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Tokyo Horror Film Festival 2025: Short Films

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Many flock to festivals to see which features are set to play. Features are fun and integral to a festival lineup, but it’s the short films that are the real meat and potatoes. Short films are usually my favorite parts of covering film festivals. I loved the short films from Tokyo Horror Film Festival 2024, and am happy to announce that the short films this year were just as great!

Our Favorite Shorts from Tokyo Horror Film Festival 2025

Femme

Written/directed by Nina Noël Raaijmakers

Fem’s (Nola Elvis Kemper) new college life isn’t what was expected. Their roommates remove the door to their bedroom, and the only way to get it back is to have sex in the room. But the experience turns out to be more than anyone bargained for.

Femme is an interesting exploration of sexual assault and peer pressure. Rather than showing an explicit depiction of assault, Raaijmakers externalizes the emotional side effects into some gnarly body horror. Nola Elvis Kemper’s solemn performance effectively amplifies the emotional undertones, requiring little dialogue. Femme is a great example of showing, not telling. And you’ll never look at lunch meat the same way again!

Flush

Written/directed by Raphaël Treiner

Flush follows an eight-month pregnant woman as she packs her apartment. Her broken plumbing leads her to a run-in with the building’s plumber, and an old friend of hers. That’s when the two friends find dead neighbors, blood, goop, viscera, and *checks notes* tentacles?!

This Lovecraftian chamberpiece delivers on emotion and indescribable horrors. It’s always a surprise to see short films with better practical effects than most big-budget horror films. Practical effects like those in Flush create a fully fleshed-out world in mere seconds. In addition to the incredible SFX, Treiner’s short brings a highly emotional story to the table. It has a heavy focus on the trials of impending motherhood in a way that feels very natural. Flush uses its environment to craft the horror, but chooses not to limit itself to typical chamber-horror fare.

Black Fog

Written by Nicholas Z. Scott and directed by Nicholas Z. Scott & Judlin Willmont

Shen Zhuoning (Lipei Gao) and her mother Xia Kexin (Crystal Rao) are trapped in their car deep in the Chinese wilderness. Unfortunately for them, the rain and the thick forest are the least of their worries.

Black Fog is a quick and to-the-point short film. It utilizes sound in an incredible way that transports you to a very uncomfortable place. The short’s main theme centers on familial love and uses it as its throughline. Viewers will appreciate the small attention to detail and the big stinger shot.

Dispensary of Death

Written/directed by Simon O’Neill

Kevin (Keith Singleton) makes his way to a pharmacy to deal with a medical issue. Upon arriving, Kevin is greeted by pharmacist Laura (Niamh Branigan). Laura’s medical assistance is beyond conventional, but hey, it just might get the job done! What’s his medical issue? Oh, how about a zombie bite!

On paper, I appreciate a lot about Dispensary of Death. It’s scrappy, efficient, and doesn’t overstay its welcome. O’Neill’s final product fell a bit flat for me. I’ve stated time and time again that horror comedies are really my thing. And the number one issue I had with this short is that it was just too goofy for me. Fans of horror comedies will get more out of this short than I will. What I can say is that it looks good, but it relies too much on digital blood.

Marteau, Clé Anglaise & Tournevis (Hammer, Wrench & Screwdriver)

Written/directed by Gabriel Vilandré

Jonathan (Mathéo Piccinin) is forced to return to the hardware store where he previously stole a hammer, a wrench, and a screwdriver. The store’s owner (Jean Harvey) blames Fred (Patrice Dubois) for the theft and officially puts him on notice. That’s when Jonathan’s night turns from rectifying bad deeds to a literal nightmare.

Hammer, Wrench & Screwdriver is a slow and methodical unraveling of the human condition. One kid tries to better his life, in a way, while another man ruins his. Vilandré’s short film isn’t grandiose or over the top, but it is an effective short film overall. Also, Patrice Dubois has some of the most piercing eyes you will ever see on film. It rivals the eyes of Neal McDonough.

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Under My Skin

Written by Alice Gatland and directed by Alice Gatland & Ross Ozarka

Someone hears something strange… Is the sound coming from beneath their skin?

Under My Skin is a minute-long, uniquely animated short that delivers a good laugh. I’m not huge on animation (my own personal hangup), but I appreciated Ozarka’s animation style. Made as part of the OPPO48 challenge, Under My Skin showcases a level of creativity and expertise that is truly impressive.

La Console

Written/directed by Simon Plante

Samuel’s (Dominick Rustam-Chartrand) job is cutthroat. His coworker Louis (Thomas Vallieres) is the apple of his boss’s eye. On the way home from work, Samuel finds a video game console that lets him take out his anger, virtually, on Louis. But, it’s just virtual…right?

La Console is an inventive way of taking out your anger on coworkers. This karaoke-looking video game console packs a virtual punch in a way that feels similar, but different enough, to Graham Skipper’s Sequence Break. There’s an odd polish to the image of this short that doesn’t mesh well with the 8-bit nature of the video game sequences. I appreciate the direction Plante took with this short, but I felt that it lacked a true punch to stand out amongst the rest.

打烊 (Closing Time)

Written by Wayne Gerald Rée and directed by Kyle Ong

Steven (Vester Kian) and Mavis (Cynthia Kuang) run an ordinary convenience store, until word gets out that they’re open till late. Soon, they start attracting a whole different kind of customer. A kind of customer of the supernatural variety.

Closing Time is a BRILLIANT concept. Never have I considered approaching supernatural horror from this angle. There are these great moments of levity that are undermined by an emotionally brutal ending. At an incredibly brisk seven minutes, Closing Time is one of the most effective, minute-for-minute, short films I’ve ever seen.

Inspiración

Written/directed by Diego Mezarina

Two killers (Oswaldo Salas and Isabel Verástegui) are living their best killer lives. They’re creating mass havoc around their town, and getting off, literally, while doing so. But their carefree life might not be as real as they thought it was. That’s when The Creator (Víctor Prada) veers his mischievous head.

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Inspiración is the perfect kind of meta-horror. It’s self-referential in a way that isn’t pretentious or unoriginal. It shares some similarities with The Draft! in a way that is only coincidental due to the subject matter. It’s when the film turns into a musical that really catches the viewer’s attention. From the start, I was turned off by the high frame rate, automotion plus looking image. That all changed when the film shifted its visual style and became a straight-up musical. Inspiración is a delightful look into the mind of a psychopath that gives both The Draft! and Chainsaws Were Singing a run for their money at one-tenth of their runtimes.

I would like to take a moment to extend a huge thank you to Yuri and everyone involved with the Tokyo Horror Film Festival! It’s a delight to participate in this festival every year, and I’ve rarely been let down by a feature or short. Be sure to keep your eyes peeled for the next Tokyo Horror Film Festival!

Brendan is an award-winning author and screenwriter rotting away in New Jersey. His hobbies include rain, slugs, and the endless search for The Mothman.

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The Horrors of Reproductive Health Inspired ‘Brian Won’t Wear Condoms’

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Reproductive health care is usually argued about, while the magnitude of it still somehow escapes politicians. These people make policies but don’t understand basic biology. They also think having ovaries makes us inferior to them for some random reason. In college, my friend shared her story about the abortion she got in a Kansas clinic with biblical pictures on the ceiling. She stared up into this Christian scene, which she didn’t believe in, as the doctor performing the procedure shamed her for her choice. 

After hearing that story, I was happy to join a different friend on a road trip to Colorado when she needed an abortion and wanted to escape a similar fate. Things were smooth until we got back to Missouri. She took her last dose of medicine and began bleeding out. We panicked and took her to the ER, where, in our fright, we told the truth and then watched the staff immediately become cold. We sat in the ER for hours with her bleeding. In the morning, they gave her a pad and sent us on our way, with no apology for making her do this in a public space. Whenever I think about how the staff treated my friend, crying and bleeding through her whimsical pjs, I get pissed. That was the last time I could pretend reproductive health matters in this country.

The Patriarchy Won’t Let Us Be Great

Being a woman is awesome, aside from the chokehold the patriarchy has on society. This especially blows because reproductive matters have been written off as women’s problems. This is sad, seeing how not everyone with ovaries identifies as a woman. This narrative also seemingly lets men off the hook for pregnancies that they are equally responsible for.  I’m not sure how we got here, and if the patriarchy will ever topple, but I love that we have so many filmmakers making art about these topics. Genna Edwards’ new short Brian Won’t Wear Condoms is one of those movies taking aim at how the patriarchy would have you believe men’s pleasure is more important than women’s health. 

Brian Won’t Wear Condoms is a very relatable premise that goes to some bloody heights. Kayla (April Consalo) watches as her friend Abby (Jordan Chin) tries a new contraceptive to appease her boyfriend Brian (Aaron Latta-Morissette). Brian doesn’t like wearing condoms and, like most men, thinks this is something Abby should figure out for his sake. So, when Abby starts acting differently, it’s Kayla who notices and starts asking questions. 

Reproductive Health Impacts Everybody

As with the stories I shared at the top of this article, and the stories I’m keeping to myself, Abby and Kayla’s dynamic is relatable. A friend with a boyfriend who doesn’t like condoms and won’t get a vasectomy is a tale as old as time. If you haven’t been the friend, then you have probably been the girl in the clown shoes risking your health. Many of us do this because we live in a society that tries to convince us that being a wife and mother is what AFABs are born to do. If that’s not our goal, then we’re called selfish. 

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Reproductive health and how cavalier men are about women’s safety were at the forefront of Edwards’ mind while working on Brian Won’t Wear Condoms.I got a Mirena IUD during Trump’s first term, when I was worried about what could happen to me if I got pregnant.Edwards continued,As a white woman of ample resources, I was and am at far less risk of what’s been happening all over the country – women dying because doctors won’t abort an ectopic pregnancy, women being kept on life support as incubators while brain-dead, teenagers forced to carry their rapist’s child. But I knew I didn’t want to get pregnant and that if I had to have an abortion, it would likely traumatize me.”

Make It Make Sense

Edwards shared,I was on the pill as a teenager, and it made me depressed, so I had been off of it for years, using condoms diligently. When Trump [took] office, it felt like I had no choice. Condoms aren’t always effective. The pill had already proven bad for me. What else was I supposed to do?Edwards pointed out,There are no birth control options for men – I wince thinking about that one trial that almost made it, but when men experienced even the slightest side effects (acne, weight changes, mood fluctuations that women deal with every day on the pill or patch) they shut it down.”

IUDs Aren’t Always the Answer

Like many of my friends who went the IUD route, Edwards’s pain was ignored, and things went badly. She said,During the procedure, the insertion was so painful I passed out. The doctors acted like this was totally normal and okay, to be expected. [They] gave me two Advil. I suppressed the trauma of the initial experience for years, until I tried to get a pap smear and realized I now fainted at the sight of forceps.”

“My IUD worked for a few years. At best, I forgot it was in there. I lost my period and felt a little bit like an alien. But no monthly blood? I’ll take it! Until a random day when I started having the worst cramps of my life. I waited for it to pass, thinking it was maybe just the pangs of myghost periods,as they call them, but it didn’t stop. It got worse.Edwards continued,There were days I couldn’t move, just laid curled up in my bed waiting for the pain to stop. [It was] like someone stabbing me repeatedly in the stomach. The hormones made me feel insane – I felt I was losing touch with myself, my body, reality. I don’t know how to truly describe it other than that I felt possessed.”

Ovaries Before Brovaries

Edwards flew home to get it removed. Her mother and her sister watched her pass out as she waited for her appointment. When she asked to keep the IUD after removal, she was denied. They threw it in the trash after the procedure. Meanwhile, she was given orange juice and told to take it easy for a few days. This is sadly the state of reproductive health in this country. So many people have stories similar to this. Doctors make a habit of ignoring women’s pain and telling them to suck it up. 

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They also prioritize hypothetical men over us, the people with the ovaries, talking to them face to face. As a kid from a large family, I knew I never wanted kids. So, I started asking for a tubal ligation as soon as I got on birth control at 18. Each doctor answered my question with,You might meet a nice man someday and regret that.No explanation of what the procedure costs, what possible side effects would be, etc. Another Missouri friend had to get her husband’s permission to get her tubes tied after a scary delivery of their daughter. Her doctors felt that risking her life once wasn’t enough. They required a man to sign paperwork that he was done breeding with her. In case I haven’t said it in a while, I really hate it here.

Turning Anger Into Art

Luckily, Edwards is also pissed and turning that rage into art.The anger I felt spurred me to write Brian. It wasn’t a long process at all. I had this realization about medical and societal gaslighting, and then this shit poured out of me like a faucet.She explained,I’ve had friends and lovers, and even strangers share similar stories with me. We’ve all had a man refuse a condom, or worst case, take one off mid-coitus. [That’s] a form of rape referred to colloquially asstealthing.” 

“So, it wasn’t just me I was writing this for. It was for all my family members and friends who’ve suffered for the sake of the male orgasm. Everything in our society, bending to male pleasure,Edwards stated. 

We are glad she did because reproductive health should be at the forefront of horror. Childbirth is body horror, and even those of us not using our ovaries for procreation have stories.

Brian Won’t Wear Condoms is currently making the festival rounds. Keep an eye out for updates on Edwards’ site.

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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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