
Well, wow. That's pretty disappointing.
I speak of the 2007 Sundance Film Festival "Park City at Midnight" selections. In previous year the PCM program introduced me to the wonderful horrors of
The Descent,
Hard Candy,
High Tension,
May,
Saw and
Three Extremes.... But next year's line-up seems alarmingly short on the scary stuff. Obviously I cannot make any judgments about the program before I see the films, but going only on the genres and the plot synopses, it seems that next January's Midnight picks are much more comedic in nature. Well, comedies and general weird stuff is what it looks like. Here's the breakdown:
Fido --
Andrew Currie's "
Romero meets Sirk" farce earned a small amount of positive buzz at Toronto, which is where James and I sat together and had
a really good time with the flick. (
Kim liked it too!) Lionsgate is currently preparing a release date for the film, but now we know why they were taking their time on that front.
Finishing the Game -- A mockumentary about the guy called in to "replace" the legendary
Bruce Lee on
Game of Death after the star passed away. From
Better Luck Tomorrow (and, ugh,
Annapolis) director
Justin Lin.
It Is Fine. Everything Is Fine! -- Director
Crispin Glover returns with a follow-up to his certifiably insane
What Is It?The Signal -- "
A mysterious signal is being transmitted from all media devices in the city of Terminus, provoking murder and madness within the psyches of its inhabitants." Sounds promising. And check out
the trailer!
Sk8 Life -- Apparently it's a Can8ian indie about a bunch of sk8ers who band together to save their beloved hangout from dem0lition.
Smiley Face --
Anna Faris stars as a girl who eats some crazy pot brownies and has a day full of wacky
Araki misadventures. And check out
the cast!
The Ten -- Some of the old
State members got together to do a comedy anthology based on The Ten Commandments. Again,
the cast is absolutely jam-packed with colorful folks.
We Are the Strange -- Apaprently someone called it "
Monsters Inc. meets
The Nightmare Before Christmas inside of a retro Japanese video game." Hmm, OK.
The trailer certainly promises something ... yeah, strange.
So there's one I've seen already, two promising comedies, an animated brain-twister, an indie that uses 8s instead of As, another piece of brain-rust from Crispin Glover ... and a Gregg Araki ensemble comedy? Which leaves
The Signal as my one small beacon of late-night horror. Ah well, a cool-looking line-up all the same, even if it's not as blood-drenched as I'd hoped it would be. (Plus there's always a few genre titles mixed in amidst the more "highbrow" programs.)