5 Chilling Films from Sundance 2015

These new nightmares of the silver screen will send shivers down your spine.

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This year, the Sundance Film Festival was all about the chill. And we don’t mean the temps – which averaged a balmy 50 degrees. We’re talking about the bone-tingling thrillers that made their debut. From an eerie vision of New England witchcraft to a creepy twist on the stalker flick, here are the top five silver screen scares we witnessed at Park City.


 

kock knock sundance

5. Knock Knock

Okay, let us explain. Yes, it’s Eli Roth’s latest. And, yes, it stars Keanu Reeves as a man fighting for his life against two femme fatales. But, it just might satisfy those Green Inferno haters. Though we’re used to gore from the torture-porn aficionado, Roth doesn’t really turn to his old bag of tricks here. Rather, he builds tension, asks questions, and leaves the audience wanting more. Lionsgate owns distribution rights, so, hopefully, we won’t have to wait long for a theater release.

4. The Hallow

Director Corin Hardy, who’s been tapped to direct The Crow remake, made his directorial debut with The Hallow, a fable about a conservationist based in London who is sent to Ireland to investigate some land said to be “hollowed ground.” Demonic attacks against him, his wife, and his infant ensue. And it’s terrifying.

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3. It Follows

One of the high points of Sundance lands in David Robert Mitchell’s lap. The director behind satisfying teen drama Myth of the American Sleepover takes the horror genre into new territory with a refreshing take on “the twist.” Of course, we’re not going to ruin the fun for you, but just know it’s a movie about a girl whose sexual encounter triggers a stalker, stars quality scream queen, Maika Monroe (who rocked The Guest), and has a score that will rattle your bones from the opening scene. Radius-TWC owns distribution rights, so look for it soon on demand.

2. The Witch

A New England folktale, writer/director Robert Eggers’s period piece paints a spooky picture set in the 1600s amid flowing lady skirts and covered wagons. During a rousing game of peek-a-boo, a family’s infant, Samuel, is taken by a witch into the woods. What follows is a coming-of-witch tale that echoes The Village, The Crucible, and The Blair Witch Project (sans shaky cam), and screams award winning.

stockholm pa sundance

1. Stockholm, Pennsylvania

More of creepy-um-that-was-bizarre than creepy-come-with-me-to-the-bathroom, Nikole Beckwith’s directorial debut left audiences a-hush. Saoirse Ronan and Cynthia Nixon give two electrifying performances – Ronan as a young woman who was kidnapped then returned to her family some 17 years later, only to be then taken prisoner by her own mother (Nixon). Oy.

Still from The Witch courtesy of Parts and Labor; Still from Knock Knock courtesy of Black Bear Pictures; Still from It Follows courtesy of Northern Lights Films; Still from Stockholm, Pennsylvania courtesy of Fido Features