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Bigfoot True Crime, Sci-fi Romantic Nightmares, and ‘90s Psychological Thrills Round Out SXSW’s Episodic Premieres

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Photograph by John P. Johnson/HBO Max

For the most part, film festival SXSW’s genre offerings tend to adhere closely to their Midnighter section, dedicated to late-night chills. However, it does spill over into other categories of festival programming. That’s certainly the case with this year’s Episodic Premieres, a programming category dedicated to world premieres of series slated for release.

Nearly all of SXSW 2021’s episodic premieres dabbled in the genre space, from cryptid-based true crime conspiracy to young adult psychological thrills set in the ‘90s. The best part is that every single one is set to release right within the next few weeks.

Here’s a roundup of the SXSW genre series coming our way very soon.


Made for Love –April 1 on HBO Max

Based on Alissa Nutting’s tragicomic novel, Made for Love, this series kicks off with a premise eerily similar to last year’s The Invisible Man. It opens to a thrilling and slightly bloody introduction to Hazel Green (Cristin Milioti), a thirty-something amid an intense escape from her tech-mogul husband, Byron Gogol (Billy Magnussen). She’s fleeing from a suffocating 10-year marriage trapped inside their “hub,” a high-tech bio-sphere. Romance turns nightmarish for Hazel, the full scope of which remains to be seen. 

The premiere cuts between Hazel’s current attempt to find safety and the events that led up to her escape, and it deftly toggles between sci-fi, comedy, and horror. The primary tone here is humor. The series kicks off with a short 30-minute episode, and Milioti instantly engenders herself to the audience, grounding Hazel amidst the absurdity of this world. Look for Ray Romano to embrace the weird, too, as Hazel’s sex-doll enamored father.


Them – April 9 on Amazon Prime Video

If you only have time for one series to watch, make it this one. Not only is Them firmly planted in horror, but it’s intense from beginning to end- at least of the two episodes screened at SXSW. Read the full review here, or watch the trailer here.

Executive produced by Little Marvin and Lena WaitheThem stars Deborah Ayorinde, Ashley Thomas, Alison Pill, Shahadi Wright Joseph, Melody Hurd, and Ryan Kwanten.


Confronting a Serial Killer – April 18 on Starz

Book of Shadows: Blair Witch 2 director Joe Berlinger has made a career out of true-crime documentaries. Most recently, he’s tackled Netflix series The Ted Bundy TapesJeffrey Epstein: Filthy RichCrime Scene: The Vanishing at the Cecil Hotel, and Murder Among the Mormons. That string of Netflix releases instantly raises the question, why premium channel Starz instead? The answer comes almost immediately, with graphic descriptions of sexual assault and murder, many via audio by serial killer Samuel Little.

The limited series follows bestselling author/journalist Jillian Lauren as she strikes up a relationship with Little to identify all of his victims. Little may be in jail serving life sentences, but his very lengthy rap sheet indicates an insane number of crimes that he’s gotten away with over his lifetime. Lauren strives to coax confessions out of Little but realizes she may be becoming his last victim on a psychological scale. It’s this critical push-and-pull between journalist and psychopath that makes this documentary series so gripping and chilling.


Cruel Summer – April 20 on Freeform

This psychological thriller produced by Jessica Biel follows the lives of two Texas teens. Kate Wallis (Olivia Holt) is the popular girl with a charmed life, and Jeanette Turner (Chiara AureliaGerald’s Game) is the nerdy outcast. Kate goes missing, and Jeanette takes her place as the new popular girl until she’s accused of being connected to Kate’s disappearance. Cruel Summer toggles between 1993, 1994, and 1995 to follow Jeannette’s rise and fall from social grace, raising a slew of intriguing questions in the process. The SXSW premiere gives an overview of Jeannette’s shifting home life and friendships, setting up multiple mysteries tethered to the central one of Kate’s disappearance.

The alternating timelines, steeped in ‘90s nostalgia, works in creating interest but diminishes that with revelations that suggest that the focus might be more related to bullying than murder. That it targets a young adult audience likely means more melodramatic answers to the questions raised, but the timeline hook gets it off to an interesting start.


Sasquatch – April 20 on Hulu

Director Joshua Rofé and producers the Duplass Brothers merge cryptid conspiracy with true-crime in this three-part docuseries investigating a bizarre 25-year-old triple homicide said to be the work of Bigfoot. The series follows investigative journalist David Holthouse as he looks into the murder of three men torn apart in Northern California in 1993.

Using animation and a mix of eccentric talking heads, along with Holthouse, the premiere paints a picture of a conspiracy set in the cannabis farms of the early ‘90s. Unlike most true-crime documentaries, however, there’s no clear case to follow here. Holthouse describes it as the craziest story he’s ever heard, and many talking heads in the first episode ponder Bigfoot as fact or fiction. While there’s an underpinning of light-hearted humor throughout, there’s also a tedious dryness to the storytelling that makes Sasquatch appear to be for avid cryptid hunters only.

Horror journalist, RT Top Critic, and Critics Choice Association member. Co-Host of the Bloody Disgusting Podcast. Has appeared on PBS series' Monstrum, served on the SXSW Midnighter shorts jury, and moderated horror panels for WonderCon and SeriesFest.

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“AHS: Delicate” Review – “Little Gold Man” Mixes Oscar Fever & Baby Fever into the Perfect Product

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American Horror Story Season 12 Episode 8 Mia Farrow

‘AHS: Delicate’ enters early labor with a fun, frenzied episode that finds the perfect tone and goes for broke as its water breaks.

“I’ll figure it out. Women always do.”

American Horror Story is no stranger to remixing real-life history with ludicrous, heightened Murphy-isms, whether it’s AHS: 1984’s incorporation of Richard Ramirez, AHS: Cult’s use of Valerie Solanas, or AHS: Coven’s prominent role for the Axeman of New Orleans. Accordingly, it’s very much par for the course for AHS: Delicate to riff on other pop culture touchstones and infinitely warp them to its wicked whims. That being said, it takes real guts to do a postmodern feminist version of Rosemary’s Baby and then actually put Mia Farrow – while she’s filming Rosemary’s Baby, no less – into the narrative. This is the type of gonzo bullshit that I want out of American Horror Story! Sharon Tate even shows up for a minute because why the hell not? Make no mistake, this is completely absurd, but the right kind of campy absurdity that’s consistently been in American Horror Story’s wheelhouse since its inception. It’s a wild introduction that sets up an Oscar-centric AHS: Delicate episode for success. “Little Gold Man” is a chaotic episode that’s worth its weight in gold and starts to bring this contentious season home. 

It’d be one thing if “Little Gold Man” just featured a brief detour to 1967 so that this season of pregnancy horror could cross off Rosemary’s Baby from its checklist. AHS: Delicate gets more ambitious with its revisionist history and goes so far as to say that Mia Farrow and Anna Victoria Alcott are similarly plagued. “Little Gold Man” intentionally gives Frank Sinatra dialogue that’s basically verbatim from Dex Harding Sr., which indicates that this demonic curse has been ruffling Hollywood’s feathers for the better part of a century. Anna Victoria Alcott’s Oscar-nominated feature film, The Auteur, is evidently no different than Rosemary’s Baby. It’s merely Satanic forces’ latest attempt to cultivate the “perfect product.” “Little Gold Man” even implies that the only reason that Mia Farrow didn’t go on to make waves at the 1969 Academy Awards and ends up with her twisted lot in life is because she couldn’t properly commit to Siobhan’s scheme, unlike Anna.

This is easily one of American Horror Story’s more ridiculous cold opens, but there’s a lot of love for the horror genre and Hollywood that pumps through its veins. If Hollywood needs to be a part of AHS: Delicate’s story then this is actually the perfect connective tissue. On that note, Claire DeJean plays Sharon Tate in “Little Gold Man” and does fine work with the brief scene. However, it would have been a nice, subtle nod of continuity if AHS: Delicate brought back Rachel Roberts who previously portrayed Tate in AHS: Cult. “Little Gold Man” still makes its point and to echo a famous line from Jennifer Lynch’s father’s television masterpiece: “It is happening again.”

“Little Gold Man” is rich in sequences where Anna just rides the waves of success and enjoys her blossoming fame. She feels empowered and begins to finally take control of her life, rather than let it push her around and get under her skin like a gestating fetus. Anna’s success coincides with a colossal exposition dump from Tavi Gevinson’s Cora, a character who’s been absent for so long that we were all seemingly meant to forget that she was ever someone who was supposed to be significant. Cora has apparently been the one pulling many of Anna’s strings all along as she goes Single White Female, rather than Anna having a case of Repulsion. It’s an explanation that oddly works and feeds into the episode’s more general message of dreams becoming nightmares. Cora continuing to stay aligned with Dr. Hill because she has student loans is also somehow, tragically the perfect explanation for her abhorrent behavior. It’s not the most outlandish series of events in an episode that also briefly gives Anna alligator legs and makes Emma Roberts and Kim Kardashian kiss.

American Horror Story Season 12 Episode 8 Cora In Cloak

“Little Gold Man” often feels like it hits the fast-forward button as it delivers more answers, much in the same vein as last week’s “Ava Hestia.” These episodes are two sides of the same coin and it’s surely no coincidence that they’re both directed by Jennifer Lynch. This season has benefitted from being entirely written by Halley Feiffer – a first for the series – but it’s unfortunate that Lynch couldn’t direct every episode of AHS: Delicate instead of just four out of nine entries. That’s not to say that a version of this season that was unilaterally directed by Lynch would have been without its issues. However, it’s likely that there’d be a better sense of synergy across the season with fewer redundancies. She’s responsible for the best episodes of AHS: Delicate and it’s a disappointment that she won’t be the one who closes the season out in next week’s finale.

To this point, “Little Gold Man” utilizes immaculate pacing that helps this episode breeze by. Anna’s Oscar nomination and the awards ceremony are in the same episode, whereas it feels like “Part 1” of the season would have spaced these events out over four or five episodes. This frenzied tempo works in “Little Gold Man’s” favor as AHS: Delicate speed-runs to its finish instead of getting lost in laborious plotting and unnecessary storytelling. This is how the entire season should have been. Although it’s also worth pointing out that this is by far the shortest episode of American Horror Story to date at only 34 minutes. It’s a shame that the season’s strongest entries have also been the ones with the least amount of content. There could have been a whole other act to “Little Gold Man,” or at the least, a substantially longer cold open that got more out of its Mia Farrow mayhem. 

“Little Gold Man” is an American Horror Story episode that does everything right, but is still forced to contend with three-quarters of a subpar season. “Part 2” of AHS: Delicate actually helps the season’s first five episodes shine brighter in retrospect and this will definitely be a season that benefits from one long binge that doesn’t have a six-month break in the middle. Unfortunately, anyone who’s already watched it once will likely not feel compelled to experience these labor pains a second time over. With one episode to go and Anna’s potential demon offspring ready to greet the world, AHS: Delicate is poised to deliver one hell of a finale.

Although, to paraphrase Frank Sinatra, “How do you expect to be a good conclusion if this is what you’re chasing?” 

4 out of 5 skulls

American Horror Story Season 12 Episode 9 Anna Siobhan Kiss

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