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    Slamdancers

    Bloody chills and red condoms make these Houston filmmakers a surprise hit in Park City movie fest

    Clifford Pugh
    Jan 26, 2015 | 8:14 am

    PARK CITY, Utah — Clinger, a campy made-in-Houston horror movie about the traumas of first love, premiered over the weekend before an enthusiastic audience at Slamdance, the alternative film conclave that takes place at the same time as the Sundance Film Festival, and three St. John's School graduates, Michael Steves, Gabi Chennisi Duncombe and Bubba Fish, were thrilled with the outcome.

    In fact, Steves, who directed and co-wrote the film with Duncombe and Fish, told the audience in a question-and-answer session that the trio had secured financing for a second film, a horror western set in the 1870s, because of the prestige of having Clinger chosen for Slamdance, a competition now in its 21st year that fosters the development of unique and innovative filmmakers.

    "The Houston community was amazingly supportive, donating food, donating resources, donating locations and time. I don't think it could have happened anywhere else."

    The trio, who co-wrote and directed several popular short films and commercials while at St. John's before going their separate ways to college in 2009 and reuniting in Los Angeles after graduation to form a production company, financed their first film through family, Houston friends and a Kickstarter campaign with 177 backers.

    They filmed the movie in Houston in the summer of 2013, using a novice crew and outdoor locations, including their alma mater and the grounds around a Memorial home.

    "We always said when we got into college we were going to come back to Houston and make a movie and so we did," Duncombe said. "The Houston community was amazingly supportive, donating food, donating resources, donating locations and time. It was really phenomenal. I don't think it could have happened anywhere else."

    "We had the opposite of red tape in Houston," Fish said. "What's the opposite of red tape? A green arrow to everything. It was so great."

    The gory story stars another Houstonian, Episcopal High School grad Jennifer Laporte, as an independent high schooler whose overly affectionate boyfriend, played by Vincent Martella (Everybody Hates Chris), dies in an embarrassing accident but returns as a romantically frustrated ghost who plots to kill his girlfriend so they can be together forever. Though bloody, with severed heads and man-eating teddy bears, it's played for laughs and seems destined for the midnight movie circuit.

    As part of the fun evening, each audience member received a blood-red scarf with the movie's logo and a red condom packaged in a white wrapper with the tag line "Nothing is scarier than your first love."

    Steves said he got the idea for the plot after he was accidentally stabbed in the chest when rehearsing a play during his freshman year in college after a real sword had accidentally been switched with a prop sword.

    "While I was in the ambulance I sent a text to my high school girlfriend (they had been in the process of breaking up), thinking this is totally the part in the movie where it's my third act twist, and I get the girl again. And I was totally wrong," Steves recalled.

    "High school teaches guys that if you love someone, or think you love someone, that they must love you back. And real life teaches you something else, which is that you don't deserve the love of anyone unless you two both love each other."

    Clinger movie poster.

    Clinger movie at Slamdance Film Festival
    Courtesy photo
    Clinger movie poster.
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    Movie Review

    Muddled drama After the Hunt wastes a strong Julia Roberts performance

    Alex Bentley
    Oct 17, 2025 | 3:30 pm
    Andrew Garfield and Julia Roberts in After the Hunt
    Photo courtesy of Amazon MGM Studios
    Andrew Garfield and Julia Roberts in After the Hunt.

    The #MeToo movement was at its peak during the late 2010s, with high profile people in the entertainment industry and elsewhere starting to be held accountable for prior sexual assaults and/or sexual harassment. A few movies, like The Assistant and Bombshell, confronted the issue while it was still garnering headlines, making the films themselves feel even more important.

    The new film After the Hunt seems to have an appropriate title, as it’s a fictional look back at the culture during that time from the perspective of the current day. Alma Imhoff (Julia Roberts) and Hank Gibson (Andrew Garfield) are professors at Yale University in the same department. They are both very friendly with Alma’s TA, Maggie Price (Ayo Edebiri), even inviting her and other students to Alma’s home for boozy gatherings.

    That friendliness and booziness comes to a head when Maggie confides to Alma that Hank “crossed the line” after walking her home one night. Alma, whose history with Hank is more than just professional, finds herself in a battle between believing what Maggie is telling her and standing up for her longtime friend. The tight group slowly gets pulled apart as each of them and people around them grapple with the fallout of the accusation.

    Directed by Luca Guadagnino and written by first-time screenwriter Nora Garrett, the film’s solid premise soon gives way to the disease of bloat. The overly-long 138-minute movie isn’t satisfied with the dramatics of its central plot, instead adding on a number of character quirks that either add nothing to the story or do little to enhance it. These include a mysterious ailment for Alma that gives her intense stomach pain, her somewhat strained marriage to Frederik Mendelssohn (Michael Stuhlbarg), and Maggie’s relationship with a transgender man.

    The filmmakers make the choice to not show a number of key moments, like the actual incident between Maggie and Hank or when Hank finds out he’s been accused. The scenes they do include, like charged one-on-ones between Maggie and Alma or Alma and Hank, work well, but the film loses all momentum when it digresses into other areas. As consequences start to be felt, it’s almost as if Guadagnino and Garrett stop caring about the main plot at all, with the main characters devolving in a number of ways.

    More than anything else, the film never has anything interesting or new to add to the #MeToo conversation. Instead of a tight, taut drama about how the three main characters deal with their feelings about the incident/accusation, the story meanders aimlessly. Garrett also seems to want things both ways, casting doubt on Maggie while also giving her a righteous cause. The result is a muddled mess with nobody coming off as compelling.

    That clutter extends to the casting, with the 57-year-old Roberts portrayed as a contemporary with the 42-year-old Garfield. The film never adequately explains their relationship, leaving audiences to fill in gaps they shouldn’t have to bridge. Roberts, Garfield, and Edebiri are each fine actors who do good work in their roles, but the story does them no favors.

    Just because it’s disappeared from the headlines doesn’t lessen the importance of the #MeToo movement, but if After the Hunt was trying to revive it in some way, it fails in that ambition. Its star power is mostly wasted in a story that never seems as interested in its main idea as it should be.

    ---

    After the Hunt is now playing in theaters.

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