I Sell the Dead
Year: 2009
Director: Glenn McQuaid
Studio: Glass Eye Pix
Stars: Dominic Monaghan, Larry Fessenden, Ron Perlman
MPAA Rating: Not Rated
Running Time: 85 Mins
Official Website: http://www.isellthedead.com/






With the Philadelphia Film Festival set to kick it into high gear tomorrow, Film Arcade.net and me is very happy to bring you readers a little sneak preview to a couple of high profile horror films along with some horrifying shorts that are playing in the Danger After Dark portion of the film festival. What better to start my coverage off, with possibly one of the most anticipated and award winning horror films that is generating alot of buzz.

“I Sell the Dead” high already won some high profile award, like Best Independent Feature at the 2008 Toronto After Dark Film Festival and it was also one of the big hits at this year Slamdance Film Festival, winning Best Cinematography (Richard Lopez) and Special Jury Mention for Best Performance, Larry Fessenden. Now it’s playing at the Philadelphia Film Festival, as part of Danger After Dark portion.

The film takes place in the 18th century where the law has finally caught up to two grave robbers, Arthur Blake (Dominic Monaghan) and Willie Grimes (Larry Fessenden). While waiting to be executed, Blake is visited by a visiting clergyman Father Duffy (Ron Perlman). The two spark a conversation that recounting the fifteen years that Blake has been the grave robbing trade from stealing trinkets, as a little boy to the formation of a the partnership that Blake and Grimes have. It’s filled with adventure, horror and rivalries that threaten to put everyone involved right into their graves. The film also stars horror legend, Angus Scrimm from “Phantasm” fame.

I know that it's early in the year, but "I Sell the Dead" is truly one of the best films to come out. A lot of this film's success comes from first time feature film Writer/Director, Glenn McQuaid. This direction job has to be considered phenomenal. The reason I use this word, first, the film is an independent production. Second, it was shot in New York City. Third, it’s very visual. Finally, how he was able to make the film fit the 18th century look, with the budget at his disposable, which it's just amazing. He manages to convey it all on the screen. He also had some very good help from his cinematographer, Richard Lopez, whose cinematography work is one of the keys to why this film achieves the 18th century look. The camerawork was just great from the filming of the action to the look; it's no wonder why this film was great to watch from a visionary sense.

This is also one of those horror films, where the acting and screenplay make the horror fun to watch, instead of the blood and gore, which makes most of these films fun.

McQuaid does a great job with making the acting component of the film work. There are some very good performances here, especially from Larry Fessenden, who does a great job holding his own with Dominic Monaghan, as the two developed great chemistry with each other, which helped with some of the film's most humorous and scary moments. The film also has a very good supporting performance from Ron Perlman, who doesn't give the typical Ron Perlman performance, as he was great with those scenes, in which the main character is telling the whole story about the deeds that he had done and Perlman just plays the character straight. It makes the film very entertaining and not boring and dull.

McQuaid's screenplay was also as good, as his direction. This could have been easily a boring film to watch, with the time setting and the material. But what makes this fun, the fact that he makes the story come off like a "Tales from the Crypt" story. The detailing of the action and characters makes this story and screenplay work. The reason for doing this, it makes the movie not come off as a series of conversations, especially towards the second half of the film, where in any other film, the film would have slowed down. Not here. It helps move the story along without getting bored and waiting for something to happen. McQuaid does a great job with the dark humor that this film has, as it’s witty and provided the necessary laughs that gets you into the film. But the sole reason this film's works; the two main characters were very likable. The screenplay also does a good job developing the two main characters during of all those adventures that the two have through the scares and the twists that this story has. Provided with the comic book style approach, it made the film very fun and dementedly entertaining.

“I Sell the Dead” is a film that you will truly hear about in the coming months, as it finds distribution. This is one of those buddy horror films that put the fun back into horror.

Review Rating: Five Stars

Upcoming Screening

Ritz East 1, Philadelphia, PA, Friday March 27, 9:45 PM
Ritz East 1, Philadelphia, PA, Wednesday April 1, 4:45 PM
International House, Philadelphia, PA, Sunday April 5, 9:30 PM

2 comments

  1. venturafilmfestival // April 20, 2009 10:22 PM  

    The Ventura Film Festival, which was started in 2004 by Jordan Older and his father, has recently concluded its

    first event of 2009 at the Majestic Ventura Theater in Ventura, California with the Ventura Film Festival "Fun Day"

    on February 16, 2009 at 2pm.

    The Ventura Film Festival is a combination online and traditional film festival requiring all submissions to be

    uploaded online and submitted via traditional means. The Ventura Film Festival has maintained that one of it's main

    goals is to give a large part of any proceeds to forest and ocean preservation efforts. The Ventura Film Festival

    features independent films from around the world and from local film makers focusing on environmental issues such as

    forest and ocean preservation, humanitarian issues, surf, skate, extreme/action sports, sports, martial arts, and

    music films.

    The Ventura Film Festival opened it’s 2009 events on Monday February 16, 2009 at the Majestic Ventura Theater in

    Ventura, California with a “fun day”. The event marked the 6th anniversary of the Ventura Film Festival which was

    started by Jordan Older and his father in 2004. The Ventura Film Festival board of directors were present to show

    their selection of currently received entries for the 2009 Ventura Film Festival. The festival board includes

    Hollywood film makers Dustin Dean and U.S. Olympian John Godina who is the most decorated shot putter in U.S.

    athletics history. Ventura Film Festival is a green organization and accepts entries and submissions online at the

    festival’s official web site, http://venturafilmfestival.org. Part of the profits from the Ventura Film Festival

    will go directly towards environmental issues such as forest and ocean preservation. The “fun day” served as a warm

    up for the main event of the 2009 Ventura Film Festival which takes place on July 5th.

    The Ventura Film Festival gives out no awards. We prefer not to have competition and to simply celibrate great

    films as works of art and enjoy a fun event that provides support for environmental issues such as forest and ocean

    preservation. From time to time we may give notice of special recognition to certain films.

    The Ventura Film Festival has become a partner with the world's biggest film festival marketing organization

    Withoutabox. The partnership was on request of Withoutabox executive Sara Nixon-Kershner on Feburary 18, 2008.

    Withoutabox provides submission and marketing service to over 200,000 filmmakers in 200 countries as well as manage

    submission receiving, judging, and notification, schedule publishing, and the ability to sell tickets using targeted

    ads on well known film site IMDB.

    Submitting to the Ventura Film Festival is a two step process. BOTH STEPS ARE REQUIRED!!!

    1) upload your submission to http://venturafilmfestival.net (REQUIRED)

  2. lpcyusa // May 29, 2009 3:18 PM  

    #What It’s Like to Chill with the Most Ruthless Men in the World
    Ratko Mladic and Radovan Karadzic:
    Confessions of a Female War Crimes Investigator


    Retrospectively, it was all so simple, natural and matter of fact being on a boat restaurant in Belgrade, sitting with, laughing, drinking a two hundred bottle of wine and chatting about war and peace while Ratko Mladic held my hand. Mladic, a man considered the world’s most ruthless war criminal since Adolf Hitler, still at large and currently having a five million dollar bounty on his head for genocide by the international community. Yet there I was with my two best friends at the time, a former Serbian diplomat, his wife, and Ratko Mladic just chilling. There was no security, nothing you’d ordinarily expect in such circumstances. Referring to himself merely as, Sharko; this is the story of it all came about.

    http://sites.google.com/site/jillstarrsite/what-it-s-like-to-chill-with-the-most-ruthless-men-in-the-world-ratko-mladic-and-radovan-karadzic-confessions-of-a-female-war-crimes-investigator