BAFF 2018: Best Short Films of the Fest
This year’s Buried Alive Film Festival has perhaps the best crop of short horror films I’ve seen to date! As always, if any of these sounds interesting to you, seek them out and support the filmmakers!
This year’s Buried Alive Film Festival has perhaps the best crop of short horror films I’ve seen to date! As always, if any of these sounds interesting to you, seek them out and support the filmmakers!
This year’s selection of feature films at the Buried Alive Film Festival 2018 was easily the best I’ve seen in years. From an insightful documentary to neon gore, there was certainly something for every horror fan! Here is my rundown of all the features shown at this year’s festival.
Have you ever found yourself watching a Studio Ghibli movie and thinking, “I wish these child characters suffered a strange bodily transformation”? Or perhaps you were watching The Fly and lamented the fact that Cronenberg hasn’t made a children’s body horror film.
“The time will come when our personality begins and our viral existence ends. That will be a real fucking mess! You won’t exist without internet.” This quote from the new Spanish horror film Framed sums up the complex ideas that the film manages to explore underneath its bloody exterior.
There’s a small subgenre of horror films that I like to call the descent-into-madness film. It’s a tried and true, from Fuller’s Shock Corridor to Aronofsky’s Black Swan to Kon’s Perfect Blue, and when it’s done right it can be as unsettling and mesmerizing as the goriest Italian Giallo. These films do run the risk …
This year’s Atlanta Film Fest was easily the best I’ve been to in years, and featured some truly exceptional feature and short films. In addition to the full reviews and the best shorts of the fest, I figured it was worth doing quick takes on every movie I caught at the festival.
Perhaps my favorite thing about going to film festivals is the unique opportunity to see short films. Shorts are such a wonderful format for telling a story and are often more engaging and memorable than their feature counterparts. This year at the Atlanta Film Festival I had the opportunity to see over …
BLAME tackles some tricky subject matters with nuance and emotion. It’s a strong, if messy, debut film from Quinn Shephard.
SECURITY gives Antonio Banderas his shot at the ‘weathered old man’ action genre. How does this action icon fare?
BPM (Beats Per Minute) is a timely and vital look back as the wave of LGBT Rights protests in the 80s and 90s, paired with deeply felt personal drama.
Harry Dean Stanton is an icon among character actors. It is fitting that LUCKY gave him a chance to shine as a leading man before his death.
The Honor Farm looks like a horror movie, but what it actually ends up being is a surprisingly sweet coming-of-age story in spooky clothes.
If you had asked me before I saw this, I would have named GERALD’S GAME as an unadaptable story. Mike Flanagan has proved me wrong.
COLUMBUS is a heartfelt drama about family, loss, and the future. As a debut film from essayist Kogonada, it is a small miracle.
INGRID GOES WEST is a biting satire of social media influencer culture with a killer cast. So why doesn’t it quite come together?