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The Method to Director Osgood Perkins’ Madness

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Gretel & Hansel Director Osgood Perkins could be considered Hollywood horror royalty. For those who don’t know his father is legendary actor Anthony Perkins who played the conflicted killer Norman Bates in Alfred Hitchcock’s Psycho and its subsequent sequels.

Osgood’s latest work is Gretel & Hansel which just opened to some critical acclaim. Horror movies have had a recent renaissance in the past few years, some good, some bad, but ask a horror fan what is considered horror–and what isn’t–and you’ll get varied answers.

I sat down with Osgood to discuss this very topic among other things including what he considers horror. What I discovered is he has a definite vision of where he wants to take things and that includes making the genre just as frightening and just as moody for a younger audience.

Image result for Osgood Perkins"

Osgood “Oz” Perkins – Comingsoon.net 

iHorror: When you first saw the script for Gretel & Hansel with the names switched, how did you react?

Osgood Perkins: It seemed to me right off the bat that it was an opportunity to push—not in the direction of, ‘Oh, How can we make this into a pointless horror movie?’—but push it into the direction of making this into a coming-of-age story. For me, I started more thinking of it as ‘becoming of age’ right? And so this quality of like ‘oh if Gretel’s name is foreground then it implies that she’s going to experience a growth’ and so it became about what can that growth be and more importantly what can that growth be vis-à-vis Hansel?

Because if the expectation is that these two go together, how can we make this both a coming-of-age story and make that coming-of-age be related to this intrinsic relationship?

Were you afraid that people would expect more of an action film like the adaptation released in 2013?

Yeah and luckily the draft of the script that came to me was so faithful to the original telling and didn’t clutter the narrative with a bunch of additional characters or dragons or armies or Orcs—nothing was apologized for. We weren’t approaching it from an apologist’s standpoint. I felt the fact that it was such a nice, faithful and humble adherence to the source material is the best part about it by far.

There have been things like Hansel and Gretel: Witch Hunters, which by the way was successful and people liked—I never saw it, I don’t know. But it [Gretel & Hansel] never felt prohibited because of that. If anything it felt like we had rights on our side. We were going to be doing a thing that was gonna be most honorably reflective of what the story actually was, so that was exciting.

You’ve done some things for A24 and fandom is really polarizing right now. Some people think The Witch is horror, some people would argue that. What does horror mean to you?

For me horror is less about turning you off with gruesome, sort of aggressive defiling, all that stuff–which I get–was for a long time the expectation of horror movies and it was going to be like negatively reflective of the ugliness of things.

I think that’s valid.

I think that what I am excited to do is bring the humanist quality back to horror movies and horror stories; the sort of mournfulness of what it’s like to lose, what it’s like to not understand, what it’s like to have your experience clouded, what’s hidden from us. It’s much more about what’s hidden and what’s waiting as opposed to what’s assaulting us at all times.

It’s almost like there’s someone following us, or watching us, in no hurry. It’s called death. I think that is such a richer place to be than how ugly can we make the world seem. I don’t want to be doing that with my day, making the world ugly.

As far as special effects for Gretel & Hansel, are they in real-time, practical?

Yeah, everything we did we tried to do practically in the camera with the actors as much as we could.

Why?

It just fits the tempo better. It fits the rhythm of what we’re doing better. Everybody’s seen the bit of the witch pulling the hair out of her mouth at the table. That, in the movie, is a very slow thing.

In the trailers, they sped it up for the sake of marketing, but in the movie, it’s almost like this sort of silent expression of these horrible things I can do, but with elegance and in no hurry.

And I think there’s a feeling when you let the actor be in control of the timing as opposed to letting the VFX house be in control of the timing. Let the actor feel it and let it be revealed.

With disturbing, moody horror films coming from directors such as Ari Aster and Jordan Peele what are you hoping audiences get from this film?

My aspiration for this movie was to make a scary movie that’s PG-13 and there are very few if any of those. Scary Stories to Tell in the Dark is maybe the only one that can be named recently.

The idea was to sort of say to younger audiences, ‘You’re welcome into this genre, which is a little too much for you, but we’re gonna couch it in a recognizable story of children, we’re gonna couch it in coming-of-age so there’s going to be an uplifting, ultimate feeling but we’re going to paint it very darkly.

We’re gonna stay as close to this original telling as we can–it’s going to be simple, it’s not going to be in your face. To me, if you’re reading a child a fairy tale there’s no in-your-face version of that.

There’s the page-turning version of that. There’s the ‘Now we turn the page and it’s the next thing, and now we turn the page and it’s the next thing,’ so the picture that we make is supposed to have a page-turning quality to it as opposed to rushing toward scares all the time, it’s supposed to be: and then this, and then this, and then this, and then this, in a more measured and composed way that really never gets in your face.

It’s meant to have sort of a presentation of a storybook.

What are you working on next?

The next thing I am doing immediately is I wrote and am going to be directing an episode of the new “Twilight Zone for Jordan Peele who you mentioned before.

They were nice enough to suggest that I kind of build my own episode which is kind of uncommon for that show, so I wrote an original idea and I’m directing it. Which is really fun to honor the all-time great Twilight Zone but to do it with a new flair

Osgood Perkins’ Gretel & Hansel is now playing in theaters nationwide.

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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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