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Showing posts with label Wolf Creek. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Wolf Creek. Show all posts

Farmerville

Thursday, November 11, 2010

Screenwriter and all-out legend Todd Farmer wants to swap Meter Maids for machetes. The Hollywood heavyweight is discussing plans with studio executives to film five horror films on the Gold Coast, Australia over the next three years and is meeting with studio executives to make it happen. Farmer, who penned horrors My Bloody Valentine, Jason X and the new Nicolas Cage film Drive Angry, arrived on the Coast on Monday with producer Kerri Hill-Grisham and over the next two weeks they will pitch the projects to executives on the GC and in Sydney.
``The idea is we would like to take movies that you can make in the Hollywood system and bring them here,'' he said.
``I've seen some great movies come from Australia, Wolf Creek being one of my favourites.
``We've three completed scripts and two outlines that are fully fleshed out and I've worked through with director Patrick Lussier (My Bloody Valentine, Dracula 2000).''

Farmer said the Gold Coast was the perfect location to base the productions as it had `every location you can imagine'. Farmer and Hill-Grisham are also on the Coast for the Gold Coast Film Festival and on Sunday will conduct a seminar on Bringing Australian Stories to Hollywood – but they nearly didn't make it here.
``Qantas threw us a few curve balls but we got here,'' Farmer said.
``We had delayed flights, lost luggage and we were supposed to be here on Sunday and arrived Monday.''

A lover of genre films, Farmer said he was looking forward to seeing Gold Coast crime-thriller Bad Behaviour at the film festival on Saturday night. I, on the other hand, am looking forward to wearing the highly superior Friday The 13th shirt he gave me. Why? Because that’s the kind of awesome shit he does. In other news, for the full lo-down on Farmer and one of his projects with Hill-Grisham, read my previous interview here.

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Byrne, baby Byrne

Tuesday, November 9, 2010

Despite a disappointing weekend at the Australian box office, I still reckon The Loved Ones is one of the best Aussie flicks you will see this year and so, I shall continue to harp on about it. This time that harping comes in the form of an exclusive chat with writer/director/producer extraordinaire Sean Byrne. As you can see from the interview, he is quite the lovely chap and definitely a director who is going to tackle a lot of genres with gusto. But what stood out to me most about Byrne is his sheer passion for movies and that, my dears, is something we can all relate to. Judge for yourself below.

Movie Mazzupial: Firstly, where did you come up with this idea? Did you have a really bad experience at your formal?
Sean Byrne: (Laughs) No, it was remarkably normal. Maybe that’s why I had to think of something crazy. It stemmed from desperation really, I had written a couple of screenplays that were too offbeat so I thought I’d have a crack at a horror film because I knew they sold internationally. There’s also a lot of mediocre horror out there, so I thought I could make something good with characterisations that make it stand out from the horror pack.

MM: And the characters, you have created some truly demented ones, particularly Lola and her daddy. It feels like they could go down as iconic horror characters like Freddy Krueger, Mike Myers or Mick Taylor, is that what you set out to do?
SB: These films thrive on the marketability of the villains. I was really looking for some kind of signature and I’ve never seen a father daughter torture team. I wanted to cut through the clutter and the thought of pink satin would be so vibrant and arresting. My 5-year-old niece was going through that stage of development where she’s thinking her prince will come and is obsessed with glitter and tiaras. I thought it would be interesting to take that innocence and mesh it with the awkwardness of being a teenager and raging hormones. Then when it came to her father, I did a lot of research on Ed Gein and Jeffrey Dahmer. Especially Ed Gein, he’s the psychological profile behind The Texas Chainsaw Massacre, Psycho and Silence of the Lambs. Dahmer now isn’t someone that has been tapped into which is unusual given all the horror films out there and some of the things he did with the head drilling.

MM: Now, speaking of head drilling, that scene was a particularly . . .I’m not sure memorable is the right word, but it stays with you.

SB: It’s one of my favourite parts of the film because there’s no safety net. I love watching it with an audience because they have no idea what’s coming. With the film we had one foot in commercial territory and one foot dangling over a cliff, and that’s the cliff part. I was looking to write a horror film and what finally sat me down to write it was the idea of `what if I merged Sam Raimi’s Evil Dead, with Carrie and brought the prom to a cabin in the woods?’ I studied Misery too. Princess has Carrie’s vulnerability, Annie Wilkes’ from Misery’s sadism and the spoilt quality of Veruca Salt from Charlie and the Chocolate Factory. It’s a horror film, but it’s not an ordeal for the audience. It’s a rock `n’ roll horror film with a sense of humour.

MM: (Laughs) That’s quite a combination. It looks like you went into the shoot very prepared.
SB: Yes, I came up with 250 page scrap book which had film references, case studies and palette references. I think Kathy Bates’ performance is so brilliant as she’s a woman who’s obsessed with a guy and even though he’s polite when he knocks back her advances, she goes off the deep end. I also looked at the females in films like Carrie, Peter Jackson’s Heavenly Creatures, Natural Born Killers, Single White Female, and got a lot of ideas from that.

MM: The casting process, what was that like? You manage to draw out some incredible performances, Robin McLeavy and John Brumpton in particular, but Xavier Samuel too is fantastic and despite only having a few lines of dialogue, he’s someone that you’re really rooting for to escape.
SB: I was really happy with the casting, we just went through the traditional process. I tried not to go in with too many preconceptions. There’s a point when the writer has to let go and the responsibility goes to the actors who walk in the room and elevate it beyond what you expect. If you don’t care, then you don’t scare. I was adamant in casting actors who understood the craft and I’m really proud of everyone that’s in the film. We talked a lot about not treating this as a horror film, because so often it’s considered disposable. The situation is on the page and by treating it with the integrity of a drama . . . it doesn’t matter what type of film you’re making it comes down to the authenticity of the performance.MM: In the film, there’s both nail-biting suspense and cringe-worthy gore, how important was it to find that balance as opposed to just having another torture porn film?
SB: It was vital. The key word is fun and I wanted it to be a fun, freaky, midnight rollercoaster ride. The audience need to be able to take a breath and have a laugh and prepare for the next white-knuckle onslaught. I could push the extreme nature of the film if it was minced with a jet black comedy sensibility. It becomes deliciously warped.

MM: This is your first feature, it has gone on to be select at over 20 international film festivals, won a swag of prestigious awards and the critics are frothing over it, could you have ever expected a response like this?

SB: I didn’t expect it, but I was definitely aiming for it. I was meticulous in my preparation; we didn’t have a lot of time to shoot and, like most Australian films, not a giant budget. It’s really rewarding to see audiences responding to the beats that had been planned. I was trying to never to be a slave to the horror formula and instead study horror films and be inspired by the work of Tarantino, Paul Thomas Anderson and Sam Raimi and Disney. We shot in 27 days on a budget just under the 4 million mark, which isn’t too bad, but I wanted a beautiful candy-coloured slick look to it. I’m big fan of Bruckheimer films, I think they have a lot of integrity to them because they say `I’m here to entertain’. The have such a perfect sheen to them that I want to get out of my seat and lick the screen. I think it would taste really sweat. Having that Hollywood glossiness to it helped pushed the horror a bit.

MM: How much of that sheen and glossiness can be attributed to your background in commercials and short filmmaking?
SB: Yeah, definitely, a lot of it.MM: When a debut film gets the response like this has, the Hollywood offers come flying in. Is that the situation you’re in at the moment or have you been batting them off to work on another one of your own projects?
SB: I’m right in the middle of writing another project, but this film has opened a lot of doors for me, both in Australia and in Hollywood. I’ve been sent a lot of scripts and I’m attached to quite a few projects. It’s very difficult to get money for a film, so I need to have a few going at the same time. I’m more interested in material. The next original thing of mine I’m working on is a bent home invasion thriller. That’s the great thing about genre, because it affords filmmakers a great luxury. There’s already an audience and they know the formula, so you’re able to bend it.

MM: Just before I started speaking to you I was reading an article that described you as the `new voice in Aussie horror’. How do you respond to something like that?
SB: I just love cinema and I feel like I’ve got a good range as a director. I want to work in all genres. Horror is a great way to start because so many of my heroes have started in horror, like Spielberg, Coppola, Raimi and Jackson who really got to stamp their own personal style on the genre. I just wanted to create something fresh.

MM: Since Saw and Wolf Creek, there seems to have been a real rebirth of Australian horror, is that something you consciously wanted to be part of?

SB: I wrote the first draft of The Loved Ones before Saw came out, that’s how long it takes to make these things. I knew Wolf Creek opened doors for Australian horror filmmakers because it proved that well-crafted Aussie horror has an audience. But we’re very different films. Wolf Creek was based on a building sense of dread, while we’re a glam horror film. We’re mirror balls and they’re the desert.The Loves Ones is out now.

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Love hurts, love scars

Tuesday, November 2, 2010

Roy Orbison once sung about how “love hurts, love scars''. That sentiment has never been more fitting than in the new Australian horror film The Loved Ones, where love also nails your feet to the floor and pours salt into your wounds. Literally.

Still blaming himself for the death of his father, 17-year-old Brent (Twilight alumni Xavier Samuel, above) takes solace in smoking dope and the affections of his girlfriend Holly (Victoria Thaine). But after he turns down his classmate Lola's (Robin McLeavy) invitation to the prom, things get considerably worse. Turns out Lola, nicknamed Princess by her warped father known only as Daddy (John Brumpton), isn't quite as innocent as she seems. Rather, she's a psychotic combination of Annie Wilkes from Misery, Carrie from, well, Carrie and Hedy from Single White Female. Lola gets her daddy to abduct Brent and bring him back to their isolated home where they have their own `prom' complete with torture, cannibalism and things you never want to see done with a drill. Ever.

Coming from a background in commercials and short films, writer/director Sean Byrne has made an incredibly stylish and original feature in The Loved Ones. From the arresting pink satin of Lola's dress to the glitter and sparkle of the demented prom, he has made a glossy product to rival the sheen of any Hollywood production. Considering The Loved Ones was made on a budget of just $4 million makes the feat even more impressive.But what really separates it from the mediocre horror mob (besides the kick ass Aussie soundtrack) is Byrne's characterisation. The sadistic and severely insane team of Lola and her daddy will go down as iconic horror movie villains to rival the likes of Michael Myers, Freddy Krueger and Jason Voorhees. Of course, they would be nothing without the talents of McLeavy and Brumpton. McLeavy's performance, in particular, is reminiscent of John Jarratt's turn as Mick Taylor in Wolf Creek. Despite limited dialogue, Samuel too is amiable as the protagonist and his pain, both physical and emotional, draws the audience behind his plight to escape the duo and seek bloody revenge.

Given the success of The Loved Ones overseas, so far it has been officially selected in over 20 international film festivals, comparisons between other Aussie horror success stories like Saw and Wolf Creek are inevitable. While it too has a black humour sensibility that is iconicly Australian, it also manages to find that rare balance between gut-wrenching gore and white-knuckle suspense so many other filmmakers seem to overshoot.

The Loved Ones is a rock 'n' roll horror film unlike anything this country has seen in a long time. It's a glam, gory and goofy experience that for once is not an ordeal for horror audiences to sit through.

The Loved Ones is out in cinemas tomorrow and you can watch the trailer below. Stay posted for my exclusive chat with writer/director Sean Byrne coming in the next few days.

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"That's not a knife"

Sunday, May 9, 2010

Still riding on the fear he generated as Wolf Creek's Mick Taylor, John Jarratt (above) is taking a knife to the Australian film industry.

In fact, he wants to lead the genre revolution with his new film Savages Crossing. He wrote, produced and stars in the thriller which opens in cinemas this Thursday. It follows a group of strangers who are forced to take shelter in an outback roadhouse while a flood rages around them. However, the tension inside the building becomes greater than the threat outside.

Jarratt says he hopes the film is another step away from the `dark and depressing dramas' Australian cinema has become synonymous with in recent years.
"We've created the market for it,'' he says.
"A lot of the Government funded films in the last 12-years have been boring, coming of age dramas or smack films.
"Myself, Jack Thompson and people like Shane Jacobson, we said `enough of this' and we've started trying to make films that Australian people want to see.
"The lunatics have taken back the asylum.''
Above: Jarrat in a scene from Savages Crossing and again, top above.

Jarratt says he looks up to actors like Anthony LaPaglia, especially after his work on Balibo recently, because it shows `experienced and true Aussie actors have got off their bums and put something back in'. Jarratt has become renowned for playing `the villain' after his chilling turn as Mick Taylor in the hit Wolf Creek and says he is once again the bad guy in Savages Crossing.
"It wasn't highly intentional,'' he says.
"I do write with people in mind and he, the character, wasn't that bad: just one of the crew really and more of a bumbling fool.
"But by the end he had to become the menacing person with a gun in his hand.
"He's quite mean and reacts badly.''

Jarratt says people have been `hanging' for him to play another villain.
"I'm playing another maniac and they've been waiting a long time, since Wolf Creek,'' he says.
"He's not evil like Mick Taylor though, he's just a drug addled fool.''

Jarratt raised the film's $3.6 million budget and says so far audiences have been `very supportive'. You can check out Savages Crossing trailer below and click here for all on the dets on session times etc.

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Forget coffee, lets breed baby!

Monday, November 3, 2008

It's no secret I'm a fan of horror movies and the latest Australia offering has got me peeing my panties with excitement. The fact it's yet another juicy Australian production may also have a lot to do with my excitement. Regardless, it's great to see Australian films being made that aren't about the outback or recovering drug addicts or coming of age. One of my favourite films is Wolf Creek and I was a fan of the Saw franchise (until they started producing a thousand bastardisations) and Dying Breed is from the creators of those. Dying Breed interweaves the two most fascinating icons of Tasmanian history: the extinct Tasmanian tiger and 'The Pieman' (aka Alexander Pearce) who was hanged for cannibalism in 1824. Basically four people searching for the Tasmanian Tiger in the wilderness stumble across the descendants of `Pieman'. Terror ensues. The film stars two of the biggest names in Australian horror- Leigh Whannell one of the stars and creators of Saw and Nathan Phillips from Wolf Creek. The trailer for this film is pretty darn freaky (to say the least) and hopefully its as successful as its predecessors. Decent horror movies are few and far between these days but in recent years Aussie horror films have struck a rare balance between being critical applauded and commercially successful overseas, a rare feat especially within said genre. Keep the quality Aussie horror coming!
View the trailer here:
http://au.youtube.com/watch?v=72tfEhFcIS8

Above: Image from Dying Breed set

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