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TIFF Interview with Female-Led German Zombie Film ‘Endzeit’ Writer and Director

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Endzeit Ever After

Endzeit (Ever After) is a gorgeous, haunting, intimate, and hopeful German zombie film that gives the apocalypse a bit of a fairytale-like twist. The film – which features women in every role of the creative team and in every lead role – was featured as part of TIFF 2018’s Discovery programming.

The story was developed from a wonderful graphic novel of the same name by Olivia Vieweg – who also came on board to write the film’s screenplay.

I sat down with Writer Olivia Vieweg and Director Carolina Hellsgård to discuss nature, the apocalypse, and being a woman in film

Kelly McNeely: So the film has an all-female creative team, and all-female lead characters, which I absolutely love. What was the experience like of working in that all-female creative environment?

Carolina Hellsgård: Well for me it’s something very natural, it’s not necessarily a political statement, I just always work with a lot of women. The colleagues that made Endzeit with me were all amazing. I just enjoyed this time we had together. We worked very well together!

Kelly: The film has a distinct feeling of creation, not just destruction. It’s kind of a balance of the two.

Olivia Vieweg: Yeah, exactly. We’re hoping that it has a more optimistic outlook than other apocalyptic films. We also believe that there’s some opportunities in the apocalypse and we should kind of embrace that chaos, to a certain extent. There’s a possibility to coexist with each other and with nature that we might not have explored.

via TIFF

Kelly: Nature plays a very big part in the film and the story. Where it’s filmed – mostly outdoors – is absolutely gorgeous. Were there any challenges of filming in that environment, doing so much outdoors?

Carolina: We were just joking about that, when Olivia was writing it…

Olivia: When I was writing the script I normally sit in my pajamas at my desk and write with my tea, very comfy. I wrote that the story takes place in summer, and everything is outside. When I got to the set for the first time I realized that about 60 people have to do this film… it was hard! It was about 40-45 degrees or something, and they were all sunburned! I realized ok, maybe I should feel sorry for what I did? But I don’t [laughs].

Carolina: It was fun, at times, but it was hard. It was a hard shoot. I was really worried about the weather all the time – it was raining and when it wasn’t raining I couldn’t really enjoy the sun. I was just looking at the sun, like, “Why doesn’t it ever set!? Just go down!”, it was really staring at us. It was very apocalyptic. It was so hot!

Towards the end, we were in September, and suddenly there was a weather change. Like, oh, this is Fall. It was freezing and raining… so that was it. We wrapped the film on a very, very rainy, dark night in Weimar about a year ago. And I was like, “Wow. That was that summer”. It was extremely hot, then cold, then we wrapped. [laughs]

Kelly: So the script was adapted from [Olivia’s] comic. How did [Carolina] find the graphic novel? Did you know each other before?

Carolina: The production company sent me Olivia’s script and I loved it. I really loved it. So we met, and we talked – quite a lot – then we met again. Then they decided that I would be a good fit to direct it.

Kelly: What were your influences and inspirations when writing – as well as filming?

Olivia: I was inspired by a well-known Italian movie called Io Non Ho Paura (I’m Not Scared). I really liked this film.

Carolina: I didn’t know you were inspired by this!

Olivia: It’s about children in South Italy, and all the fields are yellow. Such a bright yellow! It’s like nature is a protagonist because it’s so intense. There is a horror plot also, which you don’t expect at the beginning. It was so terrifying, but was so beautiful! When I wanted to do something, this was my role model, kind of.

Carolina: I didn’t even know that!

Olivia: I love this film. The combination between so beautiful but also afraid of everything… this combination really inspired me.

Carolina: It’s really good!

via TIFF

Kelly: The entertainment industry is pretty male-dominated. What perspectives do you think women bring into the horror genre, or what does female representation in film – as a whole – mean to you?

Carolina: I think it is very important that we discuss why women are under-represented in this industry. Not only in horror films, but in the whole industry. Like, what really is going on. Why aren’t there more women?

In Germany, people always say that – in the film schools – it’s very 50/50. And the women excel in this environment and they make films that go to festivals and win awards, and then they just disappear.

We have to look into that. Why is that the case? I’m very much for regulating tax money, I think this should be a 50/50 split for film financing. Private money, you can’t do anything about that. So it’s up to people’s own moral standards to work towards change.

But I think if we had a 50/50 regulation, we would stop talking about the content. Because that’s often a problem – people talk about the content of the films. They say women do more of these kinds of films, or talk about quality… but it’s really not about quality. It’s about the fact that women – of course – have other experiences than men, but maybe we can’t even pinpoint what these experiences are about. So let’s move this discussion up to a structural level and say that they have the same rights as men to work and earn money, and to put out films.

Kelly: So what’s next for you both?

Carolina: I’m shooting another film – in four weeks, based on my own script – in Spain.

Olivia: Next year I’m doing another graphic novel for the same publisher, and I just wrote a concept for a teenage dance flick.

Carolina: It’s really cool! I think it’s going to blow up.

Olivia: It’s really cool, yeah, I hope this will be my next project. I think it will also be pretty expensive with special effects with holograms… but I really, really like the idea. I always like young protagonists. That’s kind of my thing.

 

For more TIFF coverage on female-focused horror, check out our reviews of The Wind and Assassination Nation.

via Kinderfilm

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New ‘MaXXXine’ Image is Pure 80s Costume Core

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A24 has unveiled a captivating new image of Mia Goth in her role as the titular character in “MaXXXine”. This release comes approximately a year and a half after the previous installment in Ti West’s expansive horror saga, which covers more than seven decades.

MaXXXine Official Trailer

His latest continues the story arc of freckle-faced aspiring starlet Maxine Minx from the first film X which took place in Texas in 1979. With stars in her eyes and blood on her hands, Maxine moves into a new decade and a new city, Hollywood, in pursuit of an acting career, “But as a mysterious killer stalks the starlets of Hollywood, a trail of blood threatens to reveal her sinister past.”

The photo below is the latest snapshot released from the film and shows Maxine in full Thunderdome drag amid a crowd of teased hair and rebellious 80s fashion.

MaXXXine is set to open in theaters on July 5.

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Netflix Releases First BTS ‘Fear Street: Prom Queen’ Footage

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It’s been three long years since Netflix unleashed the bloody, but enjoyable Fear Street on its platform. Released in a tryptic fashion, the streamer broke up the story into three episodes, each taking place in a different decade which by the finale were all tied together.

Now, the streamer is in production for its sequel Fear Street: Prom Queen which brings the story into the 80s. Netflix gives a synopsis of what to expect from Prom Queen on their blog site Tudum:

“Welcome back to Shadyside. In this next installment of the blood-soaked Fear Street franchise, prom season at Shadyside High is underway and the school’s wolfpack of It Girls is busy with its usual sweet and vicious campaigns for the crown. But when a gutsy outsider is unexpectedly nominated to the court, and the other girls start mysteriously disappearing, the class of ’88 is suddenly in for one hell of a prom night.” 

Based on R.L. Stine’s massive series of Fear Street novels and spin-offs, this chapter is number 15 in the series and was published in 1992.

Fear Street: Prom Queen features a killer ensemble cast, including India Fowler (The Nevers, Insomnia), Suzanna Son (Red Rocket, The Idol), Fina Strazza (Paper Girls, Above the Shadows), David Iacono (The Summer I Turned Pretty, Cinnamon), Ella Rubin (The Idea of You), Chris Klein (Sweet Magnolias, American Pie), Lili Taylor (Outer Range, Manhunt) and Katherine Waterston (The End We Start From, Perry Mason).

No word on when Netflix will drop the series into its catalog.

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Live Action Scooby-Doo Reboot Series In Works at Netflix

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Scooby Doo Live Action Netflix

The ghosthunting Great Dane with an anxiety problem, Scooby-Doo, is getting a reboot and Netflix is picking up the tab. Variety is reporting that the iconic show is becoming an hour-long series for the streamer although no details have been confirmed. In fact, Netflix execs declined to comment.

Scooby-Doo, Where Are You!

If the project is a go, this would be the first live-action movie based on the Hanna-Barbera cartoon since 2018’s Daphne & Velma. Before that, there were two theatrical live-action movies, Scooby-Doo (2002) and Scooby-Doo 2: Monsters Unleashed (2004), then two sequels that premiered on The Cartoon Network.

Currently, the adult-oriented Velma is streaming on Max.

Scooby-Doo originated in 1969 under the creative team Hanna-Barbera. The cartoon follows a group of teenagers who investigate supernatural happenings. Known as Mystery Inc., the crew consists of Fred Jones, Daphne Blake, Velma Dinkley, and Shaggy Rogers, and his best friend, a talking dog named Scooby-Doo.

Scooby-Doo

Normally the episodes revealed the hauntings they encountered were hoaxes developed by land-owners or other nefarious characters hoping to scare people away from their properties. The original TV series named Scooby-Doo, Where Are You! ran from 1969 to 1986. It was so successful that movie stars and pop culture icons would make guest appearances as themselves in the series.

Celebrities such as Sonny & Cher, KISS, Don Knotts, and The Harlem Globetrotters made cameos as did Vincent Price who portrayed Vincent Van Ghoul in a few episodes.

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