Home Blog Page 42

Journey Into The Subconscious With ‘In Your Dreams’ Filmmakers

0

In Your Dreams Director Alex Woo and Producer Tim Hahn open up about Netflix’s hilarious, emotional, and brilliant upcoming animated feature.

IN YOUR DREAMS teaser trailer
IN YOUR DREAMS – In Your Dreams is a comedy adventure about Stevie (12) and her little brother Elliot (8) who journey into the absurd landscape of their own dreams. If the siblings can withstand a snarky stuffed giraffe, zombie breakfast foods, and the queen of nightmares, the Sandman will grant them their ultimate dream come true… the perfect family. Cr: Netflix © 2025

Netflix’s upcoming animated film, In Your Dreams, is a creative journey into the human subconscious. Releasing on November 14th, the film follows siblings Stevie and Elliot as they journey into their own dreams to find the mythical Sandman and ask him to grant them the perfect family.

During a special Netflix event, the filmmakers participated in a press conference for a group of journalists that included Mama’s Geeky. Director Alex Woo and Producer Tim Hahn offered an exclusive look into the making of this highly anticipated film. They shared behind-the-scenes details and the inspiration behind the characters, story, and stunning animation. From the film’s deeply personal origins to the challenges of bringing a dream world to life, here is what the filmmakers revealed.

Alex Woo Reveals The Heart Of The Story

The film’s emotional core is rooted in Alex Woo’s own childhood. Woo revealed the initial inspiration came from his own experience with his family.

“When I was like maybe six or seven years old, my mom went away for a little bit, and obviously it was, you know, it was hard for me and my brother,” Woo shared. “We banded together and we tried all these hare brained schemes to try and get our parents to get back together. And that was the big inspiration for this film.”

Alex Woo’s Personal Inspiration For Baloney Tony

IN YOUR DREAMS teaser trailer
IN YOUR DREAMS – In Your Dreams is a comedy adventure about Stevie (12) and her little brother Elliot (8) who journey into the absurd landscape of their own dreams. If the siblings can withstand a snarky stuffed giraffe, zombie breakfast foods, and the queen of nightmares, the Sandman will grant them their ultimate dream come true… the perfect family. Cr: Netflix © 2025

One of the film’s most memorable characters is the hilarious Baloney Tony, who is voiced by Craig Robinson. Woo shared the surprising origin of the character. “My brother used to have this stuffed animal that had this really gross stain on the back. We called him butthole bear,” Woo laughed. “That was a big inspiration for Baloney Tony.”

More than just a funny sidekick, Baloney Tony serves a deeper narrative purpose. Woo explained, “Baloney Tony is really supposed to be the sort of subconscious of Elliot, sort of his id.”

A Long Road To The Big Screen

The path to getting In Your Dreams made was a long one, spanning nearly a decade. Woo and Hahn first conceived the idea in late 2016 at their company, Kuku Studios. “We put a pitch together in six months. We pitched it around town. Nobody bought it,” Woo recalled.

After shelving the project to work on their show Go! Go! Cory Carson, the opportunity arose again with Netflix in 2020. “Netflix got into original features and so we pulled this idea off the shelf, pitched it to them, they liked it, and they green lit it.”

Alex Woo On The Kaleidoscope of Animation Styles

Netflix Heads To Annecy 2025 With Multiple Projects, Including Stranger Things: Tales From '85
IN YOUR DREAMS – In Your Dreams is a comedy adventure about Stevie (12) and her little brother Elliot (8) who journey into the absurd landscape of their own dreams. If the siblings can withstand a snarky stuffed giraffe, zombie breakfast foods, and the queen of nightmares, the Sandman will grant them their ultimate dream come true… the perfect family. Cr: Netflix © 2024

One of the most unforgettable aspects of In Your Dreams is its use of diverse animation styles to represent the dream world. Woo explained this creative decision, “It was so obvious to try and take advantage of the medium of animation and it’s about the world of dreams, and you have so many possibilities in a world of dreams.”

He specifically mentioned his love for anime. “I was really heavily influenced by anime as a kid. I wanted to find some way to put that sort of aesthetic into the film, and being in a world of dreams sort of gave us that license to do it.”

Musical Nostalgia And Budget Challenges

The film’s soundtrack is a trip back in time, featuring music from the ’80s and ’90s. Woo revealed they were fortunate to get the songs they wanted. “There wasn’t any song that I wanted that we couldn’t get,” he stated, noting that the Eurythmics song was “first on my list.”

Hahn praised the collaboration with the streaming giant, “And props to the Netflix music team. They were amazing to work with.”

The Power Of Authentic Representation

When asked about their journey as Asian American filmmakers, Woo and Hahn reflected on the progress made in the industry. Woo expressed pride in their representation but also noted his own positive experience. “I feel like I’ve been very fortunate that I haven’t experienced that much, I don’t know, I guess –” Hahn offered the word “obstacles” and added, “I think we get to be a generation maybe that’s had a little bit of help ahead of us, right? Breaking some of those barriers and then letting us into this industry.”

The filmmakers made a conscious choice to portray the characters’ heritage as an authentic part of their lives, rather than a central plot point. “We didn’t want to make this a front and center story about their Asian identity,” Woo said. “We just wanted that to be part of their world, just like for me. It’s just a part of who I am, but it’s not front and center.”

From The Midwest To The Dream World

IN YOUR DREAMS teaser trailer
IN YOUR DREAMS – In Your Dreams is a comedy adventure about Stevie (12) and her little brother Elliot (8) who journey into the absurd landscape of their own dreams. If the siblings can withstand a snarky stuffed giraffe, zombie breakfast foods, and the queen of nightmares, the Sandman will grant them their ultimate dream come true… the perfect family. Cr: Netflix © 2025

Alex Woo explains that In Your Dreams is filled with subtle nods to his upbringing in the Midwest. The layout of the main characters’ house and the surrounding neighborhood are taken directly from Woo’s childhood home in Minnesota. “The kitchen of that house, the opening scene, is like exactly my kitchen,” he shared.

Hahn noted the creative process behind these details, stating that Woo “created it from sense memory.”

Woo revealed that the dreams in the movie are also drawn from real life. “We had basically a day or two where we just had everybody in the story team just come up with all of the dreams that they’ve had.”

He also explained the intentional connection between the real world and the dream world. “Almost every single dream that they experience is set up somewhere in the real world. That’s my experience of dreams is like stuff that happens to me during the day somehow weaves its way into my subconscious and ends up in my dreams at night. And so, we really wanted to reflect that in the film.”

Don’t miss the chance to experience this heartfelt adventure. The new trailer for In Your Dreams is out now. Mark your calendars for November 14th, when the movie arrives on Netflix.

In Your Dreams poster

About In Your Dreams

Stevie and her little brother Elliot journey into the wildly absurd landscape of their own dreams to ask the Sandman to grant them the perfect family.

NEXT: Netflix’s In Your Dreams Teaser Trailer + Meet The Characters

Vicious Review [Fantastic Fest 2025]

0

Vicious has an intriguing premise and a lot of great jump scares, but somewhere along the line it looses itself. Still, Dakota Fanning is incredible.

Vicious movie review
Dakota Fanning stars in Paramount Pictures’ “VICIOUS.”

Vicious has a lot of great elements to it. From an intriguing and unique premise, to a phenomenal lead performance, there are a lot of things this movie gets right. Unfortunately, it goes on a bit too long and ends up getting in its own way, leaving some viewers more confused and frustrated than anything else.

When a strange, lost, and seemingly confused woman shows up at her door, Polly (Dakota Fanning) has a much different evening than she expected to. Her night quickly turns to terror as she is tasked with putting three things in a box – something she hates, something she needs, and something she loves – and is given dire consequences should she not accomplish it.

Vicious movie review
Kathryn Hunter stars in Paramount Pictures’ “VICIOUS.”

Kathryn Hunter doesn’t have a large role in Vicious, but it is a very important one. She helps to set the tone for what is to come and does a great job with what she is given. Viewers will immediately start to wonder what exactly she is up to. She is just creepy enough to keep us entertained, but not too creepy that it is hard to watch.

Vicious movie review
Dakota Fanning stars in Paramount Pictures’ “VICIOUS.”

Dakota Fanning is at the center of Vicious, as expected. She is the main focus of the movie and is often on screen completely by herself. It should come as no surprise that she gives it her all, delivering an incredible performance. It is easy to root for her as a character, despite the well known fact that she is flawed. After all, we are all flawed in one way or another, aren’t we?

Vicious movie review
Dakota Fanning, left, and Emily Mitchell star in Paramount Pictures’ “VICIOUS.”

Polly is an easy character to root for, especially when she is interacting with her niece (Emily Mitchell) that she loves dearly. There are not a lot of characters in Vicious, but whenever Dakota Fanning is given the chance to act opposite someone, she tries to keep things interesting. That said, the movie is at its best when it is just her.

There are a lot of effective jumpscares and some great visuals in Vicious. Once again, it is a truly interesting premise that could support an entire franchise when done correctly.

Vicious movie review
Dakota Fanning stars in Paramount Pictures’ “VICIOUS.”

The biggest issue with Vicious is that it has a few moments that could have (and perhaps should have) been natural endings. It ends up dragging on far too long, and as the story continues, it starts to negate lore and the rules of this world that seem to have been already established. Surely the reasoning here is to cause the audience to wonder, alongside Polly, what is and isn’t actually happening, but instead it just creates confusion and frustration.

Vicious movie review
Dakota Fanning stars in Paramount Pictures’ “VICIOUS.”

Considering Vicious is a straight to Paramount+ movie, it can be offered some leway. There are a lot of things that work, but unfortunately in the end it takes away from all the good it did early on by switching things up in the final act.

Some other Fantastic Fest attendees shared theories that the messaging is about depression and suicide thoughts, which I can see, but that doesn’t fix that the lore gets jumbled long after it should have ended.

About Vicious

When Polly (Dakota Fanning) receives a mysterious Box from an unexpected late-night visitor, it comes with a simple instruction: place three things inside: something you need, something you hate, and something you love.

What begins as a strange ritual quickly unravels into a waking nightmare. Trapped in a terrifying world where reality bends and memory betrays, Polly must navigate a series of impossible choices. As time slips away, she’s forced to confront the darkness not just around her, but within her–before it consumes everything and everyone she’s ever known.

Vicious is streaming October 10 on Paramount+.

NEXT: Jalmari Helander On Sisu: Road to Revenge: “F Off. It’s A Movie.”

Dailog Talks K-Drama OSTs, Creative Freedom & His Solo EP, Basecamp

0

In this interview Dailog, the producer behind hits for Twice and Red Velvet, discusses his new solo EP, Basecamp, and his unique creative process.

Dailog Talks K-Drama OSTs, Creative Freedom & His Solo EP, Basecamp

Dailog, a South Korean singer-songwriter and producer, has long been a creative force behind some of K-pop’s biggest hits and beloved K-drama soundtracks. Now, with the release of his solo EP, Basecamp, he is stepping into the spotlight with his own unique sound. The EP is a deeply personal journey, with Dailog creating a mix of indie rock, surf rock, and dream pop that is both nostalgic and refreshingly new. He uses love as his guide, creating songs that feel like a safe haven – a place to rest and find the courage to start again.

Mama’s Geeky had the opportunity to sit down with Dailog to discuss his creative process, his experiences working with top artists like Red Velvet’s Joy and SEVENTEEN’s DK, and the personal stories behind the tracks on Basecamp.

Dailog opened up about the challenges of being both a producer and a solo artist, the value of staying true to his own voice, and what fans can look forward to next. Read on to discover the man behind the music and the philosophy that drives his art.

Dailog On Working as a Producer vs. a Solo Artist

Mama’s Geeky: How does your approach differ when you are writing a song for another artist versus when you’re writing for yourself?

Dailog: When I write for other artists, I focus on their story and color. For dramas with these, I need to capture the emotions of the scene, and for K-pop, it’s all about polish and mass appeal. But when it’s my own music, it’s 100% my story. I keep asking myself what sound I want to make and what words I want to say. That process feels closer to the pure joy of making music.

Mama’s Geeky: You’ve worked on a lot of K-drama soundtracks. What is the process like for creating a song that has to fit a specific scene or mood?

Dailog: The key in drama music is capturing the flow of emotions in a scene. It has to reflect the character’s feeling and situation while still having a strong melody. If the music is too strong in color, it won’t match the video. So I try to keep originality at a balanced level. Sometimes, I even watch a favorite drama muted and compose along with it.

Dailog On Collaborations and Musical Influences

Mama’s Geeky: Can you share a story behind one of your most memorable collaborations with a K-pop artist?

Dailog: Working with SEVENTEEN’s DK, the Korean name is Dokyeom, was unforgettable. He’s always known as an amazing vocalist, but watching him refine even the smallest breath showed me his sincerity. It inspired me to treat my own music with the same care and honesty.

Mama’s Geeky: How do you maintain a balance between current trends in the K-pop industry and then keeping your own distinct musical style?

Dailog: Writing for K-pop means creating melodies that feel familiar and easy to connect with. At the same time, the artist’s unique color has to shine through. I always aim for what I call “familiar freshness.” In my solo work, I give myself more freedom to experiment while still using the precision I learned from OSTs and K-pop.

Mama’s Geeky: What would you say is the most challenging part of the production process for you?

Dailog: The hardest part is being responsible for everything from writing lyrics and melodies to the final engineering. Sometimes I need to be creative and experimental, other times logical and precise. It feels like having two sides of myself working at once and always pushing for the best result can be tough.

Dailog On the Basecamp EP

Dailog Talks K-Drama OSTs, Creative Freedom & His Solo EP, Basecamp

Mama’s Geeky: Your EP is titled Basecamp, which I got to hear a little snippet of it. It sounds amazing. What is the meaning behind that title and how does it represent the themes of the album?

Dailog: For me, love was more than just happiness. It was a shelter that gave me strength in life’s journey. That’s why I chose the word “base camp.” The album follows a day from morning to night at base camp, carrying the message that love is both a place to rest and the courage to start again.

Mama’s Geeky: How has your experience as a behind-the-scenes producer influenced your work as a solo artist?

Dailog: As a producer, I’m always balancing between market appeal and originality. Music is both personal art and a part of popular culture. That same tug-of-war shaped my solo work too. I thought a lot about how to keep my own voice while still making music that people can enjoy.

Mama’s Geeky: Which track on Basecamp would you say is the most personal for you to write and why?

Dailog: The most personal song is the final track, “Campfire.” It reflects my wish to keep love alive, like glowing embers, even after the fiery phase. In reality, that fire went out, but I hope to carry that feeling into future love.

Mama’s Geeky: Which would you say was the most challenging for you?

Dailog: The hardest track was track number two, “Boy Scout.” I wanted it to feel simple but powerful, so it took endless tries and revisions. It was the only song where I got help from other musicians to bring it to life, like a drummer or guitarist and a mastering engineer.

Looking to the Future

Mama’s Geeky: How would you describe your style of music to someone who’s just getting to know you?

Dailog: I describe my music as vintage yet fresh. It blends indie rock, surf rock, and dream pop – a sound that can feel both warm and dreamy. I take retro influences from the past and reinterpret them with my own sensibility.

Mama’s Geeky: What advice would you give to an aspiring singer-songwriter or producer in the Korean music industry?

Dailog: I think the most important thing is finding your own color. The K-pop market is very competitive and changes quickly, but the music that lasts is the one that truly reflects the artist. Study the trends, but never forget to show your own voice. The tougher the competition, the more you need to lean into your uniqueness.

Mama’s Geeky: Who would you say are some of your biggest musical influences?

Dailog: I grew up listening to everything from punk rock to hip hop, so many artists come to mind. But if I had to choose one, I’d say Pharrell Williams. I love him. He managed to stay trendy for decades without losing his own color, and he’s loved by so many people. That’s the kind of musician I want to be too.

Mama’s Geeky: What is one goal that you still hope to achieve in your career?

Dailog: My biggest goal isn’t about numbers or achievements. It’s to keep making music consistently like Pharrell Williams. If my songs can close someone’s day and bring them comfort, that’s success to me. In the long run, I’d love to keep building conversations with the global music scene.

Mama’s Geeky: What can fans expect to see from you next? Are there any new projects you’re working on or maybe a style that you’re excited to explore?

Dailog: I plan to keep working on drama OSTs while still releasing new solo music. Lately, I’ve been drawn to free pop for its freedom and accessibility, and I want to bring that into my songs. I also hope to connect more with the global music scene and eventually meet fans face to face on my different stages.

Mama’s Geeky: Go on tour! Come to the US!

Dailog: I hope so.

Mama’s Geeky: Where would you like to visit for a tour?

Dailog: I’d really like to go to LA.

Mama’s Geeky: Perfect. That’s where I am. So come here and do a show and I’ll go and I’ll write about it and it’ll be perfect.

NEXT: xikers Interview: Opening For ATEEZ, Hit Single ICONIC, More

The Creep Tapes Season 2 Interview: “I Found The Room They Shot SAW In!”

0

Mark Duplass and Patrick Brice reveal The Creep Tapes Season 2 details, including a dream casting in David Dastmalchian and filming in the same room SAW did.

Mark Duplass and Patrick Brice are back with a second season of their found-footage series, The Creep Tapes. The new season dives deeper into the strange world of their unsettling main character, Peachfuzz while also challenging the very format they’ve become known for.

Mama’s Geeky caught up with them at Fantastic Fest to five into the second season, when they revealed quite a few exciting details. The duo spoke about the show’s evolution, the thrill of found-footage filmmaking, and a surprising SAW related detail.

Filming A Saw-Inspired Episode In The Original Room

The Creep Tapes season 2
Credit: Patrick Brice

Mama’s Geeky: I have to ask about the episode that’s clearly Saw-based. What was it about the Saw franchise that inspired you?

Mark Duplass: We’re always trying to challenge ourselves and find a new form that will surprise people. The idea came up that my character is too scared to watch scary movies, but he hears about them. We thought, “What if someone tries to set up the premise of Saw but they’ve never seen the movie and they get it a little bit wrong?” That felt very funny to us.

Patrick Brice: I’ll never forget, I was looking for locations, and I emailed the guys, “I found the room they shot Saw in. We can shoot in the room!”

Mama’s Geeky: That was the actual room?

Mark Duplass: It was the actual room. We shot in the room.

Patrick Brice: It was crazy. The room itself is very different from how it looks in the movie, but it still feels like you’re in the film. For our found-footage style, we’re always looking for “found production design” so we don’t have to set up much. Being able to go to the actual room was perfect.

David Dastmalchian Was A Dream Casting

The Creep Tapes season 2
Credit: Patrick Brice

Mama’s Geeky: David Dastmalchian being a copycat killer in the first episode is brillaint. Can we talk about that?

Mark Duplass: I think we would be the first ones to admit that if we hadn’t yet made the movies and the TV series, and we were just casting Creep right now for the first time, we would have cast David over me. Nobody can hold the screen. Nobody can do what he can do. Because we lost that opportunity, we thought, “Well, this is the second best thing we can do, is have him trying to impersonate my character.” It was such an unthinkable idea for us for a while. But then we realized, wait a minute. There’s two movies. There’s been six episodes of the show. People know this lore. We’re at the point where we can reference ourselves.

Patrick Brice: We didn’t know David very well. We knew he was a fan of the show. I think we sat next to him during the premiere of The Creep Tapes Season 1. It was me, and then my wife, and then David. And there’s a moment in the last episode of Season 1 with Mark’s character and his mom, where during the episode, David leans over to me and goes, “You’re so fucked up.” Before I ever met him or anything. So I was like, “Oh, he’s one of our brothers.”

Mark Duplass: It was so fun to make that episode with him because you’ll notice when you watch The Creep Tapes, there are all different kinds of things that make the episodes work. But one of the things we love the most are the uncomfortable, long pregnant pauses and silences. You really need someone who can hold the screen in order to pull that off. And David afforded us that in spades in that one.

The Appeal Of The Found-Footage Genre

Mama’s Geeky: What do you think it is about the found-footage genre that has fans so in love with it?

Patrick Brice: There’s an intimacy to the genre that doesn’t exist in bigger movies, where you feel the artifice even more. We’re a small crew, and the audience is essentially the other person in the room. It’s almost like a 3D experience.

Mark Duplass: There’s nothing to hide behind. There’s no good lighting, no score, no fancy editing. We have none of those tools. If the scene isn’t true, real, and interesting, it’s just going to fall flat. I think audiences sense that. When it’s good, it’s so exciting. When it’s bad, it’s so bad, and that’s what’s so cool about the form.

Mama’s Geeky: Mark, are you filming when it is you all the time, or do you have people filming?

Mark Duplass: I film most of the time when it’s me. We offer the option to the other actors. If they want to film and feel the character that way, that’s great. If not, Patrick will hold the camera right next to them.

Mama’s Geeky: Do you have thoughts for more seasons?

Mark Duplass: We have a lot more material to come. We have about 60 episodes in our documents that we want to make. Our goal is to make a season of the show every year until we’re dead.

Playing A “Weirdo” And Fantastic Fest

The Creep Tapes season 2
Credit: Patrick Brice

Mama’s Geeky: What do you love about your character in The Creep Tapes?

Mark Duplass: I love him. I continue to discover that he’s a hyperbolized version of things that exist in me that I’m lightly ashamed of or that I actually like about myself. I’m a real early hugger, and I’ve noticed it makes people uncomfortable sometimes. To be able to use that and dial it up to a thousand is part of what people are connecting to.

Mama’s Geeky: Which of your past characters would you like to see him come face-to-face with?

Mark Duplass: I would love to see him in close proximity with Brendan Delaurier, the midwife doctor I played on The Mindy Project. They both have quite strange energy to them. I think it would be a weirdo-on-weirdo showdown in a lovely way.

Mama’s Geeky: What would you say it is about Fantastic Fest that makes this the perfect place to premiere?

Mark Duplass: I used to live two blocks from here. It’s a homecoming for me. What we’ve learned is that the loyal fan base of horror and found-footage fans has so much heart and appreciation for what we do. Not only do we get “I love it,” but we get, “Thank you so much for making this.” It’s just so wonderful. We premiered Creep here in 2014, and we premiered season one of The Creep Tapes here in 2024, so it’s a home for us.

NEXT: Jalmari Helander On Sisu: Road to Revenge: “F Off. It’s A Movie.”

Crazy Old Lady Interview: “I Like To Create Tension & Make You Question What’s Real.”

0

Crazy Old Lady director and writer Martin Mauregui on his incredible cast, the inspiration behind the film, and more, at Fantastic Fest.

Crazy Old Lady Interview

Director and writer Martin Mauregui sat down to discuss his film, Crazy Old Lady, which premiered at Fantastic Fest 2025. A dark comedy, the film follows a young woman whose road trip is interrupted when her mother’s dementia causes her to reveal a dark secret.

Martin Mauregui and Mama’s Geeky discuss the film’s inspiration, themes, and the creative process. He also raves about his talented cast.

The Inspiration Behind Crazy Old Lady

Mama’s Geeky: What is the inspiration behind Crazy Old Lady?

Martin Mauregui: The inspiration was mainly two things. First, I wanted to make a small movie with a small production, just a few characters and a few locations. The other inspiration is an anecdote from a friend of mine. We were driving, and his mom called, who was kind of lost and suddenly started talking about a man she was married to before her father. This was a fantasy of hers, a moment of confusion. I started to wonder what could be behind that – a possible story of a past life that one wants to forget. Alicia’s dementia, however, makes that life come back to the surface.

Mama’s Geeky: I really loved that aspect of it because you’re like, “Is she making this up? Or was it something that had happened to her?”

Martin Mauregui: I like this kind of humor that makes you uncomfortable, where you don’t know if it’s a joke or not. It makes you wonder, “Did this really happen?” And when you find out that it did, the situation becomes even worse. I like to create this tension and make you question what’s real.

An Incredibly Talented Cast

Mama’s Geeky: Can you talk about casting the three main characters?

Martin Mauregui: Each actor has a different story of how they came to the movie.

  • Carmen Maura (Alicia): I wrote the script for a different Argentine actress, but then Maura came in and everything just clicked. It was like a revelation. I wrote her a letter—it was almost a love letter—and with that, I gave her the script. She got hooked and joined the project.
  • Daniel Hendler (the ex): I’ve loved Hendler since I saw him in a movie called 25 Watts 25 years ago. I wanted to work with him my whole life. He’s an incredible actor, and I wrote the role specifically for him. Maura didn’t want to work with him at first because she said, “I have to establish a relationship with someone who is going to look like my grandson.” When I told her it was Händler, she was on board.
  • Agustina Liendo (the daughter): I wrote the character for her. She is a theater director, and she’s also my life partner. That story I told you about my friend’s mom happened to her. It was her friend who got that call. So for me, it was so natural just to picture her in the scene.

The Biggest Challenges Filming Crazy Old Lady

Crazy Old Lady Interview

Mama’s Geeky: What would you say was the biggest challenge on this film?

Martin Mauregui: Every single stage has its own challenge. I’ve been a screenwriter for many years, but I really love filming. For me, recording the movie is fun because it goes super fast. It’s difficult, but it’s enjoyable. It’s maybe more work on the pre-production and post-production, like putting everything together and discussing how the movie is going to end up being. I would say for me, filming was like going to a playground, not because it was easy, but because it was joyful and playful.

Mama’s Geeky: Speaking of the ending, is that how it was always going to end?

Martin Mauregui: Yes. For me, even though the movie has a very decisive ending, I like movies that give you the impression that you’re going to follow the story. You go home and you think about how the lives of those characters continue. The characters are still alive in your mind. I think that’s what we’re trying to achieve, which is to create characters that are alive beyond the movie.

The Fantastic Fest Experience

Mama’s Geeky: What would you say it is about Fantastic Fest that makes this the perfect place to play this film?

Martin Mauregui: I’ve been to many festivals, including very big ones, but I really enjoy genre festivals because I can feel that people are starving for art and movies. They are always seeking new things, and they are very receptive. It’s a very nice festival to be in, very nice to premiere, and people are very warm. It’s just great.

NEXT: The Creep Tapes Season 2 Interview: “I Found The Room They Shot SAW In!”

Bad Haircut Interview: “I Was Stuggling To Let The Character Go.”

0

Bad Haircut cast and filmmakers discuss how there is so much more to this story than meets the eye, during Fantastic Fest interview.

Bad Haircut Review [Fantastic Fest 2025]

Director and writer Kyle Misak, along with cast members Frankie Ray (Mick), Spencer Harrison Levin (Billy), and R.J. Beaubrun (Dee), and producer Jon Petro, sat down with Mama’s Geeky to discuss their new film, Bad Haircut, at Fantastic Fest.

The film follows a college student who, after getting a terrible haircut, finds himself in a twisted adventure. The team shares their insights on character development, the delicate balance of comedy and thriller, and the emotional core of the film.

Frankie Ray on Embodying Mick In Bad Haircut

Mama’s Geeky: Frankie, I adore Mick. I really love him. Can you talk about finding this character?

Frankie Ray: Finding this character, I didn’t find him. Kyle had already experienced him when he was young and expanded on him. He gave me two pages of who this guy is, which for an actor at my level, you rarely get. Usually, you get a paragraph. It was so in-depth that it scared me. I fucked up and went too far, and I found myself at the bottom of that hole. The pain that I lived as an unloved person, and the striving to find that, much like this character, was struggling to fit in.

The more freedom Kyle gave us, the deeper down into this hole I got. I called a well-known friend and told him I was struggling to let the character go. He said, “Just be honest.” I just came to the understanding that if I’m going to tell Mick in an honest way, I’ve got to let myself and my experience in life just flow through him. My hope was to bring to the forefront of people’s minds that none of us are any different. We all have this base need to be loved and fit in.

For me, there was no joy in it at all, other than I knew I had something that was meticulously crafted by Kyle. I felt a great responsibility for what was at stake for them in their journey of filmmaking.

Mama’s Geeky: I found myself really caring for Mick, which I was like, “I should not care for this person,” but I’m like, “I get it, all he really wants is love.”

Jon Petro: The characters and one in the same in a really twisted way. We wanted people to have empathy for Mick’s character. Kyle can speak to that. We were not concerned, but some of the things that his character does can easily be unforgivable. From our perspective, are people going to be able to have empathy for someone who does these egregious, wild things?

Kyle Misak: I’m really glad that people had that. We always wanted Mick to have that empathy; we just weren’t sure, “Can this happen with how he does these terrible things?” I think it came down to the casting of Frankie and all these guys. They all have this endearing nature about them. It’s kind of like the Home Alone effect, where they talk about trying to find the right kid to play that person, because anybody else other than Macaulay Culkin would have been a brat and really unlikable.

Spencer Harrison Levin and R.J. Beaubrun on the Script

Mama’s Geeky: Spencer, can you talk about what connected you to Bad Haircut?

Spencer Harrison Levin: Similarly to Frankie, I think a lot of us have felt like Billy at one point or another. The outsider-ness, the inability to connect. I remember Kyle reaching out and saying, “I’m making a movie about a college kid who gets a bad haircut.” I said, “Boy, that’s a terrible pitch, man.” Then he sent me pages of explanation, and I read the script in one sitting. It just gets crazier and crazier, and Billy’s just at the center of it. It not only seemed so fun, but it also seemed like a huge challenge. Billy goes through the wringer as a guy who didn’t even want to step outside of his comfort zone.

Mama’s Geeky: R.J., how about for you? What was it like when you first read the Bad Haircut script for the first time?

R.J. Beaubrun: When I first read the script, I was like, “This is me.” I’m just ragging on my boys; we do that anyway. It’s not something that’s different to me. It’s crazy on the outside looking in on characters like Mick and Billy because I’m more the guy who is just laughing and having a good time. Seeing them having to sometimes step away to get to a certain place or something like that… it’s like, I can feel for them. It’s an emotional scene. I felt very connected. I felt like I was almost really playing me at the same time.

The Shaving Scene Has A Major Impact On The Film

Mama’s Geeky: One of my favorite scenes in Bad Haircut is the trust scene when Billy is shaving Mick. Can you talk about filming that?

Frankie Ray: For me, it’s my favorite scene in the film. Direction-wise, to direct that scene, it’s so subtle. The looks between Billy and the tension he feels. For me as Mick, knowing that I’m carrying a lot of the power in the film, it’s the one place where Brad—he’s Brad to me—has the power. And it’s the place where Mick says, “I trust you.” There’s this tension, and all I hear in my mind is I’m laying in the chair, relaxing because I don’t have to do much. And thinking Kyle’s thinking, “Don’t make it sexual.” It’s just so beautiful to have somebody listen and be there. And I wasn’t in a place to communicate that to you back then.

Spencer Harrison Levin: It’s the first, and maybe last, moment that Billy is comfortable. He can watch a movie, he can understand what Mick is liking about it, and he can have a taco. It’s an even playing field at that point. There are no problems in that moment. And they agree. That’s where I think they meet.

Balancing Comedy and Thriller

Mama’s Geeky: Can you talk about that line between campy? It could go very campy, and it doesn’t. Looking at the poster and reading the synopsis, I was like, “This is going to be a fun, campy movie.” And then I was like, “Oh, this movie is making me feel things.” Can you talk about not going that far?

Kyle Misak: I guess in my mind, it never even crossed my mind that it would be campy. Maybe it was just because I had a vision for what I wanted. We always talked about Disturbia being a great movie as a reference for the tone where it was very grounded but in kind of a movie world. It had that great situational humor and that romance thread. And it always felt real but had this kind of heightened sense to it. So that, in our mind as the filmmakers, we always had that as a reference.

Spencer Harrison Levin: I do think there’s a light element of camp. I think the comedy of it, the movie doesn’t take itself very seriously, but it leans into itself nicely, I think. There’s a balance there.

Kyle Misak: It is an interesting tone. A lot of what people are saying about it is they’re like, “This is a bizarre film,” but they have fun the whole time, which is what we wanted. We set out to do a rollercoaster ride that was fun.

NEXT: The Creep Tapes Season 2 Interview: “I Found The Room They Shot SAW In!”

Mother Of Flies Interview: “We Rely On Each Other’s Strengths.”

0

At Fantastic Fest Mother Of Flies writers, directors, and stars John Adams and Toby Poser discuss the personal inspirtaion and filming challenges.

Mother of Flies interview

Writer, director, and cast members John Adams and Toby Poser sat down to discuss their latest film, Mother of Flies with Mama’s Geeky during Fantastic Fest 2025. The movie explores themes of love, family, and death through the lens of a family dealing with cancer. The filmmaking duo shared the personal and creative inspirations behind their work.

The Personal Inspiration Behind Mother Of Flies

Mama’s Geeky: Can you talk about the inspiration behind this film?

Toby Poser: The inspiration is to celebrate the love of life, the love of family, but also to recognize the love of death, especially if you may not be religious. Accepting that death is as beautiful as life was. That’s a really important concept, so it’s set up in a family that’s struggling with cancer, so those issues can be talked about by the characters.

John Adams: Toby and I both have cancer. So, this movie is about us literally exercising demons, making them run in front of people so that we can open up a conversation with people like you who have their own thoughts, and we can all join this conversation. That whole conversation about suicide was a real conversation because I used the idea of suicide as a button of power that I could have over something I didn’t have any control over. It was a button that I needed to say, “If this is too crazy, I hit the button.” And then, because it’s such a dark subject, I made it entertaining for my brain.

The Fantastic Fest Experience

Mama’s Geeky: What would you guys say is about Fantastic Fest that makes this the perfect place to play Mother of Flies?

John Adams: The audience here is incredibly smart, and they’re incredibly fun. It’s like a seesaw, and they know how to ride each side of that seesaw of fun and wicked darkness.

Toby Poser: It’s different from any other fest we go to, and we go to a lot. It doesn’t judge because it’s just very all-encompassing. It just loves movies. Just stepping in here, you can’t help but feel like you’re in a place that respects and loves film.

The Challenges Of Making A Film With A Small Crew

Mama’s Geeky: You both direct, write, and star in Mother Of Flies. I feel like I would be being pulled in a million different directions, and you guys obviously seem to have it down. What are the biggest challenges of doing that?

Toby Poser: I actually find it a convenience. When you’re wearing every hat, you know it’s going to get done. We just rely on each other’s strengths. Nature does a lot of the heavy lifting because we live in the woods. We shoot with natural light; we just use what we’ve got. I think we enjoy all the hats.

John Adams: It’s just really fun. Now we have our modus operandi, and we just kind of walk together. It’s really a joy.

Toby Poser: Our biggest challenge is the sun. We like flat light, so we have this motto: “We’re just waiting on a cloud.”

Mama’s Geeky: Is there one scene in particular in Mother Of Flies that you were like, “ooh, I can’t wait until we film that scene?”

Toby Poser: For me, “Death’s Vagina” was fun. We had to film it a lot because it was really hard. It was worth it. The snake scene coming into my mouth, I was terrified of because I’m not one of those people who’s like, “I’m just going to pick up this snake.” I have a healthy kind of fear of them, but I was like, when it comes to making art, you just do it.

John Adams: Toby had big stones that day. Our snake wrangler, who is my cousin, told me, “Don’t move your tongue. He’ll think it’s a mouse.”

The Appeal of the Horror Genre

Mama’s Geeky: What do you think it is about the horror genre that people just really love and can relate to?

Toby Poser: I think it’s that we all realize that we can talk about things and disguise it in metaphors. A drama has to be about the subject, so immediately it becomes divisive or polarizing. But in horror, everything is disguised in blood and thrills. It’s a very open-hearted, open-minded community that likes having these conversations.

John Adams: I think people who love horror have a really healthy appreciation of the mysteries a lot of people are afraid to confront, especially death. I think horror people are like, “Let’s talk about it, but let’s squish it through this lens of supernatural and wickedness.” My favorite horror is actually not supernatural. It’s actually the really human stuff that we’ve just got to deal with. For me, that’s the scariest because it’s so authentic and true.

NEXT: The Creep Tapes Season 2 Interview: “I Found The Room They Shot SAW In!”

Marvel Zombies Review: One Of Marvel’s Best Series!

0

Marvel Zombies is easily one of the best Marvel series to date. It is dark, brutal, and brilliantly explores a superpowered zombie apocalypse.

Marvel Zombies Review: One Of Marvel's Best Series!
(Center): Zombie Okoye (voiced by Kenna Ramsey) in Marvel Television’s MARVEL ZOMBIES exclusively on Disney+. Photo courtesy of Marvel Television. © 2025 MARVEL.

I’ll say it. Marvel Zombies has no business being as good as it is. It is miles better than any Marvel Animation project so far, and even lands in my top three Marvel series ranking. As someone who is a massive fan of the comic book arcs, this series did it justice by giving us the brutality, as well as the heart, that we wanted.

Set in the zombie apocalypse, a select few superheroes struggle to survive. When a slim chance to save the world drops into their laps, they opt to step out from the shadows and do what’s right, even if it means taking on those who were once their beloved friends.

Marvel Zombies Review: One Of Marvel's Best Series!
(L-R): Alexei Shostakov/ Red Guardian (voiced by David Harbour), Yelena Belova (voiced by Florence Pugh), Kamala Khan (voiced by Iman Vellani) and Blade Knight (voiced by Todd Williams) in Marvel Television’s MARVEL ZOMBIES exclusively on Disney+. Photo courtesy of Marvel Television. © 2025 MARVEL.

What I love most about this series is that it gives us a look into what our favorite heroes would do when their backs are up against the wall. They all give everything they have, and yes, some even make sacrifices. Marvel Zombies is not afraid to push boundaries and get extremely bloody and gory, but it also delivers a lot of heartfelt moments, some that will absolutely cause longtime fans to shed a tear or two.

Marvel Zombies Review: One Of Marvel's Best Series!
Blade Knight (voiced by Todd WIlliams) in Marvel Television’s MARVEL ZOMBIES exclusively on Disney+. Photo courtesy of Marvel Television. © 2025 MARVEL.

The animation style is similar to that of What If…?, which makes sense because that series is the first time that we saw the zombies appear. While it does continue the story, it is not necessary to have seen the other zombie episodes. The writing in this series does a great job of explaining what happened, complete with flashbacks to the start of the outbreak.

Marvel Zombies Review: One Of Marvel's Best Series!
Peter Parker/Spider-Man (voiced by Hudson Thames) in Marvel Television’s MARVEL ZOMBIES exclusively on Disney+. Photo courtesy of Marvel Television. © 2025 MARVEL.

Marvel Zombies boasts gorgeous animation, which might sound strange to say, considering a lot of it has to do with rotting flesh and body parts being ripped off. There are a lot of fight sequences, understandably so, and each one of them is epic in its own way. Zombies are scary enough, but superpowered zombies… well, those are absolutely terrifying.

Marvel Zombies Review: One Of Marvel's Best Series!
Zombie Captain America in Marvel Television’s MARVEL ZOMBIES exclusively on Disney+. Photo courtesy of Marvel Television. © 2025 MARVEL.

As for the story itself, it is brilliantly written. With just four episodes, each of which clocks in around the thirty-minute mark, the series flies by, but not without telling the story it needs to. Focusing mostly around Iman Vellani’s Kamala Khan, it is not only entertaining, it is downright inspiring. Having many of the actors return to voice their characters is the icing on the cake.

Marvel Zombies Review: One Of Marvel's Best Series!
(L-R): Kamala Khan (voiced by Iman Vellani), Blade Knight (voiced by Todd Williams), Alexei Shostakov/ Red Guardian (voiced by David Harbour) and Yelena Belova (voiced by Florence Pugh) in Marvel Television’s MARVEL ZOMBIES exclusively on Disney+. Photo courtesy of Marvel Television. © 2025 MARVEL.

Marvel Zombies is an absolute blast. Fans are sure to be thrilled when their favorite characters appear, no matter what state we find them in. There are twists and turns, some of which are more on the predictable side, but that doesn’t make them any less exciting.

And that cliffhanger that the series ended off on? Well, Marvel Zombies is going to have fans begging for a season 2.

Marvel Zombies poster

About Marvel Zombies

A new generation of Marvel heroes battle against an ever-spreading zombie scourge.

Marvel Zombies is now streaming on Disney+.

NEXT: Ironheart Review: Don’t Sleep On This Series

‘The Creep Tapes’ Season Two Unveiled at Fantastic Fest, Premiering November 14

0

The Creep Tapes sets its release date for the highly anticipated season 2 after premiering at Fantastic Fest 2025 in Austin, TX.

The Creep Tapes season 2
Credit: Patrick Brice

The highly anticipated second season of The Creep Tapes, from the unsettling minds of writers and executive producers Mark Duplass and Patrick Brice, is set to return on Friday, November 14. The announcement was made during the series’ world premiere at Fantastic Fest, where audiences were treated to the first three episodes of the six-episode season.

The Creep Tapes Season 2 Starts Off Extremely Strong

The Creep Tapes season 2
Credit: Patrick Brice

The season two premiere offered an incredible look into the twisted world of Peachfuzz, the world’s most socially awkward and deadly serial killer. The first three episodes are a masterclass in variety, each bringing something new, exciting, and slightly terrifying to the screen.

The first episode of the series showcases a disturbing copycat killer, played by David Dastmalchian, who operates in a way that feels extremely familiar. The second episode takes a tense turn, building suspense as the police come dangerously close to finally catching Peachfuzz, making for a thrilling, edge of your seat back and forth.

The third episode is a truly unique and terrifying highlight, offering a fresh take on the classic SAW horror trope. As a big fan of the SAW franchise, I was more than thrilled as soon as it opened. In speaking with Mark Duplass and Patrick Brice, they revealed this episode was actually filmed in the room that the first SAW movie was filmed in.

The new season will continue to pull back the curtain on a collection of video tapes from the killer’s secret vault, as victims learn they may have made a deadly mistake with his increasingly odd and questionable behavior.

The Creep Tapes season 2
Credit: Patrick Brice

The series will feature a stellar lineup of guest stars, including David Dastmalchian (Late Night with the Devil), Robert Longstreet (I’m a Virgo), Katie Aselton (The Unholy), Diego Josef (The Ballad of Lefty Brown), Desean Terry (The Morning Show), and more.

The Creep Tapes is produced by Duplass Brothers Productions and Shudder, with Brice directing all six episodes. The new season will debut exclusively on Shudder and AMC+ as part of Shudder’s “Season of Screams” programming event, which celebrates the streamer’s 10th anniversary with a lineup of fan-favorite horror films and original content.

NEXT: Jalmari Helander On Sisu: Road to Revenge: “F Off. It’s A Movie.”

Whistle Filmmakers: “I Had The Cast Do An Escape Room As Their Characters.”

0

Corin Hardy and Owen Egerton discuss the new horror film Whistle starring Dafne Keen and Sophie Nélisse, which premieres at Fantastic Fest 2025.

whistle interview fantastic fest

Director Corin Hardy and writer Owen Egerton have teamed up for the upcoming horror film Whistle, a frightening new take on a mysterious and ancient artifact. The film follows a group of high schoolers who discover a pre-Columbian death whistle, an item of unknown origin that, when blown, is said to signal a death. As they become obsessed with the strange object, the teens unleash a terrifying curse that forces them to confront their own mortality.

Mama’s Geeky sat down with with Corin Hardy and Owen Egerton about the film’s Fantastic Fest premiere. They opened up about the casting process, the eerie design of the death whistle, and what it was like working on a film during the writers’ strike.

Working with Dafne Keen and Sophie Nélisse

Mama’s Geeky: Can you talk about working with them Dafne Keen and Sophie Nélisse?

Corin Hardy: Casting is such a big part of a movie. Owen’s script had these five main roles – I call it the Breakfast Club – these high school kids. There’s a trio, and then Chris and Ellie are the two leads, and they have a kind of love story that goes through the movie. So it’s so important to find two actresses who are not only going to give phenomenal performances but also be able to click together. We were under a lot of pressure for time; you don’t have the luxury of six months before making a movie to go through all that.

I was really, really happy to get to meet Dafne and Sophie and have them accept these roles and then get them together and find out that they hit it off like a house on fire. Since making the movie, they’ve been constantly best friends. They go on holiday together and everything. It was really a matter of getting our own little Breakfast Club together.

In that prep period, I got them together a week before the movie. Rather than doing rehearsals, I just wanted to get them together socially. I put together a kind of experience to take them out. We went to an escape room together, and I said, “Do this in your characters.” I played Mr. Craven, the schoolteacher, and said, “We’re going on a trip. Imagine I’m your schoolteacher. I want you to do this in your characters.” It was brilliant because it was like, look, there are no lines to follow, but it will help us if there are any questions about who they are.

I also asked Owen to write a couple of pages on each character – their backstories, character relationships, and how each character knew or didn’t know each other. So when we went into the movie, it was actually a hot tub scene at night, which was not as freezing cold as it was in Toronto in November. I knew the last thing I wanted was for them to be questioning, “How do I know this person, or what’s my relationship with them?” So anyway, that’s the long answer. But Daphne and Sophie, I couldn’t have asked for better actresses. They were fantastic.

They’re playing very different roles and it’s also great to see them in a movie together because Dafne’s mainly known from X-23 when she was very young and then more recently Wolverine and Deadpool. But to have a movie that she’s leading on her own with Sophie from Yellowjackets, I think it’s going to be exciting for people to see them leading this movie. Dafne has such a classic face as well. They just shine.

Toughing Out The Writer’s Strike

Mama’s Geeky: Owen, for you, were you ever picturing how your short story could be longer and become a movie while you were writing it?

Owen Egerton: With this particular one, when I was writing the short story, I was already thinking about the movie, which was great. It was really fun to be visually intrigued. It has those moments that stand out because, you know, it could be a great short story that is internal and brooding and is about the internal life of a character. But this one was already sparking with things that I couldn’t wait to see on the big screen one way or another. And then when I wrote the script and Corin was like, “This is how I’m going to do it,” I was like, “Oh, that’s better and bigger and even, you know, amplified.” So it’s been a real blast to see that come to be.

Mama’s Geeky: Can you guys talk about how you got together on this project?

Corin Hardy: Yeah, it’s a funny story because it’s sort of backward, really. People are like, “How long have you guys known each other? You’ve known each other since you were at school together.” And we’re like, “Well, the truth is, I was sent Owen’s script just before the writer’s strike.” And so when I came on board, I wasn’t even able to meet or talk to the guy that had created it until the strikes resolved. So I had to just dive in, get making the movie, trusting that whoever this guy, Owen Egerton, was would be supportive of where I was taking it. Luckily, it turned out we completely hit it off.

I think the first time I met Owen physically was when he came to set in the middle of the shoot when it was like -15 degrees in Toronto. We built a fairground for two nights of night shoots. It snowed, and it was absolutely like, man, and there’s Owen. Obviously, we talked a little before that, but it’s just been like we’ve known each other for a long time. I think we have the same sensibilities and a lot of things, and also beliefs in human beings and life and death and grief.

Mama’s Geeky: What was it like for you, Owen, knowing someone was working on this during the strike and you couldn’t talk to them?

Owen Egerton: I finished the script just days before the strike and handed it to the producers and said, “If this strike happens, we can’t talk.” And I was like, “Go, go.” So things were happening, but I didn’t know what happened. I’d heard rumors of someone’s like, “Hey, I heard someone’s auditioning for your movie.” I’m like, “What do you mean?” But then, yeah, then I met Corin, and I was actually pretty nervous. We were going to Zoom. Corin was in the UK, and I was up near Boston, and I was like, “Oh, shit, this is going to be interesting. How am I going to feel about this?”

Almost immediately, as we started talking, Corin was surrounded by all this cool art and sculpture stuff that he makes. It’s always his workshop. He’s like, “Oh yeah, just carving this cool, beautiful thing.” And he says, “Oh, let me show you how I’m going to do this one particular scene,” and he starts showing me storyboards of some of his sketches. He’s a really talented artist and sketcher, and I just went, “Oh, thank God this guy is making this movie. He’s going to make such a great movie.” That was a thrill. And ever since, again and again, it’s just been really fun to see his ideas and see my ideas and where they melt together.

Designing the Death Whistle

Whistle Filmmakers: "I Had The Cast Do An Escape Room As Their Characters."

Mama’s Geeky: Can you guys talk about the design of the whistle?

Corin Hardy: This was, again, a blessing to read a script that had a really strong, simple mythology, which revolves around an ancient artifact that comes from real life. But it’s incredibly mysterious. If you research the death whistle, there’s no definite knowledge of what exactly it was used for. There’s a lot of different texts, and it’s spiritual and has different mythologies, really. So it was nice to have something that we could kind of run with in our own way, be respectful and honor what we knew about it, but ultimately it’s something that’s been taken from the place that it was used for and used by people that shouldn’t be messing with it.

With all that in mind, designing it visually, I look for these things when I’m taking on a movie: simple, strong ideas with visual sensibilities and emotional qualities. And this script had so much in all of that sense. There’s a non-spoiler, but there are quite a few deaths in one. I never would have thought they would be so imaginative and creepy and shocking and strange, but they come from the sort of the central character. And if you look at that death whistle that’s on the table there, you can see it has thoughts going on. It has a sort of—I wanted to be able to show it in closeup in the movie like it’s a central character. And if you light it in different ways, it has a different kind of feel. If you light it kind of underneath—oh no, I don’t like underneath.

So for the design, we first researched everything we could on real death whistles, and they are brilliantly strange-looking—bone carving, stone, ceramics. They were found in the hands of skeletons sometimes without their heads. And I wanted to create something that had a history to it and carvings from different cultures. It has a little bit of a secret to it. It was designed with a Spanish guy called Daniel Carrasco. And we went through about 50 or 60 different looks because I was very particular about how it holds up. I didn’t want it to just look like an evil thing. I wanted it to look like something that has history, both in the broken-down nature of it and the carvings and the languages. There are little words in different places.

Owen Egerton: One of the things I love about it is that you can feel its history. You can feel the idea that it’s been held in the hand of hundreds of people across dozens of cultures and thousands of years. There are aspects of that, but there are snippets of language written in it, some of which no longer exist or no one knows how to read. The idea is that its history is much stranger and much deeper than anyone can perceive. And in that comes an extremely honorable artifact that definitely shouldn’t have found its way into the hands of high schoolers. And then, a little bit like Frodo’s ring in Lord of the Rings, it’s like, if you’re left alone with it, you’re going to be drawn to blowing it. You’re going to want to know what it sounds like.

Corin Hardy: That’s funny. The amount of people who don’t—I’ll say, “Look, if you want to, you sit down and blow that, be my guest. Do it now.” “Nope, I’m good.” “I know it’s a movie. I’m good.” Every time I met a cast member, I had a death whistle there, and I would say, “You know, like, do you want to hear what it sounds like?” “No, no, no, no.” You can buy a kind of imitation one on Amazon, which actually does sound impressively scary because the sound it makes is a real like sort of pain, whistle, scream, shriek. So on set, I would use one because it had that mechanism. And in horror movies, when you need to get a reaction out of someone, whether it’s a shock or a timing thing, there were a lot of times I’d do a lot of claps in other movies or hit wood blocks together. I was able to blow the whistle. So the cast and the crew were a bit freaked out because everyone hears it, and it’s going to bring forth your future death.

Mama’s Geeky: How many of them did you have?

Corin Hardy: So in the movie, this is the hero closeup. That’s the actual one there. And then we had the actual scale size, which is a bit more of a stunt one. It doesn’t have that mechanism. This was slightly smaller. And so Daphne would be handling this and the various people who shouldn’t have really got their hands on it. And then, and then there were—yeah, I had three of those hero ones because they’re very special, precious things. And, you know, in a movie, if it falls on the floor, it cracks or anything like that. And then they just made these cool mini ones as well. It was a joy to be able to have, like I said, something that actually comes from a real place that we could also reimagine and make our own and reflect a certain respect and honor as well as something that’s creepy.

Why Premiere At Fantastic Fest?

Mama’s Geeky: What do you think it is about Fantastic Fest that makes it such a great place to premiere Whistle?

Corin Hardy: I’ll say first because we’re very different. Owen, this is part of his life for the last 20 years. This is my first year. I’ve heard about Fantastic Fest throughout being a director, and I had the hallow tour around different film festivals around the world, and I always wanted to come to Fantastic Fest, but The Nun wasn’t like a festival movie. It sort of went straight to the cinema. So to have this one as the world premiere, I was really excited because I know it’s the biggest horror genre festival in America. And it’s true, it’s a real family feel here. The crowds are just really warm, welcoming. Everyone’s excited. They want to see the movies, and also there’s a real air of, I believe it’s called “Chaos Reigns” to this place, which I love. There’s been some wild stuff. And the other night, Owen invited me to be part of the debates, and that was something I’d never done in my life before, which was really exciting. So yeah, I’m really excited about Thursday night. And this audience seeing the movie for the first time feels perfect.

Owen Egerton: Yeah, you know, there are two people I come to—people that I love hanging out with at Fantastic Fest. And one, of course, is the people that you’ve been seeing for 20 years and have known through the festival, and you see maybe once a year, this sort of summer camp of horror. And then the other people who I love to hang out with are people who are experiencing it for the first time because there’s always a moment with someone who’s experiencing it for the first time when you just see their eyes go a little wider. “Oh, this is Fantastic Fest.” Maybe it’s watching Tim League crawl over tables, yelling, “Chaos Reigns,” or maybe it’s seeing someone get slammed with a mace in the middle of a boxing ring in South Austin, dressed in a full coat of armor. But there’s always a moment, and I saw that moment with Corin earlier this week of just like, “Oh, okay.” And to have a film here, especially on the 20th anniversary, it’s a dream. It’s just such a community of horror fans, like aficionados who are just delighted. So it feels like you’re getting to make a meal for foodies who just love the same kind of stuff that you love. And we get to just sit all together and scream and laugh and cry together.

NEXT: Jalmari Helander On Sisu: Road to Revenge: “F Off. It’s A Movie.”