THE WORLD IS FULL OF SECRETS Releases Captivating Trailer Ahead Of US Theatrical Premiere

Graham Swon’s Dreamlike THE WORLD IS FULL OF SECRETS Drops Captivating Trailer Ahead of US Theatrical Premiere

The exceptional and intimate directorial debut from Swon comes to Anthology Film Archives October 31st

BAMcinemaFest 2019 Selection
WINNER – BEST FILM – INDEPENDENT COMP. – SARASOTA FILM FESTIVAL, 2019
WINNER – PRIX DU JURY ÉTUDIANT – AMERICAN COMP. – CHAMP-ÉLYSÉES FILM FESTIVAL, 2019

OPENING AT ANTHOLOGY FILM ARCHIVES IN NEW YORK OCTOBER 31ST

An old woman’s voice recalls a terrible event from her distant past: on a summer night in 1996, five teenage girls meet in a suburban house, absent of parental supervision. To pass the time, they begin to tell morbid stories of the world outside, trying to best one another in a grim competition. As the night becomes darker and their play becomes more serious, their world of fiction is consumed by reality in this feverish Decameron-in-miniature.

Graham Swon (co-producer on Ted Fendt’s SHORT STAY, CLASSICAL PERIOD, Matías Piñeiro’s HERMIA & HELENA, and Ricky D’Ambrose’s NOTES ON AN APPEARANCE) drew inspiration from ancient Greek theatre and cultural impact and form of radio for his affecting award-winning directorial debut. THE WORLD IS FULL OF SECRETS has screened at BAMcinemaFEST, Indie Memphis, Sarasota Film Festival and the Champs-Élysées Film Festival in Paris.

The film stars Ayla Guttman, Alexa Shae Niziak, Dennise Gregory, Violet Piper and Elena Burger. Swon wrote and produced the film, which is co-produced by Lio Sigerson and Bart Cortright, who also acted as cinematographer.

“This non-gory horrific tale without monsters or bloodshed is probably the most poisonous and scary US film produced in the recent years. Inspired by Southern Gothic’s dark romanticism, shot with acute minimalism, this film conjures up the best contemporary horror writers (such as Brian Evanson, Thomas Ligotti or Lisa Tuttle) with its hypnotic narration, its stylised grammar, both elegant and brutal, and its existential and metaphysical terror. In a gesture that reminds one of Warhol, Graham Swon prints on the young girls’ faces an ancestral violence inherent to the American culture, and puts the spectators in a torpor from which they will unheartedly depart.”

– Victor Bournérias,
Entrevues Belfort International Festival du Film

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