The Star Malaysia - Star2

Creepy idea worth exploring

Dave Franco makes his directoria­l debut with horror flick The Rental, inspired by old and new films of the same genre.

- By SONAIYA KELLEY

DAVE Franco makes his directoria­l debut with The Rental, an atmospheri­c thriller that aims to subvert the familiar couples-get-away-gone-wrong horror premise.

The film, now showing in cinemas nationwide, stars Sheila Vand, Jeremy Allen White, Alison Brie and Dan Stevens as two couples who rent a remote oceanside cabin together and are stalked by a voyeuristi­c predator.

Franco says he was inspired in making the film as much by horror classics like The Texas Chain Saw Massacre, The Shining and Halloween as he was by the rising class of horror filmmakers including Ari Aster, Jordan Peele, Jennifer Kent, Amy Seimetz and Sean Durkin.

“These are filmmakers who are making projects that take their time to really creep up on you,” he said. “And when they finally do, they land really hard and linger with you long after you watch them.

“I would love to continue down this path and make more films within the horror genre,” said Franco. “I have a pretty strong idea for a sequel to this film if I had the opportunit­y to carry on the story.”

The actor got his start directing short films and skits for the comedy website Funnyordie.com, and he wrote the script for The Rental with indie director Joe Swanberg (Netflix’s Easy), from a story credited to the pair and Mike Demski.

“I’ve wanted to take the leap into directing a feature for a while now but I was a little bit nervous,” Franco said.

“But then I wrote this script and I realised I had such a strong idea for how I wanted to execute it. And then when I was actually on set, I realised I knew a lot more than I thought because I’ve been on so many sets as an actor. I felt like I was able to skip some of those steps, which immediatel­y put me a little bit more at ease.”

The Los Angeles Times caught up with the first-time horror director to discuss subverting well-worn horror tropes and the nexus of his fear about homesharin­g.

The film subverts some wellworn horror tropes. How important was it for you to create a new twist on a familiar story?

We really tried to subvert the genre wherever possible to keep the audience guessing.

In a lot of horror films, there’s a reason for why their cellphones don’t work. We wanted to challenge ourselves and create a scenario where their phones do work and they could call the cops if they wanted, so we created these problems that inhibit them from doing that.

That felt like a somewhat novel approach to the technology side of everything.

I wrote the script with Joe Swanberg and our goal was to create a tense relationsh­ip drama where the interperso­nal issues between the characters were hopefully just as thrilling as the fact that there’s a psycho villain lurking in the shadows.

Even when things start to go off the rails, we never wanted to lose sight of these characters and their relationsh­ips.

Has making this movie soured your feelings toward homesharin­g or had you already been against it?

My levels of paranoia have reached their peak since filming this movie.

Now when I stay in a rental home, I’m not thinking, ‘Are there cameras here?’ I’m more thinking, ‘I know there are cameras here, it’s just about whether or not I find them.’

You will literally find me standing on chairs and using my cellphone flashlight to look in the nooks and crannies of these places.

Have you considered quitting rentals altogether?

Not necessaril­y, and I think that’s partially what I was exploring with the film – that disconnect where we are all aware of the risks of staying in a stranger’s home but we never think anything will actually happen to us.

So we subject ourselves to these scenarios where we’re potentiall­y putting ourselves in harm’s way but we continue to do it out of necessity and convenienc­e.

Have you personally had a weird or creepy home-sharing experience?

I personally haven’t had a nightmare home-sharing experience (but) I have had a terrible hotel experience.

I was staying in a pretty dingy spot while filming a movie and I didn’t want to ask (the studio) to move me to a new hotel ... I was just going to suck it up.

But then one day after they turned down the room, I went to bed and when I woke up, there was a splotch of dried blood right next to my face.

I checked my body and I was not bleeding so I guess that was technicall­y the “new sheet” that they had put on the previous day.

At that point I asked them to move me to a new hotel because I draw the line at (having) a stranger’s dried blood near my face. — Los Angeles Times/tribune News Service

 ??  ?? The Rental director Franco, with his wife, Brie, who stars in the thriller. — TNS
The Rental director Franco, with his wife, Brie, who stars in the thriller. — TNS

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malaysia