Conor Bateman has sliced clips from (mainly American) horror films in which a cinema audience is slain schlockily in a theatre – an overlooked, self-reflexive trope across the genre. In each sequence, the screen is masked out to reveal the prior sequence: each audience is successively watching the killings that we, the actual audience, have just seen. The onscreen audience never leaves the theatre – there’s nowhere else in this world beyond the cinema, and the scenes of entrapment and containment play out in similarly-framed spaces of chaos (what if what we watched onscreen leaked out?). Without a scrap of ideology-addled earnestness, the tone moves from playful to inevitable. Like a game, it all loops together in an oddly fun, self-sustaining spiral of dramatic irony.

Get Over It
2001
5.6/10

Titanic
1997
7.9/10

Shutter Island
2010
8.2/10

The Lord of the Rings: The Return of the King
2003
8.5/10

American Beauty
1999
8.0/10

The Matrix
1999
8.2/10

RoboCop
1987
7.4/10

Lethal Weapon 2
1989
7.0/10

Rain Man
1988
7.7/10

Back to the Future
1985
8.3/10

The Big Lebowski
1998
7.8/10

The Godfather
1972
8.7/10

PK
2014
7.7/10

Halloween H20: 20 Years Later
1998
6.0/10

Casablanca
1943
8.1/10

Pirates of the Caribbean: The Curse of the Black Pearl
2003
7.8/10

Gone with the Wind
1939
7.9/10

The Breakfast Club
1985
7.7/10

Rocky III
1982
6.9/10

Rocky V
1990
5.8/10