Fantastic Fest 2014: Interview with Larry Fessenden from ABC’s OF DEATH 2

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After seeing ABC’s OF DEATH 2 at Fantastic Fest (you can read my review of the film HERE), I was able to sit down with the director of one of my favorite shorts in the anthology – Larry Fessenden.  His short “N is for Nexus” is a break-neck countdown through the streets of New York as Halloween night approaches. A couple preparing their Frankenstein costumes for a party sets in motion a series of events that intersect and slowly affect one another, leading to a devastating conclusion. Fessenden is practically a legend in the indie horror genre. He has worked as an actor, cinematographer, writer and director since the later 70’s and has created a named for himself with such feature films like HABIT, WENDIGO, and THE LAST WINTER, while also appearing in films like I SELL THE DEAD, STAKE LAND, and JUG FACE. I was lucky enough to sit down with Fessenden not once but twice. Long story short, I accidentally deleted the first interview but was able to sit down for a second one during Fantastic Fest – it seems apropos considering his short also deals with actions and consequences. I’m grateful that his schedule was able to accommodate me again because it ended up being one of the best discussions I’ve had with a director. Not only did we dig into his exciting entry to ABC’s 2, but we discussed a wide variety of topics including his filmmaking process, the current state of horror, and the iconography of Frankenstein.

The interview below does contain some MINOR spoilers to his short film. If you don’t want to have anything ruined for you, go check out ABC’S OF DEATH 2 on VOD right now and then come back to read what Fessenden has to say it.

 

Was this the first idea you had when you were approached to do a short for ABC’s OF DEATH 2? A film that builds to Halloween night.

All the components I wanted to do was to shoot in the streets of my beloved city of New York at Halloween. I had the idea that all the extras would be handpicked from real people on the street and I was going to craft all the monster cameos that are seen in the film. Ultimately I wanted to tell the story of all these tricks of timing that lead to a terrible end. That’s why the short is called “Nexus.” If I got the letter C it would have been “Convergence.” I was pretty determined to tell this story of fate and circumstance. If your girlfriend tells you to “hurry up,” than you get somewhere sooner than you planned or you forget something and you get there later than you planned. I just loved the idea and seemed appropriate for a quick 3-minute piece.

 

So you didn’t shoot down any other ideas prior to this one?

No. I’m not one of these people overflowing with stories, so if I come up with one I pretty much nurture it till I can get it out of my system. It also fed into the idea that I could play with editing rhythms and I could have these three or four different stories starting to build. I love this kind of editing and you don’t get to do this with features. With a feature you tend to do longer takes and play things out more slowly, and so in this case you can do these fast cuts with each accompanied by a sound effect so you get this percussive experience.

 

That’s one of the refreshing things for me, compared to the other shorts, you do have this frenzied rapid-pace style, except for the opening shot. Did you edit the entire thing yourself or did you work with someone on that?

No. One of the pleasures of this thing for many of the filmmakers present in this feature is that you bring in all your pals to do favors and you get this great production value and it becomes this collaboration. I did the opposite. There were no friends. I did everything. One of the difficult things of being a film artist is that you’re always asking for favors. Money, time, extras, locations. You’re always asking for something. This time I was going to use the equipment that I own and go out with one or two people and do it myself. So I was the sole editor. Another quirk of my work is that I don’t screen my work for people. That the mission of the artist is to find acutely as possible what is inside and what it is that works. Then you screen it and Marc Walcow who was my producer for ABC’s and Ant (Timpson) and Tim (League) finally did see it and they had small notes but mainly encouragement. So I felt protected and that they understood the idea I was trying to convey on-screen.

 

I loved that you showed Halloween from a different angle. So often you see it set in rural America or in these small town or suburban areas like Haddonfield (in the film HALLOWEEN) or recently in the TRICK ‘R TREAT film. You showed Halloween in the big city with the cars driving about, the crowded sidewalks, the car horns, the stoplights – all of these things play a part into the story and you don’t often see that when you have a film set during Halloween.

This was my experience growing up in the city during Halloween. It’s a wonderful holiday in New York. There’s this great parade. It’s colorful and energetic and in the past 10 years it has always been this great event. There’s this very specific things that happen in East Village in New York. So I wanted to capture that. Actually a lot of the footage is from drive-bys that I did on Halloween. To see the real people during their routine. I just love the holiday. I did include a couple of odd nods to my earlier film HABIT. The cab driver in this is a cabbie now and he was a character in HABIT. It was fun to bring him out. And HABIT itself was shot as one sequence on Halloween. We shot on Halloween. So I wanted to pay tribute to that idea of “stealing real-life.” There’s this great film called MEDIUM COOL where they filmed during a riot in the 60’s. It’s traditional filmmaking where you are using a location and letting it speak to you.

 

The Frankenstein mask that becomes a central element to the story, did you make that yourself?

Of course!

(laughter)

That was why I made the movie. So we made it around Halloween and I always allow myself around that time to watch some of the old black and white movies to celebrate the stuff I love like the Jack Pierce make-up. Hopefully there’s no lawsuits but my make-up is clearly derived from that.

(laughter)

I just had fun making my own and making the costumes. I made the boots with a cobbler. Talk about the budget… that’s where the budget went.

 

Even the suit coat…

Oh yeah, it had to be smaller.

 

You have that great shot where you show him putting it on and it’s clearly shorter.

I really did all this to fetishize everything that forms this iconic imagery. It is one of the most iconic images of 20th century art. Maybe there’s the soup can and Frankenstein’s monster but I can’t think of anything else. I really wanted to tribute that. I also wanted to include a nod to The Bride. At the beginning of the film I really wanted the actress Lauren Molina to hit that pose.

 

The Elsa Lanchester…

Where Elsa rejects Boris and it’s a ¾ angle and she screams, “AHHH!”

 

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Photo source: Crave Online

 

I love that you include her at the end in this long wide shot that pans back. Throughout the film you have these quick close-ups but you include this kind of nod to the classic and frightened Bride also at the end.

We book ended the film with her. The first thing is that we pull out from her mouth screaming into the phone and than in the end we go back into the mouth, which is also a tribute to THE TENANT by Polanski. It’s one of my favorites. The film ends with it being kind of a shit-show and he yells, “AHHH! I can’t take it!” and the camera goes into his mouth. So on the one hand we have that wide shot that contextualizes it. If you actually freeze-frame it you can see there’s a giant crowd that’s gathered and that’s just New York. Everyone gathered and watched us do our thing. We only had a precious amount of time for us to block off that street. To get that wide view I basically put an old tripod on a car and had this crazy jib arm that I found in my storage room and put the camera on it. It was fun. Sometimes we would mount the camera to a bike and I would just pedal around myself.

 

You seem to embrace the DIY spirit.

You think of film… (pause) Look, it’s a business its all of those things we know, but what if your artform is making movies. Connecting one image to another and selecting the lens, the choice of a wide shot or not. Those are the choices you make. Never mind the money and who’s in your movie. What I love to do because of ABC’s OF DEATH 2 is to present you the art of film. You don’t have to worry about money or any other agenda. Its all about what are the images to tell this story, and in this case it was relatively intricate. So you go out and get the moving shot of the yellow light to cut into this, which will be about 45 frames and then show this. I deliberately didn’t hire a DP (director of photography) even though it would have made it look better, but I wanted to experience the art of film. It’s so rare now. It’s hugely stressful to deal with all the paperwork and the unions and all the equipment.

 

It’s an interesting time period we’re in because you have the technology to make a movie on your iPhone or on a GoPro so you have people that have the opportunity to finally be able to bring their ideas to life. At the same time you have so many films being made. It’s a fine line. It’s great to have so many great ideas and films out there but it’s hard to stay ahead of the pack and to stand out.

It’s the democratization of the art form. Which is cool. We’ve all been yearning for that and we’ve celebrated it when it popped up. Like when they made DAWN OF THE DEAD. We were all like, “isn’t it cool that they made that outside of the system.” Same with TEXAS CHAINSAW MASSACRE or even SAW. But it’s also true that you say, “Jeez Louis. There’s so much content.” And not all of it is crap.

 

The amount of films made in 1985 compared to know…

(laughter)

It’s insane. As you say, all good, but the puzzle becomes how you monetize it. Because if there’s that much content than that means no one has to pay for it. So we become “Spotified” and think that we don’t have to pay for anything. So we watch it and digest it. It’s a weird time and it’s fine. You can either complain about it or just say, “this is where we are.” It’s hard to make sense of it all but more it’s hard to make a living as a filmmaker unitl you get to the upper echelon. Like the Paul Thomas Anderson’s or the James Wan’s. How many horror auteurs can we speak of working now?

 

Obviously you’re a fan of the FRANKENSTEIN film(s). Talk to me about the films and their impact on you. What do you take from them?

First of all, it’s an amazing archetype. One thing I do love about horror is that it’s a cautionary tale, and I’m not talking about FRIDAY THE 13th where if you have sex you will get murdered. That’s not of interest. What I do feel strongly about is the Frankenstein mythology that comes from the book which is human hubris possibly might bite us in the ass. As you may know the book is subtitled “The Modern Prometheus” who is the Greek god who stole fire from the gods and then got eaten by vultures for the rest of time. I just love the story and it has not been told well. It’s fascinating but it has not been told very well since the Karloff 1931 film. I love the first one. A lot of people cherish the second but I found it too campy and I didn’t like the monster talking. It’s still a beautiful film and worth revisiting. I never fetishized it like the first one, which is almost a perfect film. There’s a coupe of slips into goofiness with the father figure but that’s hardly the point. The make-up is just an amazing feat. The third one has great charm.

 

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The SON OF FRANKENSTEIN is fantastic.

Oddly enough, (Bela) Lugosi, who refused to play the monster because there was too much makeup and thought he wouldn’t be celebrated – he obviously regretted that the rest of his life – would be in the third one as a hunchback.

 

And he delivers a standout performance. He’s the real “monster” in it.

You’re right. He is the monster. And that’s the one, in a way more than the others, where he has these self-reflexive moments like when he looks in the mirror going, “NO! NO!” Everything about it is fascinating. Karloff is a little heavier so the make-up changes subtly. They took away his power of speech because they realized that was the wrong direction. Then you have the archetype of guy in the town with the wooden arm.

 

Which you see now with all the bumbling idiot cops played on-screen.

It’s got a great sense of humor without being campy. You then have the weird thing with the child at the end. You have the monster wearing a new outfit.

 

They even push the German expressionist visuals even further with the lab and some of the architectural details.

It was also the first time you get that Universal Pictures cliché where you get this weird European in huge quotations village where there’s cars and horses with buggies and gypsies. It’s this weird conceit that came from Universal Pictures. Then you have the subsequent movies like GHOST OF FRANKENSTEIN and HOUSE OF FRANKENSTEIN and FRANKENSTEIN MEETS THE WOLFMAN and they all are really interesting. They spend a lot of time with Larry Talbot (the wolfman) and his anguish. I think they are all better films than people think because now obviously Frankenstein became Herman Munster and then showed up on a cereal box and this watered down thing. To go back though, there aren’t that many great Frankenstein films. They all have something. Even the Hammer films are fun. There’s a TV movie I love called FRANKENSTEIN: THE TRUE STORY with Michael Sarrazin where he plays a very beautiful Frankenstein monster but it kind of falls apart. It is my ambition to make another real Frankenstein film one day, but in the meantime, I have these short films which I have enjoyed.

 

You actually acted in one of my favorite horror films of last year JUG FACE. I actually reached to the director on Twitter after seeing it and told him how much I appreciated his film. Your performance in that film is great.

Very cool. Chad is a really genuine filmmaker. I found the experience to be exactly what you wanted when working in horror. He’s working in a genre where you have scares and oddness, but there’s clearly something very personal going on in that film. It was well researched where you have these jug faces in traditional Southern life where you make a jug out of clay with a face on it. This is why horror can be so exciting. He’s taking something so odd and peculiar and creating a world that it very unique. He’s got as story to tell but you also have a monster and a giant pit filled with blood so you also have your horror tropes. But in there you do have a very personal film and that’s where horror can flourish. You don’t always get that from the main street.

 

What were some of your favorites in ABC’s OF DEATH 2 or some that really stood out to you?

I’m always hesitant to celebrate one thing because it could just be a trick of the moment but I do have to say I thought this was an amazing collection with a lot of ambition and a lot of talent. It’s a great way to sample what these guys and gals are able to do. I did like the last one (Z is for Zygote). I thought that was just outstanding. I thought “B is for Badger” early on was great fun. So it’s cool. I’m really serious with my take on horror but that’s an example of really fun and sort of biting satire with a buffoon who just isn’t paying attention. It’s all done in single-take too. There’s a lot of great techniques going on in the film. Nicely edited together pieces. Plus there’s some great special effects throughout.

 

So what’s next for you? Do you have anything lined-up?

Well, my Frankenstein film of course.

(laughs)

 

Is that the next project?

I… (pauses) have something. I’m trying to raise some money. It’s very hard. My brand of horror is not immediately pitchable. So everything has to be from my passion for the project. Now I’m putting that out there and trying to get some dough to make the movie. Meanwhile, I produce and dabble with all sorts of other stuff.

 

I want to thank Larry Fessenden for his time and being so candid with me about his filmmaking process and his short in ABC’S OF DEATH 2. The horror anthology film is now available on VOD and will be hitting select theaters starting on October 31st.

 

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Fantastic Fest 2014: Interview with Chris Nash from ABC’S OF DEATH 2

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After seeing ABC’S OF DEATH 2 at Fantastic Fest (you can read my review of the film HERE), I was able to sit down with the director of my favorite short in the anthology – Chris Nash. His short “Z is for Zygote” is about a pregnant woman left by her husband to survive in a cabin during the winter months. She takes a special root each day to satisfy her needs. It’s what happens when the roots runs out that will have horror fans twisting in their seats. Nash has previously directed a series of shorts called the SKINFECTION TRILOGY. You can find those shorts through his Vimeo page by clicking HERE.

The interview below does contain some spoilers to his short film. If you don’t want to have it ruined for you, go check out ABC’S OF DEATH 2 on VOD right now and then come back to read what the Toronto native has to say about his film.

 

The reception to your short has been great from everyone I have talked to. What feedback have you heard?

Yeah. It’s good from the other filmmakers. Which is all I can really ask for. Tim (League) and Ant (Timpson) like it too.

 

One of the things that I really like about it is that it seems to show a sort of fantasy world that is close to our reality but slightly off. It subtly creates this disconcerting world. Can you talk about the environment and the setting and what you were trying to translate to the audience?

I was really trying to show the place where I grew up in Northern Ontario. It’s rural. I basically grew up in the woods. Lot of farmland. Being here (in Austin) kind of reminds me of it. So I kind of wanted to make a film set in that place. It’s a weird place that not a lot of people pay attention to. You hear weird stories and see weird people. It’s a weird place. In terms of my favorite storytellers, I like anyone that deals with that kind of anxiety. I like Cronenberg. I like anytime where that one thing is off a little bit. Where you set the one rule.  Like this is the normal world but this is the new rule. As long as I don’t deviate from that or don’t do anything too obtuse than it’s real enough for people to hold onto and believe.

 

I was going to ask if it’s low-hanging fruit to say that Cronenberg is kind of an influence on you between this and some of your previous shorts like BLACKHEAD? Is it accurate to make that comparison?

I’m even hesitant because it is that low-hanging fruit. More than the “body-horror” aspect of Cronenberg, what I love about him is that he doesn’t waste his devices. His allegories are so clear. He doesn’t sacrifice his story to hit you over the head with a message. He’s a smart filmmaker and I appreciate that even more than the “body-horror” aspect. That comes secondary even though it’s really memorable.

 

The main character has to eat this root in the film as a form of medicine. Is the idea of the root something that came from this backwoods environment? Because it’s not something that’s commonplace like a pill or some liquid that you drink. The root and all of these mason jars throughout her home is an unsettling image.

With the mason jars, I knew she wasn’t going to be going out and dragging food in (because she’s pregnant). Everyone has a storm cellar or fruit cellar with reserves. It also turned out to be out of convenience that day.

(Pauses and laughs)

As far as the root goes, I guess I just like the aesthetic. To go with an old-timey vibe. Where she almost is like a witch.

 

When they approached you to make a short for this was this your first idea you came up with or was there other ideas as well?

This was the main. I did have another one that was remarkably similar to Dennison Rahmalho’s “J is for Jesus” except mine was going to be “Z is for Zealot.” Yeah… I’m glad I didn’t do that one.

(laughs)

That would have just be mine standing on a milk crate and hitting people over the head with a message. I would have been a lot more annoying about it than Dennison’s.

 

The woman and her large belly looks like it took a lot of work. Did you have a hand in creating the special effects?

The special effects were all done by me at my kitchen table.

 

Wow! That’s impressive.

I had some help from the producers when we had to cast our actor. The producer Shannon and I did all the casting and made all the molds for the two actors, but the special effects were all done by me in my kitchen over a long time.

 

How long did just that aspect take?

I mean . . . I definitely bit off more than I can chew. I say that but it at least got done.

(laughs)

Yeah. It got done in the end. It took about two months. Then when we were shooting it was about another month of tweaking and modifying some effects. I had to build 3 or 4 different busts for the one shot when the hand goes up the neck and breaks the jaw. It just didn’t look quite right at first. I got really crazy over that one shot. That was actually the starting point for the whole idea of the short and I kind of worked backwards from there.

 

The idea of children consuming their parents or children becoming their parents over time is what I really got from the film. It’s also a visual you don’t see often in horror. You see beheadings and people getting stabbed all the time. But this is different. The tagline for ABC’S OF DEATH is “26 ways to die,” and I must say that this is one of the more original ways. You made the entire audience I saw it with very squeamish during that scene.

Thanks. I appreciate that. I mean… I think it’s kind of easy with “body-horror.” I think it’s low-hanging fruit but I appreciate it nonetheless.  

(laughs)

 

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Image Source: Screencrush.com

 

 

Someone had told me that there was an email or drunken tirade you went on that helped you get the job.

Tirade? Why does this word keep coming up?

(laughs)

 I wouldn’t call it a tirade but it might have read a lot angrier than I thought.

 

I didn’t read it so –

Long story short, I entered the first ABC’S OF DEATH contest. I did “T is for Thread.” It went over really well with the other filmmakers. I got to know many of them and really enjoyed the community. I also really liked the competition because there was so many good ones submitted. So, when I went to the premiere I was really disappointed with some of the filmmakers in the first one. I…

(pauses and carefully selects his words)

I really don’t want to seem like I’m being a dick. I just really felt that some were very lazy. That they weren’t even the best examples of what they are capable of making.

 

I can think of one in particular and I’m not sure if we even need to say the director’s name.

It was just disappointing. So when they announced a sequel. I just knew that if I was selected I would give 100% of my energy towards it. So I wrote this alcohol influenced two page tirade saying that if you add me to this project I will give it everything I got.

 

So they responded?

Yeah. They responded within hours.

(pauses)

I was terrified. I woke-up at 8:00 am in a panic, and I wrote it at 4:00 am. Todd Brown was the first to respond. I was thinking I made a huge mistake. He wrote me saying, “We got your email. It’s eliciting a lot of conversation here.” And I was like, “What the fuck does that mean, Todd?”

(laughter)

That could go either way. So I was thinking they were like, “get a load of this fucking asshole.”

(more laughter)

 

You know that you might have said something that was in the back of their heads but they didn’t want to acknowledge.

Oh yeah. This community is so supportive. It’s so insular. It’s almost overly supportive in a lot of ways. It’s maybe starting to eat itself.

(laughs)

 

What were some of your other favorites in ABC’S OF DEATH 2?

I really liked Steve’s (“W is for Wish”). That one is just funny because it’s a thing he’s been batting around for a while. Just to see it done is fun for me. I really loved Jim Hosking’s (“G is for Grandad”).

 

The grandfather hiding in a cut-away in the mattress is such a strong image.

I know! It’s such a perfect cut-away too! There are a lot of little touches in there. After I saw that I started to watch a lot of his other work. I just love that guy. Todd Rohal’s I really liked (“P is for P-P-P-P Scary!”).  I really like Dennison’s (“J is for Jesus”). Honestly … I really feel like I could say I liked all of them.

 

Yeah. I feel the first time around there were a lot of peaks and valleys. They were either really great or really bad. This time most were on the same high quality level.

Yeah. I saw effort in every one and I saw personality in every single one.

 

There seems to be also an odd cohesion between all of them this time. I’m not sure if that was a happy accident or not.

It might have to do with that they wrote a manifesto this time. I’m not sure if they had one for the first film. They were like, “Listen. You still have complete freedom, but we do want some quality control.” I’m not sure what it was really. It could just have been the luck of the draw this time.

 

Have you been approached to do any features or are you working on anything new currently?

Me and my producer Peter have been working on a feature for the last year now. We’re just prepping it. I mean … I could be prepping it for the rest of my life.

(laughs)

I’ll just keep making stuff in my backyard I guess.

 

 

I want to thank Chris Nash for his time and being so candid with me about his experience working on ABC’S OF DEATH 2. The horror anthology film is now available on VOD and will be hitting select theaters starting on October 31st.

 

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Fantastic Fest 2014: ABC’S OF DEATH 2 – The Review

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You would think that after THE ABC’s OF DEATH gathered so many of the most talented horror directors working in the business, that the well might be a little dry to go back for a second time around. ABC’s 2 proves that there are many talented voices working in the genre. The second entry may not have as many flashy names as the first did (Ben Wheatley, Ti West, Jason Eisener, and Adam Wingard), but it brings together a number of gifted directors that have started to break through in recent years and some that definitely should be well-known names.

What’s so great about ABC’s 2 is that there are so many highlights. Things kick off with a bang with the letter “A.” Quite literally actually. “A is for Amateur” is an entertaining blend of pipe-dream fantasy and reality that delivers a comedic blow to the head. Kristina Buozyte (VANISHING WAVES) directed one of my favorite shorts – “Knell.” An isolated woman suddenly notices from her apartment window a strange alien force affecting a neighboring apartment building. What happens next is more artistic and dreamlike than most of the shorts in this collection. Veteran indie filmmaker Larry Fessenden structures his short around Halloween in New York. His fast-paced editing and filmic style fits well with a story about time and consequence. Later on a zombie court case is equally ironic as it is emotional. “Utopia” is a purposefully slick look at a future society where perfection is strictly enforced. A journey into the “real” world of kid’s cartoon characters left me with a grin ear to ear during the short “Wish.” The film comes to an end with my favorite short of the entire series. “Z is for Zygote” is from relatively unknown short film director Chris Nash. The less said about this twisted fantasy tale the better, but I will admit that it delivered one of the most horrific moments I have ever witnessed in a theater.

Like the first ABC’s before it, this film creates a kaleidoscope of death and horror that feels like you are watching an all night horror marathon. There are so many different genre styles on display that there is a little something that will appeal to everyone’s taste. The marketing for this series has always placed an emphasis on the deaths. With that in mind, I felt that this entry doesn’t quite live up to the slogan “26 new ways to die.” Many of the deaths aren’t as creative as you would expect, and even aren’t as memorable as a few of the kills from the first film. That being said, this group of shorts at least exists on the same level of quality. The first film had such high highs and low lows. Looking back, there are only a few that stand out above the rest in the first ABC’s. Some may say the same about the sequel, but I found that almost all – except for a few derivative and predictable ones – were solid horror shorts that make up a more cohesive and entertaining collection.

Clever titles end many of the shorts with a witty punch line. It starts to become a game to try to guess what the letter is going to stand for. With what appears to be a higher budget and better production overall, ABC’s OF DEATH 2 delivers some exciting stories that manage to use their five minute or less run-time quite well. Sadly, only a few end with an imaginative approach to death, but I can at least say that the sequel far exceeds its predecessor in terms of overall quality and even gives audiences some new directors to keep an eye out for in the future.

 

Overall rating: 3.5 out of 5

 

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NSFW, RED BAND Trailer For ABC’S OF DEATH 2 Is Here

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THE ABC’s OF DEATH was an ambitious horror anthology from 2012 consisting of 26 shorts from 26 different directors all of whom accepted the challenge of taking a single letter of the alphabet, picking a word that begins with that letter and then making a short film about death with that word at the core.

We have had anthologies with segments from different directorial hands before (the VHS films are a good example) but with 27 (the letter ‘O’ had two directors) you’d have expected the result to be unwieldy and inconsistent. And it was, yet the crazy concept mostly worked. I only recall a couple of duds, and since these films only lasted 3 or 4 minutes each, taking the bad with the good was painless. It will be interesting to see what they do with the sequel. It appears the format is identical with films from Nigeria to UK to Brazil and everywhere in between. Judging by the red-band trailer below, THE ABC’s OF DEATH 2 looks to be another bloody good time at the movies!

Directors: Aharon Keshales, Navot Papushado, Alejandro Brugues, Bill Plympton, Chris Nash, Dennison Ramalho, Erik Matti, Evan Katz, Hajime Ohata, Jen Soska, Sylvia Soska, Jerome Sable, Jim Hosking, Juan Martinez Moreno, Julian Barratt, Julian Gilbey, Julian Maury, Alexandre Bustillo, Kristina Buozyte, Bruno Samper, Lancelot Imasuen, Larry Fessenden, Marvin Kren, Robert Boocheck, Robert Morgan, Rodney Ascher, Soichi Umezawa, Steven Kostanski, Todd Rohal, Vincenzo Natali.

The film is comprised of twenty-six individual chapters, each helmed by a different director assigned a letter of the alphabet. The directors were then given free rein in choosing a word to create a story involving death. Provocative, shocking, funny and at times confrontational, ABC’s OF DEATH 2 is another global celebration of next generation genre filmmaking.

ABC’S OF DEATH 2 will open on iTunes / On Demand October 2 and in theaters October 31

Official site:  http://www.magnetreleasing.com/theabcsofdeath2/
Official Facebook:  https://www.facebook.com/theabcsofdeath
Official Twitter:  https://twitter.com/ABCsofDeath
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Check Out The Official Poster For ABCs OF DEATH 2

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Just in time for Halloween, here’s your first look at the poster for ABCs OF DEATH 2.

ABC’s OF DEATH 2 is the follow-up to the most ambitious anthology film ever conceived with productions spanning from Nigeria to UK to Brazil and everywhere in between. It features segments directed by over two dozen of the world’s leading talents in contemporary genre film.

The film is comprised of twenty-six individual chapters, each helmed by a different director assigned a letter of the alphabet.

Aharon Keshales, Navot Papushado, Alejandro Brugues, Bill Plympton, Chris Nash, Dennison Ramalho, Erik Matti, Evan Katz, Hajime Ohata, Jen Soska, Sylvia Soska, Jerome Sable, Jim Hosking, Juan Martinez Moreno, Julian Barratt, Julian Gilbey, Julian Maury, Alexandre Bustillo, Kristina Buozyte, Bruno Samper, Lancelot Imasuen, Larry Fessenden, Marvin Kren, Robert Boocheck, Robert Morgan, Rodney Ascher, Soichi Umezawa, Steven Kostanski, Todd Rohal, Vincenzo Natali.

 The directors were then given free rein in choosing a word to create a story involving death. Provocative, shocking, funny and at times confrontational, ABC’s OF DEATH 2 is another global celebration of next generation genre filmmaking.

THE ABC’S OF DEATH 2 will open on iTunes / On Demand October 2, 2014 and in theaters October 31, 2014.

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