What is there to say? LIAF’s annual screaming tribute to body fluids, mutilation, dodgy sex, sub-legal practices and inappropriate touching will burst forth from the screen for 65 glorious minutes.
This year we can promise Japanese sex-education, terrifying bugs, satanic babes and the misuse of bingo balls.
As long as you keep coming, we’ll keep putting it on.
At The Horse Hospital buy tickets
Don’t Tell Mom (Kawako Sabuki, Japan)
A Japanese sex-education film about the secret joys of bike riding. No kidding.
3’25, 2015
Father’s Son (Kevin Bailey, USA)
Just another day in the desert for two lo-fi dudes who have to decide if an encounter with satanic babes is going to be worth the risk.
6’10, 2015
Bingo (Patrick Schoenmaker, Netherlands)
It doesn’t matter how desperate, you can’t shove a bingo ball into THERE!!
2’00, 2015
House Party (Daniel Barany, Hungary)
One of the strangest parties and weirdest feasts you’ll ever get to witness.
4’30, 2015
RRRING RRRING! (Thomas Kneffel, Germany)
This man thinks he’s boring – but phoning all your strange friends to find out what they’re doing might not be the answer to his problems.
6’00, 2015
Ivan’s Need (Veronica Montano, Manuela Leuenburger & Lukas Suter, Switzerland)
They say man cannot live by bread alone but this teenage boy looks like he’d be happy to give it a try.
6’20, 2015
Insect Bite (Grace Nayoon Rhee, USA)
It’s not that bugs don’t have free will, it’s just they don’t really know how to exercise it properly.
2’30, 2015
It’s A Date (Zachary Zezima, USA)
The worst blind date since ‘When Harry Met Sally’.
7’10, 2016
Datamine (Tim Tracey, Canada)
In a world of industrial decay the plugged-in masses fail to notice a sinister agent who watches and controls them.
5’10, 2016
Batfish Soup (Amanda Boniauto, USA)
Wacky relatives give way to mounting tensions with broken dolls, boiling stew and a bang.
4’30, 2016
The Laughing Spider (Keiichi Tanaami, Japan)
A nightmarish psychedelic fantasmagoria from Japan’s greatest veteran animator, based on childhood memories of air-raids.
7’25, 2016
Senior’s Choice (Ave Taavet, Estonia)
An alternative path to losing your mind – set to a catchy jingle to help you keep up.
9’05, 2015