ARCHIVES 2018
International fantastic film competition
Crossovers competition
Short film competition
Indie Game Contest
Opening / Closing
International Fantastic Competition
Crossovers competition
Animated Competition
Midnight Movies
Special Screenings
International Competition
Animated Competition
Competition Made in France
Chromosomes XX
« Chromosomes XX » met en vedette 10 films divers qui illustrent la créativité féminine dans le cinéma de genre. Performances nuancées et réalisation peaufinée donnent de la vitalité aux thèmes déroutants du vampirisme, du métamorphisme et de la désagrégation mentale, pour n’en citer que quelques-uns. Préparez-vous à affronter des beautés toxiques et des dames enivrées de carnage qui, dans le registre de l’horreur, éclipsent bon nombre de leurs pendants masculins.
On découvrira ainsi une Deneuve psychotique qui matraque et taillade dans Répulsion de Polanski, ou une Adjani rendue tout aussi folle par un désir insatiable dans Possession de Zulawski. Dans le classique La Féline de Tourneur, la douce Simone Simon est transformée par la colère en un léopard meurtrier. Le brutal Sœurs de sang de De Palma n’est pas en reste, consacrant le pouvoir destructeur de la femme.
Aux frontières de l’aube de Katherine Bigelow grouille de vampires trash qui contrastent socialement avec l’élégante comtesse assoiffée de sang des Lèvres Rouges de Kümel. Le mal ne connaît aucune limite d’âge, dans Mais ne nous délivrez pas du mal de Séria, ces néophytes insouciantes s’y adonnent lors des vacances scolaires.
Sur une note (un peu) plus légère, essayez le Carnaval des âmes, dont l’héroïne ne commet qu’un seul péché : celui de crever l’écran (et de hanter les rêves de Lynch) par son inquiétante étrangeté. Les sorcières d’Eastwick, dont les respectables personnages féminins deviennent accro au sexe avec un Jack Nicholson démoniaque, finira d’égayer le tableau. Savourez ces trésors à la sauce XX ; il y en a encore beaucoup d’autres à (re)découvrir.
La Féline
Le carnaval des âmes
Répulsion
Les lèvres rouges
Mais ne nous délivrez pas du mal
Dr Jekyll et Sister Hyde
Possession
Soeurs de sang
Aux frontières de l'aube
Les sorcières d'Eastwick
Rétrospective John Landis
American College
Le loup-garou de Londres
Les Blues Brothers
Innocent Blood
Série noire pour une nuit blanche
Un fauteuil pour deux
Make my day !
Double programme Make My Day ! Studiocanal et réalisateur et critique de cinéma Jean-Baptiste Thoret s’associent pour faire revivre des films injustement oubliés. Polars italiens, gialli, comédies, exploitation… tous les genres et toutes les nationalités auront leur place dans cette nouvelle collection dirigée par Jean-Baptiste Thoret.
Aux frontières de l'aube
La mort a pondu un oeuf
Midi-Minuit fantastique
A l’occasion de la sortie du 3e volume de l’intégrale Midi-Minuit Fantastique, réédition de la célèbre revue créée en 1962, nous vous proposons une soirée exceptionnelle avec quatre courts-métrages restés longtemps invisibles, présentée par Nicolas Stanzik, directeur de la collection. L’adaptation de Dracula en ombres chinoises de Jean Boullet (1963), La Brûlure de mille soleils de Pierre Kast (1965), somptueuse variation interstellaire sur la tragédie de Bérénice, Ténèbres de Claude Loubarie (1971), oeuvre en avance de dix ans sur le fantastique transalpin de Lucio Fulci et enfin Fantasmagories de Patrice Molinard (1963), film de vampire avec Édith Scob en croqueuse d’enfants et Venantino Venantini dans le rôle d’un émule de Dracula.
Dracula
La brûlure de mille soleils
Ténèbres
Fantasmagorie
Indie Game Contest
16 Jeux finalistes de l’Indie Game Contest
VR Corner
Conferences, Expositions and Events
Fantastic Village
Cette année encore, le Village fantastique vous attend sur la place St Thomas !
Que vous y passiez pour prendre vos «Pass Festival», débriefer sur les films que vous venez de voir ou simplement décompresser après le travail, venez profiter d’une ambiance Steampunk autour d’un verre et d’une tarte flambée dans les confortables canapés d’Emmaüs.
Véritable lieu d’échange, de partage et d’écoresponsabilité, le Village s’est entouré de formidables partenaires qui permettent aux festivaliers de découvrir un autre aspect du festival.
Des exposants aux savoir-faire variés seront présents et de nombreuses animations ponctueront ces 10 jours : brunch écoresponsable, initiation à l’impression 3D, ateliers créatifs, jeux et bien d’autres activités encore, vous avez l’embarras du choix et aucune excuse pour ne pas passer nous voir !
Guest of honor
The menacing euphoria of entertainment John Landis is the youngest of the “movie brats” generation, which in the 1970s and 1980s provided Hollywood with the new blood it needed. He was the youngest of the naughty boys, the one who made fun of everything and exposed hidden aspects of the system. By placing American pop culture, childish and trivial, poetic and vulgar, at the heart of his work, Landis exposed its ambivalence. In his cinema, laughter and nostalgia are never quite free from a vague feeling of unease. — Jean-François Rauger
John Landis
In 1978, Animal House shattered the frat comedy codes and introduced John Belushi, later to star in The Blues Brothers, a tribute to Black music, implicitly present in most Landis films. At a time when horror cinema was being renewed by auteurs such as Tobe Hooper and Joe Dante, Landis directed An American Werewolf in London in 1981, a film in which comedy did not defuse horror, but added an unprecedented satirical dimension to it. Twelve years later, Innocent Blood got the same treatment.
Fantastic Film Jury
Anurag Kashyap
The internationally renowned Indian filmmaker Anurag Kashyap has 16 films to his directorial credit, of which Gangs of Wasseypur, Ugly and Psycho Raman were official Cannes selections. Awarded the French Knight of the Order of Arts and Letters in 2013, Kashyap is a leading critic of India’s film censorship laws. His new film, Husband Material, will premier at the 2018 Toronto International Film Festival.
Martin Koolhoven
Dutch director Martin Koolhoven is a graduate of the Amsterdam Film Academy. His film Winter in Wartime outgrossed Twilight at the Dutch box office and was shortlisted for the Oscars’ Best Foreign Language Film. Despite “Hollywood calling”, Koolhoven formed N279 Entertainment in Amsterdam with producer Els Vandevorst.
Harry Kümel
Harry Kümel is a Belgian director known for the 1972 film The Legend of Doom House. In 1971, he made Daughters of Darkness, with Delphine Seyrig as a lesbian vampire. Besides teaching at the Brussels Free University and the American Film Institute, among others, he’s also Director of Demonology and Occultism at the College of ‘Pataphysics.
Crossovers Jury
Mike Hostench
Deputy director of the Sitges International Fantastic Film Festival of Catalonia since 1992, Mike Hostench is also active in scriptwriting, film production and distribution. Author of four books on Asian and horror cinema, he writes for film journals and websites and has written more than 30 booklets for DVDs and BluRay collector’s editions for American and Catalonian prestige labels.
Anne-Claire Cieutat
After her studies in Boston and in Strasbourg Anne-Claire Cieutat joined Radio France – France Bleu Alsace, where she worked as a film journalist and programme reporter for 12 years. At the same time, she worked ten years as a film journalist for the Dernières Nouvelles d’Alsace and published Le Cinématographe selon Gérard Blain. She is currently editor-in-chief of the online magazine bande-a-part.fr.
Christine Poret
After studying biology and cinema, Christine became a life and earth sciences teacher. She was involved in setting up the cinema section at the Marc Bloch High School (lycée), where she now teaches cinema. As a teacher and film buff, she passes on her passion for the cinema to her students.
Animation Jury
Grégoire Carlé
After studying at the Beaux Arts College of Epinal, he completed his introductory training in illustration at the Haute école des arts du Rhin. Author of the Baku trilogy, La Nuit du Capricorne, Philoctète et les Femmes, he also the designed the India ink decor for Gabriel Harel’s short film The Night of the Plastic Bags.
Ron Dyens
In 1999, Ron Dyens became manager of the cinema l’Archipel Paris Ciné and founded Sacrebleu Productions, which received a Palme d’Or in 2010 for Serge Avédikian’s Barking Island. His first animated feature, co-produced by Sacrebleu Rémi Chayé’s Long Way North, was released in 2016. Dyens has also directed five short films selected in more than 300 festivals.
Jérémie Périn
Jérémie Périn is a director and animated scriptwriter known for his Internet clips such as Truckers Delight, Fantasy and Hi Life. He also directed the opening sequence of Gainsbourg: A Heroic Life. As director of the TV series Lastman, he defends the idea of popular adult-oriented animation. He recently co-created Crisis Jung, an excessive, post-apocalyptic mini-series.
Short Film Jury
Laurence Algret
Having worked in several Strasbourg cinemas during her studies in the late 1990s, Laurence Algret began her career at the UGC Ciné Cité as head of communication in 2000. She went on to become deputy director and director at various UGC cinemas in Lille, Rouen and Lyon before working on the management team for two years at the headquarters in Paris. As a Strasbourg cinephile, she was delighted to return to take over the reins of the Strasbourg UGC in January 1915.
Kévin Béclié
Kévin Béclié, a teacher at Strasbourg’s Lycée Marcel Rudloff, coordinates cinema and audio-visual matters for the artistic and cultural education branch of the Strasbourg Academy. This entails setting up workshops and national programmes, such as Lycéens au cinema and Collège au cinema, among others. A fan of genre and cinéma bis, he writes for Cinétrange.
Joel Danet
Joël Danet is a contributor and programmer at Vidéo Les Beaux Jours and is mainly responsible for the “Filming the City” programme, which organises meetings with researchers in the field of documentary films with an urban theme. He is also responsible for research projects based on film archives at the University of Strasbourg’s SAGE laboratory.
Mélina Napoli
Mélina Napoli is regional delegate of the Grand Est section of the National Audiovisual Institute (Ina) in Strasbourg, where she is head of client service in the documentary department. She now brings together partners in the local audiovisual and digital ecosystem and organises “VR Challenge – time travel” with the Shadok, the Festival and the City of Strasbourg.