Round this time yearly, film buffs undergo from severe sugar overload as a result of abundance of extra-sweet cinematic holiday-themed confections accessible to stream. To revive a semblance of steadiness, the upstart twenty first One other Gap within the Head Movie Competition, a bloody good various to the gooey sentimentality, runs Dec. 6-17 on the Balboa and 4 Star theaters in San Francisco, with many alternatives streaming via Dec. 24. The fest is a seize bag of usually gory style gems. We jumped on the likelihood to take a look at a couple of.
For a full schedule and to buy tickets, go to https://www.ahith.com/.
“I Voted”: An unspecified police exercise locks down a disparate group of 14 voters and volunteers in a tense polling place throughout a risky presidential election. Sound too believable and related? Director Tyler Mann and co-screenwriter Rachel DeRouen’s slap-in-the-face premise doesn’t faucet a frayed nerve; it stabs at it, displaying how fixed feuding in our polarized nation can result in bloodshed. “I Voted” makes you query your personal strident opinions and contemplate how outrage is crippling democracy immediately. A sluggish burner, the film would have been more practical if it have been trimmed a bit. But Mann and DeRouen pull no punches, notably with a disheartening, explosive finale. Neglect polls and evaluation items—“I Voted” is each astute and observant, establishing stereotypes, then breaking them down. The big forged is uniformly good as properly. This one’s a scorching ticket. Unavailable to stream, it screens at 6:30 p.m. Dec. 17 on the 4 Star with the filmmakers slated to attend.
“‘Chainsaws Were Singing” is a goofy, music-infused horror romance destined to become a cult classic. (Courtesy Another Hole in the Head Film Festival)
“Chainsaws Were Singing”: Irreverent, goofy and gory, this scrappy Estonian genre mashup is appealingly bonkers. Shot in 2013 and just now released, this cult-movie-in-the-making so unabashedly embraces its ridiculousness, you can’t assist however turn out to be captivated by the buoyant madness. It’s partly as a result of filmmaker Sander Maran is in love with all of the genres he’s skewering: musicals, slasher movies, even romcoms. All are thrown into the blender for this boy-meets-girl-meets-serial-serial killer story a few suicidal man (Karl Ives) falling for a possible romantic savior (Laura Niils) who will get kidnapped by a chainsaw-wielding maniac who breaks out in music. Although “Chainsaws Were Singing” is hit-or-miss generally within the comedy division, it cuts to the style grain so properly, you simply received’t care. It screens at 6:30 p.m. Dec. 9 on the Balboa and is unavailable to stream.
“Fleetwood Peaks” apparently combines points of David Lynch’s iconic TV collection “Twin Peaks” and music by Fleetwood Mac. (Courtesy One other Gap within the Head Movie Competition
“Fleetwood Peaks: A Visual Album”: Religious “Twin Peaks” and Fleetwood Mac followers received’t need to miss this bizarre however hypnotic experimental undertaking that pairs photos and scenes from David Lynch’s cult traditional Nineties TV collection with music and movies of the enduring rock band. The outcome hews surprisingly true to the surreal spirit and magnificence of Lynch’s influential creation. And it cleverly mixes Angelo Badalamenti’s distinctive, evocative rating—among the finest made for a TV present—with Fleetwood Mac tunes. Dan Noall’s 60-minute function is certainly geared to followers; it casts fairly the visible and auditory stoner-like spell. It screens at 7 p.m. Dec. 11 on the Balboa and streams.
“Evil Dead Live: Deadite the Halls”: Sam Raimi’s gonzo horror traditional serves because the impetus for this live-onstage “special reimagining” of the undead splatterfest. In what’s sure to be a far cry from Christmas chestnuts resembling “The Nutcracker,” lead protagonist Ash — slayer of the undead — tries to summon up the true spirit of Christmas. That I’ve gotta see! The manufacturing, co- introduced with Desires on the Rocks, is at 7 p.m. Dec. 4-7 and Dec. 18-21 at San Francisco’s Eclectic Field, 446 Valencia St. Tickets price $35.