Polaris Visit the official festival page to learn more.
Set a film in the snow, and I am there. Set it in a post-apocalyptic winter wasteland with action set-pieces, and I am there with frickin’ bells on.
Kirsten Carthew’s Polaris is Fantasia’s opening night film this year, shot and set in Canada’s Yukon, with an intense young star, Korean-Canadian Viva Lee. Also: Polar Bear.
— Kurt Halfyard
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Lynch/Oz Visit the official festival page to learn more.
For about a dozen years, Alexandre O. Philippe has been making feature length documentaries examining pop-cinema history, from Star Wars toxic fandom, to zombie culture, and the shower sequence in Psycho.
Here he turns his lens on David Lynch, and in particular the surrealist master’s love of the Technicolor classic The Wizard of Oz and how it functions as a thru-line across the auteur’s body of work.
— Kurt Halfyard
Hard Boiled + John Woo in Person Visit the official festival page to learn more.
John Woo is receiving Fantasia’s Life-time Achievement award, and the festival is screening several of his ‘Heroic Bloodshed’ action classics, including the biggest, baddest actioner of them all, Hard Boiled.
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Few can do a shoot-em-up set-piece like John Woo, and seeing these bullet ballets on the big screen with an enthusiastic Fantasia audience is a real treat. Getting to chat about it afterwards with the master himself, who is coming to Montreal to accept his Dark Horse statue in person, is a rare gift.
— Kurt Halfyard
Detective vs. Sleuth Visit the official festival page to learn more.
Jonnie To’s regular collaborator, often functioning as writer, producer, and even co-director, Wai Ka-Fai takes another go-round with the ‘unstable detective’ story he perfected with 2007’s Mad Detective.
This glossy new blockbuster just scored big in China with a hefty box-office return. It also reunites the director with leading man Lau Ching-Wan.
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— Kurt Halfyard
Mercenaries from Hong Kong Visit the official festival page to learn more.
You may or may not know the “CARDINAL RULE” of Fantasia, but I will let you in on the secret: Never skip King Wei Chu’s presentation of a classic Shaw Brothers film screened for the local audience.
This year, it is uber-producer/writer/director Wong Jing’s 1982 low-brow action spectacular Mercenaries from Hong Kong, which breaks out of the usual SB back-lot, and goes full on location shoot in Cambodia.
— Kurt Halfyard
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One and Four Visit the official festival page to learn more.
A snowbound Tibetan neo-western! Say no more! All in.
Jingme Trinley’s debut feature, according to Fantasia’s programmer notes, also has subtle dashes of mysticism and possibly an unreliable narrator stricken with a bit of the old cabin fever.
— Kurt Halfyard
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Moloch Visit the official festival page to learn more.
A folk eco-horror entry from The Netherlands that features endless bogs, occult forces, and other staples of the subgenre. This type of genre film is a rarity from Holland, so I am curious what director Nico van den Brink has up his sleeve.
— Kurt Halfyard
Dark Nature Visit the official festival page to learn more.
The debut feature from Métis director Berkley Brady mixes psycho-therapy, survival horror, and what appears to be a dank, stark Canadian wilderness when an isolated therapy retreat goes off the rails.
— Kurt Halfyard
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We Might As Well Be Dead Visit the official festival page to learn more.
A Romanian/German take on the High-Rise / Shivers subgenre of the ugliness of overly insular communities? Yes, please!
I love these types of films because they focus on the intimate spaces of eccentric and often controlling kooks who have lost all touch with the outside world due to gated social structures. The film is in Fantasia’s always challenging Camera Lucida Programme, which focuses on surreal and edgy forms of storytelling.
— Kurt Halfyard
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Relax, I’m From the Future Visit the official festival page to learn more.
Hot off a celebrated leading performance in Our Flag Means Death, underappreciated Kiwi comedy king Rhys Darby is a time-traveler sent to the past to save the world.
This debut feature from director Luke Higginson looks to be a fun time with a fun cast that also includes genre fave, Julian Richings (Anything for Jackson).
— J Hurtado
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The Roundup Visit the official festival page to learn more.
One of the biggest surprise hits out of Fantasia 2018 was Kang Yoon-Seong’s The Outlaws, the story of a beefy detective, played with authority by Ma Dong-Seok (Don Lee), who thoroughly thrashes his way through a pair of Chinese-Korean gangs battling for turf.
Ma returns in this sequel that is already getting very positive advance word as a worthy successor, and to be honest, I’m really jonesing to watch him slap the crap out of bad guys for two hours. It’s so cathartic.
— J Hurtado
Speak No Evil Visit the official festival page to learn more
An impressive shocker out of this year’s Sundance Film Festival, this Danish cringe horror explores the consequences of politeness gone horribly awry.
Two families meet for a joint vacation, but only one is really into it.
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When the hosts start to show a dark side, their guests find themselves attempting to stay cool when things get exceedingly not cool very quickly. Sometimes you just have to say “no”, or find yourself in a very bad situation.
— J Hurtado
Popran Visit the official festival page to learn more The latest from One Cut of the Dead director Shinichiro Ueda finds a man in an unusual and unpleasant predicament. After being exceptionally rude to everyone around him, he wakes up one day to find himself without a dick.
Where has his dick gone? Well, he’d better find out in the next six days or it’ll be gone for good.
— J Hurtado
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Dr. Lamb Visit the official festival page to learn more. Fantasia is always a wealth of amazing repertory screenings and this year is no different. Among the classics playing during the festival is a new restoration of Billy Hin-Shing Tang & Danny Lee’s Category III sleazefest, Dr. Lamb.
Simon Yam plays the titular doc/serial killer who has been abducting and dismembering young women. The film is sleazy, filthy, offensive, and good, clean fun for fans of Hong Kong’s gruesome horror heyday.
— J Hurtado
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Dobaaraa Visit the official festival page to learn more. Indian iconoclast Anurag Kashyap (Gangs of Wasseypur, Ugly) makes his Fantasia debut with his latest sci-fi feature, a remake of Spanish film Mirage. Taapsee Pannu plays a woman who wakes up one day living a life that isn’t her own, including a missing child that no one seems to believe she ever had.
Her only clues come from a mystery VHS tape in the house that seems to be speaking to her from the past. Can she team of up with boy on her screen to save her sanity?
Hitting the three-quarter-century mark usually means a retirement home, a nursing facility, or if you’re lucky to be blessed with relatively good health and savings to match, living in a gated community in Arizona or Florida.
For Sylvester Stallone, however, it means something else entirely: starring in the first superhero-centered film of his decades-long career in the much-delayed Samaritan. Unfortunately for Stallone and the audience on the other side of the screen, the derivative, turgid, forgettable results won’t get mentioned in a career retrospective, let alone among the ever-expanding list of must-see entries in a genre already well past its peak.
For Stallone, however, it’s better late than never when it involves the superhero genre. Maybe in getting a taste of the MCU (Marvel Cinematic Universe) with his walk-on role in the Guardians of the Galaxy sequel several years ago, Stallone thought anything Marvel can do, I can do even better (or just as good in the nebulous definition of the word).
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The property Stallone and his team found for him, Samaritan, a little-known graphic novel released by a small, almost negligible, publisher, certainly takes advantage of Stallone’s brute-force physicality and his often underrated talent for near-monosyllabic brooding (e.g., the Rambo series), but too often gives him to little do or say as the lone super-powered survivor, the so-called “Samaritan” of the title, of a lifelong rivalry with his brother, “Nemesis.” Two brothers entered a fire-ravaged building and while both were presumed dead, one brother did survive (Stallone’s Joe Smith, a garbageman by day, an appliance repairman by night).
In the Granite City of screenwriter Bragi F. Schut (Escape Room, Season of the Witch), the United States, and presumably the rest of the world, teeters on economic and political collapse, with a recession spiraling into a depression, steady gigs difficult, if not impossible, to obtain, and the city’s neighborhoods rocked by crime and violence. No one’s safe, not even 13-year-old Sam (Javon Walker), Joe’s neighbor.
When he’s not dodging bullies connected to a gang, he’s falling under the undue influence of Cyrus (Pilou Asbæk), a low-rent gang leader with an outsized ego and the conviction that he and only he can take on Nemesis’s mantle and along with that mantle, a hammer “forged in hate,” to orchestrate a Bane-like plan to plunge the city into chaos and become a wealthy power-broker in the process.
Schut’s woefully underwritten script takes a clumsy, haphazard approach to world-building, relying on a two-minute animated sequence to open Samaritan while a naive, worshipful Sam narrates Samaritan and Nemesis’s supposedly tragic, Cain and Abel-inspired backstory. Schut and director Julius Avery (Overlord) clumsily attempt to contrast Sam’s childish belief in messiah-like, superheroic saviors stepping in to save humanity from itself and its own worst excesses, but following that path leads to authoritarianism and fascism (ideas better, more thoroughly explored in Watchmen and TheBoys).
While Sam continues to think otherwise, Stallone’s superhero, 25 years past his last, fatal encounter with his presumably deceased brother, obviously believes superheroes are the problem and not the solution (a somewhat reasonable position), but as Samaritan tracks Joe and Sam’s friendship, Sam giving Joe the son he never had, Joe giving Sam the father he lost to street violence well before the film’s opening scene, it gets closer and closer to embracing, if not outright endorsing Sam’s power fantasies, right through a literally and figuratively explosive ending. Might, as always, wins regardless of how righteous or justified the underlying action.
It’s what superhero audiences want, apparently, and what Samaritan uncritically delivers via a woefully under-rendered finale involving not just unconvincing CGI fire effects, but a videogame cut-scene quality Stallone in a late-film flashback sequence that’s meant to be subversively revelatory, but will instead lead to unintentional laughter for anyone who’s managed to sit the entirety of Samaritan’s one-hour and 40-minute running time.
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Samaritan is now streaming worldwide on Prime Video.
According to a new report, Wandavision’s Matt Shakman is in talks to direct the upcoming MCU project, Fantastic Four. Marvel Studios has been very hush-hush regarding Fantastic Four to the point where no official announcements have been made other than the film’s release date. No casting news or literally anything other than rumors has been released regarding the project. We know that Fantastic Four is slated for release on November 8th, 2024, and will be a part of Marvel’s Phase 6. There are also rumors that the cast of the new Fantastic Four will be announced at the D23 Expo on September 9th.
Fantastic Four is still over two years from release, and we assume we will hear more news about the project in the coming months. However, the idea of the Fantastic Four has already been introduced into the MCU. John Krasinski played Reed Richards aka Mr. Fantastic in Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness. The cameo was a huge deal for fans who have been waiting a long time for the Fantastic Four to enter the MCU. When Disney acquired Twenty Century Fox in 2019 we assumed that the Fox Marvel characters would eventually make their way into the MCU. It’s been 3 years and we already have had an X-Men and Fantastic Four cameo – even if they were from another universe.
Deadline is reporting that Wandavision’s Matt Shakman is in talks to direct Fantastic Four. Shakman served as the director for Wandavision and has had an extensive career. He directed two episodes of Game of Thrones and an episode of The Boys, and he had a long stint on It’s Always Sunny in Philadelphia. There is nothing official yet, but Deadline’s sources say that Shakman is currently in talks for the job and things are headed in the right direction.
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To be honest, I was a bit more excited when Jon Watts was set to direct. I’m sure Shakman is a good director, but Watts proved he could handle a tentpole superhero film with Spider-Man: Homecoming. Wandavision was good, but Watts’ style would have been perfect for Fantastic Four. The film is probably one of the most anticipated films in Marvel’s upcoming slate films and they need to find the best person they can to direct. Is that Matt Shakman? It could be, but whoever takes the job must realize that Marvel has a lot riding on this movie. The other Fantastic Four films were awful and fans deserve better. Hopefully, Marvel knocks it out of the park as they usually do. You can see for yourself when Fantastic Four hits theaters on November 8th, 2024.
Film Synopsis: One of Marvel’s most iconic families makes it to the big screen: the Fantastic Four.
Dan Aykroyd and Chevy Chase have entered Zombie Town, a mystery teen romancer based on author R.L. Stine’s book of the same name.
The indie, now shooting in Ontario, also stars Henry Czerny and co-teen leads Marlon Kazadi and Madi Monroe. The ensemble cast includes Scott Thompson and Bruce McCulloch of the Canadian comedy show Kids in the Hall.
Canadian animator Peter Lepeniotis will direct Zombie Town. Stine’s kid’s book sees a quiet town upended when 12-year-old Mike and his friend, Karen, see a horror movie called Zombie Town and unexpectedly see the title characters leap off the screen and chase them through the theater.
Zombie Town will premiere in U.S. theaters before streaming on Hulu and then ABC Australia in 2023.
“We are delighted to bring the pages of R.L. Stine’s Zombie Town to the screen and equally thrilled to be working with such an exceptional cast and crew on this production. A three-time Nickelodeon Kids Choice Award winner with book sales of over $500 million, R.L. Stine has a phenomenal track record of crafting stories that engage and entertain audiences,” John Gillespie, Trimuse Entertainment founder and executive producer, said in a statement.
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Executive producers are Trimuse Entertainment, Toonz Media Group, Lookout Entertainment, Viva Pictures and Sons of Anarchy actor Kim Coates.
Paco Alvarez and Mark Holdom of Trimuse negotiated the deal to acquire the rights to Stine’s Zombie Town book.