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
September 3, 2019
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Blue Finch takes UK rights on FrightFest horror DEPRAVED

UK distribution outfit Blue Finch has boarded UK and Ireland distribution on Larry Fessenden’s horror Depraved.

The company is planning a winter release on the title, which recently had its UK premiere at horror festival FrightFest. It has also played festivals including Fantasia and Sydney.

Genre sales outfit Yellow Veil Pictures handles rights and struck the deal with Blue Finch.

Depraved is a contemporary re-imaging of Mary Shelley’s Frankenstein, centering on a field surgeon (played by David Call) who creates a man out of body parts in a makeshift lab in Brooklyn. After being successful in his endeavour but consumed with remorse over the results, he tries to protect his creation (played by Alex Breaux) from the world. Also starring are Joshua Leonard, Ana Kayne, Chloe Levine, and Addison Timlin.

The project was produced by Fessenden, Chadd Harbold and Jenn Wexler for New York outfit Glass Eye Pix and executive produced by Joe Swanberg, Peter Gilbert, Andrew Mer, and Edwin Linker of Forager Film Company.

Read Full Article HERE

August 30, 2019
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Weekends with GEP: River of Grass

This Labor Day Weekend, revisit Kelly Reichardt’s first film, RIVER OF GRASS.
Starring Lisa Bowman and Larry Fessenden. Now streaming on Hulu

Congratulations to Reichardt for her latest film FIRST COW
unspooling at New York Film Fest in the Fall!

August 29, 2019
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DEEP DIVE DEPT: Fessenden’s HABIT on HORROR POD CLASS

Thoughtful discussion of Fessenden’s 1997 film HABIT.

August 28, 2019
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MAN OF MEDAN hits stores Friday 8/30!

From Supermassive Games, the developers who brought you UNTIL DAWN,
comes a brand new interactive drama horror game MAN OF MEDAN.
Screenplay penned by Graham Reznick and Fessenden! 

Read Review HERE

August 28, 2019
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Signal Horizon: DEPRAVED The Postmodern Prometheus

“If I cannot inspire love, I will cause fear”-Frankenstein’s Monster

After hearing about the new Fessenden Frankenstein pastiche I thought I knew what I was in for.  Fessenden has made a career of reworking old horror tropes into new and relevant material.  Whether it is through directing/acting in classics like Habit in the 90’s or shepherding new talent through producing movies like The Ranger (one of my favorites from last year) Fessenden has earned his stellar reputation.  Depraved was written and directed by Fessenden and in many ways captures so much of what is unique about this horror icon.

The film starts by introducing us to the lovers Lucy (played by the incomparable Chloe Levine) and Alex as they work through some of their issues. The relationship feels genuine, mostly because it feels complicated. It’s not perfect and while the film only gives us a few minutes of it is enough to sustain the entire movie. If the audience did not buy it as a legitimate relationship as the movie looks to leverage it later the movie wouldn’t have the emotional stakes that make it so effective. Soon after Alex leaves Lucy’s apartment he is stabbed and we wake up later with him in someone else’s body (er rather lots of other peoples bodies). Our modern Frankenstein is named Adam and is the result of our mad scientist, Henry. Adam and Henry’s relationship is perhaps the most interesting as Henry helps Adam rediscover his humanity while also questioning his own.

Much like US-China relations in the 1960’s (a phrase I am excited to use in relation to a horror movie) the two bond over Ping Pong. Alex Breaux plays Adam with such pathos we can’t help but connect with him.  He is isolated in a city of millions of people and that isolation feels particularly relevant to folks who suffer from depression or anxiety (myself included).  While the movie plays out in a traditional way Fessenden seeks to adapt the story to a modern day sensibility.  We get small psychedelic nuance which leads to us to question the camera as a reliable narrator.  In the final moments the movie makes a choice about its heroes and villains and in many ways it tries to offer the denouement that Shelley story never could.

The plot while feeling pretty traditional gives rise to a set of themes and ideas that feel squarely rooted in this moment in time.  Henry’s creation is a hybrid of Big Pharma and an ongoing war that he has been unable to mentally come home from.  As much as Adam is dealing with the trauma of having his brain and body transplanted the trauma that Henry is working through is the real driver of the plot.  Henry came home from the war a different person (while we don’t know which war he was fighting in we get a lot of dessert flashbacks that give us a clue despite Fessenden never giving us a name).  He was a medic who despite the best training and incredible talent still lost friends.  As a result he has dedicated himself to bringing those friends back no matter the cost.  At its core Depraved is a story about post-traumatic stress and the perpetual scars it causes.  Not unlike Adam’s scars Henry’s will eventually fade but they ALWAYS be there shaping the person he becomes.  These scars also prevent him from connecting with others around him.  Depraved is unabashedly an antiwar movie and as we have generations of soldiers fighting the same war it seems the movie is particularly germane to our current situation.

The practical effects of Adam’s scars and transplantations let us know Fessenden is leaning into the Frankenstein comparisons.  The psychedelia, themes, and ending let us know Fessenden is aiming for something larger.  The movie isn’t a little r or big R romantic film, although the relationship we witness in the beginning is often used a way to represent Adam’s desire to get back to the way things were, whatever that was.  It’s this complicated nature with the source material that makes the movie so interesting.  Is it a love story,….maybe?  Is it a creation story…..maybe?  Is it a monster story….ABSOLUTELY.  Although I am less convinced the movie wants to explore that in the same way other Frankenstein movies do.  Sure, Henry created Adam but the story wants even less to talk about their relationship than to talk about how the two exist together.  They are tethered at the beginning of the film but every minute from that original moment is a moment they move farther apart.  In that way it parallels an actual parent/child story and makes the fact that Fessenden’s son, Jack, appears in the film even more poignant.  As Jack Fessenden continues down his own career path as a filmmaker perhaps his father recognizes how difficult, painful, and necessary this transition can be.

Depraved is another feather to add to Fessenden’s cap of impressive genre cinema.  He continues to grow as an auteur but perhaps even more important he continues to grow the genre by supporting new and innovative stories, directors, and other artists.  Depraved is the latest combination of all of these things and like all great creations uses the best of the old with vision of something new.  Depraved is out in theatres everywhere September 13.

Read Review Here

August 27, 2019
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Daily Dead Contest: Win Free iTunes Download Codes for THE RANGER

From Daily Dead: Shudder and RLJE Films are teaming up to release a wide range of horror films from Shudder’s catalogue on VOD and Digital HD in the US, and they’re unleashing eclectic scares this September with the release of Andy Mitton’s The Witch in the Window on September 3rd and Jenn Wexler’s punk rock slasher The Ranger on September 24th.

Daily Dead has two free iTunes download codes of both The Witch in the Window and The Ranger, visit Daily Dead to see how you can enter the contest!

Read article HERE

August 22, 2019
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Take a look at the poster and trailer for VILLIANS

GEP pals Dan Berk and Robert Olsen (directors of STAKE LAND 2) release the
official poster and trailer for their darkly comedic thriller Villains.

Starring Bill Skarsgård, Maika Monroe, Jeffrey Donovan and Kyra Sedgwick.
Executive produced by Glass Eye regular Chadd Harbold
(DEPRAVED, MOST BEAUTIFUL ISLAND and ONLY A SWITCH).  

Watch the trailer on Bloody Disgusting

August 21, 2019
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WE ARE STILL HERE unspools tonight at Rockbar NYC!

WE ARE STILL HERE unspools tonight at Rockbar NYC
with director Ted Geoghegan in attendance.

Starring Barbara Crampton, Andrew Sensenig, 
Lisa Marie and Larry Fessenden.

August 20, 2019
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Tonight! THE RANGER soundtrack release party at Forbidden Planet in NYC!

August 16, 2019
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Bloody Disgusting speculates on FOXHOLE