Spoiler-Free Reviews: Aussie Shorts Showcase, Part 2 (Dark Nights Film Fest 2025) 

October 28, 2025

Written by Joseph Perry

Joseph Perry is the Film Festival Editor for Horror Fuel; all film festival related queries and announcements should be sent to him at josephperry@gmail.com. He is a contributing writer for the "Phantom of the Movies VideoScope" and “Drive-In Asylum” print magazines and the websites Gruesome Magazine, Diabolique Magazine, The Scariest Things, B&S About Movies, and When It Was Cool. He is a co-host of the "Uphill Both Ways" pop culture nostalgia podcast and also writes for its website. Joseph occasionally proudly co-writes articles with his son Cohen Perry, who is a film critic in his own right. A former northern Californian and Oregonian, Joseph has been teaching, writing, and living in South Korea since 2008.

One of the intriguing blocks of short films at this year’s Dark Nights Film Fest was the Aussie Shorts Showcase. The Sydney festival featured nine impressive slices of Australian fright-fare cinema, five of which I presented in part 1 and the remaining 4 happily discussed here.

In a Place Like This 

Official synopsis: A day in the life of Horace, an outback isolationist who holds within him a dark and violent secret. This non-conventional approach to the slasher sub-genre offers a new perspective. Set against the backdrop of the Australian bush, In a Place Like This aims to deliver a visually captivating experience, appealing to both genre aficionados and casual viewers alike.

Yet another fine display of ensemble cast work in Dark Nights Film Fest’s Aussie Shorts Showcase, writer/director Shannon Glover delivers surprises and shocks with In a Place Like This. Shane Emmett portrays lead character Horace, whose quiet life in the Australian Bush is interrupted by a support group on a camping trip. The short is a unique take on the slasher cinema that devotees of the genre should find much to their liking in both storytelling and bloodletting.

Wombo

Official synopsis: Molly and Dave argue their way through a night out camping when a deranged bush wandering madman alerts them to the incoming man-eating marsupial, “the Wombo.”

Australia already has the Yowie, the Bunyip, Yara-ma-yha-who, and the drop bear, among others, and now a newer cryptid arrives in writer/director Angus Lowe’s Wombo. The three-hander cast of Georgie Dula and Yarno Rohling as a young camping couple and Bryan Lennard Smith as the always-welcome possibly insane local warning of danger is a delight. There’s plenty of grue and the red stuff on display in this entertaining creature feature.

An Artist’s Curse 

Official synopsis: When a malevolent creature resides inside the artwork of a 10 year old girl, fate is sealed, with trauma from her childhood echoing across her life. Art and horror collide when the girl becomes a Mother and desperately tries to come to terms with her delusions and the shocking truth of her daughter.

Georgia Eyers gives a riveting lead performance as troubled young woman Sonya, who is grieving the loss of her missing daughter in An Artist’s Curse. Writer/director Steven J. Mihaljevich invests his short with a highly unreliable narrator and a looming sense of dread and despair, making this a mesmerizing, emotional watch. 

Guardian Angel 

Official synopsis: Guardian Angel is a gripping 10-minute crime thriller about a young doctor in a dangerous world, performing emergency surgery on bullet wounded gangsters in her garage.

Writer/director Charles Olsen’s Guardian Angel is a suspenseful thriller with terrific pacing and excellent performances from its ensemble cast, led by Rebecca Montalti as a doctor placed in a do-it-or-die situation. The short is tense, gripping, and blood-soaked.

The shorts reviewed here screened as part of Dark Nights Film Fest, which ran October 9-12, 2025 in Sydney, Australia. For more information, visit https://www.darknightsfilmfest.com/.

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