lee Demarbre. Want more? UK comedy duo James Corden and Mat Horne star in the loopy SXSW hit LESBIAN VAMPIRE KILLERS (Canadian Premiere). Last but not least, Germany delivers one of the wildest discoveries of the year, Andreas Schaap’s MUST LOVE DEATH (World Premiere), an astounding freak fusion of romantic comedy and extreme horror that plays as if the Coen Brothers collaborated with Takashi Miike and MANHATTEN-era Woody Allen to make something in the median between FLIRTING WITH DISASTER and TEXAS CHAINSAW MASSACRE!

On the documentary side of things, we’ve got a quartet of USA films that are bound to provoke much post-screening discussion. A role playing game based on the Columbine massacre is the subject of Danny Ledonne’s PLAYING COLUMBINE, a film that explores the question of responsibility in media and the culpability of creation. Barbara Bell and Anna Lorentzon’s GRAPHIC SEXUAL HORROR (Montreal Premiere) is a stark look at the minds and mechanisms behind insex.com, an extreme BDSM site that was shut down by US authorities using a clause in the Patriot Act. Michael Paul Stephenson’s wickedly entertaining BEST WORST MOVIE (Montreal Premiere) spends time with a pack of inadvertent celebrities – the cast of TROLL 2 (widely considered to be the worst film ever made) – whose dull, normal lives are disrupted by the surprise realization that they have fans across the world. Lastly, a year in the life of the brazenly law-un-abiding outlaw family of Jesco White is documented in Julian Nitzberg’s jaw- dropping and touching WILD AND WONDERFUL WHITES OF WEST VIRGINIA (Canadian Premiere), a film that could very well land almost everyone involved in jail the minute it comes out!

FIRST-CLASS ASIAN CINEMA

Over 50 Asian films, 35 from Japan, the rest from Korea, China/Hong Kong and Thailand, are invading Montreal as part of the Fantasia Film Festival’s 13th edition. With a mix of highly anticipated award-winning films presentations and guaranteed crowd pleasers, the Festival will be featuring the very best in Asian cinema.

FANTASIA IS BRIMMING WITH AWARD WINNING FILMS

Fantasia is thrilled to present the North American premiere of Park Chan-wook’s THIRST, this tale of love and vampires which is part film d’auteur, part horror flick made quite an impact at the Cannes Festival where it was awarded the Jury prize. Also from South Korea comes BREATHLESS, a first effort by Yang Ik-june who will be gracing us with his presence this year. BREATHLESS was conferred the highest distinction at the Rotterdam International Film Festival and earned the Critic’s Prize at Deauville. Hong Kong brings us the epic THE WARLORDS and IP MAN a historical martial arts movie both of which were highly praised during the last Hong Kong Film Awards. Not to be left behind, Japan will be delighting us with the comedy FINE, TOTALLY FINE, Audience Award winner at the 2008 New York Asian Film Festival. Also noteworthy are such prominent new films as Kim Ki-duk’s DREAM and Sion Sono’s LOVE EXPOSURE, as well as YATTERMAN (this year’s opening film which will be presented by producer Yoshinori Chiba) from none other than Japanese cinema’s favourite black sheep, Takashi Miike. Finally, let’s not forget MY DEAR ENEMY a movie with magnificently intricate aesthetics which was an official selection at the Berlin International Film Festival and whose leading lady Jeon Do-yeon is a Cannes best actress winner for her role in SECRET SUNSHINE.

HUMOUR, ACTION, EMOTION!

Kung-fu, Taekwondo and Muay Thaï will all take center stage in such films as COWEB, SPARE and FIREBALL. All the comedy lovers can look forward to INSTANT SWAMP from Satoshi Miki (ADRIFT IN TOKYO), CRUSH AND BLUSH (produced by Park Chan-wook who also had a hand in the screenplay) and CRAZY RACER. An informed public thirsting for some thrills will not want to miss THE CHASER (a surprise 2008 hit in Korea, it was presented at Cannes last year) and ROUGH CUT (produced and co-written by Kim Ki-duk). Tetsuya Nakashima (MEMORIES OF MATSUKO) is back with the family friendly PACO AND THE MAGIC BOOK a funny, touching and offbeat journey somewhere between Scrooge and Tim Burton. Japanese animation is back to claim its place in the Festival with such features as HELLS brought to us by Madhouse and GENIUS PARTY BEYOND, from beloved 4

Horror movie fanatic who co-founded Bloody Disgusting in 2001. Producer on Southbound, V/H/S/2/3/94, SiREN, Under the Bed, and A Horrible Way to Die. Chicago-based. Horror, pizza and basketball connoisseur. Taco Bell daily. Franchise favs: Hellraiser, Child's Play, A Nightmare on Elm Street, Halloween, Scream and Friday the 13th. Horror 365 days a year.

Advertisement
Click to comment

Editorials

First Omens and Immaculate Conceptions: Pregnancy Horror Is Having a Moment

Published

on

Pictured: 'Immaculate'

WARNING: The following contains major spoilers for Immaculate and The First Omen.

Horror has always served as a frightening mirror to reality. In his 1981 treatise on the genre Danse Macabre, author Stephen King writes, “we make up horrors to help us cope with the real ones”; it seems scary movies have been helping us do that since the earliest days of storytelling. Modern examples include The Texas Chain Saw Massacre (1974) now considered a reaction to the 1973 oil crisis, Dawn of the Dead (1978) which stands as a horrific condemnation of consumerism, and the explosion of the torture porn subgenre in the wake of 9/11. As the United States enters a new phase of fear, two films have converged in an exploration of horrific pregnancy caused by religious abuse. As reproduction becomes more dangerous, Michael Mohan’s Immaculate and Arkasha Stevenson’s The First Omen both follow nuns impregnated against their will and forced to carry fetuses intended to save the world. 

It’s no coincidence that both films hit at a time of increased threat to reproductive rights. The 2022 Dobbs decision plunged the United States into medical chaos and rescinded the right to bodily autonomy for millions of women. A pregnant person’s access to care now depends on her zip code and laws regulating routine medical procedures are creating gynecological deserts which threaten the health and safety of all women. The opinions of politicians and lawyers weigh more than those of doctors and strangers have the right to challenge a person’s private medical decisions. Regardless of belief or ideology, the reality is that childbirth in the US is less safe than it was two years ago and becoming pregnant feels more like a horror movie with each passing day. Both films explore this horrific atmosphere by taking us to convents where women have willingly given their lives to the Lord. But even in this restrictive environment forced impregnation is an egregious violation and innocent women are treated as nothing more than available wombs. 

Though their stories vary wildly, both Immaculate and The First Omen begin in similar places. Two novitiates fly to Italian convents and prepare to take vows of poverty, chastity and obedience. Cecilia (Sydney Sweeney) has just moved into an abbey that doubles as an assisted living facility when she discovers that she is pregnant seemingly by immaculate conception. At first honored as a holy vessel, she quickly becomes a prisoner on the grounds, forced to carry whatever has been placed inside her womb. Serving as a mirror image to Cecilia, Stevenson’s novitiate Margaret (Nell Tiger Free) is still preparing to join the cloth when a priest approaches her with an ominous warning. As the pieces of this sinister story fall into place, Margaret realizes that she is pregnant with the devil’s child. She quickly gives birth to twins; an unnamed baby girl and a boy who will come to be known as Damien. Only concerned with her male offspring, the murderous clergy steal the baby and place him in the arms of an American ambassador, hoping to spread their dark influence across the world. 

Nell Tiger Free as Margaret - The First Omen review

‘The First Omen’

Both films show the trauma of pregnancy and the violent nature of birth, but neither story concerns itself with the resulting babies. Aside from brief glances, these stories belong to the mothers and it is their experiences that bring the horror. However, the characters they engage with care only for the contents of their wombs. When Cecilia is attacked and nearly killed by a fellow sister, doctors immediately check the status of her pregnancy. They’re relieved to see that the fetus is fine, but the frightened young woman reminds them that she is not. She asks to be seen by an outside doctor and must fake a life-threatening miscarriage to be taken seriously. Margaret faces similar abandonment moments after giving birth. A priest carries her son to a waiting crowd and it’s not until she calls for the child she just delivered that they remember she’s still in the room. Both films also feature a pregnant woman pleading for release through a locked door – a haunting parallel to the experience of being trapped in an unwanted pregnancy. 

It’s important to note that neither woman gives consent for their conditions. We don’t see the moment Cecilia conceives, but we eventually learn that a priest dabbling in genetics has impregnated her with the ancient DNA of Jesus Christ. Margaret has been bred under a specific set of circumstances to create a mother capable of bearing the Antichrist. To achieve this evil goal, her fellow clergy drug and assault her in a hideous ritual that has been repeated many times before. Both Cecilia and Margaret have chosen a life of chastity and neither woman shows anything but horror at the traumatic months of gestation to come. Even though they have willingly dedicated their lives to God, they are forced to give up their bodies as well, sacrificing their mental and physical health for babies they never expected or wanted. 

Immaculate unfolds in three chapters, mirroring the major stages of a typical pregnancy. Sometime during the second trimester, Cecilia notices that she has lost a tooth. Likely a nod to superstitions about the loss of one tooth per child, this harrowing moment also reflects a larger truth. Growing and birthing another human being forever changes a person’s body. In addition to more well-known symptoms like nausea and postpartum depression, expectant mothers also experience gum disease, carpal tunnel syndrome, nosebleeds, and hair loss. Even the size of a woman’s feet have been known to change after giving birth. As her due date nears, Cecilia watches with trepidation as her belly begins to move on its own. While this can be an exciting feeling with a wanted child, Mohan presents these baby kicks with horror. An alien being has taken root inside Cecilia’s belly. Her body has been commandeered by a stranger and she can do nothing but wait for it to emerge. It’s easy to remember the bookends of pregnancy – conception and birth – forgetting that the pregnant person is “with child” every minute of 280 days. Mohan shows us the messy details in the middle and reminds us that reproduction is so much more than two isolated events. 

Sydney Sweeney Immaculate

‘Immaculate’

Also during the second trimester, Cecilia goes through what appears to be a miscarriage. She wakes up screaming and notices heavy blood pouring from between her legs. The frightened mother-to-be begs a priest to take her to a hospital and wails that she doesn’t want to die. This terrifying scene likely hits home to any woman who’s ever suffered pregnancy loss. The brutal experience is often marked by heavy bleeding as the body tries to expel the nonviable fetus. If emergency care does not follow, the mother could die due to excessive blood loss. If the uterus is not cleared of all fetal tissue, sepsis, infection, organ failure, and death may follow. We eventually learn that Cecilia has faked this miscarriage to escape the convent. With chicken’s blood covering her legs, she runs through a field as two priests drag her back to an idling car. While Cecilia’s life is not in immediate danger, this scene presents a horrifying reality playing out across the country. Cecilia simply wants medical care, but the men in control of her fate must believe that she is minutes away from death before they will act. 

Margaret only has a few hours to experience her awful pregnancy, but her labor is intense. Due to the baby’s demonic parentage, her belly rapidly balloons as the unholy twins expand inside her. On the chosen hour, she experiences debilitating spasms and falls to her knees as fluid gushes from between her legs. Cecilia’s water also breaks in the film’s final act, preceding a daring escape while she experiences active labor. After murdering her caretakers, she staggers through the convent halls seeking to kill anyone who stands in her way. But as she goes on her righteous rampage, contractions start to rip through her body. It’s a powerful depiction of this unique type of pain. The massive cramps drown everything else out and Cecilia has no choice but to wait for the current contraction to abate. She may be running from a murderous priest who will surely cut open her stomach and leave her for dead, but even then, the pain is so great that it stops her in her tracks. 

In addition to the trauma of labor, both films accurately depict the brutality of birth. While delivery can be a beautiful process, many women report a shockingly violent experience. Moments after her belly enlarges, Margaret is strapped to a gurney and rolled into a secret operating room. Stoic faces ignore her pleas for help and inject her with drugs to calm her down. Ominous medical tools are presented as instruments of torture and Margaret watches in helpless horror as the surgeons begin their work. They cut into her belly and jostle around inside her abdomen as they search for a membranous sac containing the twins. This terrifying scene reflects the experience of cesarean birth. Numb from the rib cage down, it’s still possible to feel the surgeon’s hands moving your body from side to side, rearranging internal organs and clearing a passage to pull out the baby.

The First Omen 2024 directed by Arkasha Stevenson

‘The First Omen’

Cecilia experiences a different kind of birth – arguably the film’s most powerful scene. After escaping the convent, she finds herself on the edge of a cliff surrounded by wilderness. The camera hovers inches from her face as she bears down and screams through her final contractions. The baby soon passes out of her body and Cecilia desperately tries to recapture her breath. Though we hear tiny coughs and gurgles from the product of her womb, we never see the so-called savior’s face. Cecilia severs the umbilical cord with her teeth and steps away from the reddish-brown creature wriggling on the ground. After locating a heavy rock, she braces herself and then slams it down on the newborn creature. This shocking moment perfectly captures her rage at this tiny stranger. She did not give permission for a fetus to grow inside her and she resents the way it has turned her life upside down. 

Both films explore the concept of good and bad women by following nuns who draw the line at sacrificing their wombs. Margaret tells a misunderstood orphan that she is not “bad,” explaining, “They just tell you that you are because you’re not doing what they want you to do.“ The Catholic church has been telling these two women what to do since birth. They have always been governed by someone else’s religious ideals and given no choice in the way they live out their own faith. As long as Cecilia and Margaret are playing their assigned roles in a hellish plot, they are considered good, even holy. But the minute they exert any will of their own, they are vilified and targeted for death. Another nun tells Cecilia that “suffering is love,” hoping to convince her to allow the abuse of her body. But suffering is only love when it is a choice. Cecilia never chose to be in this position and what happens to her can only be considered punishment. She and Margaret are punished simply because they have fertile wombs – a powerful reflection of what it feels like to be a woman in the US today. 

When Margaret realizes she has been impregnated, she immediately asks for an abortion, insisting, “I need it out of my now.” While upsetting, this sentiment is familiar to millions of women facing pregnancy in a country where religious ideology has taken precedence over medical care. Both films explore these relatable horrors and follow women who refuse to let their bodies be sacrificed to someone else’s understanding of God. Traumatized, assaulted, and violated in every conceivable way, Margaret and Cecilia attempt to murder their unholy offspring with varying levels of success. Though horrific, their actions challenge a patriarchal system that sees them as nothing more than vessels for reproduction. Neither woman renounces her faith and both stand against the hypocrisy that would harm one child of God to produce another. Though their stories end in different places, both women decide that a church that doesn’t care about the mother does not deserve the child. 

Sydney Sweeney horror

‘Immaculate’

Continue Reading