It’s WWII Allies VS Nazi Werewolf Fighters In Trailer For BURIAL Starring Charlotte Vega, Tom Felton And Barry War

IFC Midnight has dropped this first look at BURIAL.

Set during the waning days of World War II, Burial tells the fictional story of a small band of Russian soldiers tasked with delivering the crated remains of Hitler back to Stalin in Russia. En route, the unit is attacked by German “Werewolf” partisans and picked off one-by-one. An intrepid female intelligence officer leads her surviving comrades in a last stand to ensure their cargo doesn’t fall into the hands of those who would hide the truth forever.

Written and Directed by Ben Parker and starring Charlotte Vega, Tom Felton, Barry Ward, and Harriet Walter, IFC Midnight’s thriller BURIAL opens September 2, but until then check out the trailer below.

Ben Parker is a British film director and screenwriter based in North London, England. His debut feature, The Chamber, starred Johannes Kuhnke (Force Majeure) as the pilot of a four-man submarine trying to retrieve a US military drone from the seabed off the coast of North Korea. Since then, Ben was writer and exec producer on Travis Stevens’s horror, Girl on the Third Floor, directed a short doc for the anniversary release of The Dam Busters, and is currently in development on several TV and feature projects, including a horror feature The Haunted Ones with the producers of His House.

Body Horror Shocker MOSQUITO STATE – Available On Shudder Today! Check Out This Trailer and New Clip

MOSQUITO STATE IS NOW STREAMINGEXCLUSIVELY ON SHUDDER! Check out the trailer:

MOSQUITO STATE was the 2020 Venice Film Festival Winner: Bisato d’Oro for Best Cinematography and the 2020 Sitges Film Festival Winner: Best Visual Effects**

The critics love MOSQUITO STATE:


“Knapp gives a terrific performance… This highly original, visually torrid take onWall Street and last decade’s global financial crisis celebrates the truemasters of the universe: mosquitoes.”– Phil Hoad, The Guardian

“A haunting show of financial-crisis body horror… Knapp gives a stylizedperformance that recalls Nicolas Cage.”– Chuck Bowen, Slant Magazine


“Cronenberg meets Kafka… Knapp commits fully to the hideous spectacle of a man steadily beaten by merciless nature.”– David Rooney, The Hollywood Reporter


“You could probably call it the CITIZEN KANE of Wall Street insect movies. Then again, it’s the only Wall Street insect movie. Knapp, in a performance of unnerving calmand unblinkered insanity… manages to get under your skin.”– Steve Pond, The Wrap


“Knapp’s implosive lead performance bubbles with a demented commitment. This one holds your attention like a bite that you can’t stop yourself from scratching.”– David Ehrlich, Indiewire

Watch this clip:

August 2007. Isolated in his austere penthouse overlooking Central Park, obsessive Wall Street data analyst Richard Boca (Beau Knapp) sees ominous patterns: His computer models are behaving erratically, as are the swarms of mosquitos breeding in his apartment, an infestation that attends his psychological meltdown.


On Wall Street, they’re called “quants”—the intense data analysts whose mathematical prowess can make the difference between a fortune and a flop. Consumed with his work, Richard doesn’t often stray from his office or apartment. But when Richard decides to go to a company party, he makes two acquaintances: the mysterious, sylphlike Lena (Charlotte Vega) and one pesky mosquito, both of which take root in his mind, altering his existence in profound ways.

Finding common ground between Franz Kafka, David Cronenberg and Mary Harron’s AMERICAN PSYCHO, director-screenwriter Filip Jan Rymsza (Producer of THE OTHER SIDE OF THE WIND) emerges with a new kind of body horror, set during a single week of an exquisitely rendered pre-crash 2007 replete with signs of sociopolitical and economic rot. A hypnotic plunge into the fragile mentality of an individual who can see patterns long before the rest of us, MOSQUITO STATE adds a significant chapter to the subgenre of urban isolation. 

MOSQUITO STATE stars Beau Knapp, Charlotte Vega, Jack Kesy, and Olivier Martinez

Director Filip Jan Rymsza’s Statement: For all the vampiric bloodletting in genre films, I felt like the mosquito, man’s deadliest enemy, was thoroughly unexplored and, after reading Michael Lewis’ Flash Boys, I became fascinated by those hidden away “quants” who made high-frequency trading go. This unlikely pairing became the basis for MOSQUITO STATE. 2007 was the year I moved to Los Angeles. It now feels distant, but also strangely immediate. Many cultural events have fused with post Y2K banality, but I still recall holding the first-gen iPhone as if it were my first born. In addition to the iPhone, the first week of August saw Barry Bonds break baseball’s all-time home run record, Rupert Murdoch purchase the Wall Street Journal, “The Apprentice” with Donald Trump enter its fifth season, author Nassim Taleb appear on Charlie Rose to discuss his book Black Swan, a young senator named Barack Obama speak of growing divisiveness at the Democratic Presidential Debate, and BNP Paribas cite “a complete evaporation of liquidity,” kicking off the greatest financial crisis since the Great Depression. Canaries in coal mines and mosquitos in the streets.

WRONG TURN starring Charlotte Vega and Matthew Modine In Theaters January 26th – Here’s the Trailer

From Saba Films:A reimagining which places the story in a contemporary setting with a diverse cast.

Here’s the trailer for the new WRONG TURN:

Backwoods terror and never-jangling suspense meet when Jen (Charlotte Vega) and a group of friends set out to hike the Appalachian Trail. Despite warnings to stick to the trail, the hikers stray off course—and cross into land inhabited by The Foundation, a hidden community of mountain dwellers who use deadly means to protect their way of life. Suddenly under siege, Jen and her friends seem headed to the point of no return— unless Jen’s father (Golden Globe® nominee Matthew Modine) can reach them in time.

WRONG TURN stars Charlotte Vega, Adain Bradley, Bill Sage, Emma Dumont, Dylan McTee, Daisy Head, Tim DeZarn and Matthew Modine