Seven films. Five countries. Worlds of vision. Fantasia’s annual showcase of next-level sci-fi shorts returns.
South Africa brings us Diana Mills Smith’s MY PROTECTOR (North American Premiere) where ferocious machines hunting the last-remaining humans force a young girl to prove herself as a protector for her family. A striking dose of high-concept sci-fi/action that blasts off the screen. Sweden represents with Farhad Bakhtiarikish’s RIFT (Canadian Premiere), in which an unhappily married man desperate to find meaningful love, meets a woman in a virtual dating app. A clever and surprising film, steeped in feeling. Britain delivers Vasco Alexandre’s provocative TEN WITH A FLAG (North American Premiere), a future-set tale about expecting parents in a society that rates citizen’s value by way of a social ranking system. Their unborn child has already ranked a perfect 10. Albeit with a very particular flag.
Actor Alex Lawther (THE IMITATION GAME) steps behind the camera as writer/director for the haunting FOR PEOPLE IN TROUBLE (Canadian Premiere), a chilling vision of a plausible tomorrow that sees two people meet, fall in love and break apart as society crumbles. Built on engrossing performances from Emma D'Arcy (HOUSE OF THE DRAGON) and Archie Madekwe (MIDSOMMAR). From the USA, Jennifer Zhang’s AUTOPILOT (International Premiere) explores the nature of consciousness through a suspenseful blast of sci-fi/horror where a space pilot alone on a vessel finds herself in a frightening power struggle with her virtual assistant. A grieving mother with expertise in neuroscience brings her deceased daughter back as a hologram with retained memories and a sentient state of being in Geoffrey Prather’s A MIND CANNOT TOUCH (Canadian Premiere). A moving tragedy that explores loss with imagination and heart. Norway’s Tess Quatri captivates with FINAL FOREVER (International Premiere), a tale of ageless love in senior years as an elderly lesbian couple dealing with increasing frailties refuse to lose their agency or each other. They work to finish a homemade rocket that might allow them to leave this Earth together. A beautiful and compelling film that just may have you in tears. – Mitch Davis