Chris Reading | SOMNUS

Short films are the lifeblood of new talent into the film industry but making the jump to features is no easy task. UK Director Chris Reading has done just that with Somnus, a space thriller that pays homage to a number of genre mainstays including 2001: A Space Odyssey and Alien while spinning a gripping tale of its own. We caught up with him to get the low-down on Somnus and find out about the trials and tribulations of getting an ultra low-budget, 1970s-style space thriller made in 2016…

STARBURST: Somnus is your first feature, how would you sum up the experience?

Chris Reading: Interesting and it was so much fun. It was great because we were doing things in the way of movies which we all love from the 1970s and 80s.

You’ve come from the world of short films, a medium STARBURST really supports. How difficult was it making the jump to a full feature?

It was difficult because talking a cast into doing a feature is a lot more difficult that asking them to do a short! The commitment you need from them is a lot more, the same goes for the crew.

What size crew did you have?

It was pretty small, a couple of people in each department, ten at the most, and we brought people in when we had specific roles that needed filling. We couldn’t afford to have people standing around.

Somnus is a sci-fi movie with a very cool, retro style. What were your sci-fi influences?

Alien – as soon as I was able to watch it that is; obviously Star Wars but also things like Silent Running and those sort of films which weren’t was popular. Everyone talks about Star Wars, it’s a vast part of the language of filmmaking now, but I also like the original Star Trek films – Star Trek II: The Wrath of Khan is a real favourite, the techniques they used there we tried to emulate here.

Some specific shots in Somnus seem to evoke other films, such as the rear-view shot of the two crew looking out of the cockpit window which is very reminiscent of the Orion shuttle sequence from 2001.

Yes, that shot was definitely there when we were storyboarding and thinking about how things were going to look, it was central to what we wanted.

So how much of what you originally storyboarded ended up in the finished movie?

Quite a lot. We went to find the locations first and storyboarded off the back of the ones we chose. We wanted to get everything we could on camera.

Your locations are quite unique…

The opening was shot at the Severn Valley Railway in the West Midlands and the spaceship interiors were shot at a place called the East Midlands Aero Park where some guys have collected some post-war aircraft. They’re real enthusiasts, they’ve got things like Vulcan bombers, Nimrods and various Cold War equipment. It was just perfect for what we needed; it meant that all we had to do was dress those interiors and they just looked great, we didn’t have to blow our budget building lots of sets from scratch.

Did the fact of shooting in such a confined space make for some tense moments with your cast?

The bomber compartment we were in was built for one person and we had three guys behind the camera and three guys in front of it, in this one little space. It was really cramped and we had a lot of hours working in that environment. But the team were amazing, we never had bad moments. As soon as we found those old aircraft it just clicked in my brain: we have to make this film, this is going to make it happen because we can save so much money on building sets and still have a really distinctive ‘look’.

You also include elements such as specially created in-camera computer graphics on monitor screen around the sets. What are the technical issues in getting these elements to work effectively?

Some of the screen graphics were done in ‘post’ but most are in-camera. We did a lot of face projections, so the graphics did interact with the actor’s face and hands. It adds to the whole look of the shots as well; they’re dark sets and they’re just lit by the reflections coming from the screen. We did some computer post-production, just as a very last pass to make sure things were perfect.

 

Somnus features a paranoid female computer called Meryl, another nod to 2001. Are you comfortable with technology?

I’m really comfortable with technology and not against the use of CGI in films. In the 1980s, one of the main themes in movies was fear of computers, no one really understood them. I think the last of that trend was Jurassic Park, where people still really didn’t understand the technology and that’s what caused the problem. I think The Matrix was the first time that people had the internet and had a full understanding of computers which meant changing how they were used as a threat.

It’s great to see practical model work being used for your spacecraft rather than CGI. Was this always the plan?

Yeah, when we started in this I didn’t know too much about CGI and so I didn’t want to hand too much over to a production house. Even if they were really helpful and worked with me on everything, it’s kind of a dark art that I wouldn’t understand and I would have ended up leaving a lot of decisions to them. So we did our research and we figured out how they used to do it with miniatures. I knew I’d have so much more control, it’s a no brainer really.

Given that the balance of FX expertise is now in CGI rather than model work, how hard was it to get geared up to the point where you could shoot full-blown miniatures?

It’s a process of learning about how things were done back in the day. We watched a lot of documentaries and did a lot of reading but we still came across issues. We built a big 6ft model of the main spaceship and just the pure amount of light you have to put onto a thing like that to get it all in focus so it doesn’t look like a miniature, it actually melted the ship! We were on a ticking clock shooting that model.

After Star Wars came out there were films like Star Crash that tried to emulate it but completely lacked the technique required to shoot models realistically. It just shows how wrong things can go…

Yes, a lot of the films that followed were very poor. The photography of miniatures is an absolute art and it’s really difficult to find the expertise nowadays so we had to learn it for ourselves. It’s not that models are not still used in some films, but it’s so specialist now.

Star Wars: The Force Awakens last year saw something of a renaissance for practical FX over CGI.

I think the key there was they went for practical sets compared to all the green screen work in the previous trilogy. Obviously, the way Star Wars space battles are made now it would be very difficult to do those purely with miniatures. But compared to the previous trilogy, it was really telling in the performances that they were interacting with real sets this time.

There’s a scene in Somnus where the two leads have a bit of argy-bargy over the terms of their space contract. A nod to Alien?

Yes, it was more than a nod (laughs)! We did cut out a section which was a little bit too close to Alien but that scene is still there because I wanted to push the notion that these guys are doing a normal job and really have their own interests at heart. Whatever’s happening in the story, they are still primarily interested in getting paid.

So when it comes to matters of contract Chris, are you a ‘Company Man’ or are you a rebel?

Probably a rebel!

What’s next for you?

My next film I plan to shoot in the Highlands of Scotland. That’ll be a two-year process but we’ll shoot it next year and take it from there.

Finally, with Somnus being your first feature, what has been the biggest obstacle to overcome?

The biggest obstacle is motivation. Given that I was doing a lot of things myself and it was a very small team, it was just about having self-belief and getting out there and doing it. So many people fail to get to this point in the sense that they just give up. Basically it cuts the field in half. So I just thought we need to push this through. From then on, I knew it was on me to get it finished on behalf of everyone involved who’d just worked so hard on it. It was personal for me. I owed all those people to get it out there.

Somnus is now available via VOD.

John Jarratt | WOLF CREEK

John Jarratt is Quentin Tarantino’s favourite Australian actor. If you need more than that, he is a successful actor who has carved out a long career in both film and television, but he will always be best known as outback serial killer Mick Taylor in the Wolf Creek films. As the series of the same name comes to Blu-ray, John took some time to chat to us and offer his unique thoughts on Mick’s personality, horror films and Game of Thrones.

STARBURST: Did you ever think you’d be putting Mick’s hat back on?

John Jarratt: Only if the script was any good, and it is. I was more than happy.

Was there anything in particular that drew you back, as the format of the series is very different to the films?

To be honest, Greg rang me and said he had an idea about putting Wolf Creek on a streaming channel. I thought maybe it was a bit gratuitous just to troop Mick out again, but after looking at the scripts I had to eat my words. They were really good and it did lend itself to television. This is really a revenge story about Lucy Fry’s character. I just turn up occasionally to give everyone their horror fill.

Mick does seem to be enjoying himself.

Mick’s always enjoying himself, getting a bizarre pleasure from it all. That’s what being a psychopath is all about. In the movies he lets some of his victims go, like a cat lets a wounded mouse go. He plays a game the entire time.

Why do think he’s become such a popular cult figure?

I think that part of horror films is what a lot of people enjoy. That’s why we go on macabre scary rides – you can experience the danger without getting hurt.

How much of Mick’s success is down to Wolf Creek being set in Australia? Do you think it would work as well elsewhere?

He’s this mad, outback bruiser who just happens to be a serial killer. If you didn’t know anything else about him you’d enjoy a night in the pub with him; larger than life, give you his arsehole, shit though his ribs – that kind of guy. Little do you know you could walk out of the pub and he’ll cut your head off.

Has the way you approach the character changed at all over the years?

I haven’t changed him one tiny little scrap. He’s exactly the same as far as I’m concerned. He’s a very shallow human being, bouncing around the outback culling backpackers. He gets to play and have sex with them, which makes them a lot more fun than a kangaroo. He’s enjoying himself.

Do you think the six-episode format is more beneficial to a series like Wolf Creek?

That’s just taste, I suppose. There are people who watch crap like The Bold and Beautiful every damn day, or Game of Thrones. Bunch of wanker Shakespearean actors whispering at each other; not my kind of thing.

Are you a horror fan yourself?

I’m not a fan of Freddy Krueger or that sort of thing. I actually thought The Exorcist was one of the funniest films I’ve ever seen; all that green pea soup. I was on the floor laughing. I do like horror films, but ones like Wolf Creek and Psycho and so on, ones that could be based on something more real that could actually happen.

Thank you for your time today John.

No worries, thank you for your support.

Wolf Creek – The Complete First Series is released on Blu-ray on October 10th.

 

Lauren Ashley Carter | DARLING

Following on from memorable genre roles in THE WOMAN (2011), JUG FACE (aka THE PIT, 2013) and POD (2015), LAUREN ASHLEY CARTER now stars as the title character in DARLING, a darkly stylish chamber horror from director Mickey Keating. Set in a large and deserted New York mansion and paying liberal homage to the classic 1960s films of Roman Polanski, it is built around a tour-de-force performance from Carter, who appears in every scene. With the movie coming to DVD on October 24th, we caught up with her to find about the role that’s cemented her status as one of horror cinema’s rising stars.

STARBURST: You’re on record as being a card-carrying fan of horror movies…

Lauren Ashley Carter: Oh yes absolutely!

Are you the cosplaying kind of fan or more cool and reserved?

I did attend a convention with the production company behind The Woman and Jug Face and I loved it and thought I have to come back as they are so much fun! But those tickets are really expensive and you’re buying merchandise and you want autographed pictures with people so it’s kind of like Disney World. I haven’t been to the big Comic-Con in San Diego as I’m a really small person – I’m just five-foot tall and a hundred pounds so I get very overwhelmed in these crazy crowded places. That’s why can’t do outdoor concerts because it’s like being outside listening to really loud speakers! If I ever get the chance for VIP passes at a convention that’s the way to go because you get a little cart everywhere and you don’t have to wait in line!

With movies like The Woman, Jug Face and now Darling, you’ve chosen some decidedly dark material.

They are the kind of movies I like to watch. I also get a lot of comedy scripts and I wish that I could do more of that too. But I would like to be able to feel confident to pick things I would want to see so if I read something that’s just OK, I’m not going to pick it even though I desperately need to pay my rent and everything else. If I can’t feel good about it I wouldn’t be able to do these interviews and say confidently that I picked a project I was really into from the moment I started to read it. 

Mickey Keating, the director of Darling, has spoken about how influential Roman Polanski’s ‘60s output like Repulsion and The Tenant were on the movie. Did you check out any of Polanski’s work beforehand?

Oh yes, I saw all of them. Mickey is like an encyclopaedia; any time you do a movie with him he will give you a list of things that he wants you to watch either to take a particular feeling or attitude or the music or whatever. Some of I had already seen but I definitely don’t have the catalogue that Mickey has in my mind’s eye. So it was really fun working with him because you are forced to expand your horror collection!

In all of your horror roles to date, your directors have really put you through the ringer!

Yes, they all do! I remember on Jug Face working with Chad Crawford Kinkle, who is as sweet as they come, he told me someone had given him advice that if you’re making a drama you basically need to put your main protagonist through living hell in every scene and then you’ll have a successful film. He laughed it off until watching me every day! He had tried to schedule the scenes out of order because he was attempting to make it easier on me, but it was all in vain because we realised that throughout the movie there’s just always something terrible happening to me!

You give a mesmerising performance in Darling; there’s very little dialogue and the camera is on you most of the time.

I think that it’s almost a relief that the camera is always there and just becomes like another crew member. You’re surrounded by people the entire time, which is no less like having a camera on you. Then there are technicians on set that have to do ridiculous things and try and not get hit by the camera and a lot of other nonsense that’s going on while I’m still being  ‘in the moment’. So it’s kind of nice that from the time we started to the time we ended on Darling the camera was on me and you just forget it.

The house is really your co-star in the film…

Yes, it is a major character, spot-on. I was actually living there during filming.

All on your own?

Yeah, I was on my own just like in the movie. We were there shooting twelve-hour days and I would stay there for the remainder. The house belongs to a friend of mine, she just recently sold it, actually. She was doing renovations and that’s when I came over to visit with her and told her we were looking for a location. It was originally going to be set in just a one or two bedroom apartment but then she offered to give us her home for shooting so I called Mickey Keating and said ‘hey would you mind doing a major rewrite so we can do it in this house?!’ He didn’t see the house until we started because we shot it so quickly. I worried the audience would be quite bored watching me walk all through it, but when you watch the movie you realise how beautiful and magnificent it is.

Without giving away any spoilers, there is a really spectacular gore sequence in the movie that you are heavily involved in. Did you enjoy all that dismemberment?

Yes, of course! I just really appreciate the work that goes into it. Those guys spend hours and hours making sure the limbs are true to life and the veins and arteries are filling up with the blood. It’s just fascinating, especially the times when you know they can only do things once. I mean, if blood doesn’t come out then you can stop and reset a scene but if you are going to saw something up, that needs to be right first time. I’ve always said if you’re comparing movies to music, then horror would be the black metal of the categories. So in that moment, doing something like that, I feel about as close to being a rock star as I’m ever going to get. It makes me happy just being covered in blood with a half-naked dead person in the bath there with me!

This is your second film with actress Sean Young who plays the role of ‘Madame’ and who previously played your Mother in Jug Face. She’s a real cult figure who always attracts a lot of attention. What was it like working with her?

She’s great, she knows her shit. She’s been in so many films and is very conscious of all of the variables. She comes in and she knows where to stand, she knows how to look and she does not waste any time. She’s also a mother of two boys; she was always taking care of me but was never condescending or anything like that. I think that perhaps back when she first started out she was a young girl and she was very much on her own without many women around to protect her so there was definitely a maternal bond between us, even when she was playing such a wretched mother to me in Jug Face!

Your character in Darling is an enigma, we get very little sense of who she really is or where she comes from. Did you give her a backstory of your own to help you play her?

Oh absolutely, I think if I didn’t do that I’d feel very lost and trapped in a role like this. With any job it’s about doing your research, doing your homework, however that pertains to you. Unless you happen to be a certain Presidential nominee, you should do your homework!

How does it feel to be something of a horror icon?

Fantastic! It was something that I never knew how to break into, there’s no handbook for any of this, especially now with all the content and everything that is available to stream online, it’s oversaturated. So to have work you do rise to the top and be enjoyed by this group of people really is a dream come true. It’s kind of wild for me any time anybody says ‘I love this movie with Lauren Ashley Carter, I’m going to watch all her other movies’ because that’s exactly the way I feel as a fan of other actors.

As well as acting, you’ve been involved in production in a number of other capacities including directing a short film and producing your own web series. Will you be making the move to directing features?

I have some friends in LA who grew up with me back in Ohio and they have a feature project called Love Shy, which is a drama so I’m planning on directing that. I directed my first short a couple of years ago and had a great time – everyone listened to me and did everything I said! So we really want to get this feature off the ground, obviously raising money and financing and doing all that fun stuff needs to happen. I’m really psyched to do it.

Have you found that the way movies are distributed now, with the availability of streaming services and video on demand services, makes it easier to get these sorts of movies made?

Oh yeah, but I really think we should see these films more in theatres. Everyone is talking about Don’t Breathe and It Follows coming to theatres and they just proved we can get butts on seats. The horror community are the most loyal fans and so many great stories are coming from all over the world. South Korea is probably my favourite country for horror over the last ten years or so, I love everything they put out. Video on Demand is amazing in that we can get access to a lot of people’s work that we otherwise wouldn’t see. I don’t know who’s in charge of all this shit but they need to start putting more of these VOD movies into movie theatres. As a genre, horror has proven time and time again that people want to see it.

DARLING is released on DVD on October 24th and reviewed here.

Alain Moussi | KICKBOXER: VENGEANCE

Alain Moussi is a Lebanese/Canadian actor and stuntman. After working on several films, including X-Men: Days of Future Past and White House Down, he scored his big break opposite childhood hero Jean-Claude Van Damme in the Kickboxer reboot. Alain took the time to chat with STARBURST about martial arts training, doing the splits, and dancing.

STARBURST: Alain, there is only one way to start this interview we’re afraid; of all the training you did for Kickboxer: Vengeance, how much did you have to work on the famous Jean-Claude Van Damme dance?

Alain Moussi: (Laughs) I think that, just like a lot of people who loved Kickboxer as kids, I’ve been practicing that dance since I was 10 years old. I had it perfected by the time I was 12! It was the last day of shooting, they turned the music on and we did it in one take. It was so cool.

So after all that practice, how did you come to be involved in the project?

I met the writer and producer Dimitri Logothetis in 2011 on a film and we ended up doing a showcase with the team for all the fights. After that I auditioned for a role, and that was it. I’d wanted to get into acting, and had done some workshops, but didn’t expect it then. Two years later Dimitri called me to say he was going to reboot Kickboxer and asked me to do another showcase, so I did. Ted Field (producer) was there and so I screen tested and that was it.

You’ve clearly trained hard throughout your career, but was there any special training you needed to do for this film?

It wasn’t so much about the training itself, as learning how to put it all together. There weren’t so many new moves, just a couple I’d been working on and ones I really wanted in. Mostly it was about sharpening my skills as I knew it was going to be a tight schedule and I would only be able to learn the choreography on set. It was like “learn it and perform, learn it and perform” every day. That was the challenge – no rehearsal. So I needed to be sharp and conditioned in order to learn really fast and get through these 12-hour shooting days. I also hired an acting coach so I could spend time each day working on that. I still do that; giving myself acting workouts.

It must have been daunting going on set with Dave Bautista, Georges St. Pierre and of course Jean-Claude Van Damme, but was it reassuring that they had all come from an athletic background and not an acting one like yourself?

Absolutely, it was so helpful. They were all so nice too. Like, with Dave, I had this expectation that he would be a cool guy, and he is, but it’s the work ethic you notice. These guys all set out to work harder than the next guy and work at acting the same way they work at wrestling, or body-building or whatever. I like observing these guys, take in any advice, and if there’s anything I can steal I will, and use for myself (laughs).

Will fans of the old series be able to relate to this new version?

We pay homage to some films, but mainly the original Kickboxer. I mean, the splits obviously, you got to have the splits (laughs)! There’s a little wink to what Jean-Claude made famous, but then we tap into what’s happening today. It’s great, though, that Jean-Claude is in the film as a main character and not just a cameo. There’s this whole generation who haven’t seen him, which is really interesting.

You shot Kickboxer: Vengeance 2 years ago now, but have already wrapped on a sequel. Was there a confidence when you were making it that it was going well which prompted the follow up?

When I was told we were going to make the second right away I was surprised. Dimitri was prepping another film at the time, but when we showed the rough cut to some investors they were really interested and gave the go ahead. This gave us real confidence so we just got on with it. I was excited that people were responding well to the film and I couldn’t wait to get started. What’s exciting now is that we’re not rebooting anymore, but are able to do something entirely new. This new film is a follow up to what we did in Vengeance which is really cool.

We have to ask about your fellow cast members on the next film: Christopher Lambert which is cool, Mike Tyson which is good, and Brazilian footballer Ronaldinho, who we understand is actually playing a character called Ronaldo.

(Laughs) I don’t know if we actually say his name in the film but that is funny.

What it seems to say, though, is that there’s a fun element to these new films that is missing in many other fighting or action films today.

And that’s what you’ll see in Kickboxer: Retaliation. Ronaldinho wasn’t brought in because he’s an actor, or even wants to be one. He’s there because he can do what he does for real. Mike Tyson is Mike Tyson and Ronaldinho is Ronaldinho. He’s one of the best soccer players in the world and already has a huge audience. For me, and the writers and directors, it comes down to using these guys and what their known for, and put it on screen in a fun way that makes sense. His scene is awesome!

You genuinely sound like you’re enjoying what you’re doing now. How much has your life changed with these films?

I always wanted to be making films one way or another. I love performing, but really it’s just the process. I get to be on screen with these great people and work with a great crew. How has it changed my life? I get to make more movies and that’s all I really want. Doing Kickboxer: Vengeance confirmed for me that this is really what I want to do.

Alain, thank you for your time today.

Thank you, appreciate it.

Kickboxer: Vengeance is out now in select UK cinemas and also available on VOD.

 

Michael Berryman | THE HILLS HAVE EYES

Michael Berryman is a true icon of the horror industry, with him making a huge splash in the genre as Pluto in Wes Craven’s legendary The Hills Have Eyes. Since then, Berryman has had a multiple-decade-spanning career that’s taken in a whole host of projects and he remains one of the most recognizable figures in the business. With Arrow Video now releasing an impressive, crammed Blu-ray of The Hills Have Eyes as the movie comes up for its 40th anniversary, we caught up with the hugely engaging actor to discuss his memories of the film, working with Wes Craven, his thoughts on the sequel and subsequent remake, his time working with Rob Zombie in more recent years, and his opinion on what makes the horror genre so special.

STARBURST: Firstly, how did you end up as a part of The Hills Have Eyes originally?

Michael Berryman: Well, way back when, I got my start in film by accident. I left college and was going to homestead in Alaska working on reservation animals and conservation. I moved back to Santa Monica and to Venice Beach, California, to a little gift shop. It was a little tiny store, and a gentleman walked into my store one day – his name was George Pal. And George, of course, produced War of the Worlds. We had a lovely conversation, and he said, “By the way, you have an interesting look. I think you would fit for the role of the coroner in Doc Savage.” And I go, “Oh, I read those books, they were kind of neat, but I’m not an actor.” I studied Art History, but I wasn’t really an actor. So he said, “Well here, here’s my card. Call my office. Think about it.” So I did, and I met him and his director, and he said, “Look, it’s a two-day job and you’ll have a Screen Actor’s Guild card. I really want you to be in my movie.” I figured that’d be a good way to maybe save a little money to go to Alaska. I worked two days and it got me a $1,000 or something. So that was it. I thought that would be the career. At the time, Warner Brothers had a casting agent that helped him, and they were doing another movie they were casting. That little movie was One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest. I got a phone call one day asking me to come down and meet Milos couldn’t make it, Wes couldn’t make it, of course, because he’s passed on. It was a wonderful reunion, we watched clips from the movie. Tony Timpone from Fangoria Magazine was moderating the panel – great questions, great stories – and we actually at one point, when the movie was out, it was playing in a drive-in in Los Angeles, in the San Fernando valley, Peter, Wes and I all got in a van and drove up to see the movie. They talked me in to wearing my Pluto outfit. Halfway through the movie, they all thought it would be funny – and I agreed – to go around and bang on car windows and scare people. And I did so, and the last thing I remember was a girl screaming and this big guy with a baseball bat just yelling at me for scaring his girlfriend. He’s chasing me! I’m running for my life while on screen everyone’s being terrified. In the movie, we’re attacking the trailer, and I’m looking to find where the van was as I had lost track. I see the headlights, the van pulls out, Wes Craven is on the side of the van opening the door, shouting to me “Run! Run! Run!”. He reached his hand out, I jumped and got in the van, the guy is still chasing us, and we peel off and head to a diner, sit down and have a cup of coffee and a dessert. We all looked at each other and realised that we had a hit on our hands.

When you were on set, was there a moment during the production that you realised you had something really special, or was it only when you were being chased at a drive-in that you realised that?

Well we never thought that the movie would go anywhere. It was very hot at daytime and cold at night, very limited, we had one motorhome that was everything – that was wardrobe, that was where you’d sit and relax, where you’d wait to do your next scene. We didn’t think the movie would really go anywhere. A lot of the actors – we called them the ‘Whitebread Family’, then there was the ‘Hills Family’ – they were TV actors, soap actors, that kind of stuff. They didn’t really like it that much… “Oh, I’ve gotta go out of the city, way out in the middle of the desert… Victorville, California? Where’s that?”. I’d lived out in that area so it didn’t bother me, but they were kinda not happy about it. We worked well together, we did a good movie, we’re all friends to this day, but we never thought the movie would go anywhere. But it caught people’s attention, and it’s so effective. It’s such an effective film. I think we shot it in 16mm. We started looking at the reviews, and one thing led to another, and it caught on. Then we realised we had a hit! I remember a couple of years after the film had been released, I was looking at the Los Angeles Times. It was during the time that it was out, when it was released. There was a full-page poster, and there I was on the poster. That was really, really nice. Then in the small corner of that newspaper was a little box that said “In a galaxy far, far away… Star Wars”. Well I was doing a movie with Mark Hamill, and I brought this to the set one night – the movie was called Guyver, a cool movie – and I go, “Hey Mark, look what I’ve got here”. And then I go, “Look, I’m on a full-page ad for a movie”. He goes, “Wow! That’s pretty cool!”. I said, “What do you think this little box in the corner, what’s this Star Wars about?”. Then we started to laugh, which went on for a while. He asked whether the film did a good box office, so I said, “Wait a minute, aren’t you in that movie?!”. Then he laughed and autographed it for me. So I had a joke about how big my ad was compared to his little movie, and I hoped his career went somewhere after that.


Michael with Suze Lanier in The Hills Have Eyes 

You mentioned that Monsterpalooza had a screening of the The Hills Have Eyes recently. Does it ever surprise you how popular the film is still to this day amongst so many different generations?

Good question. No, it does not. Over the many decades it’s held its own. The remake was a good attempt, but it didn’t have the depth. One of the things about remakes, especially in The Hills Have Eyes – it’s prettier to look at and all that, and it has its moments – it doesn’t have the grit, it doesn’t hold the tension. And one of the most important aspects of good storytelling, and how we managed to accomplish that in The Hills Have Eyes, is something I picked up on during a Bruce Lee movie. I think it was during Enter the Dragon. Bruce is going to go to Han’s tournament and he’s talking. He says, “You gotta hang on. I’ve gotta teach this kid some martial arts”. And the boy’s trying to learn, he’s young. Bruce says, “Hit me! No, no, no. Not in anger. Emotional content. It’s like pointing your finger to the moon and don’t focus on your finger or you will miss out on all of that celestial glory”. The point being you have blocking, you have action, you have wardrobe, your props, you’re all set for the scene, and you have words to say, your dialogue. A lot of people hit their mark, blurt out their lines, and that’s it. Well that’s not enough. What we had on The Hills Have Eyes was the believability; everybody believed in their character, everybody created a personal history with their character. So the interaction was more honest, had more depth, had emotional content. And that’s why it’s held its own. Of course, Wes had a brilliant eye in his editing and his directing, and he knew how to bring everybody together. So that’s why it’s still so strong.

When the concept came up for The Hills Have Eyes II, was there ever any trepidation from yourself about doing that or were you more than happy to return?

No, when you’re a working actor and you have a project that’s fully funded, you have a start date, you have your Union contract so you know you’re protected in the proper manner – unless there’s some serious objection to the role, you jump on it, you take it. There’s a thousand other actors who will take it if you don’t want it. Of course you take it. A lot of people think, and it’s not their fault, that they believe that everyone in Hollywood, so to speak, is driving around with a lot of bling, a fancy car, but the fact is that 60% of all of the Screen Actors Guild members are unemployed at any given moment. About 5% secure 90% of the revenue. Well the 60% are mostly unemployed and make less than $1,000 a year. I run across people a lot who go, “Oh, well I’m very talented, I’ve studied theatre and Shakespeare”. That’s all fine and dandy, but film is a different medium. I’ve seen stage actors that were terrible on a set because they don’t understand what a camera does and how to block, how to cut, why you put it together in pieces, and they do it wrong – they play too big. No, no, no, it’s a motion picture. When I did Cuckoo’s Nest, I asked Milos Forman, we had two weeks of rehearsal for the major scenes with a camera for blocking, and I asked Milos, “You know, give me some pointers. What are some things that I need to know?”. And he walked me in front of a Panavision camera and said, “Look at the lens. You see the numbers and the dials? They do this, they do that, they pull out a tape measure to measure how far your face is away from the camera. Then they put tape marks on the ground, you’re supposed to stand directly on those spots. There’s a reason for all of that. Now look through the eyepiece”. I did, and I was transformed – I thought, “Wow! I get it now!” So, he says, “The answer to your question, Michael, is this: you should have a love affair with the glass.” And I took notes, I asked lots of questions, very technical questions, and now I have a reputation for knowing how to do what an actor should do when the camera is rolling and it’s moving and its dials are dials and twists are twists, and focus is pulled, handheld, all of that stuff. I really enjoyed that aspect of my art and my craft, it’s part of being a professional. It’s carried me through, it’s helped me get other jobs because people go, “Wow! Michael can get his stuff knocked out in one or two takes, then we can move on to different angles, one or two takes and keep on moving.” And that means your producers are spending less money and they’re getting a day’s work done. You’re done running beyond your budget. If you burn over your budget, it doesn’t help. If you can save a little money then there’s some money that you can put towards advertising or other things to have a successful long run of the film. It really is a multi-department aspect. There’s a lot of departments in putting a film together. I think it would be a good thing if more actors would appreciate and understand that. Some can be very talented and get the job done. I’m not a big fan of people with egos and “Oh, don’t talk to me, I’m in my zone”. Okay, I’ll respect that, but overall I think it’s childish.

How was the experience the second time around for The Hills Have Eyes II? We guess there was a bit more money involved, a bit more faith in Wes…

They had a little more budget, so the wardrobe was a little cleaner, we had different lights, we had HMI lights, the lighting was a little better. I wasn’t very excited about the Reaper character; I thought John Bloom was just sort of walking through it. The make-up was terrible. I loved some of the aspects, like the dog having the flashbacks. The sequel was okay but it doesn’t have the punch that the original did, honestly. It’s prettier to look at. Some of the situations that the kids find themselves in, that Cass was blind was kind of an interesting element that Wes put together, but the actors just weren’t in to it. To them it was another job, they weren’t that in to it really. Janus Blythe really did a good job, but there’s some silly moments that were unnecessary. Willard Pugh, who was the black African-American gentleman, he has a girlfriend. Then the other gal, there’s shenanigans going on, danger here and there, then the girl takes a shower and he’s going to jump her bones. I thought that was a real cheap shot. I mean, really, it’s almost racist, for Christ’s sake. I thought that was unnecessary. We had a different executive producer that was problematic. I was out the night before doing a fundraiser for the Animal Shelter in Lake Morongo Valley where we were at. When we got back to the hotel, I remember the next day there was the newspaper with our pictures, me and the bionic dog and our fundraising event – this is all good publicity – but then I noticed there was the Sheriff Department there. People were upset – parents – and something very horrible was going on with one of our producers. It had nothing to do with Wes, it just had something to do with one of the producer investors. I can’t go in to too much other detail, just use your imagination, but I was bloody furious. I remember walking in to the production office, I had heard what had happened, I guess somebody had written a big cheque to silence any prosecution. A long story short, I closed the door and talked to that individual and gave them the fucking riot act because I thought he was a very terrible person. So that didn’t help as far as my memories of how fantastic the sequel was. But people liked it. It was a job, it was okay, but it couldn’t touch anywhere near the impact of the first one. People come to signings, they don’t bring Part II. Maybe five out of a thousand will – it’s always the original.


Michael in Wes Craven’s Deadly Blessing 

Much like yourself, Wes is obviously an icon of the genre. With The Hills Have Eyes, he was still in the infancy of his career. What was it like working with him on those pictures?

Well yeah, I worked with Wes also on a movie-of-the-week. It was called Invitation to Hell, with Susan Lucci. That was kind of trippy and for TV. We also did, with Ernest Borgnine and Sharon Stone, her first movie, we did Deadly Blessing in Texas. That was a different kind of role. But I’ve always loved working with Wes. We were good friends, I went to his wedding, was at his services at the Directors Guild last February. He was just a kind, intelligent, soft-spoken great guy. Just very, very sharp-witted. He knew how to weave a story, and I always had a wonderful time with Wes. He really was a good guy.

In more recent years you’ve worked on The Devil’s Rejects and The Lords of Salem with Rob Zombie. Much like Wes Craven’s movies look and feel like a Wes Craven movie, with Rob Zombie you know straight away that it’s a Rob Zombie movie. How has it been working with him and with the visceral, intense and gritty style that he always brings?

There’s some similarities. He’s a big fan of the genre, he has a keen eye about it. The Lords of Salem, unfortunately, was kind of piecemeal because in the opening sequence there’s 3 1/2 pages of dialogue where Sid Haig and I are having conversations with the British people who are going to arrest the witches. We have a conversation where it’s all about describing what’s going on, why we’re going to arrest them. When we were doing the scene, the first scenes we shot at night were very cold with the witches. There’s some great panoramic wide shots with the fires where they’re going to burn the witches. Capturing the witches, it was cold and miserable, especially for the actresses. Here come two of the gentleman that are going to arrest the witches, and we’re assisting them, and I think one or two of them are pretty darn famous and do theatre and Shakespeare and they have Oscars… and they didn’t know they’re lines. So we get to those scenes at about 1am, everybody had been through a tough situation, Sid and I had practiced, and, well, here’s what we heard: “Rob, can you make the torches brighter? I can’t read the arrest warrant.” I’m sorry but they’re scripted lines, and I look at Sid Haig and we go, “Oh, well we’re screwed!” So we go back to our trailers, we wait two more hours, they released us, everybody went home, we didn’t shoot the scenes we were supposed to shoot. Rob said that if he knew they couldn’t see, he’d have made it his expense as a company to pay for anything, to have prescription glasses that would fit the time period. Because those opening scenes were missing, the audience doesn’t quite understand what the hell’s going on. I think it was too much filler footage of Sheri Moon’s beautiful ass. She’s got a nice butt, you know. My point is, it lost a lot of the story. You have the demon hanging on the wall, floating, blah, blah, blah. I haven’t seen his Halloween, I hear it’s quite good, but I think with good funding and letting Rob do what he wants to do, I think he will carry on in his own style, which is a little more grindy, a little more like heavy metal vs. jazz, I suppose, like a mosh pit. Everybody has their own tastes, I’m just not a big fan of that loud, grinding, ‘can’t understand what they’re saying’ kind of thing. It’s just not my thing. But he’s a great guy, he’s fun to work with, he listens. I had a great time working with him on Rejects. That movie is very effective, well crafted, it’s stylistic, it’s a complete beginning, middle, end storytelling. So yeah, Rob is very cool. Rob is Rob, and Wes will always be Wes.

You also did John Schneider’s Smothered. That movie features a lot of the guys who you’d usually be doing the convention circuit with. What’s the camaraderie like between the guys who you see around at all these cons on a frequent basis?

Well I haven’t seen John since the movie. I think he’s hit me up on Facebook once or twice. It was fun to work with other actors in the genre. It was kind of similar to what a convention’s like. I haven’t even seen the film, so I can’t answer that side of things. They were supposed to send us a DVD when they come out, you know. Nine times out of ten they never do! I haven’t seen the movie. I’ve read the script – it’s catty, it’s cute. I actually had some ideas that I gave to John on a sequel. It was cute and clever, I worked a couple of days, then I came home. That’s pretty much it. It’s always nice to work with my friends, but I really can’t comment on the final product because I’ve never seen it.


Michael in Rob Zombie’s The Lords of Salem 

And what about the kinship you guys have at these conventions? You’ve all had similar careers and all been thrust in to the horror spotlight at times. Does that result in a bond there between each you?

It’s a very tight community. We all know one another. Like, I saw over the weekend my friend Jeffrey Coombs. Don Bradley, Sid Haig… all of us… Billy Moseley, Kane Hodder. We’re all very good friends, we all keep in touch, we know about our kids and families or if somebody has a health issue. It is an extended family. It’s probably more so than in any other genre, to be quite honest. We compare notes for work, we help each other get on other projects, we keep in touch. It’s friendships that have lasted decades. So I’m very grateful to George Pal for getting me in this line of work and for some economic viability and health insurance and all the things that go along with it. They’re family in the real world, and we work together on projects, like Gunnar Hansen’s Death House. That’s being pushed by Mr. Harrison , our director. It is a special bond, I have to admit that. That’s what makes it somewhat fun, and especially at the conventions – it’s the fans! I answer all of my fan mail myself, I always have. The fans are intelligent. These aren’t just over-the-top 16-year-olds that have monster posters on their wall; these are people with children and grandchildren, and they have real jobs, some in the government, some are professors. They know everyone in the horror genre, they’re well-read, educated, have a great sense of humour – a good balance. They have, I would say, a very good sense of humanity, which is very important to me. They care about more than just getting scared; blood ‘n’ guts ‘n’ special effects ‘n’ titties aren’t just their cup of tea.

As someone who’s so engrossed in the horror genre, what do you think keeps fans coming back for more? Is it as simple as the age-old thing of wanting to be scared?

I think quite simply it’s, like Wes and I, like we all know – I mean, I grew up watching Vincent Price and Karloff – it’s just people like to be scared. And you want to survive the event. It’s cathartic. It’s almost therapeutic. There is a difference between that and snuff films and just gratuitous violence, disgusting things like… I’m not a big fan of The Human Centipede. I’ve heard about it, but I don’t care how intelligent the concept is behind it, I just find it disgusting. But it’s a free country, you can say what you want at the box office and people will respond in kind. But I abhor some of the things that happened, like Ruggero Deodato’s Cannibal Holocaust – killing animals to be on scene, being gross. I actually went on a film after we had agreed to reshoot a continuous scene where I had done something to a young lady. The way it was filmed, I go, “No, no, we’re not doing that. We can do it after the fact, let the imagination of the audience take the place of this gratuitous bullshit that you want to do. I’m not doing that.” Then when I arrived, they went, “We’re gonna do it the other way.” I said, “Nope, we’re not. It was a conversation I recorded with your permission, here’s my contract, we’ll do it the other way.” They said no, so I told them that they were in breach of contract, give me a full cheque, put me on a plane tomorrow morning. And they did. So my point is, the attraction is basically a thrill-ride. To the degree what elements people appreciate it kind of reflects more on a viewing audience. If your personal preferences are blood ‘n’ guts ‘n’ gore, maybe your 14-years-old. Or maybe you’re a special effects artist! I mean I’ve seen some martial arts movies that are over the top, where people’s heads explode. When it’s done in a gruesome manner, it becomes basically torture pornography. It’s pretty disgusting.

Do you think in more recent years the art of good horror storytelling has been lost a little, that people make it a bit too unrelenting, nobody comes out of the film really ‘winning’ as the audience is beaten down with gore and violence in modern horror?

Well there’s probably more of that than there maybe has been in the past. With the internet also, there’s some really creepy areas of the internet. Then there’s video games that I think are almost clinically depressing.

The new Blu-ray release of The Hills Have Eyes is out on October 3rd.

 

Jeremy Saulnier | GREEN ROOM

Is there a more exciting director to have hit the independent film scene in the past decade than Jeremy Saulnier? With the colour-coded one-two punch of the low-key but brilliant Blue Ruin followed up by the harsher, more visceral Green Room, Saulnier has become the hottest writer/director in genre films to keep an eye on as he lines up future projects. Green Room sees a punk band witness a murder backstage at a backwoods gig, suddenly finding themselves trapped at the mercy of Patrick Stewart’s mini-army of Neo-Nazi thugs. We spoke to Saulnier about his script scaring star Patrick Stewart into locking the doors of his house and why the film uses Nazi skinheads as its perfect movie psychopaths. Warning: it gets political!

STARBURST: How does it feel to have scared Patrick Stewart into turning all the lights on and setting the alarms on his house while reading your script?

JEREMY SAULNIER: I love it. It’s pretty much my favourite story from the casting process on Green Room. Just knowing that from across the Atlantic, Patrick Stewart alone in his house was getting thoroughly creeped out by my material was so heart-warming.

We read that he said it was around 35 pages into the script when he really got scared. Any idea what scene it was that got to him?

I think it’s pretty much when we start to tighten the screws. It’s when things get locked down. His character enters around there so it could be that. When you read a script and you see when you enter, it’s the perfect time and from then on its downward pressure. All the band are trapped in the room and then the tension goes through the roof because you realise how alone this band is and how vulnerable they are with all these forces acting against them. Honestly, I bet it was because he was in an isolated environment in his house so he could totally identify with that. But he never said exactly what scene it was. It’s just this gradual tightening that can really restrict someone while they’re reading the script.

We love Imogen Poots’ Careful Now as the lights go out in the green room, which we suspect is around page 35. Have you got a favourite moment from the film?

That’s one of them actually. I just felt it was my obligation to fully explore the environment and the lights going out is that sort of haunted house feel that I loved. It’s not quite candlelight but it’s a big lighter and a cherry from a cigarette. But one single moment? That’s a rough one. I’m always my own worst critic.

It’s more of a general feeling for me. When I watch the movie, being so close to every frame and every visual effect, and every edit, you get a little lost and you don’t perceive it as a narrative you can really immerse yourself in. You’ve got a deadline and you try to make the premiere. But I do remember the feeling of elation when I forgot I made the movie and I was just with the audience at the premiere and started to get terrified feeding off the energy. That was when the shit hits the fan and Darcy starts to talk through the door to the kids when he arrives. He’s coming across like he’s pragmatic and he’s trying to help them and get them out of there but you know there’s something much deeper going on. Overall, when the tension ramps up, I forget about all the complications and the technical aspects that went into making the film and I just release myself and go along for the ride. About an hour in, I lose myself and get scared shitless like everyone else.

It’s so low key in many ways, particularly in terms of the villain’s ideology. When we heard the film would feature skinhead neo-Nazi punks, we thought there would be a character that would deliver one of those typical racist rants that you see in films like American History X or This is England. But this film barely mentions race. Was that a very deliberate decision?

Absolutely. I utilised the conflicts that are in the hard core and punk rock scene through the engine of the narrative, but not so much making it about ideology. Or at least the content of different clashing ideologies. Ideology is a huge part of the movie, but it’s more focused on how ideologies are used to manipulate people and to divert and channel negative energy to where it doesn’t belong. And also to serve as an outlet for people who are seeking camaraderie and really benefit from loyalty to one another. So it’s more about the function of ideology than the content thereof.

And I wanted to make this about people shedding that ideology and affiliation that they have with certain sects or for certain plans or whatever it is. And then stripping it down to just raw human beings in a survival story. So it was more about setting the stage and utilising the Nazi skinhead culture because it perfectly fit what I needed. I didn’t need a bunch of racists for my movie but I did need the closest thing that I could get to soldiers. That was more in line with the skinhead movement. Because they are organised, they wear uniforms, they wear boots, they’re very militaristic and they tend towards an association with firearms and illegal activities and dog fighting. So it seemed like a perfect fit as far as, in the punk rock scene, not these are bad guys because of their beliefs, but really because they’re most like soldiers. And I use them against my amateur protagonists in the Ain’t Rights.

I also felt how boring would it be as a filmmaker to just talk about how bad racism is. It’s relevant in that there’s been this crazy uptick in xenophobia and racism. But it’s very political and ideological. It’s a bunch of people lower in the food chain that are fighting against the wrong people. And that hierarchy of power structure, like who’s doing the fighting and who’s doing the hating and who’s benefitting from it at the very top? And that’s the most overt political statement in Green Room. It’s more about the contemporary American power structure we have. The people at the top fuelling this hatred towards people at the bottom rungs of the economic ladder and they’re fighting against each other and against immigrants and against people of different colours or faiths of whatever it is. Really it’s just a ploy to cause chaos and division so the people at the top can keep the status quo and can enjoy the spoils of the top 5%. Darcy represents people who are self preservationists and use ideology to control other people. That’s an undertone.

Ultimately, I didn’t want to do a skinhead movie in the American South about racism. I wanted to even keep that geographically in the Pacific Northwest, where people aren’t aware of the sort of Nazi or white nationalist presence. Just so it wasn’t a tired old American southern racist story.

Actor Callum Turner (Ain’t Rights lead singer Tiger in Green Room) has nothing but praise for you and the cast. How was the experience of filming for you? In some ways, it seems like a smaller film than your last film Blue Ruin, even though the budget must have been much higher.

It was me taking my style and my voice and carrying it on. But I did hit a brick wall with the industry. Blue Ruin which I did on 80 locations and 200 scenes and it was all about the environment and a quiet film with visual storytelling, but we spanned three states so it was a very big scale. But I made that outside the system with a lot of my own resources and a team of kids who were just out of film school. That’s a lot of value you get outside of the system.

But as a father of three and someone who’s trying to break through I had to carry my style to the actual industry. And that was very difficult as far as the transition because I wanted to go union, I wanted to participate in the profits of my own work and get residuals and I also wanted to provide for people. As any filmmaker you accrue a certain amount of debt over time. You have to ask favours from everyone. You develop a neurosis. “I’m so sorry I’m going to ask you to be in my movie… I’m so sorry to ask you to move this light. It’s not in the right place.”

And this time I wanted to be a provider. To help people to come up with me and to be part of a more sustainable working environment in American filmmaking. It was rough. So things cost a lot more. For fair wages and for safety and for many reasons, it was difficult. We shot Blue Ruin in 31 days and I got the exact same amount of shooting days for Green Room for over ten times the budget. So I was kind of put through a test. I wasn’t quite ready for it. A lot of the filmmakers that came on board, it was also their biggest budget film to date. So there was a very steep learning curve that we were all on together. It was just like any other indie set. There was not enough time. Locations and schedules were really hard to manage. So for me it was brutal as far as expectations meeting reality.

But this time I had such a great cast and a much more experienced crew. So I leaned very heavily on them. I didn’t recognise how wonderful it was until after we had wrapped. I was in a whirlwind of self-consciousness and self-doubt and a lot of downward pressure from the financiers. Because I also funded my previous films and there’s no better investor than yourself because you are obligated to feed your story. For Blue Ruin, I fed the story whatever it needed. I designed it to work around the pitfalls so when we couldn’t afford 31 days, I just cut the crew for the first six. So we could shoot with like ten people.

But with Green Room, I didn’t have total control. I had to ask and lobby and be political while trying to be an artist and oversee the biggest undertaking of my career this far, so it was very difficult. Looking back on it, it was just wonderful because of the access to the talent I had and the fact that it was well-received. On the shoot, I was just so close to every little detail that I didn’t even know what I was doing. Luckily we had the script as a map and I was there for the actors. It was just so wonderful to watch them take it and run. Callum was great. The enthusiasm of the whole cast is what I fed off because while it was a tough transition in the industry, the access to the actors was wonderful and not only for skill and craft, because that’s so much of how actors interpret characters, but also how they are as people and their genuine enthusiasm for the project. I only let people in this movie who really wanted to be there. I didn’t try and force anyone. Through that we had this wonderful ensemble and the whole cast really gelled. That’s how you create an environment where you can all be vulnerable. I can make a few mistakes here and there and know that I won’t be judged and so can the actors and we’re all there for each other. That was the best part. This bubble of creative-minded people who were so supportive. So in retrospect it was a fantastic experience but during the process I was thinking it would be the end of my career.

Well it certainly won’t be! So what is next for you? Judging by some of your recent tweets, we feel like we won’t be seeing you making a superhero movie anytime soon?

I’m always open to doing anything. But my gripe with the superhero films is now all these franchises are just taking all these amazing actors and they’re unavailable for months on end, if not years. It’s not just one film, it’s a franchise that takes place over four to six years. It’s almost like TV shows. That was my gripe, just looking at availability of the actors that I wanted to work with. They’re all on fucking Marvel movies.

I really don’t like to judge movies. I don’t gravitate towards supernatural or sci-fi but when I do look back at some of my favourite films; you got John Carpenter’s The Thing, you have Blade Runner, Robocop. I love sci-fi. I love it when it’s grounded. I’m just looking for something I can execute continuing with my aesthetic and my style. It would serve the serve the story. I read a bunch of scripts that are quite great but I don’t think that I’m the best person for the job. I want things that are not necessarily gritty but textured and visual. I don’t want to be trapped in a room again with just people talking. When I do it, I do it like Green Room. I make it as tense, visual and insane as possible. So it’s about the opportunity for me to tell grounded visual stories in any genre.

I’m in the process of trying to get a film off the ground on a much bigger scale. So that’s exciting and terrifying. I hope by the end of fall I will know my fate. But I do have lots of opportunities so it’s great to know that if something doesn’t work out, I can just jump on a TV episode or whatever.

I definitely want to get back on to writing too. I need to take a break and get lots of films and just go direct but the most pure, exciting and rewarding process for me is the writing. Because you control the universe. You can have fun and make terrible mistakes and just write over them. In the tension of production, there is no opportunity for mistakes because I have not yet had the luxury of doing reshoots for any film I’ve ever done. So the stakes are high!

Green Room is out on DVD and Blu-ray now.

Callum Turner | GREEN ROOM

*Spoiler warning! This interview contains some minor spoilers for Green Room and the fate of a couple of characters*

If you don’t know the name Callum Turner just yet, you will do soon. After starring alongside Patrick Stewart, the late Anton Yelchin, as well as Imogen Poots and Joe Cole in Green Room, he’ll next be seen in blockbuster videogame adaptation Assassin’s Creed going toe to toe with Michael Fassbender. We asked Callum what it was like to work in one of the year’s best thrillers, written and directed by the incredibly talented Jeremy Saulnier, how he felt about his character’s (punk band Ain’t Rights’ lead singer Tiger) grisly end in Green Room, and got the lowdown on his character in Assassin’s Creed.

STARBURST: How did you get involved with Green Room? Had you seen writer/director Jeremy Saulnier’s previous film Blue Ruin?

Callum Turner: Blue Ruin was the reason I got involved. It was kind of a bog standard process like most jobs. It’s never that exciting. You audition for something, and it was because of Blue Ruin that I understood the tone and the measured way of acting that Jeremy liked. So I just put that down on a tape. I had a clear idea of what I wanted to do and then I spoke to Jeremy on the phone and he was really interested and obviously I was just super excited to work with him. For me it was a no-brainer. The fact I’d seen Blue Ruin was my ‘in’ and made me understand what this film was going to be like.

Did you listen to any punk to prepare for being the leader singer of the Ain’t Rights? It felt pretty natural seeing you up on stage singing ‘Nazi Punks’.

It was my research. It wasn’t really a genre that I listen to a lot but I still have the Misfits and The Damned and the straight edge guys like Black Flag and Minor Threat. I listened to a lot of Bad Brains and actually only listened to that music while I was in the role and shooting. But it was really the physicality that excited me and getting to go and tear loose basically on stage.

That day it was Halloween we shot the performance. I was absolutely shattered because we went into overtime. I think we went about three or four hours over time that night. And I was still doing the same thing. It was an intense day.

It must have been a short shooting schedule. Was it a tough shoot generally? How was it working in confined spaces with such a small cast?

We shot it chronologically so actually it worked perfectly for us. The stuff that was on location was only exterior shots. We shot everything else in a studio. So the green room was all built. Ryan (Warren Smith) the brilliant set designer built it all from scratch. The stuff in the bar with the stage, that’s all a studio so they built all that. It’s incredible work. And it’s a low budget film so to do that is pretty incredible.

But shooting with everyone, it was incredible. I’ve made brilliant friends. I see Joe (Cole) and Alia (Shawkat) and I see everyone all the time. Obviously Anton was becoming one of my best friends. I shot another movie with Imy (Imogen Poots). I went to a festival with Joe. We really made such good friends. The producers I’m friends with. Jeremy I’m friends with. It was a really beautiful experience.

Because it was my first American film, it was kind of a touching thing too. And it was Joe’s first American film too so we bonded over that.

How did you feel about Tiger’s death? Did you have to do extensive work with the actual dog? Was there a lot of prosthetics involved?

All of the above. How did I feel about it? I hated it. Because I wanted Tiger to live on for ever and ever. Joe and I actually go together on the same page of the script. We were like, “Well it’s our first American film and we die on the same page. We’re brothers forever.”

It’s a puppet dog. It’s not an actual dog. Obviously there are actual dogs for the other shots. But when it was on top of me, can you believe it, it looks like a real dog but it’s a guy with his hand up a dog’s ass on top of me. Straddling me. on my face. It was pretty insane.

We were gutted. We loved the film but once you guys got out of that room, you were dispatched so quickly!

But that’s the brilliant thing that Jeremy does with the violence. It’s so sudden. It snaps you. Mark Webber’s character that gets shot with a shotgun, it’s just so brutal because it comes out of there like no one’s business. You’re like, “OK, he’s going to save the day” and then “Bam!”. It’s the same in Blue Ruin with the guy in the trunk when he gets shot from a distance. You think he’s going to kill and then “Bam!” – Jeremy’s the master at that. It’s literally keeping you on your toes completely and utterly.

How is it to work with Jeremy?

Jeremy is the calmest director that I’ve ever worked with. He’s so relaxed and in tune with his ideas and knows exactly how he wants to shoot something. It was all very precise. And then with the acting he lets you play. He really wants you to bring what you can to the table. And I remember this one moment with Imy. It was a shot of Imy just after she’d cut Eric’s (Edelstein) belly open. This one shot of her and she’s like crying so hard. Jeremy brings her down step by step by step by step. All the levels that she could do. Right down to her not crying at all. And he really just understood how to play with an actor. And looking at Imy, I was like, “Wow, that’s some of the best acting I’ve ever seen in my life”.

Looking ahead, what can you tell us about your character Nathan in Assassin’s Creed?

Nathan is an assassin and he’s the one who’s wary of Cal, who is Fassbender’s character. I think that’s probably all I can say. But he’s the one who’s sort of suspicious and not so sure about him.

How’s it been on your first blockbuster? Are you finished on it?

We wrapped a few months ago. It was amazing. Michael Fassbender is one of my favourite actors, and Justin Kurzel, I remember I saw Snowtown in the cinema in 2011 and said, “Man, I gotta work with that guy’. That was when I’d just started acting. So to work with both of them was a real pleasure and also they’re both just the nicest people going, and that set the tone for the rest of my career. If these guys are so nice, then why can’t anyone else be?

And also it was just so good watching Justin. I think Justin is maybe more relaxed than Jeremy. They’re both super relaxed people when they’re on set. I give them equal standing in the table of being relaxed.

It’s a different beast. It’s a huge film. But Fassbender and Justin they made their names in independent film so it didn’t feel completely like what I imagine a huge franchise film to feel like.

We read that you learned a lot about life from films. What are the films that have changed your life and made you want to get into acting?

A Shane Meadows film called A Room for Romeo Brass and it’s about these two kids that are just knocking around and then this guy, 24 or 25, played by Paddy Considine befriends them because he’s in love with one of the boys’ sisters. And then he becomes really nasty and he’s obviously crazy and it takes one of the boys’ dads to sort it all out at the end of the film. It’s a really beautiful, beautiful film and I learned from that film not to trust people that want to hang around with kids. When I was growing up, there was a few people that wanted to do that and I was always wary of them and wouldn’t get involved in those situations. But you can learn from anything. You can learn from Billy Elliot that as a working class kid you can do whatever you want. That’s what films do. That’s the beauty of films.

You mentioned Shane Meadows there. Who is top of your wish list to work with?

The list is endless. Some people are dead on the list. I still want to work with them though. I’m not giving up hope yet.

You mentioned two British films. Have you got a career plan? Would you like to do a mix of British and American films in the future or will you just see where the world takes you?

Just see where the world takes me. I don’t see any difference between British film and American film. For me, it’s about the filmmaker. There’s no way that Shane Meadows isn’t any less worthy than Jeremy Saulnier and vice versa. It’s just about working with interesting people and nice people and finding good roles and good stories to tell.

Green Room is out now on Blu-ray and DVD.

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Paul Register | STAN LEE EXCELSIOR AWARDS

Paul Register is the founder and organiser of the Stan Lee Excelsior Awards, an annual comic book award voted for by school pupils. After this year’s ceremony we spoke to Paul to find out more about them.

STARBURST: How did the Stan Lee Excelsior Awards first begin?

Paul Register: They began in 2011, as an offshoot of the long-running Sheffield Children’s Book Awards. Initially designed as a Sheffield-only award, we attracted 17 schools that year. That number included half a dozen schools from outside Sheffield who had heard rumours of a graphic novels award for teens and asked if they could take part.

How have the awards grown from there?

The year after, I realised that there was a lot of hunger for something graphic novels-related in school libraries. I started a proper website and invited all schools in the UK to register, and 77 schools signed up. The award has grown every year since then, culminating in over 250 schools participating in 2016.

How did you get Stan the Man’s permission to use his name for the award?

I emailed him! Simple as that! I explained what I was planning and one of his staff got back to me and said that Stan would be fine with that. We even sent him one of our t-shirts a couple of years ago!

Have you altered or refined the ceremony over the years?

The awards ceremony developed a good, solid format when it was held at Ecclesfield School in Sheffield every year. Now the ceremony is a touring event and being held in different parts of the country, it will be adapted to suit the environment it’s in. The basic style and format will always be the same though. It’s all about celebrating the shortlisted books, having a lot of fun and trying to inspire kids and empower them to pick up a graphic novel.

How do you go about selecting each year’s shortlist?

I compile a longlist of interesting-looking graphic novels throughout the year (usually consisting of 70-80 titles) and then that list is sent out to the award’s team of judges. They then highlight the titles they have really loved and “black ball” the ones they feel aren’t suitable or good enough. At the start of December, we narrow that list further still and choose eight books for our new shortlist. The shortlist itself has to be broad enough so that there’s something there for all readers in the 11-16 age bracket, irrespective of gender, race, social class or reading ability. We always choose not only what we think are good books but which will actually appeal to teenagers. We also want a good balance of genres across the eight books, which is why you’ll never see eight superhero graphic novels on there. We want to open kids’ eyes to new stuff.

With popular film adaptations bringing comics to a wider audience, do you feel that reading them is gaining greater social acceptability?

I suppose it’s got to, to a certain degree, but I’m not convinced there’s a massive link between the current Hollywood superhero craze and a marked increase in reading graphic novels. I’m sure there was a boost in sales of Captain America graphic novels when Civil War was in the cinemas, but I think it should be a lot more than it is. And that’s where school libraries (and awards like this) come in. I think there’s a hunger out there and it’s our job to cater to that and help the kids who’ve seen those movies make that step into reading more.

How much of an impact do you feel the award has had on helping comics become an acceptable part of school libraries?

It’s now the biggest book award for graphic novels in the country and has gained a certain respect for the numbers it attracts and the impact it clearly has on student reading.

What comics and graphic novels would you recommend to librarians to begin a school’s collection and how would you expand it from there?

I get contacted by school librarians all the time who ask for advice on what to buy. I initially guide them to previous shortlists on the website. The top three of every year is a guarantee of popularity. I also have a page on my personal website dedicated to graphic novel recommendations. Librarians can always email for a more bespoke list as well, because no two schools are the same.

Do you have any plans for how the awards will develop in future years?

The award will be changing quite dramatically this autumn, although the basic format of an eight book shortlist and students filling in a Rating Form will remain the same. I can’t say too much at this stage but there will be a redesigned website coming over the next couple of months.

You can find out more about the awards on their website, about Paul Register on his own website and follow him on Twitter.

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Michael Madsen | REAL DETECTIVE

The hugely talented Michael Madsen is someone who is famous to so many people for so many different roles. Sure, his iconic turn as Mr. Blonde in Quentin Tarantino’s Reservoir Dogs may be the first thing that some think of when looking at Madsen’s career, but his CV is stacked full of a whole host of various projects and pictures. With Madsen having played the role of Texas Ranger Phil Ryan in True Crime’s based-on-true-events Real Detective crime reenactment show, we caught up with him to discuss this latest gig, plus we get into his career and why he thinks he’s one of the most underutilized talents in the industry.

STARBURST: How did you end up involved in Real Detective in the first place?

Michael Madsen: I’m usually called upon to play villains – that’s usually the way that everyone thinks of me – and The Hateful Eight certainly isn’t going to change that situation. I’ve wanted to cross over to be a leading man or be the hero for a long time, and it’s very hard to break down. Once people set their mind that you’re a certain kind of character then it’s pretty hard to get out of it. I wanted to do Real Detective because it was my chance to show that I’m very capable of playing that.

Were you familiar with Phil Ryan or the case in question itself before you did the show?

No, I wasn’t familiar with it at all. I know how to play a cop, I know how to play a detective, and I think I have a pretty good read on that, but I didn’t know about that particular case until I got the script. And the fact that it was true is really kind of chilling. It makes it more interesting and more fun if you’re doing something that’s a true story, if you’re playing a person who really went through this. I think I would’ve made a great Whitey Bulger , you know, just because he’s somebody who lived and somebody who actually did those things. It’s fun to play a real character. Sonny Black was a real character from Donnie Brasco. I like to play somebody that was real.

How do you as an actor approach it differently when playing a real person as oppose to just somebody of complete fiction?

You can learn as much as you want about the person you’re gonna be, but… If the person was Irish, I’d do an Irish accent. If the person was Italian, I’d give it my best Italian. There’s only so far you can go. In the end, you’ve gotta be yourself. I don’t like to do imitations of people, so usually I’m just myself in a role.

Did you do any research for Real Detective or did you just go with what was in the script?

I’ve played cops before, I grew up with cops, and a lot of my father’s friends were cops. I know how to play that sort of character – you have to have a duality of personality. I just kind of go with the material and let the material tell the story.

We’ve never met the real-life Phil Ryan, and this is based on true events, but there’s still plenty of ‘Michael Madsen’ to how the character comes across. You still always manage to make a lot of yourself shine through in whatever role you take on…

Well, I don’t like to disappear in a part, you know. If you think about Humphrey Bogart, a lot of people went to see a Humphrey Bogart movie not because they were interested in the story so much – they just wanted to see him! I think there’s a lot to say about an actor. They’re doing all these remakes lately, like Ben-Hur. You can’t remake Ben-Hur without Charlton Heston. You can’t remake The Getaway without Steve McQueen. They’re doing all these remakes now with these actors that aren’t very interesting, and the picture isn’t going to work. I know The Magnificent Seven’s coming out, and I don’t know why they’re even bothering to do a remake of such a wonderful film. You can’t do a remake of The Magnificent Seven – it’s impossible! I don’t know why anyone would try to do it in the first place. I mean, I would’ve liked to have been one of the seven, sure . If anyone called me I’d have got on a horse in a second, but at the same time I have to admit that I don’t know why they try to do that. Actors, you know, certain actors have a certain presence on screen. If you don’t have that you’re just going to disappear. I think that the studios and, for the most part, the industry is starting to not remember that, not realise that. They’re putting good looking people in parts that are very unmemorable, people who don’t have a star quality.

You’re one of those actors who certainly always manages to stand out in every project…

Sometimes I stand out too much ! You don’t wanna overwhelm the lead actor if you have a smaller part. If you overwhelm the lead actor then they’ll cut you out, you’ll be edited out. So you have to be very careful with your presence. If you know how to carry yourself, you have to be careful with it, man.

Is that something that you learnt over time then, seeing as you are a very dominant presence on screen?

I never consciously tried to take a picture, I never consciously tried to steal a show. I come in and I do the best I can, and if it ends up stealing the moment then it’s not something I did on purpose or something I’m trying to do. I’m just doing my job. And if anything, I think I’ve been underrated and I think I’ve been undersold. I’m mystified why I’m not on a series, why I don’t have my own show. I’m mystified why I don’t get bigger roles in some of the bigger films. I think there’s a real animosity in Hollywood towards an actor like me – a Christopher Walken, a Mickey Rourke, a Dennis Hopper. Some of these people are big enough that they end up overwhelming the thing that they’re in because they haven’t been properly used. I just think that there’s a misconception about me and whether I’m difficult and whether I’m this and that. I’m none of those things, I’m a team player. And I would like to think that the pictures would make that obvious to people. You don’t believe me, but I go through long periods of being unemployed, and I’m not getting the type of material that I should be. If you put my face on the side of a bus and put me in a detective show, that thing would be on for five years and go into syndication without any doubt. I don’t know what I have to do to convince people about that.

Do you feel that there was a certain moment in your career that gave people that perception, such as playing Mr. Blonde in Reservoir Dogs?

You know, I think it’s a conglomeration of Reservoir Dogs, The Getaway… I think I was a little bit more convincing than usual. They then think, “You know, you couldn’t be that good, you must really be like that.” So people have this conception, they need a killer, they need a bad guy, so let’s get Michael Madsen. People are very lazy. If there’s a Matthew McConaughey-type part, they’re not going to think of Michael Madsen. And that’s a pity, that’s sad. I could’ve done a lot of pictures that were bigger, and I could’ve done a good job.

Are there any pictures particularly that you 1) regret taking on, and 2) regret turning down?

I think I missed out on things more than a few times, but I think that was more because I didn’t have a publicist; I didn’t have that machine behind me. I never realised that you have to have a machine behind you working to make those things happen. Because I didn’t know that, I didn’t have the people behind me to push me to get a nomination or to get something nice like that. I thought that if you were good then it came automatically, but it doesn’t really work like that. All of these things are bought and paid for, they’re pushed by publicists and producers. I never had that team behind me because I didn’t understand how it worked. There’s a lot of pictures that I regret doing but there’s no point in mentioning them because it’s over, it’s in the past. I’ve been on my own for a long time. I could’ve done a lot better if I had some people behind me, but I honestly didn’t know how to do it.

You’ve done so many different things over the years – from TV shows, to small films that have blown up huge like Reservoir Dogs, to major blockbusters like Donnie Brasco and Bond, to kids’ movies like Free Willy, to video games, to superhero stuff – but what’s your favourite thing to sink your teeth into?

I’d like to do some bigger pictures; I’d like to make the transition that Humphrey Bogart when he did The Maltese Falcon. He went from being a bad guy to being a leading man in one picture by John Huston. That’s what I need, I need a big push like that. I need a very well-known, respected director to take me in his arms and realise that I can sell a big picture. I need a Die Hard or something that could point me in a new direction. I need a Maltese Falcon or someone to take me out of that rut and put me in the front of the parade, like Liam Neeson did with Taken. Some of these guys have been able to reorganize their career with one role.

You say that a mixture of pictures in the early-mid ‘90s pigeonholed you. Obviously Mr. Blonde threw you massively into the public eye…

Yeah, Mr. Blonde was a pretty big thing, it still is now. There’s a lot of pictures that really big time actors have made that nobody remembers and nobody cares about. Then there’s this little picture called Reservoir Dogs that I did and they still talk about today. I would’ve liked that somebody took a better look at Species or Mulholland Falls or Free Willy or Thelma & Louise. It’s weird the ones that stand out from my career.

The first Species was brilliant but then the second was a major let down to many people…

No, the second one was horrible. The second one I shouldn’t have done. It was a terrible script, I really wish I hadn’t done it. I don’t know what they were thinking but they should’ve featured me more as the lead of the film. The fucking thing is very confusing.

The first one is very much a classic of its time with a great cast, and it’s likely a bit overlooked in some quarters.

Yeah. And I could do another one of those easy but nobody calls me.

A lot of people obviously do tie you to Quentin Tarantino, though. Do you think that he could do something to spin the perception of you in one of his future films if he positioned you as more of a ‘good guy’?

Well I’ve talked to Quentin about that. Quentin created me, let’s face it. Or we created each other. I can only take a role if he writes something for me. He likes to do his own material, he likes to have his own point of view. It’s not like I can call him up and tell him what to write – it doesn’t really work that way. Nine times out of ten, I don’t really see him unless we’re working on a picture.

From what you’ve said, do you think that things may have been different for you, or the perception of you would’ve been different, if Quentin would’ve cast you in the Harvey Keitel or Tim Roth role in Reservoir Dogs then?

Well, yeah, I could see that happening. But, you know, he was dead set on me as Mr. Blonde. That’s what he wanted me to do. I’m glad I did it, it’s a great film, it’s a memorable picture. That’s a movie that’s going to be remembered until the end of time. How many actors can say that they were in a movie that memorable? Not that many. I mean I’m in The Hateful Eight, and if he could have any actor in the whole world that he wanted and I’m one of them, one of the eight, that’s a pretty big honour.

To a certain fanbase, you play a big part in getting people in to see a picture. We don’t know if you underplay it or don’t appreciate it, but there are a lot of people out there who go to pictures to see you in them.

I just wish some of these people were running a studio !

You mentioned how you go through periods of being unemployed, but from the outside looking in you always seem to be busy. What else do you have coming up that you can tell us about?

I’m just having a break right now. I’m just sitting back and looking for something. I’m looking for The Maltese Falcon, man, I’m looking for something great.

The Michael Madsen-starring episode of Real Detective – titled Redemption – airs on True Crime (Freeview 60, Sky 185, Freesat 143) on Thursday, September 15th at 10pm.

NIck Jongerius & Charlotte Beaumont | THE WINDMILL

With The Windmill (formerly The Windmill Massacre) having screened at this year’s FrightFest, we were lucky enough to catch up with director Nick Jongerius and star Charlotte Beaumont to discuss the film.

STARBURST: What’s the premise behind The Windmill?

Nick Jongerius: I’m terrified of windmills! I was born on a street called ‘The Saw Windmill Street’ and there was this really creepy mill 500 metres away from my house. That fascinated me. When I moved to where I live now, I noticed there were other windmills as well. It was like they were following me. I thought maybe I should do something with this – I was contemplating what to use for my feature debut, and I thought windmills. A windmill’s like a machine, I can work with that, and work it into a story.

It’s very Dutch as well…

Nick: That was also the aim, to find these Dutch icons like clocks, dykes and the windmill, and then drench them in blood, basically!

You’ve turned your nightmare into everyone else’s now…

Nick: Let’s hope so!

We watched the concept trailer on YouTube, and the style and setting have changed slightly in the film. What was the thought process behind that?

Nick: When I did the concept trailer I didn’t think of the story in depth, I just did it. I cooked up this short story – it was a study of violence. I’m fascinated by violence, how people come to violence. I thought let’s try to do that. Then it got picked up, and then I was like what am I going to do now? People are demanding something! And then I started to think ok, if I’m going to make a film, although it’s the horror genre, I’d like to put in as many of my own interests and fears as possible. For example, the Japanese character in the film is because I’m a big fan of Japan. The culture and the way they handle death. Also, I was aiming for a Grimm fairy tale as a big thing for the film. I didn’t just want to make a down and dirty horror film – I wanted something else in it as well. I was very nervous about the fact it changed so much as the concept trailer was so popular – it’s been viewed two million times. I hope people don’t think I’m taking the piss, it’s not the case. When I worked it out the story changed, the setting changed, almost everything changed except for the windmill.

The main character is Australian – what’s the reason behind that?

Nick: We – Chris the scriptwriter and I – were talking about giving the characters interesting backstories. For me, the girl, an innocent girl on the run from her past, connected with me. I thought, “Okay, if she’s on the run let’s get her from a place far away” – and then Australia came about. It’s not that I have a fascination with Australia or anything like that – it’s based on distance.

How did you prepare for that, Charlotte? Is that the first time you played someone from another country?

Charlotte Beaumont: I think it is, actually. I’ve done things in an American accent before – quite comfortably in plays and stuff – but in film and television usually I play someone from England. I’ve never even touched on Australian before, but I loved the challenge. It also made me really nervous. When I met with Nick he said “She doesn’t have to be Australian. If you’re not comfortable with it, you can make it anything you like,” but I thought let’s just commit to it and do it. I feel quite comfortable with accents. If I could nail it and really do the work for it…

Did you listen to the accent, or round up your Aussie mates?

Charlotte: I found all the Australians I could! There’s a brilliant accent website called I.D.E.A. and they’ve got loads of dialects. You can listen to loads of people talking about their lives in their accents, so I listened to that. Then I got a vocal coach to record every single one of my lines in the Australian accent and I’d just listen to that over and over again and just talk in an Australian accent all the time. Once I got those lines down and I knew the sounds, I started improvising in it so I could just talk in it, which was helpful. There was some improvisation on the day and if I’d prepped less I don’t think I could’ve… it’s really daunting! We also had Noah Taylor with us, who was Australian. So I could ask Noah “Does that sound dodgy?” and he’d be like, “It’s 90 per cent there!”

In the film, everyone seems to be punished for their sins. Do you believe in a purgatory or a Hell?

Charlotte: I don’t think I do. Everyone’s version of sin is very different. In some people’s version of Hell you can go there for having sex before marriage. It’s a hard one to judge, so I’m not going to commit to any form of purgatory. I feel like if I don’t believe it then it won’t happen to me!

Nick: I chose the Grimm fairy tale story because I thought if I take this too seriously then it will be a story about ‘do I believe in death or not’. Choosing the Grimm fairy tale approach, it’s more about good and bad – good versus evil – then it is about believing in purgatory. If you ask me personally, I think there is something there, but it’s probably totally different to what we would expect.

Charlotte: I think karma is also a big thing. It’s paying for what you’ve done and getting what you put out there back. I’m quite a big believer in karma.

Nick: Also with The Miller you get a chance to redeem yourself. Takashi is genuinely sorry about what he did. That’s your ticket out of here. If you’re not willing to face your worst secrets then The Miller gets you!

Charlotte: That’s nice about Jennifer, actually, as Jennifer never really shows repentance. She’s such a loving person, she cares deeply about people, yet this one terrible thing she’s done just highlights that not everyone’s perfect.

Nick: The shot of Jennifer and her father is one of the things I’m most proud of. Scene description removed to avoid spoilers!

What’s the future for The Miller? Will there be a sequel or franchise if it’s successful?

Nick: Probably. Let’s see if it’s successful first. If there is a demand then there will be another Miller story, but I’m not sure if I’ll be ready to direct something like that again. I really liked the Abe character and that is somebody I’d like to explore more. For the moment I’m working on a sci-fi thriller and the script is already finished. That for me is the next step, to get away a little bit from being a horror director! I’m comfortable with horror as I love it, but as a filmmaker I’d like to explore other things as well.

Do you have a favourite icon or character?

Nick: Freddy Krueger. I’m jealous of the whole concept of A Nightmare on Elm Street. It’s so unbelievably unique and perfect. Using nightmares…

Charlotte: I’m a bit rubbish with horror films. I like being in them but I don’t have a strong enough stomach to watch them. The Miller’s my favourite character!

Have you managed to catch any films while you’ve been here?

Charlotte: This is my first day!

Nick: For me I thought the Karaoke Crazies was this perfect little gem. It’s not a horror film. It’s a beautiful little story, a little bit Jean Pierre-Jeunet.

Nick, you mentioned you’re working on a sci-fi thriller. Charlotte what are your next plans?

Charlotte: I’m still doing Broadchurch at the moment… Broadchurch Series Three.  That’s filming until October.

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