NEWS
Chattanooga Film Festival: Trash Life (2022)
This movie has three minutes to win you over and it uses every single second.
Chattanooga Film Festival: The Sweet Spot (2021)
Evan Enderle definitely has an affinity for setting up tension and drama.
[CFF ’22] ‘The Third Saturday in October’ review: Love letter to slashers needs help
The Third Day in October is very much a what you see is what you get situation, which is the vibe it should go for.
Chattanooga Film Festival: Community Service (2022)
Dan gets arrested for being drunk in the streets and that means community service wherever he can get it, the easier the better.
Chattanooga Film Festival: Swole Ghost (2022)
This movie answers a very important question: how come the ghost in my house doesn’t give me any message, any inkling of how I can escape this mortal level of reality?
[CFF ’22] Short films showcase variety at Chattanooga Film Festival
Shorts are important at any film fest.
Part expressionist melodrama and part campy horror, “The Attachment Diaries (El Apego)” [Chattanooga Film Festival]
The film appeals to very raw and carnal emotions, asking viewers to indulge in the thoughts and feelings that we aren’t supposed to think and feel.
Chattanooga Film Festival 2022 Review: THE LEECH Wishes You a Bawdy Merry Christmas
The Leech is an impressively gratifying follow-up to Sadistic Intentions for writer/director Pennycoff, who cleverly pairs Gardner and Zaudtke with Skipper to tell a riotous holiday story.
[CFF ’22] ‘The Blood of the Dinosaurs’ review: Trippy short is a thrill ride for the senses
Director Joe Badon has crafted a work that is impossible to describe in words.
[CFF ’22] ‘The Third Saturday in October Part V’ review: Horror movie uses franchise fatigue to its benefit
The Third Saturday in October Part V ably does what it sets out to. It will be nostalgic to genre fans who relied on video stores while younger audiences will enjoy the comedy.
[CFF ’22] ‘One Road to Quartzsite’ Review — Doc asks for empathy
What a day to watch this film. I want to be up front that this is less a review and more a document of my own experience watching the movie, which I guess in some ways is as honest as I can be.
‘The Timekeepers of Eternity’ CFF Review – ‘The Langoliers’ Gets an Innovative, Experimental Reworking
Filmmaker Aristotelis Maragkos laboriously re-edits the miniseries using paper collage techniques and animation. The result is The Timekeepers of Eternity, a condensed, experimental, and ingenious reworking of the source material.
Chattanooga Film Festival 2022: Cryo Is a Twisty Chilly Thriller
Any film that knows how to feather its clues in and keep me guessing as I try to crack its code is a worthwhile experience for me.
CFF Review: Throwback Slasher “Bitch Ass” Is A Game Night to Remember
Directed by Bill Posley and featuring an all-black cast, retro board game inspired kills and creative editing Bitch Ass looks to join those aforementioned classics as a staple of the genre.
[CFF ’22] ‘The Ones You Didn’t Burn’ review: Awkward horror movie never finds footing
It is subtle at first; then the machinations of The Ones You Didn’t Burn take over.
THE TERROR TELEVISION - June 24, 2022
Welcome to The Terror Television, our official Fango week in review!
[CFF ’22] ‘Dawn Breaks Behind the Eyes’ Review — Mindblowing Euro-horror
This is a film full of genuine madness, featuring some of the most striking horror imagery I’ve seen in a long while.
CFF Review: Eric Pennycoff’s Horror Romp ‘The Leech’ Jingles Timely Bells
Never has there ever been a holiday film quite like Eric Pennycoff’s The Leech, which pits the holy against the hellish for a thematically strong, rapid-fire descent into festive madness.
Chattanooga Film Festival 2022: Unwrap Hilarious Holiday Drear in The Leech
Truly embodying every aspect of the modern-day Christmas spirit, The Leech follows a devout priest during the Christmas season as he attempts to assist a struggling couple through a rough period in their lives.
[CFF ’22] ‘Self-Portrait’ Review — Surveillance doc finds beauty in the mundane
Whether by design or technical incompetence, and what emerges is what Walinga calls an “incidental” portrait of a world that is ever more aware of itself, watching itself always.