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‘Beyond Skyline’ Interview with Director/Writer Liam O’Donnell

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beyond skyline

If you hadn’t heard that Skyline was getting a sequel, I’m not entirely surprised. The 2010 film received negative reviews from critics and mostly slid under everyone else’s radar. The sequel, Beyond Skyline, on the other hand, has actually been gaining momentum – and for all the right reasons.

Beyond Skyline is an apt title for the sequel. It doesn’t quite continue the story from the first film – which Beyond Skyline  writer/director Liam O’Donnell co-wrote – but instead it rotates the focus in an entirely different direction. It moves beyond the isolated scope of the first film and provides a much needed burst of over-the-top action.

Let’s start with the cast, for example. O’Donnell stacks the roster with literal heavy-hitters Frank Grillo (The Purge: Anarchy/Election Year, Captain America: Civil War) and Iko Uwais (The Raid: Redemption). Actresses Bojana Novakovic (The Hallow) and Pamelyn Chee (Prescient) are a reminder that being a total badass is often born from protective affection. They’re a fierce strength throughout the frenzy.

Iko Uwais brought along Yayan Ruhian (the incredible and feverishly brutal Mad Dog from The Raid: Redemption) to join the team where they both served as Action Choreographer. Let that sink in for a minute. Now imagine them fighting aliens. Okay. Cool.

Beyond Skyline is a wild and entertaining ride with everything from war zone combat to crazy Kaiju battles, all delivered with impeccable visual effects. But if the hack-and-slash isn’t enough for you (I don’t understand you, but, alright), rest assured that there’s actually a lot of heart to the film. For a movie that’s all about an alien invasion, it’s deeply human.

Check out the trailer below and read on for my interview with first time director/writer Liam O’Donnell. You can check out Beyond Skyline on VOD starting December 15th.

KM: So, as we know, Skyline had mixed reviews…

LD: They weren’t just bad, they were vicious. Even within the negatives for Beyond Skyline there’s not the level of vitriol which, I do think, merits of the first film aside, which I co-wrote and produced and am proud of, it was such a weird acquisition and promotional process and they kind of sold the movie for what it wasn’t. I’m still fighting this fight – always – with marketing and I take a pretty big leadership role in all the poster design and everything. You have to sell the movie for what it is, don’t try to dupe the audience. That’s some 1992 stuff, you can’t do that anymore. I love the trailers that Zealot did for us with Vertical, their trailers just kind of perfectly captured what the movie is for me. If you liked the trailer, you’ll like the movie. It’s not telling you that the trailer’s some other story. So that’s always what I’m very sensitive of, I just want the people who are going to like it, I want them to be happy. I’m not trying to make a movie for everybody. But I want to make it for the fans of this stuff, to really hit their spot.

KM: I was talking to a friend of mine about Beyond Skyline – who hasn’t seen it – and I was telling him a bit about how it’s got Iko Uwais and Frank Grillo and it’s this exciting, enjoyably cheeky alien action movie, and he said “that sounds like it’s way more fun than it has any right to be”, and it really is.

LD: That’s the pull quote on the poster! “More fun than it has any right to be” with a shaking fist [laughs]

via IMDb

KM: Beyond Skyline is your directorial debut, and you’ve said that you put in everything that you wanted to do in a movie. There’s so much going on, so I’m curious, was there anything that didn’t make it in that you were keen to try and incorporate or anything that came along during the directing process?

LD: Yeah, there’s a few deleted scenes and deleted ideas that I had in the script, that I think would have been cool if I could have made them work, and one of them was to expand the idea of the light into an actual frequency, so it wasn’t just your eyes but it was anything you heard, that they figured that out and it became a bigger part in how they could avoid being caught by it. But the scene that set it up was the last scene we shot in Toronto in Lower Bay and I just didn’t have the time. I got to do like 3 takes and then they were kicking us off the tracks and then I was picture wrap. There was a lot that was jam packed into those last few days. Shooting on the Subway was the most challenging of everything. I’d rather be in a jungle surrounded by scorpions and snakes than in that Lower Bay on the tracks.

Directing is communication, so you’re trying to talk to different people to get everything right before each take and you have a train of thought, and then a subway train goes over your head and you just have to sit in silence for a minute and a half. Then it stops and you look at everyone and you’re like, “I forgot, I don’t know”. And it just kept happening! There were takes where the actors were, you know, God bless them because they would be going and we’d just have to say “keep going and we’ll ADR”. We actually didn’t have to ADR that scene, but it frayed everyone’s nerves, definitely, and not having the time to finish that scene. It was one of those intellectual things where I think it would have been a cooler payoff and a bit more of a meaty story throughout, but it didn’t quite work.

There were some comedic one-liners that I really wanted to work. My favorite part of the movie is when they all meet up at the end temple. I thought there was a great one-liner opportunity there, but I didn’t film it at the right spot, and if I’d had a better insight it would have been after the whole shot when they come around and get to their face, bang, we would have done it right there and it would have really been a big applause moment. But the way I had it just kind of fucked up the momentum of the shot going in so I had to cut it.

We had an idea in the script of doing more of a mind meld between the alien and Frank when he first gets on to the ship, but it had been done quite a bit in movies recently so I wasn’t super sad to have let that go. So we did a bit of a reshoot and had a narrated flashback instead of a more stylized visual mind meld. That was a bit cleaner so we could catch everyone up who hadn’t seen the first movie instead of some of the more abstract stuff that I tried to do. We just explored a few different ideas and pacing with that, and I’m pretty happy with how we landed with it in the end there.

I’ve only been through two festivals, so the thing I’ve learned most from getting to see the film with different audiences is to really build to these applause moments then give a little bit of time afterwards, and that would be another takeaway. Find the mark, milk it for all it’s worth, give everybody a bit of a breath afterwards, and then move on. Sometimes we move at such a breakneck pace, but overall, again, I’m pretty damn happy with how it’s playing.

KM: It’s like in live theatre when you hold for applause in-between lines, right?

LD: Yes! I just saw Mom & Dad at Sitges with Nick Cage and I thought they did a brilliant job of that. It really builds to these big applause moments that are a lot of fun, and then sometimes it would just go to black for 3-4 seconds and everyone kind of took their cue.

Continued on page 2

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Spirit Halloween Unleashes Life-Size ‘Ghostbusters’ Terror Dog

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Halfway to Halloween and the licensed merch is already being released for the holiday. For instance, the seasonal retailer giant Spirit Halloween unveiled their giant Ghostbusters Terror Dog for the first time this year.

The one-of-a-kind demonic dog has eyes that light up in a glowing, terrifying red. It’s going to set you back a whopping $599.99.

Since this year we saw the release of Ghostbusters: Frozen Empire, it’s probably going to be a popular theme come October. Spirit Halloween is embracing their inner Venkman with other releases tied to the franchise such as the LED Ghostbuster Ghost Trap, Ghostbusters Walkie Talkie, Life-Size Replica Proton Pack.

We saw the release of other horror props today. Home Depot unveiled a few pieces from their line which includes the signature giant skeleton and separate dog companion.

For the latest Halloween merch and updates get on over to Spirit Halloween and see what else they have to offer to make your neighbors jealous this season. But for now, enjoy a small video that features scenes from this classic cinematic canine.

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‘The Strangers’ Invaded Coachella in Instagramable PR Stunt

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Renny Harlin’s reboot of The Strangers isn’t coming out until May 17, but those murderous home invaders are making a pit stop at Coachella first.

In the latest Instagramable PR stunt, the studio behind the film decided to have the trio of masked intruders crash Coachella, a music festival that takes place for two weekends in Southern California.

The Strangers

This type of publicity began when Paramount did the same thing with their horror movie Smile in 2022. Their version had seemingly ordinary people in populated places look directly into a camera with an evil grin.

The Strangers

Harlin’s reboot is actually a trilogy with a more expansive world than that of the original.

“When setting out to remake The Strangers, we felt there was a bigger story to be told, which could be as powerful, chilling, and terrifying as the original and could really expand that world,” said producer Courtney Solomon. “Shooting this story as a trilogy allows us to create a hyperreal and terrifying character study. We’re fortunate to be joining forces with Madelaine Petsch, an amazing talent whose character is the driving force of this story.”

The Strangers

The movie follows a young couple (Madelaine Petsch and Froy Gutierrez) who “after their car breaks down in an eerie small town, are forced to spend the night in a remote cabin. Panic ensues as they are terrorized by three masked strangers who strike with no mercy and seemingly no motive in The Strangers: Chapter 1 the chilling first entry of this upcoming horror feature film series.”

The Strangers

The Strangers: Chapter 1 opens in theaters on May 17.

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‘Alien’ Returning to Theaters For a Limited Time

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It’s been 45 years since Ridley Scott’s Alien hit theaters and in celebration of that milestone, it is headed back to the big screen for a limited time. And what better day to do that than Alien Day on April 26?

It also works as a primer for the upcoming Fede Alvarez sequel Alien: Romulus opening on August 16. A special feature in which both Alvarez and Scott discuss the original sci-fi classic will be shown as a part of your theater admission. Take a look at the preview of that conversation below.

Fede Alvarez and Ridley Scott

Back in 1979, the original trailer for Alien was kind of terrifying. Imagine sitting in front of a CRT TV (Cathode Ray Tube) at night and suddenly Jerry Goldsmith’s haunting score begins to play as a giant chicken egg starts to crack with beams of light bursting through the shell and the word “Alien” slowly forms in slanted all caps across the screen. To a twelve-year-old, it was a scary pre-bedtime experience, especially Goldsmith’s screaming electronic musical flourishes playing over scenes of the actual movie. Let the “Is it horror or sci-fi?” debate begin.

Alien became a pop culture phenomenon, complete with kid’s toys, a graphic novel, and an Academy Award for Best Visual Effects. It also inspired dioramas in wax museums and even a frightening setpiece at Walt Disney World in the now-defunct Great Movie Ride attraction.

Great Movie Ride

The film stars Sigourney Weaver, Tom Skerritt, and John Hurt. It tells the tale of a futuristic crew of blue-collar workers suddenly awakened out of stasis to investigate an undecipherable distress signal coming from a nearby moon. They investigate the source of the signal and discover it’s a warning and not a cry for help. Unbeknownst to the crew, they have brought a giant space creature back on board which they find out in one of the most iconic scenes in cinema history.

It is said that Alvarez’s sequel will pay homage to the original film’s storytelling and set design.

Alien Romulus
Alien (1979)

The Alien theatrical re-release will take place on April 26. Pre-order your tickets and find out where Alien will screen at a theater near you.

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