‘Saw’ back in theaters this Halloween

‘Saw’ back in theaters this Halloween

This Halloween, Lionsgate will celebrate the 10th anniversary of the theatrical release of “Saw”, the film that kicked off the most successful horror franchise in history, by bringing it back to theaters nationwide for one week only.  The film will open on Friday, October 31st, with select screenings beginning Thursday night, October 30th.  The seven “Saw” films grossed $874 million at the box office worldwide and were hailed by the Guinness Book of World Records as the “Most Successful Horror Franchise” of all time.
“The launch of SAW was a signature event in Lionsgate’s history, establishing our first franchise and paving the way for our growth into a global studio,” said Lionsgate President of Acquisitions & Co-Productions Jason Constantine. “We are excited for our fans to revisit the twisted magic that first blew their minds on Halloween 2004.”
“As part of ‘Saw’s’ 10th anniversary, we’re thrilled to give new fans and audiences the opportunity to experience this film on the big screen for the very first time,” added “Saw’s” producers Oren Koules and Mark Burg.
“Saw” was the first collaboration for co-creators James Wan, who directed the film, and Leigh Whannell, who wrote the screenplay. Together, they also created the successful “Insidious” franchise, and Wan has gone on to direct such high-profile films as “The Conjuring” and the upcoming “Fast and Furious 7.”
Directed by Wan from a script penned by Whannell, SAW is a psychological thriller focusing on two men who wake up in a secure lair of a serial killer, with a dead body lying between them. The killer, nicknamed “Jigsaw,” leaves them tape recorded messages with details of how to make it out alive. The only way for one man to make it out alive is to do the unthinkable. The two men desperately try to find a way out, while also trying to figure out who’s behind their kidnapping. The film, which was released over Halloween weekend on October 29, 2004, was produced by Gregg Hoffman, Oren Koules, and Mark Burg.

Shanley Caswell on ‘The Conjuring’ sequel rumors

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Imagine going away on vacation, and coming back to find you’re in the hottest movie of the summer. Shanley Caswell can tell you all about it.

The young actress made her major role debut in the film “Detention” a little over a year ago, but finds herself in a considerably different position these days, as one of the stars of “The Conjuring,” the summer box office dark horse that usurped the likes of “Pacific Rim” and Johnny Depp himself.

So it was time to catch up on our chit-chat from when “Detention” hit theaters and see how things were going.

TQOS:    Well, last we talked you just had an independent film come out, your first major role in “Detention.” And now you have recently had a little movie out called “The Conjuring” that maybe a few people have heard of.

Shanley:     Yes, they may have heard of it. [laughs]

TQOS:    I looked back in the last interview and you referred to your next project as a film called “The Warren Files,” so that was obviously the working title then. But anyway, how has life changed for you since the opening of “The Conjuring?”

Shanley:    Really, not much. I have been on vacation with my family in the middle of nowhere in the mountains so I have kind of avoided all the hustle and bustle of everything that has been going on which is nice. It’s nice to be away from the industry for a bit while this craziness  is going on.

TQOS:    But were you kind of surprised at such an overwhelming response to the film?

Shanley:    Yes, I think everyone really was. We knew that people would like it but we weren’t expecting the huge response that we got: everyone going to see it and it being the number one movie… nobody was really expecting that. So I think everyone was pretty shocked because we are not a super, super high budget movie but on the lower range. I think that everyone was shocked but really, really proud that we did something that became that big. It’s really validating that people like it because we all like it so much and it’s wonderful to have other people agree with that.

TQOS:    It is a quality horror film, and that’s from a horror movie geek. You know, there’s a lot of garbage  turned out in the horror genre, so it’s really refreshing to find a good one. But being kind of a smaller film and not big budget you still got to work with some really great actors… like Vera (Farmiga) and Lili Tailor who I have always adored. So how it was like working with all those great actors?

Shanley:    Oh, it was wonderful, but it was very intimidating. But of course as soon as I met them all it wasn’t so intimidating because they’re just so wonderful and always very down-to-earth. Yes, I learned a lot from just being on set and watching them work… they’re all so professional. Ron and Vera and Patrick and all the kids involved really took it very seriously. When we weren’t rolling the camera it seemed like we weren’t working but just hanging out. But as soon as the camera started rolling, everyone was extremely professional and did an amazing job. So I think I learned a lot about how to balance relationships on set. And how to work well on set: I think that is a bit I really took away from them all and watching them together was just amazing.

51155454 Celebrities at the premiere of 'The Conjuring' at the Cinerama Dome in Hollywood, California on July 15, 2013. Celebrities at the premiere of 'The Conjuring' at the Cinerama Dome in Hollywood, California on July 15, 2013. Pictured: Shanley Caswell FameFlynet, Inc - Beverly Hills, CA, USA - +1 (818) 307-4813

TQOS:    Was there any one thing in particular that was really tough with doing some of the scarier scenes in the movie?

Shanley:    Yes, I think because all the little girls and myself  (and all the actors really) were very close… when we did have to roll the cameras,  and we were getting into all the screaming and crying… it’s a fine  line with the younger girls between having fun on set, and making sure that you’re going into a serious mode with them. I realized that part of this film is finding that line between working and really learning how to work with kids, because I had never really done that before. But it went well and the kids were all amazing.

The wonderful thing about James (Wan, the director) is that there wasn’t a lot of CGI either. It was there and real so that wasn’t hard:  we actually had things to react to instead of just pretending that it was there.

TQOS:    It was definitely nice to have such a CGI-free movie because I’m old-school. I hate CGI, I mean I know it has its place, but I can imagine it would be much harder to react to something imaginary than something physical.

Shanley:    And I think it made it scarier for the actors on set to have something to react to: real things that they can actually see so they don’t have to imagine the thing. I think it makes it scarier watching it as well. You know, it seems real, it doesn’t seem fake. I see some movies and I just get so distracted by how fake it looks or how computer-generated it looks and, well, it actually takes me out of the bubble of reality that the movie has tried to create.

TQOS:    Exactly. And, well, I know that the movie has only been out for a couple of weeks and this is really early, but has anyone started talking about “The Conjuring II” already, god help us?

Shanley:    Oh, god, I know… (laughs) Yes, I have heard something about that … I can’t remember but apparently there is going to be a second one… I think that it might be the parent’s story? I don’t really know, but this is the continuing franchise about the Warrens, and maybe going on to their next story.

TQOS:    That would be what I would predict. When they had one of the scenes when they were lecturing about the paranormal in a classroom, I wanted to jump up and scream, “That’s the real Lorraine Warren! Right there in the front!” during her cameo.

Shanley:     You noticed her? Oh, my god, I looked for her every single time and I completely missed her. I need to pay attention more.

TQOS:    Well, there’s a lot going on, so it’s hard to catch her. But moving along, do you have any other projects in the works right now?

Shanley:    Next week I’m leaving to study abroad and I’m basically just trying to finish up school. I am graduating at the end of August — I already did the ceremonial graduation stuff  — but I am going overseas and finishing up some classes. Then I’m back here and looking for the next job.

TQOS:    Well, you’re probably going to get some offers while you’re overseas  I’m just guessing… going out on a limb here.

Shanley:    Fingers crossed, fingers crossed…

TQOS:    So since you have been on vacation in the middle of nowhere, you probably really haven’t had a chance to get to talk much with any cast members about their reaction to the movie and its success?

Shanley:    A big group of us have been emailing back and forth, and everyone is just out of their minds excited. James has been texting all of us, just sending us pictures of the headlines and articles. Everyone in my family is really excited, too. We all went to see it last Saturday — it was, like, 50 of us — so I’ve had many congratulations through a variety of sources, and it is just unbelievable. I really didn’t expect that at all.

TQOS:    So now, what would be the kind of role you would hope to do next?

Shanley:    What I’ve been kind of gravitating toward are good stories and stories  that haven’t been done before, because you read the same things over and over again… just carbon copies of the scripts you’ve read before. So anything that’s original — original stories and original characters — characters that I haven’t done before. I’ve played the typical teenage daughter a million times and would like something with just a little more meat to it, something  to challenge myself with.

TQOS:    Are you at the point yet where you are going down the street and people are saying “Hey! Weren’t you in ‘The Conjuring?’ or is it still a little premature for that?

Shanley:    Well, it’s still a little premature and I’m at this point where I’ve been out in the middle of nowhere. But I was in the library studying one day and this kid comes up and he recognized me from “Detention” — I had never really been recognized before. So when he told me he recognized me I was like, “Oh, we probably have a class together.” And he said, “No, you’re Riley.”

TQOS:    Well, hopefully when we touch bases again in a year, you’ll be, you know, like A-list, red carpet, getting the Bieber mobs famous. And it won’t be a teen horror movie or a teen comedy or teen anything — it will be, you know, as an adult.

Shanley:    Yeah, fingers crossed, fingers crossed.

TQOS:    It comes in time, it comes in time. Of course, in twenty years you’ll be saying “Why can’t I play a younger character?”

Shanley:    Yeah, exactly! I’m holding on to this for as long as I can.

TQOS:    Well, thank you so much for checking in and hopefully we’ll speak again in about another year.

Shanley:    Plan on it!

 

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‘The Conjuring’ shows subtle can be scary

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Horror has always been popular to some extent, but the last couple of weeks, it proved once again how it can crush the box office with the surprise success of James Wan’s latest, “The Conjuring.” It also proved you don’t need gratuitous gore, violence, nudity or things jumping out and shouting “Boo!” at you to create a creepy atmosphere and an air of fear.  In fact, the scariest moments are the most subtle, rather than the “Boo!” moments so common today in the genre.

The film revolves around a true paranormal case investigated by Ed and Lorraine Warren, the latter being most known as the psychic portrayed in “The Amityville Horror.” Yes, she’s real, and not only can you see her frequently on the TV series “Paranormal State,” but she has a cameo as one of the guests at a paranormal lecture in the movie. (The little old lady in the front.)

Anyway, she’s portrayed in this film by Vera Farmiga, and her husband Ed by Patrick Wilson. The Warrens took on a case in 1971 involving a Long Island family named Carolyn and Roger Parren (Lili Taylor and Ron Livingston) and their five daughters (Shanley Caswell, Hayley McFarland, Joey King, Mackenzie Foy, and Kyla Deaver.)

Already, you have to give kudos to Wan on casting (Is there anyone who doesn’t still love Taylor in “Say Anything? Rhetorical question.)

So the Warrens apparently investigated this house and supposedly never released info on this case till now because it was so scary… even scarier than the allegations in “The Amityville Horror.” Yeah, smells a little fishy to me, too, but it’s a horror film, let’s just roll with it.

The film opens with a documentary style interview with some young women where we learn the backstory of the infamous doll “Annabelle” from the Warren’s collection of paranormal artifacts. This doll actually exists in the Warren’s collection and they swear that thing is pure evil, although it isn’t directly involved in the Parren’s story. We also see them lecturing about the paranormal work they do as a sort of parallel story while the Parrens move in and slowly discover their dream house is not the kind of dream they were looking for.

Without giving away major spoilers, the film relies on creating a sense of dread at mostly unseen and barely glimpsed horror, particularly at first. This is a case where it works, because Wan also understands the use of elements like the blindfolded game to make his subjects more vulnerable, creating a greater sense of horror in the viewer when the subject can’t see what we can. Or a single lit match in the total darkness, tapping into one of our most primordial fears.

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As the film progresses, he shows more, until the climax with a scene of possession, which actually, seemed far less scary to me than the rest of the movie. I also wondered at the use of the sheet over the head… was there supposed to be some point of that, or just trying to save some special effects makeup cash? It was puzzling enough to distract me during that segment of the film.

But then, going off on a tangent with a question like that may just be a hazard of the profession.

That Wan — who also directed “Saw” and “Insidious” — created another quality horror film should be no surprise. That it has ruled the box office in the midst of summer and upstaged the likes of Johnny Depp in “The Lone Ranger”… that’s mighty impressive.

Does it live up to the hype? Well, that would be hard to do given how it’s been hailed as the Second Coming of Horror, but whether you  think it does or doesn’t will depend mostly on how easily you scare, and how good you are at blocking out douchebags in the theater who want to add their laugh track to this and any horror film. But it’s rock solid horror, and has a great chance of being seen as a classic horror story in the long run, and will be another worthy addition to any horror collection when it comes out on DVD.

Learn more about what it was like working on the movie later this week when I post my exclusive interview with Shanley Caswell , who dishes on the surprise success of the movie and real vs CGI horror. Meanwhile, check out the interview I did with her a little over a year ago, when she was starting to work on a little film called “The Warren Files” at the time.

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Shanley Caswell may be in ‘Detention’ but she’s more than a scream queen

ctress Shanley Caswell and Director Joseph Kahn

Actress Shanley Caswell and Director Joseph Kahn (Photo credit: EsotericSapience)

Detention (2011 film)

Detention (2011 film) (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

Teens and homicidal maniacs go together like peanut butter and chocolate in Hollywood, so “Detention” seems to be the latest in the string of slashers to hit the big screen when it premieres April 13th. But according to actress Shanley Caswell, it’s more than that. Like the films of John Hughes in the eighties, it makes some sharp commentary on the current generation, as well as having a little fun with the horror genre — think “Scream” meets “The Breakfast Club.”

“The film is representational of this generation, my generation, and how fast everything is moving,” said Caswell in a recent interview. “I grew up in a generation where we had the internet and Google and we can know anything that we wanted to know just by going on the worldwide web, and it’s definitely shows how fast kids are moving nowadays.

“It’s really the ADHD generation where we can multi-task — where we can be watching something, and then typing something on our phone, and then reading something, and then talking to someone all at the same time. It’s definitely for the fast-paced generation.”

In “Detention,” her first major role, Caswell stars as the cynical high school outcast Riley Jones, who finds herself joining with some other students of Grizzly Lake High School to fight a slasher-movie killer who has come to life. Just one problem — they have to get out of detention.

The film, which created a lot of buzz at SXSW recently, also won the Youth Jury prize for best Future Wave Feature Film at the Seattle International Film Festival. Samuel Goldwyn Films describes it as a “apocalyptic fantasy, horror, science fiction, action thriller, body-swapping and time-traveling teen romantic comedy.”

“It’s got a little bit of everything in it,” says Caswell. “It’s not just one thing, and it’s so unique and different — it breaks a lot of rules which is interesting because it’s a film called ‘Detention,’ where you’re not supposed to break rules. But it doesn’t go by the normal movie script, the Hollywood formula, and it keeps throwing things at you so you’re constantly being surprised, you’re constantly being taken into a different world and the different back stories of the characters, and the characters are so interesting.

“It was just such a unique thing that I had never, ever read before, and that was why I really wanted to do it — it was so crazy, unlike anything I’ve ever heard of before.”

Of course, the fact that it was a major role in a feature film wasn’t exactly a downside, either. Although there is always that concern of being typecast as a “scream queen” by making your major debut in a horror film, but Caswell isn’t too concerned.

“I wouldn’t exactly describe ‘Detention’ as a horror movie.  I mean it does have horror elements in it, but it’s got a lot more to it, and it’s not a typical horror movie,” says Caswell. “I hope I don’t fall into that (stereotype) because I’d love to do more dramas, but yeah, I do really enjoy doing horror movies, too.

Caswell plays a high school student in this movie, but she’s actually in college, studying anthropology at UCLA. While drama may seem to be the obvious choice, she wanted something else to fall back on, and anthropology also enhances the acting in understanding other people and cultures.

“I wanted to get something that was different and open my mind to the rest of the world and in anthropology, you are hearing about the psychology of people — learning about how they talk, why they say the certain things that they do, how culture affects people, and how people affect their culture, and you just learn how to observe really well, and that’s what you do in acting, too.

“So they kind of do help each other out, and I think I’m learning more and more of that. Like this morning in my linguistics class we were just talking about why people say certain things the way that they do. Not just the inflection as they say it, but the way that they grammatically put things together. And all of those little things like that make you realize that every person is different, and every part that you play is going to be different — you can never play them the same.”

While she may be quick to point out that “Detention” is not really just a horror film, her next project most definitely is.

“It’s called the ‘Warren Files,’ with James Wan, the director of ‘Saw,’ and it’s a horror movie but it’s the paranormal side of the horror, not the slasher horror. I like the paranormal side a lot, that’s my favorite kind of horror movie because it plays on your fear of the dark, and makes you go home, and you can’t sleep at night. So I’m really excited about the project. I saw the teaser trailer, and it was very, very scary looking so I’m excited for people to see that, especially if they’re a horror fan.”

“Detention” opens Friday, April 13 in theaters, and co-stars Spencer Locke, Dane Cook and Josh Hutcherson, who has another little movie out right now called “Hunger Games.” Maybe you’ve heard about it?

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