Glass Eye Pix congrats GEP pal Rick Alverson for THE MOUNTAIN
Variety: THE MOUNTAIN “Rick Alverson’s beautiful, often inscrutable new film takes a stand
for eccentricity in a complacent suburban nightmare.”
Starring Tye Sheridan, Jeff Goldblum, Denis Lavant,
Hannah Gross, Udo Kier and featuring Fessenden as ‘Meals’.
Directed by Rick Alverson (THE COMEDY, ENTERTAINMENT).
Hey New York! Jenn Wexler’s THE RANGER is back in town!
Graham Reznick’s new Shudder Series: DEADWAX
SHUDDER presents a brand new series DEADWAX
written and directed by longtime GEP collaborator Graham Reznick
(director, I CAN SEE YOU, THE CAREGIVER;
sound design THE HOUSE OF THE DEVIL etc, co-writer UNTIL DAWN)
produced by Peter Phok
(producer THE INNKEEPERS, BENEATH, IN A VALLEY OF VIOLENCE)
and in association with Glass Eye Pix.
DEAD WAX episode one unspools at Tribeca TV Festival on Friday, Sept 21.
All episodes will screen at Fantastic Fest 2018 Sunday!
A young woman is pulled into a murder investigation revolving around a curious vinyl record
which has driven those who possess it mad, and killed anyone who dared to listen to it.
TBT: Ti West and Pat Healy
2010: Ti West and Pat Healy on set of The Innkeepers.
Ti West joins The Boo Crew Podcast and talks The House of the Devil,
haunted secrets behind the Yankee Pedlar and what he’s up to next!
World premiere of ONLY A SWITCH at Woodstock Film Fest 2018
ONLY A SWITCH will open at the Woodstock Film Festival, October 2018.
Special Q&A with the filmmakers on the opening night!
“Drawing inspiration from distinct cinematic voices such as Georges Méliès, Stan Brakhage and Jonathan Caouette, it is a kaleidoscopic visual feast achieved through inventive digital manipulation, hand-painted film and old-school optical trickery. Tenderly romantic, delightfully weird and fiercely erotic, Only A Switch is not just a film — it is an experience.”
Starring Lauren Molina, Helen Rogers, Larry Fessenden, Nigel DeFriez and Robert Olsen.
Directed by Michael Vincent.
Paste Magazine: LIKE ME “50 Best Movies on Amazon Prime (September 2018)”
Like Me is an indictment of a life spent “extremely” online: a thriller in which the thrill is the threat of empty transgression; a body horror flick in which the body horror is the way social media and Tumblr and Reddit and YouTube transform us, make us grotesque, perverting basic physical functions into scary, dysmorphic representations of the flesh sacks we carry around with us whenever we’re not online. Early in the film, writer-director Robert Mockler introduces us to the online world of our main character, Kiya (Addison Timlin, terrifying), via a disturbing barrage of hyperreal, gif-like images—close-ups of sugary cereal and milk chewed sloppily, of a viscous tongue mid-slurp, of Kiya doing weird kinesthetics in a dirty motel room while the camera capsizes and arises around her, this Manic Pixie Dream Girl who embodies each of those words as literally as possible. Though Mockler implies that these are all curated posts Kiya’s put online, we believe that this is how she sees the world. Aided by some seriously heady opioids and hallucinogens, she can’t help but digest her lived experiences without mitigating them digitally. As Kiya moves through Mockler’s pink-ish, neon dystopia, DP James Siewert shooting Timlin as if she’s stranded in the middle of a Michael Mann joint, everything seems on the table. Kiya lures a motel manager, Marshall (Larry Fessenden, better than excellent), to her room—another room, another motel, somewhere on this stupid planet—with the possibility of sex. Instead, he finds Kiya’s redecorated her room like an outtake from The Cell, testing the lonely guy’s willingness to go along with whatever insanity’s in store. Of course, some icky gastrointestinal calamity occurs, but Marshall never flinches, so Kiya kidnaps him and takes him with her. Gorgeous and gross in equal measure, Like Me is a visual feast. Mockler conjures setpieces out of practically nothing, crafting each frame with a meticulous symmetry that belies the chaos at the heart of Kiya’s impulsive odyssey. —Dom Sinacola
AUTOMATONS featured in new book: Indie Science Fiction Cinema Today.
Indie Science Fiction Cinema Today: Conversations with 21st Century Filmmakers
covers a wide range of recent Sci-Fi films including AUTOMATONS,
along with an interview with GEP pal James Felix McKenney.
Available on Amazon or your
local brick and mortar bookstore.
R.I.P Village Voice (1955-2018)
New York Rag THE VILLAGE VOICE
was a long-time supporter of arts, culture, and indie film and music.

Reviewed Just Desserts in 1987; Gave Fessenden his first big artist’s profile
NEW BLOOD by Amy Taubin June 10 1997
and continued to support Glass Eye Pix right up to THE RANGER review last week
(even when they were not always positive)
Long live print media!
“Ya don’t miss the water till the well run dry”































































































