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Beating Hearts
Directed by:
Matthew Garrett
Written by: Matthew Garrett
Official Website
Not Available for Sale
Truly
one of the most horrifying short films of the year,
"Beating Hearts" is a disturbing and absolutely morbid
look at a family ticking away to explode in to a hail of
violence and carnage. That bombshell is incidentally the
youngest daughter of a brood of middle class individuals
who one day wakes up atop her mother's heaving bosom
only to mutilate her before her very eyes.
What
follows is a suggestive and utterly unsettling look at
cross generational love and disgusting symbolism that
signals a horrific crime that was a long time coming and
an erratic young girl who never quite figured out how to
process her uneasy feelings. |
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Amy's in the Attic
Directed by:
Matthew Saliba
Written by: Matthew Saliba
Official Trailer
Buy It Here
We've
been a fan of director Matthew Saliba for years, since
he introduced us to his male oriented revenge fantasy
"She was Asking For It" and his collaborative unique
film style. "Amy's In the Attic" is an impetus in Mr.
Saliba's cinematic works as it delves in to Italian
cinema to tell a morbid tale of a sex game gone wrong.
Filmed in the style of classic Italian Giallos and even
being filmed with alternate Italian sub-titles, Mr
Saliba has outdone himself with a short but sweet tale
of what happens when people assume their roles of sexual
dominance over a lower being.
And take it one step
further. Even
more so is the implied surprise ending leaving in the
air a plethora of questions that only the characters
will truly be knowledgeable of once the film has stopped
rolling. With frequent collaborator Kayden Rose at the
charge there's no limit to what Saliba can do next.
We're anxiously awaiting a feature length film from the
man.
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The Long Slow Death of a Twenty
Something
Directed by:
Larry Longstreth
Written by: Larry Longstreth
Official Website
Official Trailer
Buy It Here
We've followed director Larry
Longstreth's career for years from his time as a short
filmmaker, to a critically acclaimed fan filmmaker, to
now maturing as a man who has something to say with his
film's that aren't confined to Batman and the
Thundercats. "The Long Slow Death of a Twenty Something"
is a complex, heartbreaking, and very funny look at the
end of an era when a man loses his outlook on life he
had as a twenty something and must figure out where he
stands in the world as a thirty something.
And
channeling "Fight Club" in many respects, Longstreth's
protagonist must figure out where he stands as a man
whose yet to have his right of passage in a world that
values materialism over honor. Sans the fighting, of
course. Filled with Longstreth's trademark off balance
deadpan humor, and fan boy references galore, "The Long
Slow Death" is a deeply personal piece of work that we
adored. And it doesn't hurt that Superman makes a cameo.
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Seeds of Arkham
Directed by:
Aaron Schoenke
Written by: Aaron Schoenke
Official Website
Official Trailer
Not Available for Sale
If we
had our way, as soon as Christopher Nolan steps down
from his throne as the helmer of Batman, Hollywood would
come knocking on the door of director Aaron Schoenke.
Then they'd ask him "How would you like a crack at
Batman?" Then they'd toss him a multi-million dollar
budget to stage his reboot of Nolan's series. And you
know what? He'd do a hell of a job and wouldn't miss a
beat.
Because
for years now Mr. Schoenke has delivered his own vision
of Gotham and the Dark Knight that has been dynamic,
gritty, dramatic, and absolutely compelling. When we're
not feasting on Nolan's Batverse, Schoenke is the man to
go to to provide a unique look at the dark city where
crime runs rampant and a man with pointy ears can be
taken seriously again. Start seeking out Schoenke,
Hollywood!
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Absentia
Directed by: Mike Flanagan
Written by: Mike Flanagan
Official Website
Official Trailer
Buy It Here
Mike
Flanagan's supernatural horror film invokes shades of
Lovecraft in one of the most harrowing and atmospheric
indie films of the year. A story about a doomed tunnel
and a woman struggling to decipher its secrets,
"Absentia" is an often unsettling and brutally
disturbing film about a plague on a city and the lengths
people are willing to go to stop it and even appease it.
Filled
with twists and frightening turns, director Flanagan
directs a near masterpiece with a very talented cast of
performers, all of whom do battle with a beast that can
not bet stopped with a hunger that is insatiable. Filled
with a disturbing final scene, "Absentia" kept us
thinking for days.
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The Worst 10 of 2011!
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The Top 10 of 2011!
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