GLASS EYE PIX Sizzle Reel Let’s Get Physical Collectible WENDIGO Figures from Glass Eye Toyz and Monsterpants Studios Oh, The Humanity! The Films of Larry Fessenden and Glass Eye Pix at MoMA The Larry Fessenden Collection BLACKOUT DEPRAVED BENEATH THE LAST WINTER WENDIGO HABIT No Telling / The Frankenstein Complex FEVER ABCs of Death 2: N is for NEXUS Skin And Bones Until Dawn PRETTY UGLY by Ilya Chaiken BLISS by Joe Maggio CRUMB CATCHER by Chris Skotchdopole FOXHOLE Markie In Milwaukee The Ranger LIKE ME PSYCHOPATHS MOST BEAUTIFUL ISLAND Stake Land II STRAY BULLETS Darling LATE PHASES How Jesus Took America Hostage — “American Jesus” the Movie New Doc BIRTH OF THE LIVING DEAD Explores the Impact of the Ground-Breaking Horror Film NIGHT OF THE LIVING DEAD THE COMEDY THE INNKEEPERS HYPOTHERMIA STAKE LAND BITTER FEAST THE HOUSE OF THE DEVIL I CAN SEE YOU WENDY & LUCY Liberty Kid I SELL THE DEAD Tales From Beyond The Pale Glass Eye Pix Comix SUDDEN STORM: A Wendigo Reader, paperbound book curated by Larry Fessenden Satan Hates You Trigger Man Automatons THE ROOST Impact Addict Videos
April 7, 2026
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Bloody Disgusting: First Look at Laëtitia Hollard in Larry Fessenden’s Monster Mashup ‘Trauma Or, Monsters All’ [Exclusive]

 

From Bloody Disgusting

By Alex DiVincenzo

The Larry Fessenden cinematic universe takes shape in Trauma Or, Monsters All, which crosses over three of the indie horror icon’s creature features: the 1995 vampire cult classic Habit, the 2019 Frankenstein riff Depraved, and the 2023 werewolf movie Blackout.

Bloody Disgusting has an exclusive first look at the poster and a batch of stills from the film, in which Fessenden blends social commentary with archetypes of horror into a reflection of our times through a gothic lens.

Trauma Or, Monsters All follows Cassandra, an aspiring author who travels to the small upstate town of Talbot Falls to write a book while working a day job at the local library alongside Agnes.

The new friends’ lives change when Cassandra writes an article for the local paper exposing the dark history of the town: are there monsters among them?

Speculation bubbles into conflict as a werewolf, a vampire, and a Frankenstein creation emerge into the light, revealing deep suppressed trauma in the inhabitants of the town.

Laëtitia Hollard (“The Pitt”), Aitana Doyle, Addison Timlin (Depraved, Odd Thomas), Alex Hurt(Blackout), Alex Breaux (Blackout, “Stranger Things”), and Fessenden (Habit) star.

Genre favorites Barbara Crampton (Blackout, Re-Animator), Joshua Leonard (Depraved, The Blair Witch Project), and James Le Gros (Blackout, Phantasm II) also make appearances.

The ensemble is rounded out by John Speredakos (Blackout), Cody Kostro (Blackout, “Mare of Easttown”), Marc Senter (Blackout, Cabin Fever 2), Micheál Neeson (Cold Pursuit), Joseph Castillo-Midyett (Blackout), and Rigo Garay (Blackout).

Fessenden writes, directs, edits, and produces via his Glass Eye Pix. Gaby Leyner, James Felix McKenney (Blackout), and Tilson Allen-Merry also produce.

Trauma Or, Monsters All will have its world premiere this weekend at the Overlook Film Festival, which will also feature repertory screenings of Habit, Depraved, and Blackout.

LINK TO TICKET PURCHASES HERE

April 7, 2026
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Director’s Notes: James Siewert on “Tender” Video

 

It feels like since 2008, the global economy has never been more than a nickel’s throw from ruin. At the same time, consumerism and consumption through physical or online goods have never been higher. It’s a delicate balance, walking a tightrope teetering over a likely collapse, and one that is explored masterfully and musically in James Siewert’s continuously revolving music video for Tender, the first single from Just Desserts’ fourth studio album, Curtains. Returning to Directors Notes, a few years since we last spoke to him, this new animated music video illustrates through stop motion the creation of our society as we know it today and how perilously – or inevitably – close it is to falling down around us. Watch Tender below, after which Siewert talks to us about the building of his own rotating Tower of Babel, collaborating with musician/actor/filmmaker Larry Fessenden to bring his song to the screen, how real-life fire and stop motion animation do not make happy bedfellows, and his hopes of hypnotising his audience.

Congratulations on the release of Tender. What was the thematic inspiration for the imagery that would accompany the song by Larry Fessenden?

When Larry sent me the song, I think I had already started envisioning a Babel-like construction on the rotating platform, being inspired by my printmaking professor Lothar Osterburg’s series of prints reinterpreting Bruegel’s Babel. Tender, with its themes of accumulation, consumption and decay, seemed like the perfect opportunity. Larry Fessenden – an indie horror auteur, here moonlighting as a musician – told me that the single’s leading image was in fact the Tower of Babel, and it felt like we had to do it.

You previously created an animation built on a rotating platform. What is it about that storytelling base that appeals to you?

I was interested in the dynamic between the growing sculptural form of accumulating frames and the more two-dimensional experience of the interior animation. The sculpture becomes the carcass of the film’s expired animated life, and by reconciling the needs of the sculpture with the needs of the animation, both end up taking on unexpected organic qualities, suggesting further growth.

The stop-motion animation reminded me of Peter Gabriel’s Sledgehammer music video, also with lovely visual cues on each lyric. What are the references and influences that inform your filmmaking style?

That’s great. I love that video – and it does have a great sense of play. You can tell that even though all the animation is very much of a piece, it wasn’t workshopped and mood-boarded to death, but they were kind of making their way through the song playfully. And that song is an absolute blast. I mean, of course, I don’t know exactly how that video was made, but there’s a sense of discovery in it. There are ads and music videos that ape that style but you can tell the frames have been picked apart by the agency and it doesn’t feel surprising – they feel ‘fun’ in scare quotes but you can tell that the artists weren’t actually let off the leash and allowed to have very much fun.

Read Full interview at Director’s Notes

April 5, 2026
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Overlook Film Fest in NOLA: Fessenden Monsterverse Tickets and Showtimes

Fri, Apr 10th, 7:00 PM @ Prytania Theatres at Canal Place B
Sun, Apr 12th, 8:10 PM @ Prytania Theatres at Canal Place D

HABIT
Sun, Apr 12th, 11:30 AM @ Prytania Theatres at Canal Place D

DEPRAVED
Sun, Apr 12th, 2:30 PM @ Prytania Theatres at Canal Place D

BLACKOUT
Sun, Apr 12th, 5:20 PM @ Prytania Theatres at Canal Place D

TRAUMA
Sun, Apr 12th, 8:10 PM @ Prytania Theatres at Canal Place D

Fessenden and select cast in attendance

April 2, 2026
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FRIDAY 04/03: Wharton Tiers Ensemble at Main Drag Music in Brooklyn. Fessenden on Sax

April 1, 2026
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Next up from IFC/OCN: Glenn McQuaid’s I SELL THE DEAD

Cover art by Chris Barnes aka BRUTAL Posters

Additional info:

PRE-ORDER NOW

March 30, 2026
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In Good Company Dep’t: Scorsese Picture KILLERS OF THE FLOWER MOON out now on Criterion in 4K

March 27, 2026
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Hey NYC! Glenn McQuaid’s RESTORATION AT GRAYSON MANOR comes to Alamo Drafthouse BK

Boyd Grayson is an Irish playboy who delights in bringing men home to his sprawling family estate for sex, just to spite his legacy-obsessed mother, reminding her she’ll never get the grandchildren she craves. When an accident leaves him incapacitated, Boyd finds himself handless, helpless, and at the mercy of her care.

Luckily for Boyd, his mother’s familial wealth has given him the opportunity to be the first person in the history of the world to pilot an experimental technology: mechanical hands controlled entirely by his subconscious. Soon, however, the hands begin to move on their own… even when they’re not attached to Boyd’s body.

Chris Colfer playing Irish, Alice Krige playing a matriarch trying to rebuild her son at any cost. Add to the mix disembodied hands that come to life, a crumbling estate full of barbed arguments, and a gallery of characters as despicable as they are magnetic. Colfer and Krige are delicious as cinema’s most twisted mother-son duo you can’t help but adore, and Declan Reynolds as Lee will become the new horror heartthrob of your gay dreams.

Director Glenn McQuaid embraces the melodrama with a sharp eye and fearless sincerity, grounding the film’s outrageous premise in real emotion.

March 26, 2026
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Just Desserts now on the radio and youtube



Have a listen to CURTAINS on youtube!

March 24, 2026
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TRAUMA OR, MONSTERS ALL star Laëtitia Hollard sits with KTLA 5 Morning News

March 18, 2026
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Cutting Room #275: Ryan Coogler’s Mission to Make FRUITVALE STATION