GLASS EYE PIX Sizzle Reel TRAUMA OR, MONSTERS ALL BLACKOUT DEPRAVED HABIT Oh, The Humanity! The Films of Larry Fessenden and Glass Eye Pix at MoMA The Larry Fessenden Collection Let’s Get Physical BENEATH THE LAST WINTER WENDIGO 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 Collectible WENDIGO Figures from Glass Eye Toyz and Monsterpants Studios Satan Hates You Trigger Man Automatons THE ROOST Impact Addict Videos
August 15, 2019
Share:
Facebook Twitter Email

Jack Fessenden’s FOXHOLE wraps on day 16

August 14, 2019
Share:
Facebook Twitter Email

Spotlight On Frightfest 2019: Director Eric Pennycoff Talks ‘Sadistic Intentions’

GEP pal Eric Pennycoff talks SADISTIC INTENTIONS, DEPRAVED
and his experience interning for Glass Eye Pix.

“What got me into filmmaking really was, from a practical standpoint, I was an intern at Glass Eye Pix in 2010. I had thought about making movies before then, but it wasn’t really until I started seeing Glass Eye Pix’s DVDs, and subsequently meeting them, that I was introduced to this new wave of low budget pictures. You could see how they were made, but at the same time they were incredibly engaging, so it wasn’t that they were just cheap. They were incredibly engaging and interesting and unlike anything I had seen, but they seemed possible to make. It was the first time I was introduced to, I guess what you’d call an independent horror scene. That’s really where it began from a practical sense, but I’ve grown up just loving all the classic kid’s movies that most kids my age loved, but in addition to that, horror specifically was always something I gravitated towards.” – Pennycoff

Revisit the 2014 GEP Sizzle Reel, edited by Pennycoff himself.

August 13, 2019
Share:
Facebook Twitter Email

THE RANGER soundtrack release party at Forbidden Planet 8/20!

Next week meet the cast and crew of THE RANGER at Forbidden
Planet in NYC! Get the soundtrack, VHS, blu-ray, novelization
or T-Shirt signed at this killer event!

August 7, 2019
Share:
Facebook Twitter Email

DEPRAVED / GIRL ON THE THIRD FLOOR double feature!

MONDAY August 12th, Fessenden’s DEPRAVED will unspool along with
GIRL ON THE THIRD FLOOR as part of Popcorn Frights Film Festival in Florida!

August 6, 2019
Share:
Facebook Twitter Email

Fantasia 2019: DEPRAVED Puts a Fresh Spin on Frankenstein

Larry Fessenden’s latest is part of a series of films that re-interpret classic monsters in a contemporary setting. The inspiration this time: Mary Shelley’s Frankenstein.

There have been hundreds of big-screen adaptations of Mary Shelley’s 1818 novel, Frankenstein, but the latest, Depraved, resurrects Shelley’s 19th-century masterpiece with a 21st-century twist.

Depraved marks Larry Fessenden’s first feature-length film in six years, one in which he wrote, produced, directed, and edited. Known as the godfather of New York small-budget horror movies, Fessenden is no stranger to bringing Frankenstein-like stories to life on the big screen. Traces of Mary Shelley’s masterpiece can be found in many of the movies his studio (Glass Eye Pix) has produced over the past three decades, but Depraved may be his most ambitious, reconfiguring the classic story into something that’s truly his own.

Eschewing the classic gothic setting for Brooklyn, New York, Fessenden stitches together the usual motifs of hubristic science, loneliness, and fatherhood with modern anxieties about the dangers of profit-driven pharmaceutical companies, the trauma of PTSD, and the social decline of modern times.

David Call plays Henry, a grieving wartime field surgeon whose time in the Middle East has left him with severe PTSD. Alex Breaux plays Adam, a young man who is attacked one night on his way home, left to die on the sidewalk. As fate would have it, Henry stumbles upon Adam’s lifeless corpse, and drags it back to his nearby laboratory. With the help of his business partner and old college friend, Polidori (Joshua Leonard), Henry assembles various body parts, then transplants David’s brain into a new, stitched-together carcass. And so, Adam is reborn, thanks to a mysterious drug and the mangled collage of different corpses Henry has collected. Proud of his creation, Henry is eager to teach Adam how to speak, solve puzzles, regain motor control, play table tennis, and well, be human again. Unfortunately for Henry and Adam, Polidori has other plans.

Unlike the majority of Frankenstein adaptations, Depraved places a heavy focus on the father/son relationship between Doctor and Creation. Those looking for a Frankenhooker or Re-Animator style of film may be disappointed, since Depraved is first and foremost a character-driven film. Stripping the story to its bare essentials, we spend the majority of the running time watching Henry struggle with the moral and ethical dilemma of tampering with mother nature. For roughly the first half-hour, Depraved shows Adam’s death, rebirth, and healing process. The second part is a twisted coming-of-age tale that sees the two men slowly form a bond. The third and final act sees the all-too-greedy Polidori introduce Adam to the darker side of the city life. Things quickly spiral out of control as Adam starts to regain memories of his past life, and the gifted doctor instantly regrets bringing him back from the dead.

Depraved is best when it’s exploring the very unstable relationship of these two men, and it helps that David Call and Alex Breaux both do some incredible work here. Unlike most Frankenstein adaptations, Depraved is almost entirely seen through Adam’s eyes, and Alex Breaux’s mechanical performance strangely helps bring the film to life. He’s great at using his entire body to express emotions and imply what Adam is thinking and feeling, with little-to-no dialogue. Meanwhile, David Call does a marvelous job as the disillusioned doctor with something of a God complex. His performance takes the viewer on an emotional journey, and despite his poor decisions and questionable actions, he winds up sympathetic as we watch his spirit being crushed by the world around him. Unfortunately, the same sort of praise can’t be bestowed upon Joshua Leonard playing the greedy corporate benefactor behind Henry’s research. Perhaps the film’s one and only bad scene sees Polidori deliver a tiresome monologue about human nature while strolling through a museum. Of course, part of the blame should be credited to the screenwriter, but Leonard spends the majority of his screen time playing his character to the point of camp, which clashes with the performances of the rest of the cast.

Shot on the 200th anniversary of Shelley’s novel, Depraved is reportedly one of Larry Fessenden’s least expensive films, but you wouldn’t know by looking at it. Fessenden has always had a gift in producing excellent indie films on a shoe-string budget, and Depraved is no exception. From the opening scene set to the folk song “More Than Enough” by Elizabeth & The Catapult to the sepia-toned climax, Depraved looks stunning and sounds great for a DIY indie thriller. I especially love the psychedelic imagery of the second act, as well as the lo-fi lighting, filters, and color gels used when trying to convey what is going on inside Adam’s head. Even the stylish credits are fun to look at!

If every great story has already been told, the trick is to find new ways to tell it. You’d think that there would be nothing left to say about Frankenstein, but thanks to Larry Fessenden’s unique perspective, he proves that even centuries-old stories can be torn apart and stitched back together in new ways.

I don’t want to oversell this movie. Depraved is good but not great. I’m not willing to call it his best work, but it is just one more accomplishment to add to his already crowded resume. Like any movie, Depraved has its fair share of flaws, but it’s also an extremely well-made, emotionally devastating, character-driven journey. By the end, Adam is just another lost soul wandering New York City — and like many others, he’s searching for answers, a purpose, and in his case, a soul.

Read Full Article HERE

July 30, 2019
Share:
Facebook Twitter Email

Jack Fessenden’s FOXHOLE enters week two of filming in upstate New York

Glass Eye Pix and Nous Entertainment are in production on 
Jack Fessenden’s Sophomore feature FOXHOLE
now shooting in the Hudson Valley

FOXHOLE writer/director/editor/score Jack Fessenden

Motell Gyn Foster as Jackson
James Le Gros
as Wilson
Cody Kostro
as Clark
Angus O’Brien as Conrad
Alex Hurt as Morton
Alex Breaux as the German 
Asa Spurlock as the Confederate

and Andi Matichak as Gale

Producers Larry Fessenden, Adam Scherr, Chris Ingvordsen and James Felix McKenney

July 29, 2019
Share:
Facebook Twitter Email

GEP Pal Eric Pennycoff’s SADISTIC INTENTIONS hits Arrow Video FrightFest 2019

GEP pal Eric Pennycoff gets ready for the UK premiere of
his new flick SADISTIC INTENTIONS at FrightFest 2019!
Here’s what he had to say in an interview with Arrow Video:

“It’s got horror, romance, deception, grindcore, foggy landscapes, thunder, lightning, blood, chlorine,
weed, European décor, and three top-notch performances from three very special actors.”

Check out the full interview here!

July 29, 2019
Share:
Facebook Twitter Email

Twitter asks important Fright Fest question

July 22, 2019
Share:
Facebook Twitter Email

THE MOUNTAIN unspools at IFC! Rick Alverson and Jeff Goldblum in attendance!

GEP pal Rick Alverson presents THE MOUNTAIN starring
Jeff Goldblum, Tye Sheridan, Hannah Gross and
featuring Fessenden as “Meals”. 

Star Jeff Goldblum & dir. Rick Alverson in person
at The IFC Center in NYC!

Sneak previews on Thu Jul 25:
Q&A after the 7:25pm show &
Extended intro at the 9:55pm show!

Opening Night Fri Jul 26:
Q&A after the 7:25pm show &
Extended intro at the 9:55pm show!

July 19, 2019
Share:
Facebook Twitter Email

Heatwave weekend with GEP

Fessenden sits with Vice and talks climate change in horror

“It was very important to me to take these old beloved horror tropes like Frankenstein, Dracula, or the shape-shifting creature and look at them in the modern era,” Fessenden, who also tackled climate ruination in Wendigo and No Telling, told VICE. “What I’ve found most sad and frustrating about humanity is its complete lack of attention to the awesome power of the natural world and this narcissism that drives human activity with no regard for the bigger picture.”

The scariest climate change-driven horror flick in recent memory is probably Larry Fessenden’s The Last Winter(2006), an underseen blood chiller about malevolent ghosts that are released from an Arctic oil reserve by a team of drillers.

The Last Winter on Amazon