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Directors Justin Benson & Aaron Moorhead Talk ‘Spring,’ Upcoming Projects [Exclusive]

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Spring, the new film from Justin Benson and Aaron Moorhead, who brought us 2012’s Resolution, is hitting theaters and VOD on Friday, March 20. Be sure to read our review, but if you just want to know if it’s any good, I’ll tell you straight up. You should watch this one.

We had the opportunity to ask Benson and Moorhead some questions about Spring and some upcoming projects, so let’s get right to it.

iHorror: What were some of the challenges in working on a bigger film like Spring compared to a smaller one like Resolution? Do you prefer the larger or smaller scale?

Justin Benson and Aaron Moorhead: SPRING was hard because our trailer was too big, they had trouble towing it down to the beach, and being inside it gave Justin the exact opposite of claustrophobia.

But honestly, the challenge wasn’t anything related to creative control, thank God. We had complete control of SPRING. It’s mostly that things expand exponentially in how complicated they get when you involve more people and a larger story. It sometimes seems like it would have been physically impossible to make the film with a hundred dollars less than we had. The budget for SPRING was really modest, though, and as producers we had a strong grasp on where and why it was being spent, plus our producer David Lawson is a demigod. It’s a miracle that a movie like Transformers doesn’t cost 3 billion dollars and either never finish or become a complete mess — maybe Michael Bay should get more credit.

We definitely sit most comfortably at a level where we feel like everyone has what they need and is provided for, but not then by proxy giving up our craving to do as many jobs as we can get our hands on (directing, cinematography, editing, producing, writing, vfx, etc). On Resolution we had fantasies of future work with a legitimate budget, and on Spring we had fantasies of running off with a camera and two of our favorite actors and inventing something. It comes and goes with the tide.

iH: You talk a lot about building mythology with your movies, and with Spring in particular it plays right into the love story backbone. Which idea came first with Spring? The love story or the mythology?

JB & AM: At a certain point it all blends together into story-mush. You know you want to tell a love story, at some point in your life you also get this idea about a very special type of monster that you’ve never seen before, you create characters, make them talk, put them in situations…it’s hard to pin something like that down, and honestly it’s just a lot of hard work to sit at your desk and think something new up. It’s really just a recipe of a lot of hours sweating and thinking hard and trying not to look at the internet, and the script is the result.

WARNING: MINORLY SPOILERISH LANGUAGE AHEAD.

iH: One of the lines from Spring that really stuck with me was the one that said something along the lines of “Just because you haven’t seen something before doesn’t mean it’s supernatural.” Can you talk a little bit about keeping the mythology grounded in reality?

JB & AM: As natural skeptics ourselves, we always have to ask what would make me keep thinking after the movie’s over? If we don’t buy the possibility in the natural world, it can only get under our skin for a second. But there’s something about Nadia in the film that you think…maybe. The Universal movie monsters (were-man, zombies, dracula, frankenstein) are all inventions with relatively arbitrary rules. We thought — what if there were a skeleton key sort of creature that inspired all of these, and the features that it took on reminded of our own evolution? A werewolf has fangs, like our ape ancestry. A Creature from the Black Lagoon has scales, like our primordial predecessors (sorry/not sorry for that PERFECT ALLITERATION). That tiny little potentially-coincidental crossover from each of our zeitgeist’s “monsters” was enough to intrigue the inner skeptic and to design something larger.

iH: Another thing I thought you guys did really effectively was using things that secondary characters would talk about, which would maybe influence main character Evan’s thought process down the line. Examples that come to mind are when one of the guys that Evan meets up with in Italy tells a story about a woman who left him, and of course the old man’s mourning of his wife. Can you talk about that?

JB & AM: We are in love with our secondary characters. We have a firm belief that they’re more than a way to salt-and-pepper your story, and too often they feel like a tool by the writer to get somewhere with the plot. For us, our side characters are about exploring another human interaction, one perhaps that can inform the plot a bit, but much more so to deepen our understanding of who these people are.

Also, Nick Nevern is hilarious and we just want to keep him talking, y’know? There’s this idea people have that if one character says or does one thing, one inspirational thing to the main character, it can solve the problem the main character is having. But nothing can solve the death of Evan’s mother and his ensuing listlessness, nothing but time. So here’s this macho guy surrounded by a bunch of guys, all trying to make him feel better rather than empathize because they have no idea how else to do it, but the only way he can really move on is by spending the rest of the movie with him and just watching him do it. Humans are complicated.

END OF MINORLY SPOILERISH LANGUAGE

iH: I’m a huge fan of The Battery. How did you get involved with Jeremy Gardner?

JB & AM: We met him briefly at a festival in Amsterdam. He thought we were pricks. We thought he was awesome. We met him again in Brazil, he revised his opinion of us, we drank together, lots of late nights were had. Had to fight with SAG to let us cast him. You can see why we did that, he’s amazing. We are opening a timeshare in his beard.

iH: I think Spring might be the most romantic horror film I’ve seen. What romances in horror film history have stuck out to you as particularly noteworthy?

JB & AM: There’s a long history of love stories with horror elements or vice-versa, but we’d be lying to you if we said we watched them all and they inspired the film. We had no idea if a love story with a supernatural side would work, we were just really confident in the script.

iH: What is the status of your Aleister Crowley movie Beasts?

JB & AM: Train’s just about to leave the station!

iH: You said in one interview that Beasts might be the darkest thing you’ll ever do. Can you elaborate on that?

JB & AM: There’s no way to tell an Aleister Crowley story with a happy ending, it’s that simple. That complicated man’s life is not a happy story, and his personality tends to lean toward extremes that many people will have trouble accepting. But it’s amazing in its meanness, its darkness is kind of like that of Boogie Nights (remember what the 3rd act becomes) or There Will Be Blood. We guarantee the film will still be fun to watch, but happy it will not be.

iH: IMDb has you guys pegged for an “untitled UFO cult comedy,” and at one point you said you were considering making an action-adventure film with horror elements, a romance with a horror element and a revenge western. Obviously Spring is the romance. Beasts is next right? Where do these other projects fit in these days?

JB & AM: Beasts is next at the moment. The other projects are stuff we’ve talked about or started: the action/adventure/horror and revenge western are orphaned scripts we’re seeking homes for, the romance with horror element became SPRING, and the UFO cult comedy is the product of our desire to constantly film stuff so we shoot it as we travel abroad and it stars ourselves. Who knows if/how it will ultimately finish, but at least we’re workin’.

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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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BET Releasing New Original Thriller: The Deadly Getaway

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The Deadly Getaway

BET will soon be offering horror fans a rare treat. The studio has announced the official release date for their new original thriller, The Deadly Getaway. Directed by Charles Long (The Trophy Wife), this thriller sets up a heart racing game of cat and mouse for audiences to sink their teeth into.

Wanting to break up the monotony of their routine, Hope and Jacob set off to spend their vacation at a simple cabin in the woods. However, things go sideways when Hope’s ex-boyfriend shows up with a new girl at the same campsite. Things soon spiral out of control. Hope and Jacob must now work together to escape the woods with their lives.

The Deadly Getaway
The Deadly Getaway

The Deadly Getaway is written by Eric Dickens (Makeup X Breakup) and Chad Quinn (Reflections of US). The Film stars, Yandy Smith-Harris (Two Days in Harlem), Jason Weaver (The Jacksons: An American Dream), and Jeff Logan (My Valentine Wedding).

Showrunner Tressa Azarel Smallwood had the following to say about the project. “The Deadly Getaway is the perfect reintroduction to classic thrillers, which encompass dramatic twists, and spine-chilling moments. It showcases the range and diversity of emerging Black writers across genres of film and television.”

The Deadly Getaway will premiere on 5.9.2024, exclusively ion BET+.

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