Screen Anarchy highlights Fessenden Frankenstein music video in Sound & Vision series
From Screen Anarchy: In the article series Sound and Vision we take a look at music videos from notable directors. This week we look at Life in a Blender’s Frankenstein Cannot Be Stopped, directed by Larry Fessenden.
Larry Fessenden loves Frankenstein. It might even be an understatement to call it love. In an interview I did with him for the Dutch-language film magazine Schokkend Nieuws he stated: “It’s how I see the world. It’s my religion, my mythology.”
Fessenden, who as a director might be most well known for two Wendigo-related features he made (the coming-of-age horror Wendigo and the eco horror The Last Winter), and his contributions for the game Until Dawn, keeps often returning to the same themes in his work. The wendigo-myth is one, but Frankenstein is the other big main staple. In Habit a person wearing a Frankenstein-mask shows up at a party, and N is for Nexus, his segment for ABCs of Death is a cheeky retelling of Frankenstein surrounding a Halloween-themed traffic accident. It is in two other films, in which he explores the limits of science, that his love for Frankenstein most clearly shines through.
Now unspooling in NYC: “LINOLEUM” produced by GEP pal Chadd Harbold
Glass Eye Collaborator Chadd Harbold (DEPRAVED, MOST BEAUTIFUL ISLAND, CRUMB CATCHER) produces new flick LINOLEUM. Unspooling this weekend at The Quad in NYC, followed by Q&A’s with stars Jim Gaffigan, Amy Hargreaves, director Colin West and producer Chadd Harbold.
Visit QuadCinema.com for full listings
MOVIEWEB: “25 Great Low-Budget Horror Movies You’ve Probably Never Heard Of” includes 2 by Glass Eye Pix
Much like last year’s We’re All Going to the World’s Fair, Like Me explores the impact of social media on the younger generation. Addison Timlin stars as Kiya, who becomes a small internet sensation after posting a video of her robbing a convenience store online. Her newfound notoriety encourages her to go on a bigger crime spree, and she desires to record every second of it. Along the way, she kidnaps a paint-huffing drifter (played by indie-horror icon Larry Fessenden) and involves him in her criminal escapades in a number of distressing ways.
What sets Like Me apart from other films that wade in the same waters is its unique, chaotic visual style. Director Rob Mockler really knows how to capture the fast-paced world of an internet-obsessed teenager (who also happens to be a psychopath), infusing the film with both grit and blaring neon colors. You wouldn’t be wrong to draw similar comparisons to Spring Breakers, but Like Me is a twisted beast all its own. It’ll gross you out, make you laugh, and get under your skin.
I Can See You is a shot-on-video micro-budget horror film that is much more than the sum of its parts. The setup is pretty simple: three young men and their girlfriends go into the woods for a photoshoot, but the mysterious disappearance of one of the women sparks a gradual descent into madness.
If you can get past the (admittedly) amateurish production quality, you’ll be in for a real treat. This is a truly weird mix of slow-burn horror and absurd, creepy comedy not unlike something you’d find on Tim and Eric. While the movie chugs along at snail’s pace, it masterfully maintains a bizarrely unnerving atmosphere. And if you stick with it, your patience will be rewarded: the film’s climax features a hallucinogenic nightmare sequence that feels ripped directly from David Lynch’s consciousness. This is by no means for everyone, but fans of David Lynch and his style of work will find a lot to like here.
SEE FULL LIST AT MOVIEWEB
Snarky BENEATH review resurfaces as Fessenden flick hits top 10 on Netflix in Europe
A creature feature so bad it was dubbed ‘The Room’ of horror movies swims to the surface on streaming
Tommy Wiseau’s The Room will live on forever as one of the cultiest cult classics that’s ever going to cult classic, but comparisons being made between the infamously awful vanity project and 2013’s creature feature Beneath weren’t intended as a compliment.
Then again, a 30 percent Rotten Tomatoes score and an even worse audience approval rating of 12 percent indicates that maybe director Larry Fessenden’s B-tier schlocker doesn’t even deserve to be put on the same ironically adored pedestal as The Room as several reviews claimed, but that hasn’t prevented the forgotten aquatic nightmare from coming up for air on streaming.
As per FlixPatrol, Beneath has resurfaced as a Top 10 hit on Netflix in multiple countries around the world, and it isn’t too difficult to figure out why subscribers – especially those with a soft spot for bonkers horror – would find themselves enticed by a low budget effort that’s sold entirely on the back of the primary antagonist being a gigantic man-eating catfish with a preposterous taste for delicious human flesh.
Six recently-graduated teenagers decide to spend one final day together before heading off on their different paths in life, but there’s not a chance all of them will be making it back to shore alive when the monstrous fish destroys their oars. Trapped and terrified, they decide the best solution is to figure out which one of them deserves to be sacrificed to their aquatic adversary, a logical decision that inevitably creates panic, conflict, and the airing of some long-held grievances.
From The Gingold Files: A Fangoria WENDIGO review from 2002
From Mike Gingold: Welcome to The Gingold Files, featuring my past reviews and articles for Fangoria.com that are celebrating “anniversaries” this week, but have long been lost in cyberspace. This time, we’ve got reviews of Larry Fessenden’s Wendigo, Robert Parigi’s Love Object, and others, plus Gary Oldman talking about Hannibal, Matthew Modine on making his horror debut with Altar, and more!
Review: WENDIGO
An archive review from The Gingold Files.
Despite rumors of its demise, the quality independent horror film has proven itself alive and well in the past year, if sometimes difficult to find. 2001 saw a strong crop of low-budget horror features, both foreign and domestic, come to light, and a high-water mark has been set early in 2002 with Larry Fessenden’s Wendigo. If many genre films that approach its quality follow in the next 10 months, it’s going to be a hell of a year.
The New York-based Fessenden made an underground name for himself with his previous feature, the downtown vampire film Habit, but the skill for character-based horror he demonstrated there truly finds full flower in Wendigo. Literally leaving Habit’s urban milieu behind, the new movie follows a city family—commercial photographer George (Jake Weber), his psychiatrist wife Kim (Patricia Clarkson) and their young son Miles (Erik Per Sullivan)—as they drive to a vacation at a farmhouse in wintry upstate New York. Before they even reach the place, their peaceful plans go awry, as George hits a deer that runs in front of their car.
Right from this point, Fessenden presents a scenario in which already upsetting situations can have even direr consequences, setting the stage for further unease to come
…
One of Fessenden’s achievements is that he’s able to evoke a sense of rural menace without condescending to the region or its people; nor does his depiction of the citified George stoop to obvious yuppie clichés. That’s a tribute to the director’s talent for creating very specific people and eliciting strong performances from his actors, with Weber and Clarkson lending nuance to their husband-and-wife characters, Sullivan just terrific as their observant, sensitive son and Speredakos genuinely menacing as the hunter with a grudge. The simple human interaction between these characters carries the story for a long while before the supernatural elements become pronounced, and Fessenden even leaves the fact of the Wendigo’s existence up to debate, with questions of its reality tantalizingly unanswered. Is the monster real, or just a legend that Miles seizes upon to deal with his own fears? Or, as the climactic scenes suggest, does it not only exist, but actually respond to the emotions of one who, like Miles, is conscious of its presence?
This is not to suggest that Wendigo is some kind of existential exercise, but rather that there are plenty of ideas underpinning its haunting, moving and ultimately quite chilling story
…
FOXHOLE Blu-ray Now Shipping!!
Chock full of never-before-seen extras!!
Fessenden and Fessenden show off their discs
Region A Blu-ray
Introduction by director Jack Fessenden
Behind the Scenes featurette
Animation Diary by Beck Underwood
Music Video No Jockin’ (Darquell) shot by Larry Fessenden
Short film All For One from Jack Fessenden
Q&A from the screening at the MoMA
Audio commentary by director Jack Fessenden
(Theatrical Trailer)
New alternate art by Sam Coyle
Essay by Anton Bitel
English SDH subtitles
2021 / 95 min / 2.39:1 / English DTS-HD MA 5.1
Yellow Veil Pictures is a New York City and Los Angeles-based film sales and distribution company
focusing exclusively on boundary pushing genre cinema,
seeking to highlight filmmakers who exist on the cusp of
commercial and arthouse cinema.





























































































