Connect with us

Film Fests

Overlook Film Festival: ‘Leviticus’ Review

Published

on

No, you can’t pray the gay away. For queer youth, a proper life following Christian values is essentially a life on the run; an eternal haunting. Still, under the influence of God, a life haunted until death still has a thicker silver lining compared to the early graves of the LGBT+ that face the risk of deliverance. Adrian Chiarella’s debut feature, Leviticus, explodes with eerie melancholy to a degree we aren’t often rewarded with in genre film. It’s been a while since the horror has been this dark, so beautiful, and so close to home.

Leviticus is a Bleak and Beautiful Queer Horror Story

A mother-son duo has just settled into a small town in Victoria, Australia. Based on the open landscapes filled only with shy intimacy, I’d assume it to be one of those townships where the population stays in each other’s business. Even more so when the weight of the town’s church becomes visible. A community of social and religious judgment built on eggshells is no place for a young queer person just trying to know love and acceptance without harm.

The title, “Leviticus,” uses a single word to describe the phenomenon that dresses the film. It’s in reference to the book in the bible commonly used to condemn the “act” of homosexuality. The subject is Naim, played by Talk To Me’s Joe Bird. While getting acquainted with his new community, he falls into a secret courtship with Ryan (Stacy Clausen). Sheltering their authentic selves from anyone and everyone, the boys enjoy their lustful and unbiased adolescence. They meet in abandoned settings at night, captured through small bits of light through dark shadows, to enjoy each other’s company until they are discovered. The camerawork of cinematographer Tyson Perkins is beautifully lonely. The frames capture desperation for some sort of stability, and are only broken by the thing that feels right: honest companionship.

Forbidden Love in the Shadows

Bird and Clausen’s performances as damned lovers is a wreck. Their dialogue is unassuming, but paired with their physical acting, most sentences are strong enough to make you want to go back to your car, stare into the empty parking lot for a minute, and maybe even weep a little before driving home. Together and alone, their bodies move through each scene with immense social anxieties in addition to the fear of the sinister and demonic conclusions chained to their ankles by the church.

Some are better, some are worse, but religious fearmongering is the avenue to queer prosecution by way of God. The most effective way to drive away homosexuality is to teach young followers to be afraid of themselves. Naim’s deceptively loving mother, played by Mia Wasikowska, has unwavering faith in the church, even as the bodies of young queer men and women are repeatedly discovered after agreeing to controversial religious prayer. Her performance is equally as frightening as the paranormal entity that moves the film, and comes with an objectively horrible feeling of familial heartbreak. It’s clear that Chiarella, who wrote as well as directed, chose each word to say a thousand. Exactly like the world we live in, humans often speak in tongues, but they can be situationally understood with ease.

Advertisement

Religious Horror and the Fear of Self

Ryan has been prayed over before, when the community learned of the mutual lust between him and another local boy before Naim. Soon after, Naim’s sexuality is questioned by his mother, forcing a meeting between him and the deliverance healer too. Deliverance looks like members of the congregation, men of God, and of massive homophobia, surrounding the subject while their bodies contort and convulse in agony. They invoke an evil entity onto the subject to keep them running from their sexuality for the rest of their lives, or until their demise. The demon, which only the subject can see, manifests itself as the person they desire most. If seduced by it, you’ll receive a brutal, unrelenting death. Otherwise, stay as far away from your desires as you can.

This concept of haunting will undoubtedly be met with comparison to It Follows, but unlike David Robert Mitchell’s interpretation, the supernatural mechanics don’t matter nearly as much as the focus to make the allegory, and the feeling that comes from it clear. The sturdy performances mentioned underneath dense, desolate lighting evoke fear in a different medium from victim to viewer. This villain is everything you’d want, and everything you’d think you deserve. Even without a drop of blood (which there is plenty of)- how awful.

Leviticus: A Slow-Burn Horror That Cuts Deep

If you can stomach a super slow and cyclical roundtable of napalm to the adolescent soul, consider Leviticus. If you’re the moviegoer who treasures the post-horror adrenaline high, this film is too low vibration for you. I’ll happily throw Adrian Chiarella his flowers, but I don’t have the stones to press play again.

Xero Gravity is a media personality and genre journalist with a focus on diversity and inclusion in horror, sci-fi and dark fantasy. She curates and hosts nerdy fundraisers, events, screenings and dance parties as "THEE Black Elvira". When she’s not on her feet or behind the mic, you can find her online for killer movie reviews, podcasts, livestreams and commentary.

Continue Reading
Advertisement

Film Fests

Cabane à Sang 2026: Inside Montreal’s Wildest Trash Horror Film Festival

Published

on

“I promise, no one’s leaving here smarter tonight,” laughs Frank from the stage as he kicks off Cabane à Sang for its 9th annual trash horror film festival. The programming delivers an eclectic mix of gory, comedic, and bizarre short films from around the globe to a dedicated audience of enthusiastic fans.

What Is Cabane à Sang? A Quebec-Born Underground Horror Festival

Cabane à Sang (which translated to  English means “Blood shack”, a play on the Quebecois termphrase cabane à sucre / sugar shack) is a homegrown festival based in Hochelaga, a densely populated working class neighborhood on the east side of Montreal, Québec. For $18 (CA$), you can enjoy hours of meticulously curated madness. A can of local microbrew is $6, a can of soda is $2, and you are guaranteed to see some shit you’ve never seen before in your life.

“We want everyone to be able to come to the fest. Shows for $18 don’t really exist anymore,” insisted organizer Marc-Antoine in a franglais conversation between him, myself and Frank before Saturday’s “Keep It Weird” show (note: some quotes have been translated to English). Frank tells me about the festival’s early days as a road show. “It was a total fucking flop!” he laughs, but the branding was strong, so after taking a year off to regroup, the 2nd edition had people lining up early to attend, surprising even the organizers.

Photo Courtesy of Cabane à Sang

How Cabane à Sang Adapted During COVID and Found a Permanent Home

The pandemic forced the team to adapt again (Quebecers faced some of the harshest COVID restrictions in North America), and they ended up live streaming a jerry-rigged MTV-style projection screen to show the films while audiences participated in the chat. After moving around to a few locations and struggling with a host of technical difficulties, they landed at Productions Jeun’Est, an old church that’s since been turned into an event space. “This year is really next level,” says Marc-Antoine. “We need to highlight the tech crew here, who are just hallucinant (incredible),” as well as the venue, he continued, who’ve “really welcomed us and helped us out.”

This year’s edition features 5 evenings of madness spread out over two weekends. The first weekend hosted the events SCIF’HIGH (promising the “best and worst” of science fiction), RE-Animation (exploring a “wide range of animation styles”), and their signature event, Keep It Weird (a mix of “proudly off-putting short films”). The second weekend will feature Mixed Meats (an “unhinged mix of every corner of horror”) and their infamous 200$ or less film competition – the Party Pooper Spectacular (this year, the theme is Pizza Horror). A $20 virtual pass to the whole fest is available online for those with the misfortune of missing the in person experience.

Why Filmmakers and Fans Take This “Trash” Horror Festival Seriously

Despite the goofy themes, the team of ten-ish organizers take their roles seriously, and are thrilled to have landed in a venue that can give the films the respect they deserve. “Our setup is a bit punk, but I just think about the filmmakers,” insists Marc Antoine. “They put in so much work, it’s normal that we do them justice with a good screening.” Frank echoes this sentiment. “Some stuff [we get] is not necessarily gory or cheap or whatever. They’re just, like, oddities, and they deserve to be seen, you know? And tonight we’re going to see some of them!”

Advertisement

People are already showing up when I arrive an hour early to Saturday’s show (unheard of in a city like Montreal, where showing up 45 min after doors open is the norm). The vibes stay immaculate, thanks to the team’s guiding motto: Don’t be an asshole. “Like legit, this is our only fucking rule here,” laughs Frank, and it applies to everyone, including the filmmakers. “I think we all love this project because it allows us to showcase stuff that we personally like and that we don’t see anywhere else,” says Marc-Antoine.

‘Dom’s Spaghetti’ Courtesy of Cabane à Sang

Weird, Gross, and Brilliant: Inside Cabane à Sang’s Most Bizarre Short Films

True to their words, the evening’s programming features some truly mind bending films, grouped together under ‘themes’ like ‘films that feature bread’ or ‘films that start with the letter D’. For every serious film about war or depression, there are five that are totally absurd. (Frank assures me that they’ve got “plenty of movies with dicks and poop and stuff like that!”) There’s the lesbian eldritch love story inspired by The Thing (The Fling), and there’s a meat-witch orgy movie (Plant Mom). One film is simply about a haunted bidet (Bidet), another features every cinematic iteration of Vin Diesel (Dom’s Spaghetti). Then there’s the mixed media movie Dog Shit, described perfectly as “parfum de caca, marteau dans les couilles” (I’ll leave you all to translate that one yourselves).

As the evening wraps up, Frank reminds the audience to return the following week, before yelling “Shout out bébé Jésus!” to enthusiastic applause, given that we are all sitting in a church. “Over the years, people have come from all over, from Abitibi, from the US,” Marc-Antoine tells me. “Ya, they fly in!!” adds Frank, “we don’t have the money to fucking pay for their flights!” Marc-Antoine continues, saying, “that shows that this really connects with people, locally, yes, but people all over are moved by what we’re doing. We’re going up against some big machines, some big productions, but we’re able to connect with people all the same.”

Cabane à Sang Proves That Micro-Budget Horror is More Important Than Ever

“People are fed up also, and I don’t want to get into the whole fucking AI thing,” Frank adds, “but I think a lot of people are irritated about it. We’re sitting in a great position right now.” When talking about the upcoming film competition on May 9th, I learned that they’ve got 22 unique micro budget works lined up, with an additional slate of films that will soon be on their streaming site, Caban à Sang TV. “AI cannot fucking make this shit up,” Frank says. “This is honest, this is real.”

Continue Reading

Film Fests

Overlook Film Festival: ‘Hokum’ Review

Published

on

No way it’s the horror of 2026, but Hokum could be this year’s most solid “welcome to the big leagues, kid” horror. It’s a pill that’s got the potential to draw in new horror fans, but has enough flavor to satisfy a veteran for 101 minutes. Damian McCarthy definitely learned to polish up his idea of a nightmare from Caveat (2020), to Oddity (2024), to his best feature yet. Literally, sort of. With a single watch of each under my belt… Hokum has the same theme and tone as the previous two, just waxed and remixed. I’m not mad at it, though.

Hokum That Bridges Indie and Mainstream Appeal

Even the freaks like us who live in the underground horror tunnels can understand the public’s genre fatigue. I agree- it can seem like all these remakes and re-hashes are seriously weighing down blockbuster horror these days. The good indie stuff gets looked over, but McCarthy’s most recent film is a decent little in-between. It won’t bother you with a high cinema monologue, but it knows how to make you cringe, and will lock you in a dusty room with it.

It’s vague in exposition, not that a simple idea like this really needs to be super fleshed out. It stars Severance’s Adam Scott as Ohm Bauman, a famous Yankee novelist, a guy who grieves, and a big jerk. He arrives at a boutique Irish inn to scatter the ashes of his parents, and finish the last book in his trilogy. The challenge of writing an asshole lead that still has to convince the audience to root for them is damn refreshing. Scott’s performance holds it up too. He’s got a great jerk-face even without dialogue. He’s easy to pity, though- somewhere between Paul Sheldon from Misery, and a real life Stephen King, who shares the suspiciously balanced atmosphere that drove Jack Torrence nuts in The Shining.

Familiar Horror Influences with a Refined Execution

McCarthy borrows a lot from those two, and probably a catalog of blockbuster peek-a-boo scary movies. The reason Hokum is a good challenge for the horror gateway, is that it doesn’t try too hard to “elevate” (it does, though only a little) the genre. It listens and learns from its elders to complete the haunted hotel play-by-play. Not a repeat, but a re-do of the things that work for paranormal and folk horror. The aspect that Hokum brings home is the solid polycule made of production design, sound mixing, and cinematography. A happy, creepy home of cobwebs and jump scares.

The only hotel staff spared from Ohm’s terrible attitude is Fiona. When he learns she’s gone missing after a Halloween party he was famously blackout drunk for, he feels a responsibility to return the kindness and effort she had shown him. The last person to speak to Fiona was local kooky guy, Jerry (David Wilmot). His local status is confirmed by Ohm after Jerry claims Fiona is most likely dead in the honeymoon suite… because her ghost approached him and told him so. Jerry might be crazy, but Ohm has nothing to live for, apparently. Ohm agrees to investigate the suite that the hotel staff keep locked and out of service. It’s haunted by a witch, they say. Obviously.

Advertisement

Production Design and Sound Craft a Claustrophobic Nightmare

The suite, and the source of Hokum’s nightmares, is stunning work in the macabre department. Despite my distaste for them, it really is a playground for jump scares. Lighting and sound design do some real respectable heavy lifting that the viewer is forced (complimentary) to sit through. My personal playground, though, would be the dumbwaiter. The last time I had that much fun with one of those was when lowering Danny into the den of lizard aliens in Zathura (2005). Hokum’s dumbwaiter plays as much of a role as Adam Scott does in his.

Besides the horrors that persist in it, the honeymoon suite really comes alive with the one or two Resident Evil-esque puzzles in order to reach the meat of the mystery. A super engaging focus from cinematographer Colm Hogan to use frame ratio, and other visual camera tricks to induce the claustrophobia of the epicenter of scares. Bring back the dumbwaiter please.

Where Hokum Falls Short

What doesn’t work is excusable. The thin background information on Ohm’s trauma presents itself too often through a jump scare/flashback cocktail. Did this movie need to be 101 minutes, or could it have been 90? Did the viewer need to understand the weight of Ohm’s undesirable childhood? Not to this degree. I think these moments also risk confusion as to what supernatural thing we’re dealing with at the moment: the witch of the honeymoon suite, Fiona’s ghost, or the lasting haunt of Ohm’s mother’s tragic death? The film takes the “less is more” rule at about 70%- not awesome, but a passing grade, no doubt.

Advertisement
Continue Reading

Horror Press Mailing List

Fangoria