NYWIFT Blog

Meet the New NYWIFT Member: Katherine Allen

By Ozzi Ramirez

Let’s all give a huge NYWIFT welcome to Katherine Allen! Based in Brooklyn, Katherine Allen is a filmmaker whose artistry often addresses the theme of discomfort and include aspects of Magikal Surrealism, horror, and the macabre.

Some of her film projects include L’alphabête Noire (currently in development), The Widow’s Hand, Renaissance of Strings, Paper Doves (a music video for the band Submarine Bells), and Girl with the Haunted House Tattoo (a music video or the band The Long Lasts). Outside of filmmaking, some of Katherine’s hobbies are photography and occasionally lurking about during a dark moon.

Learn more about Katherine as we converse about her knack for embracing nitty gritty emotions and translating them into art, audiences’ attraction to films that blend fairytale elements with horror, her grandfather’s ongoing influence on her craft, and the spellbinding qualities of seemingly ordinary objects!

 

NYWIFT Member Katherine Allen

 

Describe yourself – give us your elevator pitch!

I am a conjuror of stories that hide deep in the subconscious. I blend surrealism, magikal (not a typo- it’s spelled with a “K”) horror, and dark humor to open portals to unusual worlds, which I hope even Lydia Deetz would approve. Oh, and I’m left-handed, which means I’m sinister.

 

Emily Solo & Varak Baronian in L’alphabête Noire (dir. Katherine Allen)

 

You’ve said, “I regurgitate nightmares and channel exquisite dreams in the same breath. I make films that will leave you sticky with alacrity.”

Can you elaborate on the importance of artists being able to regurgitate their nightmares and channel their exquisite dreams? How has embracing the darker aspects of your creativity served your artistry?   

Fumbling around in the dark and dredging up the unexpected challenges me to use light in more experimental ways. Sometimes that’s literal, but more often, this is about humor. The darker my subject matter, the more in tune I need to be with how much lightness is needed for others to see the same beauty that I see in the grotesque. I’ve never understood films that take place solely in the “Swamps of Sadness.” I hope my films will open people up, not drown them.

 

Jesse James Keitel in L’alphabête Noire (dir. Katherine Allen)

 

Whether it is through earlier classics such as Valerie and Her Week of Wonders and The Red Shoes or more modern films such as The Nightmare Before ChristmasPan’s LabyrinthSnow White and the HuntsmanThe Lure, and Winnie the Pooh: Blood and Honey, audiences seem to be riveted by films that combine horror and fairytale elements. 

What are your thoughts on moviegoers’ intrigue with this storytelling style, and where do you feel it stems from? Can you tell us about The Widow’s Hand? 

For me, this genre speaks to the inner child that wants to be taken into a fantasy – but also scared a little – but mostly entertained. Horror has always been linked to fairytales as a way of processing real-life tragedies, so these fairytales for adults let us dive a little deeper while still having fun. 

The Widow’s Hand is a trilogy of surrealistic horror shorts that re-imagine three well-known tales: Sleeping Beauty, Hansel & Gretel, and Bluebeard. Each story is ruled by one of the Fates: Hysteria, Phantasma, and Inferna. Since fairytales were originally told by women, but co-opted by men, The Widow’s Hand explores the perspective of a woman and what she might have focused on during the telling of each story.

Working under the pseudonym of Lucretia Grimm, the black sheep of fairytale royalty, I am grounding these tales in a more authentic psychological horror.

 

From Katherine Allen’s self-published umbrella book The Abandoned.

 

As a photographer, your ability to capture the essence of inanimate objects and infuse them with life is remarkable. For instance, your Umbrella Book consisting of some extraordinary photographs you captured of abandoned umbrellas strewn across the streets of NYC, evokes a sense of melancholy and wonder.

What attracts you to objects that others would consider mundane? More importantly, how do you transform these objects through your art? Is the magic in the photographs or the objects themselves?

I’ve always been an animist, so what I might find mundane are things like routines or paperwork. Objects, to me, almost always have life to them. If they want to be seen, they will then call me. Although this might be my own delusion, it’s part of the process. The glimmer starts there, and then there is definitely magic in the taking of the photographs.

Photography is capturing a specific moment in the elusive element of time – the light, the mood, the speed of the photographer hitting the button, and the space in between where there is no control. I think it’s taken for granted how magical that is.

 

Katherine Allen taking photos in Montreal in below zero temperatures!

 

 

You’ve referenced your grandfather, a photographer, as an instrumental figure in your artistic journey. Which of his works do you feel the closest to and why?

There isn’t a particular photograph that speaks to me more than the others, but rather his body of work. His themes of trauma and reverence for the natural world have profoundly impacted me. My grandfather’s WWII photographs were kept hidden from me growing up in contrast to his post-war nature photography that adorned our walls and arrived as Christmas presents. Seeing the war through his eyes as an adult gave me a greater understanding of his art of the natural world and himself as a human. Combining these disparate worlds in my work is my way of continuing an ethereal conversation with him.

 

Katherine Allen directing Nini Le Huynh on the set of L’alphabête Noire (Photo Credit: Zhen Qin)

 

What is the best and worst advice you’ve received?

Best Advice: I’m not sure when I first heard this, but I always try to make the movie that I would want to see – not just on an intellectual level, but something that lights me up inside while I’m making it. If you can connect in that way to your story, others will.

Worst Advice: Any advice about what you should and shouldn’t do to succeed or what you need to do to make a good film. There might be the rare suggestion that rings true, but being an artist is a mostly individual path where “right” and “wrong” and “should” are irrelevant.  

 

Nini Le Huynh & Kathie Kneese in L’alphabête Noire (dir. Katherine Allen)

 

What brings you to NYWIFT?

I have been feeling a strong pull towards making more time for community – especially with other female creators in the industry. I know NYWIFT provides so much more than that, but that is what has brought me here.

 

Behind the scenes of The Widow’s Hand / HYSTERIA (Photo Credit: Jon Stuyvesant)

 

How did the pandemic effect your work life?  

It shook things up and made a mess, but ultimately it gave me space to nurture ideas I had neglected from being overworked.


 

What is next for Katherine Allen? Do you have any upcoming projects in development?  

Yes! I am in post-production for the first part of my series, L’alphabête Noire, a nightmare alphabet for adults who aren’t afraid of the dark. You can check out the teaser at www.alphabetenoire.com.

I am also in early development on a narrative feature film titled, The Mardorom, a surreal gothic fairy-tale about trying to escape Death.

 

 

Connect with Katherine Allen on LinkedIn, or on her websites katfarmproductions.com/kat and www.alphabetenoire.com.

PUBLISHED BY

Ozzi Ramirez

Ozzi Ramirez Ozzi Ramirez is a current intern at NYWIFT and aspiring film producer and programmer. He studied English Literature and Theater at the University of Vermont and later received a Master's Degree in Mass Communications from Florida International University in Miami. Having moved to NYC in 2019, his interests include moseying through Manhattan with his headphones on full blast, most dogs and cats, coffee, discovering good deals on theater tickets, politics, traveling, and of course, experiencing great storytelling through movies, TV shows, and books.

View all posts by Ozzi Ramirez

Comments are closed

Related Posts

Meet the New NYWIFT Member: Monique Gabriela Curnen

Welcome to NYWIFT, Monique Gabriela Curnen! Monique Gabriela Curnen is an actor and producer known for a string of critical and commercial successes, including Half Nelson, The Dark Knight, Contagion and Birth/Rebirth. While working with Warrington Hudlin at the Black Filmmaker Foundation, she started producing short films. She continued producing independently, including the Joe Holt short Noël, which sold to ShortsHD. She served as executive producer on the award-winning feature documentary, A Run For More (PBS, Amazon) directed by Ray Whitehouse. She’s currently in development on the narrative feature Sheila & the Punk Rock, written and directed by K. Lorrel Manning. Monique discusses the roots of her career, her experience working on large-scale productions, and how she overcomes challenges within these realms. Get to know her in our latest interview!

READ MORE

Meet the New NYWIFT Member: Sonia Malfa

Let's give a warm welcome to new NYWIFT member Sonia Malfa! Inspired by nature and myth, Sonia Malfa is a writer/director who creates visually poetic films that draw from her Puerto Rican-American roots. From music video and commercials to documentary and narrative film, her directing work has been featured in Tribeca Festival, AdAge, Vogue Italia, and won both Webby and Clio Awards. Sonia is currently in development on her narrative feature debut, It's Always Sunni, which was selected for the Gotham Project Market and Film Independent’s Fast Track. Most recently, Sonia was selected for the NALIP/Netflix Woman of Color Film Incubator and the Actors Studio Directors Unit. In our interview, Sonia discusses her deep connection to nature, commercial projects, the importance of creative community, and her road trip film - with a twist!

READ MORE

Meet the New NYWIFT Member: Melissa Roxburgh

Welcome to NYWIFT, Melissa Roxburgh! Melissa Roxburgh is a Sagittarian (12/10/92), actress and Canadian. Her parents moved to Canada from the United States and founded a church in Vancouver. Roxburgh is the second oldest of four children; she has two sisters and one younger brother. While pursuing acting roles in Vancouver, Roxburgh studied communications at Simon Fraser University. She is an alumna of the William Esper Studio. Roxburgh landed her first major role in Diary of a Wimpy Kid: Rodrick Rules and has worked steadily in television and film. She is currently portraying Rebecca "Bex" Henderson, an FBI Special Agent, in The Hunting Party, a procedural crime drama on NBC. Melissa spoke to us about her creative journey, family roots, favorite actors, and her directing dreams.

READ MORE

Meet the New NYWIFT Member: Angelica Marciano

Let’s give a warm NYWIFT welcome to our new member, Angelica Marciano. Angela is a location manager and producer who has worked in several different states on narrative feature films and TV. She just recently moved to New York after living in New Mexico, and Boston. She is the person behind the scenes of queerfilmbk and prides herself on being a person who excels at bringing community together. She has a cat named Lewis who acts like a dog. She’s an enthusiastic extrovert who can talk to any stranger and is a self-proclaimed freak in that she hopes that the person sitting next to her on an airplane wants to chat. In our interview, Angelica discusses her winding career path, advice to women filmmakers, and what excites her about the locations department! 

READ MORE
JOIN OUR NEWSLETTER
css.php