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Interview: Clancy Brown on ‘The Mortuary Collection’ and His Prolific Career

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The Mortuary Collection Clancy Brown

When describing the career of actor Clancy Brown, the best word to use is prolific. At the time of this writing, Brown has 298 acting credits to his name. As a voice actor, he’s provided his dulcet tones to a collection of iconic characters, from Mr. Krabs to Lex Luthor and everything in between (including Gargoyles, Mighty Ducks: The Animated Series, Rick and Morty, Star Wars: The Clone Wars, Mortal Kombat: Defenders of the Realm, and The Venture Bros). You’ll recognize Brown from The Shawshank Redemption, Starship Troopers, ER, and Billions, but for his role in The Mortuary Collection, it may take a moment to register his stoic face through all the prosthetic makeup. 

In The Mortuary Collection, Brown stars as Montgomery Dark, a mysterious and time-worn mortician who collects the stories of the recently deceased as they pass through his halls. When a young woman comes to his mortuary in search of a job, he accepts her challenge to tell a tale that will shock and awe, and what follows is a fabulous collection of storytelling shorts that come together as one cohesive anthology film. 

After reviewing the film for Fantasia Fest and interviewing writer/director Ryan Spindell, I was thrilled to have the opportunity to briefly speak with Brown about The Mortuary Collection and his epic career. 

Kelly McNeely: I understand you’ve been quoted saying, if it’s something that reaches out and grabs me, I want to do it. What grabbed you with The Mortuary Collection? What made you want to take on this project?

Clancy Brown: Oh, well, Ryan’s script, and then The Babysitter Murders. I got this script, and thought it was very good and very clever. And all the segments were strong, and the wraparound was really cool. And then I got to The Babysitter Murders segment and nothing was written, it just said, The Babysitter Murders and then went on to the conclusion of the framing story.

So I had to, you know, I liked it, but I had to find out what the joke of The Babysitter Murders was. And so I got the link for [the short film], and I watched The Babysitter Murders and just thoroughly enjoyed it. Clearly Ryan knew how to write, and after watching The Babysitter Murders, he had a really distinctive voice and a very clever sense of humor and storytelling techniques, and could obviously direct, edit, do all the things that he needs to do to be a filmmaker. And so at that point, it was like, as long as he’s not a jerk, and he doesn’t think I’m a jerk, let’s go do this. 

So we sat down, we met and talked and I really dug him from the get-go. And so we went and did it. And he’s a good man, he’s a real talent, and a great storyteller. And that’s the important thing in telling the story.

Kelly McNeely: Now, I was gonna ask as well, and you may have already answered this now with your previous comments, but you have a favorite segment in The Mortuary Collection?

Clancy Brown: I like them all. I think the one that I liked the most is Til Death Do You Part. I just think that it’s so sad. It was such a kind of a nightmare situation. There’s no winning that situation. And I thought Barak [Hardley] did such a great job acting it, and it was filmed so beautifully. And for goodness sake, it took place in an elevator. And it was funny, and it was horrific, and it was romantic, and it was heartbreaking, and it was sad, and it was — did I say funny? [laughs]. It had everything. Everything from A to Z was really good. 

Kelly McNeely: I love the visuals in the elevator, it’s just so beautifully shot. Now I understand that you were hospitalized after a reaction to prosthetics that you wore as Victor in The Bride, and you were sort of reluctant to wear them again for Highlander. Now, I’m guessing there was quite a bit of prosthetics or makeup that was involved for The Mortuary Collection, was there any sort of anxiety or hesitancy towards wearing those with what had happened previously?

Clancy Brown: Well, you know, back in The Bride and the Highlander days, that was a while ago, so they didn’t quite know everything they know now [laughs]. What happened on The Bride was that it wasn’t so much a skin reaction — I mean, I guess it’s the skin reaction anybody would have — but the glue that they used had ammonia in it that nobody knew about. So they would put in ammonia as an additive to latex when they take it out of the tree, I guess it keeps it from solidifying or something. And so they had ammonia in there, and they put it on my face and after too long, it just eats away at your skin like a diaper rash. 

But that was 25 years ago or something, and since then they’ve figured out how to do it much, much better, much quicker and much more efficiently and much safer, so it’s not a big deal now. It still takes too much time, but I didn’t really have any anxiety about it. I just had to do it. It had to be a good script, for me to do it [laughs].

Kelly McNeely: How long did the makeup take for that? 

Clancy Brown: That took about two hours to put on, and maybe an hour to take off. It gets a little quicker the more you do it, but not that much. I think probably the quickest we did it was two hours. And then it always takes too long to take off. But you got to do a lot. There’s a lot of cleanup you had to do before you got to go home.

But the makeup artist Mo Meinhart was just terrific. She did great work and took really good care of me, I can’t tell you how grateful I was to have somebody that conscientious and talented to do the makeup.

Kelly McNeely: And did you keep the teeth that you use in the film?

Clancy Brown: I did. I kept them. I snuck them out. They’re really creepy and weird, and my wife just think I’m not the man she married when I put those teeth in. She doesn’t understand why I hang on to stuff like that.

Kelly McNeely: Now you’ve had a very prolific career as a voice actor as well. And I understand some characters like Lex Luthor and Mr. Krabs you’ve obviously played for quite some time. Do you have a favorite character that you’ve returned to, that you just really really love doing the voice for?

Clancy Brown: I love doing both of those. I like doing Mr. Krabs and I like doing Lex very much. There was a thing called Heavy Gear. I think it was something like that? And the character I played in that, I can’t remember the name. It was a Sony project, there was some reason it didn’t air. I can’t remember why it didn’t air, too violent or something. 

Kelly McNeely: Now again, within voice acting, I understand you’ve done some for DC as well as for Marvel. Do you have — this is maybe a very loaded question — but do you have a preference between DC and Marvel?

Clancy Brown: When I was a kid, I preferred the Marvel characters. Mostly because I didn’t really appreciate the DC characters as much. As I’ve grown up, I like the DC characters a lot because they’re just so iconic. Marvel characters are more complex, I think, and there’s too many of them [laughs] there’s just too many of them. But I think there’s too many DC characters too. I don’t really think I have a preference of the worlds. I like both worlds. Marvel is more grounded in reality. And recently, there was Return to the Spider-Verse, I thought that was terrific. I thought that was just a wonderful realization of a new kind of Spider Man, a new kind of superhero. But then, I’m also getting a kick out of Pennyworth. I mean, that’s a cool sort of weird alternate universe DC mythology. I mean, they’re all cool, I’m not an expert enough to actually talk about it, but I enjoy them.

Kelly McNeely: Now you’ve had a very versatile career doing films like John Dies At the End — which by the way is my favorite book, so I was so happy that it got made into a movie…

Clancy Brown: What did you think of the movie?

Kelly McNeely: You know what, I love the movie, but the one thing that did disappoint me is they changed the name of the dog. I named my dog after the dog in the book, Molly, so when they changed it to Barklee I was like, agh, how could they? But I love what Don Coscarelli did with it. 

But, anyways, with films like John Dies at the End, Starship Troopers, Highlander, is there a role that will always stand out in your memory, or a role that you’ll always think back on with great fondness?

Clancy Brown: Oh, well, I mean, Montgomery Dark [The Mortuary Collection] for sure. You know, the first one that I did, Bad Boys, because that’s the first one. Buckaroo Banzai was a lot of fun. That kind of stands out, The Adventures of Buckaroo Banzai… certainly Shawshank stands out… you know, it’s probably much easier to ask me what roles have I forgotten, but then I couldn’t answer that question because I’ve forgotten them. But I’m sure there are ones that I’ve completely erased from my mind [laughs].

The Mortuary Collection is streaming now on Shudder. But if you collect physical media the way Montgomery Dark collects anecdotes from the afterlife, you’ll be happy to know that the film is seeing a Blu-ray release as of April 20th, 2021. You can read our review of the Blu-ray release here!

 

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New Windswept Action Trailer for ‘Twisters’ Will Blow You Away

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The summer movie blockbuster game came in soft with The Fall Guy, but the new trailer for Twisters is bringing back the magic with an intense trailer full of action and suspense. Steven Spielberg’s production company, Amblin, is behind this newest disaster film just like its 1996 predecessor.

This time Daisy Edgar-Jones plays the female lead named Kate Cooper, “a former storm chaser haunted by a devastating encounter with a tornado during her college years who now studies storm patterns on screens safely in New York City. She is lured back to the open plains by her friend, Javi to test a groundbreaking new tracking system. There, she crosses paths with Tyler Owens (Glen Powell), the charming and reckless social-media superstar who thrives on posting his storm-chasing adventures with his raucous crew, the more dangerous the better. As storm season intensifies, terrifying phenomena never seen before are unleashed, and Kate, Tyler and their competing teams find themselves squarely in the paths of multiple storm systems converging over central Oklahoma in the fight of their lives.”

Twisters cast includes Nope’s Brandon Perea, Sasha Lane (American Honey), Daryl McCormack (Peaky Blinders), Kiernan Shipka (Chilling Adventures of Sabrina), Nik Dodani (Atypical) and Golden Globe winner Maura Tierney (Beautiful Boy).

Twisters is directed by Lee Isaac Chung and hits theaters on July 19.

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Unbelievably Cool ‘Scream’ Trailer But Re-Imagined As A 50s Horror Flick

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Ever wonder what your favorite horror movies would look like if they had been made in the 50s? Thanks to We Hate Popcorn But Eat It Anyway and their use of modern technology now you can!

The YouTube channel reimagines modern movie trailers as mid-century pulp flicks using AI software.

What is really neat about these bite-sized offerings is that some of them, mostly the slashers go against what cinemas had to offer over 70 years ago. Horror movies back then involved atomic monsters, scary aliens, or some sort of physical science gone awry. This was the era of the B-movie where actresses would put their hands against their faces and let out over-dramatic screams reacting to their monstrous pursuer.

With the advent of new color systems such as DeLuxe and Technicolor, movies were vibrant and saturated in the 50s enhancing primary colors that electrified the action happening on screen, bringing a whole new dimension to films using a process called Panavision.

“Scream” reimagined as a 50s horror movie.

Arguably, Alfred Hitchcock upended the creature feature trope by making his monster a human in Psycho (1960). He used black and white film to create shadows and contrast which added suspense and drama to every setting. The final reveal in the basement would probably not have been if he had used color.

Jump to the 80s and beyond, actresses were less histrionic, and the only emphasized primary color was blood red.

What is also unique about these trailers is the narration. The We Hate Popcorn But Eat It Anyway team has captured the monotone narration of 50s movie trailer voiceovers; those over-dramatic faux news anchor cadences that emphasized buzz words with a sense of urgency.

That mechanic died out long ago, but luckily, you can see what some of your favorite modern horror movies would look like when Eisenhower was in office, developing suburbs were replacing farmland and cars were made with steel and glass.

Here are some other noteworthy trailers brought to you by We Hate Popcorn But Eat It Anyway:

“Hellraiser” reimagined as a 50s horror movie.

“It” reimagined as a 50s horror movie.
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Ti West Teases Idea For Fourth Film In The ‘X’ Franchise

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This is something that will excite fans of the franchise. In a recent interview with Entertainment Weekly, Ti West mentioned his idea for a fourth film in the franchise. He stated, “I do have one idea that plays into these movies that could maybe happen…” Check out more of what he said in the interview below.

First Look Image at MaXXXine (2024)

In the interview, Ti West stated, “I do have one idea that plays into these movies that could maybe happen. I don’t know if it’ll be next. It might be. We’ll see. I’ll say that, if there’s more to be done in this X franchise, it’s certainly not what people are expecting it to be.”

He then said, “It’s not just picking up again a few years later and whatever. It’s different in the way that Pearl was an unexpected departure. It’s another unexpected departure.”

First Look Image at MaXXXine (2024)

The first film in the franchise, X, was released in 2022 and was a huge success. The film made $15.1M on a $1M budget. It received great reviews earning a 95% Critic and 75% Audience scores on Rotten Tomatoes. The next film, Pearl, was also released in 2022 and is a prequel to the first film. It was also a big success making $10.1M on a $1M budget. It received great reviews earning a 93% Critic and 83% Audience score on Rotten Tomatoes.

First Look Image at MaXXXine (2024)

MaXXXine, which is the 3rd installment in the franchise, is set to be released in theaters on July 5th of this year. It follows the story of adult film star and aspiring actress Maxine Minx finally gets her big break. However, as a mysterious killer stalks the starlets of Los Angeles, a trail of blood threatens to reveal her sinister past. It is a direct sequel to X and stars Mia Goth, Kevin Bacon, Giancarlo Esposito, and more.

Official Movie Poster for MaXXXine (2024)

What he says in the interview should excite fans and leave you wondering what he may have up his sleeve for a fourth film. It seems like it may either be a spinoff or something entirely different. Are you excited for a possible 4th film in this franchise? Let us know in the comments below. Also, check out the official trailer for MaXXXine below.

Official Trailer for MaXXXine (2024)
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