Woodsboro. Haddonfield. Crystal Lake. Fictional locations that have all shared the same, shameful burden; the serial killer. Luckily for us our own visitations to these cursed spots are limited to just a couple of hours; imagine having to grow up in a town with its very own knife wielding psychopath.
So goes the premise for The Sleepover. Coming from writer/director team Jennifer Raite and Chris Cullari, the flick shows a typical night in a town where the local serial killer is considered less an unstoppable force of nature and more like a minor irritant, albeit one that carries a machete. Cars have bumper stickers supporting Moms Against Serial Killers (MASK), sleepovers have a check list of rules to follow and babysitters are specialists in armed and unarmed combat.
Although not the scariest, The Sleepover is both smart and hilarious, effortlessly twisting the deeply ingrained tropes of the slasher movie genre. The film was made as a proof of concept, and won official selection at a host of festivals, including Fantastic Fest, Shriekfest, Seattle International Film Festival, Florida Film Festival, Vassar FilmFest and the Knoxville Horror Fest. Fingers crossed it eventually makes it to feature.