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Horror Pride Month: Writer/Director Chris Peckover

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Chris Peckover Horror Pride Month

For out gay writer and director Chris Peckover, his relationship with horror began with a bit of unintentional trauma as a child. The man behind 2016’s Better Watch Out recalls his mom and dad going out to dinner and leaving him home with his younger brother without a sitter.

“My mom rentedĀ Child’s Play for us thinking it was a kid’s movie,” he explained, laughing, during our recent interview. “They went out to dinner, and we watched the movie and I was afraid of the dark until I was in the seventh grade!”

He wasn’t one of those people who loved being scared. Rather, he approached horror as a way of facing the fears that the movies brought out in him.

It was a few years later, when he was around 13 years old, that he saw the film that would inspire him toĀ makeĀ horror movies. That film was Poltergeist, and specifically the scene where the lights came floating down the staircase late at night.

As one moved through JoBeth Williams, she burst into tears saying that her daughter had moved through her soul. The entire family gathered around her and it was a genuinely moving moment for Peckover.

“I remember seeing it and tears streaming down my face and I was a bit confused,” he said. “I was just deathly afraid of a clown like minutes before that and now I’m crying! What was going on here?”

The moment stuck with him, and he began his journey to filmmaking that day noting that it was that mixture of emotions that really spoke to him.

“Jump scares are fine as a tool; gore is fine as a tool,” he explained, “but what I love about horror is the vulnerability. Horror is a communal experience for me. When I walk out of the theater after a great horror film, I feel like we, the audience, have survived something together. That’s what inspires me.”

Chris Peckover Better Watch Out

Peckover carried that inspiration with him, eventually making his first feature, 2010’sĀ Undocumented. The film was a learning experience for him, but one of his biggest takeaways surprised him.

“It was way more graphic thanĀ Better Watch Out,” Peckover pointed out. “I learned with that film that you can’t please gorehounds. They will never get enough. I thought I wanted to chase that, but I think I’ve decided they should just watchĀ Faces of Death on repeat.”

A couple of years later, he was approached by Zack Kahn with a script forĀ Better Watch Out, and he saw an opportunity to make something different that could incorporate some of those lessons he’d learned along the way.

He liked Kahn’s story, but he wanted to shift its tone.

“I thought Zack had written a million dollar twist” the director said. “We talked about where it could go, and I kept thinking about Home Alone. I was a big fan of that film, and I was really in the mood for a good Christmas-themed horror-comedy.”

With that in mind, he set out to rework the script, lightening up some of the hardcore elements of Kahn’s version and concentrating on making the tone a bit more fun in the process.

Before long, they were elbows deep in casting, and Peckover admits he struck gold with his entire cast.

“I read about 200 twelve year olds for the role of Luke,” he explained. “I call that role a ‘motherfucker’ role because it’s really a wide spectrum for someone that age to be able to pull off. It was easy for all of them to get the meanness or the comedy or the cleverness or the warmth that the role needed, but it was nearly impossible to find one that could doĀ all of those things.”

Eventually, however, he met with the Levi Miller who not only knocked the audition out of the park, but also made Peckover take a step back in the process.

“Levi added a sexuality to the character that I had not written into it, really,” he pointed out. “He has a background in modeling and he was exposed to that kind of thing earlier in life. He would pout his lips and he had this almost snake-like way of moving. He was doing things in that audition that creeped me out so much that I ended up adding them to the movie.”

Everything fell into place with Miller on board, and the film has been a success online with distribution on various streaming services. Still, Peckover feels a little bit of guilt about one particular bit of character development that he did not include.

“With the best friend character inĀ Better Watch Out played by Ed Oxenbould,” he explained. “Even while I was writing it, I had in mind that he was in the closet. It was why he followed along with everything that Levi’s character does in the film. There was more there, for him, than just friendship, but I feel like it’s a copout to say that now. I feel a bit like J.K. Rowling saying of course there was a gay character in the film…I just never said it.”

Peckover never even discussed that particular character point with Oxenbould during filming, and it’s something that the regrets while admitting he’s still trying to figure out how to walk that line and make that statement.

“I kept wondering what would be my first film where I actually stare the gay identity in the face and actually say something about it,” he said. “Up until now, I wasn’t entirely sure what I wanted to say so I’ve danced around the issue. I’m happy, now, to say that I think I’ve finally cracked it, and I’m finally developing a film where the two main characters will be gay.”

On the set of Better Watch Out

He calls the project hisĀ gayĀ Get Out, and he says he admires what Jordan Peele was able to do with that film. He also says that the story doesn’t come from the place a lot of filmmakers are trying to place it, specifically in gay conversion therapy camps.

That’s too on the nose for Peckover, and he says that type of premise would have killed Peele’s film, as well.

“If Peele had writtenĀ Get Out and had the character saying, ‘I don’t know if I want to meet your family because they’re conservatives in southern Missouri and they have pitchforks’ it would have beenĀ way to obvious,” Peckover pointed out. “Instead of putting his character in an obvious racist setting, he instead went for the heart of that wheedling, insidious type of racism who insist that they are not actually racist. That’s what is scary!”

“It’s the same thing with what I’m trying to do with this new project,” he continued. “I’m sad and angry that conversion therapy camps exist, but I’m not afraid of them. Real fear comes from that place that we know exists but we can’t quite put our finger on where it’s coming from.”

As he continues working on writing the film, he knows that, much likeĀ Get OutĀ and other films of its ilk, there will be push-back from “horror fans.”

“People still insistĀ Get Out wasn’t a horror movie, and I’m like yeah it is,” he said. “They say the same thing aboutĀ Silence of the Lambs. They try to write them off as psychological thrillers and put distance between themselves and those movies. Good horror is still good horror and those movies are horror movies.”

That tactic, oddly enough has been used on both sides of the aisle. Non-horror fans, and especially critics it seems, want to label those films as something other than horror so they keep their supposed “credibility” while more traditional horror fans have done the same and oddly for the same reason.

For my part, I agree with Peckover, and as we finished up our conversation, I couldn’t help but ask if he’d experienced any trepidation in the possibility of being labeled a “gay filmmaker.”

“I’m gay and I’m a filmmaker, but I think the only time that label really gets thrown at you is when you make bad gay movies,” he said. “If you make something incredible, no one is going to care if you’re gay. Either way, I’m at the place in my life where I’d wear that mantle with pride.”

If you haven’t seenĀ Better Watch Out, it’s currently available on Shudder as part of its Queer Horror collection for Pride month, and keep your eyes peeled for Chris Peckover and his future projects.

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‘Evil Dead’ Film Franchise Getting TWO New Installments

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It was a risk for Fede Alvarez to reboot Sam Raimi’s horror classic The Evil Dead in 2013, but that risk paid off and so did its spiritual sequel Evil Dead Rise in 2023. Now Deadline is reporting that the series is getting, not one, but two fresh entries.

We already knew about the SĆ©bastien Vaniček upcoming film that delves into the Deadite universe and should be a proper sequel to the latest film, but we are broadsided that Francis Galluppi and Ghost House Pictures are doing a one-off project set in Raimi’s universe based off of an idea that Galluppi pitched to Raimi himself. That concept is being kept under wraps.

Evil Dead Rise

“Francis Galluppi is a storyteller who knows when to keep us waiting in simmering tension and when to hit us with explosive violence,” Raimi told Deadline. “He is a director that shows uncommon control in his feature debut.ā€

That feature is titled The Last Stop In Yuma County which will release theatrically in the United States on May 4. It follows a traveling salesman, “stranded at a rural Arizona rest stop,” and “is thrust into a dire hostage situation by the arrival of two bank robbers with no qualms about using cruelty-or cold, hard steel-to protect their bloodstained fortune.”

Galluppi is an award-winning sci-fi/horror shorts director whose acclaimed works include High Desert Hell and The Gemini Project. You can view the full edit of High Desert Hell and the teaser for Gemini below:

High Desert Hell
The Gemini Project

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‘Invisible Man 2’ Is “Closer Than Its Ever Been” to Happening

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Elisabeth Moss in a very well-thought-out statement said in an interview for Happy Sad Confused that even though there have been some logistical issues for doing Invisible Man 2 there is hope on the horizon.

Podcast host Josh Horowitz asked about the follow-up and if Moss and director Leigh Whannell were any closer to cracking a solution to getting it made. “We are closer than we have ever been to cracking it,” said Moss with a huge grin. You can see her reaction at the 35:52 mark in the below video.

Happy Sad Confused

Whannell is currently in New Zealand filming another monster movie for Universal, Wolf Man, which might be the spark that ignites Universal’s troubled Dark Universe concept which hasn’t gained any momentum since Tom Cruise’s failed attempt at resurrecting The Mummy.

Also, in the podcast video, Moss says she is not in the Wolf Man film so any speculation that it’s a crossover project is left in the air.

Meanwhile, Universal Studios is in the middle of constructing a year-round haunt house in Las Vegas which will showcase some of their classic cinematic monsters. Depending on attendance, this could be the boost the studio needs to get audiences interested in their creature IPs once more and to get more films made based on them.

The Las Vegas project is set to open in 2025, coinciding with their new proper theme park in Orlando called Epic Universe.

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Jake Gyllenhaal’s Thriller ‘Presumed Innocent’ Series Gets Early Release Date

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Jake gyllenhaal presumed innocent

Jake Gyllenhaal’s limited series Presumed Innocent is dropping on AppleTV+ on June 12 instead of June 14 as originally planned. The star, whose Road House reboot has brought mixed reviews on Amazon Prime, is embracing the small screen for the first time since his appearance on Homicide: Life on the Street in 1994.

Jake Gyllenhaal’s in ‘Presumed Innocent’

Presumed Innocent is being produced by David E. Kelley, J.J. Abramsā€™ Bad Robot, and Warner Bros. It is an adaptation of Scott Turowā€™s 1990 film in which Harrison Ford plays a lawyer doing double duty as an investigator looking for the murderer of his colleague.

These types of sexy thrillers were popular in the ’90s and usually contained twist endings. Here’s the trailer for the original:

According to Deadline, Presumed Innocent doesn’t stray far from the source material: “…the Presumed Innocent series will explore obsession, sex, politics and the power and limits of love as the accused fights to hold his family and marriage together.”

Up next for Gyllenhaal is the Guy Ritchie action movie titled In the Grey scheduled for release in January 2025.

Presumed Innocent is an eight-episode limited series set to stream on AppleTV+ starting June 12.

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