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P-TOWN AND BLOOD: An Interview with Monster Makeup LLC on Making Horror—And Their Next Film, ‘Queen of the Rats’

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Since even before I started writing for Horror Press, I’ve wanted to get a peek behind the curtain on how horror movie productions are made. Not just the films themselves, but the people.

How do you get the perfect storm of people to assemble and film a slasher? 

How do practical effects creature features get all of their most important moving parts, the cast and crew, in place? 

And with so many people with their own artistic vision, how do they keep from tearing each other’s heads off? 

Today, I got those questions answered by the wonderful Monster Makeup LLC, the queer horror film collective that brought you Death Drop Gorgeous and their newest feature Saint Drogo

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What did they say about making these ventures, and their latest feature Queen of the Rats? Venture deeper, intrepid reader…

An Interview with Monster Makeup LLC

Pictured from left to right: Brandon Perras-Sanchez, Ryan Miller, and Michael J. Ahern

Just want to start off by saying, I saw Saint Drogo, and I enjoyed it a lot. Perfectly evokes all the vibes critics say it does, and that finale is gut-wrenching. Excellent stuff, and congrats on realizing that vision. 

Michael J. Ahern: Thank you so much!

Christopher Dalpe: That’s awesome! Thank you.

Wayne Gonsalves: Hail, Saint Drogo.

The second thing I wanted to say was, all I could think about after I saw the climax of Saint Drogo was “Imagine just being in the area that day and seeing this crew off in the distance filming THAT”. Your effects are insane, has anybody ever stumbled across you guys shooting these scenes or preparing the effects and just lost it?

Brandon Perras-Sanchez: We had this weird curse placed upon us where no matter how far into the wintry wilderness or national shoreline we would travel, there would always be at least one person lingering around. We were filming the SFX heavy finale with Joe Castro on an extremely windy and freezing beach. Along with these harsh winter conditions, the tide was coming very close to washing away our props and equipment, so we had to relocate everything to the parking lot and film it there. While we were setting up, this group of four, very curious, and intrusive adults started hovering around us. We were polite at first and let them watch, but since we only had one take and opportunity to get this specific shot. Things were intense. One of the nosy spectators kept touching the makeup of one of our actors and asking really stupid questions. Her other friends were right next to us and trying to start conversations while we were about to shoot. We finally gave them the cold shoulder and they eventually got the hint, but I was ready to use one, if not all of them as actual props.

Kevin Bowden: We tried getting film permits so we could shoot in peace, but the film commission never responded so we were at the mercy of tourists coming up to us while shooting. It didn’t help that American Horror Story was also in town shooting so people thought we were part of that production.

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Pictured from left to right: Brandon Perras-Sanchez and Michael J. Ahern

Speaking of insane practical effects, the grinder scene from Death Drop Gorgeous is incredible. It felt like the spiritual brother of that very over-the-top “explosion” scene from Frankenhooker and seemed super Henenlotter inspired which is something I love. We need to know, who thought of that for the kill?

BPS: It was from my cesspool of a brain. I am terrified of glory holes and am amazed that someone could just voluntarily put their dick through one without caring about what’s on the other side. We also were very adamant about trying to create kills people hadn’t seen which made my imagination run wild. I probably need to start taking multivitamins again.

CD: This is the kill that started it all really! In the early days, before Monster Makeup was founded, before DDG was even a script, Brandon and I were geeking out and riffing on how we’d love to see a good gay slasher – one that exploited the hook-up culture and sketchy red-flag scenarios that Queers find themselves in commonly. Glory hole, meat grinder…it felt natural.

I’ve been hyping Saint Drogo up to my friends who are gore hounds. To give people who haven’t seen it yet an idea: how much fake blood did you guys end up using in that finale over the course of however many takes it took to get it right?

BPS: When Joe Castro landed in Rhode Island, we immediately went to our house and made a couple of gallons using his secret recipe and at different consistencies, one was watery and one thicker for better drippage. For some reshoots, we bought 2 or 3 more gallons because filming blood is always a crapshoot on how it’s going to splatter or flow and look on camera. Each gore scene took about 2-4 takes, we used every drop we had.

MJA: The finale was shot, I think, four different times in three different locations: twice on location at Longnook Beach, once in the Rhode Island desert (a very strange, former quarry in the state), and once in our backyard.

Pictured from top left to right: Michael J. Ahern, Chris Dalpe, Brandon Perras-Sanchez, and Ryan Miller. Pictured from bottom left to middle: Kevin Bowden and Wayne Gonsalves.

Now let’s talk more about Monster Makeup as a group. I wanted to ask how you guys formed, how did you all come together? When did you really realize “Oh this is the team we want, we’re going to do this”? Was there a moment where it clicked, or did you just hit the ground running?

BPS: I met Chris through his sister, another horror fiend, and author, Victoria Dalpe, when I first moved to Providence in 2003. Years later, the three of us were joking about how the gay sex apps could also function as a tool for serial killers, because horny men will skip red flags to get off. A year later, I befriended Mike and told him about this and he said “Let’s make it into a movie!” Next we had a group meeting at a local bar with my boyfriend, Ryan, and one of my best friends, Wayne, and we started formulating a story, which eventually morphed into a screenplay, which eventually became DDG. Each of us brings something unique to the table which is crucial for a team to function.

WG: Brandon and I had known each other for over 10 years at that point, and he was filling me in on these crazy meetings that he was having with Chris and Mike. Chris and I had known each other for a few years, but I was recently introduced to Mike, who was writing plot points for the movie that were scarily reminiscent of things I had experienced or thought, so it was like I had known Mike for years.

MJA: I don’t know if there was a specific “click” but I think with Death Drop Gorgeous, the momentum kept rolling until it was like “oh, I guess we’re doing this!” And then it got to a point where we couldn’t keep referring to ourselves as “the Death Drop boys” and we wanted to formally name ourselves.

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CD: Monster Makeup, the formal company, erupted from the ground like a limp-wristed zombie, hand sprung from the grave. We are a bunch of friends, who love horror, music, gore, and GOOD stories. We looked around and said, ‘fuck it, let’s do it ourselves.’ It’s the Captain Planet – “with our powers combined” attitude that I truly believe any amount of success derives from. Now, growing pains happen, of course, but there have been consistent core tenements that we’ve lived by: “Is it horror?” “Is it queer?” And “What are you doing on Sunday?”

Ryan Miller: Brandon and I have been together for about 12 years, so I was around when he and Chris first had the idea for the DDG story. They soon roped Mike into the group due to his excellent writing skills, as well as Wayne who Brandon had been friends with for years. At that point, I had zero background in film, but as I sat around a whiskey-fueled table listening to these guys come up with absurd, hilarious characters and scenes, I immediately knew I wanted to be a part of the process. As a group, we pretty much did collectively say, “Fuck it, let’s do it!” and learned as we went along. I tend to be much more cautious when it comes to dipping my toes into the unknown, so I’m thankful that they had the initiative and punk rock attitude to jump right in and make shit happen. The rest is history!

KB: I came in super late in the Death Drop Gorgeous production. My girlfriend saw that a local slasher needed music so I reached out to them and sent some music I had already produced under the name Limmazene. I believe Ryan asked me if I could score a scene from scratch and the first scene I received was the glory hole kill. I must’ve watched it 100 times laughing my ass off at how awesome it was. I called my girlfriend into the room, “You’ve gotta see this!” I think I scored many scenes before I even met the boys in person. One night Brandon and Ryan picked me up to watch the final cut at their place. It was dark and snowing, and their apartment was dark too. I didn’t even know Brandon was Tony Two Fingers until weeks later because I hadn’t actually seen his face. A month or two later Brandon texted me about my photography and asked if I could meet them for a drink, and that’s when they asked if I wanted to shoot Saint Drogo. I think I said yes before he finished the sentence.

Saint Drogo is a folk horror film, and I always find the subgenre interesting in the context of sharing small-scale stories, these frightening folktales, and spreading them to the world at large, to the global village that is filmgoers. So why was Saint Drogo the saint of choice for telling that sort of story to everybody, what compelled you guys to choose him of all the saints? 

RM:  From the beginning, we knew we wanted to draw on elements of religion—in this case Catholicism—to highlight the very similar social pressures that exist within the gay community. We all experience the need to belong to something larger, to find our place among our people, and to feel a sense of conviction and purpose. One day, I was browsing a catalog of Catholic saints and their patronages, and I came across Saint Drogo. At first glance, his domain seems to be eclectic and scattered; he’s attributed as the patron saint of unattractive people, the disfigured, the deaf, shepherds, and coffee (among other things). However, if you zoom in on the social aspects, the common thread seems to be that they are outcasts, those that would be ostracized from mainstream society. It’s this feature that initially caught my eye—the comparison to the marginalization that gay people have experienced in modern culture, and the way that cult-like forces might prey upon this to lure others into their fold. There are also other fun references to the Saint Drogo legend that pop up in the film, such as his reported ability to bilocate, his own disfigurement, and the burning of his church cell.

BPS: Saints have such interesting and morbid trajectories towards their canonization, so there is a lot to play with there. We also wanted to make sure we found a saint whose patronage paralleled the themes of the film. Aside from embodying our themes, he was also described as having some sort of growth/deformity on his abdomen and had to hide himself in the basement of a church because his appearance was so jarring. His story is tragic but one that was a perfect vehicle for our cautionary tale.

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Pictured from left to right: Michael J. Ahern, Wayne Gonsalves, and Mike Rigney.

Could you tell me a bit about the changes going from Death Drop Gorgeous into making Saint Drogo? Since they are very different films, tonally and aesthetically, what’s the most glaring difference that comes to mind jumping from Death Drop Gorgeous to Saint Drogo? How has the process changed for you the most over that time, and going into these new projects?

MJA: Saint Drogo, for me, felt like we had something to prove. During Death Drop Gorgeous, so much of it was learning as we were going, and there is a micro-budget charm that I think lends itself to the DIY energy of the film. So, for Drogo, I think we wanted to showcase what we learned from shooting DDG, and the growth we experienced as filmmakers and storytellers. Sometimes it’s crazy for me to recall that I was 25 when I started writing DDG with these guys, and I’m now 32. We also didn’t want to pigeonhole ourselves to a specific kind of horror, and we wanted to make something unsettling and unnerving to challenge ourselves. I feel like it would’ve been the easier route to write another comedy horror.

BPS: As far as similarities, being such a small crew, we wore a ton of hats. Saint Drogo was filmed during COVID, which forced us to have an even smaller cast and crew. Our dream is to eventually have enough staff that we can walk onto set and are only responsible for a single task instead of four or five. Adding Kevin Bowden as our cameraman lifted such a huge weight off of us and we cannot wait to have him on board for our third feature.

As far as differences go, the original DDG script was 140 pages. We learned the hard way that horror scripts are generally around 90 pages; whittling that down was a nightmare that none of us want to endure ever again. When writing Drogo, we wanted to make it as streamlined and succinct as possible. A friend of ours told us that Cronenberg will keep his screenplays at 60ish pages, and we implemented this tip when writing SD, knowing that it would be a more visual, brooding, and tense film. We also wrote the script for our third around the same time, and we kept the same mantra of “neat and tidy.”

CD: From its inception to the big screen- Death Drop Gorgeous was brutal, messy, over the top, ambitious, and hilarious. We barreled into DDG unapologetic and fiercely. This was the first time for many of us working on this kind of scale, and we may have taken the long road to get there, but we discovered and learned so much on the way.

To me, Saint Drogo is a culmination of a lot of those lessons learned. Shorter, cleaner script. Smaller cast. Wildly different and obviously a harsher story but DDG & SD are sister films with a lot to say about identity in the queer community.

RM: From a technical standpoint, one of the biggest differences between the films is the equipment we used. When we started Death Drop Gorgeous, it was a passion project, and we were more interested in the story and vision than the technical specs. There’s definitely some great cinematography, but we shot in HD on an older Canon and learned the best settings as we went along. When we started Saint Drogo, our friend Kevin Bowden, came on board with a Nikon Z6, a BlackMagic drone, and better lenses. This allowed us to shoot in 4K, which forced us to pay much more attention to things like focus, aperture, etc. Following the success of DDG and what we learned in the process, we approached this film with a bit more intention from the very beginning and wanted to make it look as good as possible. The fact that it was shot in a beautiful seaside town in the offseason definitely didn’t hurt, either. Because our script for Saint Drogo was much shorter, it also allowed us to let the visuals breathe and spend more time creating an immersive atmosphere.

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Recently, you said your next film was going to be Queen of the Rats, and that it’s going to be a middle point of sorts between Death Drop Gorgeous and Saint Drogo. Which…I don’t even know how to visualize that, but I am excited. Can you give us a little peak of insight into that film, and the creative process of striking that balance?

BPS: When brainstorming ideas for our next film, Chris mentioned Lovecraft and the mafia. I ran with this idea and fleshed out a skeleton and brought it to the crew. And like Uncle Frank coming out of the floor in Hellraiser, the Monsters worked their magic and started adding meat to the bones and before we knew it, we had an amazing script. Mike is our primary dialogue guy/screenwriter, and I think this is his best work. 

CD: It’ll be another love letter to Providence!

MJA: We actually wrote Queen of the Rats before Saint Drogo during the summer months of the pandemic. It’s this amalgamation of so many things we all love and it bizarrely works seamlessly. We are sort of describing it as Green Room meets The Sopranos meets Lovecraftian cosmic horror, and it takes place during the early 2000s in the Providence noise rock scene, which was lowkey the Golden Age of Providence. It’s implicitly queer, but that’s a little less the focus this time around for us. We’re playing with themes of greed, gentrification, and community, which I think shares some commonalities with our previous two films.

Pictured: Brandon Perras-Sanchez and Michael J. Ahern. Crew pictured: Kevin Bowden and Ryan Miller.

Is there anything you can tell us about what Queen of the Rats is exactly about, or about the main villain? Will it be a creature, or are we going for something more grounded? What can we expect from it?

WG: Should we spoil the surprise?

MJA: There’s a creature!

BPS: I can tell you it’s going to be a wild one! In a nutshell, it’s about the early 00’s warehouse scene in Providence, RI which was a utopia of artists, musicians, performers, you name it. Weirdly enough, there was a symbiosis between this scene and the mafia (yes, this factual). Toss in a Lovecraftian monster, a noise rock band, and some mafia drama, and you have QotR. Expect our usual level of gore but tenfold, an even balance of humor and darkness, and a lot of familiar faces.

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Malfunctions on set, they’re part of filmmaking. They’re inevitable, and sometimes they’re happy accidents. When it comes to practicals as involved as yours, the makeup, what’s the most memorable on-set special effects catastrophe that has happened to you? If you haven’t had one was there ever a concern like that, about a big bloody explosion or something just not coming out looking right?

BPS: The worst one was when we were filming the opening kill in DDG with the poisoned cocaine. I had made an appliance out of paper towels, latex, and acrylic teeth. We wanted to create the illusion of his nose and upper lip dissolving so we had the actor fill his mouth with fake blood and tossed in a couple Alka-Seltzers. So Mike Murphy, the actor, “dies” and starts drooling out the foamy blood and then starts saying “Hey guys, this is burning my face.” We ran over and washed all the gore off and removed the appliance. Apparently, latex and Alka-Seltzer have an adverse reaction. He ended up actually dying an hour later, but as Kevin our cameraman would say, “That’s showbiz!”

Just kidding! Mike is alive and well.

Another scary moment was between me and Ninny Nothin (Young Gloria) during the scene where she guts Tony with the electric meat carver. So, I’m wearing the silicone stomach that Victoria Elizabeth Black created which was loaded with intestines, blood and slime. We originally had a piece of plexiglass that was slid in between my actual stomach and the prosthetic. It wasn’t looking good on camera, so we decided to nix the plexi and go commando. We informed Ninny: “Don’t go in too deep!” This made her extremely nervous, and it took some convincing, but she said she’d do it. Was I terrified? Holy fuck yes, but if you’re not going to bleed for your art then what the fuck are you even doing? Luckily, I wasn’t disemboweled, and Ninny wasn’t charged with manslaughter.

RM: I second all of the above. I’ll just add that during Tony’s gutting, Brandon was also extensively wrapped in Christmas lights, so now we have live electric wires, liquid blood, and a crazed drag queen with a turkey carver carefully trying to avoid said wires. I was a nervous wreck behind the camera for most of the scene.

WG: I really hit Audrey Heartburn’s (Ava Unit) head on the vanity in Death Drop Gorgeous. It’s in the bloopers on the Death Drop Gorgeous DVD.

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MJA: Shooting the climax of Saint Drogo felt like one big catastrophe. The weather was not cooperating, hightide was insane. The rock at the end of the movie actually washed out to sea, and we had to go in and grab it before it floated away.

Pictured from left to right: Brandon Perras-Sanchez, Mike Rigney, and Katerina Pederson.

We all watch the classics, Carpenter’s essential works, and the movies that legends like Tom Savini and Screaming Mad George have worked on for great special effects. What are some obscure practical effects movies you think most people don’t know about that they should watch?   What’s a lesser-known must-watch for you?

BPS: The Demon’s Rook! There’s an interesting and adorable story behind this movie too – required viewing. Also for all you gore hounds, any Brian Paulin and James Bell films are all barf-inducing, and they both do all the SFX themselves. Others I love: The Dead Next Door, Black Past, Nikos the Impaler, Violent Shit, Deadly Spawn, Street Trash, The Kindred, Xtro, Basket Case 2 and 3, The Church, Demon Wind, Little Necro Red, The Burning Moon, Beyond The Black Rainbow, Warlock 1 and 2, Laid To Rest.

CD: Oh! We just did a TikTok about this. Personally, I love how unhinged and insane the special effects are in the 80’s remake of The Blob – skin dissolving, acid burning, and goo; every kill is so over the top.

Daydream with me a bit. No reins, no questions asked, just unlimited funding, whatever you need to make it. What kind of effects would you have if you had that? Are there any dream projects where you would just need an unfeasible crazy amount of money to realize a creature or a concept?

MJA: One of my favorite genres, if not my favorite, is fantasy horror. Pan’s Labyrinth is probably my favorite movie next to Lord of the Rings. I’d love to create a fantasy horror epic with some amazing creature designs.

CD: Hauntings and demonic possessions! I love that shit, but I’d love to tell it from a very Monster Makeup perspective. A car chase. Head explosions. A hoard of monsters crawls out from the ground. Underwater monsters. Something in space. I’d love to do it all.

BPS: This Pandora’s Box of a question! And all of these answers will involve HEAVY practical effects. My current dream project is Queen of the Rats. I have two other screenplays that I have novelized, The White Bishop (a period piece, nautical, body horror, novelized with the help of Splatterpunk terrorist Aron Beauregard) and recessive NATURE (a horror fantasy that takes place in the 80’s with a lot of folklorish creatures and monsters.) Both would need a hefty budget (these books will be available soon!) I would also LOVE to remake Neon Maniacs, Curtains, or Spookies.

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​​RM: I’ve always loved monsters that incorporate human bodies and appendages into themselves, such as the disgusting orgy mass in Society (1992) and the ravenous alien parasite in Slither (2006). I’d love to be a part of creating insane special effects like that—in fact, we already have some related ideas, so if there are any sugar daddies listening out there, please give us money!

WG: I’d really like to get thrown through a glass window.

***

And there you have it folks! It was lovely getting to know Monster Makeup LLC, and I hope you all got to learn a little something about your new favorite indie horror team. For more interviews like these, follow us on social media to keep up with Horror Press.

For those hoping to see more Monster Makeup LLC, they’ll be showing Saint Drogo at Denver Film’s CinemaQ (get tickets here!) Friday, August 11th,  as they begin the festival circuit run of their movie.

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Hail, Saint Drogo!

Luis Pomales-Diaz is a freelance writer and lover of fantasy, sci-fi, and of course, horror. When he isn't working on a new article or short story, he can usually be found watching schlocky movies and forgotten television shows.

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Books & Comics

[INTERVIEW] Tucking Into ‘Hannibal Lecter: A Life’ with Author Brian Raftery

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If you’ve had so much as a single conversation with me, you’ll know that I am unhealthily obsessed with the television series Hannibal. What you might not know is that I put off watching it when it first aired because I was uncertain it could match the heady thrills of The Silence of the Lambs, one of the first horror movies I ever saw and one that left an indelible mark on me. These pieces of media, along with the Thomas Harris book series upon which they’re based and early adaptation Manhunter, are cornerstones bricks in my psyche as a horror fan. So when Simon & Schuster announced that they were publishing Hannibal Lecter: A Life, I knew I needed to add a copy to my collection pronto. 

Author Brian Raftery’s upcoming book is a biography of a character who may not be real, but who has taken on a life that goes far beyond, perhaps, anything his elusive creator ever planned for him. To tell Lecter’s story, Raftery dives into the archives of Silence of the Lambs’ director Jonathan Demme and conducts new interviews with key figures like Manhunter director Michael Mann and actor Brian Cox, the first person to portray Lecter on screen. He also teases out how the rise of Hannibal Lecter as an enduring antihero dovetails with the pop culture-fication of true crime—and considers why a certain politician kept mentioning the “late, great” Hannibal the Cannibal on the campaign trail. 

As a self-proclaimed Hannibal Lecter stan (dare I say apologist), I had to get the chef on the phone. The following interview has been edited for clarity and conciseness, and nothing here is vegetarian. 

An Early Taste of Hannibal Lecter: A Life With Brian Raftery

Samantha McLaren: Since the book is presented as a biography and you are not a character in it, I want to start with you. What is your personal history with Hannibal Lecter—where did you first encounter him in the wild? 

Brian Raftery: The weird thing is, I have a very specific memory of that, which is when The Silence of the Lambs film came out. I was aware of the book—I’d seen some adults that I knew reading it—but I didn’t know what it was about. At that point, I was mostly just reading Stephen King and/or comic books and/or Rolling Stone magazine. And I remember in my eighth grade Spanish class, I was in the back not studying (which I should have been), but I was reading Peter Travers’ review of this movie [in Rolling Stone]. At that point, my horror experience was mostly kind of the classics, like the slasher movies and The Exorcist and The Omen. And I was reading this review and it was a rave, and I was like, wait a minute, this is a respectable, high-end movie about a cannibal. I couldn’t believe this existed, and I was fascinated. I read the review a couple of times. 

I didn’t see the movie in the theater—I didn’t see it until it came on VHS. But I was fascinated with it for years; I watched it over and over again. I think when I first watched it, when I was 15 or 16, it was just the shock of Hannibal Lecter and how crazy these kills were. It’s one of those movies that I really remember, as a teenager, the rug being pulled from under me in terms of that ending, where you think they’re going to the house where [Buffalo Bill] is and they changed it up… But then I watched it more and more, and it was one of the first movies that I kind of started to study. It was definitely one of the first commentary tracks I ever heard or owned. They did one really early in the mid-90s when not a lot of people were doing them. And there was so much writing about it and enthusiasm for it in the 90s, it was a movie that never went away throughout the decade. 

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Then I read the books. I saw Manhunter and read Red Dragon. I was very excited when the Hannibal novel came out. A little less excited when I finally read it. The funny thing is, I missed a lot of the TV show. The TV show came out right after I’d had my first daughter, and I remember putting it on and being like, I can’t watch that. I was just not in the right headspace. That show is amazing to me. I can’t believe the stuff they got away with 10 years or so ago on network television—on NBC of all things, that was airing like Betty White’s competition shows at that point. 

So I’ve always been fascinated by the character. He’s just one of the few villains that has never gone away. The character goes away for long stretches because the movies take a while, the books take a while, but [they’re] always circulating somewhere, unlike some horror villains who go in and out of coolness… So when we started talking about the book, I was at first interested in a book on The Silence of the Lambs, and then my editor said, why don’t we look at the Lecter character in general? That spurred the idea of doing a biography about someone who never actually lived. 

How Hannibal Lecter Became a Cultural Icon Without Being Everywhere

SM: It’s a great approach because there’s a lot written individually about the different iterations, but less about the Hannibal character as a whole.

BR: The thing that’s so strange… I re-read all the novels when I started working, and it’s still shocking to me how little Hannibal Lecter there is in those first two books. It’s like 12 pages in Red Dragon. It’s wild to me. Even The Silence of the Silence is mostly a Clarice Starling book. And when you get to Hannibal… the first 100 pages is all Clarice Starling again. The fact that he’s remained so popular despite being kind of underexposed is very strange. There are very few characters who have that kind of presence with that little screen or page time for a big chunk of their career, for lack of a better word. 

SM: The book reflects that aspect of Hannibal’s character in that he’s obviously the star, but there are times when he takes a back seat while you tell a broader story about the world around him and the lives he’s impacted in some way, in fiction or in real life. Was it difficult to find the right balance there? 

BR: It’s interesting because there is so little on Hannibal. Even if you were to write a Wikipedia entry on Hannibal Lecter’s life and background, there’s so little about his personal life in the books until you get to Hannibal and Hannibal Rising. So I went in knowing that you can’t have Hannibal on every page, and at a certain point, I was just as interested in how the culture created and responded to Hannibal Lecter almost more than I was in the character itself, because whether you’re looking through the lens of horror or the bigger cultural impact of him, he’s really unique in the sense that he has a kind of visibility, despite not really being a guy who’s around a whole lot. 

When I signed the contract for the book, I think Trump had only mentioned Lecter once or twice. And then, I’m not kidding, like two weeks later my book agent was like, I’m going to stop texting you every time he does it because he’s doing it so often now that I’d be doing it every day. That was kind of confirmation that, okay, these are people who probably haven’t watched the movies or read the books in 30 years… and he’s still an enduring punchline to so many people. Why this character? How can a president talk about Hannibal Lecter in kind of a heroic way in a way you couldn’t talk about Jason Voorhees or Michael Myers? What is it about this guy, and what was his popularity and his ascent? Where did that come from and what does it mean? 

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SM: There have been so many parodies and references to Hannibal Lecter in everything from children’s movies to Silence! The Musical. Was it a conscious decision to focus on the canonical, official Hannibal versus all the other ways he’s crept out into society? 

BR: It’s funny. Two weeks after I turned the book in, I saw a trailer for the new Naked Gun movie last summer that had a Hannibal Lecter joke in it, and I was like oh, I should have waited until that came out! And there was a Variety story a few weeks ago that Zootopia 2 had a whole scene that was going to basically recreate Clarice and Lecter’s encounter from The Silence of the Lambs, which I thought was a pretty funny idea, and they scrapped it because they were like kids won’t have the patience for this and won’t understand it. I’m old enough to remember The Silence of the Hams, the Dom DeLuise parody. At a certain point, I was worried that if I just kept mentioning all the parodies and riffs, it would maybe distract. 

I probably could have included a few more, but there were just so many of them. They kind of never stopped. For me, I was much more interested in how the success of The Silence of the Lambs back in 1991 created (along with Se7en) so many serial killer movies. I remember that I saw Copycat, that Sigourney Weaver and Holly Hunter one, at a screening in the mid-90s, and even I was kind of like, you’re gonna call this Copycat and you’re doing a serial killer movie after The Silence of the Lambs? It was just a little on the nose. 

Jodie Foster as Clarice Starling, Silence of the Lambs (1991)

Clarice Starling, Elusive Sources, and the Mystery of Hannibal’s Creation

SM: There are a lot of Hannibal connections that are widely known at this point, but you also uncovered stories people might not know, like the women agents who helped shape Clarice. Were there any connections or details you uncovered in your research that you were especially excited to share with a wider audience?

BR: I’m totally blunt about this in the book: I could not talk with Tom Harris. He’s given three interviews, I think, in 50 years. But it meant that basically anything I could find about Tom Harris, any scrap, I had to look at it and be like, can I use this? 

I was very lucky in that Jonathan Demme, who is the director of The Silence of the Lambs, and who remained friends with Harris even though he didn’t make the Hannibal sequel—his papers are at the University of Michigan. I got to go through and there was a ton of amazing stuff in there. I can’t say enough good things about the University of Michigan. These were random faxes from Tom Harris to Jonathan Demme and the producers, and there’d be little clues in there. At one point, he mentioned the names of some of the FBI agents he spoke to for the books—that’s the golden ticket. 

One of them is still alive and I spoke to her for two hours. Her name is Athena Varounis. She’s fantastic, she should have her own book… She was someone who Harris met with repeatedly while writing The Silence of the Lambs. There’s also a woman named Patricia Kirby who Harris met with at least once or twice during the 80s working at the Behavioral Science Unit [who he spoke to about] being a female FBI agent. That stuff was fascinating because I didn’t know any of it, and to find the name of someone he spoke to on a handwritten fax is phenomenal as a reporter. 

Even though it’s called Hannibal Lecter: A Life, to me, Clarice is equally important. I don’t think the movie The Silence of the Lambs would have taken off if it weren’t for Clarice Starling. Hannibal Lecter is not interesting to us unless we’re seeing him through Clarice Starling’s eyes, so I wanted to make sure that her story was told and how she came about. I think they’re the most perfect horror couple… It’s not a love affair, but it’s the closest two humans ever come in a movie despite (aside from brushing fingers) never touching each other. 

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SM: Harris is known for being elusive. If you had been able to speak to him, is there a burning question you were left with from your research that you would have loved the opportunity to ask?

BR: I had to take a lot of things on secondhand accounts or inference. What’s interesting about what serial killers informed Buffalo Bill or Hannibal Lecter is, he’s barely ever spoken on that. I mean, [former Behavioral Science Unit chief] John Douglas and the FBI have theories, and it’s clear when you look at Tom Harris’ relationship with the FBI, the agents he’s talking to and the killers they were studying, there’s connections there. 

My big fascination, which is probably not everyone’s question they want to ask Tom Harris, is Hannibal Rising. With the first two movies, he wanted no involvement; he was happy to cash the checks and he would talk to Jonathan Demme if he needed to. They did the Red Dragon remake, and he was kind of involved again. And then, after proclaiming his dislike of Hollywood, he writes this screenplay and the book [for Hannibal Rising] at the same time, which any writer will tell you is a terrible idea. Every agent, every studio executive, they do not want a novelist working on a screenplay at the same time—it’s usually disastrous. The movie and the book were disappointing commercially. I want to know, how much of that was his trying to wrestle back control of the Hannibal character? Because at a certain point, the character becomes bigger than the books. It was hard to write about Hannibal Lecter without people seeing Anthony Hopkins. 

I’m kind of fascinated by Hannibal Rising because it’s one of the 2000s’ most interesting failures. There’s very little documentation about. I talked to the director of the movie and found everything I could about it, but Harris did the screenplay and worked on the book—he didn’t do press. He didn’t really coordinate with a lot of people or communicate with a lot of people. So what he was thinking at the time, I can only guess. 

Sir Anthony Hopkins as Hannibal Lecter, Silence of the Lambs (1991)

Living With a Character Who Never Quite Goes Away

SM: You talk in the book about how engaging with the Hannibal Lecter media has a profound effect on some people, from David Lynch’s revulsion when he was initially attached to adapt Red Dragon to William Peterson feeling like he was Will Graham after filming Manhunter. Did your research and being immersed in this world have an impact on you?

BR: I’ve always been very good about separating fiction. I love the books, I love the movies—I don’t find that material particularly disturbing, but I was also not William Peterson trying to be Will Graham. It’s a different process.

What I found tough was, I’m not a true crime expert. I’ve been interested in true crime in various cases over my life, but for this, I had to really go deep on some serial killers. There were definitely days where I could get up really early and send my kids off to school and be like, I don’t want to deal with Ed Gein. I don’t want to read the Life magazine story about him, I don’t want to go through John Douglas’s FBI photos, but I did. That stuff, after a while, did start to upset me. 

Anthony Hopkins went on this long drive from Utah to Pittsburg right before the filming of The Silence of the Lambs, and because he has a steel-trap memory, he at one point named for a reporter every city he stopped in along the way. And I thought, I bet there’s been a serial killer in each one of those cities. I kind of wanted to make that connection between the country he was going across to play this fictitious killer, and we have all these real killers in the country. I had a week where I was just looking through numerous local papers for unsolved murders and cold cases, and a lot of them were really grisly. I remember by Friday I was kind of like, all right, I think it’s time to watch Singing in the Rain. 

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It was really unpleasant… We think that the world is more violent now, but when you go back to the 60s, 70s, and 80s and go through these newspapers, there’s a lot of really terrible things going on and I didn’t need to know about every single one of them. 

SM: Barring the epilogue, the book ends with the conclusion of Hannibal, the TV show. But there have been further adaptations after that, like Clarice [2021, CBS], which doesn’t feature Hannibal but is in his world. How did you decide to end it where you did? 

BR: I knew that the TV show was always going to be the last chapter because I knew it was always going to be chronological in terms of where Hannibal Lecter came out. The thing that’s so remarkable to me about Hannibal the TV show is the fact that Bryan Fuller had this many episodes. He planned for many seasons and the ending they had was the ending they had to do—the show was canceled after three seasons. And it’s one of the best endings for a TV show. This could be the end of the show, or the show could have started again three months later and picked up from there. 

I like the ambiguity. The idea of Hannibal falling off a cliff and you’re not entirely sure what happened to him is kind of like the ending of The Silence of the Lambs where Hannibal Lecter goes into the crowd. I wanted the book to end with Hannibal Lecter still out there in some way. It’s a biography of a character, and a character who’s still alive, not the “late, great.” 

I did talk to Bryan Fuller a bit about how he would like to do a Silence of the Lambs TV series, and he’s talked about it in other interviews, but I didn’t want to speculate. I want to end with what we know about. What we know is he falls off the cliff, and there’s that coda which, of course, implies something else going on. But I like the idea that after that show went off the air, the way that Hannibal Lecter has lived in the last 10 years is in the culture somewhere. He pops up in strange places—he pops up in a Trump speech; he pops up in college courses. It’s almost like you’re waiting for him to come back in from the cold. 

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For all I know, Tom Harris could have another Hannibal Lecter book, because he’s surprise released almost all of these books. Maybe he’ll do it again. Maybe they’ll figure out the rights situation and who owns what and make another movie or TV series. A couple of people have asked me like, aren’t you afraid they’re going to reboot it? It’s a pretty durable character… It’s the kind of character that you can play a lot of different ways and interpret a lot of different ways. 

SM: So what you’re saying is, there might be a second edition in 10 years if Harris surprise drops Hannibal V

BR:At the least, we’ll have to do a couple of chapters. 

Hannibal Lecter: A Life by Brian Raftery hits shelves on February 10. Learn more, including where to pre-order the book and upcoming appearances from Raftery, by visiting Simon & Schuster’s website.

Photo taken by Samantha McLaren.

 

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Film Fests

Inside the Live Scoring of Häxan: An Interview with The Flushing Remonstrance at Brooklyn Horror Film Festival

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If I ever needed more proof that Brooklyn Horror Film Festival was the place to be in October, my experience at this year’s live screening of Häxan with The Flushing Remonstrance was that.

The Nitehawk Cinema in Williamsburg is the primary home for the festival, and the host to what feels like a million different screenings. Each film feels like an outpouring of a director’s vision, of a cast and crew’s hard work over months, or even years. But one screening in particular among the repertory options on offer caught my eye, and that was Häxan. Part historical analysis, part horror, and part drama, there aren’t many films like this silent feature from Benjamin Christensen. And certainly, there are very few like it in terms of its age and impact: the movie is over a century old and still manages to grasp the intrigue, imagination, and emotion of audiences today.

But it was what was attached to the film that really intrigued me. Because this particular screening of Häxan was being played with a live accompaniment. I didn’t know what to expect from a group called The Flushing Remonstrance; frankly, I didn’t even know what to expect from a soundtrack accompanying a century old film as unique as Häxan. A set of percussion machines and a keyboard set were set up at the foot of the theatre screen, and soon two musicians approached them: Catherine Cramer and Robert Kennedy, the duo that makes up The Flushing Remonstrance.

The theatre dims, and the soft glow that comes off the lights illuminating their instruments becomes pronounced. The duo’s work blends into the film seamlessly. Their music is introspective, emotionally fine-tuned, and sonically bonded to what’s happening on screen with a level of smoothness I didn’t expect. There was a clear interplay at work between the film and the live score, and I knew then that I had to ask them how they did it. The Flushing Remonstrance was kind enough to entertain the question and spoke with us here at Horror Press about their process and history.

The following interview has been lightly edited for clarity and conciseness.

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An Interview With The Flushing Remonstrance on the Art of Live Scoring a 100+ Year Old Film

Luis Pomales-Diaz: So. Why exactly did you name yourselves The Flushing Remonstrance? I don’t want to assume you represent the Quakers, but… the name does raise questions.

Robert Kennedy: We were both working at a museum in Flushing, Queens, when we met. We got together for what we thought would be a one-off show. We would be live scoring vintage cartoons in a park. So, we needed a name, and after the usual process where we came up with a bunch of jokey names that would never fly, we landed on The Flushing Remonstrance.

Mainly because of geographical proximity, and it always sounded kind of ’60s like Jefferson Airplane. It wasn’t a particular political statement, although what the document represented and what they were doing, speaking truth to power, does resonate with us. We claim no representation of Quakers.

Tell us about your musical background. How does it factor into your live performances scoring films?

Catherine Cramer: We get asked a lot, almost every show, ‘how do you do this?’ and ‘is this a composed score or is this entirely improvised?’  And I find it interesting, because I spent the bulk of my musical career playing jazz, and I ask people if they know how that works first.

There’s the chart, a melody that can be written down, but then the bulk of what jazz musicians do varies from performance to performance. Who knows how many iterations of Autumn Leaves there have even been, but they all have their own measure of changes and improvisations.

Robert: We’ve been playing together for ten years, and we bring our improvisational ability and sensibility to [live scores] as our own thing. We’ve almost always played in the context of accompanying a film or a short film. If we hit something while we’re in rehearsal, we’ll run with it. But we don’t have written melodic content like a jazz quartet. Maybe like five percent of our material is identified pitches or chords, and those are primarily to ensure that Catherine’s percussion has a number of sounds that have tonal components, and that we produce either a consonant or dissonant effect.

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The best way to describe it is: we are improvised, but we have defined the structure for a given film very precisely. As far as what sorts of sounds and feelings and what sorts of timing will accompany different sections and scenes of a film, it’s definite.

An excerpt from the Flushing Remonstrance live score for The Cabinet of Dr. Caligari.

And when you’re determining those feelings, that framework, what’s the process you go through? How many times do you watch the film through?

Robert: It’s somewhat of an automatic process at this point. We identify a film we want to play, we watch it through (separately, usually), and sort of chart out the architecture of it, almost like a storyboard. Scene by scene, where the scene is taking place, and what’s happening.

We then run the film together, and let the film guide our decisions when we rehearse. And whatever the filmmaker is suggesting to us, that’s what we do. Some films we’ve had to slave over a little bit more, sometimes, we’re particularly satisfied with the first go through. We have a great deal of instrumental rapport that factors into it, and we do it in a way that feels natural to us. So sometimes it comes easily.

Catherine: When we first run through a new film, like with Häxan, there’s a lot of stopping and going back, trying variations of the same scene. Each time through, we change or add something new. And even with the film we’ve played the most, Nosferatu, it’s always different. People come up who have seen us before to tell us our performance had a completely different feeling. It keeps the performances very alive in a sense, even when the film is somewhere around 100 years old.

What causes the variation between screenings of a film like Nosferatu that makes it so different each time, even after a decade of playing the film? What keeps changing, and why?

Catherine: No matter how many times we’ve played Nosferatu, there’s been a continual change. Sometimes it’s an instrumental change. On the Roland Octapad, the instrument that I play, there are a hundred different patches, and in each patch there are eight pads, and in each pad there’s up to as many as four sounds depending on where you hit it. Not including the volume and how you balance the sounds. And that causes radical changes in itself.

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How we react to the film emotionally has changed a lot since the very beginning. We watch these films intently, and they guide us not just when we’re coming up with the framework. It guides us when we’re playing. We’re not just playing along but really bonding the music to the film. The last time we played it, it felt more sparse, more haunting.

And playing Nosferatu now, what emotions do you play to the most? What stands out to you more now than when you first started?

Catherine: With Nosferatu…it’s so sad. Nosferatu is a film I see as pathetic, in the truest sense of the word pathos. Orlok is such a tragic figure, and that sense has only grown each time we play it. In certain moments, when the man is walking down the middle of the street reading off the names of the dead during the plague, and every moment when Ellen is sitting by the ocean waiting for her husband to come home, all of the imagery strikes me so much more deeply. It’s those feelings that I’ve tried to accentuate.

Does the audience’s feelings factor into the performance to an extent?

Robert:The feel of the space, the sound of the room, but especially the feel of the crowd, are vital to how these performances keep changing. When we played Todd Browning’s The Unknown and Dali’s Un Chien Andalou in early November of last year, obviously, the presidential election had happened. Any audience we were playing for had that circulating in their head.

There were high emotions and clouded minds, and it was palpable. We brought into it an anger and intensity to a certain extent, because we were putting our own state of mind and our audience’s state of mind into it. Disorientation, paranoia, gloom, it made its way into the music. That’s how it is with improvised music often, you hear more traditional jazz, and you can tell when someone is having a bad night or if they’re sick. You’re not immune to being influenced by outside forces, and in our case, we lean into those outside forces.

A segment of the Flushing Remonstrance’s Nosferatu live score.

As musicians, you have about as many tools as filmmakers when it comes to communicating emotions through your music. Sometimes you even have more, depending on your instruments. Which emotions on film are the most challenging to communicate through your music?

Robert: I think a particular challenge is if there is a sustained scene of intensity. Sustained scenes of violence, a riot, a mob fleeing like in Metropolis. The end of The Phantom of the Opera is another great example, when they’re chasing him through the streets of Paris. The obvious approach is to pile it on, get really loud and clangorous. But after a while, it gets tiring for us and for the audience. You can’t put more water in a full glass. Those are the most challenging, assuring there’s a sense of dynamism while retaining that kinetic feeling. The goal is to maintain the integrity of the film we’re working with.

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Catherine: The hardest for me are the spots where there is no emotion. In Nosferatu, we have this scene where the longshoremen are preparing the ship, we have a man reading off a list, men moving boxes, but really not much is happening. You can’t just have it be silent! It’s not until they dump out the dirt and the rats come out that you have something to do. But you can’t leave that dead air, which is hard to fill out. Playing to emotion isn’t necessarily easy because you want to do it well, but it’s the in between parts that get me. And silent films need to have in between parts because you can’t just have constant exposition.

Robert: I immediately thought of the Spanish language version of Dracula we did last year at Brooklyn Horror. There are these long drawing room scenes where they’re sort of just…talking. And like…well, there’s only so much we can do. And that film has a lot of it! (laughs) But then you also have very active characters like that version’s Renfield, who is really just chewing the scenery.

Oh, I truly love Pablo Alvarez Rubio as Renfield. He’s my favorite Renfield. The definitive one for me, I’d love to see what you play for him.

Robert: You know, I have to put in a vote for Tom Waits in Francis Ford Coppola’s version. Beyond the freakishness, he plays so well, there’s this sadness and desperation, being aware he’s a prisoner to Dracula, that’s great. On that note though, there is one thing we do the same every single time when we play Nosferatu.

After Orlok dies in the sunlight, it cuts to Knock in his cell looking out the bars, and he says, ‘The master is dead!’ And we always go to silence, every time. Because the death isn’t the climax, the climax is the aftermath. The spell has been broken, and the sacrifice Lucy has made for this guy…who in like, none of the films, really deserves it! And the silence punctuates that.

The Flushing Remonstrance original score for the Guy Maddin short Blue Mountains Mystery Séance.

For Häxan in particular, you do have quite a few scenes that are high intensity, and high emotion. The film is effectively a witchhunter’s manual, with all the historical cruelty that implies towards the women who are accused witches.

Robert: Absolutely! It’s based at least in part on the Malleus Maleficarum, an actual witchhunter’s manual.

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It also has some generally raucous scenes of the witches. The black sabbath in the woods for instance. It’s an easy out to compose something quick and aggressive for that sequence. How did you determine what you wanted to do for that?

Catherine: It’s not an easy film to accompany. There are protracted scenes of torture, scenes of the accused women being interrogated and psychologically beaten down. One of the hardest there is the scene of the priest trying to force the young woman to use magic, to agree to show him so she can see her child again. It’s intense, but there’s subtlety you have to play for.

Robert: You know when that particular scene comes along, you’d think because of the nature of it you’d expect it to call for a big Rite of Spring, grand guignol, kind of raucous sound. But you have to break down where a scene starts and what it is. When it begins, we start with people sitting on a hilltop, and they see the witches flying off to the woods, and then you get the scene of the witches flying over the town. There’s not really fear or aggression in that, but rather mystery and a bit of wonder. So, we play towards that.

Then they get to the woods, and it begins, and that mass the witches start up is at its core a ritual. The question at the heart of it is ‘what sounds like ritual music?’, so we aim for something ritualistic. Someone’s instinct might be to play something like Carmina Burana, but it’s just not interesting. It’s obvious. It isn’t in the interest of the film or our interest to make it noisy or heavy or Stravinsky-esque, because that’s just not what the film is going for.

Häxan is over 100 years old. Though it has the indelible place in horror history, the story it tells and its cinematography, do feel very divorced from modern filmmaking. Is there an emotional disconnect from the way it’s presented that makes putting together the framework you work off of difficult?

Catherine: It’s a fun challenge, and a very different kind of challenge. It’s like a PhD dissertation turned into a film, which is not even factoring in the temporal quality that makes it so different on its own. It’s a shocking film, beyond the content but also shocking in the historicity of it and the sheer number of people killed and tortured in the name of stopping witches. Between 35 and 60 thousand dead. Like really? How many people died for this?

Then there’s also the fact that he brings in contemporary feminism into the film is fascinating, and tragic. Things are somewhat different a century later, but we’ve not completely moved past which is sad.

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The film in its last quarter is agonizing. The dialogue it has on the concept of hysteria, and modern psychological medicine as opposed to contemporary notions of psychology…

Robert: I mean the fact that they call it hysteria tells you quite a bit…

Yeah, It’s not great. Interesting, compelling, but flawed in some ways.

Robert: In terms of trying to score a film that’s that old…we try our hardest not to let it change what we do. We take each film on its own level and try to be inspired by it. But we deliberately try not to make any attempt to emulate the music of the period. We avoid idioms, we try to avoid period music because it would be silly just trying because we are primarily using electronic instruments. Whenever it’s possible, it’s just us and the film.

The Flushing Remonstrance plays a live score for the Guy Maddin short “Saint, Devil, Woman”, part of his installation art piece Seances.

How has your approach to live scoring films affected your experience while watching film?

Catherine: I think my history with film itself influences it. I did film studies at NYU, then I worked for Millennium Film Archive for a while, which was a really fabulous place on East 4th Street that preserved avant-garde films. Then I was a film editor for about six years. All that to say, I’ve always been very conscious of the sound in films. I orient more to listening for that. Starting with the sound more than I’m seeing picture wise.

Robert: I come to it from a similar place. My background is a lot of audio production for records. Mix and loudness are key factors, and I can’t turn it off. If a score is too busy or feels cliché or gets in the way of the film, I just can’t ignore it.

Are there any films in particular that you would specifically like to live score in the future?

Robert: Absolutely. We luckily have a good long running relationship with Brooklyn Horror Film Festival, and the yearly festival theme guides us on what we’re doing next year. There’s been a lot of enthusiasm in us reviving our accompaniment to F.W. Murnau’s Faust, but this time with a completely different sound. We won’t retain anything from before, we haven’t played it since 2018, so this will be entirely new. It will have a bit of resonance with Häxan we suspect. There’s a Scandinavian film called The Phantom Carriage that has been on my short list as a film I’ve wanted to play for a long, long time.

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We also love working directly with directors. We’ve been very fortunate to work with the filmmaker Guy Maddin, who makes contemporary films that are like silent films. Given our repertoire, we go together very well, and we’re very fortunate to have linked with a living filmmaker. We recently scored two very early Clive Barker films this past summer, one of which has never had a score. We contacted him, and he gave us his blessing. All that said, there’s not a formal list, but we know which films work with how our process and our style work, and we are excited to play them.

Catherine: I always look forward to working with contemporary working filmmakers.  And because of our background in avant-garde film, we’ve also been approached to score contemporary short films, and that’s been fun. There are so many different opportunities we’d like to score for. It’s New York, there’s always stuff happening.

Robert: And if you are a contemporary filmmaker who thinks your film would benefit from the sonic ministrations of a group like ours, get in touch with us!

A big thanks once more to The Flushing Remonstrance, who took the time to talk with us. You can follow their ongoings and adventures in live scoring on Instagram. A special thanks also to Brooklyn Horror Film Festival for connecting us.

And finally, thank you for taking the time to read this. Remember to stay tuned to Horror Press (@horrorpressllc on Twitter and Instagram, @horrorpress.com on Bluesky) for more interviews with creatives in the horror space, and for all news horrors!

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