You ever notice how many big wrestling shows there are in Georgia this time of year? Well, Georgia Wrestling Now has certainly taken note. And if this week’s edition is any indication, there are no signs that this trend is ending anytime soon. After successfully defending the Southern States Championship against Anthony Henry in a loser-leaves-Alternative Pro Wrestling match last Friday, “The Lethal Dose” Stryknyn talks about his match against Adrian Hawkins for the Young Lions Championship at Anarchy Wrestling‘s Fright Night this Saturday. Revolution Wrestling Association Tag Team Champions Ethan Case and Eli Evans, collectively known as Worst Case Scenario, talk about their upcoming match at the inaugural People’s Wrestling League Battle for Supremacy tournament. DeWitt Dawson, who has been managing The Jagged Edge and new Platinum Championship Wrestling Champion “The Revelation” Shane Marx at Universal Independent Wrestling, also requested a few minutes of our time, as did NWA Action Champion Michael Cannon. So Team All You Can Eat’s Matt Hankins and Wrestling with Pop Culture tried to oblige them all, while also discussing WWE‘s Hell in a Cell, Rampage Pro Wrestling‘s Doctoberfest and more.
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Erik Turner has a Warrant for rock ‘n’ roll and winemaking
Best known for such late ’80s/early ’90s hard rock hits as “Heaven,” “Uncle Tom’s Cabin” and “Cherry Pie,” Warrant has weathered many musical trends to continue rocking for more than 20 years. Though the band’s lineup has fluctuated over the years, and original front man Jani Lane (who had already been replaced by current singer Robert Mason) died last year, the band’s core lineup is back together and going strong. With a show tonight at Biketoberfest and tomorrow with Skid Row at The Forum Civic Center, founding guitarist Erik Turner talks to Wrestling with Pop Culture about hair metal, red wine and wrestling.
Warrant and Skid Row have done a few shows together. Seems like a good pairing.
If you like Skid Row, you’ll like Warrant and if you like Warrant, you’ll like Skid Row. So it’s a great package and a great night of ’80s rock ‘n’ roll.
Did the two bands play together very often in the ’80s and early ’90s?
You know, we didn’t. I can only remember doing a couple of shows with those guys in the late ’80s/early ’90s. But in the last few years, we’ve played quite a few shows with them and we play a handful of shows with them every year. And it always goes well. Back in July of this year, Skid Row and Warrant played at Fremont Street in Las Vegas and they had their largest crowd of the summer, over 15,000 people. That was a lot of fun.
You have a couple more shows scheduled with Skid Row this weekend, as well as a performance at Biketoberfest. What’s planned after that?
We’re starting to wind down our year. We’ve played about 45 shows this year, and it’s been all types of shows from large festivals with lots of other bands to casinos and state fairs. Last weekend, we played with Trixter and Firehouse and we’ve done ten or so shows with that package. We’ve played some shows with Winger, Dokken, L.A. Guns and on and on. It’s a real mixture of touring. We go out on weekends, then we go home. We don’t just grab three bands and go on tour for three months. It doesn’t work that way for us anymore. We like to come home during the week and go out and rock ‘n’ roll on the weekends.
I understand you have another project that keeps you busy during the week.
We all have side projects, but I’ve become interested in the wine business over the last few years. I live in Temecula, California and there are about 30 wineries down here. I’ve put out three wines through South Coast Winery and I released a wine in July called Warrant, I Saw Red. “I Saw Red” was a top ten hit single for Warrant and now it’s a cabernet. In the last couple of weeks I released a syrah called Erik Turner: Rocker Red. So I work on that during the week and we’re all writing songs for a new record hopefully to come out in June of 2013. So it’s wine and music for me, but everybody’s got different stuff going on.
We do some TV music placement, as well. There’s a show called Duck Dynasty and they played a little bit of our song “Dirty Jack” from our Born Again album on an episode last week. So we’re dabbling in that as well.
Warrant’s style of ’80s rock appeals to many of the same people who watch professional wrestling. You mentioned your music being used in TV shows, but have you ever done wrestlers’ entrance music or anything like that?
I’m not sure if any of our music’s been used in any wrestling events. I think I might have seen something with “Cherry Pie” and some girl wrestlers, but I’m not sure. But I see the shows and they’re huge, bombastic and exciting – it looks like a rock concert. On more than one occasion I’ve thought, “I’d love to be involved with wrestling.” It just seems like a great thing to be involved with. So if there was ever an opportunity for Warrant and wrestling to work together, we’d be all over it.
Your most recent album came out last year. How will the stuff you’re working on for next year’s album compare to that album?
Last year we released Rockaholic and we shot two videos for “Life’s a Song” and “Home”. I was actually excited to see “Home” on VH1 Classic when they do Now & Then, and it’s been played a few times on Palladia. We’re proud of that record and anybody that comes out to the shows this weekend will hear two or three new songs from Rockaholic. But we mostly play the stuff everybody’s familiar with from all the singles and videos we’ve released like “Down Boys,” “Heaven,” “Sometimes She Cries,” “I Saw Red,” “Uncle Tom’s Cabin,” “Cherry Pie” and some other deeper tracks from those records like “Mr. Rainmaker,” “Dirty Rotten Filthy Stinking Rich” and we’ll dabble into the Dog Eat Dog CD, as well. It’s a nice mixture of mostly the classic songs everybody knows us for, then we mix in some other familiar tracks and a few new ones. It’s a nice set of rock ‘n’ roll, in my opinion.
Will you be performing any of the stuff off next year’s album?
No, we’re not ready for that yet. Those songs are still in the development stages. Next year, as things start moving along, we’ll start testing some of the new songs on live audiences. There’s a song off of Rockaholic called “Sex Ain’t Love” that we started playing live a few months before the CD came out and it was going over really well live. So we kept on playing it and we still play it.
Gail Kim returns to the state where she became the first TNA Knockouts Champion
As one of the most accomplished female wrestlers of all time, Gail Kim has consistently been at the top of Total Nonstop Action Wrestling‘s Knockouts Division since its inception. She was the first ever TNA Knockouts Champion and has held the Knockouts Tag Team Championship with Madison Rayne. This weekend, Kim returns to the state where she first won the Knockouts Championship as the Impact Wrestling World Tour stops at the Macon Centreplex Coliseum on Oct. 20 and the Savannah Civic Center on Oct. 21. Though she’s scheduled to face Miss Tessmacher at each of these events, Kim recently told new Knockouts Champion Tara that she would come for her title if Tara defeated Tessmacher at last Sunday’s Bound for Glory pay-per-view. Before things combust this weekend, Kim shares her thoughts on the entire situation with Wrestling with Pop Culture.
Miss Tessmacher is the one who took that title from you a few months ago, and you haven’t had the best luck in your subsequent rematches. What are your expectations for your matches against her this weekend?
She’s improved over the last few months, so I guess I just underestimated her. Now I’m going to be back on my A game.
I think a lot of people underestimated her, but apparently Tara figured out a way to get under her skin.
She worked with her for a long time and they were [Knockouts] Tag Team Champions together. It’s always the ones that are closest to you that you know best.
You’ve had your share of run-ins with Tara, especially with her recent gloating about her celebrity boyfriend being better than your celebrity chef husband Robert Irvine.
Yeah, I’m not impressed at all. She was making fun of my husband, who she called my boyfriend. It’s funny that she made that reference to my “cable star boyfriend,” yet she made an appearance on his show last week. It was actually pretty funny. I haven’t met her boyfriend yet, but he already looks like a loser to me. What was he on, Big Brother or something like that? Did he even win?
I’ve never watched that show, but I have seen Jessie Godderz in Ohio Valley Wrestling and didn’t realize he had a reality show background.
Oh, OK. Neither have I. I’ll give him one thing, he looks like he fits the role of a wrestler in terms of his physique. He must have put some time into that.
Any idea if you might get a shot at Tara for the Knockouts Championship anytime soon?
Well, I hope that’s very soon. She and I have both been around for a really long time and the one positive thing I can say about her is that the fans do love watching us wrestle against one another. So I’m really looking forward to it. I got a little taste of it in my debut match back at Impact Wrestling, then we had a match maybe a month or so ago. But I would definitely love to get back into the ring with her because I think we’re the best at what we do and I just want to see who’s better right now.
You were the very first Knockouts Champion and you won that title in Georgia. Does returning to Georgia have any special meaning to you based on that milestone?
Of course. That was the number one moment of my career to be the very first Knockouts Champion. We fought so hard for that division to even happen and to be the first champion is something I’ll never forget, and it’s something that no one can take away from me. It’s all a blur now, but it was probably the most emotional moment of my career. It was such a great time and to have all those girls come in at once – I mean, we literally went from five girls to ten or more overnight – and it just became this huge success. From that point on, this company has been known for having good women’s wrestling and I love being part of it.
We’ve talked about this weekend’s house shows, but do you know what’s in store for you at tonight’s Impact Wrestling?
I’m not sure if I’m on Impact Wrestling tonight, but I am making an appearance on the British Boot Camp series that airs in the U.K. on Challenge TV. It’s a reality show competition and Madison Rayne and I are facing the Blossom Twins, the two girls that are competing on the show. That will be taped before Impact Wrestling and it’s interesting because the British talent doesn’t always get a chance to be seen my major promotions over here. It’s a great opportunity for them to be seen and show what they’ve got. I’ve heard about these Blossom Twins for many, many years, so they’ve been around. They’re nice girls, but Madison and I are going to have to kick some booty and show them what they’ve got to strive for.
Wrestling with Pop Culture has three pairs of tickets to this Saturday’s Impact Wrestling World Tour stop in Macon. Comment below with the name of your favorite female wrestler of all time to be entered to win a pair of tickets. Winners will be chosen by 5 p.m. EST Oct. 19.
“Girls Gone Dead” slays with cheesy ’80s gore and T&A
When I was in Miami for WrestleMania XXVIII earlier this year, I walked by an old Art Deco movie theater one night called the Colony Theatre. The theater’s retro stylings and bright white lights were enough to catch my eye, but when I looked closer I realized had I arrived in Miami the previous night I could have attended the world premiere of Girls Gone Dead, a Girls Gone Wild spoof that incorporates cheesy ’80s slasher horror with the cheesy ’80s T&A comedies from USA Up All Night. It looked great on its own, but then I realized the WrestleMania weekend tie-in was that it starred Jerry “The King” Lawler as a sheriff, a perfect fit for such a campy boob-fest since he has a reputation to uphold (he would often express his excitement for “puppies” when doing wrestling commentary during WWE‘s Attitude Era).
Aside from Lawler, Girls Gone Dead stars Beetlejuice and Sal “The Stockbrocker” Governale from The Howard Stern Show, Penthouse Pets Ryan Keely and Janessa Brazil, and the relative unknown Katie Peterson, with cameos by Iron Maiden drummer Nicko McBrain, veteran character actor Asbestos Felt, adult film stars such as Jennifer Worthington and Ron Jeremy, and scream queen Linnea Quigley. Following the exploits of a group of spring break-bound girls who end up facing a masked killer out for gore, Girls Gone Dead has all the makings of a cult classic. Thankfully, an Unrated and Exposed edition with lots of extras was recently released on DVD, with plans to release an R-rated version as WrestleMania XXIX approaches next spring. A full-time film editor for Bongiovi Entertainment by day, Michael A. Hoffman co-directed, produced and edited Girls Gone Dead, living out a teenage fantasy of combining schlocky gore with gratuitous nudity. Hoffman talks to Wrestling with Pop Culture about the filmmaking process and having Lawler involved in the film.
The title Girls Gone Dead, and the DVD cover art featuring a sexy girl removing her bikini top with blood on her hip, confuses my libido. What was your intention when making this movie?
It’s a throwback to those T&A flicks I grew up with in the ’80s and it’s got a lot of references to those movies, including a lot of the cast members from those movies. If you don’t know about that stuff or like it, you’re not going to like this. I’m surprised how well it’s done. Supposedly the horror/comedy/slasher thing is dead, but we’ve sold out at Best Buy twice and we’ve been a top rental. I think the title helps. The idea was someone could go, “I could watch Girls Gone Wild or rent this, that has something of a story, and still see the boobs and gore.”
You mentioned that this film features appearances by some of the cast members of the films that inspired it, but it also features a lot of other odd cameos. Why did you choose to cast such a variety of cameos?
Linnea Quigley was the biggest scream queen of that era. She starred in all the David DeCoteau and Fred Olen Ray movies, and she’s the bartender at Wyld Wylee’s. The guy who does the “Hammer Smash” rap at the bar is Asbestos Felt. He raps in a classic cheesefest movie called Killing Spree directed by Tim Ritter, who was one of the first people I worked for and made one of my favorite movies when I was a kid called Truth or Dare. It was a really huge hit and one of the first movies ever made directly for video back in 1985. Joel Wynkoop, who plays the TV evangelist, has been in God-knows-how-many of those movies, and he was just the star of H.G. Lewis‘ The Uh-Oh! Show. Jennifer Worthington, who gets sacrificed at the church, was in a lot of adult movies and did some modeling when she was younger.
Our casting director was Brad Davis and he cast half of those movies in that vein like Porky’s 2, Porky’s 3, Police Academy 5 and stuff like that, and a bunch of Corey Feldman T&A comedies like South Beach Academy and late-night USA movies. I wanted to put a lot of references and homages in there, so I did some subtle things like the Quigley Down Under joke where Linnea Quigley has a fake Australian accent. And at the beginning of her scene, the first thing she’s doing, before she turns around and walks up, is using the same lipstick and compact she had in Night of the Demons. There are some scenes that are direct references to things like Slumber Party Massacre, when the killer enters the house during that dubstep fight scene in the living room. I didn’t want to make a straight spoof, so what I wanted to do was actually write a film that knew it was bad, then deliver it pretty straight. If you choose to laugh at it, that’s awesome. If not, no problem.
I worked with Maurice Smith a couple of years ago on a film called Forget Me Not. He produced a ton of those low-budget Roger Corman flicks between half a million and five million bucks in the ’80s and ’90s. Then I got the biggest compliment when Maurice was actually in Florida and came by my house and watched Girls Gone Dead. He was like, “Oh, shit. For what you guys spent, you got a lot of content.” He was impressed with it, which is good because he gets it.
It’s kind of like Rob Zombie‘s movies, where he makes subtle references to all the stuff he grew up watching.
Yeah. He does these more hardcore grindhouse things, but he’s got Bill Moseley, Michael J. Pollard and the strangest cameos. But House of 1000 Corpses was a low-budget film, but it’s really polished for what it was. With Girls Gone Dead, my take on it is it’s something people can laugh at if they want to, or laugh with, which is what I hope will happen. If you rent this movie, you should expect cheesy gore and nudity.
How did Jerry Lawler get involved with the movie?
Executive producer Paul Tarnopol is friends with Jerry’s agent and we were looking for people for that role. We had actually looked at two bigger-name celebrity actors for the role, but when Paul mentioned he was friends with Jerry’s agent, I turned to my wife, who was writing it, and was like, “We’ve got to change the ending and put Jerry in there.” The way the movie is so random, with people like the drummer from Iron Maiden singing country, we were like, “This has to work.” When we first wrote this, we didn’t have any celebrities. For the Crazy Girls Unlimited emcee, I wanted somebody who had always emceed those parties, like a washed-up celebrity. I always wanted Ron Jeremy or Vanilla Ice. Vanilla Ice lives in Florida, so I was like, “It’s got to be one of those two. It’s got to be somebody you would see at that shit.” Vanilla Ice has done two Girls Gone Wild parties and Ron has done six. A friend of mine who is a makeup artist had just had Ron in his movie Bloody Bloody Bible Camp, so he called Ron and Ron was like, “Yeah, I’ll come down and do it.”
There are weird cameos that are just bizarre. [Al Spaienza], who plays Missy’s father on the split-screen phone call, the guy at the strip club, that’s Mikey from The Sopranos. He was on a Prison Break and he’s a pretty big TV actor and had a supporting role in Saw V. The girl who played the dumb one, Kelly, she was in Sex Drive. That’s the only other movie she’s been in and I was a big fan of Sex Drive because it’s a T&A comedy. Her casting agent had gotten her for Sex Drive, but she hadn’t gotten her SAG card yet, so her agent was like, “I think I can get her to do your movie.” And I was like, “That would be great if we could be her last non-SAG feature.” We wanted one Penthouse Pet and we ended up with two, and this has got to be the only movie with Beetlejuice, Jerry Lawler and a gorilla waiter ever made. That was my goal. I’ve worked on several films, but this one is so crazy compared to everything else I’ve worked on that I wasn’t sure how it was going to be digested. With all the horror movies coming out lately, we had to do something different and fun.
Is there any chance of it being released in theaters or was that only for the world premiere in Miami?
We never intended to go anywhere but straight to video and TV. We did a theatrical screening in New York sponsored by Fangoria the day before it came out in July. But the only thing I’d like to do is enter the film into some festivals and horror conventions because we never had a chance to play any. I’ve never worked on a film with any budget that had distribution before it was done being shot. We had foreign distribution locked the week after we finished shooting, then we had our domestic distribution confirmed either weeks into final post.
Do you think the film lends itself to a sequel or do you have any other plans to continue this story in any way?
I would love to flesh it out more. The initial idea for the movie was to be a Crazy Girls Unlimited type of thing about the company. But we ended up taking that concept and working it into a script we were already in production on, which was a throwback to Slumber Party Massacre. I need to see how it ends up performing, but I would love to do something bigger with this film. But producing and directing is something I would never do again. Even if I developed the project, once it turned over to production I would either not direct the sequel to this, if we do it, or I would drop off producing once we started to get into severe pre-production. I know guys do that all the time, but they must be doing it with studio resources. We don’t have that structure, so it’s a nightmare when you’re directing a film and not sleeping for 30 days.
As you know, Jerry Lawler suffered a heart attack on Raw recently. Are you still in touch with him at all since the film has come out?
Paul, our executive producer, has been talking to his agent. I’ve been trying to promote the movie, but the last thing I’d want to do is exploit that situation at all. The day he had the heart attack, he had randomly contacted our executive producer and said, “Hey. A ton of people have walked up to me and said they really liked the movie. Would you send me a copy of it? I don’t have one.” Then he had the heart attack that night. I know WWE has moved more family friendly, so as much as Jerry wants to support this, I don’t know how much he can. I was really excited about the fact that he was excited about it because at first I think he was a little concerned. I know Jerry likes the puppies, but I certainly didn’t want to get him into any trouble. He was so awesome to us and it was such a relief that day to get that phone call that he wanted a copy of the movie. Then that happened later that night and I couldn’t believe it.
And it happened on live TV.
Now he’s going to have two notorious TV moments between Letterman and the Raw broadcast. But it’s so good that it happened on TV because if it had happened to Lawler in his hotel room and he couldn’t get to a phone, he’d probably be dead. It was a blessing in disguise. But Jerry’s a super tough guy. When we’d go out for beers, he was like, “I don’t drink alcohol, I’ve never smoked.” We were originally going to have him smoking cigars, but he wouldn’t even do it.
Georgia Wrestling Now welcomes PWR Heavyweight Champion and PWA Tag Team Champion Rick Michaels
He’s the current Pro Wrestling Resurrection Heavyweight Champion and one half of the Peachstate Wrestling Alliance Tag Team Champions. He’s a Georgia wrestling veteran who has helped turn many up-and-comers into some of today’s top wrestling stars. He’s had his ups and downs, but this week Rick Michaels is our guest on Georgia Wrestling Now. Listen in as Team All You Can Eat’s Matt Hankins and Wrestling with Pop Culture talk to Michaels about his NWA Wildside days, his work with newer promotions like Platinum Championship Wrestling, his ongoing rivalry with former Exotic Ones partner Simon Sermon and more.
History repeats itself as “The Cowboy” James Storm heads to Bound for Glory
This time last year, “The Cowboy” James Storm had been edged out of the Bound for Glory Series by his friend and tag team partner Bobby Roode. Though Storm showed his support for Roode, who challenged Kurt Angle for the Total Nonstop Action World Heavyweight Championship, Roode came up short. Just days later, Storm got a shot at Angle and won the title, only to lose it the following week when Roode broke a beer bottle over his head in Macon, Ga. Almost a year later, Storm looked to be on track to win this year’s Bound for Glory Series to face the champion at this Sunday’s Bound for Glory. But history repeated itself and Roode in Storm’s match, causing Storm to be eliminated from the tournament and resulting in their match against each other at the pay-per-view. With TNA returning to Macon a few days after Bound for Glory again this year, one has to wonder how much history might repeat itself yet again for Storm. As he prepares for this Sunday’s Bound for Glory, Storm talks to Wrestling with Pop Culture about his ongoing rivalry with his former Beer Money tag team partner.
Things are coming full circle for you heading into Bound for Glory. It was just after last year’s Bound for Glory that your former partner Bobby Roode turned on you. What are your thoughts about your match against Roode this Sunday?
It’s the same as any other time. I just take it one day at a time and see what happens. I don’t want to get ahead of myself and put the cart before the horse, as they say. You never know what the next day might bring, and with Bobby Roode it’s just one of those things where you’ve got to be on your toes. Right now, he’s one of the best in the business.
How do you think King Mo‘s role as special enforcer might play into this match? Do you expect him to get involved in any way?
To tell you the truth, I don’t care if he gets involved or not. It is one of them things where if he gets in my face I’ll punch him. I don’t care if he’s an MMA fighter or not. I’ve beaten people up in bars before, so he ain’t gone be no different.
TNA was in Macon for an Impact Wrestling taping just after last year’s Bound for Glory, which is where you won the TNA World Heavyweight Championship from Kurt Angle. You’ll be back in Macon for a house show right after Bound for Glory again this year. What are your thoughts on returning to the place where you won the title and had a beer bottle smashed over your head by Roode?
We try to hit each town at least once a year and definitely go to the surrounding towns. We were just in Atlanta, but we also went to towns right around the edges and now we’re working our way down to Macon. Hopefully this deal with Bobby will be over with. If not, maybe I’ll be facing him again in Macon.
You’ve been in and out of the title picture ever since he took the title from you last year. Are you looking to get back in the title hunt after Bound for Glory?
Yeah. I mean, anybody who is a singles wrestler always wants to be in the world title hunt. For me it’s more special because I actually won by points in the Bound for Glory Series and I feel like I should be going on to Bound for Glory to wrestle for the World Heavyweight title. But it’s one of those things where I’ve got to get my stuff done with Bobby first, then move on.
I was at last year’s show in Macon, as well as the recent shows in Atlanta and Gainesville. You seem to get a warm reception anytime you’re down South. How does that feel for you, being from Tennessee?
It’s great. To me, that’s what wrestling is all about – just going out and having fun and putting on the best shows I can for the people. I think that comes across to them and they know I’m there to have fun. Of course, you’ve got a ton of beer drinkers in the crowd, so that goes over good, too.
Cargill and Derrickson give Mr. Boogie a chilling new take in “Sinister”
Everybody knows it’s a bad idea to go to sleep right after watching a horror movie. And if anyone should know that, it should be a movie critic like C. Robert Cargill. But that didn’t stop him from watching The Ring, then going to sleep and having a bad dream that inspired Sinister, the new horror film he co-srote with The Exorcism of Emily Rose director Scott Derrickson. Having previously become fans of each others’ work, the two met when, by coincidence, they realized (thanks to Twitter) that they were both in Las Vegas at the same time. Derrickson was working on a different project altogether, but when he heard Cargill’s idea he decided to turn it into a movie. And Sinister was committed to film.
Starring Ethan Hawke as Ellison, a writer who found fame after writing a hit non-fiction book about a murder, Sinister follows Ellison’s quest to reclaim that glory after his subsequent books haven’t fared as well (and have left a sour taste in the mouths of many cops, who he typically doesn’t portray in flattering fashion). After he moves into the house where an entire family was murdered (aside from one girl, who has been missing since the murders), he finds a box of Super 8 home videos that turn out to be gruesome snuff films, including one of the family that used to live in his new home being hung from a tree in the back yard. As he watches these films and conducts his investigation, he uncovers an eerie Pagan creature known as Bagul, or Mr. Boogie to the children he encounters. Refusing to acknowledge the increasingly odd occurrences happening to his family as his investigation continues, Ellison sees these developments as the perfect opportunity to regain his fame. Before Bagul comes to life on the big screen, Cargill and Derrickson talk to Wrestling with Pop Culture about Sinister‘s themes of fear, their intentional misguiding of the viewer and breaking some traditional horror film formulas to create something frighteningly fresh.
When people die in horror movies, there’s often some moral reason for these deaths. We don’t know much about the previous victims in Sinister, but we learn a good bit about Ellison. Is there any indication in Sinister that the killer is out to set something right or teach his victims a lesson?
Derrickson: There’s certainly a moral tale being told in that, like all horror films, it’s a movie about fear, it’s a movie about scaring the audience and the main character getting scared. But probably my favorite thing about the movie overall is the fact that Ethan’s watching these movies and they’re scaring him, then these weird things are starting to happen as a result of him moving into this house, then things are becoming inexplicable paranormal for him and he gets even more scared at that, yet why doesn’t he leave? Because he has an even deeper fear than all that and it’s his fear of losing his status and his fear of not regaining his fame and fortune. That’s a really relatable fear, especially in modern America where everybody’s obsessed with their status. His placing his own need to reclaim his high status above his family’s safety, and his fear of not having that, is the moral sin, for lack of a better word, that’s at the center of the movie. It causes him to make a faustian bargain very early on. He should have handed that stuff over to the police, but he realizes, as he says in the film, “This is my shot.” From that moment, he’s on a trajectory to the end of the movie.
Cargill: There’s even more to it than that in regards to the other families. The families are just collateral damage to what Bagul’s end goal really is. He’s a seducer, he’s getting someone to transgress and through that transgression, that’s where the evil really comes from. And there’s a lot of that running throughout Sinister.
Ellison’s fear of losing his fame is made apparent in one scene where he’s watching an old tape of his first television interview, which is presented in much the same way as when he’s watching these mysterious tapes of grizzly murders. Was that an intentional juxtaposition?
Derrickson: That was certainly deliberate. He’s caught inside himself in a way that he doesn’t realize and driven by a deep-seated fear that is so powerful he can’t escape it when he clearly should.
You also mentioned that he should have turned these tapes and his investigation over to the police. When he finally does decide to drop his investigation and get away from it all, why does he abandon it rather than turn it over to the police?
Derrickson: Just prior to that moment, he’s talking to the deputy and makes it clear that he doesn’t believe in any of that stuff, that he’s a skeptic, but things are getting too weird. Then he goes up in his attic and sees six ghost kids and Bagul, Mr. Boogie. At that point he knows he’s dealing with something far beyond this world.
Cargill: And to make it even simpler than that, he realizes the tapes are just evil.
Derrickson: That’s why he burns them. When he realizes that’s where it’s coming from, he asks the professor what would happen if you destroy [the source]? The professor says it would close the gateway, so he thinks he should be safe. But he’s wrong.
The only thing connecting the families is where they’ve lived. But unlike a lot of horror films, where one particular setting is cursed, this curse moves with the families. Why did you decide to do it that way?
Cargill: Quite simply, it was because who the hell would move into a house where five different families were murdered? By the second family that’s murdered, that house would be burned down or bulldozed.
Derrickson: And the connection of the killer is clear. The whole world would be investigating that.
Cargill: Ultimately, at the same time I wanted to create a creature that could get you almost anywhere. You’re not safe and it’s not localized terror. It is a creature of the other world that can move freely about. At some point you’ve got to wonder just how long could Jason stay around Crystal Lake. As long as you don’t go to Crystal Lake, you’ll be fine. No, you want that horror to be out there in the world unleashed.
Derrickson: Bagul is an entity who resides within works of art. There’s a sophistication to the way he does things and I like the idea that he seduces children, he’s the eater of children, and when it comes time to wipe out their families and have these children practice this ritual killings, he drives them to another place. That keeps the trail cold and there’s something smart about that, which I really like.
Up until a certain point in the movie, the viewer still wonders if there’s actually anything supernatural going on and that maybe it’s just a guy who manipulates children into doing these horrible things.
Derrickson: Ethan definitely thinks that’s what it is, and so does the officer. The deputy is the one who puts it all together, but they both think this is a ritual killer and the deputy has cracked his code. He’s right, it’s just not a guy.
About a year ago a movie called Insidious (read my interview here) came out. A lot of things about Sinister remind me of Insidious, including the fact that it has a grim ending that bigger studios wanted to change. There have been a few other movies with a similar feel that have come out since then, but they’ve all been from smaller studios. What do you think it would take for Hollywood to realize these films are getting cult followings and could be making them a lot of money?
Derrickson: Summit has been giving this movie a big push, but with horror you save that campaign for the three weeks before. That’s just how horror releases work.
Cargill: It’s going to take one or two more successful really dark, heavy films. The thing is a lot of executives have short memories. They feel that the audience is fickle and that their tastes change. They can name the greatest horror films of all time, but they can’t tell you why they’re the greatest horror films of all time. So what it’s going to take is a few hit films like Insidious and, fingers crossed, Sinister and things of their ilk to show them that audiences do want dark, heavy, scary, macabre horror, that it doesn’t have to have a happy ending and it doesn’t have to be built for sequels or be formulaic. The big studios were afraid of a few elements in the film, so they looked at it and passed. The ending bothered them a bit, the death of children bothered them and they were like, “Audiences won’t buy into that. They don’t want that. It’s far too risky to put this out.” Then when audiences go and love it, the studios are like, “We don’t understand.” So it will take a few more successes for the studios to go, “Oh, wait. This is hot right now.” And that’s how they’ll put it. They won’t put two and two together that every great horror film has a really heavy ending. They think that Saw was successful simply because of how grizzly it was. They forget Saw had a really downer of an ending where the bad guy wins. They forget that so many of these horror films end very poorly for the protagonists and the characters you’re invested in. That’s where this horror comes from is the fact that they aren’t safe. They’ll tell you that The Omen was great or that Rosemary’s Baby was a big blockbuster and they kind of forget that at the end of The Omen, the little kid is the only one left alive and that he’s killed the family and that Rosemary does give birth to the devil’s child.
It’s funny that you mentioned Saw because the way this movie ends, you could definitely do sequels or prequels. But then you’d run the risk of subsequent movies following the Saw formula where the focus ends up being on making each death more shocking than the previous one.
Derrickson: We don’t know exactly what we’ll do if the movie is successful and there’s going to be a franchise, but we don’t want to do that. What we’ve talked about is not wanting to do the predictable sequel thing and just put the box in another house and have more extreme kills. That’s just not why we made this movie and that’s not why people are going to like it and, if it works, that’s not what the sequels will be.
The two of you kind of serendipitously came together to work on this film. Given the chemistry you clearly have working together, do you plan on working on other films together in the future?
Cargill: As often as possible.
Derrickson: We really like each other and have great respect for each other. We’ve got several things that we’re doing now, both paid projects and a spec script that we’ve already got a first draft of.
And you also have a book coming out, right Robert?
Cargill: Yeah, it’s called Dreams and Shadows.
Derrickson: I’ve read it. It’s awesome.