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<title>Tara&apos;s Terror Boulevard</title>
<link>https://www.theindependentcritic.com</link>
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<description>Indie &quot;Scream Queen&quot; Tara Cardinal is host for this special feature blog of The Independent Critic with reviews and interviews from the best and worst of indie &amp; Hollywood horror along with horror shorts and awesome giveaways! </description>

<item>
<title>&quot;Johnny Be Gone&quot; Review</title>
<link>https://www.theindependentcritic.com/terror_boulevard/view/15021</link>
<pubDate>Sat, 26 Feb 2011 21:27:00 CST</pubDate>
<author>Richard Propes </author>
<guid>https://www.theindependentcritic.com/terror_boulevard?blogm=view&amp;blogid=15021</guid>
<description><![CDATA[<u><strong>Johnny Be Gone<br />
</strong></u><strong>Written and Directed by: </strong>Trevor Juenger<br />
<strong>Starring: </strong>Erik A. Williams, Joe Hammerstone, Katie Deerest, Catie Lax (Voice)<br />
<strong>Running Time: </strong>44 Mins.<br />
<strong>Grade: </strong>B+<br />
3.5 Stars<br />
<hr size="2" width="100%" />
<br />
Written and directed by Trevor Juenger, the 44-minute short film <em>Johnny Be Gone </em>opens  with a savage and humiliating beating inflicted upon our central  character, a transsexual named Johnny (Erik A. Williams) who seems to  rightfully have a few unresolved issues and who seems primarily  motivated by an overwhelming desire for acceptance. The only person who  begins to accept Johnny is his roommate Logan (Joe Hammerstone), but  this relationship feels constantly off-kilter and bordering on unsafe  emotionally and physically.&nbsp; When Johnny returns home one day to find  Logan having sex with the local sandwich shop girl (Katie Deerest). As  our film unfolds, the emotionally fragile Johnny retreats into a fantasy  world where he finds himself conversing with a rabbit (Catie Lax). <br />
<br />
If by now you haven't had such thoughts and images cross through your  mind as Matthew Shephard, Brandon Teena, Harmony Korine and a host of  others, then there's a pretty darn good chance that this dark, dramatic  and emotionally disturbing short film is not for you. <em>Johnny Be Gone </em>is  not light cinema, and Juenger maintains such an integrity to his artist  vision that he absolutely refuses to let up on the gas to give the  audience a breather. <br />
<br />
<em>Johnny Be Gone </em>represents my favorite kind of filmmaking ...  ballsy, relentless, experimental and unnerving. It's tempting to compare  this film to a Hollywood film and say that Hollywood would have  sugar-coated the story and created the greeting card style happy ending.  The truth is that Hollywood wouldn't touch this film, and with no  studio to answer to Juenger makes the film he wants to in exactly the  style he wants to make it. <br />
<br />
Erik A. Williams is simply astounding, sometimes sympathetic and  sometimes simply pathetic, an emotional man/woman/child all rolled into  one who can't seem to become comfortable with who he is, who can love or  how to avoid the humiliation that seems to have an almost inevitable  presence in his daily life.&nbsp; Joe Hammerstone is fine as a young man who  isn't nearly as comfortable with Johnny as one might expect. However, at  a mere 44 minutes, it's hard not to wish for more Johnny and less  Logan, who amounts to a supporting player in a film that is squarely  about Johnny. Katie Deerest shines as a sandwich shop girl who is  initially rather mean to Johnny, but moves towards being a more  sympathetic presence and represents <br />
a tiny sliver of humanity in a film that is largely devoid of it. <br />
<br />
Charlie Vavrinek's original music is nothing short of amazing, a  stunning companion to Juenger's artistic vision and the grainy and dark  camera work of Nick Brian Walters.&nbsp; Even <br />
<br />
An uncomfortable and heartbreakingly authentic exploration of  intolerance, human connection, self-image and so much more, Trevor  Juenger's <em>Johnny Be Gone </em>is the kind of film that underground,  experimental and LGBT film festivals cry out for and should openly  embrace. Not for the faint of heart or easily shaken, <em>Johnny Be Gone </em>is a brutal film but not so much in the way that we've become accustomed to in contemporary horror. <em>Johnny Be Gone </em>is,  on a certain level, even more frightening because it illustrates the  brutality within ourselves and the world that surrounds us emotionally  and physically. <br />]]></description>
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