IN FABRIC

Showings

Chauncey -Theater 2 Wed, Jun 1, 2022 10:00 PM
Series Info
Series:Late Shift at the Grindhouse
Film Info
Rating:R
Runtime:118 minutes
Director:Peter Strickland (The Duke of Burgundy)
Year Released:2018
Production Country:UK
Language:English
Website:facebook.com/ICgrindhouse
Trailer:youtu.be/biHUTtV4K40

Description

Wednesdays get weird when Late Shift hosts Ross Meyer, Joe Derderian and Aaron Holmgren dig up low-budget b-movies, horror and gore-fests, and camp classics for your viewing pleasure. Buy your ticket and take a ride in our Time Machine! Punch in and earn a bonus! $3 Big Grove Boomtown Ale tallboys and $2 small popcorn! PLUS -- special custom trash trailer reel curated by Ross with cheap swag and prize giveaways!

"Perversely titillating fusion of intimate British kitchen sink drama and Italian giallo king." - Richard Whittaker, The Austin Chronicle

"There are some marvelously cheesy '70s European horror images on display here that should totally be this Argento lover's thing."
- Brian Tallerico, rogerebert.com

"Strickland's newest film sits at the intersection of Italian giallo, kitchen sink drama and the kind of absurdism that defines much of the UK's current comedic output - call it an Absurdist-Euro-Horror-Comedy." - Abby Olcese, CrookedMarquee.com

WINNER: Best Director, Peter Strickland - Fantastic Fest 2018

A lonely woman (Marianne Jean-Baptiste), recently separated from her husband, visits a bewitching London department store in search of a dress that will transform her life. She's fitted with a perfectly flattering, artery-red gown - which, in time, will come to unleash a malevolent curse and unstoppable evil, threatening everyone who comes into its path.

From acclaimed horror director Peter Strickland (the singular auteur behind the sumptuous sadomasochistic romance The Duke of Burgundy and auditory gaillo-homage Berberian Sound Studio) comes a truly nightmarish film, at turns frightening, seductive, and darkly humorous. Channeling voyeuristic fantasies of high fashion and bloodshed, In Fabric is Strickland's most twisted and brilliantly original vision yet.