Teenage Sex and Death at Camp Miasma
After years of slapdash sequels and waning fandom, the Camp Miasma slasher franchise is handed over to an enthu...
Directing
Louise Weard is a filmmaker with a degree in Film Semiotics. Hailing from Western Canada, she cut her teeth working as the cinematographer for FX legend Ryan Nicholson and emerged as an exciting new voice in underground horror with her breakout body-horror featurette Computer Hearts. Along with her filmmaking partner Dionne Copland, Louise established CyberCraft Video in 2016 and produced the short films Inferno and Haxx Deadroom, as well as the micro-budget queer slasher film Cuties. After film school she produced Dionne Copland's feature-length debut, the cabin-in-the-woods creature-feature Cold Wind Blowing, which was released in 2022.
She has been obsessed with deeply personal (and perverse) movies that push the envelope for as long as she can remember, which culminated in her winning a Most Fearless Performance Award in 2015 for her short film S.I.D.S. in which she played herself as a transsexual woman seeking a back alley surgery. Nearly a decade after completing her debut film, Computer Hearts, it was rediscovered as a significant work of transgender horror cinema and screened at The Music Box in Chicago, IL during their Music Box of Horrors event in October 2022.
Her film theory writing encompasses work on the on-screen semiotics of the Marquis de Sade and a comprehensive history of films featuring phallic genital trauma, the latter of which can be found in the book Divergent Terror: The Crossroads of Queerness and Horror. In September 2022, she co-hosted the 100 Best Kills event at Fantastic Fest in a night dedicated to castration scenes in film.
For Louise, cinema is about illuminating the most secretive and problematic parts of the self and using storytelling to connect with other freaks and outcasts so that nobody has to feel alone. Her obsessions include ritual Magick, Gnosticism, and UFOs, and when she's not making movies you'll find her championing unsung visionary filmmakers through her film writing and her roles at various film festivals. She has also directed some fierce music videos for musical artists Ravine Angel and Lauren Bousfield, and while filming one she may have "accidentally" performed a ritual that made her trans.
Browse movies and TV shows featuring Louise Weard
After years of slapdash sequels and waning fandom, the Camp Miasma slasher franchise is handed over to an enthu...
Michaela 'Traps' Sinclair is a trans sex worker trying to get by in Vancouver while also mentoring her recently...
Izzy seeks out everything in her power to stop her partner from transitioning. Meanwhile, Michaela tries her be...
A feature-length deleted scenes movie from the Blu-ray release of the anthology series Castration Movie.
A young transgender woman takes a hike through the English countryside in an attempt to resolve her spiritual c...
Albert's stable relationship with his fiancé is jeopardized when he becomes obsessed with a computer simulation.
Fourth entry in the Castration Movie series. Plot details unknown.
An abridged version of Castration Movie Anthology iii.
100 Best Kills dates back to the earliest days of Fantastic Fest, a cornerstone of the fest’s grand tradition o...
Over the course of nearly two years, Louise Weard and her loved ones test the limits of filmmaking, friendship...
Only one strawberry left. Who will get it ?
The Fool performs a Magickal Work in hopes of cosmic suicide.
After an unexpected pregnancy The Patient is terrified at the prospect of fatherhood, and after being denied an...
The no holds barred, violently exciting, black eye inducing music video for the song of the same name.
Louise Weard's first film, written and directed in sixth grade.
A documentary which examines the making of Computer Hearts and the perils of no-budget student film making.
An interview with Z-movie director Vince D’Amato (director of Carmilla, the Lesbian Vampire aka Vampires vs Zom...
Final part in the Castration Movie series. Plot details unknown.
A short film by Dionne Copland.