THE GOOD SAMARITAN

The Good Samaritan
Directed by Darrin Suzuki
Written by Jay Clarke
2017, Canada

Horrific events unfold on a stretch of country road in this excellent short.

Screenwriter Clarke is a veteran horror short filmmaker, having directed Orange (2012), Lively (2013) and The Monitor (2014).  Director Suzuki is Clarke’s frequent collaborator.

The Good Samaritan is the creative duo’s finest work to date.

 

AYUDA

Ayuda
Directed by Patrick Mason
Written by Patrick Mason & Raul Serpas
2018, USA

Two day laborers find themselves in way over their heads in this fresh take on classic horror genre elements.

Ayuda uses great autumnal atmosphere as a backdrop for its horrific events.

Director Mason is someone to keep an eye on.

EXPLOSIONS

Explosions
Directed by Christopher Frey
Written by Christopher Frey

2012, Australia

Unhampered by dialogue, auteur Frey delivers a nightmarish but beautiful piece about the failure of gravity.

You’ll want to watch Explosions more than once.

Frey has made several other short films but Explosions is his most accomplished work to date.
 

 

BONIATO

Boniato
Directed by Eric Mainade & Andres Meza-Valdes & Diego Meza-Valdes
Written by Eric Mainade & Andres Meza-Valdes
2015, USA

A migrant field worker decides to seek a better life but is thrown into a living Hell as she is attacked by flesh-eating creatures in this slick and gory short.

Florida-based filmmakers Andres Meza-Valdes and Diego Meza-Valdes previously made the horror shorts The Room (2007), Halfway (2009), Play Dead (2011) and Haunt Ed (2012) but Boniato is by far their most effective and accomplished work to date.

VOCES

Voces
Directed by Christian Cueva & Ricardo Farias
Written by Christian Cueva & Ricardo Farias & Bernardo Esquinca
2016, Mexico

Hoping to beat the police to the scene and get a great story, two reporters investigate a call stating children have fallen into a deep hole.

One of the reporters lowers himself into the darkness to help the children with unexpected results in this outstanding, enigmatic short.

ZYGOTE

Zygote
Directed by Neill Blomkamp
Written by Neill Blomkamp & Thomas Sweterlitsch & Terri Tatchell
2017, Canada

A bizarre and deadly creature hunts the two survivors that have eluded it in an Arctic mining station.

This very high production value short features a great monster and goes very well with Jeronimo Rocha’s Dedalo (2013) and Andre Leblanc’s The Storm (2013).

Blomkamp also directed the horror shorts Rakka (2017) and Firebase (2017) as part of his Oats Studio film production slate but Zygote is by far the best of the bunch.

Short films of any kind are rarely graced with the large budget that director Blomkamp had available for Zygote but, as the director of District 9, Elysium and Chappie, working with big budgets is what he does.

THE JOB

The Job
Directed by Nick Blatt
Written by Erik VanBezooijin
2016, USA

At the recommendation of a friend, a former champion cyclist takes odd, high-paying employment that raises potentially dangerous questions in this assured debut short film from Nick Blatt that features very solid acting.

THE MAYFLOWER

The Mayflower
Directed by Christopher Goodman
Written by Benjamin Farry
2017, England

An astronaut faces a terrifying situation in this grim slice of space horror.

Having previously made the horror short films Flesh Art (2011), Blight (2016) and Fool’s Errand (2016), highly accomplished visual effects artist Goodman delivers his most memorable short to date with The Mayflower.

IT BEGAN WITHOUT WARNING

It Began Without Warning
Directed by Jessica Cutright & Santiago C. Tapia
Written by Jessica Cutright & Santiago C. Tapia
2017, USA

A bloody showdown between a parent and a child takes on an even more sinister and horrifying dimension in It Began Without Warning-an apocalyptic piece that deserves feature-length treatment.

The Cutright/Tapia directing team cut their teeth on the dark horror short films Territorial (2011) and Pookie (2016).

DEDALO

Dedalo
Written & Directed by Jeronimo Rocha
2013, Portugal

Portuguese auteur Rocha delivers a piece of space horror that may seem a bit too indebted to Ridley Scott’s 1979 classic Alien on a first viewing but watching it a second time reveals there is certainly more going on in Dedalo than simple homage.

Rocha’s accomplished short has the feel of a scene that either opens a feature film or occurs very late in its story.