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Jason Collins: “I Spit on Your Grave” 1 & 2 (3?–shh!)

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Jason Collins is a man that knows how to kill his characters. He is a skilled special effects artist who never makes light of any task requiring him to split, splay, impale or otherwise eviscerate his subjects. Collins talks to me about his work on “I Spit on Your Grave”, “I Spit on Your Grave 2”. He also mentions “I Spit on Your Grave 3”, but that will cost me if I reveal too much, so I’ll let Collins enlighten us in his own words later on.

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“I Spit on Your Grave” and “I Spit on Your Grave 2” are two very gruesome movies. The special effects in each call back a time when special make-up effects were done by hand. The artistry of creating a “kill” was first sketched out, then handed to the effects department to brainstorm a way to create it. However impossible the “kill” might have seemed, the effects department usually found a way to construct it.

Jason Collins seems to be a master at doing “kill” scenes. Both “Spit” movies are filled with creative kills done in real time, and each gets progressively more complicated. Collins, having been enamored with cinema splatter as a kid, is a craftsman and a visionary. A Southern California native, Collins grew up in Costa Mesa, California, an Orange County suburb. He explains how he first became interested in horror movies and special effects:

“I remember really vividly loving movies when I was around 12 years old…At first it was any movie.. Then I realized how much I loved horror movies. I watched everything I could get my hands on. There was a local video store where I could get my mitts on a ton of stuff…I was a fiend…Soon I realized that what I loved was watching the death scenes. It became one of those ‘how did they do that?’ things.”

Jennifer won't forget this dude!

Jennifer won’t forget this dude!

Collins’ mother had her child’s best interest at heart. She saw that he had a talent for creating make-up applications that looked real enough to fool the untrained eye, so as any good mother, she took the next step and encouraged her son to pursue what was then just a hobby, “She decided to fan the flame and took me to a local magic store,” he said,”where they sold a small quantity of make up supplies. I bought scar material.. Liquid latex.. Etc.. The guy behind the counter showed me a couple of tricks and I was off! My mother didn’t know what she was getting into.. For the next year I tortured her non stop.”

Collins has stayed away from watching the original 1978 “I Spit on Your Grave”. Having been taught to respect women, Collins was unsure about the subject matter and how he would feel if he should watch it. He does however remember seeing one scene in particular:

“The original ‘I Spit on your Grave’ was a bit of a taboo for me when I was a kid. I grew up with a strong female influence so I felt as if that subject matter wouldn’t be favorable towards woman.. I think that I would of just felt guilty watching it. I do remember catching the bathtub scene when I was young and it just freaked me out. Something about the sexual natures of the crime. To this day believe it or not I still haven’t seen the original.”

1978 Original "I Spit On Your Grave". Fantastik!

1978 Original “I Spit On Your Grave”. Fantastik!

Another girl, another country, another revenge.

Another girl, another country, another revenge.

Ironically, Collins would create his own images for the remake of that film in 2010. Possibly even more brutal than the original, “I Spit on Your Grave” and its sequel, follow women bent on revenge after being brutalized by men. In the first film, there is an effect involving eyes and fish hooks. Collins tells iHorror how he approached this effect:

“The fish hook in the eye gag was a fun one.. Albeit difficult. I can’t remember who came up with the idea of it.. I think it was in one of the original drafts of the scripts… I remember thinking how the hell or we going to do this. Steven Monroe (director) wanted to try to keep as much practical but was afraid we were going to have to do this digitally but we thought it through and came up with an idea. Elvis Jones (my collaborator) on ‘I Spit’ came up with the idea of sculpting another set of eye lids on top of the actors with a lash line a quarter of an inch below the actors lash line. This would give the actress an access point to pick up the lid and run the needle through it below his actual eye. On the day I applied it to the actor and walked Sarah Butler through the correct and safe way to run the needle through the lid. It was very daunting for her of course as she was terrified of blinding the actor.. But she really sold it. Luckily we didn’t need to keep the actor in the appliances for very long as it being blind isn’t fun for anybody!”

It's all in what kind of bait you use!

It’s all in what kind of bait you use!

Along with eye torture, no “I Spit on Your Grave” movie would be complete without doing damage to the male reproductive organ. Both movies have scenes with male genitalia being turned into mulch while still being attached to the groin.

“No male likes penis torture I can tell you that.. Well maybe some do.. But I don’t hang out in those clubs.. It’s funny when it comes time to smash balls in vices or sever penis’ with garden shears how the jokes fly.. But I think that’s a mask for anything uncomfortable that we as males do.. Inherently, as I think we should all have, there is a deep disturbing fear of anyone cutting our unit off..”

When I said "jump" my junk, this is not what I meant!

When I said “jump” my junk, this is not what I meant!

In “I Spit on Your Grave 2”, our “heroine”, Katie (Jemma Dallender), has become a transient, living in the underground tunnels of Bulgaria. One-by-one she stalks her aggressors and exacts revenge upon them in many different ways. One man, Gregory, who Jennifer happens to lure underground, cutting him on various parts of his body, rubs rat feces into the wounds in order to nurture infection. These different stages of infection are very gruesome, and Collins says that the actor was willing to do whatever it took to complete the effect:

“Gregory’s death was a ton of work. There were multiple reasons for that. The first was that we were shooting in Bulgaria with a local actor. So getting life casts was out of the question. So I needed to design those make ups with that in mind. Another difficulty was that it needed to be done in stages as she keeps coming back to torture him. So we needed to do the small cut appliances in the first stage, then move to thicker silicone appliances as the wound was swelling and eventually to really big swollen foam appliances for the final infected bloated stage. The actor was a real trooper as we were shooting inside a Russian built dam in the below freezing temperatures. So all the death rattle shivering was really frigid teeth chattering as the poor guy was freezing! I had a lot of local help on those applications with a great local make up artist named Yana Stoyanova. We had worked with her on a couple of previous films there.”

Rat feces is NOT a hack for Neosporin!

Rat feces is NOT a hack for Neosporin!

For now Collins is working on a few things.“Mr. Beebee” is a project that is still in pre-production and “Tales of Halloween”, a horror anthology in which he created a special character:

“Mr. Beebee is a script my friend Shannon Shea wrote. It’s a fantastic story that has some really great twists in it.. Right now Ernie Hudson is signed on which is a heinous touch of casting. Currently it’s still in pre production as Shannon is still finalizing some details.

Recently I just wrapped an anthology film called ‘Tales of Halloween’ which is really fun.. A lot of great horror directors got together to make a bunch of movies about our favorite holiday.. Halloween. I did Neil Marshall’s film as well as Paul Solet. Both great directors with insane ideas.. For Neil I made a killer pumpkin that comes to life and kills. Everything was done old school animatronic puppet style… So look out for that one!”

Collins is sure horror fans will want to see this!

Collins is sure horror fans will want to see this!

Could a third film be in the works for the “I Spit” series? Well, Collins can’t tell me much, and maybe I shouldn’t either because I am rather accustomed to certain parts of my anatomy. When I asked him, this is what he said, ” As far as ‘I Spit on Your Grave 3’.. For now mums the word!! If I tell you I might have to kill you (or cut your dick off.. I think we know which is worse)!!!!”

Yes we do Jason. Yes we do, and you’re just the man to do it.

You can order your copy of “I Spit on Your Grave” (2010) here. And “I Spit on Your Grave 2” here.

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Melissa Barrera Says Her ‘Scream’ Contract Never Included a Third Movie

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The Scream franchise has done a major overhaul to its original script for Scream VII after its two main leads departed production. Jenna Ortega who played Tara Carpenter left because she was overly booked and blessed while her co-star Melissa Barrera was fired after making political comments on social media.

But Barrera isn’t regretting any of it. In fact, she is happy where the character arc left off. She played Samantha Carpenter, the latest focus of the Ghostface killer.

Barrera did an exclusive interview with Collider. During their talk, the 33-year-old says she fulfilled her contract and her character Samantha’s arc finished at a good spot, even though it was meant to be a trilogy.

“I feel like the ending of [ Scream VI ] was a very good ending, and so I don’t feel like ‘Ugh, I got left in the middle.’ No, I think people, the fans, were wanting a third movie to continue that arc, and apparently, the plan was a trilogy, even though I was only contracted for two movies.

So, I did my two movies, and I’m fine. I’m good with that. I got two – that’s more than most people get. When you’re on a TV show, and it gets canceled, you can’t harp on things, you gotta move on.

That’s the nature of this industry too, I get excited for the next job, I get excited for the next skin I get to put on. It’s exciting to create a different character. So yeah, I feel good. I did what I set out to do. It was always meant to be two movies for me, ’cause that was my contract, and so everything is perfect.”

The entire production of the original seventh entry has moved on from the Carpenter’s storyline. With a new director and new script, production will resume, including the return of Neve Campbell and Courtney Cox.

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Read Reviews For ‘Abigail’ The Latest From Radio Silence

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The review embargo has lifted for the vampire horror movie Abigail and the reviews are abundantly positive. 

Matt BettinelliOlpin and Tyler Gillett of Radio Silence are getting early praise for their latest horror movie which opens on April 19. Unless you’re Barbie or Oppenheimer the name of the game in Hollywood is about what kind of box office numbers you pull on opening weekend and how much they drop thereafter. Abigail could be this year’s sleeper. 

Radio Silence is no stranger to opening big, their Scream reboot and sequel packed fans into seats on their respective opening dates. The duo are currently working on another reboot, that of 1981’s Kurt Russel cult favorite Escape From New York

Abigail

Now that ticket sales for GodzillaxKong, Dune 2, and Ghostbusters: Frozen Empire have gathered patina, Abigail could knock A24’s current powerhouse Civil War from the top spot, especially if ticket buyers base their purchase off reviews. If it is successful, it could be temporary, since Ryan Gosling and Emma Stone’s action comedy The Fall Guy opens on May 3, just two weeks later.

We have gathered pull quotes (good & bad) from some genre critics on Rotten Tomatoes (score for Abigail currently sits at 85%) to give you an indicator of how they are skewing ahead of its release this weekend. First, the good:

“Abigail is a fun, bloody ride. It also has the most lovable ensemble of morally grey characters this year. The film introduces a new favorite monster into the genre and gives her room to take the biggest swings possible. I lived!” — Sharai Bohannon: A Nightmare On Fierce Street Podcast

“The standout is Weir, commanding the screen despite her small stature and effortlessly switching from apparently helpless, terrified child to savage predator with a mordant sense of humor.” — Michael Gingold: Rue Morgue Magazine

“‘Abigail’ sets the bar as the most fun you can have with a horror movie of the year. In other words, “Abigail” is horror on pointe.” — BJ Colangelo: Slashfilm

“In what may become one of the greatest vampire movies of all time, Abigail provides an extremely bloody, fun, humorous & fresh take on the subgenre.” — Jordan Williams: Screen Rant

“Radio Silence have proven themselves as one of the most exciting, and crucially, fun, voices in the horror genre and Abigail takes this to the next level.” — Rosie Fletcher: Den of Geek

Now, the not-so-good:

“It’s not badly made, just uninspired and played out.” — Simon Abrams: RogerEbert.com

A ‘Ready or Not’ redux running on half the steam, this one-location misfire has plenty of parts that work but its namesake isn’t among them.” –Alison Foreman: indieWire

Let us know if you are planning to see Abigail. If or when you do, give us your hot take in the comments.

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Ernie Hudson To Star In ‘Oswald: Down The Rabbit Hole’

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Ernie Hudson

This is some exciting news! Ernie Hudson (Ghostbusters 1984, The Crow 1994) is set to star in the upcoming horror film titled Oswald: Down The Rabbit Hole. Hudson is set to play the character Oswald Jebediah Coleman who is a brilliant animator that is locked away in a terrifying magical prison. No release date has been announced yet. Check out the announcement trailer and more about the film below.

ANNOUNCEMENT TRAILER FOR OSWALD: DOWN THE RABBIT HOLE

The film follows the story of “Art and some of his closest friends as they help track down his long-lost family lineage. When they find and explore his Great-Grandpa Oswald’s abandoned home, they encounter a magical TV that teleports them to a place lost in time, shrouded by dark Hollywood Magic. The group finds that they are not alone when they discover Oswald’s come-to-life cartoon Rabbit, a dark entity that decides their souls are it’s for the taking. Art and his friends must work together to escape their magical prison before the Rabbit gets to them first.”

First Look Image at Oswald: Down the Rabbit Hole

Ernie Hudson stated that “I am excited to work with everyone on this production. It’s an incredibly creative and smart project.”

Director Stewart also added “I had a very specific vision for Oswald’s character and knew I wanted Ernie for this role from the start, as I’ve always admired iconic cinematic legacy. Ernie is going to bring Oswald’s unique and vengeful spirit to life in the best way possible.”

First Look Image at Oswald: Down the Rabbit Hole

Lilton Stewart III and Lucinda Bruce are teaming up to write and direct the film. It stars actors Ernie Hudson (Ghostbusters 1984, The Crow 1994), Topher Hall (Single Drunk Female 2022), and Yasha Rayzberg (A Rainbow in the Dark 2021). Mana Animation Studio is helping produce the animation, Tandem Post House for post-production, and VFX supervisor Bob Homami is also helping. The budget for the film currently sits at $4.5M.

Official Teaser Poster for Oswald: Down the Rabbit Hole

This is one of many classic childhood stories that are being turned into horror films. This list includes Winnie the Pooh: Blood and Honey 2, Bambi: The Reckoning, Mickey’s Mouse Trap, The Return of Steamboat Willie, and many more. Are you more interested in the film now that Ernie Hudson is attached to star in it? Let us know in the comments below.

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