A Night of Horror Film Festival & Fantastic Planet Film Festival

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Like the hideous result of a terrible teleportation accident, two genre film festivals are melded together every year, offering a full weekend of horrific fantasy and fantastic horror.

A Night of Horror Film Festival and Fantastic Planet Film Festival are the brainchildren of Dean Bertram, a freelance writer, filmmaker and History PhD. He launched the horror festival 11 years ago in order to showcase a short film he had made, and his unholy creation soon proved to have a life of its own. Somewhere along the way his sci-fi and fantasy themed festival joined up with A Night of Horror, and they both occur over the same long weekend.

This year there are four short film sessions: Australian horror, Australian sci-fi and fantasy, international horror and international sci-fi and fantasy. There are also several schlocky feature films screening. Here are Time Out’s nine feature film highlights.

Best for: Ghosts!

Borley Rectory (UK)

Julian Sands narrates a spine-tingling film chronicling the real-life story of “the most haunted house in England”. Reece Shearsmith (The League of Gentlemen, Inside Number 9) features in a combination of live action and hauntingly animated photographs from the period.

Best for: Action!

Sixty Minutes to Midnight (Canada)

On New Years Eve Eve, 1999, a construction worker finds himself fighting for his life on a deadly game show.

Best for: Body horror!

Replace (Canada)

A beautiful young woman suffers a disease that ages her skin but realises she can replace her own skin with that of others.

Best for: Gore!

Cannibals and Carpet Fitters (UK)

Carpet layers on a job at an old English country discover they are victims in a trap set up by a savage cannibalistic family and must fight for their lives.

Best for: Ozploitation!

Musclecar (Australia)

Bambi (Jacinta Stapleton) buys a lipstick-red, 1968 Dodge Phoenix. When she can’t afford to run it she cooks up a harebrained scheme to bring the car to life using ancient voodoo incantations, the blood of drunkards, and an ox heart.

Best for: Eroticism!

Ayla (USA)

Haunted by the mysterious death of his four-year old sister, Elton (Nicholas Wilder) brings her back to life 30 years later as an adult woman.

Best for: World movie weirdness!

Bad Black (Uganda)

This laugh-filled, self-deprecating action epic was made with no budget in Wakaliwood – Uganda’s answer to Hollywood. It tells the tale of a mild-mannered western doctor (Alan Hofmanis), who is trained in the art of ass-kicking commando vengeance.

Best for: Paranoia!

Bodies

After serious money troubles, a married couple agrees to take part in a bizarre medical experiment. As the days go by, and the experiment’s challenges become increasingly sinister.

Best for: Freaking out!

Our Evil

Mashing up supernatural with hard-edged horror, Our Evil tracks the deeds a man with spiritualist powers commits to protect his daughter’s soul from a demonic entity, including employing a serial killer from the dark web.…Read more by

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