More Films Added To Fantastic Fest 2010 Lineup
Fantastic Fest welcomes a bayou-dwelling psycho-killer, a disturbed housemaid, Muay Thai bone-crushers, blood-sucking vampires, undocumented immigrants, cannibal families, and more to its genre-bending lineup of mind blowing films for 2010.
The lineup includes a Gala Screening for Stone on Friday, September 24 at The Paramount Theatre with Edward Norton, director John Curran and more in attendance.
The lineup looks freaking awesome Stake Land, Kidnapped and Undocumented are definitely on my list of films, that I can't wait to see!
Anyway you can check out the list of films added below... enjoy :D
GALA SCREENING
Stone (2010)
US Premiere, USA, director: John Curran
Director John Curran and Edward Norton live in attendance.
A seasoned corrections official and a volatile inmate find their lives
dangerously intertwined in STONE, a thought-provoking drama directed by
John Curran and written by Angus MacLachlan. STONE features powerful
performances by Academy Award® winner Robert De Niro and Oscar® nominee
Edward Norton, and a startlingly raw, breakout performance from Milla
Jovovich as the sexy, casually amoral woman they both desire.
As parole officer Jack Mabry (De Niro) counts the days toward a quiet retirement, he is asked to review the case of Gerald “Stone” Creeson (Norton), in prison for covering up the murder of his grandparents with a fire. Now eligible for early release, Stone needs to convince Jack he has reformed, but his attempts to influence the older man’s decision have profound and unexpected consequences for them both. STONE skillfully weaves together the parallel journeys of two men grappling with dark impulses, as the line between lawman and lawbreaker becomes precariously thin. Golden Globe® winner Frances Conroy completes the superb ensemble as Madylyn, Jack’s devout, long-suffering spouse. Set against the quiet desperation of economically ravaged suburban Detroit and the stifling brutality of a maximum security prison, this tale of passion, betrayal and corruption examines the fractured lives of two volatile men breaking from their troubled pasts to face uncertain futures.
FEATURED SCREENINGS
30 Days of Night: Dark Days (2010)
World Premiere, USA, director: Ben Ketai
Director Ben Ketai, Kiele Sanchez & Steve Niles (co-writer, author) in attendance (schedules permitting).
It’s been almost a year since the Alaskan town of Barrow’s
population was decimated by vampires during its annual month-long
sunset. Riddled with grief over the death of her husband, bound by
nightmares and void of all emotions beyond hate and sorrow, Stella
(Sanchez) has spent the past months traveling the world, trying to
convince others that vampires exist. Met with skepticism and laughter,
Stella is ready to throw in the towel when a group of lost souls (Coiro,
Baird and Perrineau) offers an incredible opportunity: the chance to
exact revenge upon Lilith (Kirshner), the vampire queen responsible for
the assault on Stella’s sleepy Alaskan town. With nothing remaining to
live for, and nothing left to fear, Stella joins their mission and
ventures into the uncharted underbelly of Los Angeles where she pushes
herself to the most extreme limits to stop the evil from striking again.
Carancho (2010)
Regional Premiere, Argentina, director: Pablo Trapero
Ambulance drivers and ambulance chasers, dirty police and corrupt
doctors, fraudulent insurance brokers and some truly desperate people
are the players in a wildly original and occasionally brutal thriller
set on the streets of Buenos Aires.
Drones (2010)
Regional Premiere, USA, directors: Amber Bensen and Adam Busch, Directors Amber Bensen and Adam Busch as well as stars Angela Bettis and Kevin Ford will be in attendance.
When Brian discovers an improbable secret about his best friend and
OmniLink coworker, everything in his world changes and his safe life of
workplace detachment is no longer an option. Close encounters of the
office kind, like sales or intergalactic war, is an uncertain business.
Fire of Conscience (2010)
US Premiere, Hong Kong, director: Dante Lam
A slick cops-and-robbers film that coats melodrama with a thick layer of
blood and gunpowder. Dante Lam has emerged as one of the most exciting
Hong Kong action directors with films like THE BEAST STALKER (2008) and
SNIPER (2009). His latest work delivers the goods with chases,
fisticuffs, massive fire fights; exploding bodies and more.
Hatchet 2 (2009)
North American Premiere, USA, director: Adam Green
Director Adam Green, Kane Hodder and Danielle Harris live in person!
Witness the resurrection of bayou-dwelling psycho-killer Victor Crowley
(Kane Hodder), who terrorized a party of witless New Orleans tourists
in Adam Green’s 2006 cult hit HATCHET. After emerging as the sole
survivor of Crowley’s comically over-the-top murder spree, Marybeth
(Danielle Harris) learns the secrets of the madman’s origins and returns
to the Louisiana swamps to avenge her family’s death. Also featuring
genre fan fave Tony Todd as Reverend Zombie and FRIGHT NIGHT director
Tom Holland as Bob.
The Housemaid (1960)
South Korea, director: Kim Ki-young
Celebrated as one of the greatest Korean films of all time, THE
HOUSEMAID tells the story of a composer who invites chaos into his home
when he begins an affair with the family’s mysterious new maid, a
disturbed woman with a penchant for catching rats with her bare hands.
The print featured at this year’s Fantastic Fest has been restored by
the Korean Film Archive with the support of Martin Scorsese’s World
Cinema Foundation, a nonprofit organization dedicated to the
preservation of films from non-Western countries.
The Housemaid (2010)
Regional Premiere, Korea, director: Im Sang-soo
A reimagining of the Korean classic of the same name, the 2010 version
of THE HOUSEMAID turns the tables on the story. This time around a
perfectly normal servant enters the home of a truly dysfunctional
wealthy family who beat her down with an array of psychological, sexual
and sometimes physical trauma. With strong performances, lush design
and an exceptional story, this update serves as a worthy companion to
the original classic and makes for a truly unique double bill.
I Spit on Your Grave (2010)
Austin Premiere, USA, director: Steven R. Monroe
A remake of the controversial 1978 cult classic of the same title,
Steven Monroe’s I SPIT ON YOUR GRAVE is a shock-fest that revisits the
story of a young writer’s horrifying sexual assault at the hands of a
backwoods gas-station attendant and his knuckle-dragging cronies while
on sabbatical in the countryside. After being brutally attacked and left
for dead, she returns for vengeance. Trapping her male attackers
one-by-one, she inflicts acts of physical torment upon them with a
ferocity that surpasses her own ordeal. When the carnage clears, victim
has become victor.
Kidnapped (2010)
North American Premiere, Spain, director: Miguel Ángel Vivas
Jaime (Fernando Cayo) and Marta (Ana Wagener) are a middle-aged couple
with a teenage daughter named Isa (Manuela Vellés). The family is in the
process of moving into a big new house. Marta wants to gather the
family for dinner at home to celebrate. Isa has her own plans; she wants
to go out with her boyfriend. Jaime is stuck in the middle of it all.
Everyone’s evening is ruined when a gang of masked hoodlums pay a visit
to the home.
Legend of the Fist (2010)
US Premiere, Hong Kong, director: Andrew Lau
Life in Japanese-occupied Shanghai in the 1920s was no picnic. Military
warlords and criminal henchmen ruled the streets. The city’s one ray of
hope was the young martial artist Chen Zhen (Donnie Yen), whose
legendary showdown against a dojo full of Japanese warriors ended with
his apparent death, though his body is never found. Seven years later, a
wealthy entrepreneur called Koo returns from abroad and makes a grand
entrance on the Shanghai social scene by befriending the city’s most
notorious mafia boss. Could this be the return of Chen Zhen?
Ong Bak 3 (2010)
North American Premiere, Thailand, director: Tony Jaa
The legend of ONG BAK 3 begins after Tien (Tony Jaa) has lost his
fighting skills and his beloved step-father from the raid led by Jom
Rachan (Saranyu Wonggrajang). Tien is brought back to life with the help
from the Kana Khone villagers. Deep into the meditation taught by Phra
Bua (Nirutti Sirijanya), Tien finally is able to achieve ‘Nathayut’. His
talents are put to the test again when his rivals including the
Golden-Armored King’s Guard (Supakorn ‘Tok’ Kijusuwan), the mysterious
killers in black, and Bhuti Sangkha (Dan Chupong) return for the final
massive showdown.
Redline (2010)
North American Premiere, Japan, director: Takeshi Koike
Rev your engines, adrenaline junkies! REDLINE is a new feature from
famed Madhouse Studios that reunites animator Takeshi Koike (NINJA
SCROLL, ANIMATRIX) with his long-time collaborator Katushito Ishii, the
genius behind FUNKY FOREST: THE FIRST CONTACT. This meeting of warped
minds results in a mind-melting psychedelic assault that is easily the
wildest animated Japanese film to surface in years.
Stake Land (2010)
US Premiere, USA, director: Jim Mickle
Director Jim Mickle, Connor Paolo, Nick Damici and Danielle Harris live in person!
Following a political-economic meltdown of unexplained origins, the
world has been overrun by humanoid creatures who feed off human blood.
A disparate group of survivors band together to weave their way through
the communities of both vampires and equally dangerous religious
cultists in search of an alleged sanctuary in the north. The cast
includes Nick Damici, Connor Paolo, Kelly McGillis, Danielle Harris and
Michael Cerveris.
Undocumented (2010)
World Premiere, USA, director: Chris Peckover
Director Chris Peckover and cast members live in person!
A small group of documentary filmmakers chronicle the trials and
inequities faced by Mexican illegal immigrants. When they join a group
of families illegally crossing the border to record the experience
firsthand, their truck is pulled over and detained. What happens next
plunges their group into unimaginable horror.
We Are What We Are (Somos Lo Que Hay) (2010)
US Premiere, Mexico, director: Jorge Michel Grau
When the patriarch of the family passes away, the teenage children must
take responsibility for the family chores: the preparation of the
rituals, the hunting and putting the all-important meat on the table.
These newfound responsibilities are even more daunting, however, when
you live in the city and happen to be a family of cannibals.
So how does that lineup sound to you guys?




