Tuesday, January 28, 2025
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KAL PENN (HAROLD AND KUMAR TRILOGY, HOUSE, VAN WILDER)

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KAL PENN (HAROLD AND KUMAR TRILOGY, HOUSE, VAN WILDER) 5

 

 

 

1) Why 3D?

3D is usually saved for action movies. Never seen a comedy given this sort of deal. Not gimmicky. Think about the last good comedy you saw in 3D? You can’t! They don’t exist. So, I guess we’re trying to blaze the trail.

2) What was it like working with Wafflebot?

I loved Wafflebot. He’s just so cute. People like robots. I like robots, who doesn’t?

3) Do you plan on returning to government work?

Would love to. The plan was two years spent working in the Obama Administration. Then return to acting. I would love to work on re-election campaign. Sort of a two years acting, then politics. Back and forth, as I fulfill my goals.

4) This third film featured less Neil Patrick Harris. The result was that more of the plot advancement was thrust upon John Cho and yourself. How did that make this film a little different?

By the time this film starts, it’s been six years since NPH was shot at the Texas whorehouse. NPH has always function as a plot device of sorts in these movies. When he appears to Harold and Kumar, he basically doesn’t take away from the guys. He gives them a chance to slow things down and think about where everything’s going. So, I don’t feel that it’s that different.

5) What’s your favorite Christmas movie?

The writers knew that my favorite Christmas film was “A Christmas Story”, so building from there we worked it into the film. From that point, we extended it to include the infamous dick pole scene that involves Harold and Wafflebot later in the movie. I was also a big fan of those old Holiday Claymation specials.

6) One last question before we go. Were you a little sad that you didn’t get to work more with Danny Trejo?

We did share a brief scene at the end with Wafflebot. So, I feel that it worked out for everyone.

 

 

KAL PENN (HAROLD AND KUMAR TRILOGY, HOUSE, VAN WILDER) 6

MICHAEL JAI WHITE (WHY DID I GET MARRIED TOO, BLACK DYNAMITE, SPAWN)

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Michael Jai White has to be one of the hardest working people in
Hollywood, with a career that now spans over 30 years of television, movies
and stage production.  But he was always one of those actors who, while
everybody had heard of him, most people weren’t sure what features he’d
been in. When Black Dynamite hit last year, all of that changed, at least
as far as the internet was concerned.  Between that, and his role as Jax in
the Mortal Kombat: Rebirth short (Jackson Briggs), film geeks everywhere
are anxious to see what he does next.

His most recent role was as one of the ensemble cast behind Tyler PerryÂ’s
newest film, “Why Did I Get Married Too?”, (which is a sequel to “Why Did I
Get Married?”, and actually did better business at the box office than the
original). Reprising his role of Marcus (the TV sports commentator who
speaks only in football metaphors), Michael took time out of his insane
schedule to sit down with us and talk briefly about the DVD release of this
film, and some of his upcoming projects.

AV: Because this was a sequel, how was it coming back to the cast you previously worked with? Was it like coming to a family reunion?

MJW: Black Hollywood is small, so we all knew each other even before the first movie was shot. ItÂ’s funny, but Tasha (Tasha Smith, who plays MarcusÂ’ wife Angela in the film) and I dated for 10 years before this movie in real life. We never fought once during that entire time, but in the movie all we do is fight!

AV: What was it like working with Tyler Perry again?

MJW: Actually, this is about the fourth time IÂ’ve had the chance to work with Tyler. I worked with him to get House of Payne of the ground and was in two episodes on that show. I was also in an episode of The Tyler Perry show earlier this year. I have lots of love for the man, he is great to work with.

AV: After watching Black Dynamite, it was obvious that you could do comedy and do it well. For the DVD release of “Why did I get married too?”, will there be an outtakes reel?

MJW: IÂ’m not sure, but the cast was super funny and I hope some of the stuff that happened on set makes it onto the DVDÂ… (we checked out the feature list and there are a few shorts, Girl Talk: The Women of “Married”, and Male Bonding: The Men of “Married” where I hope we get to see some of this)

AV: Speaking of Black Dynamite, do we have any hope of seeing a sequel?

MJW: I donÂ’t know if you knew this or not, but I co-wrote this movie and was involved with its production on top of actually being in the movie. The only thing holding a sequel back would be me having the time to do one, but itÂ’s definitely happening.

AV: I know with some films though getting the funding together to make a sequel can be toughÂ…

MJW: Financing is not a problem, and the team who I worked with to do the first movie is working on the second one as we speak.

AV: Given the box office success of this latest chapter, do you think there will be more “Married” films?

MJW: Tyler has mentioned it, he thinks that the characters have more to say. For me, I would enjoy exploring the character more.

AV: What kind of preparations do you have to make for a film like “Why Did I Get Married Too?”

MJW: Well, every movie is different, but I donÂ’t do ANY special physical preparation for any of my movies. I work out regularly anyways, and I have made martial arts part of my everyday life style. (TRIVIA: Michael Jai White holds black belts in following martial arts: Shotokan Karate, Tae Kwon Do, Okinawan Kobudo, Goju Ryu, Tang Soo Do, Wushu and Kyokushin Karate) I keep my characters themselves in my back pocket, IÂ’m always thinking about them. So to get prepared for Marcus took me just a few days.

AV: Many of our readers know you from the more genre-type roles youÂ’ve done, from Spawn to doing the voice of Green Lantern in the Justice League cartoon series, and now that awesome Mortal Kombat: Rebirth short. Is there any chance of us getting to see you do something similar in the future?

MJW: Well, the guy who put the Mortal Kombat short together is pushing to get it made into a feature. I get updates from the director as things develop, and I would definitely want to play Jax in the full feature.

AV: It seems like the Super hero genre isnÂ’t going away any time soon. You had a small role in the Dark Knight, is there a particular franchise youÂ’d like to star in or a particular role youÂ’d like to do?

MJW: Absolutely. ItÂ’s a no-brainer for me. Being able to star in one of these kind of movies would be a career-defining role for me. IÂ’d love to be doing more action films, but studio heads are too removed from the consumers. No one is making real action films anymore. The studio heads take formulas that work in drama or comedy and try to apply them to the action genre, and the results arenÂ’t good. Those formulas donÂ’t work in action movies. If John Wayne or Steve McQueen had to start their careers in this day and age, theyÂ’d never have gotten careers because the studios donÂ’t get what an action hero is anymore. There have been some exceptions, like Daniel Craig in the new James Bond films and Matt Damon, but those are few and far between.

AV: What are the next projects we can expect to see you in?

MJW: I just finished shooting a movie called “We the Party”, which was put together by Mario Van Peebles, but I’m not sure when this one is coming out. (listed as still in production) I am directing a movie called “Beatdown” and have been very busy with this. In fact, if I wasn’t here interviewing, I’d be out working on it still.

I also have another project that is being put together by the same creative team that did Black Dynamite. I donÂ’t want to say too much, but itÂ’s going to be one that crosses several genres and has zombies in it.

AV: Heh, ok I will let you get back to work now. Thank you so much for your time!

MJW: YouÂ’re welcome, thanks for taking the time.

TARQUIN PACK (KICKASS, XMEN FIRST CLASS)

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An Interview with Tarquin Pack

Steve: You’re about one of half a dozen producers on Kick-Ass aren’t you?

Tarquin: Yeah! There are… who are my other producers… Brad Pitt, David Reid, John Romita Jr, Kris Thykier… how’s that for independant film-making!

Steve: That’s pretty damn impressive! The movies got a high calibre of people behind it I have to admit. Essentially, Kick-Ass is ‘the little comicbook movie that should’nt have worked’. It was made outside of the studio system, it evaded the censors. How has it been for you to see this movie get such a cult status in such a short amount of time?

Tarquin: It’s been, you’ve actually hit the nail on the head. It’s basically the little movie that could. We went on this extraordinary journey where we sent it to the studios, they all said no, we felt so passionately about it. Matthew is as a director and kind of as a filmmaker, he was kind of like ‘I know I’m right, I’ve done this before, I was here with Lock Stock and Two Smoking Barrels before, exactly the same position’, so it was unbelievable to go on the same sort of journey. The feeling to go to Comiccon, we kinda played it for the people we made it for, we got a standing ovation, you’re just kinda like, I hope to keep making films for a long time? I think it’s unlikely I ever go on that journey again! *laughs* We were the film that noone knew about, we made it despite everyone saying no, we thought we were right, we made it for the fans, the audience, and everyone was like ‘WOW!’

Steve: Obviously the movie a hard sell to the studios, it took a while to sell it I believe, without naming studios or people… what were some of the more absurd changes that were requested from you guys, to make the movie more ‘crowd pleasing’??

Tarquin: Oh we had them at every step of the way. When we were trying to get the film made, we had ‘Noone will want to go see a film which has an 11 year old girl slicing and dicing! Young men in particular don’t want to see that!’ I mean I dunno, Im young, I’m fairly young-ish? Cut to a year later, the same people are saying ‘What would be great is if there were MORE Hitgirl in the movie!!! Oh what about a Hitgirl spinoff!!! Yeah she’s the movie!!!’ Yeah cause you guys wanted to get rid of her completely…

Steve: Christ…

Tarquin: My favorite was a studio coming to us and saying ‘We love it, we want to release it, but can you release a PG13 version?’

Steve: Oh shit! *laughs*

Tarquin: Yeah!!! *laughs* I remember sitting there with Matthew and we were like ‘Oh man that’s gonna be like four and a half minutes long! I mean we didn’t make it with a studio, so we never gave ourselves options. We never kinda went ‘well lets have a version where the guys don’t say fuck!’ we always were aiming to make an R rated movie! I mean I guess they’re used to dealing with people with the money they’ve got going “We’ll do it both ways to see what the censors say…” so no, there’s no secret PG13 version out there… nor would we want one! *laughs*

Steve: What was it that drew you to the Kick-Ass property?

Tarquin: The thing is, it was Matt who kinda found it through Mark Millar. He came to me and said ‘I’ve found this thing, it’s kinda an awesome homage to superhero movies?’ He felt it was the next logical step for superhero movies? We’ve seen Superhero movies, so now lets see a movie about people who want to BE superheroes because they’ve seen all the superhero movies! So… I mean, why, because we’re postmodern wankers? *laughs* Probably because it was fresh, it was different and it was new. I mean noone had done it before, so probably because it was fresh.

Steve: What was the feeling when Lionsgate finally bought the movie from you guys, especially seeing as they said ‘Do what you want we’ll release it as is’?

Tarquin: Lionsgate in that respect. We did a big screening in LA, all the big studios came, some of the studios had some facile kinda comments, one kinda, it declared itself out quickly but then came back around, we had some interest, serious interest, but Lionsgate saw it, they got it straight away, what the movie was. They were like ‘We love it we want to release it.’ That was a big part of it, the decision to go with them, it was like, they hung their hat on our peg and didn’t ask us to change a thing. That’s what we were dreading, ending up with a studio you know, having arguments over cutting, but Lionsgate never did that. It was great!

Steve: Made independantly obviously it was a huge gamble for you guys. Was there ever a point where the movie seemed too intimidating, where you wondered ‘what are we doing?’ or that you thought maybe you’d bitten off more than you could chew?

Tarquin: Hmmmm… do you ever go on rollercoasters??? *laughs*

Steve: *laughs*

Tarquin: I mean it was, there were so many points where it felt, like 3 or 4 weeks out from photography we hadn’t found Aaron Johnson. We thought the most difficult part to cast was Hitgirl, but she was one of the first few girls we saw. Then it was like, it would be real hard to cast Big Daddy? But you know, Nicholas Cage was like ‘Yeah love it! Im in!!!’, I mean the one thing that can’t be hard is casting a 19 year old right? We’re sitting in LA, and whatever we did we couldn’t find him. Matt was at the point, sitting there saying ‘I can’t make the film without the right guy, we’re gonna have to pull the plug!’ then this guy walks in and nails it, absolutely nails it. We were like ‘Wow that’s amazing! Where are you from???’ and he suddenly replies in an English accent and told us he’s from this little place just outside London? I mean the irony was, the casting director who was english said to us ‘I actually asked you guys to look at his tape, but because you’re both complete fuckwits, oh noooooo you need an AMERICAN kid to play an American… we can’t possibly look at any english people, so go over to Los Angeles and look for one. Three months before she actually HAD put him on tape! So there’s a lesson in that. Listen to your casting director! Throughout the whole thing, we had too little money, way too much ambition… it was great.

Steve: How did it feel when the first teasers got released and the internet went absolutely apeshit for them? Myself included!

Tarquin: It kinda vindicated our belief. Look it woulda been great if the movie coulda done more money in Australia? From a boxoffice point of view it was pretty succesful. From a personal filmmaking point of view? When you fall in love with a project and people tell you it won’t get made or shouldn’t get made and you go and make it because you KNOW there’s an audience for it? It’s like, a basic joy and happiness, I hope it’s not a generic movie, but you know, I think we crafted it well, the audience seemed to respond well to it, they weren’t served up yet another plate of shit? I mean the feeling the crew had when we were making it, everyone got invested, they decided they cared as well. When people started seeing it, seeing the teasers, how they reacted, it was like, it was great, it was amazing!

Steve: Do you hope to be working on Kick-Ass 2 : Balls to the Wall as a Producer?

Tarquin: Well I better do, or I’ll be in terrible trouble! *laughs* Hope I’ve done a good enough job working with Matthew, I mean I’m workin with him on Xmen First Class, so unless I really, REALLY fuck up on this one? Yeah I think I will be!

Steve: Is there anything you can tell us about the new X-Men movie at all?

Tarquin: I really wish there was but I’ve been sworn to secrecy! I’ve been told I can’t say ANYTHING about it other than it’ll be brilliant.

Steve: I mean I have to be honest I wasn’t a fan of the third one. Loved the first two and I’m really looking forward to this because I’m a fan of Matthews work.

Tarquin: *laughs*

Steve: Well Tarquin thanks for your time!

Tarquin: Thank you Steve, have a great day!

Kickass is available now on Bluray and DVD.


Xmen : First Class will be released in June 2011.


If you haven’t seen Lock, Stock and Two Smoking Barrels… the question is why the hell not??? GO, watch it NOW.

CHLOE MORETZ (KICKASS, LET ME IN)

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An Interview with Chloe ‘Hitgirl’ Moretz

Steve: Hey Chloe how are you doing!

Chloe: Hey Steve I’m good how are you!

Steve: I’m good, how have you been? Good?

Chloe: Yeah, great, just been hanging out here in London.

Steve: Well, the first question, Hitgirl in Kickass was a very different style of role for a young girl, that’s been covered elsewhere in more detail so we won’t go back over it, ‘Let Me In’, the trailer was great and you were so creepy and effective in it. Do you tend to look for these more mature, adult type of roles, or do they just basically get given to you?

Chloe: I just look for scripts that are challenging and that I know can stretch my acting ability and I go from there!

Steve: You’ve starred with people like Joseph Gordon Levitt, Nicholas Cage, Jason Lee… who’s next. Who do you really want to work with next?

Chloe: Oh I really, really am dying to work with Natalie Portman! Yeah, I would love to do a drama with her, shes such a phenomenal actress, and I look up to her as a person and as an actress because she’s so grounded and you know, she’s been in this business for so long and I really look up to her.

Steve: How much training did you do for Kickass? Some of those action scenes were incredible, I’m not 100% sure if you had an action double or not?

Chloe: Oh, everything was me. I did all the jumps, all the running and shooting, it was all me. I did like, 90% of all the stunts. Around 10% of it wasn’t me, you know, because I can’t run up walls and all that crazy stuff you know!

CHLOE MORETZ (KICKASS, LET ME IN) 7

Steve: *laughs* Did you do a lot of martial arts training at all?

Chloe: Yeah I did a lot of martial arts training actually! I also did Gymnastics and I actually went to Circus school!

Steve: Really? Circus School???

Chloe: Yeah, Circus School was pretty crazy!

Steve: What did you do there?

Chloe: Well we did a lot of flexibility and worked on trying to do flips and stuff.

Steve: So honestly, how cool do all your friends think you are now because you’re ‘Hitgirl’?

Chloe: Oh they really LOVED it. They thought it was so funny to see me like that because I’m so different to Hitgirl, wholesome and I’m very normal you know? *laughs*

Steve: What kind of role would you really like to tackle next?

Chloe: Well right now I’m doing a film called ‘The Invention of Hugo Cabret’ with Martin Scorcese directing it? It’s a really fun film, its like a fantasy thriller type film, I’m very excited to finish it and have it done and everything.

Steve: You really do have an amazing resume, to have so much done in such a short period of time I must admit.

Chloe: Thank you!

Steve: Did you do any of the commentary on the DVD/Bluray of Kickass?

Chloe: I’m not in the commentary but I know Matthew did it, and I’m sure Mark Millar did it too?

Steve: Ok, and my friend Guy Barton asked if you could answer his question possibly… Despite your apparent versatility, can you see yourself venturing deeper into comedy in the future?

Chloe: Yes! I actually have a Farrelly Brothers movie coming out, where I have a skit in it and its a comedy film, so that’s really exciting!

Steve: Yeah, I thought you handled everything in Kickass superbly, it was wonderful. Well, thank you for your time and have a great day Chloe!

Chloe: Thank you too!

CHLOE MORETZ (KICKASS, LET ME IN) 9

The Kick-Ass Bluray and DVD should be available now in the United States.

Release dates for other countries vary.

SHAUNA MACDONALD (THE DESCENT, THE DESCENT PART 2, MUTANT CHRONICLES)

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SHAUNA MACDONALD

When shes not covered in blood and being chased by cavedwellers…  she’s quite beautiful!

About the controversy between the endings:

Steve: When you talk about The Descent 2, the elephant in the room with The Descent 2 unless youÂ’re talking about eh American version, is the changed ending, everybody else had the ending where it was a not so nice result for Sarah, but the Americans had a more upbeat positive outcome. So in essence the sequel might not make a lot of sense to people, how did it play out for you when you got the script for the sequel, how did it come across to you?

Shauna: That question does come up a lot. Actually in the script of the Descent part 2, and what we shot of the sequel in the beginning, it was very well explained how to get out of the situation, because from the Descent we pan out leaving Sarah with her daughter on the rockface in the cave and we take that shot and in the Descent part 2 we pan right back in on that shot and we see that the actress playing Molly is a new actress, obviously because shes far too old to play her now, and the daughter stands up and beckons her, they hold hands and they jump into the abyss, and the abyss turns out to be a deep river, hundreds of feet down, they get washed out, so what happens in the script and what happens with the stunt girl, sarah gets washed out into this lake, she comes out into this lake, and it suggests shes slipped back into a year ago where her daughters just died, where she gets to the riverbank and just pulls herself up and she thinks her daughters drowned.

Differences in shooting the films:

Steve: ItÂ’s not the first movie to expand upon the ending, to push the sequel along. How would you stack up the shooting of part 2 in comparison to Neil Marshalls original?

Shauna: Ummm, well, even the, its funny returning to set, because when you return, you carry with you a certain amount of responsibility and a certain amount of power, or is it with great power comes responsibility? I had a huuuuuge dressing room! It was like, whatÂ’s going on! They also put my family up in this flat, which was like five minutes from the studios, which was great, also having the responsibility of making the film good again, being on it and doing all the emotional stuff, doing the fighting, the physical stuff which they seem to have hiked up, not hiked, sorry IÂ’ve been talking a lot! *laughs* But, they seem to have ramped it up, it was really hard work, but it was summer time so it made a huge difference, this time I was going to work in the light and the sun, and you know half six in the morning when IÂ’m walking to work, I think it was like a 2 hour commute to work in traffic on The Descent, getting to Pinewood Studios, I mean the whole time in a cave in winter time, then you go home in the dark… two months of your life in the dark and itÂ’s so, it brings you down, you know, I had terrible nightmares. The Descent part 2, I was in a cave at work you know, but the rest of the time I got to bring my daughter to set, my mum was looking after my daughter, and it was just, damn I had this mindset, it was fun, because I wasnÂ’t beating myself up over it, because I wasnÂ’t in a downer over it this time.

Steve: One of the things I liked about this movie, was they avoided the pitfall a lot of the sequels do, where theyÂ’ll give the monster like, firebreath or wings or something. But in the Descent part 2, they only really had the Alpha Male, which made sense. Because with all animals that live in packs, you HAVE Alpha Males.

Shauna: Yeah, because they made it more of a pack, in one of the versions of the script they had ‘Twin CrawlersÂ’, two young crawlers, the Crawlers young I guess, thatÂ’s just the name, a producers copy, god I canÂ’t remember what they called the big one, they didnÂ’t call it the Alpha, they called it… god, I called it the Mario Brothers crawler *laughs*

Steve: *laughs*

Shauna: So they had the twin crawlers… and… the whole pack thing comes out in the movie, and they had the female, and Paul, one of the effects guys got to do a lot more grotesque crawler faces, he changes the faces so they were more like shark teeth than vampire teeth, than originally. ThatÂ’s the result of them making them more monster like.

Steve: Yeah cause on the original I think they only had like two suits or something didnÂ’t they?

Shauna: Oh they had more than two, but they only had two creatures heads!

Steve: *laughs* Ahhhh ok!

Shauna: Yeah so the final fight sequence in the Descent, our lead crawler, played by Craig Connelly, he badly went over on his ankle that morning of the fight sequence so we kind of had to, we were panicking, because we had shot it all chronologically and we were running out of time! So we kind of filmed it in bits of pieces and did it in pickups and the crawler running had to be you know, be done done in a wierd motion, they were also using the wrong face! Craig Connelly went to A+E in a crawler outfit too! He had broken his ankle! *laughs*

SHAUNA MACDONALD (THE DESCENT, THE DESCENT PART 2, MUTANT CHRONICLES) 11

How to make a budget work for you:

Shauna: The budget was pretty tight, but do you know what, it was tight in part 2, thats what they did to try and make it again. One day we were rehearsing and one of the guys in charge of, he was making the caves, he called me over and he said ‘This polystyrene, we’ve pumped it up more, if there’s more air in it, it’s like an aerobar, if you’ve got more air in it, it’s cheaper!’ the caves more squishier, more bouncy, so it’s more cheaper. They were more wise with the sets, the sets were actually smaller than the first movie, but it’s how they shot it better, its what made it look larger. Every night the art department would come in, cut it up, repaint it, rejig it, to a degree, this one set, it looked like we were going around in circles, through the cave!

The Descent 2 is currently out on DVD and Bluray (not in America), get your copy now!

SHAUNA MACDONALD (THE DESCENT, THE DESCENT PART 2, MUTANT CHRONICLES) 13

MICHAEL AND PETER SPIERIG (DIRECTORS: DAYBREAKERS, UNDEAD)

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PETER AND MICHAEL SPIERIG : DIRECTORS OF DAYBREAKERS

*Just a little word of warning: The phone line was a little fuzzy so itÂ’s ENTIRELY possible I got Peter and Michaels answers mixed up a little as to who said what! They were both great guys to talk to, so informative and so interesting, so thereÂ’s no disrespect, itÂ’s just that Skype decided to be a bastard that day… maybe Vampires and Skype donÂ’t mix… hrrrm…

=====================

Steve: So yeah, weÂ’re talking about Daybreakers, I mean I have to say honestly, I loved it. My girlfriend and I went and saw it at Browns Plains Cinema when it came out earlier this year, not the most choice of cinema…

Michael: Ahhh, that USED to be our local cinema when we were growing up!!! The Browns Plains cinema, weÂ’ve been there a number of times!

Steve: Yeah, I usually go to Southbank now, but Browns Plains is a little closer to where I am at Forest Lake. So anyhow, with Daybreakers, itÂ’s one of those movies, where the scope of it, it exists beyond what the movie is, beyond what you see on the screen. For instance, Starwars, the Empire itself exists mostly offscreen, you donÂ’t see it, only really hear about it. The Matrix too, you donÂ’t really SEE most of it, you just hear about it really. Daybreakers definitely seems to have it where itÂ’s talking about society and the evolution versus de-evolution depending on how you look at it… how long did it take you to develop the Daybreakers ‘universeÂ’ as such?

Peter: Well, it took us around probably three years, in that time we wrote a very detailed history of the world and how the plague began and everything that happened during the time period of the movie and so we spent a lot of time on it and like you said, itÂ’s not necessarily in the movie, but then again it is too, a lot of the choices you make, you think are minor, theyÂ’re kind of affected by the work that you do, prior to the movie beginning. All that stuff is critical. Unfortunately when youÂ’re limited by budget a lot of that stuff you have to hint towards, but itÂ’s all part of the work you do before you even write anything, you spend a lot of time exploring the world, and we spent… I mean thereÂ’s a whole entire other screenplay where we just explore the actual world itself!

Steve: Alot of attention was given to the movie Undead you did, to the FX you did. I read once you did most of the effects yourself?

Peter: Yeah we did nearly all of them ourselves. Except for a few shots, we did three hundred or so visual shots ourselves on home computers that… werenÂ’t very… good! *laughs*

Steve: *laughs* Still, it came out looking outstanding. How much personal input did you have into Daybreakers?

Peter: Well we did a kind of similar process where Michael and I did three hundred and fifty of the shots ourselves. From simple work where we paint out wires, or things like that, to things like creating complete digital city shots, it runs the whole sort of gamut of complexity, it was very difficult but good!

Steve: Yeah I remember seeing in the paper once and it was on TV a bit, you were down the bottom of the city, down near where City Rowers used to be? You flooded one of the streets? Then the movie kinda disappeared off the radar totally, then reappeared a few years later on the Film Festival circuit… how long did it take you from start to finish to complete the film?

Peter: Well I mean it took like, two years nearly? Or just over? For a lot of reasons. Theres a lot of complex visual effects. I mean we had a test screening in LA and it went extremely well, it was one of the highest tested horror films Lionsgate ever had, and it was about finding the right date. That in itself is extremely tricky, especially nowadays, theres so many films getting released every weekend! You look at even the last few months theres a major film released every single week! It’s about finding the opportunity to release the film and survive, is really tricky. I mean if you’re not a sequel, not a remake, not based on a popular novel, tv series, it’s so hard! Almost every movie these days, seems to be based on something, so to come up with original material and to be released right, is very tricky. So our original date was September 11! I mean for better or worse, that was our date. There were alot of other films being released around that date so Lionsgate rightly pulled it from that date and tried to find another date, so the only other free date was January, so January used to be considered the ‘dump month’ where they’d dump movies that were no good, mind you now, you have movies like Peter Jacksons new movie, Denzels new movies, all these other, literally every single other weekend, these major new releases. The days of finding a weekend where no one wants to see a movie are over, it doesn’t exist any more, its very tricky, releasing a new movie is a new artform in itself! It’s very complicated.

Steve: The amount of Australian and New Zealand talent on hand is outstanding!? Claudia Karvan, Sam Neil, Jay LagaÂ’aia, Vince Colossimo… How was it for you bringing some of Australias best talent together with some of Americas best talent such as Ethan Hawke and Willem Dafoe?

Michael: It was bizarre in a way? Because we were so surprised they all said yes! We had some really extraordinary people, and we really had our Australian New Zealand dreamteam, and they were all so excited about being involved, I have nothing but good things to say about them all! I mean we also put Isabelle Lucas in her first movie! You know she did Daybreakers before she did any feature films (Transformers : Revenge of the Fallen), so IÂ’d like to get a cheque of anything she does from now on! *laughs* Oh and Michael Dorman, another Aussie actor whoÂ’s on his way to doing really well!

Steve: ThatÂ’s right you gave Isabelle her break didnÂ’t you!

Peter: Yeah! She needed it! Yeah…sure…she reeeeeeally needed it too…. She wasnÂ’t going anywhere without us! *laughs*

Steve: With the movie it was a real showcase for Brisbane, the city looked *stunning*, how did you manage to decide Brisbane was the place to shoot and not Adelaide, Melbourne or even LA for instance?

Peter: Well, it was the cheapest??? *laughs* Well, I mean we lived in Brisbane for 25 years or so? And Michael and I shot a lot of tv commercials around the city, and the main thing is Brisbanes not tarnished by a lot of big productions coming through and the city council charging a lot of rates whereas Sydney has had big productions like THE MATRIX come through among other big projects and now its hard to shoot in Sydney, so Brisbanes film maker friendly which is great and I hope it stays that way for a long time. So we were lucky and we chose some places which were logistically difficult, we chose to shoot around Eagle St pier, like you said near City Rowers nightclub, which I think is where the Jade Buddha lounge is now, we shot on a Thursday or Friday night, we shut down the street, several blocks, we reversed the traffic, so the cars were on the opposite sides, it was logistically complicated but what turned out being more complicated than ANYTHING was dealing with all the drunk people coming out of the club, that was the hardest thing of all! *laughs*

Steve: *laughs*

Michael: *laughs*

Steve: So with the movie you avoided the cliché of the gothic vampires, quite frankly itÂ’s been done to ‘unÂ’death… you seemed to go more with, youÂ’ve gone with a ‘noirÂ’ look, with them, was it a conscious decision to go with it from the start with the script or was it when you started production?

Michael: It was from the start, with the script. We wanted to do a movie set in the future, but we didnÂ’t want it to feel like a scifi future, we wanted it to feel like it was grounded in a real world, sort of elements, and one of the best ways to make scifi feel timeless is to look at architecture and costumes from the past, and personally I love the design of say the 20s through to the 50s, anywhere in that era. ItÂ’s all great, and design a wardrobe with that. I like, like you said, itÂ’s not gothic, itÂ’s all noir, it was a conscious decision, itÂ’s about making a film thatÂ’s timeless, so you can pick it up in 20 years and itÂ’s a film that doesnÂ’t feel like it was made in 2007 you know? Some of our favourite films do that well, low budget films do that really well. Look at EVIL DEAD, the wardrobe and the design of that movie, you wouldnÂ’t know that was made in what, the late 70s early 80s? Just because of the choices they made. Even Starwars to a certain degree achieves that.

Steve: Yeah! I mean I said to my girlfriend, the thing I loved, shes a twilight fan *shudder* I said one of the things I loved was it ‘put the fangs back into vampires’!

Peter: Are you saying we donÂ’t have any hairless oiled up guys in it! *laughs*

Steve: Well the fact the only time Ethan took off his shirt was an appropriate time, he wasnÂ’t mugging for the camera, and the acting was excellent?

Michael: I will say NOTHING on that!!!!

Peter: NOTHING!!!!

Michael: Yes….twilight…..is…….very…….good……itÂ’s…….a great movie *cough* quote me on that!

DaybreakersBluray

Steve: So with the Bluray and DVD coming out what can we expect on the Bluray itself?

Michael: ThereÂ’s a two hour, just for the bluray, a 2 hour documentary just on the making of the movie itself, with all the cast, ourselves and the crew! Also on the bluray, is a short film we did, our last short film we remastered in hidef, most of its in HD, theres a storyboard comparison, on DVD thereÂ’s a scaled down version of the documentary, but the real package is the Bluray package. So itÂ’s time to buy a bluray player! The bluray player is a direct digital transfer of the digital so youÂ’ve got the original intention of the movie in all its colour, in all its colour grading suite has been transferred to the bluray.

Peter: So anybody that complains about dust and scratches on the disc is full of it! Because its a direct digital transfer!!!

Michael: AND its in 7.1 surround!!!

Steve: So letÂ’s hope we see a sequel, because I really want to see a sequel to it. I really do!

And I thought I’d put this poster in… just cause it’s so goddamn awesome 😀