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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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’47 Meters Down’ Getting Third Movie Called ‘The Wreck’

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Deadline is reporting that a new 47 Meters Down installment is heading into production, making the shark series a trilogy. 

“Series creator Johannes Roberts, and screenwriter Ernest Riera, who wrote the first two films, have co-written the third installment: 47 Meters Down: The Wreck.” Patrick Lussier (My Bloody Valentine) will direct.

The first two films were a moderate success, released in 2017 and 2019 respectively. The second film is titled 47 Meters Down: Uncaged

47 Meters Down

The plot for The Wreck is detailed by Deadline. They write that it involves a father and daughter trying to repair their relationship by spending time together scuba diving into a sunken ship, “But soon after their descent, their master diver has an accident leaving them alone and unprotected inside the labyrinth of the wreck. As tensions rise and oxygen dwindles, the pair must use their newfound bond to escape the wreck and the relentless barrage of bloodthirsty great white sharks.”

The filmmakers are hoping to present the pitch to the Cannes market with production starting in the fall. 

47 Meters Down: The Wreck is the perfect continuation of our shark-filled franchise,” said Byron Allen, founder/chairman/CEO of Allen Media Group. “This film will once again have moviegoers terrified and on the edge of their seats.”

Johannes Roberts adds, “We can’t wait for audiences to be trapped underwater with us again. 47 Meters Down: The Wreck is going to be the biggest, most-intense film of this franchise.”

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‘Wednesday’ Season Two Drops New Teaser Video That Reveals Full Cast

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Christopher Lloyd Wednesday Season 2

Netflix announced this morning that Wednesday season 2 is finally entering production. Fans have been waiting a long time for more of the creepy icon. Season one of Wednesday premiered in November of 2022.

In our new world of streaming entertainment, it isn’t uncommon for shows to take years to release a new season. If they release another one at all. Even though we will likely have to wait quite a while to see the show, any news is good news.

Wednesday Cast

The new season of Wednesday looks to have an amazing cast. Jenna Ortega (Scream) will be reprising her iconic role as Wednesday. She will be joined by Billie Piper (Scoop), Steve Buscemi (Boardwalk Empire), Evie Templeton (Return to Silent Hill), Owen Painter (The Handmaid’s Tale), and Noah Taylor (Charlie and the Chocolate Factory).

We will also get to see some of the amazing cast from season one making a return. Wednesday season 2 will feature Catherine-Zeta Jones (Side Effects), Luis Guzman (Genie), Issac Ordonez (A Wrinkle in Time), and Luyanda Unati Lewis-Nyawo (Devs).

If all of that star power wasn’t enough, the legendary Tim Burton (The Nightmare Before Christmas) will be directing the series. As a cheeky nod from Netflix, this season of Wednesday will be titled Here We Woe Again.

Jenna Ortega Wednesday
Jenna Ortega as Wednesday Addams

We don’t know much about much about what Wednesday season two will entail. However, Ortega has stated that this season will be more horror focused. “We’re definitely leaning into a little bit more horror. It’s really, really exciting because, all throughout the show, while Wednesday does need a little bit of an arc, she never really changes and that’s the wonderful thing about her.”

That’s all the information that we have. Make sure to check back here for more news and updates.

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A24 Reportedly “Pulls Plug” On Peacock’s ‘Crystal Lake’ Series

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Crystal

Film studio A24 might not be going forward with its planned Peacock Friday the 13th spinoff called Crystal Lake according to Fridaythe13thfranchise.com. The website quotes entertainment blogger Jeff Sneider who made a statement on his webpage through a subscription paywall. 

“I’m hearing that A24 has pulled the plug on Crystal Lake, its planned Peacock series based on the Friday the 13th franchise featuring masked killer Jason Voorhees. Bryan Fuller was due to executive produce the horror series.

It’s unclear whether this is a permanent decision or a temporary one, as A24 had no comment. Perhaps Peacock will help the trades shed more light on this project, which was announced back in 2022.”

Back in January 2023, we reported that some big names were behind this streaming project including Bryan Fuller, Kevin Williamson, and Friday the 13th Part 2 final girl Adrienne King.

Fan Made Crystal Lake Poster

“‘Crystal Lake info from Bryan Fuller! They officially start writing in 2 weeks (writers are here in the audience).” tweeted social media writer Eric Goldman who tweeted the info while attending a Friday the 13th 3D screening event in January 2023. “It will have two scores to choose from – a modern one and a classic Harry Manfredini one. Kevin Williamson is writing an episode. Adrienne King will have a recurring role. Yay! Fuller has pitched four seasons for Crystal Lake. Only one officially ordered so far though he notes Peacock would have to pay a pretty hefty penalty if they didn’t order a Season 2. Asked if he can confirm Pamela’s role in the Crystal Lake series, Fuller replied ‘We’re honestly going to be covering it all. The series is covering the life and times of these two characters’ (presumably he’s referring to Pamela and Jason there!)'”

Whether or not Peacock is moving forward with the project is unclear and since this news is secondhand information, it still has to be verified which will require Peacock and/or A24 to make an official statement which they have yet to do.

But keep checking back to iHorror for the latest updates to this developing story.

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