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 4, 2018
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LIKE ME now on Blu Ray!

Now available on Blu Ray and VOD!

April 4, 2018
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THE RANGER review round-up!

 “a film that has a lot of affection for both the punk community and the history of horror
and wants to be a new entry into both those worlds.”
Rue Morgue

“an off-beat and exciting new icon of horror.”
Pajiba

“Levine and Holm anchor the film, bringing a sort of
anti-chemistry that is terrific fun to behold.”
Daily Grindhouse

“Nostalgia done right.”
Ghastly Grinning

“I absolutely enjoyed this move. Each character’s unique attitudes and personalities making me love
and hate them all at the same time. Not just with the writing, but the cast was great
and were all believable in their roles.”
– Nightmarish Conjurings

March 30, 2018
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Front Row Boston: How Boston’s Punk Scene Influenced Horror Film THE RANGER

A group of teens sit at a table in a graffiti covered club that throbs with music. They experiment with drugs, crash onto the dance floor, and party with the free joy of their youth – until the cops come crashing in. In short order, things go from bad to worse as they attack an officer, steal a van, and hide out in a closed-down state park… only to end up in the crosshairs of an unhinged park ranger. At its core, The Ranger is a film about the clash between self-expression and conformity, of self-determination vs. oppressive authority. About finding yourself in a world that tries to tell you how you should be. Currently making its way through the festival circuit – including this past weekend at our own Boston Underground Film Festival – The Ranger‘s message is loud and clear, not only in plot, but in the blindingly pure punk aesthetic of its wicked cool wardrobe and solid soundtrack.

Read the entire interview HERE

 

March 28, 2018
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The Ranger SOLD OUT in NYC!

Jenn Wexler’s THE RANGER sold out at the IFC Center in NYC!

March 27, 2018
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Rue Morgue: Joshua Leonard on UNSANE, BLAIR WITCH and DEPRAVED

By MICHAEL GINGOLD

UNSANE, the Steven Soderbergh psychothriller that opened Friday, features as its villain Joshua Leonard, whose horror résumé stretches back to his big-screen debut in the 1999 trendsetter THE BLAIR WITCH PROJECT. We got a few words with the actor contrasting the two movies, and his first words on his next fright feature, Larry Fessenden’s DEPRAVED.

In UNSANE, Leonard plays a stalker who appears to be working as a meds-dispensing orderly in a mental institution where heroine Claire Foy has been committed against her will; see our review here. Like the bulk of BLAIR WITCH, UNSANE was shot digitally—on an iPhone 7. However, Leonard notes, “There are as many differences as there are similarities between BLAIR WITCH and UNSANE,” starting with the fact that whereas the former was improvised, the latter was fully scripted (by Jonathan Bernstein and James Greer). “BLAIR WITCH always felt like a bunch of teenage kids getting together in their mom’s garage and making a punk album. I believe that’s part of the reason the film worked; we were figuring out everything as we went. It’s a very different experience making a movie with Steven Soderbergh—not only because it’s scripted, but you’re working with somebody who’s a master of his craft, with a specificity of vision that I can’t even aspire to having in my lifetime.

“The other big difference was technological,” he continues. “At the time we made BLAIR WITCH, the digital equipment was in such infancy that part of the conceit of the movie had to be: OK, it’s going to look like shit, but it’s going to look that way because these characters are student filmmakers who bought their camera for 300 bucks at Walmart.”

Leonard just wrapped a project with another well-established auteur: DEPRAVED, the variation on the Frankenstein legend written and directed by Larry Fessenden (see first details here). The film also stars David Call as Henry, a former military surgeon who makes a monster (Alex Breaux) in a Brooklyn lab with the help of Leonard’s character. “I play a guy named John Polidori [after the British writer who penned “The Vampyre” during the same Swiss getaway where Mary Shelley wrote FRANKENSTEIN]. It’s interesting, because I just realized that in DEPRAVED, I’m playing a guy who works in the pharmaceutical field, and not a great guy. So it’s another role with the pharmaceutical industry being a backdrop bogeyman for the story, which is an interesting parallel with UNSANE.

“I play college best friends with Henry,” Leonard continues, “who’s really the brains behind the Frankenstein operation. He’s not called Frankenstein in our film, but that’s the riff, and together we come up with a way to ostensibly keep soldiers alive on the battlefield using his skills and my medical technology. So our monster in this movie is a bit of a proof of concept for what could be a medical breakthrough. That’s our way in.”

 

March 23, 2018
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Check it! Fessenden Birthday Celebration on the Creepy Christmas Instagram

The Creepy Christmas Film Fest is Back!

After a 10 year hiatus, Glass Eye Pix is chilled to no end
to announce the return of the Creepy Christmas Film Festival.

Jingle your bells on over to Instagram and explore our magical cabinet of curiosities

And enjoy today’s post of GEP pal BEN DUFF’S Birthday Card to Fessenden

@creepychristmasfest

Originally created by Beck Underwood in 2008 as an advent calendar style online film fest, this year’s fest will be co-curated by Glass Eye cohort, Ben Duff and feature a terrifyingly talented group of artists.

An eclectic potpourri of short films will spice up your holidays with playful animations, dramatic narratives and wacky visual sugarplums as a new and original work premieres each day from Dec. 1st – 25th.


For the original advent calendars and more Fest info, go to:

www.creepychristmasfest.com

March 22, 2018
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Entertainment Weekly: First look The Art of Ghoulish Gary

Ghoulish: The Art of Gary Pullin includes posters for Vertigo, Creepshow, and The Big Lebowski — first look

CLARK COLLIS

March 20, 2018 AT 02:00 PM EDT

Does artist Gary Pullin deserve the nickname “Ghoulish”? The answer — which, SPOILER ALERT, is “Yes!” — can truly be found in Ghoulish: The Art of Gary Pullin (published May 8), a 228-page, full-color retrospective of the horror-loving artist and illustrator’s career. Ghoulish features Pullin’s alternative movie posters for horror classics like Halloween and A Nightmare on Elm Street as well as cult favorites such as The Warriors and The Big Lebowski, plus a range of Pullin’s magazine covers, special edition Blu-ray packaging, album covers, enamel pins, and monster-based illustrations.

“This book covers it all — from my early years as a budding artist and horror film fan and my thirteen-year stint at Rue Morgue magazine as their original art director to the present day, which finds me owning and operating my own company, Ghoulish Gary,” Pullin says in a statement. “I hope you enjoy reading my story and taking in the artwork as much as I enjoyed creating it. Perhaps it will inspire you to carve out your own path.”

Ghoulish is written by 2017 Rondo Horror Award-winner April Snellings and edited by Rue Morgue co-owner David Alexander. The book features an introduction by director, actor, and all-around horror scene notable Larry Fessenden and a foreword from Mondo co-founder Rob Jones. The regular version of Ghoulish will be available to buy via Amazon and local bookstores. Fans will also be able to buy two deluxe, limited edition versions, one of which is packaged with an exclusive single by the band Goblin while the other, Amazon-exclusive version boasts a 3D print of the film House and special branded 3-D glasses. All versions of Ghoulish are now available to pre-order.

Check out an exclusive first look at Ghoulish: The Art of Gary Pullin, below.

March 19, 2018
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Bloody Disgusting: ‘The Ranger’ Is An Unabashedly Punk Slasher Throwback

From Bloody Disgusting by: Justin Yandell

The Ranger, is – on its surface – a vibrant, vicious throwback to 80’s slashers with a unique visual flair. This is like saying punk subculture is – on its surface – people in leather jackets with a lot of piercings and even more product in their radically dyed hair. It’s an easy label to slap on something that is actively and enthusiastically doing its level best to kick your labels in the face.

The hook on Jenn Wexler’s feature directorial debut is baited well. A handful of teenage punk fugitives flee to a cabin in the woods only to run head-long into a malevolently dedicated park ranger. The line between these kids, who have near-zero regard for anyone in a pressed uniform, and the titular Ranger, a stickler for the rules to the point of gratuitous bloodshed, could not be drawn any clearer.

Working from a script by Giaco Furino and herself, Wexler directs with one of the most interesting eyes I’ve seen in a minute or two, using camerawork, color and pacing to exaggerate the clash between conflicting worlds of chaos and order. This is greatly assisted by Abbey Killheffer, who at times gleefully edits the film like a small child with a straight razor. I mean this in the nicest possible way. Portions of the movie are cut with the rhythm of a punk rock anthem, and it pairs well with the subject matter and soundtrack.

Leading the cast is Chloe Levine, who, with recent turns on Mr. Robot and The Defenders, is deservedly well on her way to going places. Her role as Chelsea is meaty, with plenty of nuances provided in the form of an appreciation for common courtesies her uber-rebellious brethren don’t share. This makes her something of an outcast among outcasts and that’s an enjoyable dynamic to watch.

Jeremy Holm plays The Ranger with a cheerful and meticulous maliciousness reminiscent of Dan Stevens in The Guest, though much of David’s creep factor was embedded in the prospect of such a person being mistakenly invited into your home. The Ranger’s eeriness is instead intertwined with the specter of indifferent, jackbooted authoritarianism violently intruding on your space. In either case, there’s something chilling about a man ending you with a smile on his face and a song in his heart.

The rest of the cast is rounded out with a semi-traditional slasher line-up of People Born to Die. Granit Lahu as Garth, Bubba Weiler as Abe, Jeremy Pope as Jerk, and Amanda Grace Benitez as Amber all range from intentionally unlikeable to genuinely sympathetic as needed, but their individual arcs aren’t as important as what they collectively represent; braggadocious babes-in-the-woods who have spitefully bitten the Powers-That-Be only to discover the Powers-That-Be have sharper teeth.

I readily admit I’m, at best, a tourist of punk subculture. I greatly appreciate the general aesthetic, but I don’t live there. That said, it’s impossible to discuss The Ranger in any meaningful way without also talking about the core ideologies of the punk movement.

To be clear, I’m not talking about the brilliant satire of punk mentality we saw in Return of the Living Dead. Suicide’s hilarious declaration that his attire is “a way of life,” while technically accurate, was a send-up of aggressively defiant counterculture for its own sake, though Wexler does play with that here as well. Chelsea’s too-punk-to-function cohorts revel in casual littering as a sneering finger to The Man, flaunting how little they care so exuberantly they often swing all the way back to walking, talking tropes. They grasp the general idea of punk as counterculture and benefit from its facilitation of familial bonding among the disenfranchised, but they’re also kind of missing the point. In fact, this theme of sheep-in-wolves’ clothing bleating futilely at the moon penetrates the movie to a point that would venture sharply into the realm of spoilers. (There will come a day; I’m not done with you by half, The Ranger)

The spirit of punk and what that means undoubtedly varies wildly from end of the subculture to the other, but to my understanding, it’s the idea of self-empowerment through the total embracement of a personal identity that some people – maybe most people – may not be willing to accept. And where the movie itself is concerned, I think a prime example of this is a homosexual relationship that, for once, is allowed to simply exist. Nobody points at it. It’s not haphazardly exposited in clumsy dialogue or a point of contention. It just is, without bravado or fanfare, with no need for explanation or apology. And when you look at the idea of punk through that lens, it becomes something everyone can relate to because everyone just wants to be allowed to exist in their own unique way. The real horror in The Ranger is the threat of a callous and stringent agent of arbitrary ‘normalcy’ extinguishing that unique existence simply because you’re not following ‘The Rules’.

While The Ranger is indeed a throwback to slashers of yore, Wexler doesn’t strictly adhere to ‘The Rules’ as established by her predecessors. The actual Slasher is not a traditional Slasher. The Final Girl is not a traditional Final Girl. Wexler’s very much doing her own thing here with a reckless regard for whether or not the viewer approves and heed my words, watching her continue to shed the trappings of tradition is going to be something to behold.

For many of the reasons listed above, and a few that would be a little too spoiler-specific, The Ranger isn’t going to be for everyone. But it’s not trying to be. At all. It’s an unapologetic movie fully confident in its own identity and central themes of self-acceptance and empowerment. This probably isn’t the correct nomenclature but, in that way, The Ranger is one of the most punk horror movies that has ever punked. It’s like a hot pink mohawk – if you’re not into it, it’s not meant for you anyway.

March 18, 2018
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That’s a Wrap on SXSW 2018

THE RANGER team headed down to Austin for its SXSW World Premiere! Check it out in pics here.

March 14, 2018
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Bloody Disgusting: ‘FEAR2000’ Conference Welcomes Larry Fessenden & Unveils Programme!

Sheffield in the UK is normally associated with Celluloid Screams Film Festival in the world of genre events.  Before it returns for a tenth edition this October, horror fans in the surrounding area can get schooled in the sinful cinema which we love with Sheffield Hallam University’s FEAR 2000 conference.  Hosted by the Department of Humanities, the event running April 6 & 7, is dedicated to studying horror cinema and television in the twenty-first century.  Organized by Craig Ian Mann, Rose Butler and Shelley O’Brien take a look at the running order of lectures planned which are sure to make your brain bulge before pouring out of your ears.

Full program HERE