Werewolf Thriller ‘Blackout’ Chills Digital on April 12

Werewolf Thriller 'Blackout' Chills Digital on April 12

“ONE OF THE MOST INTELLIGENT AND INTERESTING WEREWOLF MOVIES OF THE 21ST CENTURY.” – Craig Ian Mann

Dark Sky Films And Glass Eye Pix Reunite

To Release The Acclaimed New Film

BLACKOUT

Written and Directed by Larry Fessenden

Modern-Day Werewolf Thriller Opens In NYC March 13th

Nationwide Digital/VOD Release To Follow On April 12th

Werewolf Thriller 'Blackout' Chills Digital on April 12

BLACKOUT

Writer-director Larry Fessenden has created some of the most original and memorable independent horror films of the last 25 years, from Habit and Wendigo to The Last Winter, Skin and Bones, Beneath and Depraved. His latest, BLACKOUT, ranks among his most chilling and thought-provoking works with a cast that includes: Alex Hurt, Addison Timlin, Motell Gyn Foster, Joseph Castillo-Midyett, Ella Rae Peck, Rigo Garay, John Speredakos, Michael Buscemi, Jeremy Holm, Joe Swanberg, James Le Gros, Kevin Corrigan, Marshall Bell and Barbara Crampton.

Earning rave reviews on the festival circuit, BLACKOUT marks the long-awaited reunion of Dark Sky Films and Larry Fessenden’s Glass Eye Pix, two iconic horror companies that brought us contemporary classics such as Ti West’s The House of The Devil and The Innkeepers, Jim Mickle’s Stake Land and Adrian Garcia Bogliano’s Late Phases.

BLACKOUT will open for a one week exclusive NYC theatrical engagement at IFC Center on March 13th, which will feature special cast appearances and a Q&A. The film will be released nationwide on digital platforms and VOD on April 12th.

Official Film Synopsis:

Painter Charley (Alex Hurt, Minyan, TV’s New Amsterdam) wakes up in an upstate motel where he appears to have been living for some time. After he packs and leaves he encounters various people in the small town where everybody knows your name. Charley is saying goodbye to the estranged love of his life, Sharon (Addison Timlin, Submission, TV’s American Horror Stories), and settling his affairs with a manic urgency that culminates with a call to a friend, Earl (Motell Gyn Foster, Marriage Story, A Dog’s Way Home), saying: “You better be ready, I’m coming.”

But Charley never makes it to his friend’s house: When the sun goes down he has convulsions while driving his car, goes off the road and ends up in a ditch. Charley, it seems, is a werewolf. He attacks his rescuers and moves through the outskirts of town at night wreaking havoc. But the next day he can’t remember the things he’s done. Now the tight-knit town must rally to find out what is tearing it apart: mistrust, fear, or a vicious monster.

BLACKOUT

Written and Directed by: Larry Fessenden

Produced by: James Felix McKenney, Chris Ingvordsen, Larry Fessenden

Cast: Alex Hurt, Addison Timlin, Motell Gyn Foster, Joseph Castillo-Midyett, Ella Rae Peck, Rigo Garay, John Speredakos, Michael Buscemi, Jeremy Holm, Joe Swanberg, Kevin Corrigan, Barbara Crampton as Kate; with James Le Gros and Marshall Bell.

Distributor: Dark Sky Films

Genre: Horror, Thriller, Independent

Run Time: 103 Minutes

WHAT THE CRITICS ARE SAYING

“Blackout has a compelling, truly disarming earnestness.”

– ROGEREBERT.COM

“one of the most intelligent and interesting werewolf movies of the 21st century.”

– OUR-CULTURE

“Every aspect of Blackout — its pacing, its beautiful character work, its very specific structure — seems to gleefully abandon expectation and convention, and trusts that audiences will take this sad/funny trip crafted by a wholly original cinematic voice.”

– FANGORIA

“Reflecting the current social climate with authentic poignancy and, often, a dry absurdist sense of humor… Fessenden may approach Talbot Falls with documentary-like authenticity but he also injects stunning cinematic moments.”

– BLOODY DISGUSTING

“There aren’t a lot of filmmakers out there who’ve been making horror as smart and emotionally gripping as Larry Fessenden over the last several decades, and Blackout shows us that he has no intention of slowing down.”

– SLANT

“Fessenden takes very traditional horror materials, and weaves from them an utterly modern sociopolitical and ecological allegory.”

– PROJECTED FIGURES

OnVideo News via Email

Get our free new-release newsletter every week in your inbox:

Subscribe to our weekly new-release newsletter. Join here.

Want more? Keep up-to-date with OnVideo's Breaking News, sent straight into your email box. Subscribe here.

Subscribe to OnVideo's Email News