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Arrow Video FrightFest unveil the Discovery Screen and First Blood programme

All the films haunting the Discovery Screens this August.

This summer’s Arrow Video FrightFest will take place at Cineworld Leicester Square from Thursday 26th – Monday 30th August. Following on from the Main Screen announcements two weeks ago, FrightFest have today announced their second batch of titles for their August event. These new additions will form the programme for both the Discovery Screen content as well as the First Blood selection. First Blood is a strand that showcases the best and brightest of genre films being created by burgeoning talents; previous highlights include A Serial Killer’s Guide to Life and Death of a Vlogger. The Discovery screen offers some interesting and diverse alternative content to that on the Main Screen and this year’s crop has some very delectable looking delights. With thirty-four new films on offer there’s something for every genre flavour going, see the full announcement from the FrightFest team below:

It’s Full Scream ahead as Arrow Video FrightFest 2021 announces its second wave of hugely anticipated Discovery Screen and First Blood titles – a summer collection of provocative, edgy and transgressive entertainment to die for. There are fourteen World and ten European / International premieres amongst the thirty-four films on offer.

Eleven countries are represented, with titles ranging from Canadian entries Bloodthirsty, Amelia Moses’ simmering LGBQT+ werewolf movie and sinister isolation thriller Motherly to Francesco Erba’s As in Heaven, So On Earth, a stunning Italian blend of live action and Gothic puppet animation. Then there’s Péter Bergendy’s sumptuous Post Mortem, an epic Hungarian ghost story, Frida Kempff’s Swedish entry Knocking, a breakout Sundance sensation, and Belgium’s latest wildly inventive genre hit is the hallucinogenic Hotel Poseidon, a directorial feature debut from Stef Lernus. And from the UK, the cut-throat world of social media influencers is given the terror treatment in the World premiere of Marcus Harben’s Followers

Familiar FrightFest luminaries grace this year’s event. Graham Skipper teams up with A Nightmare on Elm Street franchise icon Lisa Wilcox to star in the world premiere of Mel House’s metaphysical horror Mystery Spot, and after beguiling FrightFest with Driven, director/writers/stars Glenn Payne and Casey Dillard present the World premiere of their new slasher, Killer Concept. Also welcomed back is Marcel Walz, who continues the terror travails of serial killer thriller Blind with the UK premiere of Pretty Boy

Michael Mongillo, who wowed FrightFest in 2017 with Diane brings us the World Premiere of intense body snatcher The Changed. This will be an additional main screen presentation, with the leading cast in attendance. The one-take time travel suspense comedy, Beyond the Infinite Two Minutes, will now be shown as part of the Discovery stand.

The festival continues to unearth genre gems from South America and this year there are three shining examples from Argentina: Gonzalo Calzada, writer/director of the FrightFest 2018 selection Luceferina, returns with the UK premiere of his astonishing tour de force Nocturna: Side A – The Great Old Man’s Night, and there are European premieres for José María Cicala’s Shadow of the Cat, starring Danny Trejo as you’ve never seen him before and Alejandro Cohen Arazi’s cult hit The Unburied. Plus, from Mexico, comes Forgiveness, a surreal, violent and revenge-laden horror thriller by new Mexploitation maestro Alex Kahuam.

Bloodthirsty

The US continues to lead the way with innovating indie genre filmmaking and this year’s Stateside shockers are testament to that. Isolation is an incredibly rich anthology of nine chilling tales shot in lockdown, whilst Bad Candy has been hailed as the best Halloween portmanteau since Trick ‘r’ Treat. Then there’s Antidote, which goes deep inside a horror hospital, Stephen King Simmons’ stunning black-and-white feature debut The Parker Sessions, which goes beyond our wildest existential nightmares, Greywood’s Plot, a creature feature send-up for our times and the intense drama Touch – the winner of the NYC Independent Film Best Movie and Director awards.

The fearsome fun continues with Red Snow, a bloodsucking spook-a-blast that puts a stake through the heart of comedy horror, the unique Laguna Ave, where metal fetishism goes the full John Waters route, Beau Ballinger’s She Watched from the Woods, a chilling walk between supernatural curses and mental health, the disturbing familial psychodrama Captive  and the out of this world Night Drive.

FrightFest has always championed genre documentaries and this year’s picks are at their engaging best. Woodland Dark and Days Bewitched: A History of Folk Horror has been attracting much fantasy festival attention and it’s a 3-HOUR PLUS enchantment. Absolutely astonishing also is The Found Footage Phenomenon, which tells you everything you need to know about the roots and growth of the shaky-cam genre and POV Cinema. Finally, Paul Hunt and Julie Kauffman’s obsessive The Brilliant Terror, is a totally absorbing delve into the Grassroots Horror movement.

The Arrow Video FrightFest First Blood strand has become a film industry watchword for those in the know wanting to discover the next great genre talent pool from the UK and Ireland. The five titles chosen for 2021, all World premieres, once more show the range of innovation and exciting breadth of the professionalism waiting to burst through into the mainstream. Seb Cox’s Are We Monsters is a unique werewolf coming-of-age saga, Ian Steele’s Boy #5 is an innovative take on the vampire myth, Leroy Kincaide’s The Last Rite is an authentic paranormal rollercoaster ride and Conor Buro’s When the Screaming Starts is a spirited horror mockumentary. Finally, from Ireland, is Richard Waters’ Bring out the Fear, which explores a doomed relationship on its final day. Richard is a longtime FrightFest community member and a graduate of the festival’s innovative ‘New Blood’ strand.

Arrow Video FrightFest, the UK’s biggest horror and fantasy film festival, takes place at the Cineworld Leicester Square from Thurs August 26 – Monday 30 August, 2021.

Festival co-director Paul McEvoy said today: “At Arrow FrightFest this year we are thrilled to be presenting so many incredible new works from the International genre landscape. We’re showcasing a myriad of World Premiere screenings from many new and exciting talents, along with familiar names. The thrills are diverse and sensational, proving that the genre is truly alive, kicking and flourishing in these troubled times. We cannot wait to share the excitement with everyone”. 

Tickets for weekend passes go on sale this Saturday, 24th July 2021, with single tickets available from Thursday 29th July 2021. For more information, including pricings, please head to the FrightFest website.

Kat Hughes is a UK born film critic and interviewer who has a passion for horror films. An editor for THN, Kat is also a Rotten Tomatoes Approved Critic. She has bylines with Ghouls Magazine, Arrow Video, Film Stories, Certified Forgotten and FILMHOUNDS and has had essays published in home entertainment releases by Vinegar Syndrome and Second Sight. When not writing about horror, Kat hosts micro podcast Movies with Mummy along with her five-year-old daughter.

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