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  • Interview: Jesse O’Brien, Two Heads Creek Director

    Interview: Jesse O’Brien, Two Heads Creek Director

    Ahead of the UK premiere of TWO HEADS CREEK, a playfully dark cannibal horror comedy, director Jesse O’Brien talks about the joys of cannibal karaoke, tackling immigration issues and filming in a haunted hotel.

    How did Jordan Waller’s TWO HEADS CREEK script end up in your hands and did you see it as more a family comedy than a cannibal gore-fest?

    Jesse – Producer Judd Tilyard and I were developing one of my own scripts, Inherit the Earth, which we thought would take a while to finance – and during that process he asked if I’d like to take a look at another script, which was then called Flesh and Blood. I read it with a sense of hesitation. Did I want my second film to be a cannibal horror comedy set in the outback? But from page one, Jordan Waller’s writing really leaped off the page. I knew immediately it was a film with something to say – a hilarious parody of our greedy and violent attitudes towards immigration – but it was also filled with a lot of heart, all about a family finding each other.

    Did Waller always want to play Norman, or was that budgetary casting?

    Jesse – Jordan wrote it with himself in mind but when I was presented with the project, I didn’t know him. Our producer Jayne Chard, who was so wonderful to work with, really believed in Jordan. His involvement as a very collaborative writer, as well as his vision for himself as a unique and charming leading man, was really a gift to this film. He and I clicked immediately, and he had a lot of trust in me when it came to interpreting his words.

    Waller and Kathryn Wilder (playing Annabelle) are brilliant as the bickering siblings who immediately turn supportive of each other in the face of others criticizing them. Was their chemistry instant?

    Jesse -Casting Annabelle was a challenge, because we didn’t just need to find someone to play Jordan’s sister – we needed a twin sister. So looks were important. We saw a lot of audition tapes. The character is a bit stuffy and conceited, so we needed that, but we also needed her to evolve and be likeable underneath that facade. So finding both was a real challenge. When we presented Kathryn’s audition tape to Jordan, he was delighted, because they happened to have met and hung out before. After they got together and filmed some scenes to show us, we knew their believability as twins was hard to deny. Every time they were on screen together, I would smile because they just got the rhythm and the tone of it all. I couldn’t be happier that we found Kathryn.

    TWO HEADS CREEK
    TWO HEADS CREEK

    Was it always the intention to channel the old school Ozploitation gonzo attitude in TWO HEADS CREEK? WAKE IN FRIGHT, TURKEY SHOOT, LONG WEEKEND all come to mind in terms of setting and atmospheres? And the gore feels very early Peter Jackson?

    Jesse – Oh yes. As I said before I couldn’t have enjoyed this if it was pure Ozploitation. But when I knew we had a solid story, the more outlandish elements just became decoration. My creative angle was to lean fully into what makes Australia goofy and silly. To do it more sinister and realistic would have been inauthentic; and Wolf Creek already has that covered. So my brief from the start was to do a 70s throwback. Welcome to Woop Woop was the biggest influence. The absurdity of Australia that it’s always flaunting itself in the background, for better or worse. The immigration themes in this are not the point of the story, but they are an important piece of the puzzle.

    Do you expect to provide a new fan base for the pop hits of Australian teen idol Normie Rowe whose fab songs pepper the soundtrack?

    Jesse – I sure hope so. It was a pleasure to bring this soundtrack together. It was my Dad, a walking rock n’ roll encyclopedia, who suggested Normie Rowe’s music, so the connection to Norman’s name was purely coincidental. As integral as Normie is, the real kicker for us was getting the rights to Skyhooks’ Horror Movie. That Cannibal Karaoke sequence was a big reason we were able to convince people to work on the film. It’s where the film becomes itself. Exploding into blood, guts, glamour and absurdity. 

    You filmed in a Queensland hotel supposedly haunted by ghosts?

    Jesse – We were warned before we arrived that our crew would be haunted, that gear would go missing, that we’d be cursed by the devil. And in preproduction, things had been going wrong…so a small part of me dreaded being cursed. But once we arrived, the whole experience was a joy. The hotel was our safe haven after a hard day’s work. Our producer was serving tequila shots from the bar we’d been filming at. We all bonded and had an amazing time. The only thing haunting us was an onslaught of green tree frogs that refused to leave anybody’s toilets. Day one, I thought I could never sit down on that porcelain with an immovable frog staring up at me. By the end, the frogs were just part of the crew.

    How did your background in visual effects help make TWO HEADS CREEK? 

    Jesse – I was pretty hands off with the visual effects this time. Empire Post managed our entire postproduction pipeline, and they hired a team of VFX artists to do our 90+ shots. I suppose my knowledge in effects helped me communicate what I wanted to see – and the effects were only there to help strengthen or improve what we captured in camera. There’s a shot where a head flies up towards the camera right after its cut off; that idea only came about because I knew the exact elements we’d need to put it together. But it was other artists who did the hard work and made it shine.

    The contrast between the British and the outbackers is stark and funny, was it difficult to get the tonal balance of light and dark right?

    Jesse – Jordan did the heavy lifting with that, because so much of the wit is in the script. I worked with him a little bit to add some more authentic Aussie spice and some extra slang. But I’d say the other important factor though is casting. I made sure we found actors who already understood the tone and could just inherently have a good time with what Jordan had written. It’s incredibly important to not settle when casting, and to cast for the right reasons. It was great to work with actors who understood the tone and were part of the gang.

    TWO HEADS CREEK
    TWO HEADS CREEK

    Why has Australia so lagged behind in the contemporary genre stakes, considering they led the field back in the 1970s/80s? Are you trying to give Ozploitation a higher international profile with TWO HEADS CREEK?

    Jesse – I didn’t have a mission to bring Ozploitation to the world, it was just a choice that grew organically out of this material. The style was the perfect fit for the lunacy Jordan wrote. I think the real glue that gave me confidence here was the music. Too much violence can put some viewers off, so one response could have been to tone it down. But I went the other way with it – really leaning into it – because when people are singing, dancing and laughing, I think you can get away with the gorier moments. In truth, if people don’t love the film overall but they walk away appreciating that Cannibal Karaoke sequence, I’ll be satisfied!

    Finally, what’s next for you?

    I’m planning a few things. Next on the slate should be Holy Water, a gothic horror that I wrote, which is set in 17th century Scotland. We have some great cast attached and we’re hoping to shoot once current restrictions allow. It’s deadly serious in tone and not at all like Two Heads Creek. But my own scripts tend be more serious, like my first film Arrowhead (Alien Arrival) was. Judd and I would still love to get my other project off the ground, Inherit the Earth. That’s basically Lord of the Flies with hellish lava monsters. Everything I do starts with strong images because I don’t want to settle for realism or everyday life…I want to be taken somewhere else when I’m on set, because if I’m excited about going inside the world of the movie, then maybe the audience will be too.

    TWO HEADS CREEK is showing online on Sunday 30 August, 4pm, in the Horror Channel Screen, as part of the Arrow Video FrightFest August Digital event.

    FrightFest Presents and Signature Entertainment are releasing TWO HEAD CREEK on Digital HD from September 7th.

  • Gutterbug: Review

    Gutterbug: Review

    By Thomas White. 

    Gutterbug is the story of Steven Bugsby, known as ‘Bug’, a young runaway living on the streets. Together with his misfit punk friends, he decides on his twenty first birthday to return home, a quest that will ultimately lead to a catastrophic and life changing conclusion. 

    The film opens with a scene of frantic confusion, in the immediate aftermath of a serious car collision, a distressed emergency services voiceover and a medical resuscitation in transit. Like the adrenaline shot administered in the back of a claustrophobic ambulance, we are immediately injected into Bug’s turbulent, messy, sordid world, a turgid soup of blood, sweat, grime and chemical substances. 

    A large reason for this film’s promising reception is, I suspect, down to the gamut of themes and societal issues it tackles, thus targeting a wider audience. Rebellion, drug abuse, homelessness, family dysfunction, toxic relationships and violent crime are all on the agenda here, simmering away until eventually reaching boiling point. 

    While remaining appropriately raw and gritty in tone, director Andrew Gibson gives the film less of a bleak, fatalistic outlook and more of freewheeling, vivacious spirit, keeping the disenchanted nihilism balanced with moments of lightness and the exuberance of freedom. 

    This is less Requiem for a Dream, but closer to films like The Basketball Diaries, with a protagonist we can feel justified in rooting for, a lost soul who has turned down a road and been sucked into a world they never really belonged to. The feeling of the central characters is that of ‘us against the world’, a certain innocence endearing us to their vivacious unity, a tribe of outlaws keeping each other afloat whilst battling their own demons. 

    For all their narcissistic, remorseless qualities, they are not so despicably vile or contemptible that we don’t enjoy spending time in their company. The self-absorption comes with a zestful, youthful spark of life. 

    Andrew Yackel, who plays Bug, brings both a troubled and thoughtful side to the role. In the scenes where he is alone we see a reflective, almost regretful side to his character, a side not shown in his two cohorts, the caring but self-serving Jenny, played by Hannah Mosqueda, and the rather more garrulous Slim, played with erratic relish by Justin Pietropaolo. There is little compassion elsewhere, save for the collective day to day interactions of those living on the fringes of society. 

    Gutterbug puts us through the wringer as we follow through the trajectory of Bug’s journey, an exhausting and exhilarating barrage of character defining moments and life altering events. Eventually brought to face his own mortality, he comes to realise he must first acknowledge his former delinquencies and wrongdoings in order to find redemption. If you like loose ends that tie up neatly then rest assured, you will be rewarded with closure from each of the narrative strands, the lack of ambiguity sparing us any dissatisfaction in that sense, if at the expense of its final veering towards sentimentality. 

  • Geri’s Game: Disney+ Talk

    Geri’s Game: Disney+ Talk

    The Pixar short films are fantastic at showing and not telling. They’d usually be based around one scenario and would feature barely any dialogue, instead replacing it with facial expressions and movements to convey a characters’ emotions and actions to its audience. ‘Geri’s Game’ takes it one step further, by using editing to trick the audience into thinking the short features more characters than it actually does.

    ‘Geri’s Game’ premiered in 1997, and was theatrically shown before ‘A Bug’s Life’ a year later. It won an Oscar for Best Animated Short in 1998, as well as winning 8 more awards, including Best Short Film at the Florida Film Festival.

    The 4-minute short film centres around an elderly man who is in the park playing Chess against an interesting opponent – himself.

    This style of editing has been used before in films, usually to convey madness in a character, but is rarely used for comedic effect, and this decision was perfect for the type of scenario that was picked for the short. The short starts off by showing that the elderly man, Geri, is switching seats per Chess turn.

    However, as the short goes on, it skips this action entirely, just showing Geri taking his turn each time. This also brings in a youthfulness to the character, as Geri ‘tricks’ himself at the end of the short, thus winning the game. And the ultimate prize for winning? His own false teeth!

    ‘Geri’s Game’ is a clever short film, that uses a simple scenario as its comedy sketch, and the centre for its humour. It also gives Geri a form of youth as he tries to find ways of tricking himself to win the game. The phrase ‘growing old is compulsory; growing up is optional’ is one of my favourite phrases, and this short is the definition of that phrase.

    This is a very underrated short and, if you have 4-5 minutes to spare, I would highly recommend it. 

  • Tesla: The BRWC Review

    Tesla: The BRWC Review

    Weaving a diversified portfolio of assured stylistic choices, Michael Almereyda’s career has undeservingly gone under the radar with mainstream audiences. Whether he’s reinventing classic Shakespeare in a modern portrait of Hamlet or infusing a 4th-wall breaking sensibility with Experimenter, the writer/director has never been afraid to pursue unique storytelling avenues. Similar to the latter film, his latest biopic Tesla unearths an inventive and well-realized portrayal of its titular subject’s overlooked history.

    Tesla follows the arduous journey of Nikola Tesla (Ethan Hawke), starting from his days working under scientific juggernaut Thomas Edison (Kyle MacLauchlan). After he trail blazes his own path with breakthroughs in electricity, Tesla sets his eyes on groundbreaking ideals while sharing a complicated relationship with JP Morgan’s daughter Anne (Eve Hewson).

    Where most filmmakers are partisan to Hollywood’s biopic formula, Almereyda cleverly eschews and often mocks those standard conventions. He skillfully implements a subversive edge that colors in its central figures with impact, avoiding the standard “big” moments by painting around the crevices with intimate detail (a great tracking perspective shot captures Tesla’s angst before a big speech, with Almereyda then cutting away to spare us from the overly theatrical). Whether its well-constructed 4th wall breaks or cheekily conceived frames that double as effective character-building (Tesla singing “Everybody Wants to Rule the World” is cinematic bliss), I greatly appreciate an auteurist director who brazenly explores new avenues of creative exploration. It helps that his craftsmanship is exceedingly impressive, with the implementation of bold colors and pastille-painted backgrounds rendering an alluring vision.

    For all his showmanship, Almereyda never forgets Tesla’s central focus. The audience gets a keen sense of Tesla’s inner turmoil, seeing an idealistic pioneer whose prophetic vision of a connective future lied frustratingly out of his grasp. Ethan Hawke’s subdued performance and mousy presence unearths much of the figure’s driving forces, whether it be conquering a sense of inadequacy from his humble beginnings to growing a wide-eyed ambition after years of belittlement from his superiors. These complexions are meshed together by a quiet sensitivity that’s skillfully imbued into the character, rectifying Tesla as a tragic introvert who couldn’t see past his own obsessions (Hawke continues to prove himself as one of the industry’s standout talents). Strong supporting players like Eve Hewson, Ebon Moss-Bachrach, and Jim Gaffigan round out a stellar cast, with Gaffigan’s dramatic turn being a welcomed change of pace for the standout comedian.

    Tesla’s bold approach isn’t without its missteps. Some of Almereyda’s stylistic choices can feel perfunctory, failing to add the depth or humor that they intend to. I also think the writer/director bit off more than he can chew from a narrative perspective, as he often dances around Tesla’s inner-circle in ways that don’t really enhance Tesla’s journey (while the relationship between he and Anne is well-constructed, his infatuation with a starlet actress goes nowhere).

    Michael Almereyda’s go-for-broke vision elevates Tesla into a fresh change of pace for the biopic genre.

  • The Royal Road: GSFF Review

    The Royal Road: GSFF Review

    Esme Betamax | @betamaxer

    In the run-up to Glasgow Short Film Festival’s online edition (17th – 23rd August) we have been treated to DIVE IN cinema. It’s a week of films curated by Africa in Motion, Alchemy Film & Arts, Berwick Film and Media Arts Festival, Central Scotland Documentary Festival, Dardishi, GSFF, IberoDocs, LUX Scotland, Matchbox Cineclub, Scottish Queer International Film Festival, Screen Argyll and Take One Action.

    My pick from this selection is The Royal Road by Jenni Olson. Screening five years after its initial release, it has a peculiar resonance with 2020. It is a diary of a road trip and a history lesson. Narrated by Olson, it is an account of self-discovery and self-reflection of a type common in the gay/queer community, and now popping up in the mainstream (Hannah Gadsby; Mae Martin). Olson cuts through the layers of history in San Francisco and the Royal Road (AKA El Camino Real), reflecting as she goes, and using cinema as her reference points. She likes to show her workings and provides multiple links to the history of the area on the film’s website, aware that her audience will likely want to dig a little deeper.

    The Royal Road

    Everyone has some sense of what San Francisco is like. It has seeped into the common psyche through music, literature and film. But whether you draw inspiration from Armistead Maupin or The Grateful Dead, it’s cinema that does the heavy lifting.

    Film locations are a funny beast. Some iconic: The Golden Gate Bridge in It Came from Beneath the Sea; some eerie: the former Sutro Baths in Harold & Maude; some pretending to be elsewhere altogether: San Francisco City Hall appears in Raiders of the Lost Ark as a DC government building. And many that all but the most dedicated fans would walk past without a second thought.

    The Royal Road

    Olson seeks out corners of the landscape where there is beauty in the mundane, and captures them on 16mm to add to her collection. Sometimes they have significance to classic cinema. Other times they are simply a beautiful image. They are a visual accompaniment to her story of unrequited love. San Francisco is known to be densely populated, but these images are captured at quiet times, with sometimes only the slightest bit of movement captured. This is why The Royal Road feels connected to 2020 — urban space depopulated.

    The Royal Road is nostalgic, and Jenni Olson has romantic tendencies. When that is paired with a fear of innovation, it can develop into conservatism. That’s when she brings in Tony Kushner. As the only point in the film when someone other than the director speaks—over halfway through—it feels striking. Olson refers to it as a “voiceover cameo”. It’s an excerpt from his lecture “The Intelligent Homosexual’s Guide to Socialism and Capitalism with a Key to the Scriptures.” (City Arts & Lectures. San Francisco. 28 Apr. 1998). He warns of the perils of nostalgia, and she takes this very personally, as though he has exposed her. It’s a brilliant move to include his criticism and evaluate it. She realizes that although she has a deep love of the old, she does accept the certainty that the urban landscape will change over time. She no longer feels the need to fight it, because she has that piece of time and place preserved in her collection. 

    The landscape of “pure industrial beauty” never ceases to change, but for the most part, buildings outlive people, and that perspective shift sets the film’s tone. It’s reminiscent of Chris Ware’s Building Stories: people are fleeting but the building remains. The Royal Road is as much of a love letter to a place as it is a love letter to a person.