Friday, September 26, 2025

PUFF X

PUFF X
A Decade of the Philadelphia Unnamed Film Festival

Get your tickets HERE

by "Doc" Hunter Bush, Staff Writer and Podcast Director


Ten of anything is quite a milestone. We count by tens after all, so doing something ten times or, in the case of the Philadelphia Unnamed Film Festival doing it for ten years, is nothing to sneeze at. I've covered PUFF for a few years, and they always showcase a wide assemblage of titles, both features and shorts, that might otherwise fly under the radar. I'm very much looking forward to what they've got in store for this year.

With these sorts of articles, I would usually single out a few features to highlight. I'm not going to do that here because A) PUFF is relatively small, so there's only a handful of features to begin with, and B) I looked into all of them and they all look pretty interesting, so why don't I just walk you through what this year's fest has to offer:


Wednesday, Oct. 1st:

The fest kicks off with a filmmaker meet-up featuring a panel discussion led by local filmmaker and Drexel’s Westphal College professor David Greenberg.

Thursday, Oct. 2nd:

The films begin on the 2nd with a double feature cohosted by Girls Like Horror beginning with You Know What You Are (dir. Rose Trimboli), a vampire horror-drama (produced by MJ contributor Shayna Davis). I was already interested in YKWYA after speaking to Shayne about it briefly earlier this year, and its teaser trailer, which features a young woman sitting on a bench and briefly remembering some past violence in a terrible flash, is so stylish I can't help but be intrigued.

A screening of 1985's The Oracle (dir. Roberta Findlay), where a spirit reaches out to a young woman for help solving its murder, follows and I was pleasantly surprised by a few things: it looks a little janky, it appears to be a Christmas (and maybe even a New Year's) movie, and there is a reliance on sickly, bright green light throughout, which is a cinematic affectation I always love. I'm a big fan of alternative holiday viewing, so I was sold almost immediately.

Friday, Oct. 3rd:

Friday features two films from PUFF alumni: Robbie Banfitch returns with a new found footage film, Tinsman Road. Its teaser trailer is primarily a shot of a ballerina music box silhouetted against a wall with footage projected on it, and paired with audio alluding to the film focusing on a missing young woman. It ends with the phrase "Sorrow is Terror", which is heartbreaking, chilling, and fascinating in equal measure.

I've actually seen Alex Phillips' latest, Anything That Moves, and it's tonally very different from what I was expecting. A messily ambitious film (complimentary) about love and sexuality set amidst a giallo-esque murder spree, ATM will likely leave you smiling and satisfied, if somewhat bewildered.

Saturday, Oct. 4th:

As the late, great DMX said, "X gon' give it to ya", and PUFF X is definitely giving it on Saturday. The most packed day of the fest this year boasts five features. Projection (dirs. Evan Samaras & George Scoufaras) seems to be the story of an aspiring screenwriter making his dream project alongside, and forgive me if I have this wrong, the spirit of his recently-deceased father? And there appears to be some kind of giant-serpent worshipping cult shenanigans, as well. Head Like a Hole (dir. Stefan MacDonald-Labelle) seems to be about a man hired to watch ... a hole, but to paraphrase Twin Peaks, the hole is not what it seems. To be clear, I'm not sure what it really is, but it surely ain't just a hole.

I had heard good things about Pater Noster and the Mission of Light (dir. Christopher Bickel), but nothing could have prepared me for how Extremely My Shit it appears to be: big, colorful, violent, with a story centered around the extremely collectible vinyl record of a long-gone cult that just might not be all that gone. The practical effects look perfectly artisanal (and goopy!), and at one point there's a wild-eyed young man yelling "Fuck your entire generation!", so I ask you: what's not to love?

I wasn't able to find trailers of any kind for two of the films but from what I could find out, they both seem to be right up my alley. Mooch (dir. Jeff Ryan), which follows a slacker golf caddy turned amateur p.i. on a case that "spirals wildly out of control", and is being compared to The Big Lebowski (1998), sounds like a great palate-cleanser to a weekend of films that tend toward darker stuff. Alan at Night (dir. Jesse Swenson) meanwhile starts with a sillier premise, an internet prankster films the unusual behavior of his new roommate, but I anticipate things will get very weird. Since it's the final film of Saturday, I'm guessing it will.

But wait! That's not all! Spread across the rest of the weekend, amidst the features, are a number of blocks of short films. The Bizarre Block caps off the Girls Like Horror night on the 2nd, there's an Animation Shorts block and a Global Grab Bag block on the 3rd, and the Horror Shorts block is nestled in the middle of all those films on the 4th. But all good things must come to an end...

Sunday, Oct. 5th:

Sunday winds the festival down with the Music Videos block and Local Shorts block leading up to the PUFF X Awards ceremony bringing things to a close in the afternoon. The shorts are always a really interesting experience because, though the PUFF crew organize them into these themed blocks, watching them back-to-back can lead to some fun moments of cognitive whiplash. Sometimes it's a better eye-opener than a cup of coffee!


Notably (to me at least) in Jason X (2001), the infamous serial teen-murderer went to space, as one does. Not to overreach for a corny pun, but this year's PUFF X looks equally as out-of-this-world! Get your tickets immediately, or live to know the true feeling of true regret. 

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