Streaming in August and October!

Whether you're on the East Coast or the West Coast, you've probably been wondering what's going to happen with the H. P. Lovecraft Film Festival®. We've been closely watching the COVID-19 situation in both Rhode Island and here in Oregon, and it is apparent that neither show can happen in person this year.

This would have been our 3rd bi-ennial HPLFF in Providence in coordination with our friends at the Lovecraft Arts & Sciences Council, but since we can't gather in person, we invite you to join us on August 22nd for a one night streaming event celebrating 130 Years of H. P. Lovecraft, featuring new Lovecraftian short films plus newly restored classics of the genre! While meant to bring the joy and horror of Lovecraftian Cinema to our friends in Providence, the silver lining is that Portlanders (and anyone else in the US) can also tune in!

We're heartbroken that we won't see you in Providence (or challenge you to another round of Lovecraftian Pictionary!), but besides having no open theatrical venue, as Oregonians, we can't even enter RI without a 2 week quarantine. BUT the thought of cancelling the festival outright was too much to bear. Luckily for all of us, this is 2020 and we have the technology!

This year is also the 25th Anniversary of the H. P. Lovecraft Film Festival in Portland, OR, and  we will be streaming the full 3-day event directly into your living room, October 2-4th! We were really looking forward to celebrating this milestone with our festival family in person. However, after watching the COVID-19 numbers increase here in Oregon, and discussing this with the Hollywood Theatre, it does not seem likely that they will be allowed to be open in October.

This is normally a huge festival that takes place on 3 screens and in secondary venues with multiple art, music, film, and live events. The easiest thing would have been to cancel it and have our big 25th Anniversary bash next year, but we didn't think that was fair to you, or to the filmmakers who rely on us to showcase their particular kind of Weird cinema. In the face of ever-increasing weirdness and isolation in the US, we think the right thing to do is to bring the right kind of Weird directly into your home! The up side: for the first time ever, folks in Providence (or elsewhere in the US) can easily enjoy the Portland show!

We've got some fun stuff planned that will make this much more than just watching movies at home, so mark your calendar and stay tuned for more info!

F.A.Q.

Is there going to be a Kickstarter campaign?

We're 99% sure there will be a Kickstarter fundraising campaign for the Portland festival that will let you pledge for streaming tickets, plus exclusive merchandise. We'll update you as soon as we have more info!

What if the theaters in Providence and Portland are suddenly open?

This is the number one thing that makes our decision so tough. We have seen that things are opening at a different pace from state to state as infection numbers are monitored, which means that things could change without much notice. However, while it's possible, everybody involved thinks it is very unlikely that theater venues will be open at all. When they do eventually open, even after phase 3, the consensus is that they will still only be able to do so with very very limited seating capacity and by maintaining social distancing.

In our traditional Providence venues, this would mean only being able to seat about 25 people. In the Hollywood Theatre in Portland, this number may be less than 100. In both cases, maintaining proper social distancing also means limiting movement before, during and after the show, limiting restroom capacity and the ability to exit the auditorium to use it, no concession stand so there are no lines, and one way traffic flow in the auditoriums. It's a bleak view of the movie-going experience and is probably the best case scenario. Again, neither we, nor the theater believes they will be open at all.

How can I watch the August 22nd -130 Years of Lovecraft show?

We're streaming via the Hollywood Theatre, here in Portland, OR, and tickets will be available soon. The theater's platform is a web based video player that works on any browser by clicking the link in the ticket confirmation email or by logging into your account. We used this system for Portland Horror Film Festival™ and it worked great! There may be other ways to watch, but these are the ones we know work:

  • Watch on your computer, laptop, tablet, mobile device
  • Watch on your TV
    • by connecting your computer, laptop, tablet, etc., to it with an HDMI cable. (For tablets or slim computers like a Macbook Pro, you might need an adapter, like the Lightning --> HDMI or USB-C --> HDMI).
    • Use Chromecast: If you have a Chromecast device connected to your TV, you can cast to it from any computer on your Wi-Fi network by opening the video stream in a Chrome browser with the Chromecast extension installed. Then just cast the tab with the video window to your TV. Easy!
    • Use the Amazon Fire TV stick: log in to the theater website using the Silk web browser that is built in to the Fire stick. You can access your ticket and links in your account details.
    • Use Roku: Cast from your mobile device using a third party app like "Web Video Caster"

Is the content going to be different for the two events?

For the August 22nd one night show, we will be showing a mix of new films, a few classic films that we've been working on restoring, and films that were screened at the October 2019 festival in Portland, OR but not in Providence at Necronomicon. There may be a little bit of overlap if you attended the Portland Festival last year, but it represents a very small portion of what we'll be showing in October. In other words, there won't be a bunch of repeats, so you can enjoy both shows!

I'm not in the US, can I watch the shows?

We know that some of you from far off lands such as Canada, Sweden, and Taiwan, have been able to join us in person in past years. However, in the same way that Netflix has different catalogs for different countries, we expect to only be able to secure streaming rights inside the US for most of our content. It is possible that we may be able to make a limited amount of content available to our festival family outside the US and we will update you as we have more news.

We'll be back soon with more details, but in the meantime - Stay safe, stay healthy, keep watching the stars!

Iä! Iä! Cthulhu Fhtagn!
  Gwen and Brian Callahan

Call for Entries - submissions for 2020 are open!

Submissions are open for the 2020 H. P. Lovecraft Film Festival through FilmFreeway. Save on festival submission fees by submitting early! The earlier you submit, the greater chance you will have of being selected for any satellite events we host, including potential HPLFF screenings at our 3rd Biennial HPLFF in Providence, RI, August 21-23, 2020 (Lovecraft's Birthday weekend!)

All deadlines, requirements, and fees are shown on our FilmFreeway page. Submit early, submit often! 

COLOR OUT OF SPACE wins big at 24th Annual H. P. Lovecraft Film Festival, plus all 2019 Award Winners!

Congratulations to all the 2019 H. P. Lovecraft Film Festival Award Winners! With over 45 short and feature films, we had more films than ever eligible for awards. Choosing the winning films was extremely difficult, and all the filmmakers whose films were accepted this year should be extremely proud.

 

Categories and winning films are:

 

Best Feature: Color Out of Space by Richard Stanley

Best Short Film: "Red Moon" by Thomas Chrétien

Best Adaptation: "The Last Incantation" by Woodruff Laputka

Best Screenplay: "Flypaper" by Brian Hauser

Audience Choice: Color Out of Space by Richard Stanley

*Lovecraft Under the Gun: "Secluse" by team Monsieur Soeur

**Pickman's Apprentice: "Romantic Shoggoth" sculpture by Monstark

Spiritus Nostrae: presented to Vincent Price

 

*Lovecraft Under the Gun is a 72 hour film competition. Teams have 3 days to make a short film from scratch, using a line of dialogue and a prop that are revealed when they register. The audience chooses the winner based on technical merit, creativity, and how well they used the prop and line of dialogue.

**Pickman's Apprentice is a live art competition. This year's challenge was to create an original sculpture in 2 hours based on a Lovecraftian monster and mood. The finished works are sold by silent auction. The proceeds are being donated to relief efforts after the devastation of Hurricane Dorian.

Lovecraftian Micro-Fiction Contest winners

The Lovecraftian Micro Fiction collection vol. 5 is the flip side of the Challenge From Beyond 2019, with wraparound cover art by Mike Dubisch.

The reading is done. The winners are chosen. The stories are on their way to press. Congratulations to the winners of the 2019 Lovecraftian Micro Fiction contest!

Each of these super-short, super-creepy stories will be printed in Volume 5 of the Lovecraftian Micro Fiction collection, as the flip side to the Challenge From Beyond 2019. The author of each story will receive two copies of the finished book in the mail, and the top story will be read by one of our noted guests for an adoring (and pretty Weird) audience at the H. P. Lovecraft Film Festival, taking place October 4-6, 2019 at the Hollywood Theatre in Portland, OR.

And the winners are (in no particular order):

  • TOP WINNER! "Dol-Hareubang" by J. Wiltz
  • "Gateway Drug" by Jason Zuleger
  • "The Herd" by Russell Smeaton
  • "Mother" by Kyle Webb
  • "Check Your Pockets" by Michael Carlyle
  • "Domovoi" by Erik Gorka
  • "Etching of The Masks" by Zachary Bishop
  • "White" by Susan Hill
  • "That Scar We Made" by Kerry Birmingham
  • "Latex" by Sean Blau

For a round 13 stories, we also select 3 Honorable Mentions, which will also be printed in the book, including:

  • "Chaos Crawls Back" by Rick Hutchins
  • "He, Alone..." by David Gonzalez
  • "When the Stars Were Right" by Joe Broers

Competition was fierce and this year's submissions were some of the most clever, impacting, and Weird stories we've ever read, short or not. There were so many standout stories that making these selections was nearly impossible, and if we could have made a double-sized issue, we would have! But, narrowing it down and making those hard choices is a commitment we make to both the authors and the readers. Every one of these authors can be extremely proud of this accomplishment. It was not an easy choice, but you earned it. H. P. Lovecraft himself would be proud of these tiny feats of horror!

The Lovecraftian Micro Fiction collection Vol. 5 was included at several reward levels in the 2019 H. P. Lovecraft Film Festival Kickstarter, and will be available as an add-on to Kickstarter backers, as well as at the H. P. Lovecraft Film Festival, October 4-6th, with Guest of Honor Victoria Price, Roger Corman, and Richard Stanley. 

LEGENDARY ROGER CORMAN TO APPEAR AT THE H. P. LOVECRAFT FILM FESTIVAL IN PORTLAND, OR

Roger Corman

We are over the moon-thrilled to announce that Roger Corman, cinematic luminary and all around movie making legend, will be a special guest at the 24th Annual H. P. Lovecraft Film Festival™ this October 4-6. He will be joining Guest of Honor Victoria Price on stage for a rare 35mm screening of The Haunted Palace, based on Lovecraft’s story “The Case of Charles Dexter Ward.”

Well known for his work with American International Pictures, and as the head of New Horizon Pictures, Corman has written, directed, and produced hundreds of films spanning 7 decades. In the 60s and 70s, he adapted eight Edgar Allan Poe stories to the screen, many of them starring Vincent Price. Corman made this adaptation of a Lovecraft story as a break from the Poe films, but AIP wasn’t taking any chances, gave the film a Poe title, and marketed it as one of the series.

Richard Stanley’s Color Out of Space comes to Portland

Nicolas Cage and Joely Richardson as the doomed Gardner family in The Color Out of Space

Hot off the tail of its World Premiere in Toronto, The H. P. Lovecraft Film Festival in Portland, OR (Oct 4-6) will host the regional premiere of visionary director Richard Stanley’s long-awaited The Color Out of Space, based on the H. P. Lovecraft story, and starring Nicolas Cage (Mandy, Raising Arizona) and Joely Richardson as the Gardner family, who must deal with the horrors visited on their home and family  by the arrival of a meteorite with destructive properties.

Richard Stanley is attending the event to make this a truly special premiere with extensive Q&A and other programming revolving around the film, which is sure to be this decade’s biggest Lovecraft movie! Deluxe and VIP ticket packages are available now, until September 8th in our 2019 Kickstarter campaign. Get yours now!

Book your room using our discounted group rate for 2019!

For you early birds who are planning your travel for the 2019 festival, we have a discounted group rate at the DoubleTree by Hilton near Lloyd Center. Rates are $155/night+tax for a single bed and start at $165/night+tax for two beds. CLICK HERE To book your room!

If you're looking for accommodations closer to the theater, check out our Travel & Venues section!

Victoria Price, daughter of Vincent Price, is our 2019 Guest of Honor!

Noted author and speaker, Victoria Price is also the daughter of screen legend Vincent Price.

Vincent Price has long been a beloved actor in the horror genre, and starred in several very Lovecraftian films, including Roger Corman's The Haunted Palace (based on HPL's The Case of Charles Dexter Ward), Diary of a Madman (based on Guy De Maupassant's "The Horla"), and even portrayed the sorcerer John Carnby in Night Gallery's adaptation of Clark Ashton Smith's "The Return of The Sorcerer." This year, we welcome his daughter Victoria Price as our guest of honor. Victoria is an award-winning author and speaker in her own right; in additon to penning The Way of Being Lost: A Road Trip to My Truest Self and Vincent Price: A Daughter's Biography, she is also an acclaimed inspirational speaker and interfaith minister. She'll be joining us to speak about growing up with the legendary Vincent Price, as we feature some of his more Lovecraftian cinematic works.

The 2018 Awards Roundup

Congratulations to all the 2018 H. P. Lovecraft Film Festival Award Winners! With so many amazing films, choosing the winners was a difficult process

 

Categories and winning films are:

 

Best Feature: Hammer of the Gods by Nick Szostakiwskyj & Cameron Tremblay

Best Short Film: "Young Liars" by Adam Christy

Best Adaptation: "The House of the Seven Gables" by Ben Wickey

Best Screenplay: "You and Me and Dagon Makes Three" by Mack W. Mani

Audience Choice: "The Music of John Low" by Marko Kattilakoski

*Lovecraft Under the Gun: "Bestill the Fabric" by team Amor Artisanant

**Pickman's Apprentice: "Zoogs in a Tiki Bar" by Lee Moyer

 

*Lovecraft Under the Gun is a 72 hour film competition. Teams have 3 days to make a short film from scratch, using a line of dialogue and a prop that are revealed when they register. The audience chooses the winner based on technical merit, creativity, and how well they used the prop and line of dialogue.

**Pickman's Apprentive is a live drawing competition. Artists have 90 minutes to create an original piece based on a Lovecraftian monster, location, and action. The finished works are sold by silent auction. The proceeds are being donated to relief efforts after the devastation of Hurricane Florence.

Four Screenplay Finalists for 2018

This year's Screenplay competition has been narrowed down to four finalists by our illustrious jury (Ross E. Lockhart, Dominique Lamssies, Susan O'Neill, Gwen Callahan). The winner will be announced at the Awards Ceremony on Sunday night at 7 pm! We can not post screenplays, but here are the synopses of the four contenders:

Feature screenplay - "Lovecraft: Into the Abyss" by Mark Sudano

When one of his stories is found at a gruesome crime scene, a young HP Lovecraft must team up with Harry Houdini to clear his name, but as they investigate, it becomes clear that Lovecraft's inter-dimensional horrors exist in real life - and the reanimated corpse of Edgar Allan Poe is using them to find the Necronomicon to end life as we know it.

Feature screenplay -"Three Men Dwell" by Bill Bradshaw

It is the year of our Lord 1900. In the storm of the century, a team of Lighthouse keepers are stranded on a barren island off the North West coast of Scotland. The storm brings carnage and destruction but it also harbors something far more sinister. As the days edge by, the team becomes aware of a centuries old evil that threatens, not just the island, but their very existence. "Three Men Dwell" is 'A Perfect Storm' meets 'The Wicker Man' to the bleak backdrop of the North Atlantic. 

Short screenplay - "You and Me and Dagon Makes Three" by Mack Mani

Sometimes meeting the parents is about more than making a good impression, for Joe it means traveling to an isolated island and opening himself up to a whole lot of cosmic baggage. It turns out that finding the man of your dreams is the easy part, meeting his parents and their ancient god...that's another issue entirely. Pass the ritual. Survive the night. Plan the wedding. "You and Me and Dagon Makes Three" is a gay horror/rom-com about what it takes to love someone despite their cosmic flaws and the sometimes horrifying lengths we go to to prove that love.

Short screenplay - "Wet Rot" by Stuart Creque

Kit wonders why Dad is spending so much time in the basement, cleaning up the mildew growing there. "Wet Rot" is a short, but effective creep out, and has a nice take on Lovecraftian themes without ever referencing the mythos.

Congratulations to the finalists, and good luck!