The Fort Worth Press - UK horror film fest gains a worldwide reputation

USD -
AED 3.673028
AFN 67.50031
ALL 93.450112
AMD 388.379901
ANG 1.797007
AOA 911.999876
ARS 1007.249995
AUD 1.549667
AWG 1.8025
AZN 1.697483
BAM 1.854894
BBD 2.013135
BDT 119.148331
BGN 1.866613
BHD 0.376928
BIF 2895
BMD 1
BND 1.342539
BOB 6.890305
BRL 5.820097
BSD 0.997032
BTN 84.045257
BWP 13.603255
BYN 3.263026
BYR 19600
BZD 2.009882
CAD 1.407955
CDF 2870.999706
CHF 0.888203
CLF 0.035425
CLP 977.490134
CNY 7.25205
CNH 7.26023
COP 4403.72
CRC 509.469571
CUC 1
CUP 26.5
CVE 105.449921
CZK 24.148024
DJF 177.719544
DKK 7.12451
DOP 60.402589
DZD 133.979029
EGP 49.623504
ERN 15
ETB 123.449885
EUR 0.955145
FJD 2.2806
FKP 0.789317
GBP 0.79762
GEL 2.730139
GGP 0.789317
GHS 15.699388
GIP 0.789317
GMD 70.99985
GNF 8629.999717
GTQ 7.695226
GYD 208.598092
HKD 7.78304
HNL 25.225005
HRK 7.133259
HTG 130.860533
HUF 392.407502
IDR 15923.3
ILS 3.645425
IMP 0.789317
INR 84.302396
IQD 1310.5
IRR 42087.502706
ISK 138.609457
JEP 0.789317
JMD 157.444992
JOD 0.7093
JPY 153.391502
KES 129.499483
KGS 86.802594
KHR 4050.00021
KMF 468.950188
KPW 899.999621
KRW 1397.560198
KWD 0.30775
KYD 0.830915
KZT 497.847158
LAK 21965.00031
LBP 89549.999527
LKR 290.349197
LRD 179.82502
LSL 18.039403
LTL 2.952741
LVL 0.60489
LYD 4.894975
MAD 10.033503
MDL 18.222083
MGA 4679.000056
MKD 58.775491
MMK 3247.960992
MNT 3397.999946
MOP 7.992375
MRU 39.915016
MUR 47.319865
MVR 15.449766
MWK 1735.999806
MXN 20.822975
MYR 4.4575
MZN 63.889626
NAD 18.039728
NGN 1692.269994
NIO 36.759918
NOK 11.18857
NPR 134.472032
NZD 1.718331
OMR 0.385007
PAB 0.997069
PEN 3.77825
PGK 3.969898
PHP 58.947985
PKR 277.749776
PLN 4.11615
PYG 7780.875965
QAR 3.640604
RON 4.753102
RSD 111.746003
RUB 105.4915
RWF 1371
SAR 3.757123
SBD 8.39059
SCR 13.598931
SDG 601.498985
SEK 11.01112
SGD 1.348255
SHP 0.789317
SLE 22.700902
SLL 20969.504736
SOS 571.499774
SRD 35.405043
STD 20697.981008
SVC 8.724393
SYP 2512.529858
SZL 18.040157
THB 34.740094
TJS 10.653933
TMT 3.51
TND 3.16725
TOP 2.342094
TRY 34.650415
TTD 6.779275
TWD 32.494499
TZS 2644.99969
UAH 41.427826
UGX 3694.079041
UYU 42.488619
UZS 12829.999758
VES 46.580729
VND 25415
VUV 118.722009
WST 2.791591
XAF 622.125799
XAG 0.032903
XAU 0.000381
XCD 2.70255
XDR 0.762694
XOF 627.497895
XPF 114.049829
YER 249.925019
ZAR 18.20957
ZMK 9001.202255
ZMW 27.49457
ZWL 321.999592
  • CMSC

    0.0000

    24.73

    0%

  • GSK

    -0.1750

    33.975

    -0.52%

  • NGG

    -0.4300

    62.83

    -0.68%

  • RIO

    -1.0300

    61.95

    -1.66%

  • AZN

    -0.1050

    66.295

    -0.16%

  • BTI

    0.3050

    37.635

    +0.81%

  • RBGPF

    0.8100

    61

    +1.33%

  • BP

    -0.4300

    28.89

    -1.49%

  • BCC

    -3.9200

    148.58

    -2.64%

  • RELX

    0.2200

    46.79

    +0.47%

  • SCS

    -0.2100

    13.51

    -1.55%

  • CMSD

    -0.1310

    24.449

    -0.54%

  • BCE

    -0.4300

    26.59

    -1.62%

  • RYCEF

    0.0300

    6.8

    +0.44%

  • JRI

    -0.0500

    13.32

    -0.38%

  • VOD

    -0.0450

    8.865

    -0.51%

UK horror film fest gains a worldwide reputation
UK horror film fest gains a worldwide reputation / Photo: © AFP

UK horror film fest gains a worldwide reputation

There's no red carpet, glitzy awards ceremony or even a real cinema but UK film festival Horror-on-Sea, now in its 10th year, has carved a niche promoting independent movies that don't make the mainstream.

Text size:

"We decided from day one that there is no point in trying to copy all the big horror festivals," its director Paul Cotgrove, who founded the event in 2013 in Southend-on-Sea, told AFP.

"In the wintertime, it's dead," he said of the popular seaside resort, famous for its amusement arcades and pier that extends 1.3 miles (just over two kilometres) into the River Thames estuary.

"I thought, let's just look at the brand new independent horror films, the ones that actually probably don't get into bigger festivals because they're not polished, they're a little bit rough around the edges."

For two weekends every January, the convention meets at a sprawling seafront hotel that would otherwise be shorn of guests in the winter months of the tourist off-season.

Since it started, the festival has become a reference point for a niche genre of mainly self-funded B-movies.

This year, the festival is showing 36 feature films and 44 short films selected from hundreds of submissions over six days until January 22.

The specialist US website Dread Central last year ranked Horror-on-Sea among the best in the world, alongside others in Chile and Beijing, and Sitges in southern Spain.

- Informal -

On the cold, empty streets of Southend, there's nothing to suggest a world-renowned film festival is taking place.

Delegates mill about the hotel in film T-shirts and costumes.

"It's a really loyal audience that will forgive the low-budget film-making if it's got a good script," said Dani Thompson, who appears in six of the films being shown.

Debbie Blake, a 49-year-old wind turbine company employee, has become a regular and attended the last four editions "because of the new films that you don't get to see anywhere else".

She watches six feature films a day for six days, despite the uncomfortable chairs, simple video projection system and a microphone that regularly fails when a director introduces their work.

There's no formal question-and-answer session afterwards.

Instead, anyone can chat with filmmakers, directors, screenwriters and actors at the bar overlooking the churning North Sea, to discuss ideas and even hatch new projects.

More than one of the films on show began life this way, including director Mj Dixon's "Slasher House" series.

"In 2013, the first festival put on our first feature film, when no one else was really interested because it wasn't a mainstream film and that really launched my career," said Mj Dixon.

Dixon has since directed a dozen more feature films and won prizes in other competitions.

- Escapism -

Italian Christian Bachini's short film "Escalation" has already been screened around the world but he's happy to show it at Horror-on-Sea because of its reputation.

The festival has a "world premiere" every night. Sometimes the films have only been finished a few days before.

Most are by British or American filmmakers although this year includes a screening from Brazilian director Gurcius Gewdner.

Many international directors don't make the trip to the hinterland east of London because they have to pay for the trip out of their own pocket.

The shoestring horror industry -- notorious for gore, crude black humour and sexist stereotyping -- has proved itself much more agile in responding to crises than mainstream cinema.

"Last year, a lot of the films that were submitted were all to do with Covid," said Cotgrove.

"Low budget filmmaking people are more creative because they haven't got a lot of money and they were all suddenly thinking, 'if we go out on the streets, there's no people so we can make a film up about empty streets and it's free'."

Just as George A. Romero's "Night of the Living Dead" (1968) was "an allegory for societal change and segregation and things like that", horror films often reflect contemporary society, said Dixon.

But he added: "I think there's a lot of escapism to horror especially in the world we live in. Those uncertainties that exist in society."

For Blake, the message is simple in a real world blighted by war and the cost of living crisis. "Try and forget about it all and just watch the movies," she said.

H.M.Hernandez--TFWP