Women Who Kill - DCP -  93 minutes

Director: Ingrid Jungermann

Commitment phobic Morgan and her ex-girlfriend Jean are locally famous true crime podcasters obsessed with female serial killers. There’s a chance they may still have feelings for each other, but co-dependence takes a back seat when Morgan meets the mysterious Simone during her Food Coop shift. Blinded by infatuation, Morgan quickly signs up for the relationship, ignoring warnings from friends that her new love interest is practically a stranger.When Jean shows Morgan proof that Simone may not be who she says she is, Morgan accuses Jean of trying to ruin the best thing that’s ever happened to her. But as she and Simone move into commitment territory, Morgan starts to notice red flags—maybe Jean was right and Simone isn’t as perfect as Morgan’s made her out to be.Morgan and Jean investigate Simone as if she were a subject of their podcast, they uncover disturbing clues—a death at the Food Coop, a missing friend, a murder weapon—leading them to suspect her not only of mystery, but of murder. In the end, Morgan has to examine all the evidence in front of her: Is she just afraid of what it means to be in a relationship or is her life actually in danger

"THE BEST LESBIAN HORROR COMEDY OF ALL TIME" - IndieWire Sept. 6 at 21:15 / Sept. 10 at 17:00 WRITER / DIRECTOR / ACTOR INGRID JUNGERMANN IN ATTENDANCE Morgan and Jean are ex-girlfriends, but they live and work together. They share a fascination for female murderers – also the subject matter of their podcast. One day Morgan encounters mysterious Simone, and tensions escalate in all kinds of ways. Who is Simone? Through razor sharp humor and successful unpleasant moods, Jungermann tells a story that primarily is about relationships and human relations. It's awkward, hysterical, dead pan and poignant - Jungermann is a master at what she does and with her debut feature film WOMEN WHO KILL, she confirms she's a force to be reckoned with. The film won the Best Screenplay award at TriBeCa Film Festival earlier this year, and IndieWire called it the “best lesbian horror comedy of all time”. Jungermann has previously made several shorts and two web series; "The Slope" with co-creator Desiree Akhavan ("Appropriate Behaviour" 2014), then two seasons of her own "F to 7th", a series she's now developing for Showtime. Both original series are available on Vimeo.