Summer may be over, but with this year marking the 35th anniversary of Friday the 13th, it's never too late to visit the lake. Ahead of the event's November 4th start date, the folks behind the Denver Film Festival have announced the first wave of programming, including a special November 13th 35mm screening of Sean S. Cunningham's monumental slasher film.

Press Release: October 9, 2015 (Denver, Colo.) - The Denver Film Festival (DFF), produced by Denver Film Society (DFS), announced its first wave of programming. Recognized as the Rocky Mountain Region's premier film event, the festival will feature a focus on Polish Cinema, sidebars for CinemaQ, CineLatino, Late Night and Women+Film, as well as robust Shorts Packages and Music Spotlight programming.

"In keeping with our long and rich tradition of presenting the best in Eastern European cinema, we at the Denver Film Festival are proud to announce that this year's Focus on a National Cinema program will shine the spotlight on Poland. Numerous Polish directors and producers will be in attendance during the course of the festival to present their acclaimed work to us,” said Artistic Director Brit Withey. “Traditional festival sidebars once again highlight the strong diversity of the Denver program and prove, as always, there is something for everyone in our lineup.”

While the full lineup will not be announced until Monday, October 19, the general public and DFS members can purchase 6-Packs now through October 18. The DFF 6-Pack includes 6 tickets for the low price of $57 DFS Member / $75 Non Member ($9.50 per ticket / DFS Member, $12.50 per ticket / Non Member). Once the full schedule is announced, individual tickets will cost $12 DFS Member / $15 Non Member.

“We encourage film lovers to take advantage of our 6-Pack offer,” says Denver Film Society Festival Director, Britta Erickson. “Our areas of focus in the Denver Film Festival are the perfect way for a first time festival-goer to get their feet wet, but they are also great for festival veterans who are familiar with our year-round branded programming to delve deeper into a subject matter.”

In addition to 6-Packs, Red Carpet Packages are now on sale for $60 DFS Member, $75 Non Member, a $45 savings over purchasing individual tickets. The package includes one (1) ticket to each Red Carpet presentation (November 4, 6, & 15). In previous years, the Festival has featured films such as The Artist, Black Swan, Brokeback Mountain, Nebraska, No Country for Old Men and Silver Linings Playbook during their red carpet presentations. Currently, purchasing a Red Carpet Package is the only way to guarantee a seat at those films – this year’s Red Carpet titles have not yet been announced.

Packages are available for purchase online at www.denverfilm.org or the DFF main box office location at the Sie FilmCenter (2510 E. Colfax Ave., Denver, CO 80206).

DFF Patron Packages are currently available. Click here for levels and benefits and contact Brittany Heath to purchase at 303.595.3456 ext. 229 or patrons@denverfilm.org.

To keep up to date with the Denver Film Festival on social media: like the DFF Facebook (Facebook.com/DenverFilmFestival) page, follow @DenverFilm on Twitter and join the conversation by using the hashtag: #DFF38.

CINELATINO

600 Miles (600 millas) / Mexico (Gabriel Ripstein) - In this bi-lingual feature, a young Mexican arms trafficker for a drug cartel is under surveillance by ATF agent Hank Harris (Tim Roth). Harris is kidnapped by the young man and taken from Arizona to Mexico after a chance encounter. During the long journey, the pair form an unlikely friendship while destruction looms over both of their heads.

The Club (El club) / Chile (Pablo Larraín) - The uneasy peace that four disgraced priests have found after being banished to a remote Chilean village is disrupted when a new exile arrives-one of whose victims shows up to torment him. Acclaimed filmmaker Pablo Larraín co-wrote and directed this taut fable about the social costs of organized religion.

El Cinco (El 5 de talleres) / Argentina, Uruguay, Germany, France, Netherlands (Adrián Biniez) - In this smart look at midlife romance, the hot-tempered Patón is on his last legs as a Buenos Aires soccer pro. After a turn to boozing and a stint in jail, he realizes he needs a different path. But how long will his steadfeast wife Ale remain by his side?

Embrace of The Serpent (El abrazo de la serpiente) / Colombia, Venezuela, Argentina (Ciro Guerra) - Two Westerners who journey into the Amazon seeking a medicinal plant are guided in their quests by a shaman whose tribe has been wiped out by the white man. A winner at Cannes this year, acclaimed Colombian filmmaker Ciro Guerra's black-and-white epic mesmerizes while delivering a devastating critique of colonialism.

Lucifer / Mexico/Belgium (Gust Van den Berghe) - On his fall from heaven, Lucifer makes a pit stop in rural Mexico-and naturally, all hell breaks loose in his wake. Belgian filmmaker Gus Van den Berghe used a groundbreaking device called Tondoscope to present this existential allegory of paradise lost as an enclosed circle onscreen.

The Mud Woman (La mujer de barro) / Chile (Sergio Castro San Martín) - María must leave her young daughter Teresa to return to work as a grape picker in arid northern Chile, where she is soon faced with her worst fear: a menacing supervisor from her past, Raúl. Pushed to the breaking point, María takes action in this intense drama.

Parabellum / Argentina, Austria, Uruguay (Lukas Valenta Rinner) - Chubby, middle-aged office workers undertake survivalist training in this quirky dark comedy that amuses and disturbs by turns. Ultimately, it morphs into a story about how far people will go and what they will do to stay alive and protect what's theirs-when the apocalypse arrives for real.

CINEMAQ

An Act of Love / USA (Scott Sheppard) - In 2013, United Methodist minister Frank Schaefer was defrocked for officiating at his son's same-sex wedding. Suddenly, the Reverend found himself an accidental LGBTQ activist. Considering all sides of the debate, this powerful documentary shows how the groundwork for a 2016 showdown that may transform American Christianity is being laid.

Call Me Marianna (Mow mi marianna) / Poland (Karolina Bielawska) - Having negotiated cumbersome legal, medical, and family issues, Marianna finally realizes her dream of pursuing gender reassignment surgery. But on the other side of her operation, life holds surprises that would daunt anyone of any gender. This timely documentary follows her as she finds the resilience to face them.

Nude Area / Poland, Netherlands (Urszula Antoniak) - Two teenage girls from different walks of life explore their own awakening sensuality in a love story that's structured as a visually stunning series of soundscapes, unfolding entirely without dialogue to consider the thin lines between tenderness and cruelty, longing and fulfillment, ecstasy and disappointment.

Sworn Virgin / Italy, Switzerland, Germany, Albania, Kosovo, France (Laura Bispuri) - In this soulful meditation on gender and identity, Hana has long abided by the vow of chastity she made in order to escape wedlock and live as a man in rural Albania, per local tradition. But when she visits her sister in Italy, a whole new world opens up.

FOCUS ON NATIONAL CINEMA: POLAND

Body (Cialo) / Poland (Malgorzata Szumowska) - A widowed, hard-drinking prosecutor who is inured to the worst kinds of human misery finds himself helpless in the face of his bulimic daughter's accelerating decline. In this dark comedy, father and child are ultimately thrown together with their only hope-a counselor whose best suggestion is a séance.

Call Me Marianna (Mow mi marianna) / Poland (Karolina Bielawska) - Having negotiated cumbersome legal, medical, and family issues, Marianna finally realizes her dream of pursuing gender reassignment surgery. But on the other side of her operation, life holds surprises that would daunt anyone of any gender. This timely documentary follows her as she finds the resilience to face them.

Demon / Poland, Israel (Marcin Wrona) - This atmospheric ghost story with an undercurrent of absurdist humor tells of a bridegroom who covers up skeletal remains that he finds at his future father-in-law's country home. Inadvertently, he draws the soul of the dead woman to his wedding reception, where she takes possession of him.

Gods (Bogowie) / Poland (Łukasz Palkowski) - Łukasz Palkowski directs this award-winning biopic about Zbigniew Religa, the first cardiac surgeon to perform a successful heart transplant in communist Poland in the 1980s. Relig challenged the morals of the medical world tirelessly, overcoming medical odds and cultural taboos. With fast-paced wit and even humor, Gods captures history captivatingly.

Karbala / Poland (Krzysztof Lukaszewicz) - Filmed on location in the Middle East, writer-director Krzysztof Lukaszewicz tells the true story of how an 80-man strong Polish-Bulgarian unit defended Karbala's City Hall against Al-Qaeda. Running out of ammunition and faced with impossible choices, this film puts a non-American human face on this historic conflict.

Nude Area / Poland, Netherlands (Urszula Antoniak) - Two teenage girls from different walks of life explore their own awakening sensuality in a love story that's structured as a visually stunning series of soundscapes, unfolding entirely without dialogue to consider the thin lines between tenderness and cruelty, longing and fulfillment, ecstasy and disappointment.

Polish Silent Film Program Poland - Acclaimed Polish composer Marcin Pukaluk will present two Polish silent films, The Strong Man (1929) and The Polish Dancer (1917) with a live in theater musical performance.

These Daughters of Mine (Moje córki krowy) / Poland (Kinga Dębska) - Playing on both the hilarity and drama of family dysfunction, this story tells of a middle-aged woman who must come to terms with her emotionally volatile sister around a parent's illness. Set for commercial release in Poland in 2016, the film features top actors from that country's cinema.

The Touch of an Angel / Germany, Poland (Marek Tomasz Pawlowski) - This intensely personal Holocaust  documentary uses manipulated archival photos and staged reenactments to lend a poetic atmosphere to narrator Henryk Schonker's account of his boyhood experiences in Auschwitz. Visually and metaphorically, the scattered images reconstruct both the horror of the time and a community's vain hopes for escape.

LATE NIGHT

Aaaaaaaah! / UK (Steve Oram) - Humans live like wild apes in the midst of a present-day London neighborhood-grunting, fornicating, and fighting to kill-in this exuberantly low-budget mashup of horror, comedy, cult sci-fi, and commentary on social devolution from co-star, screenwriter, and first-time director Steve Oram.

Camino / USA (Josh C. Waller) - Long time Quentin Tarantino collaborator Zoë Bell stars as a photo journalist trapped in the Columbian jungle after documenting a shocking act by a quasi-religious leader. Cult director Nacho Vigalondo also shines as the corrupt leader hunting Bell through the unforgiving wilderness.

Crumbs / Ethiopia/Spain/Finland (Miguel Llansó) - Candy resides with his sweetheart in a bowling alley in post-apocalyptic Ethiopia, collecting the remnants of a decayed civilization. When a long-inactive spaceship on the horizon shows new signs of life, he must confront witches, Nazis, and Santa Claus to discover a new reality in this surreal sci-fi comedy.

Decay / USA (Joseph Wartnerchaney) - Local filmmaker Joseph Wartnerchaney presents a thriller based on actual events. Jonathan, whose abusive childhood has left him barely functioning with crippling OCD, returns home to find a beautiful young woman dead in his basement. He's pleased to have a companion, but the relationship falters when she begins to decay.

Demon / Poland, Israel (Marcin Wrona) - This atmospheric ghost story with an undercurrent of absurdist humor tells of a bridegroom who covers up skeletal remains that he finds at his future father-in-law's country home. Inadvertently, he draws the soul of the dead woman to his wedding reception, where she takes possession of him.

Der Bunker / Germany (Nikias Chryssos) - In this ode to cult cinema à la John Waters and David Lynch, a young man rents a room from a family with an ostensibly 8-year-old son, Klaus, whose schooling he takes over at the behest an alien living in the matriarch's leg. An offbeat sendup of helicopter parenting.

Emelie / USA (Michael Thelin) - When the regular babysitter can't make it, the Thompson's reach out to her friend, Anna. At first Anna seems like a fun, carefree sitter. But as her actions turn from the odd to the bizarre, the Thompson children soon realize they are in for a horrific evening, and Anna is not who she seems.

Friday the 13th / USA (Sean S. Cunningham) - A special 35th Anniversary screening of Friday on Friday the 13th. Revisit where one of the most successful horror franchise of all time began at Camp Crystal Lake

Love / France (Gaspar Noé) - Murphy wakes up on the first of the year to a voicemail from the worried mother of a former lover, Electra. Feeling imprisoned by his young wife and small child, he spends the day reminiscing on the extremely passionate, erotic and chaotic relationship he had with Electra.

Ludo / India (Q, Nikon) - Four horny, but innocent, teenagers in search of privacy break into a shopping mall after hours. Unfortunately, they're not alone, and the old woman who invites them to play dice has something other than fun and games in store for them in this supernatural horror flick from the acclaimed director of Gandu (DFF34).

The World of Kanako (Kawaki) / Japan (Tetsuya Nakashima) - In this fast paced thriller, disgraced former cop and estranged father, Akikazu Fujishima searches for his missing seventeen-year-old daughter, who may be wrapped up in trouble beyond anyone's grasp. The visceral and violent Japanese film, adapted from the Akio Fukamachi novel by Hateshinaki Kawaki, demands attention and does not let go.

MUSIC SPOTLIGHT

The American Letters (Americké dopisy) / Czech Republic (Jaroslav Brabec) - This biopic about Czech composer Antonín Dvorák concentrates on a pivotal moment late in his life. At the height of his career, working in New York City, he learns his secret love and lifelong muse is ill. He must return home and decide whether to upend his family life and declare himself for her.

Breaking a Monster / USA (Luke Meyer) - Three African-American preteens get an uneasy taste of fame after Unlocking the Truth, their heavy-metal band, lands a major record deal. This real-life coming-of-age tale follows the trio as they juggle middle-school angst with the premature pressures of adulthood.

I Saw the Light / USA (Marc Abraham) - Named for one of his signature tunes, this biopic of legendary country-music artist Hank Williams paints a picture of how his drinking and marital woes shaped his tragically short life. The film plays his meteoric rise to fame against the darkness that would eventually bring him down.

Memories of Duke / USA (Gary Keys) - A music-filled tribute to the legendary composer, bandleader, and pianist Edward Kennedy "Duke" Ellington by late filmmaker (and longtime festival guest) Gary Keys; shot on one of his last tours, it lets Ellington's genius speak for itself while incorporating interviews with two esteemed colleagues, trumpeter Cootie Williams and reedman Russell Procope.

Music Video Mixtape A selection of the top music videos of the past year from around the world.

Music Video Mixtape - Local - New this year to the festival, a local edition of the Music Video Mixtape highlIghting all the incredible music and video makers Colorado has to offer.

Polish Silent Film Program Poland - Acclaimed Polish composer Marcin Pukaluk will present two Polish silent films, The Strong Man (1929) and The Polish Dancer (1917) with a live in theater musical performance.

Theory of Obscurity: a film about The Residents / USA (Don Hardy) - This intriguing documentary focuses on the anonymous, avant-garde rock band known as The Residents, examining the group's creative output (music, films, and artwork) over four decades, since its founding in the 1970s. Testimonials by Matt Groening, Penn Jillette, and other famous fans balance a flurry of pop-culture homages and parodies.

WOMEN+FILM

FRAME BY FRAME / Afghanistan (Mo Scarpelli, Alexandria Bombach) - During the Taliban's five-year reign in Afghanistan, taking photographs was a crime. This gripping documentary follows four photojournalists as they "re-frame" the historical narrative of their homeland by establishing a free press. A combination of cinema vérité, interviews, and archival footage yields a collective profile in courage.

India's Daughter / UK (Leslee Udwin) - Banned in India, Leslee Udwin's award-winning documentary about the brutal 2012 gang rape and murder of Jyoti Singh on a Delhi bus-which includes interviews with the perpetrators-reveals how a patriarchal society's rampant misogyny could lead to a crime so heinous that it sparked a nationwide uprising for change.

Mustang / Turkey, France, Germany, Qatar (Deniz Gamze Ergüven) - Five young sisters in a coastal Turkish village are placed on tyrannical house arrest by their grandmother after being suspected of lewd behaviour with boys. France's official Oscar submission for the year shows that nothing can stop a girl's transition into womanhood.

Radical Grace / USA (Rebecca Parrish) - Agree with the Catholic Church or not, these ladies are not your grandmother's nuns. The nuns in this hilarious and inspiring documentary embark to fight for the common good, while their male counterparts try to destroy their mission and faith for their so called "radical feminism." Bridge the gap between religion and humanity with these progressive women.

Sailing a Sinking Sea / USA (Olivia Wyatt) - Olivia Wyatt's mesmerizing and visually stunning documentary takes an insider's look at the Moken, a group of seafaring nomads hopping the islands between Burma and Thailand. As they go about their daily lives, a sense of their history, folklore, musical culture, and lifestyle as foragers and spearfishers develops against a dreamy waterscape.

She's The Best Thing In It / USA (Ron Nyswaner) - Mary Louise Wilson waited over forty years to win a Tony award. As a character actor nearing 80, she begins teaching acting classes at Tulane University for the first time in her life. This engaging documenary gets a behind the scenes look on the life of many character actresses as well as the students she teaches.

Songs My Brothers Taught Me / USA (Chloé Zhao) - Set against the beautiful backdrop of South Dakota's Pine Ridge Indian Reservation, this meditative drama follows a teenaged brother and sister as they summon the strength and grace to face upheavals in their family life and work through ambivalence about how and where to make a life for themselves.

Tired Moonlight / USA (Britni West) - Britni West wrote, directed, produced, and edited her acclaimed narrative debut, which rests on an innovative combination of seeming  and dreamscape. Tired Moonlight sets overlapping story lines about people trying to make their lives work, if only for a short time, against a stunning Montana backdrop.

A Woman Like Me / USA (Alex Sichel, Elizabeth Giamatti) - Through a heartbreaking yet playfully inspiring combination of documentary and fiction, writer/director Alex Sichel simultaneously chronicles her treatment for terminal cancer, her filmmaking process, and her approach to life and death, exploring both what might have been and what will surely be (with the ever-watchable Lili Taylor as her double).

Yosemite / USA (Gabrielle Demeestere) - Three interconnected stories by co-star James Franco form the basis for this engaging tale of three boys in suburban California circa 1985. As the world changes around them and the end of innocence nears, each must find a way to make sense of his experiences and connections to others.

###

2015 Denver Film Festival Sponsors:

PREMIER: Regal Entertainment Group ASSOCIATE: Anna & John J. Sie Foundation, AOR, Inc., Barbara Bridges, CEAVCO Audio Visual, Liberty Global, Mike's Camera, STARZ, Three Tomatoes Catering SUPPORTING: Argonaut Wine & Liquor, Best Friends Animal Society, Denver Pavilions, Kline Alvarado Veio, Sage Hospitality, William Hill Estate Winery PATRON: Biennial of the Americas, Kentwood City Properties, Polish Film Institute, SundanceNow Doc Club, Cross-Cultured MEDIA: Denver Life Magazine, Out Front, Westword, KBNO GOVERNMENT: Arts & Venues Denver, Colorado Office of Film Television & Media, Consulate General of Poland, French Film and TV Department of the French Embassy in Los Angeles, Honorary Consulate of Belgium - Denver, Scientific & Cultural Facilities District CONTRIBUTING: Baur’s, Brookfield Parking, Colorado Film & Video Association, Contagious Media, E&J Gallo Winery, Eldorado Natural Spring Water, L.E.G. Valet, LaMarca Prosecco, Louis Martini, Pearl Street Marketing, SAGIndie, Silver Spur Marketing, Sunset Limo, Visit Denver, Wyoming Film Office FESTIVAL FRIENDS: 2127 Presents, Asian Art Coordinating Council, Basil Doc’s Pizza, Galvanize, School of Rock,  Withoutabox SPECIAL THANKS: Denver Film Academy, Denver Film Society's Alumni Board, Denver Film Society's Board Members, Volunteers of the Denver Film Society, Young Filmmakers Workshop

About the Denver Film Society:

Founded in 1978, the Denver Film Society (DFS) is a membership-based, 501(c)(3) nonprofit cultural institution that produces film events throughout the year, including the award-winning Denver Film Festival and the popular, summertime series Film on the Rocks. With a vision to cultivate community and transform lives through film, the Film Society provides opportunities for diverse audiences to discover film through creative, thought-provoking experiences.

The permanent home of the Denver Film Society, the Sie FilmCenter, is Denver's only year-round cinematheque, presenting a weekly-changing calendar of first-run exclusives and arthouse revivals both domestic and foreign, narrative and documentary - over 600 per year, all shown in their original language and format. DFS's one-of-a-kind programs annually reach more than 200,000 film lovers and film lovers-in-training.

  • Derek Anderson
    About the Author - Derek Anderson

    Raised on a steady diet of R.L. Stine’s Goosebumps books and Are You Afraid of the Dark?, Derek has been fascinated with fear since he first saw ForeverWare being used on an episode of Eerie, Indiana.

    When he’s not writing about horror as the Senior News Reporter for Daily Dead, Derek can be found daydreaming about the Santa Carla Boardwalk from The Lost Boys or reading Stephen King and Brian Keene novels.