
Teaser Trailer For Osgood Perkins' Horror Film KEEPER Starrring Tatiana Maslany and Rossif Sutherland — GeekTyrant
The film stars Tatiana Maslany ( Orphan Black ) and Rossif Sutherland ( Possessor ) as a couple celebrating their anniversary in a remote cabin. Things take a dark turn when Malcolm (Sutherland) suddenly heads back to the city, leaving Liz (Maslany) isolated.
Alone in the woods, she comes face-to-face with an unspeakable evil lurking in the shadows of the cabin's sinister past. It looks like it's going to be psychological, and possibly supernatural, descent into terror.
The script comes from Nick Lepard, and with Perkins' growing reputation for crafting deeply atmospheric horror, this first look suggests another chilling experience that dives headfirst into isolation and dread.
Would you check out Keeper based on this teaser?
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Cunningham would go on to direct the first film in the Friday the 13th franchise, which will turn up soon on this list. Freeway (1996) Writer-director Matthew Bright's very '90s update on Little Red Riding Hood stars a very young Reese Witherspoon as Vanessa, an illiterate teenager living in Southern California with her sex worker mom (Amanda Plummer) and evil, predatory stepfather (Michael T. Weiss). Then things get worse. When her mom is arrested, Vanessa tries to trek north to Grandma's house, but she's picked up by modern-day big bad wolf Bob Wolverton (Kiefer Sutherland.) Everything about this movie feels wrong, and it's intoxicating. We love all the acting — Witherspoon is spectacular — as well as the surprise appearances of stars like Brooke Shields and stars-to-be like Bokeem Woodbine and Brittany Murphy. Best of all, we saw this for free, via the Kanopy app. And it's also on our list of '90s Comedies That Just Don't Care If You're Offended. Body Double (1984) The gold standard of sleazy '80s movie, this Brian De Palma neo-noir imagines a Hitchcock movie in the era of VHS adult home movies. It stars Craig Wasson as a struggling actor named Jake Scully who gets a housesitting gig that includes a creepy side bonus — he gets to watch a neighbor seductively undress and dance around each night. (The movie assumes that this is totally cool, despite her apparent lack of awareness that he's watching.) But then things get even weirder, as a home invader with a drill breaks into the woman's home, and Jake's search for answers links him up with adult actress Holly Body, played by a terrifically game Melanie Griffith. It's great sleazy fun that will keep you guessing. The Texas Chainsaw Massacre (1974) A movie that makes you want to take a shower afterwards, The Texas Chainsaw Massacre is a relentlessly sleazy movie that uses sleaze to its great advantage. 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The film was based on a screenplay by Quentin Tarantino that was so thoroughly changed that Tarantino has distanced himself from the film. (Not because it was a sleazy movie, mind you, but because Tarantino thinks the final film misunderstood his intentions.) Kids (1995) Kids, the directorial debut of Larry Clark and the screenwriting debut of Harmony Korine, was criticized at the time of its release for its blunt depiction of a hedonistic teen world filled with sex, drugs, and exploitation. The lead character, Telly (an excellent Leo Fitzpatrick) is an unrepentant 17-year-old predator who targets very young girls. As Roger Ebert noted, the film "doesn't tell us what it means." But that's not what makes Kids sleazy — depicting behavior isn't endorsing it, and Kids can be read as an important message movie about kids' need for attention and guidance. What's uncomfortable about the film, in retrospect, is its leering camerawork with young subjects. 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Hostel (2005 Hostel is kind of like Saw for people who thought Saw was too soft. Director Eli Roth is a student of horror and exploitation flicks, and enlists all of their best tricks while introducing several horrible ones of his own. What makes Hostel so good is the way it combines very dark social commentary with the nightmarish spectacles to make us rethink the way the world works. The Laughing Woman aka Femina Ridens (1969) One of the weirdest, wildest, and most gorgeous-looking sleazy movies we've ever seen, this very 1969 Italian film will be a good wakeup call for anyone who thinks 50 Shades of Grey kicked off that whole scene. The film is about a woman (Dagmar Lassander, above) who goes undercover in the lair of a possible serial killer who delights in degrading his victims. It's all so sleazy you can't believe you're watching it, but then there's a twist! It's actually... a romance? 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