Icelandic auteur Hlynur Pálmason’s layered but fragmentary family portrait approaches a kind of mundane surrealism, with lyricism and strange humor.
Mia Wasikowska, Blake Harrison, and Taika Waititi star in director Jeffrey Walker’s film.
Eva Rose and Ardalan Esmaili star in the dramatic series.
Latvian filmmakers Lauris and Raitis Ābele reflect on the making of their dark, folkloric animated feature, and discuss the creative and production choices behind the project.
James Price talks about how the film’s meticulously constructed world, anchored in physical reality, narrative logic, and creative risk, became a decisive element of its unsettling power.
A young woman, Macy, fights for survival after being abducted by a deranged, monster-like figure who wants to raise Macy as their child. A daring blend of New French Extremity and 1970s American horror.
Ugo Bienvenu directs an Academy Award-nominated animated film, featuring the voices of Natalie Portman, America Ferrara, Mark Ruffalo, Will Ferrell, Flea, and Andy Samberg.
We track the director’s entire career, starting in horror and quickly embracing all other genres.
Ah, toilet humor. It exists both as a description of a type of humor, and currently it has served as a setting and location for a growing crop of movies within the horror genre (Scared Shitless, Holy Shit!, and Flush). With Canadian, German, and French filmmakers having made their mark on the specific sub-sub-genre, a couple of Brazilian filmmakers have come along and said, “Segure nossas cervejas.” This brings us to the Brazilian horror-comedy Bowels of Hell, written and directed by Gustavo Vinagre and Gurcius Gewdner. Blending gore, dark humor, and transgressive horror, BOWELS OF HELL draws from underground genre traditions while delivering sharp social commentary. Beneath its outrageous premise, BOWELS OF HELL positions killer toilets as a grotesque metaphor for domestic betrayal,…
Ric Roman Waugh directed the action thriller, also starring Bill Nighy, Naomi Ackie, and Daniel Mays.


