The Ithaca Fantastik (IF) festival returns to Ithaca, New York, November 3-12, 2017 with a carefully curated selection of new and classic genre films. With less than a month and a half to go, IF is announcing exciting changes, its first wave of titles, and a truly inspired retrospective!

Poster custom illustrated by Steve Ellis

Returning audiences will notice an expanded schedule as the festival grows from half a week to a full nine days. The festival’s two weekends will be dedicated to the best in current genre and festival cinema, with the week between featuring classic retrospective selections.

The first weekend kicks off with the return of the CINEMA PUR miniseries, with gems that genre fans won’t want to miss! From Finnish action comedy Samurai Rauni (Mika Ratto, Finland) to the hyper-real dark fairy tale Tigers Are Not Afraid (Issa Lopez, Mexico), audiences will be delighted by the variety the IF programmers are bringing to Central New York. Turkey and Canada are well-represented again this year, with the SXSW award-winner Inflame (Ceylan Ozgun Ozcelik, Turkey), and the TIFF midnight madness selection The Crescent (Seth A. Smith, Canada). The lineup wouldn’t be complete without a little witchcraft—the IF team promises Hagazussa: A Heathen’s Curse (Lukas Feigelfeld, Germany) will haunt viewers long after the screening. Rounding out Cinema Pur, the documentary Bight of the Twin (Hazel McCarthy, US), about the personal journey of avant-garde performance artist Genesis Breyer P-Oridge, interlaces belief and grief in a beautiful and unexpected way.

The 40th Anniversary of the Giallo masterpiece Suspiria (Dario Argento, 1977) provides an excellent occasion to revisit Italian exploitation classics with fresh eyes. The festival retrospective, ITALIANO PSICHEDELICO, will focus on the amazing visuals these inspired directors put on-screen. Selections include late 60s to mid 70s Italian films Suspiria (Dario Argento, 1977), Autopsy (Armando Crispino, 1975), Le Orme (Luigi Bazzoni, Mario Fanelli, 1975), Baba Yaga (Corrado Farina, 1973), Deadly Sweet (Tinto Brass, 1967), as well as more titles to be announced in wave two!

The weekend lineup also includes slasher comedy Tragedy Girls (Tyler McIntyre, UK), Tribeca award winner The Endless (Benson and Moorhead, USA), Graham Skipper’s directorial debut Sequence Break (USA), Nordic ghost tale I Remember You (Oskar Thor Axelsson, Iceland), and a twisted take on the timeloop trope A Day (Sun-Ho Cho, South Korea). From start to finish, there will be plenty to captivate audiences whose tastes lie across the horror spectrum and beyond!

Ithaca Fantastik would not be complete without its midnight series, featuring the riveting zombie comedy Zombiology (Alan Lo, Japan) and the surprising Brave Storm (Junya Okabe, Japan), which can be best described as an inventive and improbable mix between
and Evangelion.

Visit the IF Website and stay tuned for more Fantastik announcements and title waves soon!

About the Author

From humble beginnings as a bisexual art kid who drank more coffee than a 40-year-old author, Remy now holds a BFA in Film Production from Chapman University and is a proud member of the HorrorBuzz team (and still a bisexual art kid who drinks too much coffee). They were first introduced to the world of horror and camp when their grandma showed them The Rocky Horror Picture Show at age 5, and never looked back. When they're not writing cartoons or working on movies, one can spot them in various clubs around Los Angeles performing very, very self-deprecating standup comedy. Howdy ho!