“I liken the film to like a great rock song,” Kriv Stenders describes to me about his newest movie, Kill Me Three Times, in a relaxed Australian accent. It sounds exactly like the kind that puts you at ease, like you’re sitting on a beach with a beer in your hand.

“[It’s got a] great kind of opening, a really cool chorus, a great bridge, great guitar solos and a grand finale. So it’s just so much fun when you can work with material that presents itself to you in that musical kind of way.”

Hailing from Australia, Kriv Stenders began his career making dark, arthouse films but rose to prominence with the family film Red Dog in 2011. It was hailed by critics and became a commercial success, ranking in as the eighth highest-grossing Australian film of all time. “I saw [Red Dog] and War Horse within a day of each other, and felt that Red Dog achieved much of what Spielberg’s film was aiming at,” wrote Garry Couzens of The Digital Fix, “with much less sentimentality, anthropomorphism and self-importance, more laughs and with an hour’s less running time.”

With Kill Me Three Times, Stenders’s rock ‘n roll aesthetic is reminiscent of the likes of Guy Ritchie and Edgar Wright, but with his own unique twist that puts you in the seat of a Corvette and stomps on the gas pedal.

In fact, that’s exactly how Kriv approaches movies. “They’re intense, vicarious experiences,” he tells me. “It’s like getting into a sports car and driving really fast somewhere and enjoying the ride.”

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The first thing I want to remark on is the film’s photography. The lush Australian landscapes was breathtaking. What led you to shoot there as opposed to the original Ireland location?

Kriv: The writer is Irish, James MacFarland. I’m Australian, and live in Australia. I’ve pretty much made all my movies there. [laughs] It was purely because, yeah, I’m an Australian filmmaker. WA Screen and Screen West have a very lucrative funding body that gave us a really great big chunk of finance, so that’s why we shot it over there on the western coast of Australia.

I’m freezing right now in New Jersey, so it was just gorgeous to look at.

Kriv: Oh good! [laughs]

Kill Me Three Times was like a sarcastic puzzle. It was like watching a Rubik’s cube get solved by a jokester. As an artist, what was the biggest challenge in bringing this project to life?

Kriv: I think the biggest challenge really was about tone. Balancing the violence and the dramatic elements of the story with this overall, I guess this kind of stream or sort of spine of the humor. And trying to find the right rhythm, and the right kind of way to play the notes. Obviously, a big factor that helped us was casting Simon Pegg as Charlie Wolfe. Once we did that, suddenly this film had a kind of a life, or a heartbeat. It was something I could kind of pin the humor on, and that was Simon and his portrayal of Charlie Wolfe. So it was a challenge in one respect in finding that tone and sticking to it.

The tonal juxtaposition was my favorite part of the film, actually. You termed it as “murder in the sun.”

Kriv: Yeah. A sun-scorched neo-noir thriller.

That’s awesome.

Kriv: [laughs]

That reminds me of Albert Camus’s The Stranger, but Kill Me Three Times is anything but that. This movie is like a riot. 

Kriv: It wasn’t difficult [to maintain the tone], it was more difficult to find it. Once we found it, it was just a lot of fun. My analogy is music. When you make a movie, it’s very much like making a piece of music or a song. You have to find the rhythm, you have to find the notes, everybody has to be in time with each other. So all the performances have to be sort of calibrated to this rhythm, or this kind of harmony. The way you play the notes, how you press down on the lines or the performances.

But once again, once you sort of find that, it’s so much fun. I liken the film to like a great rock song: a great kind of opening, a really cool chorus, a great bridge, great guitar solos and a grand finale. So it’s just so much fun when you can work with material that presents itself to you in that musical kind of way.

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You mention Charlie Wolfe. Out of all the characters, it’s clear that he might be the show-stealer. What went into making that particular character? He’s such a rich character, he could star in his own series.

Kriv: Yeah, that’s the great thing about working with Simon. Because I’m a big believer that comedic actors make great villains. There is a way to cast [them]. There would be the generic way of casting a hitman — a good looking guy, in a suit — but we’ve seen that a thousand times. What I loved about Simon was that it was clearly a role he hadn’t played before, but he was up for it. That juxtaposition of someone who has a following and a fanbase with a certain kind of body of work behind him, to make this step is really exciting.

Again, to me that was kind of the trick of the movie. To make this character someone you wanna be around! Even though he’s the worst guy, the baddest guy in the room! [laughs] He’s almost your favorite! I think that’s just a delightful thing to give an audience.

Beyond Simon, you assembled quite the cast. What was it like working with them? Did they meet or surpass any of your expectations?

Kriv: First of all, they’re lovely people. Each one of them. Really lovely human beings. Just nice to be around. Everyone kind of came on board with the right spirit and saw the film the same way. They understood that it was a cartoon set in a movie world, not in a “real world,” and they enjoyed themselves.

It was each one of them, from Sullivan Stapleton to Teresa Palmer, the legendary Bryan Brown to Callan Mulvey, and to Luke Hemsworth, they all sort of knew their place in the story and embraced it. It was kind of like a, what I call a “great dinner party,” with great conversation. [laughs]

It certainly looked like you had fun making the film, and in beautiful Australia of all places.

Kriv: Yeah we did, but you know every film is challenging. We had a tight schedule, Simon’s schedule meant we had to shoot him out in two weeks. We had to shoot the beginning and the climax in the first week.

Oh, wow.

Kriv: Yeah, that’s kind of a bit of a challenge, you know? But that sort of thing galvanizes you as a filmmaker, it galvanizes the crew, and really keeps you on your toes. Your focus is so much more sharper, and therefore your decision-making is so precise. Every hour, every day is precious and you can’t waste a second of it.

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Your last film was the family film Red Dog, a critical and commercial hit. What was it like to approach Kill Me Three Times after that film? How big was the change in your artistic voice?

Kriv: I love movies. I’m very privileged to be able to make them. And I love all kinds of movies. I guess I’m the type of filmmaker, my ambition [is], to make all kinds of films. I think you learn so much from each film. Hopefully you become better after the journey of each film. So to me, the shift was really fun. Red Dog was a big shift for me then, up to that point I had been making very dark, heavy arthouse films. So Red Dog was a complete left-hand turn from what I’ve done before.

Kill Me Three Times actually wasn’t that much of a shift from what I’ve done before. It was clearly going to be a commercial film, for a wide international audience with an international cast. It was just great kind of fun to do something for an adult audience, that played with violence, that wore its influences on its sleeves, and had its tongue very firmly in its cheek. Once you make those decisions when you read the script and go, “I know how to unlock this” or “I know how to decode this script,” it just becomes so much fun.

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I’m an aspiring filmmaker, and Kill Me Three Times is exactly the kind of movies I hope to make. But what do you see yourself tackling next?

Kriv: Ironically, I’m in preproduction on the sequel to Red Dog. Which has got the working title of Blue Dog right now, so I’m going back to that material and that world. As a filmmaker, that’s just such a wonderful thing to do, to be able go back to a story world or a universe and continue to tell and embellish that story. So that’s my next project. We start shooting in May.

But for me, in time, I just did some television last year. And that was an incredible adventure. I think movies and television are movies. I’m really interested in that development. I think stories now can be told on all kinds of canvases. Television really is just long-form movies. So I find that very exciting, and I hope to continue that strain of work as well.

What are the differences, to you, when it comes to directing television to movies? Do you have any preference?

Kriv: I love movies, they’re digestible. They’re intense, vicarious experiences. It’s like getting into a sports car and driving really fast somewhere and enjoying the ride. Television [meanwhile], is like reading a book or a novel. Putting it down, and pick it back up again, and that’s also so pleasurable. So to me they’re different pleasures, there’s different delights you get out of both mediums.

With television, you can really explore characters. You can basically create characters from the ground up, and I find that really exciting.

I have to agree. The more time to spend exploring characters is quite the advantage. It’s quite the writer’s medium.

Kriv: I also think it’s becoming the director’s medium as well. Audiences now, their standards have been raised, you know? Mad MenTrue DetectiveFargoThe KnickHouse of Cards. To me, cinema has seeped into the television language, the lines have been completely blurred. As a filmmaker, I find it really thinking.

What is Kill Me Three Times ultimately about to you? As both an audience and the artist. Obviously we know what it’s about, but what do you think it has to say with its heart, however dark it may be?

Kriv: [laughs] I don’t think it has any deep social message or moral, I think it’s really just about a bunch of bad people doing terrible things to each other. Hopefully the good guys who are in that struggle find a way out. To me, the film is just a joyride. The key word is joy. It’s having some fun through other people’s misfortunes. [laughs]

So the film is a demonstration of schadenfreude? 

Kriv: Yeah! [laughs] Exactly!

Kill Me Three Times is set for release on April 10, 2015 from Magnet Releasing. It is available now on various VOD platforms.

Briefly: I was a big fan of the weird-as-hell horror anthology The ABCs of Death when it premiered early last year. The film was an entirely original, extremely memorable romp through every letter of the alphabet, and was absolutely chock full of laughs, scares, and WTF moments.

I was extremely excited when Magnet announced that a sequel was in the works, and that 26 new directors would be putting their own unique spin on each letter of the English alphabet. Today, Magnet released the red-band trailer for the film, giving us a phenomenal taste of the horrors we’re in for early next month.

Want to know who’s taking part? Here’s the list of directors this time around:

Alejandro Brugués
Bill Plympton
Chris Nash
Dennison Ramalho
Erik Matti
Evan Katz
Hajime Ohata
Jen and Sylvia Soska
Jerome Sable
Jim Hosking
Juan Martinez Moreno
Julian Barratt
Julian Gilbey
Julien Bustillo and Alexandre Maury
Kristina Buozyte and Bruno Samper
Lancelot Imasuen
Larry Fessenden
Marvin Kren
Robert Boocheck
Robert Morgan
Rodney Ascher
Soichi Umezawa
Steven Kostanski
Todd Rohal
Vincenzo Natali

And here’s the trailer:

The film will be available On Demand on October 2nd, and in theatres October 31st.

ABC’s OF DEATH 2 is the follow-up to the most ambitious anthology film ever conceived with productions spanning from Nigeria to UK to Brazil and everywhere in between. It features segments directed by over two dozen of the world’s leading talents in contemporary genre film. The film is comprised of twenty-six individual chapters, each helmed by a different director assigned a letter of the alphabet. The directors were then given free rein in choosing a word to create a story involving death.

Provocative, shocking, funny and at times confrontational, ABC’s OF DEATH 2 is another global celebration of next generation genre film making.

If you’re a regular around these parts, the title Milo may ring a bell; Jonathan spoke rather highly of the film (among others) on last week’s live episode.

 

Milo premiered at last week’s SXSW, and is an original horror-comedy that blends the gory elements of a classic critter film with the lighthearted comedy of an unlikely friendship. According to the press release, Milo was one of the most talked about films of the festival.

 

Magnet Releasing announced today that they’ve picked up the North American distribution rights to the film, and will be releasing Milo later this year.

 

If you were at the festival and managed to see the film, let us know what you thought! We’ll be keeping you updated on Milo as we learn more!

 

Duncan’s (Ken Marino) life is a real pain in the ass.  Tormented by manipulative, crooked boss (Patrick Warburton), a nagging mother (Mary Kay Place), a deadbeat new age dad (Stephen Root), and a sweet, yet pressuring, wife (Gillian Jacobs), his mounting stress starts to trigger an insufferable gastrointestinal reaction.  Out of ideas and at the end of his rope, Duncan seeks the help of a hypnotherapist (Peter Stormare), who helps him discover the root of his unusual stomach pain: a pintsized demon living in his intestine that, triggered by excessive anxiety, forces its way out and slaughters the people who haveangered him.  Out of fear that his intestinal gremlin may target its wrath on the wrong person, Duncan attempts to befriend it, naming it Milo and indulging it to keep its seemingly insatiable appetite at bay.

 

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I can’t wait to see John Dies at the End. If the trailers that we’ve seen so far (here and here) weren’t enough, the film also made up 1/10th of Jonathan’s venerable ‘Most Enjoyable Movies Of 2012‘ list.

Of course, you’ve seen the movie right? John Dies at the End came out on VOD almost a week ago for those of you that reside in the United States. Sadly, I’m all the way up in the snowy wasteland of Canada, and I was unpleasantly surprised when I learned that I’d have to wait to see the film.

Midnight Alliance has just released a new red band clip for the movie, and it’s not making the wait any easier. The clip features Paul Giamatti and a LOT of swearing. Check it out below!

Those of you that can should check out John Dies at the End as soon as possible (though DON’T pirate it). You wouldn’t want someone to spoil the ending!

Back in October we showed you a green band trailer for Magnet Releasing’s upcoming John Dies at the End. The film immediately jumped to the top of my radar, and I’ve been counting down the days until I could see it ever since. That day is fast approaching. John Dies at the End hits VOD in just 9 days (December 27th), and will make its way into theatres on January 25th.

A new red band trailer has just been released for the film, and it’s even better than the last preview! Check it out below, get excited, and start counting down!

Are you a festival goer who’s already seen the film? Let us know what you think! Just don’t spoil the ending.

In JOHN DIES AT THE END, it’s all about the Soy Sauce, a drug that promises an out-of-body experience with each hit. Users drift across time and dimensions. But some who come back are no longer human. Suddenly a silent otherworldly invasion is underway, and mankind needs a hero. What it gets instead is John (Rob Mayes) and David (Chase Williamson), a pair of college dropouts who can barely hold down jobs. Can these two stop the oncoming horror in time to save humanity? No.No, they can’t.

After a lengthy festival run, us small town folk (and anyone who doesn’t hit festivals) are finally about to experience John Dies At The End. The film will hit VOD in just over a month, and I couldn’t be more excited!

Watch the trailer below, and let us know what you think! This thing looks like it’s going to be something special.

Not sure what the film is about? Have a synopsis:

In JOHN DIES AT THE END, it’s all about the Soy Sauce, a drug that promises an out-of-body experience with each hit. Users drift across time and dimensions. But some who come back are no longer human. Suddenly a silent otherworldly invasion is underway, and mankind needs a hero. What it gets instead is John (Rob Mayes) and David (Chase Williamson), a pair of college dropouts who can barely hold down jobs. Can these two stop the oncoming horror in time to save humanity? No.No, they can’t.