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Pat Higgins
Pat Higgins
from Wikipedia

Pat Higgins (born 30 March 1974[1] in Essex, England) is a film director, writer, producer and owner of independent production company Jinx Media Ltd.

Key Information

Higgins' first feature from the company, Trash House, was filmed in 2004[2] and released on DVD in Europe in February 2006.[3] It was distributed by Screen Entertainment, the UK distributors of such controversial features as I Spit On Your Grave and Faces of Death.

Higgins' second feature, KillerKiller', was filmed in 2006 and completed in 2007.[4] All worldwide rights were licensed to York Entertainment, who released the film on DVD in August 2007.[5]

Higgins' third feature, Hellbride,[6] was publicly premiered at the Festival of Fantastic Films in the UK in September 2007, where it was awarded 'Commended' status.[7] It was released on DVD in the USA on 5 May 2009 via Midnight Releasing[8] and in the UK in March 2010.

Higgins' fourth feature, The Devil's Music, was listed as complete on 19 January 2008.[9] It premiered at the Festival of Fantastic Films, in 2008, where it was awarded winner of Independent Feature category[10] and was released on DVD in the US in December 2009.

In October 2008, Fangoria described Higgins as one of the "most promising British horror directors",[11] and announced his involvement in an anthology movie entitled Bordello Death Tales[12] for which Higgins directed a sequence titled Vice Day.

Higgins is also the original writer and creator of Strippers vs Werewolves,[13] a horror comedy produced by Black & Blue Films and starring Adele Silva, Barbara Nedeljáková, Sarah Douglas and Billy Murray. His original script was rewritten extensively during production.[13]

A Bordello Death Tales sequel, entitled Battlefield Death Tales, followed in 2012.[14] It was retitled Nazi Zombie Death Tales for UK release and then retitled again to Angry Nazi Zombies for US release.[14]

Higgins' appearance at the 2013 Horror-on-Sea festival was filmed and released online as Werewolves, Cheerleaders & Chainsaws.[15] This release was followed in 2015 by another show entitled How Not to Make a Horror Movie,[16] which also featured various other filmmakers sharing their worst on-set experiences.

On 23 January 2016 Higgins premiered a new film entitled The House on the Witchpit at the Horror-on-Sea festival without releasing any images, trailer, cast or plot details.[17] After the screening, he destroyed the master copy of the film onstage.[18]

Higgins gave a TEDx talk entitled 'Childhood Fears are Awesome' [19] in October 2017.

In October 2020, he was announced as writer and director of horror-musical Powertool Cheerleaders vs the Boyband of the Screeching Dead.[20] The film premiered at the Prince Charles Cinema in Leicester Square, London, on the closing night of the FrightFest festival in August 2022.[21]

Filmography

[edit]
  • Trash House (2006)
  • KillerKiller (2007)
  • Hellbride (2007)
  • The Devil's Music (2008)
  • Bordello Death Tales (2009)
  • Strippers vs Werewolves (2011)
  • Battlefield Death Tales (aka Angry Nazi Zombies) (2012)
  • The House on the Witchpit (2016)
  • Powertool Cheerleaders vs the Boyband of the Screeching Dead (2021)

References

[edit]
[edit]
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from Grokipedia
Pat Higgins is a British film director, screenwriter, and producer known for his independent horror and comedy-horror films that often blend graphic gore with sharp humor and genre subversion. He founded Jinx Media Ltd in 2003, initially as a platform for various media projects before focusing on feature filmmaking. Higgins made his directorial debut with TrashHouse (2005), a single-location horror film shot on a domestic camcorder, which premiered at festivals and earned recognition including a Best Screenplay award. He followed with back-to-back productions KillerKiller and Hellbride, before achieving acclaim with The Devil's Music (2008), which won Best Independent Feature at the Festival of Fantastic Films. His later works include contributions to the Death Tales anthology series and the musical horror-comedy Powertool Cheerleaders vs the Boyband of the Screeching Dead (2022), which gained significant attention through a successful Kickstarter campaign and premiered as the closing night film at FrightFest. Beyond directing, Higgins has worked as a creative copywriter on marketing campaigns and as an uncredited script doctor for features. He has lectured on screenwriting and idea generation for over a decade, delivered masterclasses, and appeared as a speaker at events including the London Screenwriters' Festival and TEDx Chelmsford. His public commentary on independent filmmaking has also included appearances on BBC News discussing the UK horror scene.

Early life

Background and birth

Pat Higgins was born on 30 March 1974 in Essex, England. Limited biographical details are available about Higgins' early life. In interviews, he has described himself as a "child of the 1970s" who was initially "scared shitless" of the horror genre as a child but fascinated by it, with early cinema memories involving horror posters and the rise of VHS during his adolescence. He noted that in his mid-teens he realized there was "nothing to fear" in horror films and began to claim the genre as his own. Higgins holds a degree in Media and his only prior professional experience in the film industry was working as a runner on a couple of unreleased 35mm features. No additional verified information on family background or other childhood details has been publicly released.

Career

Founding Jinx Media and early feature films (2004–2008)

Pat Higgins founded Jinx Media Ltd in 2003 as his independent production company, initially intended for a stalled mobile content project before shifting focus to feature filmmaking. He served as the primary creative force behind his early low-budget horror features, handling writing, directing, producing, and editing duties on most titles. His debut feature, TrashHouse (filmed 2004, premiered 2005), was a single-location horror film shot on a domestic camcorder in an Essex warehouse, incorporating iconic horror tropes such as scary clowns and chainsaws. To maximize efficiency on limited resources, Higgins insured multiple shoots under one policy and filmed his next two features back-to-back. KillerKiller (2007) and Hellbride (2007) followed as low-budget horror productions blending supernatural, psychopathic, and comedic elements, with Hellbride adopting a particularly jokey tone fusing horror and romantic comedy. Higgins completed his fourth feature, The Devil's Music (2008), which he wrote, directed, and edited while his wife Pippa Higgins produced; it marked a shift toward a more serious mockumentary-style horror. These early Jinx Media films were distributed primarily through small DVD labels in the UK and US markets.

Anthology segments and external collaborations (2009–2012)

During 2009–2012, Pat Higgins contributed to horror anthologies and an external script project, extending his horror-comedy style into collaborative formats that differed from his earlier independent Jinx Media features. He directed and produced the segment "Vice Day" in the 2009 anthology Bordello Death Tales, an unconnected trilogy of horror stories set in a brothel. The segment was written by Higgins and centers on a politician indulging in secret vices during an annual "Vice Day," featuring dark, dialogue-driven twists involving a webcam performer. In 2012, Higgins wrote the original script for Strippers vs Werewolves, a horror-comedy produced by Black & Blue Films and directed by Jonathan Glendening, though the screenplay underwent heavy rewrites by Phillip Barron before filming. The project originated from Higgins' script in development since at least 2008 but shifted significantly under producer Jonathan Sothcott's influence, resulting in a final version that diverged from his initial draft. That same year, Higgins directed, wrote, and produced the segment "Devils of the Blitz" in Battlefield Death Tales (also released as Angry Nazi Zombies and Nazi Zombie Death Tales), another multi-director anthology featuring World War II-themed horror stories. The segment follows a family defending against supernatural threats during the Blitz, noted for its classic Higgins approach emphasizing deft dialogue and practical creature effects. These anthology works involved shared production with directors James Eaves and Alan Ronald, allowing Higgins to apply his genre sensibilities within collective projects.

Festival appearances and experimental projects (2013–2016)

In 2013, Pat Higgins appeared at the Horror-on-Sea festival with a live presentation titled Werewolves, Cheerleaders and Chainsaws: Shooting Low-Budget Horror!, which was filmed and released for free online shortly afterward as a resource for the horror filmmaking community. The talk offered practical advice and personal anecdotes drawn from his work in low-budget horror production. Higgins returned to Horror-on-Sea in 2015 for How Not to Make a Horror Movie, an 82-minute filmed presentation in which he discussed challenges and experiences from on-set horror filmmaking. These festival appearances built on his established reputation in independent horror. In 2016, Higgins wrote, directed, produced, edited, and appeared in the experimental horror feature The House on the Witchpit, which premiered at Horror-on-Sea on 23 January 2016 in a sold-out screening preceded by virtually no promotional details beyond a teaser poster. Immediately after the premiere, he physically destroyed both the master copy and the only backup onstage, rendering that version of the film permanently unreleased. The project, spanning 2015 to 2021, is defined by its lack of a fixed final cut, with subsequent versions made available very briefly (including limited streaming) before deletion; the film remains effectively unreleased with no ongoing public distribution. This act of destruction emphasized the film's unconventional, experimental character.

Recent work and ongoing projects (2017–present)

Since 2017, Pat Higgins' creative output has been relatively limited compared to his earlier prolific period in independent horror filmmaking. In October 2017, he delivered a TEDxChelmsford talk titled "Childhood Fears are Awesome," in which he examined his personal relationship with fear as both a source of inspiration for his work as a horror screenwriter and director and a persistent challenge in his own life, drawing on specific childhood experiences to illustrate how confronting such fears can diminish their power. Higgins returned to feature directing with the horror-musical Powertool Cheerleaders vs the Boyband of the Screeching Dead (2022), which he wrote, directed, and appeared in. The film premiered as the closing night presentation at Arrow Video FrightFest on August 29, 2022, at the Prince Charles Cinema in London. Higgins has also contributed to other projects in minor capacities, including voice work in Dune Drifter (2020) and a role in the short film Faeran (2020). He wrote the segment "Bad Penny" and served as executive producer for the anthology horror film Virus Detected, which premiered on January 17, 2025.

Recognition

Festival awards and industry mentions

Pat Higgins' films have received recognition at genre festivals, particularly the Festival of Fantastic Films in the UK. His feature Hellbride (2007) received Commended status at the event in September 2007. The following year, The Devil's Music (2008) was recognized at the same festival. In its October 2008 issue, Fangoria magazine described Higgins as one of the "most promising British horror directors." His later projects have included premieres and screenings at festivals such as Horror-on-Sea and FrightFest. For instance, Powertool Cheerleaders vs the Boyband of the Screeching Dead had its world premiere at FrightFest in 2022.

Personal life

Personal details and trivia

Pat Higgins is 6 feet 4 inches (1.93 m) tall. He was born on March 30, 1974, in Essex, England. Little verified public information is available on his family, relationships, or other non-professional aspects of his personal life.
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