Discover Movies

2,654 Matches Found

Flytrap

A man stranded by a heavy storm seeks refuge in a woman's home. But he soon discovers more than what he bargained for. A short horror thriller produced by Lunacraft Productions, starring Ben Hamilton and Ally O'Brien. Flytrap was officially selected and screened at the 48ISFF Awards Ceremony at the Directors Guild Of America in Hollywood, 2019. Now known as the 48 Independent Short Film Festival, an international short film festival and online competition where filmmakers worldwide were given 48 hours to write, film, edit, produce and upload a short 4 - 7 minute movie, and had to incorporate three elements to prove that it was really made in 48 hours: a character, a prop, and a line of dialog - ours were, Sonny Hickman (character), garlic (prop) and the line "It will never fly."

Flytrap

NR 2019
Makoto Kitano's We Are Psychic Detectives: Get to the bottom of the mystery!

Advisor Kazuya Nishiura investigates a strange video with many orbs! Tanishi Matsubara examines the ghost stories of ghost storyteller Toshiyuki Tanaka! Yuji Okayama examines a haunted photograph owned by ghost storyteller Issei Kunizawa! Psychic detective investigates ghosts from various places The latest work in the Kitano Makoto's We Are Psychic Detectives' series that rushes to the spot and thoroughly investigates it!

Makoto Kitano's We Are Psychic Detectives: Get to the bottom of the mystery!

NR 2019
Silver Stars on Red Velvet

After being cheated on by his ex-girlfriend, Alex decided to get his revenge in the best possible way he could think of: pretend he's dating an adult film star. During an evening out on the town, Alex and his lady friend, Madelyne, witness a hit and run. After reporting it to the police, strange things begin to occur around them. It soon becomes clear that the culprit has now set their sights upon them. Alex and Madelyne, with the help of Detective Castillo, must set out to catch this criminal before they become the next victims.

Silver Stars on Red Velvet

5.0 2019
Runtime

Conor Bateman has sliced clips from (mainly American) horror films in which a cinema audience is slain schlockily in a theatre – an overlooked, self-reflexive trope across the genre. In each sequence, the screen is masked out to reveal the prior sequence: each audience is successively watching the killings that we, the actual audience, have just seen. The onscreen audience never leaves the theatre – there’s nowhere else in this world beyond the cinema, and the scenes of entrapment and containment play out in similarly-framed spaces of chaos (what if what we watched onscreen leaked out?). Without a scrap of ideology-addled earnestness, the tone moves from playful to inevitable. Like a game, it all loops together in an oddly fun, self-sustaining spiral of dramatic irony.

Runtime

8.0 2019