Categories
Comedy Horror

He Took His Skin Off For Me (2014)

He Took His Skin Off For Me (2014) – Different Love story Drama

Ben Aston’s He Took His Skin Off for Me is one of the most literal short films I have yet to see, as it concerns the relationship between two people, where, the male (Sebastian Armesto) loved his partner (Anna Maguire) so much he decided to take every part of his skin completely off his body, leaving him nothing but a bright red display of muscles and ventricles. The eleven-minute short film chronicles the relationship these two have created with one another, with the female of the relationship talking about the struggles that have come about with her lover carrying out such a drastic act. While love-making and intimacy hasn’t suffered, cleaning the house has become more of a common practice, as her partner leaves bloodstains all over the floors, carpets, sheets, and clothes, and his job has suffered a sharp decline due to his inability to close deals because of the distraction of his physical appearance. Nonetheless, the two share a strong bond and are largely unfazed by the opinions and glares of outsiders.

Before anything else is said, special effects artists Colin Arthur and Jen Cardno must be commended for their unfathomable anatomical makeup, perfected and executed using no computer animation and all practical effects. Aston states Armesto sometimes spent up to eight hours in a makeup chair, but for good reason, as he is so breathtakingly realistic and impeccably perfected that one almost wonders what the special effects crew did with his skin. With that, the film conducts itself in a very straight-forward, minimalist manner, which could be the most disappointing element of all because the film walks with its concept rather than letting it run on its own. We watch things that play out to what we expect and nothing really more. That isn’t necessarily such a hefty criticism, however, seeing as the entire cast is, for one, thoroughly capable at acting in a low-key fashion, and secondly, the makeup and special effects work is so fascinating to view. Aston’s methodical storytelling, reliant predominately on dreamlike pacing and narration, makes for a strangely calming, almost reassuring aesthetic to an already deranged piece of work that is effectively defies categorization in every regard. He Took His Skin Off for Me shows just how far someone in a relationship will go to express their feelings and affection to the one they love, even if the action doesn’t make much sense or liable to be met with perplexing stares and such from others. – Steve Pulaski

Directed by Ben Aston. Starring: Sebastian Armesto, Anna Maguire

Categories
Comedy Horror

Self Assembly (2014)

Self Assembly (2014) – creepy, tender and comic short film!

This film opens with a tragedy – not a big thing to reveal here, because it is the start of the film. The reason to mention it though is because the opening really does give you a sense of the film’s tone. What we have is oddly dainty and slightly comedic music playing, while stark (but not cold) black and white images show a boy playing with his ball by the street. We sort of know what is coming but I was not prepared for how clearly and yet matter-of-factly, we would see what happened – it is a quite shocking piece of special effects.

This tone continues as the film keeps the music and in fragments tells us the story of a couple building a self-assembly cabinet which turns out to be assembling some sort of life within it. The ominous but yet slightly perky presentation works well, because at one time it is oddly comic but yet also threatening and so obviously horrific. Through the film it is possible to see the impact of this creature as that of a disrespectful child and then teenager, but the design of the creature and the tone of the film never let us forget that this is a horror of a sort. The building “wrongness” of it all never goes away and I found this sense of terrible tension to be great value, particularly in moments where it resulted in something happening.

The design of the creature is interesting, but for me it is the colder and familiar-but-creepy design of the faces, the cabinet and other aspects that make it constantly creepy. The cast work well opposite the special effect; Kinsella is good as the father who is pent up somewhat, while Kirwan brings across her character’s sense of loss and need for motherhood really well; they make the characters and the environment seem real – which means the horror is all the more creepy as a result. The camera doesn’t seem to move around much, which gives the film a stillness that benefits the content, it does feel like the camera is holding its breath at times, just as the viewer may in some tense moments. Likewise the black and white adds to this and generally the whole film has a great visual aesthetic which is creepy in a cold, ordinary-but-not way. Sullivan and Shanley manage to produce comic and tender moments throughout, again just making the horrific and creepy that much more effective.

It is a hard short film to define, but it is very good at what it does. It is accessible, recognizable, creepy, tender, comic, and horrific; and the way that the film is perfectly judged to deliver all of this across the running time is really very impressive. – bob the moo

Directed by Ray Sullivan. Starring: Darryl Kinsella, Amy Kirwan, Ruben Kenny, Bobby McGlynn

Categories
Drama Science fiction

The 3rd Letter (2010)

The 3rd Letter (2010) – dystopian bio-mechanical vision!

The 3rd Letter is a distinctive dystopian vision where humans utterly depend on bio-mechanical alteration to withstand the deteriorated climate. Set against a polluted megalopolis world, the tragic tale of Jeffrey Brief unfolds. Faced with imminent loss of his crucial health insurance, Brief unwittingly unravels the dark truth behind population control that pushes him to unspeakable lengths. Grzegorz Jonkajtys is an award winning Polish writer and director and it is best known for the short movie Ark for which he has been nominated to Golden Palm at Cannes film festival in 2007 and won Siggraph Electronic Theater “Best of Show” award in the same year. Over the years, the contributed as vfx artist and animation lead for films like Sin City, Hellboy, Blade III, Pan’s Labyrinth, Mist and Terminator Salvation.

Presented by Marauder Film
Directed by Grzegorz Jonkajtys
Written by Grzegorz Jonkajtys & Bastiaan Koch
Produced by Bastiaan Koch

Categories
Drama

Room 8 (2013)

Room 8 (2013) – Fantasy Short Film Of A Prisoner’s Magical Box

A prisoner discovers a magical box with a baneful secret that he falls foul to.

Room 8 is a 2013 short film written and directed by James W. Griffiths. On February 2014, this film has won the 67th British Academy Film Awards (BAFTA) as the best short film. The Bombay Sapphire Imagination Series seeks to spark the imagination. The company asked Oscar winning writer Geoffrey Fletcher, to write a short script stripped of any stage direction. The five most imaginative film entries were picked, produced and premiered at Tribeca Film Festival 2013.

Directed by James W. Griffiths
Produced by Sophie Venner
Written by James W. Griffiths based on an original idea and script by Geoffrey S. Fletcher
Starring Tom Cullen, Michael Gould, Franc Zalewski
Edited by Michael Aaglund

Categories
Drama

I Lost My Dream (2015)

I Lost My Dream (2015) – Short Film Based Upon True Events

I Lost My Dream is a short film chronicling the true story of Moacir Zeledon. Moacir’s journey is an uplifting anecdote in the greater narrative that is humankind’s pursuit of happiness. The film premieres online the public on November 16th, 2015.

From a life of poverty and abuse in Nicaragua, Moacir fled to pursue the American dream. Along the way inflexible immigration laws and abandonment leave him alone in the Mexican city of Tapachula. It is here where he first meets Pam and Alan Skuse at children’s refuge Misión México, and the radical transformation of his life begins.

STEFAN HUNT IS A FILM MAKER.

He directs, shoots, edits, sometimes even jumps in front of the camera. But none of this really defines why he does it, and the why is important to Stefan. You see, he believes that creativity and social impact should not be separate to one another. He also believes that having fun in a professional work environment should be compulsory. He believes everyone has a story, and he has the passion to share them.

It all began in 2006 when he packed his camera, headed to the USA, bought an ice cream truck and drove to all fifty states to make a documentary. No lie. Since then he has directed commercials, TV series and award winning documentaries across the globe with one simple goal. To inspire change through creativity.

Categories
Comedy Drama

Speed Dating (2015)

Speed Dating (2015) – Desperate Girl in need of a man of her dreams

Desperate to find the man of her dreams, sweet and plain Ava tries a last ditch effort, speed dating. But the absurd cast of characters she encounters makes her wonder if being single is not so bad after all.

Meghann Artes is an award-winning filmmaker and animator who has worked with Sesame Street, Dreamworks, Nickelodeon, Bix Pix, Nick Jr., NBC and ABC. Her short films have enjoyed success in festivals across the country and, in 2009, her work for Sesame Street was awarded both an Emmy and a Peabody.

Drawing from her small town childhood and her urban career, Meghann’s independent works artfully utilize handmade elements and modern techniques. Meghann’s whimsical subject matter as well as her use of color and texture draw in audiences of all ages.

Meghann holds an MFA from the Animation Workshop at UCLA and is currently an independent filmmaker and an assistant professor at DePaul University in Chicago.

Facebook Page: facebook.com/speeddatingmovie

Writer/ Director: Meghann Artes (meghannartes.com)
Director of Photography: Scott Thiele (thieleworks.com)
Music: Robert Steel (robsteelmusic.com)
Sound Designer: Suzanne Goldish (goldish.net)

Categories
Comedy Drama

Party Animal (2015)

Hangover from Nightmare

Party Animal (2015) is a smart and powerful film about a man who wakes up in a horrible hangover after a wild night and finds out that his life has completely changed. Well directed and edited film about a lifestyle of a party freak with great ending.

Adam Bowers was born in 1985 in Tampa, Florida, USA. He is a director and editor, known for New Low (2010), Paperback (2015) and New Personal Worst (2008).

Categories
Science fiction

2084 (2016)

2084 (2016) – Big Brother is Watching You in Dystopian Future!

This amazing film by Taz Goldstein is based upon a dystopian novel 1984 by English author George Orwell. The novel is set in Airstrip One (formerly known as Great Britain), a province of the superstate Oceania in a world of perpetual war, omnipresent government surveillance and public manipulation, dictated by a political system euphemistically named English Socialism (or Ingsoc in the government’s invented language, Newspeak) under the control of a privileged elite of the Inner Party, that persecutes individualism and independent thinking as “thoughtcrime.” The tyranny is epitomised by Big Brother, the Party leader who enjoys an intense cult of personality but who may not even exist. The Party “seeks power entirely for its own sake. It is not interested in the good of others; it is interested solely in power. It was awarded a place on both lists of Modern Library 100 Best Novels, reaching number 13 on the editor’s list, and 6 on the readers’ list.

2084 is an experimental sci-fi/comedy was filmed in director Taz Goldstein’s living room. Its plot is placed in the distant future where society is slowly being crushed into conformity by an all-powerful computer. One individual is surprisingly ignorant to the malevolent machine’s relentless conditioning.

Taz Goldstein is an award-winning director and producer, and co-founder of Chaos Theory Entertainment. He directed for Universal Pictures, Walt Disney Pictures, Fox Television Studios, and Sony Pictures, as well as numerous corporate and commercial clients including Adobe, Microsoft, Nissan, Fuji, and The Cheesecake Factory. His work has been featured on the big screen, the small screen, and the really small screen. He is also writing for Hand Held Hollywood, a mobile filmmaking blog launched in 2009. official page

Categories
Action Drama

Six Shooter (2004)

Six Shooter (2004) – Harsh Irish comedy about a sad train journey

Six Shooter (2004) – black and bloody Irish comedy about a sad train journey where an older man, whose wife has died that morning, encounters a strange and possibly psychotic young oddball….

The film earned several awards, including the Academy Award for Best Live Action Short Film. McDonagh is a brilliant story teller and fully deserves his Tony nominations and his Olivier Award for Best Play (The Pillowman). McDonagh (formerly a playwright, here making his film debut) is a master craftsman, able to play several levels at the same time. “Six Shooter” is shocking, heartbreaking and very funny, often simultaneously. The story, in a nutshell, revolves around four people, each suffering a very recent death in their families. As they each deal with the loss in very different ways, they collide with each other, sometimes with words, sometimes with more. It’s also fantastic to see the raw talent of Ruaidhri Conroy back on screen and with none other than Brendan Gleeson, the master! The cast is uniformly excellent, especially Brendan Gleeson as the sad-eyed protagonist. McDonagh’s pitch-perfect writing – while not approaching the near-apocalyptic absurdity of plays like “The Lieutenant of Inishmore”.

Directed by Martin McDonagh. Starring: Brendan Gleeson, Rúaidhrí Conroy, David Wilmot, Aisling O’Sullivan

Support on Official page

Categories
Horror Thriller

Torture Ship (1939)

Stream Torture Ship (1939)

Torture Ship – A mad scientist performs experiments on “the criminal mind” on captured criminals on board his private ship. Since he faces indictment for illegally testing the relationship of endocrine to criminality in hopes of eventually curing criminals medically, he offers seven known murderers a boat ride to another country. This way they can all escape the American judicial system. All he asks in return is that they allow him to surgically experiment on them during the trip. They face execution if they stay. At least this way, he explains, they stand a fifty-fifty chance.
This film was directed by Victor Halperin who previously made White Zombie, Supernatural and Revolt of the Zombies. Overall the film isn’t too bad but there’s really not too much action or horror in the film’s short 50-minute running time. The Alpha Video release seems to be fairly complete with the entire story intact (except for some splicy sections in what was probably a 16mm television print: The story does make sense in this version which has the entire explanation of why the criminals are on the ship in the first place and what the doctor’s motivations are.

Cast and Crew:

Director: Victor Halperin Writer: Jack London (story “A Thousand Deaths”) Stars: Lyle Talbot, Irving Pichel, Julie Bishop
Categories
Fan films

Batman: Dead End (2003)

Batman: Dead End (2003) – Batman vs Joker vs Aliens vs Predator!

The Joker has escaped the Arkham Asylum and Gotham’s hero Batman will try to bring him in – once and for all. As it turns out, Joker is not the only evil enemy Batman has to conquer. Bruce Wayne puts on his Batman suit, mask, and cape, and goes in pursuit. He’s soon found the Joker and begins a fight to subdue the red-eyed, sneering villain. Then, suddenly, things take a surprising turn: the Joker becomes the least of Batman’s worries. New enemies appear: it’s as if he’s found himself in another set of comic books. Can he hold his own?

Batman Dead End has not only set fandom ablaze with it’s ultra stylistic, noirish, accurate depiction of the Dark Knight, it has set a new standard for genre filmmaking and set the bar sky high for all the Hollywood, big budget, superhero and sci-fi films to follow. – torontogosh

Director: Sandy Collora
Starring: Clark Bartram, Andrew Koenig, Kurt Carley

Categories
Adventure Animation

Against Time (2012)

Against Time (2012) – Short Film about love in a post-apocalypse world

Contre temps (Against time) is set in a post-apocalyptic city that was long ago covered by rising tides. While exploring the city at low tide, however, a scavenger discovers another soul within the city. A man searches for clocks in a submerged world where the water recedes once per year. He meets a girl who changes his outlook on time.

This animated short was directed by Jérémi Boutelet, Thibaud Clergue, Tristan Ménard, Camille Perrin, Gaël Megherbi, and Lucas Veber as their graduation film, and it was an official selection at the Annecy International Animated Film Festival and at Siggraph 2013.

It uses the painterly quality of its CG animation to a particularly grand effect, creating a beautiful city reclaimed by sea life and a pair of characters who prove winning in the end.

Categories
Adventure Comedy

Castello Cavalcanti (2013)

Plot:

The story takes place in Italy, 1955, during a Formula One race when the Italo-American pilot played by Schwartzman crashes his vehicle at a small village and gets stuck there. The accident, a total wreckage of the car and cause of same moodiness to the pilot turns out to be something unexpectedly good when he gets involved with the local people, their routine, awakening an almost forgotten memory. He belongs there, and losing the race is no longer so important.

Wes Anderson Castello Cavalcanti – Hommage To Classic Italian Movies

Anderson references some classic Italian films in the short, including several by Federico Fellini, such as La Dolce Vita (1960) and Amarcord (1973). Castello Cavalcanti is essential viewing for fans of Wes Anderson’s work. With beautiful set pieces including a famous prop from Fellini’s “La Dolce Vita” (both were filmed at the same studio in Rome) and a number of distinctive background characters, Anderson immediately establishes a truly memorable period atmosphere that evokes positive memories from both his own work and classic Italian films. Furthermore, Jed Cavalcanti, a Formula 1 driver played by Jason Schwarzman, is a funny, unique protagonist who fits comfortably alongside Max Fischer and Steve Zissou. Brisk and enjoyable, the film is a wonderful surprise that bears no resemblance to an advertisement and does not overstay its welcome. Anderson has stated that, with the further participation of Prada, he hopes to follow Cavalanti in more adventures filmed at other great studios around the world. Let’s hope he follows through on that promising idea and that Cavalcanti becomes the star of many more Anderson shorts.

The 8-minute film was filmed at Cinecittà in Rome, Italy and financed by Prada. It first debuted at the Rome Film Festival and was released online on November 13, 2013. It quickly became viral and received critical acclaim.

Directed by Wes Anderson
Starring: Jason Schwartzman, Giada Colagrande, Renato Agostini

Categories
TV series

Flash Gordon (1936)

A Cult Series With a Magnificent Transposition of Cartoon by Alex Raymond to the Big Screen!

When a mysterious planet is menacing to collide on Earth, the athlete Flash Gordon (Buster Crabbe) flies by plane to meet his father in New York and stay with him during the collision. While traveling, Flash meets the blonde passenger Dale Arden (Jean Rogers) and they become friends.

In the Twentieth-First Century, the special effects of this film are very cheesy and dated, like in an Ed Wood movie: visible wires holding rockets and flying objects, quite ridiculous “maquettes” of the cities, the fire dragon, the fly and movements of the rockets with fire in the propellers, even the behavior of the character of Dale Arden, screaming, fainting, being paralyzed in the dangerous situations are very funny in the present days.

The Flash Gordon serials of the 1930s used several big guys (most of whom really were not actors) to bring to life the characters of a serialized cartoon. This is the first series, and, some of the experts believe it is the best. I am not an expert on Flash Gordon or serials, but I know what I like, and this serial was more entertaining and enjoyable than other classics like Radar Men on the Moon and The Phantom Creeps.

Directed by: Frederick Stephani, Ray Taylor
Starring: Buster Crabbe, Jean Rogers, Charles Middleton

Categories
Comedy Drama

My Best Friend’s Birthday (1987)

First movie by Quentin Tarantino! Like a blueprint for everything he would do after this…

It is big day for Mickey – his Birthday and his girlfriend just left him. His friend Clarence shows him a birthday Mickey will never forget. We will never see this movie in full. The final reel of this movie was destroyed in a lab fire that broke out during editing and the only surviving parts were edited together to make this 34 minutes short movie. Still you never get the feeling that you’re ever really missing any sequences while watching this movie.

I find it funny that people are saying this is “trash”. This was done on a budget of what, less than nothing. Reservoir Dogs was done on like nothing. I’d like to see you write, direct and star in your own film as good as this. You do realise this wasn’t just the first film he made, it was the first film he wrote. This is the screenplay for True Romance for any of you that didn’t know. So i’d like to see you write, direct and star in a film this good and then have it go on to be a major motion picture, and oh yeah go on to be one of the biggest people in Hollywood today.

it’s not bad for a first film, especially when you add in the fact that Tarantino taught him self without any College plus back then there was no internet

Directed by Quentin Tarantino
Starring Craig Hamann, Quentin Tarantino, Crystal Shaw Martell, Allen Garfield.

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