GLASS EYE PIX Sizzle Reel 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 12, 2023
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INSIDE + OUT Interview with Fessenden

2023 WOODSTOCK FILM FESTIVAL: A CONVERSATION WITH ART-HORROR AUTEUR LARRY FESSENDEN

What inspired you to choose a career in the film business, and what was your journey?

I always loved movies and monsters as a child. I was drawn to the arts as a kid, drawing pictures and writing stories when I was very young. I was an actor in grammar school and high school. I might have had small roles, but I always made an impression as a dragon or a one-legged pirate. As I grew up, I became aware that when you watch a movie, it is the camera that tells the story, and I started shooting S8mm as a teenager. I learned feature filmmaking with video because the tape stock was cheap. I am only tangentially in the film business even now, but I have been involved in various aspects of making and distributing many, many movies.

What was your most rewarding or the most challenging project to date?

I am proud of the filmmakers whose careers I have helped, like Kelly Reichardt, Ti West, Jack Fessenden, and many others. I am fond of my own films because they express my viewpoint of life, for better or worse. I have cherished memories working with actors and directors that I revere, like Adam Driver, Bill Murray, Jim Jarmusch and the incomparable Marty Scorsese. As for my most challenging project, every project, big and small, that I am involved with is a challenge. You try to bring your personal best to the work, and it doesn’t always hit.

What are your thoughts on technology and the changing landscape of the TV and film industry?

I am very bitter about the commodification of a medium I love. The studios have relinquished moviemaking to the streamers.

I dislike streaming, even though it is convenient. I grew up on the scarcity of access to movies; it made them special. They lived in the mind, imagination, posters, and stills from magazines and books. Movies mattered. The business mindset behind the streamers is craven; they don’t even let you watch the end credits on a movie you’ve just sat through. No time for reflection. They are training viewers to disdain the people who made the work and just gobble up the next dollop of content.

The TV execs tried to drop televising the cinematography and editing award at the Oscars, no respect for the craft, just celebrity gawking. But it is not just movies, of course. Technology and rampant capitalism in all aspects of life have amplified our narcissism, which leads inexorably to tribalism and strife.

What is one question you’re constantly asked or what’s the biggest misconception about what you do?

People often suggest I should “sell out” and go to Hollywood. That’s not something you just do. It is very hard to break into the film business, especially if you have an alternative perspective on the world. And anyway, I’m too old now, it’s a youngster’s game.

Can you put your finger on what makes a great Writer/Director and who inspires you?

I respond to directors who have a distinct visual style, a sense of realism even in fantastical contexts, and a commitment to resonant themes. But this could describe many directors that I don’t particularly revere, I suppose. I like Hitchcock, Kurosawa, Scorsese, Polanski, Kubrick, The Coen Brothers, and Herzog. It is a pretty traditional list for a cinephile of my generation. These were high priests when the cinema was a church.

What are you working on now that you’re excited about?

In fact, I am working on a few changes to BLACKOUT. When I finished it a month ago, I suspected there were two things I might want to revisit in the edit. I am allowing myself to go back in. I often do that between festival screenings and whatever distribution I might secure. And I am working on the sequel. Yes, you read that correctly.

If you could have one superpower, what would it be?

It’s a whimsical question that reveals my melancholy about life because I really would like a superpower to vanquish the bad guys and fix the world. In that way, I have never grown up.

Read the article at INSIDE + OUT

September 11, 2023
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Commemorate 9/11 with Ilya Chaiken‘s LIBERTY KID, now streaming on MAX, etc

“Liberty Kid elevates that woeful genre, the 9/11 movie,
by keeping a ‘Wire’-worthy ear to the street talk of south Williamsburg
and maintaining a shrewd balance of the personal and the political…
an uncommonly acute, deftly played drama of the New York working class.”
— Nathan Lee THE VILLAGE VOICE

September 8, 2023
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Blast from the past dept: Phil Hartman’s NO PICNIC unspools in NYC’s EV tonight 9/8/23

9/8/23 • 7:30PM • 6&B Garden (6th Street, Avenue B, NYC)
FREE ADMISSION
Q & A with M.M. SERRA and writer/director Phil Hartman to Follow

come revisit the post-apocalypse/pre-gentrification East Village
at this special screening of No Picnic in one of the actual locations in which it was filmed!

Shout Out to Phil Hartman, GEP pal, longtime supporter of the downtown arts scene as
investor (IMPACT ADDICT VIDEOS), actor (HABIT), director (EERIE), organizer (HOWL FEST),
presenter (TWO BOOTS VIDEO, PIONEER THEATER),
and pizzaiolo (TWO BOOTS PIZZA featuring the annual DEPRAVED PIZZA slice)

September 7, 2023
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TBT: 2001 Woodstock Film Festival

Fessenden with Beck Underwood at the Woodstock Film Festival 2001 with the film WENDIGO (winner best feature). Also in the frame: (l) David “Impact Addict” Leslie, (r) Jay Silver, WENDIGO 2nd Unit DP, Rick Field, “Rick’s Picks” entrepreneur. photo by Nelson Bakerman.

This was just 11 days after the terrorist attacks of 9/11. Art heals.

September 4, 2023
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Fessenden in 2 of 19 “Bad Time” Party Movies in BuzzFeed “Back to College” list

by Ken W, Hanley on BUZZ FEED

With college season here for most, I’ve put together a number of “bad time” party movies that showcase what happens when partying hard turns into hard times for everyone.

8. Cabin Fever 2: Spring Fever (2009)

Cast: Giuseppe Andrews, Noah Segan, Alexi Wasser, and Marc Senter
Director: Ti West
Runtime: 86 Minutes
Rating: R
Rotten Tomatoes

He may have redefined his career with the one-two punch of X and Pearl in 2022, but Ti West’s debut in the director’s chair came with a direct-to-video sequel for Cabin Fever that follows a group of teenagers preparing for their high school prom unknowingly in the midst of a deadly outbreak. Living up to the gruesome gross-out standards of its predecessor, Cabin Fever 2redefines the concept of “worst prom ever.”

13. Body (2015)

Two young women look mystified at their friend in a large mansion

Cast: Helen Rogers, Alexandra Turshen, Lauren Molina, and Larry Fessenden
Director: Dan Berk & Robert Olsen
Runtime: 75 Minutes
Rating: Not Rated
Rotten Tomatoes

From the filmmakers behind Significant Other and VillainsBody surrounds a trio of young women who decide to party at a secluded mansion belonging to a nearby babysitting client, but find themselves in a moral quandary when they accidentally paralyze the groundskeeper. This macabre movie is a lean and mean one, which is ultimately bolstered beyond its fairly by-the-numbers narrative framing by outstanding performances and confident direction.

See list at BUZZFEED

September 4, 2023
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Happy Labor Day from Glass Eye Pix

We celebrate this especially prevalent Labor Day with a GEP Minidoc of the behind-the-scenes movies created over the last 35 years. Highlighting all the essential workers of film and GEP productions.

Union Strong!

September 3, 2023
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ScreenRant KILLERS OF THE FLOWER MOON cast rundown features Fessenden (and others…)

by Stephen Barker For Screen Rant

Martin Scorsese’s next movie is a 3.5-hour epic, and the Killers of the Flower Moon cast is just as epic to fill its behemoth runtime. The new western is based on the true story of the Oklahoma murders, in which members of the Osage tribe were murdered in the 1920s due to an oil dispute. This led to an investigation operated by Tom White for the BOI (soon to be FBI). Apple TV funded Killers of the Flower Moon with $200 million, and the production is on such a monumental scale. However, one of the most exciting elements of a new Scorsese movie is its cast, and Killers of the Flower Moon boasts an impressive ensemble led by longtime Martin Scorsese collaborator Leonardo DiCaprio.

Like many directors, Martin Scorsese is known to work with the same group of actors with each release, with a few changes to the roster here and there but the same few members at its core, and many regulars from his previous movies appear among the Killers of the Flower Moon cast. Nevertheless, with every new film, Scorsese picks up more trusted talents that he’ll keep in mind for future roles. This happened with The Irishman’s Jesse Plemons and Louis Cancelmi, who both appear in Killers of the Flower Moon. Scorsese also likes to cast complete unknowns, who quickly become huge actors shortly after. The Killers of the Flower Moon cast is an exciting amalgam of regular collaborators, up-and-comers, and Osage tribe first-time actors too.

Larry Fessenden as Radio Voice – Fessenden is a serial actor, as he has featured in multiple movies every year for decades, including Scorsese’s Bringing Out the Dead. The actor has also voiced video game characters, which explains his voice-only role in the Killers of the Flower Moon cast.

September 1, 2023
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Don’t Blink Dep’t: Fessenden cameos in THE GOOD MOTHER with Hillary Swank, in theaters today

Directed by GEP pal Miles Joris-Peyrafitte (actor, The Past Inside The Present)

August 31, 2023
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‘Habit’ Shines the Spotlight on Addiction

from Certified Forgotten:

by Anthony King

At one point in Larry Fessenden’s Habit, our protagonist Sam (Fessenden) is walking home with Anna (Meredith Snaider). He admits he has somewhat of a drinking problem. “I’m committing suicide on the installment plan,” he quips. To most, this is nothing but self-deprecating humor. To an alcoholic, though – like Sam, like me – we’re simply masking the truth. On top of being an excellent independent horror film, Habit is one of the finest examples of allegorically depicting addiction on screen

On their way home from a weekend of food and plenty of drink, Sam and Nick pass a casket company truck followed by a hearse. We know where this is headed. Unless you make the choice to get out and get help, the harmless habit that surreptitiously turned into an addiction will kill you. Unfortunately, real-life death from addiction isn’t nearly as romantic as the demise of the star-crossed lovers in Habit. Larry Fessenden is a master of allegory, and Habit is singular in its romanticization and swift deglamorization of alcoholism.

August 29, 2023
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Glass Eye Pix at Woodstock Film Festival: Fessenden’s BLACKOUT & Skotchdopole’s CRUMB CATCHER

Larry Fessenden’s BLACKOUT unspools at the Woodstock Film Festival
Friday, September 29 at 9:45PM Tinker Street Cinema.

Chris Skotchdopole’s CRUMB CATCHER unspools
Saturday, September 30 at 3:45PM Tinker Street Cinema.