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Horror Pride Month: Writer/Director Erlingur Thoroddsen

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Erlingur Thoroddsen was obsessed with horror films long before he was allowed to watch them.

The Icelandic filmmaker, who grew up just outside Reykjavik, wasn’t like most kids his age. Rather than playing soccer, he was inside watching American TV shows where he learned to speak English, and building the foundations for the talented filmmaker he would become.

But still, there were those horror films on the periphery.

“I’m not sure exactly where my love of horror began, but I was always intrigued by the stuff that I wasn’t supposed to watch,” Thoroddsen explained. “I remember going to the video store when I was a kid and being drawn to the horror section. I would look at the covers and the pictures on the back and imagine what the film might be like.”

A few years later, Scream was released and not only did he get to see the film, but it also made an immediate and lasting impact on the youngster. He obsessively tracked down all the film’s referenced in the movie and watched them and before long, he was making movies, himself, with his dad’s video camera.

“My friends and I were running around in the back yard with knives and ketchup making short films,” he laughed.

Something else was also happening to the burgeoning filmmaker at the same time, however. He was just beginning to realize that he was gay. It was a pivotal moment in the young man’s life and he says, to this day, that he feels a link between his queerness and his love of horror films.

Iceland isn’t a bad place at all to grow up gay. In the last 20-25 years, they have been remarkably progressive in their lawmaking and their protections to the gay community. In fact they were one of the first countries in the world to legalize gay marriage, and their annual Pride festival boasts attendance in excess of 100,000 people.

“Our government has been very forward-thinking when it comes to gay rights, and that focus is now shifting to trans rights,” the director explained. “It’s such a small country and it has that feeling that everyone knows everyone else and we were quick to realize that we were all in this together.”

By the age of 15, he and his best friend, who also came out of the closet a couple of years later, had rented a camera and put all their effort into creating their very first serious film.

They presented it to their school, charging $2 for admission, and by the end of the night, they had made $400 and Thoroddsen knew for certain that filmmaking was his destiny. After high school, he earned a Bachelor’s Degree in Literature in Iceland and then moved to New York to attend film school at Columbia University where he received his Master’s Degree.

After leaving university life behind, Thoroddsen wasted no time. He’d soon written and directed several short films including Little DeathBumps in the Night, and Child Eater which he would later turn into a feature film.

And then came Rift.

Bjorn Stefansson as Gunnar in Rift

Beautiful, romantic, and terrifying, Rift is a queer horror film with few peers.

Late one night, Gunnar (Bjorn Stefansson) receives a disturbing phone call from his ex-boyfriend Einar (Sigurður Þór Óskarsson). Fearing that Einar intends to hurt himself in some way, Gunnar makes the journey to where Einar’s staying, hoping he’s not too late.

Upon his arrival, Gunnar finds Einar is okay, at least on the surface, but he cannot shake the feeling that something more is going on, and as the two men are haunted by their past relationship over the course of the next several days, they also discover that other dangers are lurking just outside their front door.

Rift is the kind of film Hitchcock would have made if he were alive and making films today. The line between danger and passion is razor-thin and the tension is beautifully calculated throughout.

It’s a remarkable feat considering the speed with which it was created.

“I started writing in October of 2015 and we were shooting by March of 2016,” Thoroddsen said. “Bjorn had been playing a lot of tough guys roles on stage and Sigorour had been repeatedly cast in childlike roles and they were both looking to do something different so I found them at the perfect time in their careers. We premiered the film less than one year after I started writing.”

The film blurs genre lines, and the writer/director was intensely proud of how the final product and how it was received.

Turning his eye to the future, Thoroddsen says he feels a certain responsibility to continue infusing his films with LGBTQ characters and story lines, but he also says that those characters and situations must grow organically from the material.

“In Iceland, we have very few films every year and almost none of them have queer characters so I feel the need to get up and do something about that,” he said. “There’s something that compels me to do it. I’ll always try to squeeze in some gayness where I can, but for some stories it just doesn’t fit and I can’t force it.”

For now, the filmmaker, who is currently living in Los Angeles, has numerous projects in development including a feature that will take him back to his home country this winter.

Rift is currently available on both Shudder and Amazon Streaming and some of Thoroddsen’s short films are available on YouTube. You can check out one of these shorts, titled The Banishing, and the trailer for Rift below!

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2xiuuWmraVM

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‘Evil Dead’ Film Franchise Getting TWO New Installments

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It was a risk for Fede Alvarez to reboot Sam Raimi’s horror classic The Evil Dead in 2013, but that risk paid off and so did its spiritual sequel Evil Dead Rise in 2023. Now Deadline is reporting that the series is getting, not one, but two fresh entries.

We already knew about the Sébastien Vaniček upcoming film that delves into the Deadite universe and should be a proper sequel to the latest film, but we are broadsided that Francis Galluppi and Ghost House Pictures are doing a one-off project set in Raimi’s universe based off of an idea that Galluppi pitched to Raimi himself. That concept is being kept under wraps.

Evil Dead Rise

“Francis Galluppi is a storyteller who knows when to keep us waiting in simmering tension and when to hit us with explosive violence,” Raimi told Deadline. “He is a director that shows uncommon control in his feature debut.”

That feature is titled The Last Stop In Yuma County which will release theatrically in the United States on May 4. It follows a traveling salesman, “stranded at a rural Arizona rest stop,” and “is thrust into a dire hostage situation by the arrival of two bank robbers with no qualms about using cruelty-or cold, hard steel-to protect their bloodstained fortune.”

Galluppi is an award-winning sci-fi/horror shorts director whose acclaimed works include High Desert Hell and The Gemini Project. You can view the full edit of High Desert Hell and the teaser for Gemini below:

High Desert Hell
The Gemini Project

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‘Invisible Man 2’ Is “Closer Than Its Ever Been” to Happening

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Elisabeth Moss in a very well-thought-out statement said in an interview for Happy Sad Confused that even though there have been some logistical issues for doing Invisible Man 2 there is hope on the horizon.

Podcast host Josh Horowitz asked about the follow-up and if Moss and director Leigh Whannell were any closer to cracking a solution to getting it made. “We are closer than we have ever been to cracking it,” said Moss with a huge grin. You can see her reaction at the 35:52 mark in the below video.

Happy Sad Confused

Whannell is currently in New Zealand filming another monster movie for Universal, Wolf Man, which might be the spark that ignites Universal’s troubled Dark Universe concept which hasn’t gained any momentum since Tom Cruise’s failed attempt at resurrecting The Mummy.

Also, in the podcast video, Moss says she is not in the Wolf Man film so any speculation that it’s a crossover project is left in the air.

Meanwhile, Universal Studios is in the middle of constructing a year-round haunt house in Las Vegas which will showcase some of their classic cinematic monsters. Depending on attendance, this could be the boost the studio needs to get audiences interested in their creature IPs once more and to get more films made based on them.

The Las Vegas project is set to open in 2025, coinciding with their new proper theme park in Orlando called Epic Universe.

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Jake Gyllenhaal’s Thriller ‘Presumed Innocent’ Series Gets Early Release Date

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Jake gyllenhaal presumed innocent

Jake Gyllenhaal’s limited series Presumed Innocent is dropping on AppleTV+ on June 12 instead of June 14 as originally planned. The star, whose Road House reboot has brought mixed reviews on Amazon Prime, is embracing the small screen for the first time since his appearance on Homicide: Life on the Street in 1994.

Jake Gyllenhaal’s in ‘Presumed Innocent’

Presumed Innocent is being produced by David E. Kelley, J.J. Abrams’ Bad Robot, and Warner Bros. It is an adaptation of Scott Turow’s 1990 film in which Harrison Ford plays a lawyer doing double duty as an investigator looking for the murderer of his colleague.

These types of sexy thrillers were popular in the ’90s and usually contained twist endings. Here’s the trailer for the original:

According to Deadline, Presumed Innocent doesn’t stray far from the source material: “…the Presumed Innocent series will explore obsession, sex, politics and the power and limits of love as the accused fights to hold his family and marriage together.”

Up next for Gyllenhaal is the Guy Ritchie action movie titled In the Grey scheduled for release in January 2025.

Presumed Innocent is an eight-episode limited series set to stream on AppleTV+ starting June 12.

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