The 20th annual Boston Underground Film Festival is returning to Harvard Square and it’s bringing a five-day fever dream of vanguard and description-defying filmmaking, including soul- thrillers/killers/chillers, to the Brattle Theatre and Harvard Film Archive. The festival will run from March 21st through the 25th. This year’s program includes some of the festival’s most eclectic and challenging selections to date, highlighting the harrowing, the horrifying, and the heady.

MY NAME IS MYEISHA

MY NAME IS MYEISHA is a  phantasmagorical meditation on a beloved teen’s life cut tragically short, told from her perspective at the moment of her unjust death kicks off the festival at full force. “BUFF is deeply honored to mark its twentieth birthday by celebrating the poignant, powerful story of Myeisha (Tyisha Miller, the real-life inspiration for Myeisha), a young woman who did not make it to hers,” says Director of Programming, Nicole McControversy.

Coming straight of the festival line from 2018 Slamdance world premiere, where it garnered both the Audience Award for Beyond Feature and the Slamdance Acting Award for breakout performance by lead Rhaechyl Walker, MY NAME IS MYEISHA  is a bold and beautiful adaptation of co-writer Rickerby Hinds’ play, Dreamscape, that demands and deserves your attention. Director Gus Krieger and star Walker will be in attendance for a post-screening Q&A.

BUFF

BUFF is taking its love of the beyond to the next level with a rare repertory screening of Slava Tsukerman’s underground masterpiece of avant-garde sci-fi and queer cinema, LIQUID SKY.  Nearly 35 years to the day since its theatrical release, BUFF is presenting this neon-drenched, new wave, electroclashtastic cult classic on lush 35mm. Inspiring generations of creatives, filmmakers, musicians, and weirdos since its debut, LIQUID SKY is a mind-melting must-see on the big screen.

BUFF is also bringing double trouble from the French film vanguard with the East Coast premiere of Coralie Fargeat’s genre-flipping, outré feature debut REVENGE  and the New England premiere of BUFF alumni Bruno Forzani & Hélène Cattet’s piece de resistance, LET THE CORPSES TAN. Fargeat revamps the rape-revenge thriller subgenre, spinning a subversive monomythic tale of female survival and rebirth with fierce and formidable Matilda Lutz in the lead. Forzani and Cattet deliver another gorgeous, sensory-saturated homage to the vintage genre, this time honing their craft in pulpy poliziotteschi perfection against a bullet-riddled spaghetti-Western backdrop.

DAHA

The festival is thrilled to host the US premiere of Turkish writer-director Onur Saylak’s chilling debut DAHA and the New England premiere of British writer-director Deborah Haywood’s stunning, deeply personal first feature PIN CUSHION. While Haywood explores the visible and invisible wounds of intergenerational bullying as experienced by a mother and daughter in small-town England, Saylak examines the cycle of intergenerational violence between a father and son caught up in the refugee smuggling trade in small-town Turkey.

 



BUFF is also excited to present the World Premiere of Stacy Buchanan & Jess Barnthouse’s homegrown horror doc SOMETHING WICKED THIS WAY COMES and the New England Premiere of Aaron McCann & Dominic Pearce’s Aussie-by-way-of-Japan mocku-doc TOP KNOT DETECTIVE. Buchanan & Barnthouse give New England’s pop-horror-culture the full-feature treatment, exploring the region’s viability for growing our independent film scene with input from genre luminaries, horror fans, natives, and local filmmakers. McCann & Pearce explore Japan’s most beloved ronin detective, Sheimasu Tantai, from the 1970s style martial arts series RONIN SUIRI TENTAI (Deductive Reasoning Ronin), and his Oz-based cult fandom so thoroughly and hilariously that it’s nigh impossible to discern fact from fiction…it’s somehow beyond both.

The festival has not forgotten its smaller younger audience. The kid-friendly annual SATURDAY MORNING CARTOONS program with cereal smorgasbord will be programmed and hosted by renowned curator, author, publisher, and founder of the Miskatonic Institute of Horror Studies, Kier-La Janisse; a veritable bounty of shorts programming celebrating fantastic music videos, animation, transgressive horror; and more!

Individual screening tickets will be available online for advanced sales and at the Brattle Theatre box office day of.

BOSTON UNDERGROUND FIRST WAVE:

DAHA – US Premiere

Onur Saylak | Turkey | 2017

Young Gaza lives in a small town on Turkey’s Aegean coast and dreams of escaping the soul-crushing drudgery of the family business: smuggling refugees. Studious and still imbued with a youthful sense of optimism and innocence, Gaza is pulled deeper and deeper into a dark, immoral world of human suffering and exploitation by his domineering father; will he avoid becoming the monster he’s being raised to be?

LET THE CORPSES TAN – New England Premiere

Bruno Forzani, Hélène Cattet | France, Belgium | 2017

After stealing a cache of gold, Rhino and his gang discover a near-abandoned Mediterranean hamlet hideout, occupied by an inspiration-seeking woman. Their bucolic surroundings become a horrific battlefield when uninvited guests arrive on the scene to foil everyone’s plans.

LIQUID SKY – 35th Anniversary

Slava Tsukerman | USA | 1982

Heroin-seeking invisible aliens land on top of an NYC apartment inhabited by a drug dealer and her androgynous, bisexual, nymphomaniac, fashion model lover: Margaret (played by co-writer Anne Carlisle). The aliens quickly get hip to a better drug–orgasmic pheromones–and start vaporizing her casual sex partners. Things get weirder as Margaret’s arch nemesis Jimmy (also played by Carlisle), a lonely, horny neighbor across the street, and a German scientist gets involved in the proceedings.

MY NAME IS MYEISHA – Opening Night | East Coast Premiere

Gus Krieger | USA | 2018

On the evening of December 28th, 1998, Myeisha Jackson’s night ends with her asleep in her car, her cousins outside, and police on the way. In the fleeting moments, before the unthinkable occurs, she awakes with a start inside her inner dreamscape and contemplates her life–what it was and what it was going to be. A metaphysical trip into Myeisha’s mind reveals a life brimming with promise on the cusp of adulthood–her secrets, goals, flaws, strengths, loves, and talents–and is fueled and expressed by her love of hip-hop, dance, and spoken word as she comes to terms with what’s happened to her.

PIN CUSHION – New England Premiere

Deborah Haywood | UK | 2017

New to town, the inseparable dafty duo Lyn and her daughter Iona are excited to have a fresh start. Determined to establish herself successfully after a rocky start, Iona drifts away from her bestie/mum and becomes BFFs with the school’s equivalent of the “Heathers.” Forlorn, Lyn attempts to make friends of her own, but after a lifetime of being bothered, she still struggles with the same vicious trials and tribulations of being different that her daughter now faces.

REVENGE – New England Premiere

Coralie Fargeat | France | 2017

What starts as a weekend getaway between a married man and his mistress quickly devolves into a deadly game of cat and mouse when his hunting buddies arrive. Director Fargeat revamps and recalibrates the rape-revenge trope from a female perspective, creating a violent, visceral monomyth about the rebirth and survival of a woman wronged seeking to even the score.

SOMETHING WICKED THIS WAY COMES – World Premiere

Jessica Barnthouse, Stacy Buchanan | USA | 2018

Something Wicked This Way Comes is a full-feature exploration of the popular horror culture of New England. Through discussions with genre luminaries, horror fans, and natives, the film discovers popular conventions within the genre and identifies how they’re driven by the history, eerie settings, and social issues of the area. And through the stories of actors and local filmmakers, it aims to discover if the area’s passion is strong enough to help grow an independent film industry.

TOP KNOT DETECTIVE – New England Premiere

Aaron McCann, Dominic Pearce | Australia, Japan | 2017

This is the story of how a failed Japanese samurai series, RONIN SUIRI TENTAI (Deductive Reasoning Ronin), became an instant Australian cult classic. Badly acted, translated and edited, the show centered around a detective samurai who solved crimes and killed monsters while avenging his master’s murder. This hilarious doc digs up the bizarre behind the scenes antics that its creator and co-stars got up to, and investigates how the main star ended up in jail 20 years later…or maybe not!

 

About the Author

Rosalia likes to spend her nights watching Netflix or reading a good book. Her interest for horror came from a very young age. Her mother nurtured this obsession and she thanks her for it. She also thanks the film IT for her dislike for clowns. She is currently finishing her Bachelor Degree in Cinema and Television Arts and hopes to be behind the camera shooting the next big thriller.