Close Sidebar close
The Cinematropolis
  • Home
  • About Us
    • Write For Us
    • Contact
  • Essays
    • Essays
    • Lists
    • Film Festivals
    • Reel Insights with Laron Chapman
  • The Cinematic Schematic
  • Interviews
  • Planet Thunder
  • Store

Subscribe & Follow

About

  • Write For Us
  • About Us
  • Scream 7

    ‘Scream 7’ Is a Tired Entry That Plays the Hits

    March 4, 2026
  • How to Make a Killing

    How to Make a Killing: Bonus Mini-Review

    February 19, 2026
  • Wuthering Heights

    “Wuthering Heights”: Bonus Mini-Review

    February 18, 2026
  • Good Luck, Have Fun, Don't Die

    Good Luck, Have Fun, Don’t Die Bonus Mini-Review

    February 13, 2026
  • Scarlet

    Scarlet: Bonus Mini-Review

    February 5, 2026
  • Send Help

    Send Help: Bonus Mini-Reviews

    February 4, 2026
  • 28 Years Later: The Bone Temple

    ’28 Years Later: The Bone Temple’ Champions Compassion in the Bleakest World

    January 21, 2026
  • Movies to Watch in 2026

    Cinema Sneak Peek – New Movies to Watch in 2026

    January 14, 2026
  • Top 5 Movies of 2025

    The Cinematropolis Top 5 Films of 2025

    January 7, 2026
  • 2025 Oklahoma Film Critics Circle Awards

    One Battle After Another Reigns Victorious at the 2025 Oklahoma Film Critics Circle Awards

    January 6, 2026

Brought to you by Planet Thunder Productions

  • Home
  • About Us
    • Write For Us
    • Contact
  • Essays
    • Essays
    • Lists
    • Film Festivals
    • Reel Insights with Laron Chapman
  • The Cinematic Schematic
  • Interviews
  • Planet Thunder
  • Store
The Cinematropolis
The Cinematropolis
    deadCenter 2022 Essays Film Festivals

    Would you join the ‘Mantis Club’? – dCFF22

    June 13, 2022
    Mantis Club

    I love an adventurous short film, and Mantis Club from writer/director Yalian Li is definitely that.

    Imagine this. What if you lived in a world where love and sex were, quite literally, deadly for men? Because in Mantis Club, any sexual encounter with a woman could end in potential tragedy. In this world, 85% of women devour their sexual partners. 

    Meet Zack (Nicholas Petroccione), a 17-year-old, doe-eyed virgin in search of love. He wants to meet an older woman from the internet, willing to risk it all for a chance at intimacy. But therapist Moe (Reginald James) and his cadre of “Bachelors Anonymous” step in to stop him. They’ve sworn off women and taken vows of celibacy in an effort to stop the violence they enact.

    But Zack is determined to believe he’s found a true connection, a rare woman who doesn’t eat men. He refuses to cancel the date, meeting Alex (Nicole Starrett). Is she a predator? Will Zack escape alive?

    Viewers will likely recognize a lot of the verbiage here, as the film skewers life in a patriarchal society and the heteronormative interactions that have become all too common in straight relationships. Flipped on their head, of course.

    “She’s only looking for some fresh meat.” 

    “What if she’s one of the good ones?” 

    “Just a kiss.”

    Short films and social commentary are a risky crossover, because you’ve got so little time to tackle what are often massive, nuanced topics. But the darkly comedic approach of Mantis Club allows characters to be a bit more on-the-nose. The short never preaches. No one ever condescends. The well-rounded characters get us invested in the story just as much as the thematic undertones. 

    Li’s short is her 2022 graduate thesis, and with this quality of work coming so early in her career, I’m excited to see what’s next. I could very easily see her making the next Fresh or X. 

    Being a woman is already a nightmare, so to see the experience satirized via horror dulls the pain just a little. 

    Find more on Mantis Club on the film’s Instagram.

    deadCenter 2022Mantis Club
    Jo Light
    Jo Light is an Oklahoma-based freelance journalist. She has worked for over five years as a Hollywood story analyst, teaches a college-level media writing class and continues to develop screenplays of her own. Her work is regularly featured at No Film School and The Oklahoma Gazette.
    • Made In Oklahoma: Three Films About Identity, Scarcity And Crime (Among Other Things)

    • Octopus Contemplates Life in the Wake of Tragedy – dCFF22

    You Might Also Like

    Endeavor

    Bunee Tomlinson Brings Adaptive Athletes to the Forefront in Endeavor – dCFF24

    June 14, 2024
    Jabee: Hope

    “Jabee: Hope” Realizes OKC Hip Hop Artist’s Autobiographical Vision – dCFF21

    June 12, 2021
    The haunting image of Mema reviews its true form in Satoshi Kon's Perfect Blue

    Perfect Blue Investigates the Demon of Identity

    October 15, 2018

    No Comments

Brought to You By

Planet Thunder Productions

2026 - All Rights Reserved.