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Interview: Jay Baruchel on Horror, Slashers and ‘Random Acts of Violence’

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Random Acts of Violence Jay Baruchel

Jay Baruchel is an actor/writer/director/massive fan of the horror genre. For his second time directing a feature film (the first being Goon: Last of the Enforcers), it makes perfect sense that he’d dive into the genre head-first with Random Acts of Violence. 

Based on a graphic novel of the same name (written by Justin Gray and Jimmy Palmiotti), Baruchel spent years working on the script with co-writer Jesse Chabot. The end result is a stylish, brutal, and well developed horror film that challenges its viewers, intentionally and openly prompting conversations on artistic responsibility and violence in our culture while splattering the screen with gore.

I sat down with Baruchel to discuss the horror genre, slashers, and the making of this compelling and vibrant film.

You can check out Random Acts of Violence in theatres and on-demand in Canada on July 31, or on Shudder US, UK, and Ireland on August 20.


Kelly McNeely: So Random Acts of Violence is based on a graphic novel. But you’ve got a lot of really great horror elements in there, too. What were your inspirations or influences when directing the movie and making those horror elements really kind of pop?

Jay Baruchel: Basically it all — this is going to sound super hokey — but it stems from a kind of an earnest desire to do something rather than, like, ‘this is the movie to guide our hands’. So basically we wanted to kind of come up with a language for on screen violence that was as close to the real thing as we could manage, you know, give or take. And when I say that, I mean we wanted it to unfold clumsily, and to have a stop-starty energy.

We wanted to sort of bury the choreography in it as best as we could, so that the audience was kind of out of control and sort of at the mercy of our sequences. And so there’s a few movies that we think kind of got there with their violence. I think it would be Zodiac and Irréversible, and basically every Scorsese flick. You know, his flicks are always harsh as fuck, but nothing happens that couldn’t actually happen. Even if it’s horrendous to look at, it’s still, you know, physics and anatomy have rules, and so we just kind of wanted to abide by those. 

Touching on the sort of burying the choreography thing, our idea was like, there’s a social contract. And there’s a sort of music that comes from the social contract. We all wake up every day, we all have the same routine every day and when we’re out and about — this is obviously in a pre-fucking-COVID thing where people don’t know how to relate to one another anymore — but basically, when you leave your house, you make an agreement. I’m going to walk on the sidewalk, and I’m going to wait my turn, and I’m not going to hit anybody, and I’m going to pay my taxes, and I’m going to wait in line, and I’m going to get out of the way if someone’s running, whatever it is, there’s just a sort of music that’s happening that we all play along.

Kelly McNeely: This social contract that we all unknowingly sign.

Jay Baruchel: That’s exactly it, and from that comes a music that we might not even be able to put our fingers on, but you notice it when it stops. So if you’ve ever been out and about when a fight breaks out, or a fender bender, or the cops chase somebody, or somebody is kind of screaming, or somebody eats it, or whatever it is, the music is interrupted completely. And it’s now operating on its own meter, and you kind of don’t know that song. And you kind of have no idea where this is going to go. And we wanted our audiences to feel that.

If you’ve ever watched a movie before, you can reasonably assume once a sequence has begun, when it’s going to end. When you’re in an action movie, and you know, guns come out, they start shooting or somebody hits the ignition on a car, I know that I’m in for four to seven minutes of this. When the killer takes his knife out, same fucking thing, right? And how is that scary? If you know that all you have to do is weather the storm for this finite period that’s coming based on 100 plus years of cinema, which has just taught me that every sequence is a self contained thing unto itself. That gives you a control that I wanted the audience to not have. 

My idea was, I want when a kill happens in our movie for the audience to be unaware of where it would go. I want to bury its choreography as best I can, I want to mute its telegraphing. Best case scenario would be when a kill starts in my flick that the audience is like, oh shit, is this just what the movie is for the rest of the 90 minutes? So it was that, and it was finding movies that we thought kind of got there.

And a lot of it was based on conversations in the backyard with my friend George, who choreographed all the fights in the movie. And he’s a very talented actor, but a very accomplished martial artist himself. And we’re both huge movie nerds, and we spend all of our time together when we’re not making movies. And so we get into plenty of ideological discussions, and a lot of times it comes down to fight scenes. And we were like, how come every glass shatters upon impact in the movie? How come every chair shatters upon impact in the movie? 

Kelly McNeely: Every car explodes.

Jay Baruchel: Yes! And every punch lands sweet. Every block is perfect. None of that is real! And so that that was the spark that led to the kind of gore that we put in.

via Elevation Pictures

Kelly McNeely: You had Karim Hussein do the cinematography for Random Acts of Violence — I know he did Hobo With a Shotgun and Possessor,  which are both fucking gorgeous — how did you guys develop a shared visual language when making the film? Because it does have such a very distinct visual language.

Jay Baruchel: Oh, awesome. I’m happy to hear you say that, see, I think so too. The thing I’m most proud of with the film is that it’s a hard one to describe. People say, oh so is it kind of like Cabin in the Woods or is it like Saw or is it like– and it’s not really any of that, it’s kind of its own thing. 

Karim and I, our conversation about this movie really starts — one could argue — 20 plus years ago, because he and I have known each other since I was 15 or 16. Back in the day before he was a cinematographer, he was a writer director, and before he was a writer director, he was the founder of the Fantasia Film Festival in Montreal, and was a journalist for Fangoria. Fantasia was — I’ve been going to that festival since I was 14. And when I was 15 or 16, I was shooting a movie in Montreal called Matthew Blackheart: Monster Smasher, and Fangoria was covering it, and they sent Karim to cover it on set. And when I found out that he was one of the co-founders of Fantasia, I lost my shit and two nerds — you know what it is when two nerds find each other, and they just start speaking Linux — but then we sort of fell out of touch.

And then a few years ago, I saw him again via Jason Eisner who brought me over to an apartment, like some sort of little party type thing. And Brandon Cronenberg was there and Karim was there. And I said, Karim, man, I’ve been super proud of you from afar for the last 20 years, and he was like, “Yeah, likewise!”. So it was really cool for us to finally get to eventually make a movie, which is really the fruit of a nerdy discussion that lasted over two decades. 

He comes in with a surplus of ideas. He has never yet run out of inspiration and something new, and Karim’s greatest interest is in doing something original. Now, you can’t always, and that’s just the way it goes. But that should be always the aspiration and the goal. And Karim is also kind of — I call him my artistic conscience. Like, every decision that was kind of the tougher one to make creatively, like if ever we were at a fork in the road and there was a sort of more palatable, accessible way to do something — which was rarely my instinct — but you know, I’m making a movie with a finite period of time with other people’s money, and I gotta get people to dig it. So, that palatability and accessibility conversation is ever present, it’s always there. And having someone like Karim, he’s the angel on your shoulder — or the devil, if you ask the producers I suspect — that he’s the one being like, now go harder. No, fuck it. You know, just trust what we came up with. 

So I came in with a movie and he came in with a whole bunch of movies that we thought were kind of good reference points. I came in with The Red Shoes, which is an old British flick from the 40s or 50s — not remotely a horror flick, although I would argue it is kind of ultimately horrific — but it was more about just an energy I feel when I’m watching the flick, that I was like, oh, that in the color palette I think are kind of right for this thing. Karim comes in with a binder of DVDs.

His big instinct was that it was a steadicam flick, that was the spark that led to all of his inspiration and all of his ideas. The first kind of big one that seems to be was he’s like, I feel like the movie should live in a steadicam and be constantly flowing. And so the first movie that he kind of pointed out to me that was a pretty big inspiration for us — technically anyway — was White of the Eye, which is an 80s flick — an 80s serial killer flick — super fucking bonkers movie and really crazy photography, and when you see it, I think you would be able to see, “oh I see what he’s talking about”. 

And then once we kind of knew the language, once we had kind of lifted enough ideas from other people’s films to start our own kind of vocabulary and language. Then while we’re having this conversation, Karim’s also like, “alright, so I read the script, I think I’m seeing amber and cyan”. I said, oh, I want pink. I want the color that is the aggregate effect of a Christmas tree being on when all the colors of the Christmas lights, when they’re all singing at once. Like it gives you a pink takeaway. And Karim comes in with amber and cyan — fire and water, those are his two big sort of motifs that he came in with.

And then in sort of going through literally six drafts of our shotlist in pre-production, we eventually realized what the look of the film is, which is — and this is the main story, not the flashback [within the film] — but the look of the film is the POV of a curious ghost. It’s a ghost that is not sort of married to anybody, but has a vested interest and was connected to everybody, and it’s sort of so our camera wanders and it finds little details and it finds pieces and then kind of you know… So anyway there’s a fuckin curious ghost. I guess I could have answered that way easier. 

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Panic Fest 2024 Review: ‘The Ceremony Is About To Begin’

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People will look for answers and belonging in the darkest places and the darkest people. The Osiris Collective is a commune predicated upon ancient Egyptian theology and was run by the mysterious Father Osiris. The group boasted dozens of members, each forgoing their old lives for one held in the Egyptian themed land owned by Osiris in Northern California. But the good times take a turn for the worst when in 2018, an upstart member of the collective named Anubis (Chad Westbrook Hinds) reports Osiris disappearing while mountain climbing and declaring himself the new leader. A schism ensued with many members leaving the cult under Anubis’ unhinged leadership. A documentary is being made by a young man named Keith (John Laird) whose fixation with The Osiris Collective stems from his girlfriend Maddy leaving him for the group several years ago. When Keith gets invited to document the commune by Anubis himself, he decides to investigate, only to get wrapped up in horrors he couldn’t even imagine…

The Ceremony Is About To Begin is the latest genre twisting horror film from Red Snow‘s Sean Nichols Lynch. This time tackling cultist horror along with a mockumentary style and the Egyptian mythology theme for the cherry on top. I was a big fan of Red Snow‘s subversiveness of the vampire romance sub-genre and was excited to see what this take would bring. While the movie has some interesting ideas and a decent tension between the meek Keith and the erratic Anubis, it just doesn’t exactly thread everything together in a succinct fashion.

The story begins with a true crime documentary style interviewing former members of The Osiris Collective and sets-up what led the cult to where it is now. This aspect of the storyline, especially Keith’s own personal interest in the cult, made it an interesting plotline. But aside from some clips later on, it doesn’t play as much a factor. The focus is largely on the dynamic between Anubis and Keith, which is toxic to put it lightly. Interestingly, Chad Westbrook Hinds and John Lairds are both credited as writers on The Ceremony Is About To Begin and definitely feel like they’re putting their all into these characters. Anubis is the very definition of a cult leader. Charismatic, philosophical, whimsical, and threateningly dangerous at the drop of a hat.

Yet strangely, the commune is deserted of all cult members. Creating a ghost town that only amps up the danger as Keith documents Anubis’ alleged utopia. A lot of the back and forth between them drags at times as they struggle for control and Anubis keeps continuing to convince Keith to stick around despite the threatening situation. This does lead to a pretty fun and bloody finale that fully leans into mummy horror.

Overall, despite meandering and having a bit of a slow pace, The ceremony Is About To Begin is a fairly entertaining cult, found footage, and mummy horror hybrid. If you want mummies, it delivers on mummies!

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“Mickey Vs. Winnie”: Iconic Childhood Characters Collide in A Terrifying Versus Slasher

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iHorror is diving deep into film production with a chilling new project that’s sure to redefine your childhood memories. We’re thrilled to introduce ‘Mickey vs. Winnie,’ a groundbreaking horror slasher directed by Glenn Douglas Packard. This isn’t just any horror slasher; it’s a visceral showdown between twisted versions of childhood favorites Mickey Mouse and Winnie-the-Pooh. ‘Mickey vs. Winnie’ brings together the now-public-domain characters from A. A. Milne’s ‘Winnie-the-Pooh’ books and Mickey Mouse from the 1920s ‘Steamboat Willie’ cartoon in a VS battle like never before seen.

Mickey VS Winnie
Mickey VS Winnie Poster

Set in the 1920s, the plot kicks off with a disturbing narrative about two convicts who escape into a cursed forest, only to be swallowed by its dark essence. Fast forward a hundred years, and the story picks up with a group of thrill-seeking friends whose nature getaway goes horribly wrong. They accidentally venture into the same cursed woods, finding themselves face-to-face with the now monstrous versions of Mickey and Winnie. What follows is a night filled with terror, as these beloved characters mutate into horrifying adversaries, unleashing a frenzy of violence and bloodshed.

Glenn Douglas Packard, an Emmy-nominated choreographer turned filmmaker known for his work on “Pitchfork,” brings a unique creative vision to this film. Packard describes “Mickey vs. Winnie” as a tribute to horror fans’ love for iconic crossovers, which often remain just a fantasy due to licensing restrictions. “Our film celebrates the thrill of combining legendary characters in unexpected ways, serving up a nightmarish yet exhilarating cinematic experience,” says Packard.

Produced by Packard and his creative partner Rachel Carter under the Untouchables Entertainment banner, and our very own Anthony Pernicka, founder of iHorror, “Mickey vs. Winnie” promises to deliver an entirely new take on these iconic figures. “Forget what you know about Mickey and Winnie,” Pernicka enthuses. “Our film portrays these characters not as mere masked figures but as transformed, live-action horrors that merge innocence with malevolence. The intense scenes crafted for this movie will change how you see these characters forever.”

Currently underway in Michigan, the production of “Mickey vs. Winnie” is a testament to pushing boundaries, which horror loves to do. As iHorror ventures into producing our own films, we’re excited to share this thrilling, terrifying journey with you, our loyal audience. Stay tuned for more updates as we continue to transform the familiar into the frightful in ways you’ve never imagined.

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Mike Flanagan Comes Aboard To Assist in Completion of ‘Shelby Oaks’

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shelby oaks

If you have been following Chris Stuckmann on YouTube you are aware of the struggles he has had getting his horror movie Shelby Oaks finished. But there’s good news about the project today. Director Mike Flanagan (Ouija: Origin Of Evil, Doctor Sleep and The Haunting) is backing the film as a co-executive producer which might bring it much closer to being released. Flanagan is a part of the collective Intrepid Pictures which also includes Trevor Macy and Melinda Nishioka.

Shelby Oaks
Shelby Oaks

Stuckmann is a YouTube movie critic who’s been on the platform for over a decade. He came under some scrutiny for announcing on his channel two years ago that he would no longer be reviewing films negatively. However contrary to that statement, he did a non-review essay of the panned Madame Web recently saying, that studios strong-arm directors to make films just for the sake of keeping failing franchises alive. It seemed like a critique disguised as a discussion video.

But Stuckmann has his own movie to worry about. In one of Kickstarter’s most successful campaigns, he managed to raise over $1 million for his debut feature film Shelby Oaks which now sits in post-production. 

Hopefully, with Flanagan and Intrepid’s help, the road to Shelby Oak’s completion is reaching its end. 

“It’s been inspiring to watch Chris working toward his dreams over the past few years, and the tenacity and DIY spirit he displayed while bringing Shelby Oaks to life reminded me so much of my own journey over a decade ago,” Flanagan told Deadline. “It’s been an honor to walk a few steps with him on his path, and to offer support for Chris’ vision for his ambitious, unique movie. I can’t wait to see where he goes from here.”

Stuckmann says Intrepid Pictures has inspired him for years and, “it’s a dream come true to work with Mike and Trevor on my first feature.”

Producer Aaron B. Koontz of Paper Street Pictures has been working with Stuckmann since the beginning is also excited about the collaboration.

“For a film that had such a hard time getting going, it’s remarkable the doors that then opened to us,” said Koontz. “The success of our Kickstarter followed by the on-going leadership and guidance from Mike, Trevor, and Melinda is beyond anything I could have hoped for.”

Deadline describes the plot of Shelby Oaks as follows:

“A combination of documentary, found footage, and traditional film footage styles, Shelby Oaks centers on Mia’s (Camille Sullivan) frantic search for her sister, Riley, (Sarah Durn) who ominously disappeared in the last tape of her “Paranormal Paranoids” investigative series. As Mia’s obsession grows, she begins to suspect that the imaginary demon from Riley’s childhood may have been real.”

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