FANTASTIC FEST 2012 Winners

Fantastic Fest has announced the 2012 Fantastic Fest Award winners. With all the great films screening at the Fest, they had quite a time choosing the best and most striking films of the festival.

Look for more coverage from Travis Keune in the coming days. Check out his Fantastic Fest review of FRANKENWEENIE here and DREDD 3D here.

AUDIENCE AWARD (Presented by Maxwell Locke & Ritter)
I Declare War (dir. Robert Wilson & Jason Lapeyre)

AMD “NEXT WAVE” SPOTLIGHT COMPETITION
Best Picture: Flicker (dir. Patrik Eklund)

Best Director: Charles de Lauzirika (Crave)
Best Screenplay: Max Porcelijn (Plan C)
Best Actor: Michael Eklund (Errors of the Human Body)
Best Actress: Alina Levshin (Combat Girls)

FANTASTIC FEATURES
Best Picture: Vanishing Waves (dir. Kristina Buozyte)

Best Director: Kristina Buozyte (Vanishing Waves)
Best Screenplay: Bruno Samper, Kristina Buozyte (Vanishing Waves)
Best Actor: Rene Bitorajac (Vegetarian Cannibal)
Best Actress: Jurga Jutaite (Vanishing Waves)

HORROR FEATURES
Best Picture: Here Comes the Devil (dir. Adrian Garcia Bogliano)
Best Screenplay: Adrian Garcia Bogliano (Here Comes the Devil)
Best Director: Adrian Garcia Bogliano (Here Comes the Devil)
Special mention: Hajime Ohata (Henge)
Best Actor: Francisco Barreiro (Here Comes the Devil)
Best Actress: Laura Caro (Here Comes the Devil)
Special mention: Katherine Isabel (American Mary)

GUTBUSTER COMEDY FEATURES
Best Picture: New Kids Nitro (dir. Steffen Haars & Flip Van der Kuil)
Best Director: Dario Russo (Danger 5)
Best Screenplay: John Mitchell (The History of Future Folk)
Best Actor: Chapman To (Vulgaria)
Best Actress: Rina Takeda (Dead Sushi)

DOCUMENTARY FEATURES
Best Picture: The American Scream (dir. Michael Stephenson)
Best Director: Rodney Ascher (Room 237)

SHORT FUSE: HORROR SHORTS
Winner: At The Formal (Andrew Kavanagh, Australia)
Runner-up: The Sleepover (Chris Cullari, USA)

FANTASTIC SHORTS
Winner: Record/Play (Jesse Atlas, USA)
Runner-up: Love – (Kaveh Nabatian, Canada)

DRAWN AND QUARTERED: ANIMATED SHORTS
Winner: Bendito Machine IV – (Jossie Malis, Spain)
Runner-up: Tram – (Michaela Pavlatova, Czech Republic)

For more information on the films listed above, visit http://fantasticfest.com/films.

For the latest developments visit the Fantastic Fest official site www.fantasticfest.com and follow on Facebook & Twitter.

The audience awards are presented by accounting firm Maxwell Locke & Ritter (www.mlrpc.com), who provided the certified tabulation of ballots this year and are the exclusive accounting sponsor of Fantastic Fest. AMD is the presenter of the prestigious “Next Wave” Awards, which honors emerging filmmakers.

AMERICAN MARY – Fantastic Fest Review

I’ve had this conversation on multiple occasions. When it comes to body modification of any kind — tattoos, piercings, etc. — I’m all for it. Go ahead. Cool. Express yourself. Experiment. As long as you’re a consenting adult, it’s your body and your choice. I actually think a lot of it is fascinating, even artistically accomplished. However, this comes with a flip side… I have zero body modifications. No reason. Just a personal choice. Why do I bring this up? Because when it comes to viewing a film like AMERICAN MARY, I can be as supportive and open-minded as I would like, but I’ll always remain someone viewing the culture from the outside. If you’re wondering why that matters, well… it matters a lot if you’re about to watch the sophomore outing from Canadian filmmakers Jen and Sylvia Soska, whose debut feature DEAD HOOKER IN A TRUNK (2009) made waves as an ultra-violent indie flick amidst the festival circuit.

AMERICAN MARY begins harmlessly enough. Mary Mason, played by Katharine Isabelle (GINGER SNAPS), is a talented and promising young medical student, relentlessly honing her craft as a future surgeon. It’s a wonderfully uplifting American dream kind of back story, with Mary rising above her underprivileged background to make something of her self. Except there’s a catch… she’s flat ass broke. Bill collector’s harassing her daily, Mary must find a way to bankroll her education if she plans to continue on the path before her. Desperate, Mary succumbs to the monetary allure of selling her body. Mary meets with with Billy Barker (played by Antonio Cupo), unaware that this interview will unexpectedly lead to a much more morally corrupt yet higher paying gig.

With this horrifying experience behind her, and a handful of Benjamin Franklin’s in her pocket, Mary finds the long sought relief she needed, but things are about to change for her in a way she never expected when she is contacted by Beatress Johnson, played by Tristan Risk (DARKEST HOUR). A member of the general “extreme body mod” community, the artificially cute-as-a-cartoon Beatress lures Mary once more into the fray with the promise of deep pockets, but this time her clients are willing recipients of the services she can provide. Mary has one last epiphany, a tragic twist of fate that sends her own American dream down a much darker path as she follows the white rabbit deep into the underground.

The Soska sisters have a distinctly severe and forthright style of filmmaking that’s in your face, yet also carries enough mental meat between the buns to be more than merely visual fluff. The Soska sisters take chances and their stories dwell in the fringes, making for content that’s above the usual mix of shock cinema produced today. AMERICAN MARY is visually stunning, if not often repulsing, revolting or just plain outrageous. The colors of the film accentuate the characters, a vividly bizarre bunch, and the graphic nature of the film has it’s place, making it anything but needlessly gratuitous. On the flip side, the film’s pacing suffers on occasion, the writing is more forced than it is unrefined, and the message could be labeled as being worn too flagrantly on the filmmaking sisters’ sleeves.

It’s evident that the Soska sisters have done their research, even so far as casting members of the extreme body modification community within the film. AMERICAN MARY will likely prove as educational as it is shocking to those unaccustomed to this particular culture, but don’t let this frighten your from taking the chance. While AMERICAN MARY is not a finely-tuned masterpiece, when compared to the sister’s feature film debut, it’s a positive step in the right direction, led — perhaps even greatly benefiting from — a truly riveting performance from Katharine Isabelle, offering a compelling shift in range and an uncanny ability to freak the Hell out of the audience — especially the men —  while somehow managing to maintain a hint of the innocent persona we swallow when first we meet her character.

Tristan Risk may not outshine Katharine Isabelle as an actress in AMERICAN MARY, but her presence is far from unnoticed or unappreciated. Beatress’ obsession with looking like Bettie Boop is a scene stealer in her first appearance, easing the audience into what’s in store with the gentle equivalent of a sledgehammer wrapped in a cheesecloth to soften the blow. The Soska sisters themselves make a particularly twisted cameo in the film, depicting a real urban legend within the body mod community. AMERICAN MARY is many things — a graphic horror display, a thriller, an expose of an underground culture, a very dark breed of Aesop’s fable, a revenge tale — but most of all, despite it’s flaws, AMERICAN MARY is a promissory note of better things to come from Jen and Sylvia, the Twisted Twins of terror.

Overall Rating: 2.5 out of 5 stars

FRANKENWEENIE – Fantastic Fest Review

What was your relationship to monsters as a child? Were they the boogeymen under your bed, or were they the things of wonder that fueled your imagination? My experience growing up follows the latter, filling my young mind with freakish fascinations. Clearly, the same goes for Tim Burton, who has taken his popular 1984 short film of the same name and expanded it into his newest feature film. FRANKENWEENIE (2012) is still a stop-motion animated film, in 3D this go ’round, adding even more of Burton’s uniquely dark charm to the semi-autobiographical story of a strange loner of a boy and his undead pooch.

FRANKENWEENIE is shot in glorious black and white, capturing the moody universe of Burton’s imagination. Much like the original short, the story begins by painting a picture of young Victor’s daily life, his time at school, his personality. Victor, voiced by Charlie Tahan (CHARLIE ST. CLOUD), is an intelligent loner with a knack for science. His best, and only friend, is his dog Sparky. Mr. Rzykruski, voiced by Martin Landau (ED WOOD), is the new science teacher whom has the town of New Holland’s parents and Mayor up in arms, proves to be a major influence on young Victor.

Victor’s father encourages him to get outside and try sports, but in doing so results in a tragedy that will forever change Victor’s life. Poor little Sparky meets his unexpected demise, but after Mr. Rzykruski demonstrates an experiment with electricity, Victor’s focus immediately becomes applying this new knowledge to bringing his beloved Sparky back from the dead. His success sparks a chain of events amidst his schoolmates and neighbors that slowly spirals out of control and provides a hilariously enjoyable, nostalgic adventure through multiple eras of monster movies classics.

As always, the animation in Burton’s film is awe-inspiring. The pace of FRANKENWEENIE is charged with energy and kept my eyes fixed on the action and the antics of the loyal Sparky. Combined with Danny Elfman‘s quirky trademark style of composing, the film resembles a fun house amusement ride of Gothic proportions. Seeing Burton’s creativity and love of monster films take shape in this film is a real gem. Inspirations varies widely, but I can say that it spans from the gargantuan in 1954 to the reptilian mischief of 1984, and beyond.

FRANKENWEENIE comes full circle in a fairly conventional fashion, lacking any significantly jaw-dropping moments, but the film as a whole is a marvelous experience for fans of the horror genre of all ages. Backed by Disney, Burton provides another film to the pool of monster films suitable as introductory fare to the youngest of blossoming fans. While the story is obviously most connected to that of FRANKENSTEIN, and Mr. Rzykruski is clearly inspired by Vincent Price, be prepared to pick out all the other winks and nods to genre classics.

In addition to Landau, FRANKENWEENIE also features Burton regulars Wynona Ryder as the voice of Elsa van Helsing, and Catherine O’Hara voicing Victor’s mother as well as two other characters. Having failed to keep Sparky’s return a secret, Victor must overcome the Mayor’s hatred for his dog and the bigger danger of classmate Edgar E. Gor’s irresponsibly fiendish plot to win the science fair by employing Victor’s experiment for selfish purposes. In the process, Victor learns a valuable lesson.

FRANKENWEENIE is being presented in IMAX 3D — as well as in 2D — but the 3D provides an added dimension to the film that is welcome, blending in rather than popping out as merely a gimmick. The short running time of 87 minutes also lends itself well to younger viewers.

FRANKENWEENIE opens nationwide on Friday, October 5th, 2012.

Overall Rating: 4 out of 5 stars

DREDD 3D – Fantastic Fest Review

Set in the not-so-distant future America, an irradiated desert wasteland, DREDD 3D paints a dark, grungy picture of society to come. Based upon the comic book series, this second film adaptation takes the British comic strip source material more to heart, without taking itself too seriously. The Judges in this future, based from the Hall of Justice, are also the jury and executioner… a type of one-stop-shop of the criminal justice system. Less focused on celebrity as Sylvester Stallone’s JUDGE DREDD (1995), DREDD 3D (2012) may feature a relatively simple story, but showcases the extraordinarily bleak, post-industrial mess of a landscape and the overall character of its characters’ world.

Directed by Pete Travis (VANTAGE POINT), DREDD 3D stars Karl Urban (STAR TREK, PATHFINDER) as the infamous, no excuses Judge to be most feared by criminals. Keeping in line with the previous statement about the film not focusing on celebrity, Urban never once removes his helmet in DREDD 3D. This, in turn, requires an actor to enhance their physical presence as well as their vocal range in convincingly selling a character. Urban pulls this off, capturing the same trademark grimace that defined Stallone’s performance in the role, but expanded on his facial articulation to give the character slightly more depth. Fortunately for Urban, that depth is shallow in a character like Dredd and in a movie such as this, heavily preoccupied with every violent, bloody bit of action.

The assumption in DREDD 3D is that the last bastion of humanity — a very loose term in this context — resides within a single mega city that stretches from Boston to Washington, D.C. Surrounding this mega city is a massive wall, separating mankind from the inhospitable Hell of their own creation outside. Those less fortunate to be born and live in the border regions near the wall, find themselves exposed to higher levels of radiation. This brings rise to the mutants, an element of the story not unlike that in TOTAL RECALL, but far less emphasized. In this case, epitomized solely by Judge Anderson, a rookie forced under Dredd’s wing for assessment. Played by Olivia Thirlby (THE DARKEST HOUR), Anderson is given special consideration due to her status as a mutant with a certain special ability that proves extremely valuable.

DREDD 3D wastes little time diving into the filthy reality of the universe it inhabits. Spawned from the rapid onset popularity of a new drug known as Slo-Mo, a rise in significant crimes brings Judges Dredd and Anderson to the notorious Peach Tree mega block, one of several mega structures housing tens of thousands that tower endlessly over the dilapidated remains of the old city. The call is relatively routine, a multiple homicide with three bodies. However, not long after Dredd and Anderson arrive on the scene, things begin to spiral out of control.

The face and personality behind the recent mayhem is MaMa, a curiously fresh and original criminal boss played to a marvelously twisted and sexy outcome by Lena Headey (Queen Gorgo from 300). Physically scarred and as equally deranged and she is emotionally damaged, Headey provides the all-too-rare femme fatale foe that the ultra-masculine Dredd needs to provide the type of pleasingly digestible balance we get from DREDD 3D. With an entire mega block at her command and disposal, MaMa proves to be a force to be reckoned with and not short on the criminal mastermind smarts one expects.

Flipping the coin, and complimentary to her foe, Thirlby provides a certain feminine fragility, a certain innocence to Judge Anderson that further balances this three-way oh hormonal stereotypes. Thirlby captures the frightened girl emotions, but also builds a deeper, more rigid face of a strong woman holding back that resides dangerously just beneath her cute exterior. Both in the cases of Dredd and Anderson, the stereotypes are merely superficial, with the bulk of their depth left implied, residing between the scripted lines, while MaMa wears her abrasive style of restrained madness on her sleeve.

DREDD 3D is a dark, gritty film with a steam punk edge. I found visual and tonal elements of the film in line not with BLADE RUNNER, from the design of the sets to the choices in lighting and how the film plays out. I also found the violence to be favorably excessive and graphic, not unlike in PUNISHER: WAR ZONE. The violence and gore is there for a purpose, and to that purpose it serves to enhance the film as a justifiable mean to its end. The original music from Paul Leonard-Morgan keeps the pace steady and energizing, which is a damn good thing as the majority of the 95-minute running time takes place within this one mega block tower.

The 3D portion of DREDD is commendable, not especially extraordinary, but does serve to enhance certain scenes of action. However, I found the use of the beautifully stylized slow-motion in combination with the 3D to have been leaned upon ever-so-slightly too much. Those viewers who prefer the more visually assaulting, graphically gory violence that tends to invoke subtle laughter of disbelief combines with the flinching reaction similar to watching testicles being abused on America’s Funniest Home Videos… DREDD 3D delivers as much of this as the general audience will permit and just enough to satisfy the more discerning connoisseurs.

On a general note, DREDD 3D is a superior film adaptation to its 1995 predecessor on many levels. For the men out there looking for the beauty and the beast in genre film — that being babes and guns — DREDD 3D presents Olivia Thirlby in a very positive, albeit modest light and as I hope to have clearly conveyed already, lots of guns and violence. For the ladies, well… I entice you to join your man or venture out on your own to see DREDD 3D for two words… bristle (in the form of facial stubble) and brawn — Karl Urban offers you both.

Overall Rating: 3.5 out of 5 stars

DREDD 3D opens in theaters nationwide on Friday, September 21st, 2012.

Fantastic Fest 2012: New Poster Revealed for SINISTER

Here’s the new abstractly curious and creepy poster for SINISTER, designed by SA Studios. SINISTER is playing at Fantastic Fest on Friday, 9/21 at the Alamo Drafthouse S. Lamar.

Synopsis: SINISTER is a frightening new thriller from the producer of the PARANORMAL ACTIVITY films and the writer-director of THE EXORCISM OF EMILY ROSE.  Ethan Hawke plays a true crime novelist who discovers a box of mysterious, disturbing home movies that plunge his family into a nightmarish experience of supernatural horror.  SINISTER opens in theater October 5.

Fantastic Fest – Austin, Texas – September 20-27, 2012!

Look for more film and event programming announcements for Fantastic Fest in the weeks ahead. For the latest developments, tickets and badges visit the Fantastic Fest official site and follow us on Facebook and Twitter.

Final Wave of FANTASTIC FEST 2012 Films Announced

Austin, TX-Wednesday, September 12, 2012- Fantastic Fest is thrilled to announce the final installment of programming for Fantastic Fest 2012, including the world premiere screening of The Collection. Fantastic Fest will take place September 20-27 in Austin, Texas at the Alamo Drafthouse South Lamar. Continue reading Final Wave of FANTASTIC FEST 2012 Films Announced

Fantastic Fest 2012 Announces Shorts Programming

Fantastic Fest recently announced their selection of more than 40 short films slated to slither and crawl into all the various orifices of this annual extravaganza of genre film. The biopsy of the best genre short films from around the globe will showcase works from several countries, including Spain, South Korea, Bangladesh, Australia, New Zealand, the Netherlands and more. Continue reading Fantastic Fest 2012 Announces Shorts Programming

Fantastic Fest Announces RED DAWN World Premiere as the Closing Night Film

Fantastic Fest recently announced that FilmDistrict’s RED DAWN will have it’s world premiere as the closing night film on Thursday, September 27 to be followed by Korean-invasion-themed party to close out Fantastic Fest at the Alamo Drafthouse. RED DAWN hits theaters nationwide on November 21, 2012.

RED DAWN stars CHRIS HEMSWORTH (Thor, The Avengers, Snow White & The Huntsman), JOSH PECK (Drake & Josh, The Wackness), JOSH HUTCHERSON (The Hunger Games), ADRIANNE PALICKI (Friday Night Lights, upcoming GI Joe: Retaliation), ISABEL LUCAS (Transformers: Revenge of the Fallen, Immortals), CONNOR CRUISE (Seven Pounds) and JEFFREY DEAN MORGAN (Watchmen).

Synopsis: In RED DAWN, a city in Washington state awakens to the surreal sight of foreign paratroopers dropping from the sky – shockingly, the U.S. has been invaded and their hometown is the initial target. Quickly and without warning, the citizens find themselves prisoners and their town under enemy occupation. Determined to fightback, a group of young patriots seek refuge in the surrounding woods, training and reorganizing themselves into a guerilla group of fighters. Taking inspiration from their high school mascot, they call themselves the Wolverines, banding together to protect one another, liberate their town from its captors, and take back their freedom.

Fantastic Fest Announces 2012 AMD Next Wave Filmmaker Spotlight

Fantastic Fest recently announced the lineup of 8 films from 7 different countries being showcased in the 2012 AMD Next Wave competition. This annual sidebar of Fantastic Fest recognizes outstanding new talent in genre filmmaking. Many of these films being shown at Fantastic Fest will mark their U.S. or World premieres. The winning filmmaker will be awarded $1,000 cash prize and AMD based computer hardware featuring their latest Accelerated Processing Unit (APU). Continue reading Fantastic Fest Announces 2012 AMD Next Wave Filmmaker Spotlight

Alamo Drafthouse & Badass Digest Present the Fantastic Fest 2012 Bumper Contest

Fantastic Fest, Alamo Drafthouse and Badass Digest are thrilled to present the Fantastic Fest 2012 Bumper Contest!  Every year Fantastic Fest hosts a bumper creation contest where filmmakers are invited to create the most outrageous and entertaining thirty second video possible.  Fantastic Fest will use as many entries as possible and play different bumpers onscreen before every single screening during the festival with two goals in mind: 1) to represent the creativity (and often bizarre sense of humor) of the Fantastic Fest community and 2) to ensure that unlike otherfestivals, the audience at Fantastic Fest won’t have to sit through the same six or seven bumpers over and over again.

Your bumper can be almost anything you can imagine, but there are three ground rules:

  1. The theme this year is Time Travel Is Fantastic. Feel free to interpret that in whatever manner you choose.
  2. The video must be between 15 seconds and 45 seconds.
  3. The last line of dialogue or narration in the video must be, “That’s fantastic!”

Check out some bumpers from previous festivals for inspiration! http://tinyurl.com/ffbumpers

All 2012 Fantastic Fest bumper videos selected by our programming committee will be screened in front of an unsuspecting audience during Fantastic Fest (September 20-27, 2012).  Each of those audiences will include visiting filmmakers from around the world, press from the likes of Badass Digest, IFC, TwitchFilm, Fangoria, SlashFilm, Film Threat, Ain’t It Cool News, Variety, USA Today and more, plus a legion of the most devoted and intelligent genre film fans on the planet.

And as if that weren’t enough, there are more prizes!

The Fantastic Fest programming committee will select the Top 4 bumper finalists, and members of the Filmmaking Frenzy voting community will select the 5th finalist. The Top 5 bumpers will play at the Fantastic Fest 2012 Awards Ceremony, and the audience will select the grand-prize winner.  That winner will receive two VIP badges to Fantastic Fest 2013!  These VIP badges are always sold out by the end of the previous year’s festival, and they are seriously hot ticket items.  VIP Badges include an exclusive limited edition t-shirt and poster, plus a souvenir Fantastic Fest shoulder bag filled with tons of fun swag.  The main benefit of the VIP badge, however, is guaranteed admission to the movie of your choice at any given show time at next year’s Fantastic Fest.

The Fantastic Fest 2012 Bumper Contest is hosted by Badass Digest, and you can read all rule submissions and guidelines and submit your film here: www.filmmakingfrenzy.com

Fantastic Fest runs from September 20 through September 27, and because time is needed to build the festival’s preshow, Fantastic Fest Bumper Contest entries are all due no later than Saturday, September 15, 2012.  Any videos we receive after that date can’t be guaranteed to play during the festival and won’t be eligible for any prizes. Good luck and be fantastic!

For the latest developments, tickets and badges visit the Fantastic Fest official site  www.fantasticfest.com  and follow us on Facebook & Twitter.