Tag: News

  • Mom’s Cat: Short Film from Hungary Captures the Furry Angst of Rejection

    Mom’s Cat: Short Film from Hungary Captures the Furry Angst of Rejection

    Moms Cat.jpgMom’s Cat is an intense, yet quiet, short film by Hungarian writer/director Annabella Schnabel, who produced it for her diploma project at the University of Theatre and Film Arts in Budapest (you can watch a preview here). It has already garnered several awards, including the Grand Jury Prize at the 29th Chicago Underground Film Festival, First Prize at the 19th Pannonfíling Film Festival, Best Short Film at the 8th Nefiltravane Kino Film Festival, and Best Young Director at the 13th Short to the Point International Film Festival. It was screened at several Oscar-qualifying festivals, such as the 70th Melbourne International Film Festival, 40th Flickers’ Rhode Island International Film Festival, 52nd Nashville Film Festival, and the A-listed 43rd Moscow International Film Festival, earning a spot on the 2023 Student Academy Awards long list. I had the opportunity to watch this 18-minute film, and I can say the plaudits are deserved.

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  • Mom’s Cat  Review by Grubbs Grizzly

    Mom’s Cat Review by Grubbs Grizzly

    Mom’s Cat is an intense, yet quiet, short film by Hungarian writer/director Annabella Schnabel, who produced it for her diploma project at the University of Theatre and Film Arts in Budapest. It has already garnered several awards, including the Grand Jury Prize at the 29th Chicago Underground Film Festival, First Prize at the 19th Pannonfíling Film Festival, Best Short Film at the 8th Nefiltravane Kino Film Festival, and Best Young Director at the 13th Short to the Point International Film Festival. It was screened at several Oscar-qualifying festivals, such as the 70th Melbourne International Film Festival, 40th Flickers’ Rhode Island International Film Festival, 52nd Nashville Film Festival, and the A-listed 43rd Moscow International Film Festival, earning a spot on the 2023 Student Academy Awards long list.

    I had the opportunity to watch this 18-minute film, and I can say the plaudits are deserved.

    For those of you who don’t know me, I have been writing a furry advice column called “Ask Papabear” since 2012 (www.askpapabear.com), and over the years I have been approached for advice from many furries struggling with wanting to be a furry even when their families, peers, and society reject them. This dilemma is a complex issue about which one could write an entire book—even books. I mention all of this so that the reader knows that my reactions below are based on my extensive familiarity with furries.

    What impressed me most about this film is how Schnabel packs so much emotion into just a few minutes and with minimal dialog. Every word uttered, every movement the actors make bears weight.

    Without giving anything away, the story is basically this: 30-something Felix (Attila Fritz) lives in squalid conditions with his mother, who barely tolerates her son and clearly despises him for not being “normal.” One day, Felix gets exciting news that a company wants to hire him to be a kind of mascot-for-hire, which means he can get paid and wear his fursuit! Felix is immensely proud of his fursuit, which he made himself. So, off he goes to his new job, where he meets coworkers who seem shy but admire his fursuit, which is a kind of winged cat. What follows are some ups and downs in his job that adeptly capture the sensitivities of the kind and sweet Felix, who only wants to be happy, and a mother and society that despise him for being abnormal. The conclusion is tragic, sad, disturbing, and oddly sweet.

    If I could encapsulate all the worst experiences and angst I have encountered in my 13 years as a furry advice columnist into one character, Felix would be that character. Similarly, every scene, every word of dialog, every gesture, and every movement of the well-directed camera compresses a world of misunderstood love like a telegraphed message in which each dot and short dash has a significance. A rose, a hesitant touch, a half-eaten chicken foot, and many other images add to the painting like dots on a pointillist painter’s masterpiece. When Felix explains to his coworkers why his fursuit has wings and why there are stripe marks on the head, for example, Schnabel reveals in a few seconds how a fursuit can contain deep personal meaning for its wearer. It is just one of many poignant scenes here.

    To be clear, Mom’s Cat is not about the average furry experience, but it is about a side of the fandom that is very true indeed and to which many furries will relate.

    I would give it two thumbs up, but I’m a bear and don’t have thumbs, so I will give it a big Awoo! instead.

    [You can read an interview with Schnabel by going here https://magyar.film.hu/filmhu/magazin/schnabel-annabellea-a-furry-szubkultura-mogott-gyakran-lelki-sebek-rejtoznek-interju.html and hitting Translate. There is a link to the movie at the bottom of the article. It’s $5 to watch.]

  • Eufuria Fursuit Parade Map

    Eufuria Fursuit Parade Map

    Hey, critters! Ready to match with us in the fursuit parade? Check out the parade route in the graphic!
    Viewers can line up along this route for the best photo ops 📸
    The group photo will be taken promptly at 12:50 and the parade will begin soon after.

  • Eufuria The Black Pawrade

    Eufuria The Black Pawrade

    ☠ EUFURIA: THE BLACK PAW-RADE
    💔 JULY 23-25, 2026
    🎸ALBANY CAPITAL CENTER
    🦇 ALBANY, NY
    ★ ⋆༺𓆩☠𓆪༻⋆★

  • Dr. David “Spottacus” Benaron – furry known for work foundational to smartwatch heartrate monitors – passes away

    Dr. David “Spottacus” Benaron – furry known for work foundational to smartwatch heartrate monitors – passes away

    Spottacuss3.pngNews of the passing of Doctor David “Spottacus” Benaron on Friday Friday July 18th, 2025 was shared and confirmed on Saturday. This doctor with a cheetah fursona was well known in the fandom for their work that enabled the capacity of smart watches to monitor heart rates. PC Mag’s Will Greenwald did a piece on the doctor on his technical and furry lives in 2022. This article had become highly shared as a focal point of people holding successful careers within furry fandom spaces.

    The spotted doctor did not shy away from his hobby and the influences it had in his career successes. He gave a presentation at Berkeley called Furries, Neurodivergence and STEM: Finding Your Path From Zero to One to One Billion, which can be viewed on YouTube.

    He was a prolific fursuiter that had multiple suits to his name. Other characters played by the doctor included a California sabretooth by the name of Toofs, and lion named Dandy, an Ocelot named Ozzie. More information and photos of these can be found on his WikiFur page.

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