Craig Wainwright | THE LAST TITAN

last titan

Craig Wainwright is an independent UK-based author. We caught up with him to discuss his debut novel THE LAST TITAN.

STARBURST: Tell us about The Last Titan

Craig Wainwright: It’s a novel that’s been in the making for about 40 years from when I was about ten! It’s in the vein of superhero novel. Somebody discovers that they are something they didn’t think they were. The protagonist discovers that they have a very large destiny, which will happen in later novels. The first one is an origin story. He discovers what he is, is taken to where he’s from and he changes quite dramatically.

Why is it called The Last Titan?

The people that he’s from, there are three classes. You’ve got the hoi polloi – that means majority in ancient Greek – then you’ve got the titans, who are the sort of more powerful, and then you’ve got the cardinal titans, who are the most powerful. The titans are dying out and he’s the last born, hence the Last Titan.

Where did the idea for this novel come from?

You need to talk to a ten-year-old about forty years ago! It started out with Jeff Wayne’s War of The Worlds. My brother brought the disc home, played it and I thought “I can do better than that”. I toddled off and borrowed my brother’s records, much to his horror. I started recording backgrounds and made up stories by myself. On the third adventure that I did, that’s when this Omega-type character appeared. He is the hero in the book. He ended up on another planet and you started getting things appearing, like Andromeda, Omega’s wife. She appeared a couple of years in, when I started to discover girls! Things then evolved and got more grown up. The book had its genesis when I was about ten.

I have been inspired a lot by films. The modern Omega is very much powerful and very, very intelligent. That side of him is very much inspired by the Doctor, because I’m a big Doctor Who fan.

Which writers inspire you?

Tolkien. I love the epics! I love the stories behind the stories. That’s why The Last Titan has myths that explain thing. If you read it you’ll see there a lot of backstory that is only hinted out. That will be explained in later books. Another big influence is Terence Dicks. I met him one time and asked the usual question that a writer asks a writer. “What advice would you give for writing a book?” He said “Just write it!” He was right. Sit down, plan the book, write it. That is the best advice you could ever get.

Any other advice?

Write everything down. Every idea.

What’s next for you?
Book Two, which I’ve already started. It’s very different from the first one. The Omega character is very much established at this point and the menace that appears later on in Book One is really starting to take hold and is starting to ‘play chess’. I don’t want to give too much away, but Omega is also starting to ‘play chess’ as well. It’s a very different beast, it’s more fantasy than sci-fi.

What would you have done differently?

Can’t say I’d plan it more, because I plan to the nth degree. There was a lot of stuff that I wrote that I looked back and thought ‘this doesn’t fit’. We’re talking probably a hundred pages. There was a whole subplot involving an old guy, reciting the whole story from book one to book four. When I sat down and read it, there was some lovely backstory but it really started to break up the book.

There was an alternative chapter, which introduces a character in a very different way. He’s actually quite a comical character now, in the first version he was quite crotchety. To answer your question, I’d probably have honed my art more.

Why is science fiction and fantasy so popular now?

It’s escapism. Especially the way the world is going on now. Particularly with fantasy, you can have incredible backstory. Look at Tolkien. I had such fun reading his stuff. The backstory that you’ve got, he built a whole world. I don’t think I could come near to what he’s done, but I’ve built a world that is more than two-dimensional. I think good writers are good at building alternative realities. I think that’s what people like. You can get away from what’s going on with Earth.

How important is world building to your process?
Very. When I got my first computer in 1989 – a PCW, if you remember those – the first thing I did wasn’t write the book, but write the mythos of the modern Hellas. Explaining why these people had become diminished. It gives depth. I sat down and wrote most of the backstory.

Why a novel and not a screenplay or game?
I always wanted to write a novel. I think the characters have got the legs; I’ve got at least eight books planned. I’d love it to be a film, but it’s got to be successful. You can get so much more in a book than a film. Just look at The Lord of the Rings.

Why did you choose the self-publishing model?

I was going to go down the traditional fantasy route. I went on a couple of publishing websites and I was absolutely mortified that someone could take the rights to my world away from me. I wanted to be able to publish when I wanted and to keep it in print for as long as I wanted. That allowed me to go overboard with the publicity and give The Last Titan as much as exposure as I can. There’s forty years of love that has gone into this book.

If you could preserve one thing so it survive eternity, what would it be?

A full-sized Dalek, from the Russel T Davies era. They’re a thing of beauty.

THE LAST TITAN can be purchased on Amazon, or via the website thelasttitan.online.

JENN WEXLER, HEATHER BUCKLEY, CHLOE LEVINE, GRANIT LAHU | THE RANGER

wexler

The opening film at Frightfest is always the pacesetter for the rest of the festival, which in 2019 will be celebrating its 20th anniversary as it becomes ever more popular amongst both old and new fans. The Ranger, directed by Jenn Wexler, tells of a group of punks wanted for the shooting of a police officer during a drug bust, who retreat to a cabin only to find themselves the target of a resentful park ranger.

STARBURST had the pleasure of talking to director Wexler, co-producer Heather Buckley and cast members Chloe Levine and Granit Lahu during the festival.

STARBURST: How many drafts of the script were there? And given the film’s surprisingly short (77 minute) running time, is there a “Director’s Cut” of the film?

JENN WEXLER: There were about two drafts written, and by March 2016 the final draft felt right and is similar in content to the version you saw. We did have a cut that came in at around 85 minutes, but my co-editor (Abbey Killheffer) felt some of it was indulgent. We then cut it down to the running time as we wanted it to be more like a roller-coaster ride for the audience.

The longer version fleshes out the relationships. There is an alternate scene in the Ranger’s basement which is in the “X” version, but the version we have released is the R-rated version. My producer Heather felt that this should have more of the feel of a punk song, three chords.

You used natural locations. How did you come to select them and did you construct any sets?

JW: We built one set so we could get the tax credit from the New York Film Office. The club sequence was shot at the Don Pedro Club, which closed shortly after we finished filming there. Heather and I went location scouting in up-state New York and found my dream cabins around Woodstock.

The make-up and gore effects are as effective as anything we have seen in other horror films. Tell us about your team and their background.

JW: We had a great team, led by Brian Spears.

GRANIT LAHU: I was in prosthetics for around 12 hours during one scene in particular. It’s rather uncomfortable and I was half-naked during that.

What were your filmic influences on The Ranger?

JW: I wanted to mash up 1980s punk films like Class Of 1984 and Return Of The Living Dead with other classics from the time like The Evil Dead and A Nightmare On Elm Street.

As actors, did you have much time to rehearse and did you improvise at all?

CHLOE LEVINE: We didn’t have a lot of rehearsal time whilst on location.

GL: There was one scene we did improvise, when I was chasing Amber (Amanda Grace Benitez) in the woods and I stood on this stone formation made by the ranger. We also added some New York-influence to the dialogue.

In terms of finance, how long did it take to put the package together?

JW: Well, it began with Larry Fessenden, another of our co-producers. Heather was my second.

HEATHER BUCKLEY: Another of our key players was Andrew Van Den Houten, who is a good friend of mine and had produced previously The Woman and Jack Ketchum’s The Girl Next Door. We then put together a teaser, and Andrew called me. Then Glass Eyed Pix and Hood River Entertainment came on board. Jenn is somebody who knows how to make a film of this type of budget.

As you reflect on your first visit to FrightFest, what key things will you take away from the experience?

GL: The community of it.

CL: It’s my first time in London as well, so it’s been so awesome to absorb both London and the festival itself.

HB: It’s been great to hang out with some great punk-rock people who love the horror genre.

JW: I would say the Frightfest community is incredibly loving, open and passionate about horror, and I do gravitate towards people like that.

How has digital film-making enhanced production on a film like The Ranger?

JW: We shot on the Alexa Mini, which gives a great cinematic quality to the images, but it is also lightweight enough so we can do great shots. I have shot on Super-16 which I did for The Most Beautiful Island, but for The Ranger, one thing I didn’t want was the 1970s look.

Finally, is there a particular genre you would like to tackle, or is horror the thing for you now?

JW: Horror is my thing.

HB: I like noir…

CL: I love horror!

GL: Similar with me, and I also like layered characterisation.

See www.theranger-movie.com for screening information.

Andrew Lee Potts | THE INNOCENTS

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We caught up with former Primeval star Andrew Lee Potts to discuss his role in the new Netflix show The Innocents and the future of this web series Wireless

STARBURST: For those who haven’t caught it yet, tell us a little bit about The Innocents.

Andrew Lee Potts: The premise of the show is kind of a Romeo and Juliet runaway story but with this added twist of shapeshifting. That really simplifies it because it’s very complex. In my opinion, it’s a touch of class what they’ve done with it. I had a feeling from the get-go it was going to be something good and obviously Netflix agreed because I don’t think I’ve been in a show apart from Band of Brothers with so much advertising. They took over Waterloo station with a massive board, on Twitter they were posting stuff around the world as it came out on the same day, so it’s pretty cool. It’s exciting to be involved with a show that’s that big!

It’s a drip-feed show for sure, but the payoff is enormous in it. They do shapeshifting in a way you’ve never seen before. It’s the implications of what that actually would mean without being Mystique in X-Men. It’s the emotional stuff that comes along with that. The people that she shifts into are so far between each other; it reminds me a little bit like Quantum Leap, but a really dark version of it.

After my episode [3], it really kicks into gear, so obviously they did a lot of work on establishing the relationship of Harry and June (Percelle Ascott and Sorcha Groundsell) – who are played so well by the two lead actors, they really get you to care about them. They don’t apologise for just taking it at their own pace and going ‘you’re going to need to know when we want you to know’. It’s so easy with big shows to cut corners, put a bit of funky music on it and jazz it up because you’re frightened of people getting bored. I’m a big fan of Better Call Saul, which has been a slow burn right from the start and now they’re on Season Four, and he’s still no closer to being the lawyer we knew in Breaking Bad. I think it’s brave and intelligent television, really.

I don’t want to give too much away as the show twists and shifts so many times and in so many ways that it’s a bit of a journey. It’s seems to be going down well though.

So tell us about your part in Episode 3…

I play a kind of a Fagin-type role. The runaways need somebody and I’m there at the right time and right place. I guess he’s a charming kind of friendly chap but with The Innocents, you never really know anyone’s motives until they become clear. So I get the two youngsters involved in drug dealing in London. It’s their first time in London, obviously not the wisest move for them! So I take advantage of their vulnerability and their innocence and it ends pretty catastrophically!

One of the best bits about working on it, obviously I got quite close to Percy who plays Harry. He’s a young actor but he’s so earnest; just my cup of tea a person. So honest and took it all in his stride. He was listening a lot – I like both of them as actors, but I had more to do with him. I think he’s going to be a big star – he deserves to be. Once you watch the show, you’ll realise how huge of an emotional challenge he’s taken on, because obviously, when she shifts, the only other person who’s stable is him. So he’s having to cope with it.

So he’s having to shift with the way he deals with things?

Mentally shift all the time, yeah. There’s a brilliant line where Harry calls his mum, going: “I don’t understand, June’s changing so much, she scares me” and his mum goes, “That’s love darling”. Obviously, they don’t know what’s going on, so that’s funny.

I was happy with my part from the get-go. When I went in and met the director Farren Blackburn – who did Daredevil, The Defenders, and Iron Fist so he’s big with the Marvel stuff, but this is totally not like a Marvel show at all – he was just cool as fuck, basically. I really liked him, really respected him and he just gave off an air of calmness and we kind of just really connected. You don’t often get that sometimes, you’re one of many names and many faces that they see. I walked out of there thinking I don’t only want this job because it’s a really cool show, I wanted to work with him! I think he’s a really good egg, and super talented. So I hope I get the opportunity to work with him again.

Funnily enough, even though it’s only a lead in one episode, it took the entire time of the shoot to film. Because of Guy Pearce’s availability and things like that, and part of it’s not set in England, they had to split my filming in half. So I literally started on Harry and June’s first day of filming, and I was there on their second to last day. Which is crazy, because you feel like a real part of it. I saw how they were at the start and how they were at the end, so it was a nice job like that.

I was surprised at how big it’s come out. It’s nice when the company get behind the show that you’re in.

It’s normally just the reality garbage that gets all the publicity…

Exactly, and this is a totally unique type of show. For all the people who like X-Men and things like that, there’s something in it for them, but it’s high drama as well. You know, if you were some sort of mutant, what would be the emotional cause of that on you? It’s an interesting thing, and that’s what they explore in it. It’s also a coming of age story; going through your teens is hard enough, imagine if you can’t keep the same face and body? So they explore every part of it.

A lot of times on jobs, you come away with friends at the end, I met Sabrina Bartlett, who plays my girlfriend, on it. We really bonded; she watched some of Wireless, and there’s a character coming up that she would be perfect for so she’s going to be in it! When stars align and all that…

I’m coming to the end of editing Episode 14 and that just leaves two more episodes and it’s done. Three years in the making!

So you’re looking to end around March time next year?

I’m going to put 14 out, then 15 is another cool episode, which answers a lot of questions and then we’re into the big finale. I don’t think I’ll be shooting that until the beginning of next year because I’m shooting it differently. It’s going to be cool to do; it’s all planned out. It’s been a crazy journey doing it.
I guess getting to the end, which I will and which I promised, even though it’s taken quite a long time to do, it makes me proud that I’ve stuck with it and hopefully told the whole story. The end is going to be satisfying, let’s just say that. Everybody’s been so patient with it, I want to give people the ending they deserve.

So when do you shoot next?

Soon! I’ve got a pre-title scene to do, like I say, this one’s nearly done, I’ve just got to do the sound levels on the next episode. Which, funnily enough, is the one set at MCM, but there’s quite a lot of different things that happen in it so it’s been quite complicated to put together.

The whole next episode is finished and out to the actors, and I’m just waiting for a location and the actor’s availability. The next one’s less of an action episode, and more ‘get some answers’.

What’s next for you when Wireless has finished?

Sitting down and having a cup of tea I think [laughs]. I’ve got ideas… I’ve always said to myself that I want to direct a feature, so that will be the next step for me. But in the vein in which I’ve done a lot of my things, I want to direct it in my own way. Which would be not big budget, trying to be clever about it but do everything properly, with a crew and this, that, and the other. If I can do Wireless with a GoPro on my own, hopefully with a bigger crew, I might be alright! I’ve got the imagination and I’ve got the drive to do it, so we’ll see. I don’t want to rush it though, I want to have everything in place and planned. It’s all about putting the story and script together. You can put all the bells and whistles on later.

The Innocents is streaming now on Netflix. You can view past episodes of Wireless on YouTube now, and find out more about the exciting web series at www.keychainproductions.co.uk.

James Lavelle | THE MAN FROM MO’WAX

James Lavelle The Man from Mo'Wax

James Lavelle thrust himself into the musical spotlight in the early ‘90s with his game-changing style that infused a whole slew of musical genres and got the toes tapping of many a listening ear. At the age of just eighteen, Lavelle founded the Mo’ Wax record label and would then go on to found UNKLE with DJ Shadow. It wasn’t all smooth sailing for Lavelle, UNKLE, or Mo’Wax, however, and some hard and devastating lows were around the corner; themselves to eventually be followed by some further highs. Chronicling these peaks and valleys, Matthew Jones’ stunning The Man from Mo’Wax goes in-depth on both the most successful and the most testing of times in Lavelle’s career and life, complete with input from a host of the key players involved in that period. With the documentary in select cinemas from August 31st ahead of a September 10th home release, we caught up with the truly fascinating Lavelle to discuss all of this and much, much more.

STARBURST: First and foremost, how did The Man from Mo’Wax even come about?

James Lavelle: It’s a weird one. It started with my ex-wife – my wife at the time – and it sort of started as a series or documentaries or blogs. That’s what the idea was. Suddenly, I was presented with the idea of making a documentary. It was one of those things where, “Yeah, cool, sounds like a good idea.” Then it took on a life of its own; it became a bit of a snowball, grabbed momentum and started rolling. Before I knew it, there was a documentary being made about me. Mack [producer M.J. McMahon] and Matt [director Matthew Jones], who were also involved, wanted to finish it. This is like eight years ago, nine years ago – it started ten years ago – and I sorted of said on the basis that I wouldn’t work with my ex-wife on it. If it was something that they wanted to continue then I’d look at that. They sort of came up with that scenario where it could continue, and I didn’t feel at the time it was being made it was a documentary about what was going on at the time, which was the War Stories and Where Did the Night Fall time. I didn’t feel that that would make a very good documentary, so I then gave them access to a massive part of my archive. That’s when it really started to take more shape. That was probably about seven years ago, and here we are now. It was finished a couple of years ago, to be honest with you. That’s the nature of films and film festivals and funding and distribution and all that stuff. It’s not my film, I didn’t direct it, I’m not producing it or financially involved in it. I just felt that there was a point where this beast is going to come out one way or another. Do you want to try and be more creatively involved and shape it with hopefully more of the right subject matter? Not shaping it in the sense of me saying what can’t be in the documentary, hence why it is what it is. For me, it’s quite difficult as it’s not a film I’d have made. But maybe that’s part of what’s interesting to other people about it.

It is very much warts ‘n’ all, as in it’s just you laid bare and very vulnerable at times. There must be some sort of trepidation involved in putting yourself out there like that, especially with how blunt and open the film is?

Yeah, I found it very difficult. I think I’m more at ease with it now. You can imagine, when I started to really see the rough cuts about four years ago, there were certain things I wasn’t happy about being in there, which I did change. I think there has to be an element of alluding to but not actually always seeing, because actually it then becomes rather boring; certain things on a personal level or on a factual level that I felt were inappropriate or we needed more work on. Again, like I said, it wasn’t something that I could dictate; I just tried to navigate it in a way that I could support this if you wanted me to. Therefore, if I do then we need to find some sort of common ground. I like the film, I think the film has some amazing moments, I think the beginning of the film – the ‘90s stuff – is very good. The third quarter, I don’t like. That’s the Night Fall period, which I think they still didn’t get right, but it is a lot better than it was. I just think it gets a bit boring. And I think there’s a lot of stuff that’s not in there. When people talk about it being the definitive Mo’ Wax documentary, it isn’t; there are many people who aren’t in this documentary. It plays on the fact that there’s these constant broken relationships, but yet I still work with people like Trevor Jackson, Fraser Cook, Ben Drury; many people who were very involved with Mo’ Wax but who aren’t in that documentary. It’s a documentary that basically shows from the perspective of me and [DJ] Shadow, and that isn’t what Mo’ Wax was about. Shadow was part of it, but he didn’t define Mo’ Wax. And he also didn’t define UNKLE. I find sometimes that it’s very centred around Shadow. That’s not really for me personally the journey that it’s been for a very, very long time. But, I think in the sense now, going through it, where it’s got to, the reaction to it, and we live in a very different world… In the last few years, mental health, people are looking at DJs and what’s happened to DJs. Recently, what happened with Avicii really touched a nerve with me. I didn’t know him, I wasn’t a fan particularly of his music, but what I went through as a kid and what people go through now, I went through that without any support, without any mental support. I sort of look at that and think, without trying to sound too morbid, but I’m alive, I’m here, I’ve managed to come out of the other side. There’s a lot of things I find difficult, and there’s a lot of things factually that aren’t in there as well.

People don’t talk about how when I left XL, I signed Nick Huggett who signed Adele. They don’t talk about the fact that the person I worked with on War Stories is now in prison for ten years for £200 million tax fraud. There were things for me factually that I would have liked to have had a bit more… it’s easy finding a pie graph of the failure of things, but people don’t know that you can do a pie graph of War Stories not selling as many copies as Pysence Fiction, but actually War Stories is a much more successful record. What it doesn’t talk about is that the record industry changed, no physical records are being sold. War Stories became one of the most licensed records in the world that year! But that is part of the story, I suppose. Part of the mythology. They want to show it in the sense of the ups and the downs of the roller coaster. For me myself, there are a lot of things, a lot of people that aren’t in that documentary. On a positive note, I think it does show a lot of the madness of the record industry at that time and what I went through. Some of that is my own fault, but what people don’t really know, and I think this maybe shines a bit of a light on it, is how it was brutal. I was put through quite brutal things. You look at now, people are able to talk about these things. When I started in the music industry, it was very male and very laddy. Dance music culture was very aggressive, it wasn’t like how it is now. It was a very football and rubeboy-led thing. It was very urban and street, very football. To be in the middle of that was very difficult. That’s something that you will never really understand. When I used to dye my hair, the abuse you’d get. Or trying to play house music when you were considered to be a hip-hop DJ, the abuse you’d get. I had to have a bodyguard at one point because people would throw bottles at you for playing house records.

James Lavelle The Man from Mo'Wax

That seems to be one of the major reasons why you’ve got such a huge and varied fan base, because you’re not just pinned to one genre of music. At that time, people were used to a relatively narrow range in that regard. How do you think that’s changed over the years, and what effect has the rise of digital media had on the industry from your perspective?

I’m lucky that we have a fan base that’s still engaged in the physical product. I’m lucky that I’ve also managed to navigate between other things to keep my career hopefully relatively fresh and interesting; having a career outside of a typical music arena by doing curation of soundtracks and all of the other bits and pieces that have allowed me to maintain a creative life. But it’s not easy. I didn’t have the success that many other people around me did. Unfortunately, that’s very frustrating; it’s frustrating that I have a history of being very “part of things” that have actually become hugely successful. I never made a penny off Pysence Fiction. I hired people like Nick, who signed Adele and transformed Xl, but I didn’t get anything from that. I sort of got hit with most of the failures rather than the financial benefits of some of the things that I’ve been involved with. It’s a rock ‘n’ roll business and, unfortunately, to quote Hunter S. Thompson, that’s the nature of the beast.

The Man from Mo’Wax is certainly constructed like a traditional three-act movie, highlighting the highs, the lows, and then the highs once more.

It is, and that’s what they wanted to do. They wanted to do the highs and the lows, take you up, take you down, take you back up there. Through the periods of where it’s showing everything being down, there were also some incredibly positive things going on as well. But I think that’s the nature of it being a film. I don’t think something like this, would people be interested if it was all about how amazing I was? Maybe it wouldn’t be that interesting. Most documentaries now, if they’re made by an artist, most people are very in control of every element of their careers. You look at something like the LCD [Soundsystem] documentary [Shut Up and Play the Hits], that’s a documentary about how great you are. It’s not something that I particularly care about. I care about watching something like Hearts of Darkness or Some Kind of Monster. Of course, it’s incredible to watch a documentary about how amazing somebody is, but usually you want to see somebody that is beyond amazing. When you’re watching a documentary about, say, James Brown or Pavarotti or whatever, you’re watching somebody who is the greatest in the world at what they do. You don’t watch a documentary like that to see their life or break ups of their marriages, you’re watching it more in the sense of the great things that they’ve created. This is about rock ‘n’ roll. And when I say rock ‘n’ roll, I mean the term of being in the music industry. I think it works for that reason. For me, it’s quite hard to have to see your failures and your insecurities and choices. It’s all very raw, which I found quite hard to deal with. I do feel in the last year, for various reasons and especially with what’s been going on with the change in the entertainment industry, with #MeToo, with male suicide awareness, all these horrific things – I’ve had eight people in the last eight years kill themselves – in that respect, I do sort of feel that this is kind of cathartic; it puts an end to a period of ones life. In many ways, I never want to feel like that again. I never want to do what I did. There’s many things I wish I could do again – the idea of going back to the beginning of Mo’ Wax, I would chop my own right arm off to do that! – but that time has gone. The other stuff, I don’t want that in my life. It’s a hard pill to swallow, but it has a positivity in the sense that that was then; it’s gone now, I’m not that person anymore.

Getting into the industry at such a young age, how hard did you find it to gain the trust and respect of those already established at that point in time?

It really was hard. You’re a kid, you know? So you’re treated like a kid, you have to fight your way through it. Everyone is ten years older than you, most of the people you’re around are bullies. There’s a lot of money flying around. Well, not a lot of money now. If I had Mo’ Wax now, I’d have probably sold it for £20 million, not £250,000. We live in a very different world, financially. Also, the record industry. If you’ve got a major record company now, then they’re run like an accountancy office. That wasn’t what it was like then. It was cocaine for lunch. It was great fun, but to be taken seriously was difficult. Unfortunately for me, it was all so quick. I had a window of four or five years at Mo’ Wax where it was incredibly amazing, but once the bubble burst and the relationships started breaking down, it just never really stopped. It was very difficult, very sad in some ways, but again it was just this snowball that became massive and didn’t give you chance to catch your breath. In many ways, that had a massive impact on my childhood, on my life. Since I was eighteen, I never had a childhood, I never had any time out. I had amazing experiences, but that amount of responsibility at that young an age, I wouldn’t wish it on anyone, I don’t think it’s healthy. Whilst it tells a great story and it was fun, at eighteen, nineteen, twenty, 21, you’re not an adult. You don’t know the consequences of your actions, you don’t know it’s going to end, you don’t think about the future. All you think about is the day after. Therefore, this is a great way to show young people that get involved in any creative industries, to be very mindful, to protect yourself.

James Lavelle The Man from Mo'Wax

Your debut album, Pysence Fiction, was massively well-received by fans, yet the music press seemed at the time weren’t so kind.

It was slammed critically. The NME review was horrific, it was awful. It was, like, one out of 10 stars. They said it was the worst collaborative record ever made! It was awful, it was horrific. Pysence Fiction was the beginning of it. Never, Never Land was okay, but they could never follow on from the idea of Shadow. So yeah, I’ve never had the best of relationships with the press in that respect. It was a very different period, a very different age. The idea of a young guy in a record company, making a record with collaborative people was seen as blasphemy. Now, it’s the foundation of pretty much every pop record in the world.

Melody Maker seemed a little bit kinder with their reviews at the time.

Yeah, we had a really good review in Melody Maker. The reason the review in NME was terrible… there’s a section of me on Jo Whiley in the film. I basically diss the fact that NME had put Robbie Williams on the front cover. I thought that Robbie Williams should be on pop magazines. There were no boundaries! And I was right, because it did destroy the music press. Once The Face put the Spice Girls on the front cover and NME put Robbie Williams on the cover, their sales went through the roof. But after that, it meant that they could never break things again. The sales would never be the same again. I think it ruined the music press, that period, the end of the ‘90s and the beginning of the 2000s. You being a journalist, if you’re working for an underground magazine that reviews films that are science-fiction, suddenly Harry Potter becomes the front cover when you’re really about Blade Runner. You’ll sell a million copies of the magazine, but then people will want that the next time. And that’s what’s happened to the music industry and creative industries in general. It became more of an industry than it did about the relevant information, breaking things.

When everybody’s got The Avengers on their front cover, things no longer have their foundations, their space. I think that was the beginning of it. NME basically destroyed me because of the reasons why I’d criticised them over Robbie Williams. And that stupid cunt in the fucking movie that they interview, telling me that I can’t be an A&R man. People forget, I set my label up to be able to put out my own records also. That’s not abnormal.

While The Man from Mo’Wax flows well, it maybe at times does lean a little too much on DJ Shadow, as if everything all fell apart because of his departure.

But that’s Matt, and he’s a fanboy of that story. That’s okay, that’s his story. That’s why to me it’s not a definitive story of my life or Mo’ Wax. It’s a snapshot and it shows a certain aesthetic, and in a certain way that’s very raw. But that’s why we’re talking now, so I’m trying to embrace it. I have a habit of the glass is always half-empty rather than half-full, and it is getting a really positive reaction. I think that it does maybe engage, it touches a nerve with people who were there at that time and who experienced that side of things. It touches a nerve that they don’t see the negativity, they just see that you can create and that you just kept trying to create. So that’s the positive I look at. But to me, it’s not like the ultimate be-all and end-all of my career, because it misses a lot of things. That’s because those things aren’t telling the story that they necessarily want to tell.

James Lavelle The Man from Mo'Wax

It pegs it as almost a redemption tale of sorts by the end, with you getting to direct Meltdown 2014 and then DJ Shadow returning. How big was that Meltdown exhibition for you?

It was one of the most wonderful experiences that I’ve ever had. There was a lot of anxiety about it, where I felt that I was in that chain of people that had been involved before. Again, I think that what had always been part of it, not necessarily out of choice, but I always seemed to be a bit of a guinea pig. And thank god for Jane [Beese] and Meltdown, that they saw me in the way that they did. It was definitely the first time that they’d tried to do it in the sense that it wasn’t about a traditionally incredibly successfully celebrated artist. It was about somebody that was more a sort of cultural curator. But, I think that’s why it was fucking good, because it wasn’t about me, it was about the people that were involved. It’s partly about my choices, but the reason that that Meltdown I think for me was one of the best experiences that I’ve had at Meltdown, is it just encompassed a lot about London and what’s great about London. Even though it was international and it wasn’t all London artists, it was about music that had had an influence on London and the UK. I think it created a very good social experience in London, and I have been to the various Meltdown events since and I don’t think it’s been the same vibe on that level. That’s not about me being egotistical, I just think it needed to happen. Something needed to represent that time, both of past, present, and the future. There was a lot of things in there, so it wasn’t all retrospective. It was a mixture. It was also going back to Grandmaster Flash and stuff like that. Having that going on, the whole site was alive. DJing, there’s 5,000 people outside the Houses of Parliament, Higher State of Consciousness playing. There’s nothing quite like that.

We’ve talked about the 2014 Meltdown exhibition, but you also did the Daydreaming with Stanley Kubrick exhibition. How much of an honour was it to be asked to oversee that?

It’s one of the greatest accolades of my life, to be able to work with his family on that exhibition. It was amazing, mind-blowing. When I was younger, I wrote a letter to him to try and get him to direct the video for Lonely Soul. And they remembered, and they wanted that spirit for the exhibition. To work with some of the artists that I did, it was unbelievable. Some of the biggest artists in the world, from Thomas [Bangalter] from Daft Punk, to Anish Kapoor. It was pretty incredible for me. To have that and to do each side of the Southbank over a period, that was pretty special to me.

James Lavelle The Man from Mo'Wax

We have to put you on the spot then. Have you got a single favourite Kubrick film?

[Without missing a beat] 2001: A Space Odyssey.

You’ve recently worked on a new TV show, Trust. How was that as an experience?

Just working with Danny [Boyle] was amazing. He’s an amazing, amazing guy, who was again really incredible. It was the end of last year, the autumn of last year into the beginning of this year. He’s a very wonderful and special man, and I’d love to work with him again. It was an incredibly brilliant experience, and yeah, it’s coming out here in the autumn on BBC 2, I think.

Over the years, your music has been featured  on a whole load of movies, video games, and TV shows. Some of it is simply using your songs, while for other projects you’ve composed new material. How different is it to create new songs tailored to such a particular project?

You’ve got to direct the motion that you’re reacting to. So when you write a song or a piece of music for a record, you’re sort of creating a motion. It’s a different way of making music. You’re sort of creating something in your head. Whereas with this, you’re creating something based on the picture. So it’s a much more direct way of working, because you’ve got an emotional sense of style or a period, whatever it may be, that you’re setting it against. The reference is much clearer.

One final question. If you could go all the way back to visit young James Lavelle, just setting up Mo’ Wax, what advice would you have for him?

Oh man, get a good lawyer! And just slow down, just take care of business, man. Pace yourself. And drugs are a bad thing [laughs]. Well, they’re not, but they can be. Everything in moderation. As the famous line on the Temple of Apollo, “nothing in excess, everything in moderation.”

The Man from Mo’Wax is in select cinemas from August 31st, with a home release to follow on September 10th. For further information, head on over to www.themanfrommowax.com.

David Tennant / Dean Devlin / Brandon Boyce | BAD SAMARTIAN

Tennant

The cast and crew of Bad Samaritan, from director Dean Devlin starring David Tennant and written by Brandon Boyce, took time out from their busy schedule to talk about this new psychological, horror film to STARBURST.

STARBURST: David, your character, Cale Erendreich, is very dark and a departure of some of the roles you’ve played before what attracted you to the story?

David Tennant: The character is tactical and calculating in his methods. I wanted to explore the dark side of human nature. When I read the script, I jumped at the chance to play him.

How did you prepare for the role?

DT: He’s a psychopath without guilt or remorse. I read a lot of books on psychopaths to see how they functioned and in that, you have to find your character. What would it be like to live a psychopathic life?

Dean. How did David come about in casting for the role?

Dean Devlin: Being a big Doctor Who fan, I watched all his episodes and there are some actors you just want to work with because of their quality of work. David is amazing in all of his roles. When David got the script, we were Skyping over the Internet and I geeked out telling him how much I loved Doctor Who and I even wore my Who t-shirt when we talked!

DT: Yes, but you were wearing the Eleventh Doctor logo T-shirt, not mine and I was ready to hang up!

The technology in the film is interesting, but it seems more plausible in the future.

Brandon Boyce: Yes, you’re right. It doesn’t exist. When we screened the film in Silicon Valley everyone cheered that we got the technology right in our film, yet it was all made up. We had to laugh about that.

David, how do you decompress after portraying this type of dark and sinister character?

DT: You play a role that you dabble in and get intoxicated with it then you have to back away from it. It’s the Scottish guilt of shame going down that rabbit hole. Bad guy versus worse guy. Meaty stuff there.

Brandon, did you want to combine the two elements of crime and horror in the beginning when you wrote the script? How did it come about?

BB: Yes, as the writer I had the ending already written in my head. When I began the script, I took the characters on their journey traveling down this dark highway to see what avenues they would follow.

Dean, was shooting the majority of the film at night difficult?

DD: I’m a night person myself and I don’t get going until 10 PM. Night shoots are vampire moments and it was so damn cold when we filmed in Portland, Oregon where I live. We had five snowstorms during the filming.

DT: We did get that gorgeous snow scape at the end of the film that we didn’t have the budget for. The snow covered the background in the end scene that we got for nothing.

The horse sequence is a bit disturbing and frightening at the same time. How was that filmed?

DD: We never had any horse on the set, nor could we afford them in our budget. They are 100% digital. The sequence came about in the script by Brandon.

And it works quite effectively. David, what is Cale’s backstory?

DT: He doesn’t have one, but you know he’s damaged goods. He has a lot of unanswered questions and self-awareness himself, but he’s a broken man who doesn’t know who he is as he’s psychopathic and nomadic in his actions.

What villain from childhood affected you the most?

DT: The only character I can think of is the Child Catcher in Chitty Chitty, Bang Bang. Even now, I have to look away when I watch that film, so if you see Cale on the screen, you decide if there’s a bit of the Child Catcher in me on the screen.

Bad Samaritan hits UK cinema screens on August 24th.

Justin McConnell | LIFECHANGER

 

Justin McConnell has crafted a memorable horror drama with his latest film Lifechanger, which is generating some buzz on the back end of its recent screenings at Fantasia in Montreal and is scheduled to get another view when it plays at this year’s London Frightfest at the end of August. Starburst recently had the pleasure of speaking with the director ahead of the London show.

STARBURST: Lifechanger is rooted in the tradition of alien invasion films like Invasion Of The Body Snatchers and, of course, John Carpenter’s now-classic remake of The Thing. Did the film start out that way, and how did the concept develop?

Justin McConnell: The film didn’t start out as an ode to anything in particular. I generally approach story development as organically as possible, and the concept influences the story flow. Of course my influences include all those films in your question, and more, but the key to Lifechanger for me was to tell a human story first, that just happens to have these fantastical horror elements driving it. It kind of just came to me in 2014 and was fleshed out from that point.

What were your key influences when you were growing up, and how did you develop as a filmmaker when you decided to pursue a career in it?

We’d be here all day if I had to list my influences. I grew up a monster kid/horror fan, and from a young age was introduced to the genre, mostly by my father. Growing up in the 80s/90s, the horror directors were like rock stars in a way. Everyone knew Carpenter, Romero, Craven, Hooper, Argento, etc. I loved movies from a young age, and started a collection that has grown to massive proportions throughout my life. I didn’t actually start working on my own movies until the age of 15 though (aside from a couple of experimentations in stop-motion using toys before that). I started with documentaries cut from existing content for class projects, then a couple of shorts. I bought my first video camera, cheap mixer board, and a VCR with a flying erase head around then too, so I could edit cleanly. I shot my first feature, Strata, while I was still in high school, and it kind of just continued from there.

When I hit Toronto I pursued a career in post-production while simultaneously collecting music video/live event shoot clients. Then took that money and some borrowed cash and made more shorts, and my next feature Working Class Rock Star. That kept on for quite a while until now, where Lifechanger is my 6th feature (if you count the one in high school), my production/post services company keeps me afloat, and I’m finally at a point where I have trusted production partners allowing me the privilege to work on a more professional level. Of course my work is always evolving, as I believe you have to keep learning and getting better.

It is great to see more physical horror and make-up effects in Lifechanger, which has been sorely missing in a lot of the genre offerings, which have been criticised for taking the easy option of using CGI. Were you determined that your film would be reliant more on the tradition of legends like Baker, Bottin and Savini?

I definitely wanted this to be a practical effects film. There is some minor CG in it, in places, but in ways that aren’t noticeable and only enhance certain elements. I grew up in a time where the best practical effects films were popular, and loved the tactile insanity that played across the screen. It just always seems more tangible and effective. I absolutely bow to the altar of Baker, Bottin and Savini, but also less-known, but still extremely talented people like Kevin Yagher, Screaming Mad George, Todd Masters, KNB, Tony Gardner, Steve Johnson, Amalgamated Dynamics, etc.

When I moved to Toronto I quickly ended up in a friend group that included a bunch of SFX people, and my best friend and writing partner for a decade was a very talented SFX artist named Kevin Hutchinson (who is unfortunately no longer with us). It gave me the ability to work with and understand practical effects, how much they cost, and the time they take to properly implement, from early in my career. So it’s only natural that this was my goal with Lifechanger.

Where did you shoot and how long did it take?

We shot in Toronto and parts of Southern Ontario over 20 days, plus two pickup days.

What was the budget of the film and how hard was it to raise the initial finance for the film?

My sales agents will kill me if I say the budget. All I can say is that it was lower than you think, but not so low that our hands were tied. Finance is one of the most difficult things in the film business. This film exists out of frustration from me unable to get two much larger projects, The Eternal and Tripped, off the ground. After the financing on those fell apart I wanted to do something lower budget. But even then it took almost 4 years. We went to Telefilm first, which was almost a year long process, only to be rejected for funding. Then we signed with another production company I’m not going to name here, and that deal fell apart too (they went off and made another film that played Fantasia last year). Finally we found our ideal partners in Uncork’d and Raven Banner, companies that my co-producer Avi Federgreen and I had pre-existing business relationships with. It was a long road.

There are a wide variety of actors playing the Lifechanger in this film. How many variants did you start out with and were there compromises due to budget and screenplay constraints?

We did quite a large casting call, but our pool was limited to non-union Southern Ontario performers. We looked at a ton of self-tapes, collected by our casting director Ashley Hallihan, and the best performers sort of rose to the top. There weren’t any real compromises as far as casting, aside from the pool being limited to non-union. The characters in the script were the characters in the film. The dynamics between them changed a bit during rewrites, but that’s natural. As for budget compromises, that’s definitely an issue, but we made do.

The film is due to screen at this year’s London Frightfest on the back of it’s Premiere Screening at Fantasia? Are you planning to come to the UK festival in the future?

Yes, I’ll be at Frightfest for the entire festival.

Finally, what is the next project for you?

I have four that should be going in the next year. I have a sometimes writing partner named Serena Whitney who is co-directing with me on a Christmas horror feature called Do You See What I See? (based on the short film we co-directed in 2015). We also co-wrote and are co-producing the adaption of Michael Prescott’s novel Kane, set to shoot in Australia under the title Mark Of Kane (director Serhat Caradee is attached). I’m also currently in post on a documentary film/series called Clapboard Jungle: Surviving The Independent Film Business, which I’ve been shooting since 2014. And finally, the third edition of our Little Terrors anthology series, Blood Sweat And Terrors, comes out across North America this coming November (the previous two films were Minutes Past Midnight and Galaxy of Horrors).

Alon Young | PATRON

PATRON

We caught up with filmmaker Alon Young to find out about his upcoming short film Patron, co-directed by Emily Haigh, which is currently crowdfunding on Indiegogo.

STARBURST: What was the inspiration behind Patron?

Alon Young: Honestly, I was just appalled when news of the Weinstein scandal first broke. Then, as the extent of his crimes were revealed and as the whole thing broadened and it became apparent this was a widespread culture – not just within Hollywood but other industries as well – I felt I really needed to address it somehow in my work.

I’m a genre writer but I always have an underlying social theme running through my stories, as those are the types of sci-fi/fantasy/horror films I gravitate towards – in the same way, X-Men is really about racism or Dawn of the Dead was about consumerism.

I find that this approach is very effective – taking a social issue and putting it in a different context – it makes you look at the problem with new eyes and it also sticks in your head longer than a typical drama that covers the same themes. That can only be a good thing.

So, in a nutshell… Patron is a social horror with a surreal twist. Think Get Out meets Twin Peaks!

You’re co-directing with Emily Haigh, what brought about that collaboration?

Given the subject matter and that I chose a female protagonist for this story, I felt it was important that I brought a female perspective on board to shape the script and the production as a whole. Emily has a track record of bringing strong female characters to the screen so she was the obvious choice. I sent her the script, she loved it and the rest is history.

You’ve promised a very artistic look to the film, what do you mean by that?

We don’t want Patron to look like anything already out there, so we’ve picked a really distinctive colour palette and lighting style. We’re also aiming for a digital manipulation of the main character, we want to do something fresh and new and not fall back on typical horror tropes, so we’ve taken inspiration from surrealist paintings. The tests have come through and they look great, when you see how the VFX play out in the story you will be on the edge of your seat!

What can you tell us about the cast and crew you’re assembling?

This is a real showcase for an actress’ talents, so we needed somebody who could play the whole range – bubbly, vulnerable, stern and threatening… When we met Devora Wilde, it was clear she could do it all.

Jamie Lee-Hill has brought a really interesting take to his character, he’s got that energy and menace we were after and really developed the role into his own, bringing a sense of entitlement to the villain and many more layers to the character than what was originally on the page.

We are also keen for Patron to look as polished as possible, so we have brought on board a BAFTA crew DoP Beatriz Delgado Mena and other crew members that have worked on high profile features to ensure Patron looks and sounds far better than your average short. Emily has been instrumental in bringing on a predominantly female crew, which we thought was really important for a production of this nature.

What sort of incentives are on offer for people wanting to contribute?

So many perks! The big ones range from getting an Executive Producer credit (so your name will appear at the start of the film and on IMDb), to getting a signed poster, or a Skype session with me, or a digital download of the film. The smaller perks range from getting exclusive behind the scenes photos, a PDF copy of the locked script, down to getting a good old social media shout-out.

This short is going to the start of a trilogy, what can you tell us about that?

They’re all going to tackle a relevant social theme and will utilise innovative VFX and sound design. Kubrick and Lynch are big influences, I’m an obsessive so expect to find lots of extra little details in every aspect of these productions – they’ll definitely warrant a lot of repeat viewings!

Get involved with making Patron happen by heading over to Indiegogo and pledging some money!

Vanessa Marshall | STAR WARS REBELS

marshall

In anticipation of her appearance at MCM Comic Con Manchester (July 28th – 29th), STARBURST caught up with legendary voice actor VANESSA MARSHALL to talk about her incredible career, cons, closure, and of course, STAR WARS…

STARBURST: You’re a regular on the circuit in the US, but is this your first UK convention appearance?

Vanessa Marshall: This isn’t my first time in the UK – I’m a huge Anglophile – but this is indeed my first UK convention appearance!

Manchester is honoured! We imagine attending events such as these can be very rewarding…

Absolutely – I’m thrilled to attend this con! I’m looking forward to seeing all of my Star Wars friends and family!

That’s surely one of the biggest ‘pros’, but are there any ‘cons’ to cons; so to speak?

Only that I have to go back home, I wish I could stay forever! 

You’ve had a long career playing characters that have either gone on to garner huge fanbases, or, in the case of many of the superheroes, were already wildly popular; but which of them have been the most enjoyable or rewarding to perform?

I enjoyed playing Hera in Disney XD’s Star Wars Rebels. As a massive Star Wars fan, this was a dream come true! I was honoured to play Gamora in Marvel’s Guardians of the Galaxy, also on Disney XD, as well as Black Canary in Young Justice and Mary Jane in The Spectacular Spider-Man. It was fun to play Irwin in The Grim Adventures of Billy and Mandy too!

Speaking of Hera, those final few episodes of Star Wars Rebels certainly packed a powerful emotional punch for the audience – full disclosure, there were many tears shed here at STARBURST – did those scripts affect you in similar ways when you were performing in the studio?

It was an emotional time for the cast. We knew we were in the final stretch, so every moment was precious. The intense plot points only heightened our awareness of this reality. As an actress, I think I did what I had to do and got the job done.

And how about as a fan?

When I watched the episode, I was devastated. I think it was actually even harder to watch than to perform. I was shattered watching most of Season 4. It was beyond anything I could have imagined. Lucasfilm rocked the animation as usual. It packed a massive punch for sure!

We believe that Rebels is different in that creator Dave Filoni insists that the scripts are recorded with the cast together in a single studio, rather than separated, which is the more traditional approach. Do you find this method more beneficial? Any downsides?

Yes, it’s amazing… so much better as a group! There are no downsides, I loved it.

So we all heard references to Hera Syndulla in Rogue One, and the character has featured in several episodes of Forces of Destiny so far, but can fans expect more of her in the future do you think? Obviously you might face some… Resistance… from Lucasfilm if you were to confirm anything *cough* so we understand if you’d rather stay schtum!

I sure hope so!

Schtum. Nuff said. If you were offered the chance of playing Hera in one of the many future live-action Star Wars projects, would you be interested?

Absolutely. I would be honoured. I have a Masters degree in Acting from NYU, and I’d love to return to on-camera acting.

To be honest, I don’t think fans would accept it any other way!

It would be delightful!

If you could switch roles with any of your Star Wars cast members for an episode, and they weren’t allowed to refuse, which would it be?

Chopper! That would be hilarious!

Perfect! Since first winning the role of Hera and really getting invested in the world of Star Wars, have you noticed a change in the fandom as a whole?

The fandom has always been great! I feel less alone with all my new Star Wars friends and family, so I’m forever grateful for all their kindness and support.

Moving away from Star Wars, are there any characters out there in pop culture that you would still love to play?

Jean Grey!

Readers, let’s start campaigning for that to happen! Talking of your fans, if any of them want to follow in your footsteps and dream of becoming a voice actor one day, what advice would you give?

I would say check out Dee Bradley Baker’s website www.Iwanttobeavoiceactor.com. Also, take tons of classes and never give up!

What projects do you have coming up that we can look forward to? The ones you’re allowed to tell us about, that is…

The Star Wars Rebels Season 4 DVD is being released in the US on July 31st, there’s new Forces of Destiny episodes coming soon to the Disney YouTube channel, and Guardians of the Galaxy Season 3 continues in 2019! You can hear my voice in the new Teen Titans movie, and I have exciting news coming soon about new cartoons and video games either on my Twitter, @VanMarshall, or Instagram, @VanessaMarshall1138.

Stealth George Lucas reference noted! So will you be making any more UK convention appearances after this, just in case any fans can’t get to Manchester this weekend?

We’re trying to arrange more visits, but there are no concrete plans yet. That said, I hope to return to the UK as soon as possible!

Be sure to catch the wonderful VANESSA MARSHALL while she’s a special guest at the upcoming MCM Comic Con Manchester, July 28th – 29th

Photo credit: Cherie Crowder 

Robert D. Miles | UFO Chronicles

miles

We talk to Robert D. Miles, a filmmaker whose life could have come straight out of a sci-fi movie but actually spurred him on to be behind a series of UFO conspiracy documentaries. The truth might be out there, just keep watching the skies!

STARBURST: What made you become interested in UFOs?

Robert D. Miles: An extraordinary event occurred in my life almost fifty years ago. At the time, I lived aboard a sailboat, a forty-seven foot trimaran. This modern trimaran three-hulled vessel had been built by me and my partner in Portland, Oregon, and sailed down the Oregon-California coast in the spring of 1968. After several months in San Diego, California we sailed on to Hawaii, a voyage of over twenty-four hundred miles. This sailboat was our home for over two years.

Early one morning, just a couple of minutes after 5 am, I looked out the open skylight from my bunk at the beautiful early morning sky. The sailboat was tied to a dock in the Alawi Yacht Harbour in Honolulu, Hawaii. I had gotten up a littler earlier, dressed, made coffee, and then returned to stretch out on my bunk. My mind was filled with the events of the coming day. My partner and I had just sold the boat and the new owner would take possession within a few hours.

Suddenly, I experienced a dazzling array of shimmering light followed by an intense tingling of energy, which filled the entire stateroom and engulfed me. My entire body began to vibrate as a beautiful woman materialised in the walkway right next to my bed. My first reaction was, of course, to believe that I was dreaming or perhaps hallucinating.

She spoke to me and took my hand. In a matter of moments, I came to understand that she was real and much more alive than I. The energy aura that she emanated made my entire being vibrate at a level that could only be described as ecstasy. I asked, “Why have you come to visit me?” She replied, “I and others like me are friends and we want you to come to a very important briefing.” Moments after agreeing to go with her, an unparalleled series of events occurred.

First, I was teleported to New York City. I then boarded a saucer-like spacecraft and was transported to an extra-terrestrial location for the briefing. The extra-terrestrials orchestrated the briefing to give me and about fifty other guests a glimpse of Earth’s history.

They also showed to us a dramatic and vivid view of humankind’s potential destiny. After the briefing, I was asked to undertake a mission to help change the conditions on our planet through using our abilities and our mental thoughts to bring about positive changes.

Upon returning to the sailboat, I realised that only thirty-three minutes had passed. However, from my personal perspective, it seemed like many unhurried hours had been spent with these incredible beings. To this day, I remain convinced that the series of events were real and not a dream or delusion.

 

When did you get the idea of making documentaries about the subject?

Upon returning from that briefing, I took television production classes at a San Diego community network and over the course of a year or so I quickly learned how to use a video camera, edit, and produce documentaries.

Having acquired those skills, I began producing documentaries that aired on local and national TV and was nominated for a local Emmy award.

Over the ongoing fifty years since my contact experience, I have used my knowledge and skills to create, market, and distribute sixteen documentaries – UFO Chronicles – which feature the material that is covered up by most of the nations of our world relative to what is commonly known as UFO and ET disclosure films.

What was your first major success?

In November 2006, I was the executive producer/producer/writer of the award-winning UFO and ET feature film Fastwalkers. It was a breakthrough documentary that won two EBE awards (for People’s Choice and Best Music) from the International UFO Congress.

Fastwalkers sold-out theater premieres in New York, Phoenix, Washington, DC; Hawaii, Roswell, New Mexico, and Toronto. A DVD of the film was given to every member of the US Congress, the Presidential Staff, NASA, and every member of the Canadian Parliament. It is currently in distribution under an updated title, which is Alien Agenda: Planet Earth, executive produced by Warren Croyle and distributed in association with Reality Entertainment.

Outside of documentaries, have you any experience in narrative features?

I was the executive producer and line producer for the general release motion picture Ice Cold in Phoenix, which premiered in Milan, Italy and is currently in international distribution. It was written and directed by the late Lindsay Schonteff, who helmed cult classics Devil Doll (1964), The Million Eyes of Sumuru (1967), and Big Zapper (1973).

More recently, I optioned a script Starseed to the newly-formed Starseed LLC, based in Arizona. Filming is set to begin shortly in the greater Phoenix area.

What audience are you aiming your films at?

My films are targeted toward an audience who are interested and aware of the simple fact that the governments of the world do not want the general public to know the truth that the world we live in is far more advance than we are led to believe.

As people, we are kept in the dark about the true reality of our world’s actually level of technology and that we currently have ongoing treaties and agreements with numerous aliens and off-world visitors to our planet.

The average person has no idea that we, in fact, have anti-gravity propulsion systems and even extra dimensional crafts and even on-going mining projects on the Moon and other planet both in our own solar system and beyond.

Have you included any alien abduction cases?

Our award-winning documentary Fastwalkers covered not only abduction but also interviews with ‘experiencers’, who even though they were abducted without their consent they ultimately came to believe that it was a positive experience.

Some of these experiencers believe that they have hybrid children as a result of their abductions. Often they say they had a chance to actually see and hold their children when they were once more taken aboard space crafts in or around our solar system.

Other than eyewitness testimony, is there any solid evidence that proves they are more than the product of Cold War hysteria that has evolved over the decades?

As far as any real proof that what I write and make films about is my own experience to take the ‘nickel tour’ aboard the space craft and my briefing experience. And, of course, the witness testimony that is contain within my series of UFO and ET films and documentaries.

Is there a government cover-up?

Without question there is an ongoing government cover-up not only by the US but also by most of the western countries and by almost all of the countries of our world.

However with the ongoing progress of the formal ‘discloser movement’, the true story of what is in fact the real history of our planet and its people is moving forward and will hopefully result in the truth becoming known sometime in the near future.

Do you enjoy science fiction as well? If so, what are your favourite books/films?

As far as science fiction goes, I have long been a reader of virtually all the sci-fi books that I could find. Some of my favourite authors are Isaac Asimov, Philip K. Dick, Frank Herbert, Arthur C. Clarke, Ray Bradbury, and, of course, Robert Heinlein.

Some of the most outstanding films of the science fiction type in my opinion are 2001: A Space Odyssey, Ex_Machina, Avatar, The Matrix, and Star Wars, which I saw twenty-four times!

Do you do anything outside the UFO world?

I am also an avid adventurer and have designed and built four large sailing vessels and sailed to Hawaii, Baja, Mexico, and Honduras. And I have undertaken film projects in Tahiti and Nicaragua.

I especially enjoy living the boating and the RV lifestyle. I was also a gold miner and the publisher/writer/photographer for the magazine Modern Gold Miner and Treasure Hunter.

Currently, I am one of the Executive Producers on a reality-based TV series entitled Deadly Dogmen, which is based on an original concept by Leslie S. Mitts, who is also the content creator of this cryptid-based series. It’s is currently in pre-production under the Timestream Pictures banner.

Leslie S. Mitts and I penned a book entitled Lycandroids Super Soldiers and the Freedom War. It’s a science fiction novel and outlines what we both feel is unfortunately the course that humankind and our planet is heading. In its first week on Amazon, Lycandroids was ranked #8 in horror and #12 in sci-fi!

Still, as I was told in my briefing while I was on the planet Jupiter in the summer of 1971, humankind as a species has been gifted with free will. It is that which gives us the opportunity not only change the destiny of our planet but to take our rightful journey to the stars.

Where can people see your work?

The series entitled UFO Chronicles is available on Amazon Prime as well as other media platforms worldwide and is an ongoing series of programs featuring well known and highly regarded investigators, historian researchers, contactees, and scientists who provide insights into the real situations that are covered up by the mainstream press. Interested parties could also check out fastwalkers.com.

What’s next on your agenda?

Deadly Dogmen is currently being launched. Filming of its first episode happened in early June 2018.

My book Safespace was published in 2003 and received the Editor’s Choice Award. It’s based upon my own UFO-extra-terrestrial experience, and I’ve adapted it into a screenplay, Safespace: The Briefing, which is currently in pre-production. It documents the briefing by these friendly beings.

For more information on Robert and his documentaries, head over to timestreampictures.com.

John Hannah | GENESIS

Hannah

John Hannah is one of Britain’s most adaptable and well-known actors. Having earned his big break as Matthew in Four Weddings and a Funeral (1994) John has developed a varied career starring in films such as Sliding Doors (1998) and The Mummy (1999), and television shows including the Spartacus series and Marvel’s Agents Of S.H.I.E.L.D.

His most recent film Genesis is a dark sci-fi thriller full of political intrigue and questionable motives. John took some time to sit down with Starburst to discuss those themes, his career and voice his thoughts on how this film might relate to the times we’re living in.

STARBURST: Genesis portrays quite a bleak future for humanity and the Earth. What message do you think the film is trying to get across?

John Hannah: I think we’re living in a dark time in terms of the future, and what direction we’re going in is up for debate. There’s a lot of stuff in the mainstream press about technology and A.I., and who controls it and who are benefitting from it. I think that’s an element of the film, which we have the potential to destroy the planet and we’re led by these fucking muppets: May, Trump, Farage and all these Boris fucking Johnson twats. If they all get their way, then the future certainly is bleak. The film’s perceived as part of a trilogy, so I’m sure that Bart and Freddie (writers and directors Bart Ruspoli and Freddie Hutton-Mills) will be trying to direct it into a more positive, active way of contributing. It also touches on the individual and being able to take responsibility for your decisions and also the responsibility for the decisions being made on your behalf. I think that’s a little bit of the Brexit thing; everyone just read the side of the bus with the fearmongering, and we’ve gone down this route that, for me, is a dead end for the future and for young people.

The A.I. is key to the film’s story but really Genesis is about the character’s around that central premise, how they develop, and it seems to be trying to get the audience to make their own minds up.

I think that’s very much it. People often dismiss sci-fi as some space opera or just something with effects, or some sort of free-association fantasy of what a world might be and what creatures might be in it. But near-future sci-fi is very much dealing with real issues, and most of the major issues that have impacted on our planet have been technology based, whether you think of the loom or the Toe Puddle Martyrs (six 19th-century agricultural labourers largely responsible for the birth of trade unionism) or the industrial revolution, mass industrialisation; it’s always been technology that has created this friction and the one element in all of it I think is who has been in control of it and who benefits from it. With Brexit again, you have to ask who are benefitting from this, and it looks like people like Boris Johnson and international catalysts who’ll be working in a less regulated environment.

You clearly have strong views on this, and I wonder how much of that enters your decision-making process when choosing a role, asking yourself ‘is this a message I want to be a part of?’

Not consciously I don’t think, no. I tend to respond instinctively to the material. I try to put myself in the position of someone going to the cinema or sitting watching this program or another on television, and what they would get from it. And then when you start working on it, it’s the beginning of a journey where that journey is about discovering things yourself. It becomes something that nobody expected, and I think that’s a good thing. If the writers and producers and directors get exactly what they thought of at the beginning of the process, then I think it’s kind of failed. On the other hand, if they get something that’s surprised and delighted them and satisfied them from where they set out then, I think that’s a success. For Genesis, I think there was an organic development where the story is, although Bart and Freddie might tell you different and they probably would!

I wanted to pick up on your point about responding to the material as you’ve had an extremely varied career, but most recently it’s on television that you’ve had the greatest success and are probably best known. Do you have to change as an actor in how you approach a small, independent film such as Genesis when you’ve just worked on Spartacus or Marvel’s Agents Of S.H.I.E.L.D.?

I’ve always said that regardless of what the project is, from an actor’s point of view you do the same thing regardless. Whether it’s a multi-million-pound production, or a network television show or a little independent film, what you do in front of the camera remains the same. The discussions and the ability to influence what’s coming around the corner on a small budget is more organic. With the Americans; it’s a business, and they run it like that, and that’s great. You can go off and be a part of something that’s bigger than any of us as individuals, or you can mix it up on an independent film and be a part of that and in the discussions.

So you have no particular preference?

I try not to over-think it. I have a look and go and meet the guys and have a chat and go from there. Sometimes the reason it appeals or doesn’t is because it’s similar to something I’ve just done. It’s never been about career management, more cherry picking whatever’s in front of me.

We wanted to go back and ask about Rebus. Your version was very different to the Ken Stott version, being much darker and I’d read various things about why you left the role. Is it something you have fond memories of or think could have been done differently?

I have fond memories of doing it, but I never thought I was right for the part. The production company I was involved with were in the process of picking it up, but the company who owned it wanted me to do it. We wanted Peter Mullan to do it, but at that point, Peter hadn’t then won Best Actor at Cannes, so they pressed me, and I was seduced by the fact I really liked the material anyway. So you take a chance because that’s what you do or it’s all a bit boring. But I don’t suppose I was ever really right for it as I was a bit young. Ian Rankin said I was the same age as the character was when he started writing but I guess people just get an idea in their heads.

In your career, is there something that perhaps didn’t get the exposure it should have done, such as Circus or one of the smaller projects you’ve been involved in?

Circus is an interesting one in that I thought it was a brilliant, brilliant script by a young writer called Dave Logan but it was ruined by the director and two young producers who at that point were more interested in having the money to make the film rather than actually make it. They saw it as a business and wanted just to get on to the next step. They were just interested in money. They let the film down. No-one sets out to make a bad film, but sometimes it just happens.

Genesis is released on DVD and VOD on July 16th.