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Interview: Jay Baruchel on Directing, Effects, and His Top Horror Movies

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Jay Baruchel

As the director of Random Acts of Violence, Jay Baruchel had a wealth of experience to draw from. Working in the industry from the age of 12, he’s learned from the likes of directors like David Cronenberg and Clint Eastwood, and gained valuable insight into what can make (or break) a film set.

I sat down with Jay to discuss his newest film, practical effects in the horror industry, and some of his favourite horror films.

For part one of our interview on Random Acts of Violence, click here.


Kelly McNeely: So, you’ve been in the industry for a long time starting with Popular Mechanics for Kids, but how has that helped you with everything you’ve experienced as a director and what have you learned through all those crazy experiences? 

Jay Baruchel: Everything. And pretty much everything I know about movies is from being on set since I was a kid or watching movies. My first day on set, I was 12. And even when I started then, my mother said to me, well, you want to be a director. My interest in cinema wasn’t born of my interest in acting. It’s the other way around. I became an actor because it allowed me to be near cinema.

And so when I was 12, and my mom said to me, you know, you want to go to film school eventually, you’d have to wait till you’re 18. But you have an opportunity now to be in the best film school in the world, which is experience and just seeing it from the guts out. I was always a sponge. So from my first day onwards, I was always in love with, you know, the goddess of cinema, and I was absorbing everything I could, I would pick every brain that I could.

And what’s cool is looking back as a 12 year old/13 year old starting on these things, a lot of the crew, they were grownups in my mind back then. But looking back, they would have been way younger than I am now, 23-24, fresh out film school. So all their ideas and their interests were still fresh and diverse. And so at 12-13 I got to see how movies are made. But I got to be around a bunch of 20-somethings that just got out of film school who wanted to feed me all of the shit that they’d learned. And that’s a really awesome, inspirational place to start from. 

But also, I’ll be honest, in 20 plus years of being on set, I think I’ve maybe been on half a dozen to ten that have functioned correctly. Like there is an industry standard of kind of controlled chaos, but it’s controlled in the loosest sense. But there’s also — and I’ll say this — that directing is… how should I put this? There are people that fail upwards. And because you’re the conductor, because your job is to have an instinct and opinion, and every other person on set ultimately comes to you, right?

What that means is, if you are someone who’s devoid of inspiration, it’s fucking easy to fake it, because everybody is constantly showing you options. I can’t tell you how many times as an actor I have been on a set where it was clear that the director had absolutely no instinct for what we were trying to do. And so these people would — every single time — assume that having the entire cast and crew in front of you as a sort of sandbox with with fucking GI Joes and vehicles in it, that somehow you would have to be inspired and have an instinct.

That seems to be the big takeaway, that a lot of them come in not knowing what the fucking thing is about and hope that we’re going to find it for them. And when you don’t know what you want, and all you’re going off of is what’s not working for you or what you don’t want, that’s when you get north of 7, 10, 12, 15 takes, and rare is the inspiration that survives that, I think.

And the best sets I’ve been on, by far, by far, by far, would be two masters that I’m really lucky to have to have worked for, was David Cronenberg and Clint Eastwood. Their sets were incredibly similar too, because it was a shared vision that was very clearly articulated. Now obviously you leave room to find and to explore, and no matter what the thing is, the thing on paper is not going to be the thing you make. But like, you still know what you’re trying to say, right? And so everybody on each set knew what the movie was trying to say. Everybody on each set enjoyed being there. Everybody on each set felt that their fingerprints were on the film. And so everybody operates from a place of passion, but also, there’s no stress and anxiety.

Because Eastwood’s thing is if I hired you, it’s because you can do the job. I hired you. So I don’t need to fucking worry. I don’t need to micromanage. Bring it — like the way everyone else is bringing it — and we’re all good, and we don’t have to do more than one rehearsal. And we don’t have to do more than three takes, and we can get home early. No one gets home early! But on both those movies, I got off set early, and they finished early! Million Dollar Baby finished like two days ahead of schedule, which is unheard of for a movie that size!

And so I was like, that’s the whole thing. Make sure everybody feels that this is theirs, that we’re all in this together. Nobody will ever be as at risk creatively as I am. But whatever the next best thing is, that’s what I want everybody to feel. I want them to feel that they can pitch any idea to me. Because — by the way — if everyone feels they can pitch in any idea to me, that means they’re really operating from a place of pure imagination, which for an artistic endeavor, like a film, can only be good for it. But also more to a point, I’ve seen a lot of examples — way more examples — of what a director shouldn’t do. And that is a strong kind of guiding thing too.

via Elevation Pictures

Kelly McNeely: With the really brutal violence in Random Acts of Violence, that’s a bit of a departure from what people expect from you. Horror is clearly a passion of yours, would you make another horror movie? How important was it for you to have practical effects? And how did you design those effects like the triptych, how did you get those concepts created?

Jay Baruchel: Yeah, that’s a great question. Um, yeah, absolutely in a heartbeat. I want to spend my life making horror movies or action movies. And what I realized is I want to spend my life making war movies, because war movies are both of those, and then some… pretty much every fucking genre. And the older I get, the more I’m unable to see truth in any movie that isn’t a war movie. But yes, I would. I would definitely in a heartbeat. 

There’s a videotape somewhere at my mom’s house of me at age 7 — I said I wanted to be a director at 9 — but when I was 7 there’s a videotape of me saying to my mom, to the camera, I’m going to write stories so scary that they scare Stephen King out of his underpants. And so, I’ve enjoyed that shit since I was little, and I come by it honestly from two legit movie fans.

My mother and father would constantly give me a Film 101, and and with every flick, we’d watch — and especially if we watch something that was important — my mother explained to me why Hitchcock is the master of suspense and what that means and the type of movies he made, which drove me into an absolute obsession with the man when I was a teenager. So I love this stuff. And I’ve tried to figure out why.

I think it’s the same reason that I like punk, industrial, and metal, which is because it’s direct, and it bypasses a lot of shit that I find to be little more than wallpaper. It’s direct, it’s truthful, it’s strong medicine, and its fan base is religious and it gets no love from the intelligentsia. So this is the shit I should be watching, this is the shit I want to make. 

In terms of how important the prosthetic stuff was: of paramount importance. For me it’s [Roberto] Bava’s work and John Carpenter’s The Thing. That’s the pinnacle, and everything else is an answer to that, an effort to recreate it, it’s a springboard from that. The crutch of computer generated imagery is — like any crutch — it’s a fucking crippling one, ultimately, that we’re overly reliant on.

But there’s obviously a place for it; there is computer generated imagery in Random Acts of Violence, in addition to just the obvious stuff like the animation, but there’s stuff we did to, you know, add a bit of rain here and there, and to add in a blade here. There is a home for it, but to make it the entirety of your special effects design, that’s sacrificing too much control of the aesthetic for me. By the way, I also can’t name a movie with CGI that I love, right? But I can name a bunch of prosthetic bits that I think are masterpieces. Se7en, there’s nothing like that shit, that stuff is true artistry. 

One of the cool things about being in the same business since I was a kid is that you get to make relationships and you get to learn and you get to sort of go and ask people that you worked with when you were a kid who, like, remember you as the nerdy kid that asked too many questions. So the team that did all of the prosthetic effects, all of our gore, was Paul Jones. Jones also did a bunch of stuff in Goon: Last of the Enforcers, including the fist that breaks on his face and he loses a bunch of teeth, so his broken pallet, that’s all shit that Paul did.

If you google Paul Jones, you’ll see Resident Evil and everything, everything. And I worked with the guy when I was like 18-19, and we got along super well. We just shared nerdy interests — Fangoria kids, right — of course, I was an actual kid, he was in his 20s. So when I get time to make my horror movie, however many fucking years — a decade plus — later and I get to say, hey, Paul, can you come up with some crazy shit? And that’s the best. That’s the most fun thing. One of the most fun things about a movie is getting all of these people together, and having everyone just jam. 

So I know what I want — and what I think I want as the director and co-writer — Karim knows what he wants and what he thinks he wants as DP. Paul has some ideas as a creator himself, and Michelle Lannon, our production designer, Linda Muir, our costume designer, and we all chime in, and we all feed off each other. And somebody’s idea, like, “oh fuck, that would be awesome because that matches this other thing that we’re trying to do”, “oh, fuck, that’s true, that’s true because we can do this, right?” And then we start to find what we think our ceiling in our basement is, and how crazy we want to get, how crazy we’re allowed to get, how over the top, we want to know — if at all — blah, blah, blah.

And then we kind of just understand and realize that, and then it’s all the same, then it’s one shared fucking vision, and then we go out there and shoot the motherfucker. And so yeah, it’s very important for it to be as practical as humanly possible, and that includes our fire, right? We really did set that fucking house on fire. It’s heavy duty, man. So, wherever possible, be practical, and go with the practical as opposed to digital, but also know that we’re going to need some digital help later on down the line.

Kelly McNeely: I like that idea of having everyone come together — different artists — because it’s like when you get a lot of really good musicians together to make jazz or something. It’s that same idea, you’re making music that just fucking works.

Jay Baruchel: That’s it! And no idea is wrong, it’s just ideas that will survive and ones that won’t, because if an idea is wrong, then the guitarist is going to be in his head next time he wants to think of something. Right now I want everyone to pitch anything that comes to mind. If I end up using it, that’s that’s another thing, but I want you to feel fucking free, and I want you to feel ownership because I know that you’re going to swing for the fences.

Scroll down to continue to Page 2 for Jay’s movie recommendations

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Trailer for ‘The Exorcism’ Has Russell Crowe Possessed

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The latest exorcism movie is about to drop this summer. It’s aptly titled The Exorcism and it stars Academy Award winner turned B-movie savant Russell Crowe. The trailer dropped today and by the looks of it, we are getting a possession movie that takes place on a movie set.

Just like this year’s recent demon-in-media-space film Late Night With the Devil, The Exorcism happens during a production. Although the former takes place on a live network talk show, the latter is on an active sound stage. Hopefully, it won’t be entirely serious and we’ll get some meta chuckles out of it.

The film will open in theaters on June 7, but since Shudder also acquired it, it probably won’t be long after that until it finds a home on the streaming service.

Crowe plays, “Anthony Miller, a troubled actor who begins to unravel while shooting a supernatural horror film. His estranged daughter, Lee (Ryan Simpkins), wonders if he’s slipping back into his past addictions or if there’s something more sinister at play. The film also stars Sam Worthington, Chloe Bailey, Adam Goldberg and David Hyde Pierce.”

Crowe did see some success in last year’s The Pope’s Exorcist mostly because his character was so over-the-top and infused with such comical hubris it bordered on parody. We will see if that is the route actor-turned-director Joshua John Miller takes with The Exorcism.

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Win a Stay at The Lizzie Borden House From Spirit Halloween

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lizzie borden house

Spirit Halloween has declared that this week marks the start of spooky season and to celebrate they are offering fans a chance to stay at the Lizzie Borden House with so many perks Lizzie herself would approve.

The Lizzie Borden House in Fall River, MA is claimed to be one of the most haunted houses in America. Of course one lucky winner and up to 12 of their friends will find out if the rumors are true if they win the grand prize: A private stay in the notorious house.

“We are delighted to work with Spirit Halloween to roll out the red carpet and offer the public a chance to win a one-of-a-kind experience at the infamous Lizzie Borden House, which also includes additional haunted experiences and merchandise,” said Lance Zaal, President & Founder of US Ghost Adventures.

Fans can enter to win by following Spirit Halloween‘s Instagram and leaving a comment on the contest post from now through April 28.

Inside the Lizzie Borden House

The prize also includes:

An exclusive guided house tour, including insider insight around the murder, the trial, and commonly reported hauntings

A late-night ghost tour, complete with professional ghost-hunting gear

A private breakfast in the Borden family dining room

A ghost hunting starter kit with two pieces of Ghost Daddy Ghost Hunting Gear and a lesson for two at US Ghost Adventures Ghost Hunting Course

The ultimate Lizzie Borden gift package, featuring an official hatchet, the Lizzie Borden board game, Lily the Haunted Doll, and America’s Most Haunted Volume II

Winner’s choice of a Ghost Tour experience in Salem or a True Crime experience in Boston for two

“Our Halfway to Halloween celebration provides fans an exhilarating taste of what’s to come this fall and empowers them to start planning for their favorite season as early as they please,” said Steven Silverstein, CEO of Spirit Halloween. “We have cultivated an incredible following of enthusiasts who embody the Halloween lifestyle, and we’re thrilled to bring the fun back to life.”

Spirit Halloween is also preparing for their retail haunted houses. On Thursday, August 1 their flagship store in Egg Harbor Township, NJ. will officially open to start off the season. That event usually draws in hordes of people eager to see what new merch, animatronics, and exclusive IP goods will be trending this year.

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’28 Years Later’ Trilogy Taking Shape With Serious Star Power

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28 years later

Danny Boyle is revisiting his 28 Days Later universe with three new films. He will direct the first, 28 Years Later, with two more to follow. Deadline is reporting that sources say Jodie Comer, Aaron Taylor-Johnson, and Ralph Fiennes have been cast for the first entry, a sequel to the original. Details are being kept under wraps so we don’t know how or if the first original sequel 28 Weeks Later fits into the project.

Jodie Comer, Aaron Taylor-Johnson and Ralph Fiennes

Boyle will direct the first movie but it’s unclear which role he will take on in the subsequent films. What is known is Candyman (2021) director Nia DaCosta is scheduled to direct the second film in this trilogy and that the third will be filmed immediately afterward. Whether DaCosta will direct both is still unclear.

Alex Garland is writing the scripts. Garland is having a successful time at the box office right now. He wrote and directed the current action/thriller Civil War which was just knocked out of the theatrical top spot by Radio Silence’s Abigail.

There is no word yet on when, or where, 28 Years Later will start production.

28 Days Later

The original film followed Jim (Cillian Murphy) who wakes from a coma to find that London is currently dealing with a zombie outbreak.

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