Latest Breaking News On - Brussels international fantastic film - Page 1 : vimarsana.com
19/04/2021 - The Canadian film
Vicious Fun scooped the Grand Prize and the Audience Award during this yearâs one-off online edition of the Brussels International Fantastic Film Festival
Riders of Justice by Anders Thomas Jensen
It was
Bill Calahanâs cleverly self-referential Canadian movie
Vicious Fun which won over the jury and the public at this 39th edition of the BIFFF (Brussels International Fantastic Film Festival), bagging itself both the Golden Raven and the Audience Award. The film follows in the footsteps of Joel, a film critic for a horror magazine who finds himself unintentionally involved in a support group for serial killers. Short of other options, Joel tries his best to blend in to avoid becoming their next victim.
United-kingdomSwedenFranceIrelandCanadaBrusselsBruxelles-capitaleBelgiumFrenchIrishCanadianGustav-egerstedt19/04/2021 - The Canadian film
Vicious Fun scooped the Grand Prize and the Audience Award during this yearâs one-off online edition of the Brussels International Fantastic Film Festival
Riders of Justice by Anders Thomas Jensen
It was
Bill Calahanâs cleverly self-referential Canadian movie
Vicious Fun which won over the jury and the public at this 39th edition of the BIFFF (Brussels International Fantastic Film Festival), bagging itself both the Golden Raven and the Audience Award. The film follows in the footsteps of Joel, a film critic for a horror magazine who finds himself unintentionally involved in a support group for serial killers. Short of other options, Joel tries his best to blend in to avoid becoming their next victim.
United-kingdomSwedenFranceIrelandCanadaBrusselsBruxelles-capitaleBelgiumFrenchIrishCanadianGustav-egerstedtGaia Weiss) wakes up to find herself imprisoned in a metal labyrinth full of traps, with a countdown bracelet on her wrist urging her to hurry. But as she starts making her way through the deadly attractions, there is one thing she cannot avoid â memories of her dead daughter. We spoke to director
Mathieu Turi about his film, which is screening at this yearâs Brussels International Fantastic Film Festival.
(The article continues below - Commercial information)
Cineuropa:
It's always so uncomfortable watching these claustrophobic situations. It's the kind of fear that's just universal.
Mathieu Turi: I am not claustrophobic at all, but even I would be frightened watching this kind of movie. It's in all of us; we are afraid of being stuck like that. But it works very well in cinema, in movies like
United-statesBrusselsBruxelles-capitaleBelgiumFranceFrenchAmericanPeter-franzLisa-gaia-weissMathieu-turiBrussels-international-fantastic-film-festival