Interviews
[INTERVIEW] Talking ‘Pretty Little Liars: Summer School’ With the Cast and Crew
Recently, I had the wonderful opportunity to watch the first half of Pretty Little Liars: Summer School, the much-anticipated follow-up to Original Sin. I was a huge fan of Original Sin, so when I was offered a spot in the Summer School press junket, I jumped right on that. I had the chance to sit down and chat with Roberto Aguirre-Sacasa, Lindsay Calhoon Bring, and Annabeth Gish for a few minutes. We had a wonderful conversation!
An Interview with Roberto Aguirre-Sacasa, Lindsay Calhoon Bring and Annabeth Gish
Brendan Jesus: Like Original Sin, Summer School is chock full of references and homages, from a very great visual homage to The Exorcist III hallway scene to a passing comment about Randy Meeks and Scream 2. Since you explicitly mentioned Randy, I’m curious if you took any of his ‘sequel’ notes into the writer’s room.
Lindsay Calhoon Bring: You know what, in our writer’s room, if we’re ever taking a break–we had a TV in the writer’s room–one of our favorite things to do was watch a trailer or watch an old horror movie. One of the scenes we pulled up for Tabby was Randy walking everyone through the rules of horror movies. We thought it was so Tabby’s energy. Later in the season, Tabby really is our sort of cross between Dawson and Randy Meeks, she kind of walks us through a list of suspects, who they could be and why, and it definitely is in line, and tone, with that Randy Meeks energy for sure.
BJ: Throughout the first few episodes, it’s clear Imogen has sort of a crisis of character. With as much as you can go into this, did her character mirror the process of creating this season? By that I mean, did you feel like Summer School needed to exist as its own entity? To exist as its own grand idea?
Roberto Aguirre-Sacasa: It’s funny, you’re totally circling something Lindsay and I spent a lot of time talking about before starting the writer’s room. We definitely wanted the second season, the sequel season, to feel different, to have a different theme, vibe, and horror villain. But, we 100% wanted to continue the emotional storylines from Season 1 and to not do a hard reset. We said, whatever stories we’re telling in Season 2, we cannot forget the trauma the girls went through in Season 1. They were terrorized by a guy in a mask with a knife! Specifically that Imogen and Tabby were dealing with the shared trauma of sexual assault. We didn’t want to say, “They’re all good, fresh start.” The secret thematic story of Season 2 was these girls working through their traumas. We wanted to give them someone to talk to, so who better than Dr. Sullivan from the OG Pretty Little Liars? It was finding that balance of new story, new villain, new franchise, but keeping that emotional and thematic continuity from Season 1, which we loved doing! We loved the challenge of that.
BJ: When it comes to creating projects, reality will always differ from expectation. For the three of you, what do you think will scare audiences most? For me, I’ve already had some nightmares about the masks.
Annabeth Gish: That mask did a number on me, I’ll say. When I had to shoot that scene, and it was in that sort of floating head form, it was terrifying! And I’ve been around some horror sets. That one crept into my dreamscape as well.
Lindsay Calhoon Bring: A classic for me in horror, and we’re all such huge horror fans. It’s my sort of anxiety dream, which circles Imogen, right? We know she’s struggling with her mental health, and our villain is preying on that. But a constant anxiety dream for me is being chased. And I think there’s nothing better in a horror movie, especially a summer horror movie, than to have an epic terrifying chase. I think we deliver on that really amazingly in Episode 5 with Maia Reficco’s barefoot chase in the woods. That really turned out amazing and is pretty pulse-pounding. I hope that it will scare people!
Roberto Aguirre-Sacasa: To your point, and what we mentioned a little bit when we were coming up with Bloody Rose, and knowing this was sequel season, we were inspired by horror movie sequels. One of them, that really inspired the look of Bloody Rose, was the character of Julia Cotton in Hellraiser II. No skin on her face, in a blue diaphanous evening gown, wafting through a hellscape. There’s something about someone who’s had their face skin, with their face wrapped and covered in blood with a crown of thorns–that felt very apocalyptic and primal. That idea, the mother as a primal destructive force, is wrathful and terrifying.
Annabeth Gish: And pagan, almost!
A big thanks to Roberto Aguirre-Sacasa, Lindsay Calhoon Bring, and Annabeth Gish for taking the time to chat with me, and if you don’t have Summer School on your radar, go binge the first season on Max! You won’t want to miss this season.
Film Fests
Cabane à Sang 2026: Inside Montreal’s Wildest Trash Horror Film Festival
“I promise, no one’s leaving here smarter tonight,” laughs Frank from the stage as he kicks off Cabane à Sang for its 9th annual trash horror film festival. The programming delivers an eclectic mix of gory, comedic, and bizarre short films from around the globe to a dedicated audience of enthusiastic fans.
What Is Cabane à Sang? A Quebec-Born Underground Horror Festival
Cabane à Sang (which translated to English means “Blood shack”, a play on the Quebecois termphrase cabane à sucre / sugar shack) is a homegrown festival based in Hochelaga, a densely populated working class neighborhood on the east side of Montreal, Québec. For $18 (CA$), you can enjoy hours of meticulously curated madness. A can of local microbrew is $6, a can of soda is $2, and you are guaranteed to see some shit you’ve never seen before in your life.
“We want everyone to be able to come to the fest. Shows for $18 don’t really exist anymore,” insisted organizer Marc-Antoine in a franglais conversation between him, myself and Frank before Saturday’s “Keep It Weird” show (note: some quotes have been translated to English). Frank tells me about the festival’s early days as a road show. “It was a total fucking flop!” he laughs, but the branding was strong, so after taking a year off to regroup, the 2nd edition had people lining up early to attend, surprising even the organizers.

Photo Courtesy of Cabane à Sang
How Cabane à Sang Adapted During COVID and Found a Permanent Home
The pandemic forced the team to adapt again (Quebecers faced some of the harshest COVID restrictions in North America), and they ended up live streaming a jerry-rigged MTV-style projection screen to show the films while audiences participated in the chat. After moving around to a few locations and struggling with a host of technical difficulties, they landed at Productions Jeun’Est, an old church that’s since been turned into an event space. “This year is really next level,” says Marc-Antoine. “We need to highlight the tech crew here, who are just hallucinant (incredible),” as well as the venue, he continued, who’ve “really welcomed us and helped us out.”
This year’s edition features 5 evenings of madness spread out over two weekends. The first weekend hosted the events SCIF’HIGH (promising the “best and worst” of science fiction), RE-Animation (exploring a “wide range of animation styles”), and their signature event, Keep It Weird (a mix of “proudly off-putting short films”). The second weekend will feature Mixed Meats (an “unhinged mix of every corner of horror”) and their infamous 200$ or less film competition – the Party Pooper Spectacular (this year, the theme is Pizza Horror). A $20 virtual pass to the whole fest is available online for those with the misfortune of missing the in person experience.
Why Filmmakers and Fans Take This “Trash” Horror Festival Seriously
Despite the goofy themes, the team of ten-ish organizers take their roles seriously, and are thrilled to have landed in a venue that can give the films the respect they deserve. “Our setup is a bit punk, but I just think about the filmmakers,” insists Marc Antoine. “They put in so much work, it’s normal that we do them justice with a good screening.” Frank echoes this sentiment. “Some stuff [we get] is not necessarily gory or cheap or whatever. They’re just, like, oddities, and they deserve to be seen, you know? And tonight we’re going to see some of them!”
People are already showing up when I arrive an hour early to Saturday’s show (unheard of in a city like Montreal, where showing up 45 min after doors open is the norm). The vibes stay immaculate, thanks to the team’s guiding motto: Don’t be an asshole. “Like legit, this is our only fucking rule here,” laughs Frank, and it applies to everyone, including the filmmakers. “I think we all love this project because it allows us to showcase stuff that we personally like and that we don’t see anywhere else,” says Marc-Antoine.

‘Dom’s Spaghetti’ Courtesy of Cabane à Sang
Weird, Gross, and Brilliant: Inside Cabane à Sang’s Most Bizarre Short Films
True to their words, the evening’s programming features some truly mind bending films, grouped together under ‘themes’ like ‘films that feature bread’ or ‘films that start with the letter D’. For every serious film about war or depression, there are five that are totally absurd. (Frank assures me that they’ve got “plenty of movies with dicks and poop and stuff like that!”) There’s the lesbian eldritch love story inspired by The Thing (The Fling), and there’s a meat-witch orgy movie (Plant Mom). One film is simply about a haunted bidet (Bidet), another features every cinematic iteration of Vin Diesel (Dom’s Spaghetti). Then there’s the mixed media movie Dog Shit, described perfectly as “parfum de caca, marteau dans les couilles” (I’ll leave you all to translate that one yourselves).
As the evening wraps up, Frank reminds the audience to return the following week, before yelling “Shout out bébé Jésus!” to enthusiastic applause, given that we are all sitting in a church. “Over the years, people have come from all over, from Abitibi, from the US,” Marc-Antoine tells me. “Ya, they fly in!!” adds Frank, “we don’t have the money to fucking pay for their flights!” Marc-Antoine continues, saying, “that shows that this really connects with people, locally, yes, but people all over are moved by what we’re doing. We’re going up against some big machines, some big productions, but we’re able to connect with people all the same.”
Cabane à Sang Proves That Micro-Budget Horror is More Important Than Ever
“People are fed up also, and I don’t want to get into the whole fucking AI thing,” Frank adds, “but I think a lot of people are irritated about it. We’re sitting in a great position right now.” When talking about the upcoming film competition on May 9th, I learned that they’ve got 22 unique micro budget works lined up, with an additional slate of films that will soon be on their streaming site, Caban à Sang TV. “AI cannot fucking make this shit up,” Frank says. “This is honest, this is real.”
Interviews
[INTERVIEW] Alice Maio Mackay Talks ‘The Serpent’s Skin’
If you’re having a conversation about contemporary queer horror and the other person hasn’t heard of Alice Maio Mackay, it’s time to stop talking, sit them down, and introduce them to one of the most interesting filmmakers operating in the space right now. At just 21, this Aussie powerhouse has a staggering six feature films under her belt, including the goopy T-Blockers (2023) and holiday horror Carnage for Christmas (2024). Her most recent, The Serpent’s Skin (read our review here), just hit VOD platforms following a successful festival run and limited theatrical release, delivering a soft, sensual sapphic love story—and a snake demon unleashed via a tattoo.
To celebrate the film’s release, I connected with Mackay to learn more about her influences, the collaborations that brought The Serpent’s Skin to life, and her advice for other queer storytellers. The following interview has been lightly edited for conciseness (aka removing the parts where I gushed over one of my favorite filmmakers).
Alice Maio Mackay on Queer Joy, Magnetic Chemistry, and a Touch of Horror Wish Fulfilment
Samantha McLaren: All your films center on queer and trans characters, but this one more than any other radiates with queer joy and euphoria. I’m curious if that was a conscious decision going into The Serpent’s Skin—to center that while still acknowledging trauma.
Alice Maio Mackay: Yeah, I think the way that I wanted to portray trauma was very different in this one. The trauma that both queer people go through is kind of like trauma bonding, bringing them together. It’s more of like past issues, whereas in my previous films, it’s very much been political, a bit angry, like these characters are dealing with bigotry on a daily basis. In this film, I’m not ignoring the issues that trans people face, but it’s more brief and lighter, and that’s not the focus of the film. I really wanted to show that trans people can love, and their love is magic in a sense.
SM: I wanted to talk about the tattoo in the film, because tattoos are such a big part of queer culture. Where did the idea of a tattoo gone wrong come from?
AMM: There’s a couple of different places. I really wanted to, especially with Danny, evoke 2000s gamer culture. That was always a big part, because I wanted to explore how those men who seem performatively woke can be toxic under the surface. Also, I grew up watching and reading The Mortal Instruments and things like that, where tattoos play a big part. And as you mentioned, tattoos are in the queer culture quite a bit. So it’s just a combination of all these things and I thought it was the perfect plot device as well.
SM: This movie centers on a psychic powers narrative, and I think for a lot of queer people, that’s a very wish fulfillment genre of horror. I’d love to hear about your own relationship with it and the influences it had on The Serpent’s Skin.
AMM: I loved Carrie growing up, albeit the remake with Chloë Grace Moretz, which is not a popular opinion. That came out when I was a child, and I read the book as well and really fell in love with that. Anything, as a queer kid, relating to the other and seeing people get their comeuppance, albeit in messed-up ways, is interesting.
And then Charmed was a really big part of my childhood, and Buffy [the Vampire Slayer], which both incorporate witchiness into everyday adolescent issues. The blend of those things has always been very interesting to me as a filmmaker because I feel like those shows weren’t trying to be necessarily scary or have horror at the forefront. It was more about the three women, or the Scooby Gang, and then the horror was propelling the story forward, but it was focused on character development, and their personal lives, which I was drawn to.
SM: Let’s talk about your characters, because the chemistry between the actors feels so sweet and natural. What was the casting process like for The Serpent’s Skin, and how did you work with Alexandra [McVicker] and Avalon [Fast] to build that chemistry?
AMM: So Alex, I was a fan of her work. I’d seen her in Vice Principals [2017] and some other stuff she’d done, and she was just a friend of a friend who I’d kind of got to know. And then Avalon, I was a fan of their work and thought they’re really cool. They said they wanted to get into acting, and the timing just worked out perfectly when they sent me a self tape.
I felt like I was really lucky with the chemistry because we didn’t have a lot of pre-production time. There were a few meetings with the intimacy coordinator before, but I think everyone got here like two days before we started shooting, and Alex got here the night before, so I don’t think they had met in person up until their first scene. The chemistry was just really natural—from the moment they had their first Zoom, it was electric. I think that’s a testament to their willingness to commit to the roles, and their talent.
SM: Such a big part of the sensuality in the film comes from the score, which is so dreamy. When you were working with the composers, what guidance did you give them around what you wanted The Serpent’s Skin to feel like?
AMM: I’ve been working with Alexander Taylor for a while. He brought a co-composer on for this one as well. And I love having a lot of types of music when we’re editing—we have a lot of different ideas about what we want it to sound like sonically, inspiration-wise. We’ve been working together for a really long time, so he kind of just knows what would click. And working with Vera [Drew] as well as an editor, she’s big into temp music, so all three of us were into shaping the score and the movement as early as possible, and then you take it from there.
SM: You mentioned working with Vera Drew of The People’s Joker. This is the second time she’s edited one of your films. How did that relationship come about, and what kind of energy did she bring to your films when she came on board?
AMM: It’s always been really special working with Vera because I looked up to her, and then she was a friend, and getting to work with a friend is always really special. I’ve said this a couple of times, but I think we’re very similar and really inspired by a lot of the same things. She very much understands my reference pool and the world that I want to create. So rather than having a stock edit from the footage, she would be like “oh, this is how you shot it—this is the order?”
She understands my vision, but crafts the footage through her own mind. Especially with the montages and overlays, she’s creating like other-wordly dream sequences through the footage we created, which is kind of like adding to my vision in a separate way I wouldn’t have maybe thought of from the get-go. It’s been a really valuable experience.
Unpacking the Challenges and Triumphs of Getting Queer Horror Made
SM: One thing I love about your films is that they’re so specific to the queer community, yet so accessible. There’s no need to over-explain things. Does that come naturally to you or are you thinking about a straight cis audience at all when you’re writing?
AMM: Maybe this is a bad thing to say, but I never think about an audience in general—especially with these films where there’s pretty much no money involved and you’re shooting in 12 days. I care about the story so much, and at the end of the day, I’m fighting so hard to even get these movies made, so I’m making the story and the vision that everyone on set wants to make.
I feel very lucky that people have been interested in these films. When I started, I never thought people would want to watch them, let alone come back for a few more. It’s a weird thing where it’s so hard to make these films that I just make them for myself, and that’s kind of it, and people seemingly want to see that, which is really nice.
SM: You started making films when you were very young, and you now have six features under your belt. How do you feel you’ve grown as a filmmaker?
AMM: I mean, I was like 14 when I made my first proper short film and 16 when I shot So Vam, so it has been a little while. I feel I’ve definitely become more confident and assured, just trusting people and collaborating, and not letting people speak over me—I know what I want artistically now. Maybe on So Vam, I wouldn’t nitpick or be as specific as I am now.
Working with Aaron [Schuppan, cinematographer] and Astra [Vadoulis, first camera assistant] since day one, almost, we’ve kind of grown up together and that’s been really special. We kind of have a hive mind now and can communicate in our own different ways. It’s been really beautiful and special.
SM: All your films are a little DIY, and I mean that as a compliment—it’s clear you’re getting out and making the things you want to make. But in an ideal world, if you had all the resources and time you wanted, what is your dream project?
AMM: I’m actually writing it at the moment. I hopefully will get it made at some point. The scope is grander; it’s a bit of a period piece, a little bit set in the 70s, a little bit in the future. It’s just this epic melodrama horror-romance about being doomed… We’ll see what happens.
SM: Fingers crossed, because I want to see that. If you had one piece of advice for other queer people who want to break into the film industry but are not sure where to get started, what would you say to them?
AMM: Corny as it sounds, start to tell a story that is accessible to you at the moment. It’s hard for people in general to break into the film industry, let alone queer people, and there’s no one way to do it. So just write that story, start making things with your friends, and then build up from there. That’s how I managed to start things.
The Serpent’s Skin is now available to watch on demand.



