Showing posts with label NIFF. Show all posts
Showing posts with label NIFF. Show all posts

Tuesday, April 12

Jim Ridley Honored at this Year's Nashville Film Festival



Sam Adams at INDIEWIRE.com posted the news yesterday that the Nashville Film Festival will hold an empty seat in every theater "from now on." Sounds like they mean not only this year but every year going forward, from that statement, which is a remarkable tribute to an equally remarkable man.


Jim's passing continues to stun and sadden me. Jim was always such a great friend and ally to all of us here, a true champion for all of Dr. Gangrene's creative ventures. He was so excited back when I first started my TV show, I remember him telling me how great it was that Nashville had a horror host again. He made mention of my events time and again in those early days of cable access zaniness.



 
I remember a couple years back I ran into him in Nashville one day shortly after I'd started my Fantastic Films of Vincent Price series. He was so excited to hear about it and told me one of his favorite Price films was HIS KIND OF WOMAN, starring Robert Mitchum, Jane Russell, and of course Vincent Price. It is a great film; zany, unusual, quirky and energetic - much like Jim himself. Makes total sense he'd love that one!


As editor, Jim was naturally the one who gave the go-ahead for a Dr. Gangrene cover on the Nashville Scene. I remember he had me come in for a photo shoot to accompany the article (written by Randy Fox), but instructed friends at the Scene (like Randy) to keep the fact I was going to be on the cover quiet, so it would be a surprise for me. And quite the pleasant surprise it was!! Time and time again he would write reviews or mentions of events we were hosting over the years, from live shows to movies, events and more -  and he'd even work humorous mentions of Dr. Gangrene into other folks' events, such as the following from Jan 22nd 2016, during a blurb for a Creeping Cruds show:

The Independents w/The Creeping Cruds & The Lonesome Town Drifters 

When: Fri., Jan. 22, 9 p.m. 2016
Price: $12
To non-fans, “horror ska” is redundant, but South Carolina’s The Independents are still skankin’ to wake the dead after almost a quarter-century of shock rock. Managed for a few years by the late Joey Ramone, an ardent admirer, founders Evil Presly and Willy B. have moved farther from the band’s early ska elements toward a punk sound that’s not as garage-y as, say, The Cramps, but still laden with references to black angels, corpses in the rain, and even the much-missed Rudy Ray Moore. Joining them are Nashville’s own psychotronic rockers The Creeping Cruds. If you plan your evenings around the chance of spotting horror host Dr. Gangrene, here’s a pretty safe bet. JIM RIDLEY
Too funny! That one I stumbled across totally out of the blue. But that's how Jim worked, making kind gestures like that without a second thought or expecting anything in return. He got a kick out of it, and I would have thanked him next time I saw him - to which he would naturally have shrugged it off as if it were nothing.


At last year's 12 HOURS OF TERROR festival Jim handed out stacks of paperbacks to the crowd for free.  He gave me one called THE SCREAM by John Skipp and Craig Spectre, which is a heavy metal horror (a favorive sub-sub genre of mine) novel. Jim raved about how much he loved Skipp and Spectre's writing. The book is fantastic, I need to do a proper review of it.


I'll leave you today with this shot of Jim from last year's 12 HOURS OF TERROR fest, where he  introduced THE EVIL SPAWN. Thank you again for your friendship and everything you did for us over the years, Jim. You rock, my friend.

Wednesday, April 15

ANOTHER



I got a chance to screen the 2014 horror film ANOTHER recently, which makes its Southeast premiere tomorrow night (4-16-15) at the Nashville International Film Festival.

Part coming-of-age story, part demonic possession, think Carrie and The Omen smashed together with a dash of Argento for flavoring. Dark, dreamy, atmospheric and scary in all the right ways, Another is definitely one worth catching on the big screen. Nancy Wolfe is especially good as Aunt Ruth, the creepy guardian of Jordyn (Paulie Redding), who is slowly pulled into a satanic nightmare, where dreams and reality collide as Jordyn discovers the dark secret of her past.


Director:Jason Bognacki
Cast:Paulie Rojas
Nancy Wolfe
David Landry
Maria Olsen
Lillian Pennypacker
Producer:Aline Bognacki
Screenwriter:Jason Bognacki
Cinematographer:Jason Bognacki
Music:Fulton Dingley


Nashville Film Festival Horror Offerings 2015

The Nashville Film Festival
kicks off tomorrow, and this year there are some terrific horror entries! Here is a quick guide for those attending, with a horror pick a day to keep you fright fans happy! Each feature screens with one or more accompanying horror short films, too. This should be a lot of fun!

Enjoy, and see you there!!


**************************************************************************



Another - THURSDAY APRIL 16 - 9:30pm
Director: Jason Bognacki. USA. | A beautiful young woman is driven into a dark underworld of demonic possession, desire, and extreme indulgences when she learns she may be the devil’s kin. Southeast US Premiere.



Ladies of the House - FRIDAY APRIL 17 - 10pm
Director: John Stuart Wildman. USA. | A birthday outing with two brothers and a friend turns into a horrific fight for survival after they become trapped in a house with a “family” of malevolent women.






Cub - SATURDAY APRIL 18 - 10pm
Director: Jonas Govaerts. Belgium. | A troupe of young Cub Scouts find themselves stalked by a psychopathic huntsman who has riddled the forest with ingenious and deadly traps. 




Sufferland - SUNDAY APRIL 19 - 9:30pm
Director: Linear Downfall. USA. | A walk through the many compartmentalized landscapes in the mind of a tormented girl who is under the control of a tormented man. World Premiere.



They Look Like People - MONDAY APRIL 20 - 9:30pm
Director: Perry Blackshear. USA. | Suspecting that those around him are actually malevolent shape-shifters, a troubled man questions whether to protect his only friend from an impending war, or from himself. Southeast US Premiere.




Felt - TUESDAY APRIL 21 - 10pm
Director: Jason Banker. USA. | A woman creates an alter ego in hopes of overcoming the trauma inflicted by men in her life.




Horsehead - WEDNESDAY APRIL 22 - 10pm
Director: Romain Basset. France. | A young woman plagued by nightmares studies lucid dreaming techniques to find the source of her horrifying visions.




Alléluia - THURSDAY APRIL 23 - 9:30pm
Director: Frabrice Du Welz. Belgium. | French fear jockey Fabrice Du Welz (Calvaire, Vinyan) returns with this tale of star-crossed romance and straight-up carnage, based on the true story of 1960s “Lonely Hearts Killers” Martha Beck and Ray Fernandez. 

 

Monday, April 22

Shame on you Nashville Film Fest



I've always been a big fan of the festival, from its humble Sinking Creek beginnings to its current “international” status. I try to support the Nashville Film Festival each year when it rolls around, and although I rarely get to see as many movies as I’d like, I nevertheless try and attend at least one or two screenings. The first thing I always do is search through the listings and see what horror offerings are on tap. The NFF website made it even easier this year by allowing you to sort by category. I looked under HORROR and the search turned up seven listings: Six features and a collection of shorts called GRAVEYARD SHORTS. I opted for the latter, as it was screening Saturday the 20th and I had that evening free. I figured it might be fun to see a collection of horror shorts and was looking forward to some creative, scary, and well-made short films. Here is the description of the short film block:


Graveyard Shorts - From the deeply disturbing, to the raucously silly; from spine-tingling chills to the mind-bendingly weird - this collection of shorts is one you won't soon forget.

Sounded intriguing. Well, for the most part it was a pretty interesting batch, some better than others. But about three quarters of the way through, a short “film” screened that turned my stomach. It made me angry, honestly, because it wasn’t a horror film and it had no business being in the festival to begin with. It was called Coco D. Nut and was a 3min music video of a squirrel puppet singing a moronic song about looking for a nut. It was made by Big Kenny. Now I had no idea who Big Kenny was before this, (because I don’t listen to country music), but have since found out he’s one half of the country music duo BIG AND RICH (the other half is the guy who built that god-awful eyesore on top of Love Circle). 


 Here’s the thing. This was a well-produced video, technically speaking. But the music was, to put it bluntly, shit. It was embarrassing, complete with a “rapping” segment. My son looked at me and asked what the heck this was. It was obvious that this video was only in the festival because of who made it. The Nashville Film Festival has aspirations of greatness, wants to be on par with Sundance and Cannes – but as long as they pull this crap, kissing up to local “celebrities” and screening garbage like this, they’ll always be considered a second-rate festival. It is an embarrassment to Nashville that this was included in their film festival.


Most frustrating of all is the fact this took the spot of some deserving filmmaker. I’d love to see some of the shorts that were rejected in favor of Coco D. Nut. I am sure there were some real gems excluded in favor of this ridiculous pandering.

By the way, Big Kenny was in the audience, as was pointed out by NFF employees before the show – but he got up and left after his short screened. Guess he was too “big” to stick around and chat with people after the show.