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Queer.Horror.Movies

The curated portfolio of film journalist Joe Lipsett

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[HXFF Review] RUIN ME Is An Innovative Slasher With A Polarizing Plot Point

March 18, 2018 by Joe Lipsett

 Marcienne Dwyer, Ruin Me

Can a film have multiple personality disorder? Ruin Me certainly makes the case for yes.

Let’s bitch it out… [Read more…]

Filed Under: Hexploitation Film Festival, Horror Film Festival Coverage Tagged With: Cameron Gordon, Chris Hill, Hexploitation Film Festival, John Odom, Marcienne Dwyer, Matt Dellapina, Preston DeFrancis, Ruin Me, Terror Weekend Productions

[MidWest Weirdfest] THE MOOSE HEAD OVER THE MANTEL Is A Stagey Historical Anthology

March 10, 2018 by Joe Lipsett

The Moose Head Over The Mantel

There are two intriguing hooks at play in Jessi Gotta’s The Moose Head Over The Mantel: a narrative hook and a technical hook. Both work exceptionally well.

Let’s bitch it out… [Read more…]

Filed Under: Horror Film Festival Coverage, MidWest Weirdfest, Movies Tagged With: Bryan Enk, Inappropriate Features, Jessi Gotta, MidWest Weirdfest, The Moose Head Over The Mantel

[MidWest Weirdfest] FUTURE Is A Life-Affirming Drama Wrapped In A Sci-Fi Premise

March 10, 2018 by Joe Lipsett

Joshua P. Cousineau, Conor Sweeney, Future

Future gets high points for selling a life-affirming drama under a sci-fi banner. Now all it needs is a more distinct name.

Let’s bitch it out… [Read more…]

Filed Under: Horror Film Festival Coverage, MidWest Weirdfest, Movies Tagged With: Claire Sloma, Conor Sweeney, Future Film, Joshua P. Cousineau, MidWest Weirdfest

[MidWest Weirdfest] ATTACK OF THE TATTIE-BOGLE Is Lean & Mean

March 9, 2018 by Joe Lipsett

It’s pretty evident when watching Attack of the Tattie-Bogle that the indie slasher is a passion project.

Let’s bitch it out… [Read more…]

Filed Under: Horror Film Festival Coverage, MidWest Weirdfest Tagged With: Failureboys, MidWest Weirdfest, Pete Marcy

[Review] FAKE BLOOD Is A Masterful Meta-Takedown of True Crime Docuseries

February 13, 2018 by Joe Lipsett

Rob Grant, Mike Kovac, Fake Blood

On its surface, Fake Blood has all of the trappings of any other found footage horror film. The film is a cautionary tale about two twenty-something filmmakers – Brad and Mike – who make low budget horror films. They’ve received minor acclaim and think little of the broader impact of their work until one day they receive a video of two men re-enacting a scene from their film, discussing how best to dispose of a corpse.

Not unlike most found footage films, the proceedings are presented as fact (ie: the two directors are the directors of the film and they use their own names). The video they receive sends the pair into a talespin as they ponder their responsibility as filmmakers for inciting (or is it inspiring?) violence in their audiences. And so begins a trip down the rabbit hole as they investigate the nuanced details of their own work: how long could a deadly fight actually last? How life-like is their low-budget gore compared to real wounds? And what is it really like for victims of violent crime?

These questions drive the “plot” of the film, which mixes found footage and true crime documentary tropes to create something inherently new. The guys eventually find themselves in well over their heads when the investigation leads them to a mob hitman named “John”, witness protection and eventually a murder, but these plot points are less captivating than the ideas that Fake Blood raises and the means by which it raises them.

Questions about life imitating art and vice versa have long been a part of the dialogue around true crime and horror films. There’s a history of the latter being based on real life serial killers and, in recent years, killers rationalizing, justifying and copying violent films for their own purposes. Fake Blood exposes this is a series of talking head interviews wherein Brad, Mike and their actors discuss films that are linked to real life violent events, as well their first exposure to film violence and how they interpreted it. Interspersed with these moments is footage of films such as The Matrix and Natural Born Killers. This documentary angle is hardly revelatory, but it brings the discussion to the fore in anticipation of the more meta(commentary) elements to come.

Fake Blood

As the “plot” points involving “John” deepen and the threat of violence against the filmmakers escalates, the pair delve specifically into the details of his crime. As they pore over the casefiles and conduct web research, their discoveries are re-enacted by actors in true crime docuseries fashion, complete with staccato editing, stark lighting, slow motion and enhanced sound effects. The result is evocative of any number of true crime series on cable (Cold Case Files; I Survived, etc) that have gained popularity for sensationalizing real life crime stories.

And then – just when audiences are sucked into the violent re-enactment – either Brad or Mike will loudly yell “Cut!” and the video will return to normal to remind us that we’re only watching a fictionalized version of events (which are being presented as real, but are, in reality, also fictional). It’s a double layer of deception that is incredibly effective at reinforcing the fact that we, as audiences, are also actively consuming these violent acts, buying into the gore and contributing in some way to the dialogue that Fake Blood is engaging in.

In this way, even if the particulars of the “case” that Brad and Mike end up embroiled in are mildly underwhelming, the ideas about craving and celebrating violence and who is ultimately responsible for depraved acts that may or may not spill out of the screen is fascinating. Couple that with the tools that (the real) Brad and Mike use to dig into it, and you have an incredibly smart and effective film that denies easy categorization: part true crime documentary, part found footage horror film and 100% worth watching.

Filed Under: Horror Film Festival Coverage, Movies Tagged With: Blood In The Snow Film Festival, Fake Blood, Mike Kovac, Rob Grant

Horror-on-Sea review: The Redeeming Is A Low-Key Thriller That Channels Misery

January 26, 2018 by Joe Lipsett

Tracey Ann Wood as Joyce, peering through a keyhole

Brian Barnes’ The Redeeming makes its world debut at Horror-on-Sea festival.

Let’s bitch it out… [Read more…]

Filed Under: Horror Film Festival Coverage, Horror-on-Sea, Movies Tagged With: Brian Barnes, horror festival, horror on sea, The Redeeming

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The 411 on me

I am a freelance film and television journalist based in Toronto, Canada.

Words:
> Bloody Disgusting
> /Film
> Consequence
> The Spool
> Anatomy of a Scream
> Grim Journal
> That Shelf

Podcasts:
> Horror Queers
> Hazel & Katniss & Harry & Starr

Recent Posts

  • ‘Materialists’ Interrogates The Cost of Love [Review]
  • Serial Killer Meets Sharks in Sean Byrne’s ‘Dangerous Animals’ [Review]
  • 4K Review: ‘What Lies Beneath’ (2000)

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