Editorials
[Fantastic Fest] 10 Upcoming Horror Films to Keep On Your Radar
As September ends, so too does another Fantastic Fest, the largest genre film festival in the United States. We here at Bloody Disgusting know how fortunate we are to be able to attend these film festivals, often seeing horror films months before they are released (hell, some of them never even get released). We also know how difficult it can be to keep track of the plethora of films we review over the course of festival season (see: Sweetheart, which Meredith Borders reviewed at Sundance back in January and is just now getting released later this month).
Because of that, we’ve put together a handy-dandy list of the best horror films to come out of Fantastic Fest this year.
In no particular order here are 10 horror films that screened at Fantastic Fest 2019 that you should keep on your radar in the coming months:
1. The Golden Glove
Elevator Pitch: Director Fatih Akin’s latest film chronicles real-life serial killer Fritz Honka, who terrorized Hamburg, Germany in the 1970s.
Where/When Can You See It: The Golden Glove is currently available on VOD platforms and playing in a limited theatrical release.
From Meagan Navarro’s review:
“It feels inaccurate to say that you’ll “enjoy” The Golden Glove. This subject matter is of the heaviest variety, and its central character not one you’re supposed to like. But it is a story with immense artistic merit and a new angle of this subgenre with something important to say. It’s bleak, dour, and often tough to watch. And oh so compelling. If you can stomach the more extreme offerings of cinema, one that happens to be based on a nasty figure in German history, then I urge you to seek this one out.”

2. Jallikattu
Elevator Pitch: A water buffalo escapes captivity and terrorizes an Indian village, causing chaos among its inhabitants.
Where/When Can You See It: Jallikattu is currently seeking U.S. distribution.
From Rafael Motamayor’s review:
“Pellissery may not have set out to do a genre film, as there are still moments where the director explores the daily drama of the villagers’ life. But with hundreds of extras as his disposal, a symphonic and meticulous score, and cinematography that rivals that of Fury Road in making you ask how the hell no one died during production, Jallikattu results in an apocalyptic cinematic ride through hell that reveals the worst of mankind, and the best that cinema has to offer.”

3. The Pool
Elevator Pitch: A man and his pregnant girlfriend are trapped in an empty pool with a crocodile.
Where/When Can You See It: The Pool is currently seeking U.S. distribution.
From my review:
“Every once in a while, a movie comes along that is so stupid and so aware of that stupidity that you can’t help but be won over by its charms. It knows exactly what kind of movie it’s trying to be and doesn’t have any pretenses about being “high art.” It knows what viewers are expecting and playfully toys with those expectations, stringing them along on a roller coaster of fun. Ping Lumpraploeng‘s The Pool, which won the special mention award for “Most Fun Movie to See with an Audience” at Fantastic Fest last week, is that movie.”

4. The Platform
Elevator Pitch: A vertical prison houses two prisoners on each of its 200+ levels. Each day, a platform full of food begins at the top level and slowly descends, feeding the upper levels but forcing the lower levels to resort to cannibalism to survive.
Famous Faces: Iván Massagué and Antonia San Juan
Where/When Can You See It: The Platform was acquired by Netflix during TIFF but no release date has been set.
From Rafael’s review:
“The Platform takes full advantage of its isolated setting and small cast to instead focus on a high concept, a tight script, and sharp dialogue that will make you laugh as often as it will make you think. This is a funny, heartfelt, at times disgusting, yet also thought-provoking sci-fi thriller that reminds of Bong Joon-ho’s Snowpiercer, but with way better food.”

5. Random Acts of Violence
Elevator Pitch: A comic book writer and his friends are stalked by the real-life serial killer that his comics are based on.
Famous Faces: Jay Baruchel, Jordana Brewster and Jesse Williams
Where/When Can You See It: Random Acts of Violence is currently seeking a distributor.
From my review:
“Random Acts of Violence will not work for everyone. Reconciling the on-screen violence with the screenplay’s possible condemnation of appropriating a tragedy for the sake of entertainment will be a difficult challenge for some viewers. The film will no doubt elicit strong reactions from viewers, and that’s what [director Jay] Baruchel wants. It’s honestly quite shocking that he had this film in him. Random Acts of Violence is not a great movie, but there’s enough on display here to make you want to see what the director has cooking in his twisted little brain next.”

6. Saint Maud
Elevator Pitch: A deeply religious nurse becomes obsessed with the salvation of her dying patient, but might have become possessed in the process.
Famous Faces: Jennifer Ehle, Morfydd Clark
Where/When Can You See It: StudioCanal and A24 acquired U.S. and U.K. distribution rights to the film. No release date has been set.
From Joe Lipsett’s review:
“By eschewing easy answers or placating audiences who demand closure, Saint Maud is a far more fascinating piece of art: is it a portrait of a young woman slowly losing her grip on reality in service of her devotion to her faith or it is a religious parable about an emissary battling demons to save a life? Or is it both? The film lives in the place in between that question and the result is a confident, measured first feature. Saint Maud is slow, and moody, and gorgeous, and powerful. It’s simply good cinema.”


7. Scream, Queen! My Nightmare on Elm Street
Elevator Pitch: A documentary that looks at the homoerotic subtext text in Nightmare on Elm Street 2 and the effects it had on the film’s star Mark Patton.
Famous Faces: Mark Patton, Robert Englund, Kim Myers and Robert Rusler.
Where/When Can You See It: Scream, Queen! My Nightmare on Elm Street is currently seeking distribution.
From my review:
“Scream, Queen! My Nightmare on Elm Street [is] a documentary that aims to set the record straight (for lack of a better term) on Mark Patton’s story. The end result is a touching, poignant film that’s less about the A Nightmare on Elm Street franchise and more about how one man took control of his narrative and used it to empower not only himself, but millions of queer horror fans around the world.”
8. Sea Fever
Elevator Pitch: A fishing trawler stumbles upon a giant tentacled beast, which slowly begins to infect the crew members with a vicious parasite.
Famous Faces: Connie Nielsen and Dougray Scott
Where/When Can You See It: Sea Fever is currently seeking U.S. distribution.
From Joe’s review:
“Sea Fever is a subversive, intelligent, adult aquatic horror film that prioritizes characters first and foremost. Writer/director Hardiman has crafted a smart film that is aware of the conventions of the subgenre and leans into those tropes as often as she eschews them. The film looks great, it has unexpected developments and there is plenty of mystery in the mythology, which has elements of both environmental allegory and government conspiracy. While Sea Fever may not be the madcap monster aquatic horror film that some audiences anticipate going in, the result is far more introspective and thought-provoking. This is one that will stick with you.”

9. Sweetheart
Elevator Pitch: A girl washes up on a deserted island and is stalked by a mysterious creature.
Famous Faces: Kiersey Clemons
Where/When Can You See It: Universal Pictures will release Sweetheart on VOD and digital platforms on October 22, 2019.
From Meredith Border’s review:
“It’s thrilling to watch a film that relies almost entirely on Clemons’ dazzling presence, and she has no trouble carrying the weight of her scenes alone, often with no dialogue. She gives such a wonderful, profoundly human performance, and watching Jenn figure out basic life necessities on this small, beautiful island would make for a compelling watch even without the monster.”

10. We Summon the Darkness
Elevator Pitch: Three girls attend a heavy metal concert in an area that has been plagued by Satanic murders.
Famous Faces: Alexandra Daddario, Amy Forsyth, Maddie Hasson, Logan Miller and Johnny Knoxville
Where/When Can You See It: Saban Films will release We Summon the Darkness on VOD platforms and limited theaters on December 13, 2019.
From Meagan’s review:
“It doesn’t reinvent the wheel or present anything we haven’t seen before, but it’s so damn fun that it’s hardly a flaw. It’s a throwback horror comedy that offers up just enough surprises and a pair of scene-stealing performances by Hasson and Daddario will make you throw up a pair of devil horns and hail Satan.”


Editorials
The Mark of the Beast: The Lasting Impact of ‘The Omen’ at 50
Of the three films that make up the Diabolical Trinity of classic religious horror films—Rosemary’s Baby (1968), The Exorcist (1973), and The Omen (1976)—The Omen is the most purely entertaining.
While Rosemary’s Baby digs into the societal shifts of the 60s and The Exorcist explores spiritual tensions between faith and doubt in an ever-shifting world, The Omen seems most interested in just telling a thrilling story. It achieves this by blending two major trends of the 1970s, the devil movie and the paranoid thriller, into one crackling adventure yarn. In the process, The Omen has sparked fear and curiosity about what could happen in the “end times” if such events are to occur.
After seeing The Exorcist, producer Harvey Bernhard contacted writer David Seltzer and said something along the lines of, “Hey, write me one of those.” Seltzer, having never read the Bible, thought it would be an interesting challenge, so, according to various interviews, he read the Bible and several commentaries in search of a story. Then he stumbled upon a passage in the book of Revelation, the image of a great Beast rising out of the sea, that sparked his imagination. In the commentaries, he found that the sea represented politics in some interpretations of the text, and he began building his story on that foundation.
Seltzer has told this story often, and I am inclined to believe him. However, from there, much of the theological-sounding lore of The Omen was created purely by Seltzer. Many of the ideas surrounding The Antichrist in the film appear to be drawn much more from the pop-eschatology sensation of the 1970s, The Late Great Planet Earth by Hal Lindsay, than any Biblical source.
Lindsay’s book was the bestselling nonfiction book of the 1970s and re-popularized views of the “last days” that had been dying along with fundamentalism for decades, namely Dispensationalism, Millennialism, and the Pre-Tribulation Rapture. In dispensationalism, history is broken into several epochs of time (or dispensations) that culminate in the return of Christ and his thousand-year (millennial) reign.
Before this return, a seven-year Tribulation will occur in which the Antichrist comes to power and persecutes all who oppose him, culminating in a battle between the forces of good and evil at the valley of Megiddo, usually called Armageddon. Of course, in this worldview, the true believers in Jesus will be lifted out, or raptured, before all this takes place. Since the publication and popularity of The Late Great Planet Earth, this has been the prominent belief in Evangelical and Fundamentalist Christian circles, though Roman Catholic, Orthodox, and mainline Protestant denominations largely reject it.
Lindsay also did something unique that had not been the case even in dispensationalist circles before him—he posited that the creation of the modern state of Israel in 1948 started the countdown to Armageddon. Fans of the film will immediately realize where Seltzer ran with this idea in the first line of the poem created for the movie: “When the Jews return to Zion…”
Damien Thorn and the Creation of Horror’s “Innocent Villain”

Seltzer’s next inspiration focused on the idea of the Antichrist as a child, what he would call the film’s “innocent villain.” In watching The Omen, it is readily apparent that Damien Thorn (Harvey Stephens) does not really do anything evil beyond a bit of normal kid mischief. Even the moment in which Damien knocks Kathy Thorn (Lee Remick) over a second-floor railing can be read as an accident orchestrated by Damien’s diabolically connected nanny, Mrs. Baylock (Billie Whitelaw). The film takes this idea of the innocent villain a step further by casting Gregory Peck, best known for playing arguably the greatest father in film history, Atticus Finch in To Kill a Mockingbird (1962), as Damien’s earthly father, an element that greatly satisfied Seltzer.
The New Testament itself says very little about the Antichrist and certainly nothing about his childhood. In fact, the word antichrist is used twice (1 John 2:18 and 2 John 7 for the curious) and refers to groups of people, not a particular person. There is also a passage in 2 Thessalonians 2:1-12 in which the writer (usually attributed to Paul) discusses “The Man of Lawlessness” who will “exalt himself over everything that is called God” and “proclaim himself to be God.”
Then there is the Beast of Revelation chapter 13 with “seven heads and ten horns” that Seltzer latched onto, which has been interpreted in a multitude of ways over the centuries. Powerful people throughout history, from Charlemagne, various Popes during the Protestant Reformation era, Napoleon and Hitler, to modern politicians, including Ronald Reagan, Bill Clinton, Vladimir Putin, Barack Obama, and Donald Trump, have all had the label placed on them by various circles. Even religious leaders like Billy Graham have not escaped being called the Antichrist.
Lindsay and modern dispensationalists are certain the Antichrist will be a 21st-century individual as they are equally certain that the Rapture, Tribulation, and return of Christ are imminent, likely within their lifetime. Many scholars and theologians, however, interpret these passages as symbolic representations of the Roman Empire and the first-century Caesars who persecuted, tortured, and murdered Christians and Jews who refused to submit to Imperial rule and worship them as gods. For example, that the Beast from the sea in Revelation has seven heads is symbolic of the famous seven mountains of Rome, with the 10 horns referring to rulers and magistrates of the Empire.
But this is all really of no matter to Seltzer and the story of The Omen. Instead of being concerned with any historical or theological accuracy, he instead built his own lore, which sends Robert Thorn and photographer Keith Jennings (David Warner) on a globetrotting investigation into the nature of the Antichrist and how to stop him. Some of this lore includes the child being born of a jackal, the reaction of animals, the protective cult that arises around Damien, the daggers of Megiddo, and maybe most interesting of all, the peculiar flaws in Jennings’s photographs that presage the ways certain individuals will die.
All these aspects are where the paranoid thrillers come in, as films like Blow Up (1966), Z (1969), The Conversation (1974), The Parallax View (1974), 3 Days of the Condor (1975), and All the President’s Men (1976) were all the rage at the time. Especially in the wake of the Watergate scandal, the idea of journalists (like Jennings) as ordinary heroes who could bring down the powerful, nefarious forces in the world was exactly what audiences craved. And what greater hidden evil force was there than the Devil? This is also why the device of the daggers of Megiddo is so important to a movie like this. If Damien is indeed the Antichrist, there must be a way to stop him, though in the Biblical text, the only power capable of destroying the Devil is God Himself.
The Mark of the Beast, 666, and the Film’s Most Famous Religious Symbolism

The piece of lore created for the movie with the most solid Biblical grounding is the Mark of the Beast. Revelation describes a mark on the forehead or hand of those who worship the Beast and his image. Again, this is symbolic language differentiating those who belong to the power of the Roman Empire and those who belong to Christ, who have the Mark of the Lamb. In Seltzer’s hands, the mark is very literal, a birthmark that is borne by not only the Antichrist but all his followers, meaning they are marked from before birth as belonging to Satan, and there is no escaping it. This is all rather distressing to the priest Father Brennan (Patrick Troughton), who betrays his mark by warning Thorn about Damien and pays the price by memorably being impaled by a spire that falls from a church steeple after being struck by lightning.
Why is the mark three sixes? Again, this is drawn from a passage in Revelation that states that the Beast can be identified by calculating his number. In Biblical scholarship, this is believed to be the sum of the name of a man transferred into Hebrew numerology, a practice in which each Hebrew letter also represents a number. Using this method, the number of the name Caesar Nero, which many believe to be the most logical choice, is six hundred sixty-six. In the film and elsewhere, this number is changed to three individual sixes. According to the film, this represents the Diabolical Trinity (a designation also unique to the film) made up of Satan, the Antichrist, and the False Prophet. That Damien carries this unique birthmark under his hair convinces Robert that the child is the Antichrist, and it’s up to him to destroy him.
Part of what makes The Omen great is its ambiguity. Damien could be the Antichrist, or he could be at the center of a series of coincidences. Director Richard Donner stated in interviews that he believed Robert Thorn had gone insane by the end of the film, which, to Donner, is the only explanation for why Thorn would attempt to kill an innocent child. However, that enigmatic smile in the final shot suggests that Damien does embody a spirit of great evil. The sequels, however, all but erase this ambiguity.
In audiences, The Omen sparked a renewed interest in the concept of the Antichrist and the dispensationalist interpretation of the end times that continues to echo throughout the last five decades. Around the time of the film’s release, even Elvis Presley was photographed brandishing a paperback copy of Seltzer’s novelization. Dispensationalist authors like Hal Lindsay, Tim LaHaye, and John Hagee have made millions publishing books and giving lectures about the Antichrist and the end of the world.
The Legacy of The Omen, 50 Years Later

Though A Thief in the Night (1972) preceded The Omen in initial release, it gained quite a resurgence (along with the ability to create three sequels) in the wake of the popularity of The Omen and went on to scar the psyches of Evangelical children for decades. Hal Lindsay was also able to release a film version of The Late Great Planet Earth in 1978, complete with narration and a brief onscreen appearance from Orson Welles.
In the 1990s, the Left Behind series became a cultural phenomenon, spawning twelve books in the core series, a YA spinoff series, video games, and a movie series (2000-2005) starring Kirk Cameron. A bigger studio adaptation of the first book was released in 2014, starring Nicolas Cage. 20th Century Fox and The Omen got in on the renewed “end-of-the-world” vigor by releasing a remake of the original film on June 6, 2006. The franchise was revived once again in 2024 with The First Omen, which explores ideas of the Antichrist and the motivations of those in power in our current religious, social, and political context.
But despite all the sequels, spinoffs, rip-offs, remakes, and “end times” money grabs of the last 50 years, the original version of The Omen remains untouchable. Its greatest strength is that it seeks, first and foremost, to entertain. And it does so admirably.
After half a century, its influence can be felt in horror, the culture at large, and even in various faith circles. It is a testament to the power of story and film that, consciously or unconsciously, fans of The Omen and those who have never seen it alike are, to this very day, marked by the Beast.

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