
Blossom Needs a Ride Home (2025):Directed by Tim Schwagel. You know how it is. You spend your night fighting off a bloodthirsty maniac, you’re covered in gore, the adrenaline is fading, and now you have the ultimate indignity: trying to get a ride home in the middle of nowhere. I always wonder what happens in a slasher after it’s all over. This short has taught me that getting the ride you need may be even more difficult.
The Stay (2026): An illustrator, already frayed at the edges and pushing against a wall of creative stagnation, retreats to a remote, stark location to finish a massive project. As the deadline approaches, the boundaries between the illustrator’s dark, ink-heavy creations and his reality begin to bleed together. This gave me a lot of feelings, as I am against deadlines every day.

Max Distance (2025): This follows a weary programmer who spends her waking hours lost in the digital void of endless, droning Zoom meetings. To keep her sanity, she starts living vicariously through the window of her apartment, obsessing over the mysterious, handsome stranger living next door. It starts as a harmless flirtation with the idea of a real life, but as her professional isolation deepens, her daydreams begin to bleed into a full-blown fixation. As someone in these meetings all day, I understand.

Feast (2025): The world has ended and whatever is left is starving. In this wasteland, the survivors have adopted rituals that are as sadistic as they are necessary. Our protagonist is a man who finally hits his breaking point, refusing to participate in the group’s barbaric feasts. But in a society where conformity is the only currency, dissent is a death sentence. He finds himself caught in the crosshairs of a ruthless, manipulative leader who understands that if you control the calories, you control the morality. This won’t end well.

Always On (2026): Bronson Somatz is a man at the end of his rope. Fresh off a brutal breakup with an Instagram model, he retreats to the subterranean safety of his parents’ basement. Yet he doesn’t find clarity—he finds a bizarre new routine. To process the wreckage, he sets up shop in the back of an old, abandoned ice cream truck, holding therapy sessions for whoever wanders by. As he mixes booze with the isolation, the lines between his reality and his increasingly twisted, devolving daydreams start to blur. But maybe he’s better off. Maybe he doesn’t need a son named Batman and to watch other men rail his wife. Maybe he can succeed on his own with that reverse ice cream sandwich. Kyle Kuchta has made a short that I wish were a show streaming all the time. This was absolutely amazing.

The Lord of All Future Space and Time (2025): A grief-stricken cowboy whose life was shattered when his wife was brutally taken from him is ready to ride into the sunset and let the buzzards take him until he stumbles upon a mysterious duffel bag dropped straight from the future. Inside? Advanced tech that turns him from a man with nothing to lose into a one-man army with the power to rewrite the past. But it’s more than that. It’s all the lives that are touched or not touched by each decision. Director Chris Paul Russell has made something absolutely incredible here, and this is my favorite short I’ve seen at this fest. Just so well made and something that packs so much into its 24 minutes.

Fisher of Men (2025): Director Zach DeSutter tells a fish story. Or, well, made a short film that centers on a fisherman who is, to put it mildly, complicated. He’s a man of grit and tradition, but he’s carrying enough baggage to sink a skiff. When his questionable past catches up with him, he finds himself being hunted by something that has been lurking in the depths of his home lake for decades. The monster is an ancient, grotesque entity that seems to know exactly which buttons to push to make our protagonist pay for his earlier sins.

Imago (2025): Director Ariel Zengotita takes the concept of toxic family dynamics and drags it into the realm of body horror, creating a film that is as repulsive as it is impossible to turn away from. Ana has always lived in the shadow of her mother, but that shadow is about to get a lot more literal and a lot more chitinous. As her mother begins a slow, agonizing, and grotesque transformation into an insect, their already frayed, codependent relationship begins to unravel completely. It’s not just a physical transformation; it’s an emotional one. As the mother loses her humanity, Ana is forced to care for a parent who is becoming something entirely alien. She’s also going to make her feel guilty of dating a gringo, which is a whole other story.

RED: Beast Huntress (2025): Directed by Benjamin Maublanc, this follows Red, a fierce mercenary, who is hired to rescue a young shepherdess kidnapped by a mysterious beast on the eve of her wedding. As Red ventures deep into the forest to track the creature, she finds that man is the worst monster of all. This looks amazing and as a lover of sword and sorcery, I’d love to see a full-length.

And They Shall Handle Serpents (2025): If you thought getting the wrong order from your local delivery spot was bad, director Stuart Valberg is here to make your local driver look like a saint. The film introduces us to a takeout driver who has traded his GPS for a holy mandate. Convinced by the audio casettes he listens to that he’s been chosen to lead the wayward back to the Father, he decides that the best way to save souls is to make some terrifying—and usually lethal—adjustments to the local delivery orders. What a dark and well-made movie.

triptrap (2026): Jade (Ayla Xuan Chi Sullivan) isn’t great with people. But her sister invited her to a party and tells her she still ahs to go, even alone, but then everyone starts tripping and there’s a ghost and…well, we’ve all been there. Directed by Jack Dorfman, this made me think that the ghost might hav ea frightening face, but was probably the best person Jade had met at this place.

WAR (2026): Directed by Danny Shepherd, this takes our protagonist to an underground combat ring, a place where her sister has goen away to, leaving her family behind. What does she find in this violent sport of the future? Will she still have space for her sister after the carnage is over? And what exactly kind of battle is this? Great twist.

Penelope (2026): Penelope has been dead for a while—666 days, to be exact—and she’s spent most of that time catching up on some serious shut-eye. When she finally wakes up, she realizes she’s blown her deadline to raise an army of the undead to make her father Satan proud. With the clock ticking and the Lord of Lies himself on the way, she has to pivot fast. She starts scouring the neighborhood, recruiting the most unlikely soldiers imaginable: an irate MAGA neighbor who probably has a bone to pick, two total stoners who have no idea they’re being drafted for a zombie apocalypse, and a mopey boy from next door that Penelope is nursing a major crush on. When dad shows up and takes one look at this ragtag group of misfits, the comedy turns into a stinging look at the universal struggle of never quite being enough for the people who raised you.

The One-Minute Problem (2026): When you’re tinkering with the fabric of reality in a suburban garage, the last thing you need is a visit from the utility company. Director Nick Delgado has made a great short about Raul, a Spanish immigrant with a brilliant but dangerous mind. He’s on the verge of perfecting a teleportation device. The problem? It requires more juice than the local electrical grid can comfortably provide. Every time he fires it up, he triggers blackouts across the neighborhood. Enter a relentless, pencil-pushing Department of Water and Power inspector who isn’t just looking to write a fine. He’s looking to end the operation permanently. As the inspector closes in, Raul’s experimental high-voltage drain starts acting up, threatening the structural integrity of his invention, his lab partner, his quiet domestic life, and the safety of his pregnant wife. This feels like it needed a full-length to fit all the ideas.

My Favorite Murderer (2025): Gayle (Mitzi Akaha) is a true crime junkie who spends more time listening to forensic podcasts than she does dating. But she finally meets the right guy, he seems almost too good to be true. He’s handsome, charming, has an encyclopedic knowledge of unsolved mysteries and throws her a party where he dresses as Keith Morrison. But as the sparks fly, the line between a shared hobby and a shared pathology begins to blur. Is it true love or is it a mutual descent into darkness? Tina Carbone has created a fun short and yes, I am married to a true crime person who falls asleep listening to how luminol makes the blood glow.

Yolk (2025): Our protagonist, played with frantic, bleary-eyed intensity, is just trying to make it home after an all-night warehouse party. But a wrong turn down a labyrinthine industrial alleyway leads her straight into a pocket dimension inhabited by creatures that defy biological logic. These aren’t your standard movie monsters; they are slimy, shifting and deeply unsettling. As she struggles to survive this alien domain, she undergoes a transformation that is as much about the loss of self as it is about physical metamorphosis. Ingo Dieckmann has captured something frightening and yet gorgeous.

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