I Can See You (DVD)
When the three-man staff of a boutique ad firm trades their Brooklyn home base for a rural backwater campsite, a classic “city slickers in peril” scare-film set-up is reborn. But in I Can See You, Graham Reznick’s “surprising horror debut” (Village Voice), nothing is what it seems for even the blink of an eye.
Lead designer Ben Richards (Ben Dickinson) pairs off with free-spirited hippie girl Summer Day (Heather Robb), as Kimble (Christopher D. Ford) and his girlfriend Sonia (Olivia Villanti) take off into the deep woods, at unctuous Doug’s (Duncan Skiles) urging. Meanwhile, the vintage spokesman (exec producer and horror meister Larry Fessenden — Habit, Wendigo) for the trio’s client reappears like the ghost of marketing past. What begins as a low-pressure brainstorming session becomes a high voltage brain-frying night-mare where the borders between reality and imagination, sanity and madness, are re-drawn and erased completely. As Variety raved, “everyday normality goes grotesque.”
“One of the most intriguing horror films in recent memory” (Fangoria) that “heralds a splendid new filmmaker” (The New York Times), I Can See You is a relentlessly menacing psychedelic kaleidoscope of sound and vision brimming with enigmatic, hallucinatory dread and uncompromising violence. Also included is Reznick's short film The Viewer, a chilling inward odyssey that uses 3D (glasses included) to burrow into the mind of an accused murderer undergoing telepathic interrogation.
- “The Viewer,” a Brand New 3D Short Film (3D glasses included)
- Director, Cast and Crew Audio Commentaries
- Behind-the-scenes Featurette
- Deleted Scenes
- Stills Gallery
- 5.1 Surround Sound Audio Mix
- Graham Reznick - Director
- Heather Robb - Actor
- Ben Dickinson - Actor
- Christopher Ford - Actor
- Duncan Skiles - Actor
- Olivia Villanti - Actor
Reviews
“Without a doubt one of the most intriguing and well crafted low budget horror films in recent memory.” – FANGORIA
“...heralds a splendid new filmmaker with one eye on genre mechanics, one eye on avant-garde conceits, and a third eye for transcendental weirdness.” – Nathan Lee, THE NEW YORK TIMES
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