Kick-Ass To Premiere At SXSW Festival

Matthew Vaughn’s eagerly anticipated comic book movie Kick-Ass is to receive its world premiere at the ever-brilliant South By Southwest Festival in March. The film tells the story of a teenager (Aaron Johnson) who is so obsessed with comic books – he decides to become a “real” superhero. Along with Big Daddy (Nicolas Cage), Hit Girl (Chloe Grace Moretz) and Red Mist (Christopher Mintz-Plasse), he takes on a local mob boss (Mark Strong). It quite frankly looks a hoot: mixing first rate dialogue with bone-crunching action.

The South By Southwest Festival is fast becoming one of the hottest events of the year. It’s mixture of music, film and business dealings have created quite an unique media fest in Austin, Texas. In the past, Sam Raimi screened a rough cut of Drag Me To Hell and P.T. Anderson premiered There Will Be Blood. Is this the new Sundance, but way cooler?

It won’t be long before celebrities and huge corporations turn up soiling the whole affair. And what about Matthew Vaughn? From producing Guy Ritchie movies to fast-becoming one hell of a director. Making his directorial debut with Layer Cake then delivering the hugely enjoyable Stardust: he is showing versatility and talent in abundance. Can this be said for the former Mr. Madonna? Not bloody likely.

FilmShaft Exclusive: The Ford Brothers Discuss Their Zombie Debut – ‘The Dead’

The day before the world premiere of The Dead last Monday (30st August), I got to sit down with directors Howard and Jonathan Ford in the throng of Film 4 FrightFest 2010 to chat all things zombie.

The Ford Brothers are clearly passionate about their debut movie and show absolute adoration to George A. Romero’s Dawn of the Dead. During our half-hour talk we explored the appeal of the zombie genre, the craziness of shooting a low budget film in previously unseen parts of Africa, the travails of the actual shoot and why zombies should never – ever – run.

Shot in Burkina Faso and Ghana, The Dead is the story of two soldiers attempting to escape the world of chaos and mayhem that surrounds them when corpses begin to rise. It’s a richly photographed movie set amongst arid landscapes and sun-bleached vistas to possibly make it the sleekest-looking zombie film ever made.

The Ford Brothers are great and lively company. Howard talks really fast while Jon chips in with his own observations and insights into zombie movies, shooting in Africa and why the film became a labour of love.

Filmshaft: This has been a film twenty years in the making… why so long?

Jonathan: We wanted to make a zombie movie straight after seeing Dawn of the Dead because it blew our minds away… we were hooked. I started to write a script in the ‘80s and I’ve been chipping away at it ever since. Down the years we always tried to make it happen. It’s the film I’ve always wanted to make.

Howard: When we told people about making a zombie film they would laugh us out of the room. But we knew we had to do it.

What was it about Dawn of the Dead that so captured your imagination?

H: It is set in broad daylight and big open spaces yet the horror is still there. It took horror into the light.

J: People get scared of the dark but I’d get scared of walking down the street.

H: Yeah, I remember after seeing it we walked home in the middle of the road. We couldn’t be anywhere near people. I wanted to harness that power… that exhilaration and feeling.

J: I don’t think anybody will ever beat it… until the end of time! It’s not only one of the best zombie films – it’s one of the best films full stop!

How did you decide on shooting it in Africa?

H: We wanted do something that had never been done or seen before.

Was it always the idea?

H: We always knew it would be set in an exotic landscape and that it would be a fish-out-of-water story, but the idea presented itself when we’d shot some commercials and we kept saying ‘can you imagine a zombie movie here?’ I wanted it to be a beautiful film and for it to be a journey movie. Not just a shoot ‘em up horror.

J: And we shot it right next door to Benin where the original zombie legend comes from, which is also French-speaking West Africa.

How did you choose Burkina Faso, was it from shooting there previously?

H: We shot in Ghana and Burkina Faso. We wanted it to be a dry location and it turned out Ghana wasn’t dry enough. We did the beach scene there where he washes up and then we went for a location recce to Burkina Faso.

J: It had big open spaces and even though they are slow zombies – which I have to admit are my favorite kind – and you can walk right by them, sooner or later you have to stop to rest and sleep… they will still be coming for you.

Was there anything non-zombie related that influenced your film?

J: Very much so. You wouldn’t believe some of the non-genre influences that went in there like Wages of Fear, Ice Cold in Alex, Lawrence of Arabia.

H: There were so many things Jon and I discussed while writing the script. It’s an accumulation of all the things we love and channeled.

So what were some of the worse things that happened during the shoot?

H: I was mugged, held at knifepoint and gunpoint and money was extracted a lot… there was death all around us. We’d be shooting in a hut at a village and there would be the remains of dead relatives in these big pots. The lead actor Rob Freeman caught malaria… he was within three days of actually dying… it was horrific. Then it took five weeks to get the actual filming equipment into the country even though we had the entire crew there. We planned for a six week shoot!

Okay then, running zombies: discuss

J: Don’t get me wrong, I love 28 Days Later and did like the new Dawn of the Dead (2004). I went in thinking I’d hate it but actually quite enjoyed it… but no.

H: Jon and I discussed from the very beginning that it would never be running zombies. Absolutely no way. Running zombies in a film turns it into an action scene. It loses the horror and suspense. And we didn’t want to make an action movie. We wanted something that would stalk you, not sprint at you!

J: If a dead body would to be re-animated rigor mortis would have already set in and logic would dictate they would walk in an awkward way. Everything had to play by the rules of Romero.

Did you approach the special effects in an old-school way?

H: The special effects are old school… there’s a few enhancements. We tried to keep it to a minimum. Jon and I aren’t really fans of CGI. If somebody gets shot in the head in the film – which happens a fair bit [laughs], we had a physical effect. We wanted the actors to have a reaction.

On a scale of one to ten – how gory is The Dead?

H: Okay before I give my number… there are some gory bits but it’s not an incredibly gory film. There are some proper good gore scenes! I’d say five or six.

J: Really? I’d have said six.

H: Okay… there are machetes, guns, exploding heads… actually there’s quite a lot. But it’s not Brain dead, which gets a ten!

Will there be a sequel?

J: There’s enough to do a sequel.

H: It’s definitely a world and story I’d want tor re-visit.

Something slightly larger in scope, perhaps?

H: Yeah but it wouldn’t be like Mad Max 3… you know, Beyond Thunderdome. Some sequels can be disappointing… we’d be aware going into it. If fans want to see it and support the first one and don’t watch it on a pirate [laughs] they’ll be supporting the next one… and we’d give them it.

J: Films suffer from that sequel-it is problem where they think they’ve got to be bigger and they lose track of what made the original good in the first place. We’d expand the story.

Howard and Jon, thanks for taking the time to chat.

J: Thanks and I hope you enjoy the film.

Daniel Barber: Harry Brown Is “Born Out Of Reality”

Daniel Barber’s debut feature Harry Brown is a terrifying look at the state of modern Britain and one’s man attempt to clean it up. Starring Michael Caine in yet another iconic role, Harry Brown is released nationwide in the UK 11th November (see review).

I sat down with director Daniel Barber in London last week to discuss his vision of a society on the verge of chaos, making his first film and working with the screen legend known as Sir Michael Caine. Read on:

What attracted you to the story of Harry Brown?

DB: It is a story about our times. It’s a modern piece…a piece that is about a tale that needed to be told. Pick up the newspapers every day and you read about normal people standing up to gangs of kids. The project just spoke to me…and the fact that Michael Caine was very excited about playing the lead role. It just felt right. It felt like a film that needed to be made and I felt that I could do something really strong with it.

How did Michael Caine get involved in the project?

DB: He read the script and he really liked it. He saw a short film that I had made (Tonto Woman)…this is the first feature I’ve ever made…and he just really liked the script, we got on really well and he said to me, “I’d really like to work with you.” And it’s a great role for him too…a fantastic role.

And how did the screenplay come to you?

DB: It came to me through a rather roundabout way. A friend of mine who is a cameraman, said that I should check out the script and I went for a meeting with the producer – who’d seen the short film that had been nominated for an Oscar – being nominated for an Oscar gets you a certain amount of attention, and it came from that. He gave me the script and said tell me what you think.

Was there much work done to the script?

DB: Yeah there was script development quite a lot. Gary Young, the screenwriter, did a terrific first draft – and he was brilliant with me. We worked on the script over a period of weeks and months. We refined it. Stories are told both verbally and visually; it’s a combination of both. We changed a lot, but at its core, the story remained the same. It’s about an old man who seeks revenge for the death of a friend. But how you create that story and how that happens and where and so on, we developed.

Daniel Barber Michael CaineIt has been described as an “urban western”. Where do you think the western elements are in the story?

DB: I think the western in the tale is in the fact it is the story of one man. His journey is to seek justice. That’s a very western headline, if you like. I took that and I decided what might be interesting, was at times, to give it a certain western pacing and certain framings with the camera which are born of western films. There is one framing we employed that is called “the cowboy”, which is basically, when you have a single shot of a person in a situation and the camera frames them from just below the knees and gets in the rest of their body. That is known as the cowboy, in the industry, believe it or not. I didn’t know that before, but it is! The way he (Harry) moves through the landscape…this rather tough, urban cityscape…it has a certain western quality about it. If people go and see the film, they’ll see that…they’ll feel that.

Why did you choose to set (and film) Harry Brown in the Elephant & Castle area of London?

DB: The reality is shooting in London, generally, is cheaper than shooting in other parts of the country. Most of the crew I wanted to work with were from London anyway. London has many council estates that you can film on. The Haygate estate is kind of a well known one. I used to pass it every day on the way to college in Southwark. It is a real eyesore on the landscape. I think it was the perfect setting for where he lived and what goes on.

The visual look of the film is very striking; very “film noir”.

DB: I think the look of the film is born out of the reality of the places we shot. We shot a lot of the film at night. That does in essence mean some of the scenes will be quite dark. We lit it very sparingly, actually. I feel the way we should light, a lot. The most important thing is thing is the story, obviously, and the look we used just helps to define the story.

The social content in the film – were you ever concerned it was a little bit “Daily Mail”…a bit “Broken Britain”?

DB: Well, I think the reality is the film script could have come off any of our national newspapers. Every day you read about normal people standing up to defend themselves in horrendous situations against gangs of lawless youths. Unfortunately, that’s the way it is. You can go and see the film and you can see it is born of that, and what is interesting is the audience reaction…they want Michael Caine’s character to do what he does and they feel good about it. But should they? No. It is immoral what he does…completely immoral. But he’s brought to do it. That’s a question for our society…and I’m really interesting that. I hope the film sparks a conversation because there are issues within our society, which are uncomfortable to discuss. The Daily Mail, The Times, The Telegraph, The Sun – all our major newspaper – all carry stories about normal people standing up because they want to do something about what’s going on in our country and I don’t think there’s anything wrong with that.