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Brooklyn Horror Film Festival 2025: ‘Slayed’ LGBTQ+ Shorts Block

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As someone who has been attending the Brooklyn Horror Film Festival annually since 2017, I can comfortably say that the ‘Slayed’ LGBTQ+ shorts block is a true highlight. Horror Press was honored to once again sponsor the block for the 2025 edition of the festival, elevating some of the very best that queer horror has to offer. 

This year’s shorts represented a vast diversity of gender identities and sexualities, and the role of intersectionality in shaping a person’s lived experience. They managed to be funny, sexy, beautiful, heartbreaking, and triumphant in turns—and plenty scary, too. 

If you couldn’t make it to the screening, here’s a quick recap. Consider it a call to action to prioritize the ‘Slayed’ programming at next year’s fest!

Long Pork (Dir. Iris Dukatt)

The opening titles of writer-director Iris Dukatt’s Long Pork inform us that we are in post-Roe America (don’t I know it). But our currently dystopian hellscape has been taken up a notch, with state propaganda posters plastering the exterior walls of an upscale steakhouse informing us that we need to “Protect the child, forfeit the vessel.” Inside, the head chef (Lena Headey) seizes the opportunity to avenge her daughter, a victim of this extreme pro-life regime, when the smug, hypocritical Chancellor of Righteousness (Marc Menchaca) walks through her doors. 

Deliciously cathartic, Long Pork’s master stroke is in its portrayal of a pregnant trans-masc kitchen worker and the solidarity of the women around them. It’s a powerful reminder that queer and gender non-conforming people are often equally (if not more) vulnerable to the kind of oppression that targets cisgender women, and that standing together is the best way to defend ourselves and our communities against those who seek to destroy us. Even if we have to eat them. 

Are You Fucking Kidding Me?! (Dir. Zen Pace)

“We’re all clowns in the hospitality industry,” writer and star Zachary Solomon said of their short film Are You Fucking Kidding Me?! during the Q&A at Brooklyn Horror Film Festival. In it, they play Jordyn, a struggling birthday party clown dealing with bitchy clients, a fellow performer throwing around queer slurs, and an empty bank account, all while his phone rings off the hook, informing him that his ailing mother has taken a turn for the worse. A mean right hook from an entitled kid and an abusive sexual encounter with the dad finally push Jordyn over the edge, leading to a bloody climax that left the person next to me audibly praying for Jordyn to murder the child next. 

He doesn’t, leaving Are You Fucking Kidding Me?! more tragicomedy than outright cathartic horror. Director Zen Pace uses shots through the eyes of Jordyn’s humiliating pig costume to put the viewer in his shoes, but many queer people will already be very familiar with the situation he’s in, forced to debase himself just to make ends meet, any art he might have produced drowned out by the screams of unappreciative little brats. 

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She Devil (Dir. Allie Perison)

Being a butch woman in hyper-feminine spaces can be uncomfortable. Director Allie Perison amps up the discomfort to an eleven in She Devil, a short film following butch Gemma (Paula Andrea Placido) as she accompanies her femme girlfriend, Mae (Phoebe Voss), to a friend’s breakup party. This is Gemma’s first time meeting Mae’s friends, and she’s alarmed to learn that the group forced the breakup because they distrusted the boyfriend, seemingly without cause. When they realize that Gemma isn’t entirely on their side, the women quickly turn on her, using her as a stand-in for the ex to express all their rage and distrust. 

Co-written by Perison and Matt Almquist, She Devil is a chilling examination of weaponized femininity and how it can harm gender-nonconforming women. “I would do anything for my femmes,” one character expresses, pointedly excluding the decidedly unfeminine Gemma. The script also cleverly plays on viewers’ biases, leaving us to reflect on whose side of the story we believe when relationships sour. 

Last Call (Dir. Winnie Cheung)

Winner of Best Short Film at this year’s festival, director Winnie Cheung’s Last Call is a dreamy, drug-fueled ride into the psyche. Less a narrative film and more a vivid emotional landscape lit by a lotus-flower sun, the short follows a rebellious motorcyclist (Celia Au) who indulges in her worst vices night after night in an attempt to outrun the seductive serpent woman (Matilda Sakamoto) in her mind. But a high-speed crash forces a collision, triggering a journey of transformation and desire.

Last Call is cut through with moments of stark body horror like a forked tongue slithering from a wound. Paired seamlessly with sumptuous acid-trip landscapes and a triumphant performance from Au, it all makes for one of the most unique—and uniquely beautiful—films of the fest. 

Tal 탈 (Dir. Charlie Gillette)

Not all queer stories have a happy ending. From director Charlie Gillette and writer Wesley Han, Tal is a quietly devastating short about the crushing expectations of immigrant parents and the feeling that you need to hide your true self to be successful, or at least make others happy. 

Han stars in Tal as Gabriel, a young associate at a prestigious New York City law firm. He’s tried to put his artistic dreams behind him, but he can’t let them go entirely, keeping a neutral mask (a tool used to train actors in movement by hiding their expression) in the desk drawer of his cubicle. As he pulls a grueling all-nighter for his demanding boss and fields worried phone calls from his mother, he finds himself struggling to suppress his feelings for his kind coworker (Barton Cowperthwaite)—and running from a demon wearing his mask. Sadly, Gabriel can’t outrun his demons or confront his desires, leading to an ending that will sit with you long after the credits roll. 

Consume (Dir. Aliyah Knight)

The Nitehawk Cinema’s projector broke in the middle of Aliyah Knight’s Consume, but the highest praise I can give the film is to say that I was gutted to miss a single moment of it. From what I did see, the short follows a young woman in a religious household who is struggling to suppress her desires. A little sexy, a little sapphic, and very bloody, it left me hungry for more—a must-watch if I can catch it in full in the future!

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Blood Boys (Dir. Jordan Hahn)

When it comes to the topic of blood donation, the shadow of the AIDs crisis still hangs over the gay male community. Writer-director Jordan Hahn’s Blood Boys reframes blood sharing between queer men as a sexy competitive sport, one that fuels toxic masculinity and gets in the way of genuine intimacy.

Based on the real phenomena of creepy old rich men getting blood transfusions from young donors in an attempt to live forever (or at least reverse the effects of aging), Blood Boys follows buff boy Sam (BooBoo Stewart) as he competes to be a billionaire’s personal blood bag. If he wants the job and the perks that may come with it, he’ll have to beat out the current bloodletting champ, Charlie (Damian Joseph Quinn). Hahn contrasts the cold sterility of the clinic with hot skin shining with sweat, plunging needles into swollen veins in a way that is both wince-inducing and undeniably, disturbingly erotic. 

The Dysphoria (Dir. Kylie Aoibheann)

With access to affordable gender-affirming care getting more limited by the day, writer-director Kylie Aoibheann’s playful short The Dysphoria packs a surprisingly hefty punch. In it, Alice (Eva Rees), unable to afford a procedure, turns to ancient rituals in an attempt to make her body reflect her true identity. Unfortunately, her boyfriend Tyler (Adam White) not only won’t take the ritual seriously, but wants to dissuade Alice from getting the surgery at all. 

The Dysphoria elegantly sidesteps obvious punchlines, instead driving toward a conclusion that is as cathartic as it is amusing. With some great practical gore and a standout performance from Rees, it’s a fun take on a serious issue—and the perfect way to close out the ‘Slayed’ shorts block for another year.

Samantha McLaren is a queer Scottish writer, artist, and horror fanatic living in NYC. Her writing has appeared in publications like Fangoria, Scream the Horror Magazine, and Bloody Disgusting, as well as on her own blog, Terror in Tartan. If she's not talking about Bryan Fuller's Hannibal or Peter Cushing, she's probably asleep.

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Film Fests

Another Hole In The Head: ‘Kombucha’ & ‘Weekend at the End of the World’

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Author’s Note: When this article was initially published, I had stated Weekend at the End of the World used AI. After an email from the film’s publicist and producer, I am updating that portion as we have been told they did not use AI in the creation of this film. Horror Press takes a hardline stance against the use of AI, generative or otherwise, and we will remain diligent on calling out its potential use and update where needed. We thank the crew behind this project for taking the time and clarifying how certain effects were created. It’s never our intention to punch down, but we owe it to our readers to be transparent and call out AI when we think we see it. However, this was not the case, and no AI was used in Weekend at the End of the World.

There is nothing wrong with a film festival that takes chances on films. Programming festivals seem like an incredibly tedious job that will always leave people underwhelmed, no matter how great the programming is. There are two films I screened at Another Hole In The Head that left me wanting more and questioning their inclusion within the festival. I’m sure these films worked for whoever picked them, but for me, they fell completely flat. And one of them was my most anticipated film from the festival.

Kombucha Review

Luke (Terrence Carey) is a down-on-his-luck musician who is stuck on the edge of recognition and nothing. His partner, Elyse (Paige Bourne), begs him to get a “real job” after his ex-band member, Andy (Jesse Kendall), mysteriously resurfaces with a too-good-to-be-true job offer. After taking this new job, Luke finds himself happy with the influx of money, but void of personal growth. His new boss, Kelsey (Claire McFadden), forces Luke to drink their company’s trademark kombucha, or else he’s out of a job. It turns out this mystery drink may just turn Luke into a shell of a man. Literally.

Kombucha was my most anticipated film screening at Another Hole In The Head. I was stimulated by the film’s description, which was described as Office Space meets Cronenberg. From that descriptor, I was expecting some pretty out-there comedic moments mixed with gnarly grossout scenes. Kombucha failed on both of those aspects. The film’s handful of jokes were fart and poop jokes that felt beyond out of place. (And this is coming from someone who loves fart and poop jokes.) On top of that, the film’s “Cronenberg” moments were few and far between.

Flat Visual Style Undercuts Kombucha’s Strong Concept

Co-writers Geoff Bakken and Jake Myers, and directed by Jake Myers, have an excellent concept on their hands. Even the film’s commentary hits perfectly. But the film’s bland writing takes the oompf out of the overall effect. I wanted much more from this film, visually. Matt Brown’s cinematography isn’t bad…it’s competent enough. At its core, this film just feels very by-the-college-textbook; dead-center framing with After-Effects-like handheld plugins make this film feel flat beyond belief. Some of the practical effects look good; unfortunately, I was checked out by that point.

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Weekend at the End of the World Review

Karl (Clay Elliott) is reeling from his ex-girlfriend’s proposal denial. His best friend, Miles (Cameron Fife), decides to take him to his deceased grandmother’s cabin for a best friends’ weekend. Once at the cabin, Karl and Miles find themselves in a world of trouble when they open a portal to another dimension. These two friends, along with their nosy neighbor, Hank (Thomas Lennon), must travel through strange worlds in order to save their own.

Thomas Lennon is Weekend at the End of the World’s Biggest Missed Opportunity

One of my favorite things about actors like Michael Madsen (RIP) and Thomas Lennon is how they use/used their fame and time to bring independent horror films into the limelight. While that trajectory made a bit more sense for Madsen’s career, it has been a delight to see Lennon pop up here and there throughout the past decade in horror. Most horror fans delight in seeing a big-name actor take the time and star in a film that helps bring credence to a genre that was once looked upon with disgrace. 

One of the two great things about Weekend at the End of the World was Thomas Lennon…and then they silenced him. Co-writers Clay Elliott, Gille Klabin, and Spencer McCurnin filled a script with teen-brained fart jokes in a way that feels lazy and cheap. Thomas Lennon’s ill-written character, who is nothing more than a punching bag for two characters who lack a single ounce of comedy or character, is (figuratively) castrated shortly into the film, and any sense of self the film had is then gone. While his character was flat, Lennon brought a sense of something to this empty film. 

MeeMaw’s Practical Effects Are a Highlight

The film’s other standout moment is the practical effects used on MeeMaw. So much has been done in horror, and creating a new viscerally icky character is hard to do. MeeMaw’s character (creature?) design is delightfully awful to look at. She could have easily become the film’s star and propelled this film to be something if it had been more interesting. But this film’s story is bland and recycled from other stories. 

I have so little to say about this film because it exists as an hour and a half of attempted flash, with little to nothing to add to the genre. The story is bland, the characters are flat, and the jokes will make a teenager laugh (before they inevitably go back to scrolling on TikTok). Full of D-grade visual effects that aren’t even fit for the year 2015, Weekend at the End of the World is an overall forgettable experience; it’s an apocalypse of entertainment…an exercise in futility. Not even Thomas Lennon or MeeMaw’s well-thought-out (and achieved) character design could save us from this…experience. 

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Another Hole In The Head: ‘Hoagie’ (2025) Review

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When you watch films for a living, you sometimes feel like you’ve seen it all. It’s hard to be surprised by films when you’ve seen everything from Salo to Inside to Slaughtered Vomit Dolls. For those looking for the next “big thing” in horror, the festival circuit is the best place to look. When I pressed play on Hoagie, I had no clue I was about to watch my favorite film of the year.

A Gooey Goblin and an Everyman Hero

An average family man, Brendan Bean (Ryan Morley), is left home alone while his family heads out for the weekend. While home alone, Brendan finds himself in the company of a homunculus zygote named Hoagie. Hoagie is a devilishly cute little goblin man that sprang to life from an alien egg and is about to give Brendan much more than he bargained for. When a right-wing militia attempts to get Hoagie back, Brendan and Hoagie find themselves in a fight for survival. Can this everyman save his new best friend? Or will these weekend warriors succeed in stealing this goopy goblin?

Hoagie toes the line between low-budget schlock satire and a genuinely great film. From the start, my reaction was nothing more than, “Ah, this film knows what it is.” As the minutes ticked by, I couldn’t help but notice how honestly incredible it was. Co-writers Matt Hewitt and Ryan Morley, under Matt Hewitt’s direction, have an incredibly heartfelt story of love and compassion that is wrapped up in a sinewy bow. I’ve said time and time again that horror comedy doesn’t typically work for me. Hoagie’s schtick never gets old for a singular second. Whether it’s poking fun at right-wing nazis who spend their weekends getting shirtless and “training” together, or literal poop jokes, Hoagie does not fail to deliver laughs and tears.

A Third-Act Bloodbath That Proves Hoagie Goes Hard

Just when you think the film has run out of tricks, you get hit with a third-act tour de force of blood, carnage, and mayhem. I’ve come across many festival films that I think could be used as wonderful teaching tools in film school…Hoagie could be used as a master class. This film demonstrates how filmmakers can effectively stretch a budget. They lean into the lo-fi aesthetic but never use it as a crutch. From the film’s unique and odd acting to its purposefully quirky, stilted dialogue, Hoagie is a film that does not fail to entertain all of the senses.

Hoagie Is One of the Best Indie Horror Films of the Year

I could go on, waxing poetic to hit a word count or get a pull quote. But Hoagie taught me that sometimes minimalism is best. It’s important to learn when to say too much and when to say enough. I’m stunned by how impressive a feature Hoagie is. This gooey little goblin gets at your heartstrings and refuses to let go. If you’re a fan of well-done, fully realized practical effects that have substance and style, then Hoagie is the fix you’ll find yourself chasing for years to come. Oh, and there are enough dong shots to make another full frontal ranking list.

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If you get the chance to catch Hoagie, I cannot recommend enough that you do so. Humanity is not ready for these forces to be unleashed onto this world. You’ll laugh, you’ll cringe, you’ll squirm, but, most importantly, you’ll feel. Hoagie is more delicious than a fatty patty six-stack (with the beans).

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