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Showing posts with label Chained. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Chained. Show all posts

Wednesday, February 27, 2013

Stranger With My Face Horror Film Festival special guest Jennifer Lynch will screen 'Chained', 'Surveillance' and 'Despite The Gods'

Posted by Stranger With My Face Horror Film Festival on February 27, 2013

Tickets are now on sale for the niche genre festival, 7-10 March in Hobart 

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE



Hobart – 27 February— Highly regarded filmmaker Jennifer Lynch (daughter of iconic filmmaker David Lynch) will be a special guest at the Stranger With My Face Horror Film Festival in Hobart next week. 

Lynch will be present for the opening night film Despite the Gods, a documentary which details her difficult experiences while directing the feature film Hissss in India. 

The film’s director, Australian Penny Vozniak, will also be in attendance for a post-screening Q&A. 

“This is the ideal film to open the festival,” says Stranger With My Face’s Briony Kidd, “It’s not only a hugely entertaining doco, but it concerns the struggle of a female director making genre cinema, so will be of particular interest to our audience and the other visiting filmmakers.” 

“We’re excited to have Jennifer at the festival, because she’s had a fascinating career to date and her work is so strong and original.” 

The Stranger With My Face Horror Film Festival focuses on female perspectives in the horror genre and highlights the work of women specifically, in an area of the film industry where they are greatly underrepresented behind the camera. 

It’s affiliated with an international movement, Women in Horror Month, and coincides with International Women’s Day on 8 March. The festival’s aims are about increasing the quality and entertainment value of mainstream cinema by encouraging diversity. 

Stranger With My Face will screen Lynch’s most recent film as director, Chained, on 9 March, with a post-screening Q&A. Well received on the international festival circuit in recent times, it stars Vincent D’Onofrio as a serial killer. 

In addition, Jennifer Lynch will introduce a screening of her 2008 thriller, Surveillance, at MONA Cinema on 9 March. MONA will also host a short program of selected films from the festival on 10 March, with details to be announced soon.

Thursday, February 14, 2013

Interview: Vincent D'Onofrio | CHAINED


WRITTEN BY WHITNEY SCOTT BAIN SATURDAY, 09 FEBRUARY 2013

Truly one of the greatest character actors of his generation, Vincent D’Onofrio is the consummate human chameleon who immerses himself into his believable roles. Starburst caught up with him to talk about his latest film, Chained...
Starburst: As an actor, you’ve played good guys, bad guys and troubled souls. How do you prepare for a role?
Vincent D’Onofrio: You need to read the script, find your character and how he influences the story. You ask yourself questions. Get inside his imagination; what’s he all about… then things start to come to you on how you want to portray him. You go back and forth reading and re-reading the script trying to see what works and what doesn’t, developing what kind of character he is and his motivation that’s integral to the plot.
Up until seeing you in the role of Bob in Chained, the one film that really disturbed us was your character as the crystal meth dealer, Pooh-Bear, who took one too many trips to the “honey jar” causing his nose to melt off in The Salton Sea. How the hell did they do that effect?
Those were the days of early CGI. There was a trailer on the set where they had a digital camera set up and they’d put these dots on my nose with a Magic Marker scanning it that took 45 minutes. They can now do a full body scan in 2 minutes with today's technology.
The house where you filmed Chained is isolated and ominous, yet has a welcoming look about it. Do you think the house itself is a reflection of Bob’s character?
Yes. By the way, that’s all Jennifer.
The scenes between you and Eamon Farron are riveting acting as his surrogate father through fear and intimidation.
In acting, there are scenes that are “in-the-moment.” They create emotion in the plot which creates a reaction in the viewer.
If there was one character you could play, living or dead, real or fictional, who would it be?
That’s a tough question as there are so many choices. I would say it begins with the story and how good it is, the character’s motivation and goal. That’s what makes me want to be a part of it.
Anything coming up we’ll see you in next?
I’m working with Jennifer again on her next film; A Fall From Grace and few other things coming up.

Friday, February 1, 2013

'Director Jennifer Lynch: I decided to shoot Chained just so I could work again'

DAILY RECORD



Rabbit (Eamon Farren) and (Bob) Vincent D'Onofrio
Rabbit (Eamon Farren) and (Bob) Vincent D'Onofrio




JENNIFER LYNCH is back behind the camera with her latest feature, Chained, and we took some time out to chat to the director, and daughter of David Lynch, about the film.
Starring Vincent D'Onofrio as a serial killer looking to mould a youngster into his protege, Chained (review here) is an interesting character study on the effects of abuse.
Here's what Lynch had to say about the movie.
There's always a worry that a film focusing on a serial killer can be cliched. How did you handle such a concept for Chained?
Backtracking, I was sent a script called 'Chained' by the two producers and it was an 'A and B' story - detectives following a serial killer who had been killing women. We see him driving his taxi and he kidnaps a boy and his mother before killing the mother and keeping the boy. I thought the concept was great but it was far too gratuitously violent  and almost torture-porny. I was more interested in the killer and the boy and why do people kill like this. I was offered the chance to rewrite the script but wanted to honour what they had purchased from the writer, which is one of the best parts.
For me, the film seems to focus on whether or not a child can be moulded from a young age to become something evil.
Definitely. I tried to write something about how real monsters are made. In discussing what child abuse does, there's no justification for what the killer does but there's an explanation. The reason I think Rabbit (Eamon Farren) doesn't become a full-blown replica of Bob (Vincent D'Onofrio) is because for at least the full first nine years of his life he had true affection from his mother and security. That versus what Bob had - pain, damage and abuse all his life. It asks what the value is for a bed of goodness no matter how dark things get and can that be stolen from a child. It also studies what it is, even in this broken monster of a man, to be loved and understood.
What was it about Vincent that made you think he'd be perfect for the role of Bob?
Vincent is so genuinely human and masculine. He's both boyish and grown up and to me that's exactly what the film and the role required. We all have that within ourselves and he, through actions and innately in his appearance, is very good at being human even when that human is a monster.
I've been a fan of his since he started working. It was an honour to have him trust me enough to be both emotionally and physically naked in this. He did a great service to the film and he, in my mind, was the only person who could do that without an ego getting in the way.
Eamon, who plays Rabbit, seems to have a natural vulnerability to him. Was that what drew you to him for the role?
What's amazing about Eamon is that I hired him over the phone and via Skype. For me, one of the most important things I look for in an actor is whether we can converse. Do we have a similar ability to discuss a character? Eamon is a gregarious and loud Australian man but what I saw in him - and heard in our conversation - was a willingness and bravery to explore what it is to be stuck in and damaged and stolen from on a daily basis. I don't know how I knew he could do it, but I just knew.
Do you find yourself focusing on stories that delve into the darker side of humanity?
There's no doubt that seems to be the theme but it's not the only thing I'm drawn to. It's interesting me now, primarily, because it's something I'd want to see done that I don't usually get to see. The planet is always half light and half dark, and so are we. I have a very happy life so what interests me is what my life isn't.
What do you look for in a script before you decide it's worth turning into a film?
To be brutally honest, in Chained I was just looking for a job. But what compelled me was the fact I was being offered a great idea - albeit gratuitous - and find some way to make it potent and redemptive, dare I say. What I'm drawn to are things that challenge and frighten me in a good way. How will I pull this off and do it justice and how do I make a movie I've never seen before which is ultimately what I'm trying to accomplish.
We know about your father's legacy in film so how to you, if you can, avoid being compared to him?
I can't avoid the comparisons but what tickles us both is that we feel we are so different from each other, so it's a constant surprise. It's like a pastry chef being compared to someone famous for the meat dishes they cook. Yes, it's food, but that's where the comparison should end.
I do think that some people need to make the comparisons, but I don't know what it is that compels them. For me, I was given a great gift by my father and my mother in that I was never told any idea was bad. I was told I could explore any thought as long as I wasn't hurting someone else. That innate curiosity that allows us to be brave and inquisitive is how I would compare us. I also think I learned from him how joyful creating a story on film can be.
What's next for yourself?
I have a film coming up call A Fall from Grace which stars Tim Roth and Vincent with Paz Vega. It deals with hurt children and a serial killer but it's primarily about a detective and his unravelling. That's scheduled to go April or May. After that intending on shooting a really great horror comedy written by Jim Robins called The Monster Next Door. It's going to be a fun romp into horror with some smart comedy and vampires and zombies and werewolves.

Tuesday, January 29, 2013

'JENNIFER LYNCH Interview – Writer and Director of CHAINED'

FILMORIA
JANUARY 29, 2013 BY 

chained dvd 212x300 JENNIFER LYNCH Interview   Writer and Director of CHAINEDChained is the latest feature from American writer-directorJennifer Lynch, daughter of David Lynch. It’s a psychological horror, about a man called Bob (Vincent D’Onofrio) who – having suffered years of abuse as a child – has become a predatory killer of women under the guise of a taxi-cab driver. Bob crosses paths with a young boy called Tim (Evan Bird) who gets in the taxi-cab with his mother (Julia Ormond) after a trip to the cinema. Bob takes them to his isolated home in the middle of nowhere, before overpowering and killing the mother with Tim listening to her final screams.
Rather than killing the witness, the perverse Bob sees an opportunity and keeps the boy alive – he renames Tim ‘Rabbit’ and chains him to the wall. He is now Bob’s domestic slave to clean-up after him when night after night he kidnaps and then slaughters women. Bob tells him ‘This is your world now. It’s only you, me and them’ and for Rabbit that’s true for ten long years. Now a young man, Rabbit (Eamon Farren) is being groomed to become Bob’s protégé. So he may have to become what he hates to finally get released from his chains.
I was lucky enough to chat to Jennifer about her new film, as well as her future projects, her approach to writing and directing, and of course her famous father. She was an engaging interviewee, with an infectious laugh and a clear passion for film that oozes from every pore. The following interview provides an excellent insight into film-making from an accomplished writer-director who is carving a name for herself in her own right.
Filmoria: Your latest film Chained is being released in the UK on 4 February 2013, so what can you tell our readers about the film?
Jennifer: What can I tell your readers… that they should buy it (laughs) No, for me Chainedwas an exercise in looking at how the human monster is made – real monsters. And hopefully, I think humanises monsters, because I want to bring to the surface that child abuse is what builds those horrible people.  In no way do I mean to justify or excuse the horrible behaviour because there is no excuse for it, but there is an explanation.
And so, in looking at the cycle of nurture versus nature, maybe there’s a kind of a fascination of why one man grew up one way and the boy grows up another. And what happens to you when you receive that kind of damage.
…for me Chained was an exercise in looking at how the human monster is made – real monsters.
chained still 300x200 JENNIFER LYNCH Interview   Writer and Director of CHAINEDFilmoria:  Although you wrote the screenplay, the actual story is based on a screenplay by Damian O’Donnell. So how much of the script did you change and what elements did you keep?
Jennifer: The producers came to me with a script that was incredibly well written, but that I felt was a bit too gratuitous or – for lack of a better word – more torture-porn than psychological horror. And that doesn’t mean it’s bad, it just means that it wasn’t a film for me.
But when they asked: “What would you do with it?” – I said I wanted to focus on the relationship between our taxi-cab driver and the boy, and that ten year relationship that they go through. I removed the detectives searching for the killer and I removed the killings that didn’t tell me anything about my killer.
Filmoria:  It’s quite a subtle film I thought when I was watching it, even though it’s got this big, brazen ‘Chained’ title. Like you said, the torture-porn elements have been removed and you’ve very much gone for the less is more approach like Jaws.
Jennifer: And you should know too that the original script was called ‘Chained’, and when I re-wrote it I called it ‘Rabbit’ and when I shot it, it was called ‘Rabbit’. But apparently the powers that be said they didn’t know how to sell a film called ‘Rabbit’. I think that ‘Chained’ is misleading as a title because it suggests more of Saw or a Hostel and that’s not what this movie is. So I’m grateful to hear that hopefully people are seeing it, even though the title suggests something it isn’t.
Filmoria: Exactly, and the scene at the start of the movie where young Tim/Rabbit is locked in the taxi-cab and can hear his mother being killed signifies that approach. And personally, that’s one of the most horrifying things I’ve seen in cinema and you don’t see a drop of blood.
Jennifer: I’m so glad you think so. To me, there is so much more terror in not seeing something and seeing just the reaction of what Tim is feeling when he hears his mother screaming. Because what the audience can create as far as what’s going on behind that door is far more devastating than anything I could show them. And hopefully that bonds the audience to the boy and stays with them through the movie.
Filmoria:  Have you got any flak from the taxi-driver unions in America for the film?
Jennifer: I have not (laughs) not yet. Don’t give ‘em any ideas (laughs)
Filmoria: I haven’t got in a cab since to be honest.
 JENNIFER LYNCH Interview   Writer and Director of CHAINEDJennifer: Yeah, suddenly more people are walking and asking friends for rides (laughs). But what really thrilled me about the idea of him being a taxi driver was that he is what we think as a “normal guy”. He can go anywhere and you get into his car without thinking twice. Just the idea of something you’re not thinking as a dangerous situation, could be incredibly dangerous. And because Bob doesn’t kill everybody he drives around it’s all the more frightening.
Filmoria: And when you were writing the script was Vincent in your mind from the word go?
Jennifer: I knew by the end of it that’s who I wanted, but I wasn’t writing with him in mind necessarily. Without sounding too creepy, the way I tend to write is that every character comes from me because I’m thinking of what I would do if I were them. And then I separate myself from them and think who could do this? The second it was done he was on my mind.
Filmoria: It’s a great fit as well, and I think he’s fantastic in it.
Jennifer: Thank you. I think he’s incredibly wonderful, and he was so brave and generous. And not many people would have trusted me like Vincent did – so I’m deeply honoured and tickled that he did.
…the way I tend to write is that every character comes from me because I’m thinking of what I would do if I were them
Filmoria: In terms of developing the character of Bob, with his emotions and mannerisms – was that collaborative or did Vincent bring all that to the table?
Jennifer: I’d say it’s collaborative. The first thing Vincent said was “Do you need me to lose weight?” and I said don’t you dare! I said what’s really important is that Bob is not stupid, Bob has been hit in the head a lot so he’s like a seasoned boxer. So his words are heavy in his mouth, he has to really concentrate or everything gets slurred. His body is really heavy on his bones. And he’s as much the angry man as he is the frightened confused child – the boy he was when all that abuse was going on.
So, I said stay that weight but know that everything is heavy on you. And Vincent developed the speech impediment. Our budget was very low, and Vincent had his own dentist make him up a mouthpiece so he really had to work hard at annunciating words.  Then I just let Vincent go – once I had told him what I felt was going on there to remind him that the boy is still in there, and the body is heavy on him. And I didn’t want him to think that Bob is stupid, because Bob is not stupid he’s scared. And that’s often confused with ignorance and stupidity.
Filmoria: The role of Bob was quite demanding, but so was the role of Rabbit – played by two actors Eamon Farren (as the older Rabbit) and Evan Bird (as the younger Rabbit). How did you cast them? And did they shadow each other to develop the character of Rabbit?
Jennifer: Believe it or not, I hired them both over the phone and Skype. And I knew after speaking to them both that they were the right people, and that was after quite an extensive search. Eamon has probably one of the strongest Australian accents I’ve ever heard, and you would never know it in his performance. And Evan – you still protect him because he’s a child – but he is just a wise little man.
What I had was Eamon arrive for the entirety of the shoot and watch Evan’s performance, so he could adopt some of mannerisms that I was giving Evan or that Evan innately had in himself. And I think that was really beneficial, I think it made Evan feel good to have Eamon there and I think it was incredibly helpful to Eamon to see what he was supposed to look like as a boy – and to figure how to change that and how maintain some of it. I think both of them did a phenomenal job, and both of them expressed to me that it was a great comfort and help to have each other there – so I think it was the right choice.
Filmoria:  So you didn’t opt for rehearsals, you shot chronologically instead?
Jennifer: Yeah, it’s not a very popular opinion but my opinion is that rehearsals are B.S. I think the first time something’s done should be on camera, but there should be a dialogue about it first. Conversation is incredibly helpful to me, it’s more helpful to me than rehearsal. Blocking is important – absolutely – the actor’s familiarity and sense of safety with who they are, what’s expected and what they want to bring to things. But to run through it over and over, and over again with full emotion is totally useless to me and I think damaging.  To have say to an actor ever “Can you do what you did in rehearsal?” is devastating, and I never want to do that to someone. So running lines – yes, but you don’t run lines with full emotion. You block, you run lines and you discuss – then you turn that camera on and do the scene.
Filmoria: You pinpointed a key part of the film – it’s wrought with tension and emotion. And I’ve heard you say you shot it in 15 days, so how challenging was it get the right levels of tension and emotion when you’ve got such a short timescale?
chained poster 222x300 JENNIFER LYNCH Interview   Writer and Director of CHAINEDJennifer: You’d be surprised (laughs). It was not difficult to reach those levels, the pressure almost helped the tension. And also – not to make us all sound like horrible people but to remind ourselves that we were human beings – there was a tremendous amount of laughter in between takes and joy on the set. Not laughter at the subject matter, but almost as a way to preserve our sanity and not to become overly exhausted with the schedule and the weight of the material.  That in fact helped them go back into it each time with an equal amount of tension.
And you know, I gotta say that I adore digital for many reasons but the one that’s really most precious to me is that I don’t have to worry about running out of my mag. I can just say “Okay still rolling, stay in the moment, let’s go again” with this in mind, and the actors don’t have to leave their space, they don’t need to get up and shuffle around – we can stay in the moment and nobody’s worried about running out of film. And that’s an incredibly potent gift that film does not allow.
Film is film, this is digital. And I adore them both for very different reasons. I’ve found digital to be very helpful in terms of honouring what the actors are doing. And being able to keep them in a space that I see is working and make just subtle adjustments. And respecting what they’re doing – it looks like actors have clothes on, but they’re really quite emotionally naked. It’s nice to keep them in a safe space and not snap them in and out of stuff.
To have say to an actor ever “Can you do what you did in rehearsal?” is devastating, and I never want to do that to someone.
Filmoria: And I guess you’ve taken that approach into your next film, which is called A Fall from Grace and it’s another serial killer film. So what can you tell us about that it?
Jennifer: I guess the best way to describe it is that it is about the human wound and wreckage, and the reality of that. Tim Roth plays the lead, and he is a homicide detective who has been wounded and has become addicted to drugs and alcohol due the pain he has – physically and emotionally – for not solving a particular case. We go with him through the city of St Louis, trying to unfold both his own demons and the demon that is killing young girls.
Filmoria: And Vincent D’Onofrio makes an appearance in this film as well. So who does he play?
Jennifer: Vincent plays a next door neighbour to Tim Roth called George, who is a working class man whose son has been killed. He is completely devastated by it.
Filmoria: Just going back to Chained briefly, it had its UK premiere at last summer’s Frightfest in London and you attended the festival. How do you think it went down with UK audiences?
Jennifer: It seemed to be great you know, but the only people who came up to me were the people who loved it thankfully. So if anyone hated it, they didn’t tell me (laughs). I think it went great, I sleep a lot better at night thinking it went that way. It was an incredibly powerful experience. It was in one of the most beautiful theatres (the Empire Leicester Square) that I’ve ever seen – it was quite a thrill to be sitting in a theatre that large, and hearing people react and experience it. I think it went well, do you know something I don’t? (laughs)
Filmoria: I was actually at one of the screenings and it was my favourite film of the festival, and I think one of the Frightfest organisers said it was his too. So I think it went down pretty well.
And sorry to throw a quote back at you, but in the Q&A session at Frightfest you said “I’ve a fondness for serial killers, I’ve a fondness for Mother Teresa – I like to figure out why people do what they do, good and bad” So is the film after A Fall from Grace going to be the Mother Teresa biopic?
Jennifer: (Laughs) Yeah, after that it’s the Mother Teresa biopic ‘Why would you do such good things?’ (laughs). I am fascinated by human behaviour. I have not figured out myself or other people, and that is a great source of material for cinema (laughs).
Filmoria: In terms of future projects, are you looking to do something a little bit lighter?
Jennifer: After A Fall From Grace, I’m scheduled to do a really great film which is a horror-comedy called The Monster Next Door written by Jim Robbins. It’s hysterical, it’s sexy, it’s fun and it’s got vampires, werewolves, zombies and nerds in it. I’m super, super excited about it.
Filmoria: I’m sure you’re probably sick of getting questions asked about your dad in interviews, so apologies for that, but have you guys ever talked about collaborating again? With you writing and him directing, or co-writing/co-directing – is that in the Lynch family plan?
Jennifer: You know I don’t know. For a while we were talking about making a Diane Arbus (a famous twentieth century American photographer) film together, because we both love that Diane Arbus. But when we talk it’s about other stuff, more than just the work. But you never know what’s gonna happen in the future, and he’s about to make a film that’s gonna blow the world’s mind. So for now we’re both doing our own things and patting each other on the back.

'Interview: Jennifer Lynch On Chained And Her Star Vincent D’Onofrio'

DIY One of the more interesting interviews we took part in during last year's FrightFest was with Jennifer Lynch, and ahead of the release of Chained on 1st February (on DVD and Blu-ray 4th February), we can now share it with you.

The daughter of David Lynch made her film debut in 1993 with the controversial Boxing Helena, and after the hysterical, scathing attacks on the twisted drama about obession, Lynch left the public eye. She returned in 2008 with Surveillance, which earned Lynch awards at Festival de Cine de Sitges and the New York City Horror Film Festival. 2010's Hisss appears to be a blip on Lynch's career, as she is back with her most accomplished work yet with Chained.

Chained stars Vincent D'Onofrio as a taxi driver and serial killer who keeps the young son of one of his victims imprisoned in his remote home for a decade. Nicknamed Rabbit, the child grows into a young man (Eamon Farren), and Lynch's fascinating, intelligent and disturbing drama examines the effects of this warped upbringing on a boy, while featuring a terrifying performance from D'Onofrio.

The remarkably candid and friendly Lynch joined us for an intimate round table chat last summer, where she spoke honestly about her struggles as a filmmaker ("I live paycheck to paycheck and there are many dry spells - I apply for a lot of waitressing jobs and I clean a lot of houses") and the gap between her debut and follow-up (I had three spinal surgeries, I had my daughter and I was a single mother, so I devoted my time to my child and getting better physically). Thankfully, Lynch appears to be on a roll after the critical success of Chained, and you can learn about her new projects below.

How did Chained come about?
The film came about as I was really in need of a job, and two producers Lee Nelson and David Buelow who had a script called Chained, which they sent to me as they were looking for a director. I read the script and really loved the idea of this kind of killer, a taxi cab driver - he's not your masked guy in the woods, he's out there in the world. It could happen to any of us. The storyline is essentially what you see, he picks up a mother and son, kills the mother and keeps the boy for a decade, and there was the twist ending. But it was incredibly graphic and there were detectives following him, and Bob's name was the Dicer, and he would removed pieces of these women and torture them slowly. That didn't grab me by the short and curlies and turn me on. I first asked the producers why they thought of me for something like this, and I guess the general consensus is that I'm a very dark, violent person! [laughs] I don't think of myself in that way; I'm curious and I'd love to end up studying that. I'm not afraid to go dark, I like it. But it came to me that way, and I asked them if I could keep their premise, as that's what they'd paid for, but make it more about how this monster was created and the interaction between him and the boy. They were all for it. 

A snapshot of horror from FrightFest shows a borderline misogynistic trend. Was the lack of exploitation in your otherwise disturbing film a conscious one?
I would say definitely misogynistic! It was how I wanted the vision to come across. There was consciousness to it but not in the sense of I'm not going to be exploitative, it's just that that's not what scares me. What gets me is knowing the people, and for an hour and a half living someone else's experience. That's what cinema is to me, that invitation to be in someone's world. I don't get excited when I don't know the girl screaming and getting stabbed. These women, I wanted to see them so briefly, so it was more about what he did, than about torture. It's not necessary to me, and it doesn't tell a story. There are people who want to do it, and are very good at it, and there's a large audience for it. I just don't think killing people is interesting. 

How hard was it to balance the sympathy with Bob [D'Onofrio]?
I don't know if hard was the word, but I made a conscious choice to try and offer up an explanation of what had happened to be him. But just enough so we didn't say, oh poor Bob. Just so we understood that this guy was not born a bad man, and that there was a humanity to him. Because that to me is, for want of a better word, touching and interesting as well as more terrifying. Because if the guy who is going to kill me is very much like me, I'm just shocked. How can I negotiate with him? You can't negotiate with him. Bob just wants to kill you, as that's what he does, that's how he feels better. I don't want to justify what he does at all, but explaining it brings a whole other element to it that is more terrifying and touching.



What is it like working with Vincent D'Onofrio?
Vincent is a fucking genius. This is such a cornball answer, but he's so great. He's generous and trusting of me. He's brave - I've always said the bravest thing I can do, or anyone else can do, is say "I'm afraid" but keep going. It's the chickenshit that says "I'm not afraid" and doesn't want to do anything. The bravery he exhibited in taking these chances and not being big - there's only that one moment when he's like [rages] gets big, and that's a childlike thing, as he's always that kid. He's so good to the other actors, and willing to risk his own embarrassment to tell this man's story, and I have so much respect for him, and a deep gratitude to him and everyone who was in the film for playing it as quiet as he did. He really is one of the most underrated actors in TV and cinema. There's nothing that guy can't do, and I hope people see this. That's my only sadness with the performance is that as we're not getting theatrical in the US, the Academy won't recognise his performance. The more people who see it, I hope he is honoured somehow, even if it is just by word of mouth. There aren't a lot of people who would've trusted me in this situation, and there were a couple of times I asked him to do something that occurred to me while shooting, and he'd nod and say he'd do it once. Fortunately there was a camera there, so I got to capture it. 

Did you have him in mind while writing?
Not when I was writing it, but the moment it was finished. I really had him in mind. He can be so small in this big body, and so big in a way that isn't the traditional big. There was a little bit of a flavour of Lenny in Of Mice and Men, where he doesn't know his own strength maybe, and I love that. Bob is always this kid who tries to relate by talking about puzzles. It's really about how we are forever these children in adult bodies.

Can you talk about casting relative newcomer Eamon Farren as the older Rabbit?
I was looking for an innocence, yet a strength we could all relate to. Again, there's nothing more powerful than something whispered, because it can be so loud. And Rabbit is a whisper, but he's stronger than we expect. I had heard about him from the casting agent, and I was having a really hard time finding somebody. There were your good-looking young guys, and your awkward young guys, but nobody really had that. Rabbit's not a normal kid. She said there's this Australian guy I really think you'll like; he's done very few things but he's got a great face. He sent an audition from Australia and I got about a minute and a half into the audition and said I gotta get on the phone with him. Basically hired him after talking to him, as I knew he got it. I love his face. He looks very similar to Evan [Bird, the young Rabbit], who was cast after Eamon, also over Skype. Eamonn is such a big personality, and he's jovial and happy and hella Australian! That man's got an accent you can't believe and he can drop it in a heartbeat. I hope people interview him a lot, as people will be astonished how different he is from Rabbit. It's testament to what a great actor he is.

You've spoken about wanting a director's cut - what did you have to lose?
There are three small scenes that are really important to me that I want to put in the centre of the film, in the main bulk of the experience in the house. Then there's a two minute section where it's not revealed in voiceover so much, but in visuals, of the end. Those are important to me, but I needed to make it work without doing that. I can't stand voiceover. It's a visual medium, show don't tell me. Again, I lost that battle. I lost the battle for the title, certain scenes. A scene I really want in the director's cut, is after we reveal from behind the TV that Rabbit is older now, that shot doesn't end there. It continues over and there's a bound woman sitting next to Vincent on the chair, just like his mother was in the flashback, and she's whimpering. Both Rabbit and Bob go "shush!" and go back to watching TV. That to me, is the example of how long he's been there, and now this is normal. He's a kid trying to watch his TV show. Everybody felt this was Rabbit being too complicit. But to me it's a perfect example of how normal his life is. Little things that tell us what damage is done stays. 

Do you have a favourite scene in the film?
I'd love to show the whole card game, which goes on for a round each. I love Bob's nightmare and his flashback, and I love Vincent saying "Are you trying to make me fucking insane?" because it's just so ridiculous he's asking the kid this! I like Rabbit doing the silent scream at him, like it's the only thing he can do to this guy. I've seen kids to that to dogs, too, to see what they can get away with when the dog wasn't looking. 

Can you tell us about the design of Bob's house, as it's the main location throughout the film?
There was a production designer also on Surveillance called Sarah McCudden who I just think is incredible. For five bucks, Sarah can give you the Taj Mahal. We only shot over 15 days and we had very little money, and I walked on to the sound stage when another film was finishing, and I could save lumber costs if they didn't tear it down and I just bought the wood from them. I tried to make it look like some old couple's home, as I didn't want to know how Bob got this house, I just wanted it to look like it had been there a while and it was a home. Choosing practical lights and trying to keep it disgustingly warm and cosy in there. It was the genius idea of the cinematographer to put a coat of varnish on the wallpaper in the living room, which really gives the light a strange kick when Bob's sitting there. 

Can you tell us about the closing credits of the film? SPOILERS
That was weird. I had 11 minutes left in the final mix and they wanted to put a song over it, but there was no right song. You just don't want a Journey song over it, a bit of Etta James. SPOILERS I just wanted the idea of what it sounds like when Rabbit gets back to that house, as it's the only place he has to live, and it's what he knows as home. So I took all of the sounds of Bob and he moving around the house and played them over the credits, so there's the acknowledgment of him doing what he's done, but there's enough for the audience to think what next? There is the sound of Angie breathing, as I think she's just fine. The only thing that bothers me is that the sound of him bathing sounds like him pissing, but I figured he's got to piss. END OF SPOILERS

What's your next project?
It is called A Fall From Grace, again I'm examining damaged children. It stars Tim Roth as a detective. He is for several different reasons fairly damaged himself, and is an alcoholic and drug addict and is trying to solve a series of cases while also dealing with an underground ring of paedophiles. So it's a romantic comedy. It's a lot like The Bourne Identity and Bridget Jones' Diary [laughs]. 

Would you want to tackle another genre?
I've been directing a lot of comedy TV, I love comedy and in fact there's a film I want to do after A Fall From Grace called The Monster Next Door. It's a vampire, zombie, werewolf nerd comedy. It's a great script from Jim Robbins, and it's an opportunity to still play around with effects and gore, but also laugh really loud. Hopefully it's Superbad meets American Werewolf in London [laughs]. I love love stories, I'm a human being. I just haven't been presented with that opportunity. I'm more drawn towards things I don't experience every day, and that's why the darkness appeals to me. I have a very bright and shiny life for the most part! 

Saturday, January 12, 2013

Congratulations to Vincent D'Onofrio winner of Fright Meter Award's Best Actor in 'Chained'!

FRIGHT METER AWARDS


Have to add, very well deserved.  Keep in mind that Vincent was simultaneously filming 'The Tomb' at the same time.  That meant flying back and forth between Canada and Louisiana with no day off for 3 weeks. The sheer commitment alone is worthy of any award.  The talent of slipping into one character to another is pure genius.  So proud that others recognize what we already know.

Monday, December 17, 2012

Vincent D'Onofrio nominated for 'Fright Meter Award' for 'Chained'



The FRIGHT METER AWARDS are presented annually by the Fright Meter Awards Organization, an organization dedicated solely to honoring and recognizing excellence within the Horror genre. The nominations and winners are determined by members of the HORROR MOVIE DIARY Fright Meter Awards Organization. Members consist of Horror fans, bloggers, actors, producers, directors, and others, making the Fright Meter Awards truly the most prestigious Horror award given.

The Fright Meter Awards aim to select and nominate worthy films regardless of budget, means of release, or popularity.

Me, one of the 31 committee members of the FRIGHT METER AWARDS, is proud to announce the nominations of this year's awards:

Best Ensemble Cast
* CHAINED (Vincent D’Onofrio, Eamon Farren, Conor Leslie)
* EXCISION (Roger Bart, Traci Lords, AnnaLynne McCord, Ariel Winter)
* LOVELY MOLLY (Gretchen Lodge, Ken Arnold, Alexandra Holden, Johnny Lewis)
* THE CABIN IN THE WOODS (Amy Acker, Kristen Connolly, Tim De Zarn, Chris Hemsworth, Anna Hutchison, Richard Jenkins, Fran Kranz, Bradley Whitford)
* THE LOVED ONES (John Brumpton, Robin McLeavy, Jessica McNamee, Xavier Samuel, Victoria Thaine)

Best Actor In A Leading Role
* Daniel Radcliffe - THE WOMAN IN BLACK
* Ethan Hawke - SINISTER
* John Cusack - THE RAVEN
* Neil Maskell - KILL LIST
* Vincent D'Onofrio - CHAINED

Best Horror Movie
* DETENTION
* EXCISION
* SINISTER
* THE CABIN IN THE WOODS
* THE LOVED ONES

Thursday, November 29, 2012

'Chained' starring Vincent D'Onofrio to be released in theatres February 1st

SUBTITLED ONLINE

UPDATE: UK ONLY AT THIS TIME


Anchor Bay has announced that controversial thriller Chained will be released in cinemas on 1stFebruary 2013.
Chained, Jennifer Lynch
Chained: Jennifer Lynch's twisted family dynamic.
From the mind of writer/director Jennifer Lynch (daughter of the infamous David) comes a shocker that has stunned audiences worldwide. When he was 9 years old, Tim and his mother were abducted by taxi-driving serial killer Bob (Vincent D’Onofrio). Tim’s mother was murdered and Tim was kept as a chained slave, forced to bury the bodies of the young women Bob drags home and keep scrapbooks of the crimes. Now a teenager, Tim (Eamon Farren) and Bob share a depraved father/son/protégé relationship. But who will ultimately sever the bond between ‘family’ and unimaginable horror?
Also starring Evan Bird (The Killing US), Jake Weber (Medium, American Gothic) and Julia Ormond (The Curious Case Of Benjamin Button, Legends Of The Fall), Chained is an independent movie that is being hailed as one of the most controversial and uncompromising thrillers of our time.

Monday, November 12, 2012

Video: More Jennifer Lynch at SLIFF



Published on Nov 11, 2012 by 
From the Director of Surveillance, to date, Hollywood's youngest Screenwriter & Director, Jennifer Lynch, is in town for the 21st Annual Whittaker St Louis International Film Festival, showing her film "Chained". Chained is a psychological thriller that tells the story of a madman taxi-driving serial killer, Bob (Vincent D'Onofrio, from Law & Order: Criminal Intent). The movie starts at the end of an afternoon excursion, Sarah Fiddler and her young son gets in Bob's taxi to head home...they never get there. Re-christening the boy "Rabbit," Bob forcibly adopts him and compels his "son" to clean up after his crimes. In his own distorted way, Bob wants to be a good father - to raise a son who is well-prepared to succeed in the world...as a mass murderer. See Jennifer's interview right here as she talks about the film and what's next.

Wednesday, November 7, 2012

WAMG Interview – Director Jennifer Lynch


WE ARE MOVIE GEEKS

Posted by 

Interview conducted by Tom Stockman November 5th, 2012
Director Jennifer Lynch’s new horror film CHAINED will be playing at 7pm at the Tivoli this Friday night as part of the St. Louis International Film Festival. Lynch, who will be in attendance, has lived through her own horror stories the past couple of decades since making her directorial debut in 1993 with BOXING HELENA. The dark comedy about a doctor who removes the limbs of his shapely neighbor and places her in a box on his dining-room table, was critically savaged, a financial flop, and led to a highly-publicized lawsuit involving its original star Kim Bassinger. Ms Lynch then went through a series of painful spinal surgeries, the result of being hit by a car when she was 19. It was fifteen years before she was able to mount another directorial outing with SURVEILLANCE (2008), a mind-bender about the quest for truth in a series of serial killing; HISSS (2010) about a snake woman; and the upcoming CHAINED (2012) about a serial killer and his young apprentice. Her next film, the thriller A FALL FROM GRACE, will be filmed in the St. Louis area in 2013. Her father David Lynch’s influence is evident in her work, especially her penchant for the lurid, but Jennifer Lynch has emerged as a skillful director with her own voice. She took the time this week to speak with WE ARE MOVIE GEEKS about her new  projects and her upcoming weekend in St. Louis as a guest at the St. Louis International Film Festival.
We Are Movie Geeks: You’ll be bringing your film CHAINED to the St. Louis International Film Festival this weekend. I have not seen CHAINED but I did see BOXING HELENA at the theater back when it was new.
Jennifer Lynch: You are probably the only guy. Very hardcore.
WAMG: I always liked it. There was a 15 year gap between BOXING HELENA and your next movie SURVEILLANCE.
JL: Yes, have you seen that?
WAMG: I have not.
JL: Oh, you gotta see that. It’s on Netflix.
WAMG: I will. What were you doing during those 15 years?
JL: I was having spinal surgery and raising a daughter as a single mother. I was doing a lot of writing and when I decided to have a baby I decided the best thing I could do is make sure she felt welcome because I had no partner. Then there was the BOXING HELENA debacle. In my opinion I made a very funny, interesting fairy tale. What everyone else said I’d done was become the world’s greatest misogynist. The aftermath of that was upsetting so I spent the next 15 years finding my voice again and doing what I felt was not real work but different work. Then I realized that what I really wanted to do was to continue to tell stories and when my daughter was old enough, I did that as soon as I could.
WAMG: You referred to BOXING HELENA as a debacle. As a filmmaker, does it matter to you how the critics might receive a film while you’re making the film?
JL: While I’m making the film, I can’t think about that. While I’m making a film I’m thinking about telling a story. But afterwards, I’d be lying if I said I don’t care. You can’t please everyone but wouldn’t it be great if they all dug it? The beauty of SURVEILLANCE was that people actually saw the film that I set out to make. I was very proud of it and it was very well received. That felt good. Not everybody liked it but everyone saw the film that I made.
WAMG: Let’s talk about CHAINED. It’s based on someone else’s screenplay. How did it come to your attention?
JL: I was sent the script through two producers who told me good things about it. When I got it, I though it was a great idea, but where the idea went was a little too much for me. For lack of a better word, it felt more like “torture porn” than a thriller, which is more my bag. So I told the producers that I liked the idea of the script, it was very well-written, and I asked them why they thought of me and they said it’s because I do violent things. And I don’t! SURVEILLANCE had violence in it but it was a totally different thing. They asked what I wanted to do with it. To me, it’s not interesting to just kill a bunch of people. What’s fascinating to me is why people kill and I like this idea that day-to-day this man and this little boy are living together. I mean, what’s that all about? I love “The Human Monster’, those are the real scary stories.
WAMG: Do you know where the idea for CHAINED came from? Was it based on a true story?
JL: It was not based on a true story. It was based on an idea that writer Damien O’Donnel had about a serial killer. I’m more tickled by things that are universal and can scare me. If you can scare me in broad daylight, then you’ve won. If I’m sitting in a theater and I look at everyone around me and think “what’s their damage. What’s dangerous about them?, that’s what’s fun for me and that’s what I try to create.
WAMG: How long did it take to get CHAINED made and where was it filmed?
JL: It was filmed in the same city where SURVEILLANCE was filmed, Regina Saskatchewan. They call it “Regina, the town that rhymes with fun!”. It was shot very fast, less than 15 days and it was shot for less than $800,000.
WAMG: Are these dark stories like CHAINED, the type of films that what you like yourself?
JL: I like things that are different from my life. Because that’s where my curiosities are. The same way with my next film A FALL FROM GRACE, I think it’s an interesting way to create a dialog about child abuse and what we’re ultimately doing to each other and how we have no business acting surprised when kids who get the crap beaten out of them turn out to be terrible people. It’s not that I don’t love romantic comedies, or comedies at all, I have comedy planned after A FALL FROM GRACE, but what interest me are things that scare me, that I’m not sure how I’ll accomplish and are different than my own life which is very happy and laughter-filled and not as dark as one would think.
Vincent D’Onofrio in Jennifer Lynch’s CHAINED
WAMG: I hear that you had some dealings with the MPAA concerning CHAINED. Can you talk about that?
JL: I did. They gave me an NC-17. There is a process you can go through, you pay a sum of money and you can go through arbitration where upon the group screens the film again and afterwards there’s kind of a boardroom, or courtroom where you plead your case and they plead theirs.
WAMG: Were you there for all of this?
JL: Oh yes, I was there. It was really important to me because after seeing films like SAW and HOSTEL and TEXAS CHAINSAW MASSACRE, there was no way they were going to get me to believe my film was as violent as those. And they concede. They said that it’s not that you can see the violence, it’s just that it felt too real. What was painful to me about that was that they punished me for making an authentic movie. I guarantee that if Brad Pitt had played the killer, it would have received an R, but Vincent D’Onofrio did such a great job of being real and believable that you lose sight of him being an actor and you just see this character. And I’m proud that it is unseen violence that is frightening because that’s what I was focusing on. So I lost that arbitration, which was sad. I did receive several votes for overturning it but there weren’t enough.
WAMG: Was cutting it down to an R an option?
JL: That’s what I did. There’s an R version, which swallowed up all of my budget for a director’s cut. All I changed was a small amount of blood in one scene. Because the film was already finished, that required going into a flame room at several hundred dollars an hour and painting it out bit by bit. When I showed the film at a festival, no one could believe that’s what they made me change. In SURVEILLANCE I dealt with violence in ales authentic manner. In CHAINED I wanted the violence to feel terrible because that’s the situation and I many a specific decision to make it feel bad. It’s not funny or sexy. A child is involved and it’s horrible. I wanted to play with the senses because it’s mainly what the child hears and what he sees, and that scared me and it scared the MPAA who said we made a great, effective film but children should never see it.
WAMG: Did your father (director David Lynch) see CHAINED and what did he think of it?
JL: Yes, he did and he said “That is a dark picture”.
WAMG: That’s saying a lot coming from him.
JL: He doesn’t get that people think he’s dark so I don’t know what he and I are doing but apparently we’re not as self-aware as we should be. I didn’t think the MPAA was going to have a hard time with this and I thought it would get an R because of what I’d seen everybody else getting. I’m not cheering violence. I’m not saying it’s cool or that this killer is a good guy. For me, if cinema isn’t once in a while a really great proponent of change, then what’s the point?
WAMG: How old were you when your father made ERASERHEAD?
JL: I was 2 when started and he finished when I was 7.
WAMG: Did you see that movie when you were 7?
JL: Oh yeah, I lived on the set. His favorite quote of mine is when we left the theater after seeing it and I said “Dad, that is definitely not a movie for kids!”
WAMG: Do you ever ask him for filmmaking advice?
JL: I think I did early on I did, but his advice was always the same: have a great time but use common sense. I’m a big believer that I’m not doing anything magical. I’m just telling the story the way I see it. It’s the same way you would recount your day or an event to a friend. Tell it as it happens and as you remember.
WAMG: Let’s talks a bit about A FALL FROM GRACE, your next project which you’re filming here in St. Louis, correct?
JL: I sure am. I love it there. The original script which Eric Wilkinson had written, was 90 percent a different story. He had brought it to me three times and I politely declined. I he kept saying that I should direct this. I told him that I love the places he was telling me about but I felt like I had seen this movie. I was asked what I would do with it and I had some ideas about what I would do with it. I wanted to give a voice to things going on with children. Because I love The Human Wound and to me there’s not a lot sexier in this world than a damaged man so I sort of put all those things together. I flew to St. Louis and fell in love with the old Chain of Rocks bridge. Fell in love with the old ghost parts of the city and the newborn parts of the city. Around every corner there seemed to be something new and I just can’t believe the landscape and I though “This is it”. The story was really born from that visit. So we banged out a script that still include the idea of a serial killer and police but this is more one detective’s plight and the thought that he may not solve this is eating him away. Tim Roth is just gonna knock it out of the park. I’m so grateful and flattered about how excited he is about this role.
WAMG: There was a famous double murder on the Chain of Rocks Bridge about twenty years ago you may have heard about.
JL: Yes, I think that’s what ultimately inspired Eric’s original draft. Perhaps not that incident in detail but the fact that something creepy had taken place there. I know that’s a story that’s very sensitive for the family and I think Eric’s investigating that if he can get the family’s permission but he doesn’t want to do anything that would hurt them so I think he’s being cautious about that. For me, the beauty of that bridge is that there is still something unsolved there. It is not just a walking bridge. It’s got this “once was” feeling about it. Just the shape of it, that crazy bend, the way it goes over land and water, I just can’t get enough of it.
WAMG: When will you be filming?
JL: I hope to be prepping late February and March and shooting in April and May.
WAMG: And you’ve spent some time hearing scouting locales?
JL: Oh yeah, I’ve been scouting the hell out of that place. I love it there. I’ve been there five or six times since this process started and I just adore it.
WAMG: You’ll be showing CHAINED this Friday night at 7pm at the Tivoli theater as part of the St. Louis International Film Festival and you’ll also being doing a seminar where you’ll be discussing A FALL FROM GRACE  also at the Tivoli and that is Saturday morning at 11am.
JL: That’s right and a short I directed is also playing in one of the shorts programs. I short called HOW TO HAVE A HAPPY MARRIAGE. Also we’re screening the teaser trailer I shot in St. Louis for A FALL FROM GRACE. We shot it under four days and Bill Pullman does the voice-over.
WAMG: How old is your daughter now?
JL: She’s 17 which is amazing because I myself look 17 (laughs).
WAMG: You’ll have a great time in St. Louis this weekend.
JL: I’m super-excited.
WAMG: Good luck with CHAINED and A FALL FROM GRACE
JL: Thank you.

St. Louis Post-Dispatch film critic Joe Williams leads a discussion on the A FALL FROM GRACE project and its development with SLIFF guest Jennifer Lynch, screenwriter/actor Eric Wilkinson (a former St. Louisan), and producer David Michaels. The program includes a pair of shorts by the filmmakers: Lynch’s “How to Have a Happy Marriage” (part of the compilation film “Girls! Girls! Girls!”) and Michaels’ “Chinatown.” Free coffee and pastries are provided by Kaldi’s Coffeehouse. This event is free and takes place Saturday morning, November 10th at 11am at the Tivoli Theater