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Two Heads Are Better Than One: iHorror Interviews ‘Kin’ Directors Jonathan and Josh Baker

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Jonathan and Josh Baker, the co-directors of Kin, aren’t just brothers.  They’re identical twins.

Kin, which is the brothers’ feature directing debut, is based on the brothers’ short film Bag Man (watch film here), which is about an African-American boy from Harlem who possesses a mysterious weapon that has the power to vaporize anything it targets.

When Bag Man premiered at the South by Southwest (SXSW) Film Festival in 2015, the brothers soon found themselves being courted by various Hollywood studios.  The filming of Kin began in Toronto in October of 2016, approximately one month after Lionsgate bought the film rights to Kin at the Toronto Film Festival for $30 million.

In Kin, an African-American teenage boy named Elijah (Myles Truitt) takes possession of a mysterious weapon of unknown origin and finds himself being hunted by otherworldly soldiers and a ruthless criminal.  In this interview, the Baker Brothers discuss the journey they’ve taken with the project, from short film to feature, and the virtues of co-directing.

DG: Although co-directed feature films are still rare, there have been more co-directed feature film that have been released in the past decade than in the previous century.  What are you feelings about the co-directing method of filmmaking?

Jonathan: Making a film is very stressful, and I think that a filmmaking duo increases efficiency.  We’ve been working together for approximately fifteen years, and while we don’t always bring the exact same ideas and vision to a project, we respect each other’s opinions, and we’re always unified in front of the cast and crew.  When it comes to the filmmaking process, I think that two heads are definitely better than one.  I think that you’re going to see it happen more and more in the future because I think it’s the best way to make a film.

DG: Kin is based on your 2014 short film Bag Man.  When you made the short film, did you visualize that you would eventually turn the concept into a feature film?

Jonathan: We never intended Bag Man to be a feature film.  It was a contained project, and we had no intention, initially, of turning it into a feature film.  It wasn’t until we had the great reaction at the Southwest festival that we started giving serious thought to how we would turn the short film into a feature.

Josh: When we made Bag Man, we had been working in advertising, shooting commercials, for approximately twelve years, and we were looking for a narrative refresher.  Although we enjoyed making commercials, it’s hard to tell a story within the commercial format, so Bag Man seemed like a smart thing to do.  With Bag Man, we wanted to show science fiction in a different way and combine science fiction with drama and other elements.

DG: How would you describe the process of turning the fifteen-minute Bag Man into the feature-length Kin?

Josh: In Bag Man, there’s a duffle bag, a boy, a gun inside the bag, and there’s gangsters, and that’s pretty much it.  With Kin, we wanted the film to have a mashed-up feel and tone to it, and we focused primarily on drama and the relationships between the characters. None of the influences we brought to Kin were related to science fiction.  When we met with [screenwriter] Daniel Casey, we told him that we didn’t want to see any science fiction that he’d written.  We only wanted to see character and drama.  Daniel is a native of Detroit, which led us to move the setting from Harlem to Detroit.

DG: How would you describe Elijah, the film’s teenage protagonist, played by Myles Truitt?

Jonathan: Elijah is a street smart kid who is far wiser than his age.  Elijah has been adopted into a middle-class Polish-American family, and they live in Detroit, in Poletown, where there’s a lot of crime and gang life.  As an African-American boy living in a Caucasian household, Elijah has never truly felt accepted, although he’s very close to his adopted brother, Jimmy, who has just gotten out of prison.  Jimmy is a cool guy who has a lot of charisma but has chosen a bad path in his life.  Although Elijah and Jimmy are very different people, innocence versus corruption, they love each other very much.  After Elijah finds the weapon, they’re forced to go on the run.

DG: How would you describe Elijah’s relationship with the mysterious weapon that appears in the film?

Josh: Elijah has a kind of Sword in the Stone existence in the film, in terms of his relationship with the weapon and the journey Elijah takes throughout the film.  He finds the weapon early in the film, about twelve minutes in, and the weapon acts as a symbol throughout the rest of the film.  The weapon is like a ray-gun, and it’s similar to the weapon in the short film, which vaporized everyone it shot at.  The gun has a flat end, and it can shift itself into a box, so we’re not always sure what end we’re looking at.  Elijah has a love-hate relationship with the weapon throughout the film.

DG: What was your inspiration in terms of conceptualizing the weapon and its origin?

Jonathan: The weapon in the film is a mystery in terms of what it is and where it came from—just like the box on Lost.  Is it alien?  Is it from the future?  It functions like a ray-gun, with its vaporizing effect, and the challenge for us was to do something interesting with the weapon in the film.  We didn’t want it to look like a ray-gun from the 1950s.  The weapon is to this film what the ring is to The Lord of the Rings.  It symbolizes everything that happens in the film.

DG: How would you describe Taylor, the character played by James Franco?

Josh: Taylor is a mash-up villain in the vein of the villains in films like No Country for Old Men and Out of the Furnace.  He’s a lowlife, a smalltime gangster whom Jimmy owes money to because of a prison debt.  It was one of those things where Jimmy had to pay protection money to survive in prison, thousands of dollars, and that didn’t stop when he got out, and now Taylor’s after him.  I would describe Taylor as resembling Reverend Harry Powell in the film The Night of the Hunter.  James was great.  He loves playing different characters, and he enjoyed mashing up his look in this film.  He has a mullet and stringy hair.

DG: What was the biggest challenge you faced in making the film?

Jonathan: The biggest challenge we faced in the making of this film was filming in Toronto when it was close to winter.  We filmed in Toronto from October to December in 2016, and we did a lot of filming at night, often at three and four in the morning, and it was grueling.  It was so dark sometimes that we couldn’t see anything, and we had to do that because so much of the film takes place at night.

DG: Why do you think audiences should be excited to see this film?

Josh: When we did the short film, we wanted to play with the audience’s expectations, make them believe that they were going to see one thing, see one kind of story, and then show them something else that completely surprises them.  Kin is in the science fiction zone, but it doesn’t contain the familiar elements that exist in so many blockbuster science fiction films.  It’s a drama and a gangster film and a science fiction film.  It’s more than one thing.

Kin opens in theaters on August 31.  Watch the theatrical trailer here.

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Brad Dourif Says He’s Retiring Except For One Important Role

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Brad Dourif has been doing movies for nearly 50 years. Now it seems he is walking away from the industry at 74 to enjoy his golden years. Except, there is a caveat.

Recently, digital entertainment publication JoBlo’s Tyler Nichols talked to some of the Chucky television series cast members. During the interview, Dourif made an announcement.

“Dourif said that he’s retired from acting,” says Nichols. “The only reason he came back for the show was because of his daughter Fiona and he considers Chucky creator Don Mancini to be family. But for non-Chucky stuff, he considers himself retired.”

Dourif has voiced the possessed doll since 1988 (minus the 2019 reboot). The original movie “Child’s Play” has become such a cult classic it’s at the top of some people’s best chillers of all time. Chucky himself is ingrained in pop culture history much like Frankenstein or Jason Voorhees.

While Dourif may be known for his famous voiceover, he is also an Oscar-nominated actor for his part in One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest. Another famous horror role is The Gemini Killer in William Peter Blatty’s Exorcist III. And who can forget Betazoid Lon Suder in Star Trek: Voyager?

The good news is that Don Mancini is already pitching a concept for season four of Chucky which might also include a feature-length movie with a series tie-in. So, Although Dourif says he is retiring from the industry, ironically he is Chucky’s friend till the end.

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Editorial

7 Great ‘Scream’ Fan Films & Shorts Worth a Watch

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The Scream franchise is such an iconic series, that many budding filmmakers take inspiration from it and make their own sequels or, at least, build upon the original universe created by screenwriter Kevin Williamson. YouTube is the perfect medium to showcase these talents (and budgets) with fan-made homages with their own personal twists.

The great thing about Ghostface is that he can appear anywhere, in any town, he just needs the signature mask, knife, and unhinged motive. Thanks to Fair Use laws it’s possible to expand upon Wes Craven’s creation by simply getting a group of young adults together and killing them off one by one. Oh, and don’t forget the twist. You’ll notice that Roger Jackson’s famous Ghostface voice is uncanny valley, but you get the gist.

We have gathered five fan films/shorts related to Scream that we thought were pretty good. Although they can’t possibly match the beats of a $33 million blockbuster, they get by on what they have. But who needs money? If you’re talented and motivated anything is possible as proven by these filmmakers who are well on their way to the big leagues.

Take a look at the below films and let us know what you think. And while you’re at it, leave these young filmmakers a thumbs up, or leave them a comment to encourage them to create more films. Besides, where else are you going to see Ghostface vs. a Katana all set to a hip-hop soundtrack?

Scream Live (2023)

Scream Live

Ghostface (2021)

Ghostface

Ghost Face (2023)

Ghost Face

Don’t Scream (2022)

Don’t Scream

Scream: A Fan Film (2023)

Scream: A Fan Film

The Scream (2023)

The Scream

A Scream Fan Film (2023)

A Scream Fan Film
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Movies

Another Creepy Spider Movie Hits Shudder This Month

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Good spider films are a theme this year. First, we had Sting and then there was Infested. The former is still in theaters and the latter is coming to Shudder starting April 26.

Infested has been getting some good reviews. People are saying that it’s not only a great creature feature but also a social commentary on racism in France.

According to IMDb: Writer/director Sébastien Vanicek was looking for ideas around the discrimination faced by black and Arab-looking people in France, and that led him to spiders, which are rarely welcome in homes; whenever they’re spotted, they’re swatted. As everyone in the story (people and spiders) is treated like vermin by society, the title came to him naturally.

Shudder has become the gold standard for streaming horror content. Since 2016, the service has been offering fans an expansive library of genre movies. in 2017, they began to stream exclusive content.

Since then Shudder has become a powerhouse in the film festival circuit, buying distribution rights to movies, or just producing some of their own. Just like Netflix, they give a film a short theatrical run before adding it to their library exclusively for subscribers.

Late Night With the Devil is a great example. It was released theatrically on March 22 and will begin streaming on the platform starting April 19.

While not getting the same buzz as Late Night, Infested is a festival favorite and many have said if you suffer from arachnophobia, you might want to take heed before watching it.

Infested

According to the synopsis, our main character, Kalib is turning 30 and dealing with some family issues. “He’s fighting with his sister over an inheritance and has cut ties with his best friend. Fascinated by exotic animals, he finds a venomous spider in a shop and brings it back to his apartment. It only takes a moment for the spider to escape and reproduce, turning the whole building into a dreadful web trap. The only option for Kaleb and his friends is to find a way out and survive.”

The film will be available to watch on Shudder starting April 26.

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