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WATCH ALTER: Six Horror Shorts to Check Out

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Do you find your love of horror films combating a short attention span and struggling with your packed schedule? Or do you enjoy watching short horror movies because you can speed date various filmmakers in the time it would take to watch one feature-length title that you are not even sure you will like?

Then add Alter to your viewing habits. 

The Alter YouTube Channel is a treasure trove of short horror movies from countless filmmakers. The movies are creepy, usually great quality, and are from around the globe. It also allows you to start keeping tabs on directors and writers who might not have their first feature under their belt yet. I love it because I find so many POC and/or women filmmakers making some of the most gnarly shorts I have ever seen.

Allow me to point you toward a few of my favorite titles on the platform.

6 Horror Shorts to Check Out From Alter

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Other Side of the Box

Directed by Caleb J. Phillips
Written by Caleb J. Phillips & Nick Tag

A couple receives a mysterious box from an old friend. This was my gateway Alter short, and I have been hooked ever since. This short is effectively creepy in the best kind of unsettling ways. It also proves that some pretty horrific things can come in small boxes.

 

Kickstart My Heart

Written and Directed by Kelsey Bollig

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A woman fights through three levels of hell after a car accident. I appreciated this for giving me Buffy The Vampire Slayer vibes but with people of color. Then I found out it was inspired by the filmmaker’s journey to recover after an accident, and I found even more ways to respect it. It’s fun and violent but also tugs at your heartstrings.

 

Logan Lee & The Rise of the Purple Dawn

Written and Directed by Raymond C. Lai

Chinese-American DJ Logan Lee is set to make his live debut on the night of the Hungry Ghost Festival. However, the night goes wildly off course due to aliens and dank weed. This horror comedy is cute, creative, and quick. That’s all we can ask for, so the cameos were a bonus. If you’re looking for a fun entry point to Alter, start with Logan Lee & The Rise of the Purple Dawn.

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Nose Nose Nose Eyes!

Written and Directed by Jiwon Moon

A ten-year-old girl witnesses her mom do gnarly things to her dad to get more insurance money. This short film upset me to my core and sent me to hell. Talk about childhood trauma! I should have expected it to go where it did from the title. However, why would I suspect anything this sinister to be streaming so freely online? Please send helpafter you watch it too, though. 

 

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Pare

Written and Directed by Lauren Sick

A mysterious presence haunts a woman after finding a bloody jacket on a secluded road. This twisty short has become one of my go-to winter holiday watches. It’s beautifully shot, directed, and lit. It also epitomizes the “plot thickens” as each new piece of information makes you lean further in. It’s one of those short films I might never have seen without Alter’s assistance.

 

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Superpower Girl

Written and Directed by Soo-young Kim

Two students suddenly acquire tremendous capabilities. I was not ready for this short that seemed to be about a school of mean girls to end with so much blood and death. Every time I revisit this one, I wish it was a feature-length film because this world has me in a chokehold. It’s the perfect rollercoaster of emotions if you are looking to take a quick face journey.

These are just six of my favorite short films I have discovered on Alter. They get new stuff all the time, and many star familiar faces. Amanda Seyfried, Bella Ramsey, and Allison Tolman are just a few of our favorite beloved actors I have spotted on the channel. 

For more information, check out Alter’s website. If you feel overwhelmed about where to start watching or want a more curated list, check out The Alter Tapes on the Anatomy of a Scream Pod Squad Network. I am one of the many rotating hosts going through the neverending catalog to highlight some amazing short films for your viewing pleasure.

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Sharai is a writer, horror podcaster, freelancer, and recovering theatre kid. She is one-half of the podcast of Nightmare On Fierce Street, one-third of Blerdy Massacre, and co-hosts various other horror podcasts. She has bylines at Dread Central, Fangoria, and Horror Movie Blog. She spends way too much time with her TV while failing to escape the Midwest. You can find her most days on Instagram and Twitter. However, if you do find her, she will try to make you watch some scary stuff.

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The Creep Tapes: “Brad” (S1E4)

If The Creep Tapes aren’t automatically greenlit for a second season, someone is making a mistake. These episodes have endless replayability. Each time you watch, you’ll find something new. You will see moments where something clicks in Josef’s head that you missed the first time; you will see when he makes split-second decisions you may have missed. The easiest way to put my thoughts into a phrase is that this franchise is lightning in a bottle.

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Josef (Mark Duplass) continues his reign of terror with the best episode in the entire series so far. We’ve seen Josef trap people in a snowy mountain cabin, bait a birdwatcher into an oxygen-deprived fate, and get a gotcha journalist. So what could he do next? How about trapping a true crime filmmaker into a nightmare out of his own films?

Brad (Josh Ruben) is a washed-up true-crime filmmaker who hasn’t had a hit in years. He is invited by Josef to a gorgeous house and offered to hear a pitch that’ll change everything. What is the pitch? Document true crime as it occurs. After some hemming and hawing, Brad agrees to participate in this odd experiment. Little does Brad know that he may end up more than a documentarian.

Why is this my favorite episode? To start, Josh Ruben. I love Josh Ruben. From his hysterical appearances on Game Changer to his harrowing performance in A Wounded Fawn, Ruben is one hell of a talented actor. But he’s more than just an actor; he’s also a great horror director. His written/directed hit horror comedy Scare Me delights with frights, while Werewolves Within was a more mature, albeit still funny, directorial feat. Simply put, whatever Josh Ruben touches turns to gold.

Secondly, the story. Episode 4, “Brad,” has one of the best stories of the series. Imagine you are a true-crime filmmaker who hits gold with your first project. Then, everything dries up. You can’t find the magic that made your first project so special to true-crime fanatics around the world. Suddenly, you’re allowed to change your fate. There’s something magical about that.

I want to go into more detail about this episode’s story, and we will break the spoiler barrier at this point. The big twist for this episode is that not only is Brad obviously being targeted by Josef, but in a way that’s more sinister than Josef has done before. Josef turns Brad into the killer. What Brad didn’t know is that Josef had cameras set up in specific locations and planned to make Brad appear as a killer. Once Brad realizes this, his whole world falls apart. He, on camera, has become what he wanted to film. What Josef has done here is gorgeously grotesque.

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Besides the great twist, Duplass and Ruben have brilliant chemistry. I feel like I’ve said this many times in my Creep Tapes coverage, but Duplass plays off everyone so well. That’s one of the charms of Duplass and the Creep franchise as a whole. Without an actor as incredible as Duplass, this franchise would not work. His boyish charm plays off his maniacal inner nature in ways that haven’t been captured before.

If The Creep Tapes aren’t automatically greenlit for a second season, someone is making a mistake. These episodes have endless replayability. Each time you watch, you’ll find something new. You will see moments where something clicks in Josef’s head that you missed the first time; you will see when he makes split-second decisions you may have missed. The easiest way to put my thoughts into a phrase is that this franchise is lightning in a bottle.

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The Creep Tapes: “Jeremy” (S1E3)

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Episodes 1 and 2 of The Creep Tapes set a terrifying precedent of murderous mayhem at the hands of Josef (Mark Duplass). We may or may not have learned anything new regarding the canon or lore behind Josef, but we’ve gotten to watch him ‘play with his food’. I still believe that Episode 2, “Elliot,” is the slowest of the episodes thus far, but I’ve slightly come around to the idea of it. One of my best friends told me, “If that’s the worst episode, then we’re in for a treat.” And honestly, that’s the best way I could describe my thoughts on it.

Episode 3, “Jeremy”, takes us out of the wetlands and returns us to a claustrophobic mountain house. “Jeremy” follows our newest victim, Jeremy (Josh Fadem), a ‘gotcha’  internet personality whose whole personality surrounds exposing those he deems needing to be exposed. After his Big Pharma expose, Jeremy finds his sights on Father Tom Durkin (Mark Duplass). Jeremy meets with Father Durkin under the guise of an interview. Little do both of them know…neither is there for what the other thinks.

This episode will probably be a diving episode for fans. I’m personally a big fan of Josh Fadem. His quirky awkwardness is appealing to me. But there’s a chance his schtick will get old quickly for some viewers. The way Fadem and Duplass play off each other is fascinating to watch, and it creates a very compelling dynamic.

Duplass has always given 110% when playing Josef, but he amps it up tenfold in this episode. We get one of the funniest bits in Creep history when Josef/Father Tom Durkin *literally* exercises his demons out. Besides that exercise bit, Father Tom Durkin is one of Josef’s greatest personalities.

If you haven’t seen the episode, I’m about to mention something that is a spoiler, BUT it needs to be discussed. Toward the latter half of the episode, Josef shows Jeremy one of his tapes and uses this to ease Jeremy. The goal of showing him this tape is to give Jeremy his Gotcha moment. See, “Father Tom Durkin” was supposedly possessed and was being exorcised by Father Dom Gurkin. The video we see is of Josef, in his Peachfuzz mask and underwear, cowering in the corner of a small shack while Father Dom Gurkin tries to exorcize the demon from him.

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From what we’ve seen so far, between the first two films and the first two episodes, this is the only evidence that Josef has shown something from his collection to one of his victims. Not only is this idea haunting from Jeremy’s perspective but as a viewer as well. Knowing what we know, this is beyond terrifying. I can only imagine what’s going through Josef’s head while Jeremy is watching this. Will we witness Josef showing other victims tapes at any point?

Episode 3 continues to strike fear into Creep fans and shows no signs of stopping. I still don’t enjoy the credits and think it ruins the immersion (this is a general complaint of opening credits in all found footage) but I’ve come to accept it at this point. I’m happy that Josh Fadem has a character that is canon in the Creep-iverse, and this episode does an excellent job of continuing the legend of Josef. My only real question is, in this age of cell phone pings, how hasn’t he been caught yet?! I’ll continue to suspend my disbelief on that front. With three episodes left in this season, what havoc will Josef wreak on the camera people of this town? Tune in next Friday to find out!

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