Sizzlin’ Summer of Subterranean Psychotronica 2026: Moon of the Blood Beast (2019)

Week 2 (June 28 – July 4) – Dawna Lee Heising: Our beautiful QWEEN

I dig what Dustin Ferguson is doing with his movies. They’re not big budget affairs, but they have heart, quick a little over an hour bursts of blood, boobs and beasts, which as we know is pretty much all you need to make a good little movie.

Much like a Tigon movie from the past, this film concerns a small town that protects itself from the outside world by sacrificing a victim once every ten years to the titular Blood Beast. It’s also a lot like 1972’s (well, it wasn’t released until 1976) Track of the Moon Beast, the Richard Ashe film that was co-written by Batman co-creator (some would say main creator) Bill Finger. To hammer that point home, a character named Bernadette (Dawna Lee Heising) watches a scene from that very same movie within this movie.

This movie has AVN Hall of Famer (and guest vocalist on a Lords of Acid album) Alana Evans as an early victim, as well as Julie Anne Prescott (Kill Dolly Kill), Vida Ghaffari (Eternal Code), Mike Ferguson, Alan Maxson, Ken May, Chelsea Newman, Eric Reingrover, D.T. Carney, Rob Mulligan, Valerie Mulligan, Dustin Wonch and Raymond Vinsik Williams.

This has some fun monster costumes and gore to go with all the POV shots. It’s a quick watch and probably better than the film that inspired it, to be perfectly honest. I love that Ferguson debuts these movies on WGUD, an actual TV station, with this one airing on the After Hours show on June 7, 2019.

You can buy it on DVD from this site.

JUNESPLOITATION RECAP

This was the sixth year I’ve participated in the F This Movie! month-long event. Here’s my list, which you can also find on Letterboxd.

Day Film Title Category
1 Wedlock (1991) 90’s action
2 Bubble Bath (1980) Cartoons
3 Calendar Girl, Cop, Killer? Linda Blair
4 Def by Temptation (1990) Blaxploitation
5 After School (1988) Teenagers
6 The Public Cemetery Under the Moon (1967) South Korea
7 12 to Midnight (2024) Free Space
8 Kung Fu Zombie (1981) Zombies
9 The Wages of Fear (1953) Thrillers
10 Hot Fuzz (2007) Private Eyes
11 Knowing (2009) Disasters
12 Kiltro (2006) Kung fu
13 Star Time (1992) 90s horror
14 The Bronx Executioner, Cross Mission, Bridge to Hell, Urban Warriors Cannon
16 Ringo (1978) Free space
17 Tiger on the Beat (1988) Hong Kong Action
18 Redneck (1973) Franco Nero
19 Street Wars (1991) Black Filmmakers
20 Moontrap (1989) 80’s sci-fi
21 Twilight Theatre (1982) Free space
22 Sugar Cookies (1973) Revenge
23 Diamond Ninja Force (1986) Exploitation Auteurs
24 Delusion (1981) Slashers
25 Drunken Master II (1994) Jackie Chan
25 Rumble in the Bronx (1995) Jackie Chan
25 Thunderbolt (1995) Jackie Chan
25 First Strike (1996) Jackie Chan
25 Mr. Nice Guy (1997) Jackie Chan
25 Who Am I? (1998) Jackie Chan
26 Superhero Movie (2008) Heroes & Villains
27 Neverlake (2013) Italian Cinema
28 Firepower (1993) PM Entertainment
29 Rolls-Royce Baby (1975) Free space
30 See No Evil, Hear No Evil (1989) ’80s Comedy

JUNESPLOITATION: See No Evil, Hear No Evil (1989)

DAY 30: ‘80s Comedy!

Sometimes, the chemistry between two legends is enough to carry a movie. See No Evil, Hear No Evil is the definition of that sentence: a high-concept, low-brow collision that remains a mandatory watch for anyone obsessed with the glory days of the Pryor and Wilder pairing.

Directed by Arthur Hiller, this was the third of four collaborations between comedy titans Gene Wilder and Richard Pryor. It’s a classic odd-couple setup: Dave (Wilder) is deaf, and Wally (Pryor) is blind. They become an unlikely team when they witness a murder in Dave’s newsstand. Wally hears the shot, Dave sees the killer’s shapely legs, and what follows is a frantic, slapstick-heavy chase through NYC and New Jersey involving a stolen gold coin, a secret superconductor and a whole lot of hijinks, as they say.

The cast is a weird, wonderful mix of genre staples. You’ve got Joan Severance, who had the perfect cold, calculated look for the villainous Eve (and thiose gorgeous gams that Dave notices) and a young Kevin Spacey is in fullgoonmode as Kirgo, long before he hit A-list status. Look for the legendary Anthony Zerbe—a guy who has been in everything from The Omega Man to License to Kill—playing the blind villain, Sutherland. 

The production was a legal mess before a camera even rolled. Joseph Bologna and Renée Taylor (who wrote Lovers and Other Strangers) sold the script in 1984 but later sued Columbia Pictures for a massive payout after being cut out of the rewrite process. Before Wilder was cast, the studio considered Jim Belushi for the role of the deaf store owner. That would have been an entirely different—and significantly less charming—kind of movie.

While the critics at the time—including Roger Ebert—hated it, calling it adud,the audience didn’t care. It sat at number one at the box office for two weeks. My wife absolutely adores this movie, and we watch it at least twice a year.

There is one really good thing that came out of this: Wilder attended the NY League for the Hard of Hearing to prepare for his role. He worked with speech pathologist Karen Webb, who would become his fourth wife. That’s good luck, as he’d already turned down the movie twice, as he was worried the film would mock people with disabilities. He changed his mind when, during his research and meetings with real deaf people, he was told,People with handicaps do have a sense of humor.” 

Writers Earl Barret and Arne Sultan created Too Close for Comfort, so from all the Cosmic Cow fans, thank you.

Chattanooga Film Festival Announces Award Winners

The 13th edition of the Chattanooga Film Festival, aka “Summer Camp for Cinephiles,” is officially in the books. After a fantastic week of screenings, our panel of judges and film fans have spoken.

CFF salutes all our award winners! We extend a heartfelt thanks to our patrons, sponsors, and staff, and offer our congratulations to all the filmmakers—whether they took home an award or not. We can’t wait to set up camp again next year.

Audience Awards

  • Narrative Feature: Orfeo – Directed by Virgilio Villoresi
    • A pianist falls for a mysterious woman who vanishes into a supernatural realm. Following her through a doorway, he encounters fantastical beings and must navigate a dreamlike afterlife to find her, guided by music and memories.
  • Documentary Feature: Blood & Guts – Directed by Carlye Rubin and Katie Green
    • The lines between real life and reel life are muddied in the story of the Adams, an unconventional family who makes independent horror films. While they may vomit blood onto one another, lack boundaries and make frequent use of the f-word, they also face what every family must: change.
  • Short: Scissors – Directed by Hannah Alline
    • Follows a slasher with a grudge who meets his match when a group of queer friends on a weekend getaway turns his killing spree into a bloody night he never saw coming.

Jury Awards

  • Best Feature: Jump Scare – Directed by Donnie Hobbie
  • Best Short: Xolo – Directed by Matthew Serrano
  • Best Documentary: First Feature – Directed by Curtis Matzke
  • Best First Feature: Sender – Directed by Russell Goldman
  • Bad Night Good Movie Award: Big City Pizza – Directed by Dusty Saunders
  • Dangerous Visions Award (Feature): The King of Black Goo – Directed by Andrew Zappin
  • Dangerous Visions Award (Short): Nebuchadnezzar – Directed by Samuel Ogunremi
  • Let’s Get Physical Special Jury Prize: Dead Media – Directed by Joseph Scrimshaw
  • Jeff Burr Prize: On Gallows Hill – Directed by Ed Shimborske
  • Pride Award: Camp – Directed by Avalon Fast
  • Cult Classic Award: Bunny Rabbit – Directed by James Branson
  • Tennessee Filmmaker Award: The Recluse – Directed by Matt Webb
  • Student Filmmaker Award: The Damned Thing – Directed by Christopher Lewis
  • Sonic Cinema Prize: The Obsessed – Directed by Wataru Takahashi
  • CFF Mantra Special Jury Prize: Enduring Destiny – Directed by Thomas Reilly-King
  • Short & Sour Special Jury Prize: Assets & Liabilities – Directed by Zach Weintraub
  • Best Cinematic Universe Tie: Frogman Returns / Grind – Directed by Anthony Cousins, Ed Dougherty, Brea Grant, and Chelsea Stardust

About the Chattanooga Film Festival

The Chattanooga Film Festival is a 501(c)(3) non-profit run entirely by a small but passionate crew of volunteers. All proceeds from the festival’s ticket and badge sales and donations go directly to the staging of each year’s festival. For more information, visit chattfilmfest.org.

Chattanooga Fim Fest 2026: Recap

The Chattanooga Film Festival is a 501c3 non-profit run entirely by a small but passionate crew of volunteers. All proceeds from the festival’s ticket and badge sales and donations go directly to the staging of each year’s festival. For more information, visit chattfilmfest.org or follow us on InstagramFacebook, and Youtube or even join our virtual monthly secret screening series with The Double Secret Cinema Society on Patreon.

Wow, I sure watched a lot of movies this week.

As always, Chattanooga Film Festival is my favorite time of the year. A fest that gets it, giving online viewers just as much content as those in person. They always surprise me with what they have to show and it’s always exciting. Thanks for having me!

Here’s my Letterboxd list. I didn’t get 100% but I tried. Here’s what I watched:

Features

Chattanooga Film Festival 2026 Red Eye #7: The Wrong Guy (1997)

Nelson Hibbert (Dave Foley) is the kind of corporate ladder-climber who thinks he’s a shark but is actually a goldfish. When he loses the executive promotion at Nagel Industries, despite marrying his boss’s daughter, he decides to storm the big boss’s office and unleash a tirade for the ages, yellingGo to hell, you bastard! I swear. I will kill you! You are dead to me!

Instead of a promotion, he finds Mr. Nagel slumped over with a knife in his back. Nelson’s brain immediately hits the panic button. He assumes that because he was angry and present, he’s Public Enemy Number One. He bolts and goes on the lam, changing his look, living in the woods and trying to survive off the grid.

The kicker? The office security cameras captured the entire murder, and the police have zero interest in Nelson. He is a fugitive running from a law that isn’t even looking for him, while simultaneously trying to stay one step ahead of the actual killer who starts tracking him down. It’s a farce of errors where the biggest threat to Nelson is his own panicked imagination.

Foley co-wrote the script with Jay Kogen (who wrote for The Simpsons) and Wallace Wolodarsky. You can feel the sharp, cynical humor of the Kids in the Hall era throughout the entire runtime. And David Steinberg was a massive influence on the comedy scene for decades. His background in stand-up and his work on shows like Designing Women and Seinfeld gave him the perfect sensibility to frame this film as a series of escalating, claustrophobic miscommunications.

There’s no way this movie was going to be a success. It’s too weird, too full of character actors I love (Joe Flaherty, Jennifer Tilly and, of course, Kevin McDonald, Mark McKinney and Scott Thompson in cameos; what was Bruce McCulloch, causing more cancer?), too all over the place. It’s like an episode of The Simpsons when you were a kid or Mad Magazine. It’s as dense as dense can be when it comes to jokes, and I laughed out loud like six times, which is more than I’ve laughed in weeks.

This never came out in theaters and barely made it to DVD. My kind of movie.

Also: You should know that as a kid, I totally wanted to grow up to be Joe Flaherty. He remains a hero.

You can watch this either in-person or virtually at the Chattanooga Film Festival. For more info, visit the official site.

Chattanooga Film Festival: Emily’s Monster (2020)

Young Emily is doing what every horror movie child inevitably does: snooping where she has no business being. Her target is the basement, a dark, dusty repository of household secrets. What she unearths down there is decidedly not a lost plaything or a dusty box of old records. It’s something much, much worse. The moment Emily vanishes, the tone shifts—the film sheds its skin, transforming from a domestic mystery into a desperate, frantic hunt for a missing child who is trapped in a space that no longer obeys the laws of reality.

The way this is shot—and the sound design—elevate a very simple idea into a tense short. While the creature design leans a bit too heavily on Spirited Away’s aesthetic—giving it a whimsical, No-Face-esque silhouette that feels slightly at odds with the grit—the sound design and claustrophobic cinematography keep your eyes glued to the screen regardless of the aesthetic choice.

That’s really my only note. Oli Jess has made a more frightening film than others that get ten times the budget and length. 

You can watch this on YouTube. Watch it with headphones.

You can watch this either in-person or virtually at the Chattanooga Film Festival. For more info, visit the official site.

Chattanooga Film Festival 2026 Red Eye #4: Fatal Frame (2014)

In the video game Fatal Frame, you are Miku Hinasaki, a young woman with a sixth sense for the spectral. Her brother, Mafuyu, has gone missing while investigating the infamous Himuro Mansion. It’s a place so steeped in bad vibes and urban legend that the locals won’t even talk about it. Miku heads into the belly of the beast to find him, only to realize that the mansion is a sprawling, multi-dimensional trap filled with the vengeful spirits of those who died during a botched ritual. But instead of killing things, you capture their souls on film to banish them.

Director Makoto Shibata and producer Keisuke Kikuchi didn’t just want to make a game; they wanted to craft a sensory experience. They drew heavily on Japanese war films and classic ghost stories. They were obsessed with making this the scariest thing possible, to the point where they had to cut some of the more graphic ideas because they were just too intense.

When the game hit North American shelves, the marketing department went full exploitation-hustle, slappingBased on a True Storyon the box. Did a real mansion in Japan have a creepy ritual? Maybe. Does it matter? Not really.

Mari Asato’s 2014 adaptation Fatal Frame: The Movie (or Gekijōban Zero) is going to throw you a curveball if you think it’s going to be based on the game. Instead of frantic survival horror, this is a much moodier, gothic-drenched melodrama that trades jump scares for a haunting, atmospheric exploration of isolation and forbidden love.

The story centers on Aya Tsukimori (Ayami Nakajō), the coolest girl at a strict Catholic boarding school, who suddenly barricades herself in her dorm room. She becomes an urban legend, as students who kiss a photo of Aya at midnight disappear, only to be found later, drowned. When Michi Kazato (Aoi Morikawa) begins digging into the vanishing of her classmates, she finds herself pulled into a supernatural web that is far older and more tragic than a simple schoolyard curse. The plot gets pretty convoluted, involving a photographer named Mary (Noriko Nakagoshi) who archives the past suicides of women who couldn’t face a society that rejected their love. I

So yes, while sold as a video game tie-in, this is based on Fatal Frame: A Curse Affecting Only Girls by Eiji Ohtsuka, which explains why this feels like a doomed romance influenced by lesbian vampire films. It was directed and written by Mari Asato.

You can watch this either in-person or virtually at the Chattanooga Film Festival. For more info, visit the official site.

Chattanooga Film Festival 2026: On Gallows Hill (2025)

Edward Shimborske IV—making his feature debut at the ripe age of 24—definitely brings the ambition with On Gallows Hill.

Matthew (Rohan Maletira) was a regular college kid until a rough night in New York City and a fight with a bouncer ends with him being dumped in an alley in the worst neighborhood in the Big Apple. He ends being attacked and turned into a vampire.

Here’s where Shimborske gives us a clever twist: our new bloodsucker can’t just feed on anyone. He’s limited to the blood type he had while human. Poor Matthew is O-, turning his new eternal life into a comedic hunt for the right donor.

He falls in with a crew of underground vampires, including mentor figure Joseph Singer (Sam Smiley) and the dandyish leader of The Inner Circle, Ben (Noah Jacobs). They take pity on him and get him a source for blood while he works for them. 

Toss in a ticking-clock mechanic where vamps turn into desiccated husks if they don’t feed every ten days and a doomed romance with a nursing assistant named Annie Apples (Jill Pierangeli — who has the blood type Matthew needs — and you have a movie that is clearly bursting with ideas. 

Maybe too many ideas, as by the end we also have Mr. James Skinner (Billy Whitehorse), a vampire hunter who pursues him.

The biggest takeaway here is that On Gallows Hill feels like an overextended feature. The high-concept hook of the blood type diet is fantastic and I loved the scene where our protagonist keeps asking women their blood type at a bar. Unfortunately, the film doesn’t quite know how to stretch that premise across two hours without losing steam.

However, the craft on display is worth the price of admission. 

For example, the black, white, and red opening title sequence (crafted by Jasper Morris, Anna Anderson, Jake Johr and Shimborske) really sets the mood. It’s gritty, nightmarish, and exactly the kind of stylistic punch we look for.

Shimborske is clearly a filmmaker who has watched many movies and wants to try everything at once. But there is more than a vibrant pulse beating here. I can’t wait to see what he makes next.

You can watch this either in-person or virtually at the Chattanooga Film Festival. For more info, visit the official site.

Chattanooga Film Festival 2026: Sunshine Girls (2026)

Directed by Madeleine Hicks, this is the story of Elaine (Clara Vance). She’s teetering on the edge of thirty, living in a world that’s suffocating under the weight of total environmental collapse. More than right now, that is.

Oxygen is a luxury, and humanity is dying. The government solution is a medical procedure that repurposes a woman’s reproductive system to perform photosynthesis. Instead of having a baby, you become a human air purifier.

Elaine joins the Sunshine Girls, a group of these converted women who act as living, breathing lung replacements for society. It’s supposed to be an empowering, life-affirming transformation, but is it? As Elaine begins to thrive, the film peels back the layers to show that when you’re turned into a human plant, you’re also prone to being harvested.

In her director’s statement, Hicks said, Sunshine Girls is both a love letter and a rallying cry. ​ Women are the sunlight illuminating everything around them. They are nurturing. They are strong. They are giving. They are the seeds from which we grow and the roots that ground us. ​ We want to explore the beauty and tenderness of life-giving, while also acknowledging the potential for violence and suffering alongside it.

You can watch this either in-person or virtually at the Chattanooga Film Festival. For more info, visit the official site.