The Province

Five reasons to check out VIFF mini-festival Rupture

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1 American Animals

Curated by Curtis Woloschuk, a Vancouver Internatio­nal Film Festival programmer, Rupture is a new, four-day, mini-film festival. Presented by VIFF, it showcases “innovative, odd and otherworld­ly films that bend rules and blend genres,” according to VIFF. It kicks off with this “wildly entertaini­ng true-crime thriller” (Variety). If you can, stick around for Rock Steady Row, a Grand Jury Prize Winner at the 2018 Slamdance Film Festival that blows up college film convention­s.

2 David Lowery

The director of 2017’s acclaimed, subversive A Ghost Story takes part in a Creator Talk (May 26). Lowery also directed Ain’t Them Bodies Saints and Pete’s Dragon.

3 The Forest of Lost Souls

“A nasty and impressive little thriller that goes about its business with ruthless cinematic efficiency” (Variety, again). The Forest of Lost Souls features two strangers who meet in the woods between Spain and Portugal. Both have suicidal tendencies.

4 Hereditary

The Witch, The Babadook, and The Eyes of My Mother are among the best-reviewed horror movies of the last five years. According to consequenc­eofsound.com, this debut feature from American director Ari Aster, “is scarier, more inviting and ultimately more cathartic than any of the above.”

5 Self-Destructiv­e Cinema

In this one-of-a-kind event, Vancouver creators premiere nine, new, short films. Following their screening, the films will be ceremonial­ly destroyed (followed by a wake in the theatre’s atrium). Additional Vancouver content includes a screening of Fake Blood, a new, meta-horror flick from local filmmakers Rob Grant and Mike Kovac.

 ??  ?? David Lowery, the director of 2017’s A Ghost Story, will talk about his creative process at the inaugural VIFF mini-festival Rupture.
David Lowery, the director of 2017’s A Ghost Story, will talk about his creative process at the inaugural VIFF mini-festival Rupture.

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