Shudder Releases Trailer and Poster For Southern Gothic Horror WHAT JOSIAH SAW – Stars Robert Patrick, Nick Stahl And Kelli Garner

Photo Credit: Shudder

Shudder has released the new trailer for the Shudder Original What Josiah Saw ahead of the film’s debut on the platform next month, on Thursday, August 4. The film is the third feature from American filmmaker Vincent Grashaw (Coldwater, And Then I Go) and world premiered at the 2021 Fantasia Film Festival and went on to win awards at the Brooklyn Horror Film Festival, Fantaspoa International Fantastic Film Festival, Screamfest, and more.

In What Josiah Saw, after two decades, a damaged family reunites at their remote farmhouse, where they confront long-buried secrets and sins of the past. The film, which is written by Robert Alan Dilts, stars Robert Patrick (The Terminator), Nick Stahl (Sin City), Scott Haze (Child of God) and Kelli Garner (Lars And The Real Girl), with Jake Weber and Tony Hale.

“UNAPOLOGETICALLY BRUTAL”RogerEbert.com

“TENSE AND DEVASTATING”Screen Anarchy

“MASTERFUL STORYTELLING, SPECTACULAR PERFORMANCES, AND AN OVERWHELMING ATMOSPHERE OF DREAD MAKE WHAT JOSIAH SAW BRILLIANTLY AGONIZING PSYCHOLOGICAL HORROR… GUARANTEED TO HAUNT YOU FOR DAYS”Dread Central

Streams Exclusively on Shudder Thursday, August 4

Available on Shudder U.S., Shudder CA, Shudder UKI, and Shudder ANZ

Nick Stahl as Eli Graham – What Josiah Saw – Photo Credit: Shudder
Robert Patrick as Josiah Graham – What Josiah Saw – Photo Credit: Shudder
Scott Haze as Thomas Graham, Robert Patrick as Josiah Graham – What Josiah Saw – Photo Credit: Shudder

BROOKLYN HORROR FILM FESTIVAL Announces Its Awards For 2021 – Alfonso Cortés-Cavanillas’ EGO and Rob Jabbaz’s THE SADNESS Breakout with Multiple Wins

The Brooklyn Horror Film Festival ended its 6th edition last Thursday with the sold-out closing night East Coast Premiere of Rob Jabbaz’s THE SADNESS at Nitehawk Cinema and announced today its jury and audience award winners. Launching on October 14th with the NY Premiere of MLUNGU WAM (GOOD MADAM), Brooklyn Horror is proud to have welcomed back an eager and excited audience who packed the cinemas after a one year pandemic related hiatus and hosted a majority of sold-out screenings, with special highlights being the festival’s 35mm projection of SESSION 9, presented for its 20th anniversary with lead actor and co-writer Stephen Gevedon in attendance, and the US Premiere of local filmmaker Edoardo Vitaletti’s debut THE LAST THING MARY SAW, with Rory Culkin and Vitaletti present for the Q&A.

Further highlights of the festival include the world premieres of Adam Randall’s Netflix Original vampire feature NIGHT TEETH and Alfonso Cortés-Cavanillas’ psychological social-media thriller EGO, which went on to win three awards including Best Feature. In addition to Rory Culkin, Stephen Gevedon, and Edoardo Vitaletti, Brooklyn Horror also welcomed composer Robert Pycior for the NY Premiere of WHAT JOSIAH SAW and the return of BHFF alumni filmmaker Perry Blackshear for the US premiere of his latest, WHEN I CONSUME YOU, alongside the film’s stars, Libby Ewing, Evan Dumouchel, and MacLeod Andrews, as well as numerous local short filmmakers and an extended intro from author Kate Robertson ahead of the special 20th-anniversary screening of TROUBLE EVERY DAY. 

In total, Brooklyn Horror 2021 hosted two World Premieres, two US Premieres, one North American premiere, one East Coast Premiere, and five NY Premieres, and screened 14 features and 49 shorts across all eight days of the festival, with over 93.5% of all available tickets sold and over 30 attending talent to celebrate the explosive return of the event.

This year’s BHFF features jury was composed of filmmaker Anthony Scott Burns, Fangoria Managing Editor Ariel Fisher, and Fantasia International Film Festival programmer Justine Peres Smith. The jury awarded the following distinctions: 

Best Feature — EGO, dir. Alfonso Cortés-Cavanillas

Best Director — Rob Jabbaz, THE SADNESS

Best Screenplay — Jorge Navarro de Lemus, EGO

Best Actor — Nick Stahl, WHAT JOSIAH SAW

Best Actress — María Pedraza, EGO

Best Cinematography — Jenna Cato Bass, MLUNGU WAM (GOOD MADAM)

Special Jury Mention — THE SADNESS, dir. Rob Jabbaz

“I would like to thank the jury for this award on behalf of EGO’s team, María Pedraza and myself,” said EGO director Alfonso Cortés-Cavanillas. “The first international feature film debut promoted by La Caña Imagine could not have been better. Now, we expect that its debut will have the same recognition in Spain. We also wish that this feature-length film could present a new creators’ community in our society and we wish it will open new doors and offer new opportunities for filmmakers.”

“Whoa, thanks so much to the judges and to the audience at BHFF,” said Rob Jabbaz on his win for directing THE SADNESS. “I wish I could have been there in person to receive the award. I’m so happy that there are still people out there who enjoy films like THE SADNESS as much as I do. This is truly an honor!”

The BHFF shorts jury was composed of Short of the Week Senior Programmer Chelsea Lupkin, “Knight Light” Podcast Host Prince Jackson, and BHFF alumni filmmaker Yfke van Berckelaer, director of the short film LILI, which took home Best Performance and Best Screenplay in 2019. The jury awarded the following distinctions: 

Best Short — LA OSCURIDAD, dir. Jorge Sistos Moreno

Best Director — Jon Bell, THE MOOGAI

Best Performance — Irene Tsu and Bert Matias, ATROPHY

Best Cinematography — Nick Morris, SUDDEN LIGHT

Best Sound Design — John Moros, WEEE WOOO

Most Bonkers Short — SUSHI NOH, dir. Jayden Rathsam Hua

Special Jury Award — OTHER BODIES, dir. Alyssa Loh

“I’m so thankful to everyone for watching LA OSCURIDAD,” said director Jorge Sistos Moreno on the win. “It means the world to me to receive this award from one of the most frighteningly amazing festivals in the world. I’m so grateful to all those who made the Brooklyn Horror Film Festival possible. It brings joy to this wicked soul of mine and is something I will hold dear over these long, cold winter nights spent in ‘La Oscuridad.’” 

“My first Best Director’s Award, I can’t truly express my gratitude to the Brooklyn Horror Fest,” said THE MOOGAI director Jon Bell. “Genre films can be such tricky beasts, you never really know if something’s going to work or if it will travel. What’s scary to Australians could easily be considered comedic to American audiences. Kristina Ceyton, Taylor Goddard, Samantha Jennings, Mitch Stanley and I tried our best to make it as universal as possible but you never know. Chelsea Lupkin, Prince Jackson and Yfke van Berckelaer, thank you so much. I got a pocketful of dreams…”

This year’s Audience Award winners for feature and shorts are the following: 

AUDIENCE AWARD – FEATURE: THE SADNESS, dir. Rob Jabbaz

AUDIENCE AWARD – SHORTS: 

Nightmare Fuel — THIS IS OUR HOME, dir. A.K. Espada

Head Trip — THE FARAWAY MAN, dir. Megan Gilbert, Jill Hogan

Slayed — THE COST OF LIVING, dir. Alice Trueman

Home Invasion #1 —  STILL TOGETHER, dir. Christopher Piazza

Home Invasion #2 — HAZEL, dir. Jordan Doig

Fear in Focus: Australia — SUSHI NOH, dir. Jayden Rathsam Hua

Brooklyn Horror Film Festival will return for its seventh edition in 2022. Look out for announcements of dates, submissions and badges this winter.

Review: ‘Quid Pro Quo’

Quid Pro Quo is one of those small wonder films from Magnolia pictures. The movie centers around Issac Knott (Nick Stahl) a reporter on National Public radio in New York. Issac, paralyzed and stuck in a wheelchair from a car accident at a young age, still searches the streets of the big city for the strange and unique story. Issac finds it when he stumbles on a group of people who actually are paraplegic wanna-bes. I have heard of fetishes: feet, hands, and the kinky sex stuff… but to think that there is a group of people out there that dream of being bound to a wheel chair is MESSED UP! Issac meets Fiona (Vera Farmiga) during an encounter with this group and decides to interview her and get some perspective on why they want to be like him. She brings him into her world and seduces him into the wanna-be world.

Quid Pro Quo is in the classic Hitchcock style and supplies the audience with plenty of intrigue and suspense and there are even a few twist in the end that will shock you. Quid Pro Quo is one of the art-house pictures that is hard to find at the theater, but it is well worth the search.The film opens this Friday in limited release and follows nationwide. If you can’t find it, Magnolia is very good about getting their films out on DVD quickly. It should be on the shelves in about a month.