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Tag: Osgood Perkins

  • Seemingly Every Horror Filmmaker in Hollywood Agrees: ‘Keeper’ Looks Creepy AF

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    We’re just over one week away from Keeper hitting theaters, meaning the latest from Osgood Perkins can finally stop with the freaky, enigmatic marketing campaign and fully reveal itself to the world. However, there’s still time for one last trailer—filled with even more quotes from Perkins’ horror peers (and a few repeats from the last trailer), agreeing that this movie is going to blow your socks off.

    However, and this is key, Keeper proves it’s fully aware of the “show me, don’t tell me” rule of filmmaking and throws down with some genuinely unsettling creature imagery to go with the praise from Bong Joon Ho, Fede Alvarez, Damien Leone, Guillermo del Toro, and others. (Video game titan Hideo Kojima calls Perkins “the wizard of horror.”) There are also some fresh looks at Tatiana Maslany’s character having a meltdown reminiscent of Wendy Torrance in The Shining.

    Can you blame her, with all those drooling monsters roaming around? Oh, and it looks like Keeper has a fun new tagline too: “Hell awaits.”

    While we still have very little idea of what Keeper‘s story is about, beyond it being a relationship drama that spirals into something supernaturally nightmarish, we feel very confident about the vibes: it’s gonna be an icky, nerve-jangling ride, possibly even more hysterical than Perkins’ The Monkey and more visceral than his Longlegs.

    Will you be checking out Keeper when it arrives next week?

    Want more io9 news? Check out when to expect the latest Marvel, Star Wars, and Star Trek releases, what’s next for the DC Universe on film and TV, and everything you need to know about the future of Doctor Who.

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    Cheryl Eddy

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  • Can You Survive This Mind-Mangling Osgood Perkins Triple-Feature?

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    The day before Keeper, Osgood Perkins‘ latest film—”a dark trip,” according to its marketing—hits theaters, fans can get an early glimpse as part of a triple feature highlighting Perkins’ dark trips from the past. Can your brain and sanity survive watching Longlegs, The Monkey, and Keeper in one sitting (and for just one ticket price)? Neon invites you to try.

    The screenings will take place November 13; you can check here to see if a theater near you is participating, as well as find showtimes and ticket info.

    Let’s break down what you’ll be getting yourself into. Longlegs stars Maika Monroe as a young FBI agent who’s brought in to assist on a perplexing case involving a gruesome serial killer played by Nicolas Cage. As we soon learn, she’s no ordinary agent, and he’s no ordinary killer—and there are all manner of oddities involved, including some truly distressing dolls.

    Another doll, of sorts, anchors The Monkey, which is based on the Stephen King tale about a hideous toy that causes chaos—specifically for a family that includes twin brothers (Theo James in a dual role) who grow up on different but equally dysfunctional paths as a result. It’s also a horror comedy, in contrast to the more somber Longlegs, and features some of the most hilarious yet agonizing death scenes in recent memory.

    And then: Keeper. What the hell is Keeper about? We know it’s a relationship drama with supernatural elements, but not much else; it stars The Monkey‘s Tatiana Maslany alongside Rossif Sutherland. Presumably, it will also follow the grand Perkins tradition of making you want to shriek and cover your eyes multiple times while watching.

    If you just want to catch it as a standalone, Keeper hits theaters November 14.

    Want more io9 news? Check out when to expect the latest Marvel, Star Wars, and Star Trek releases, what’s next for the DC Universe on film and TV, and everything you need to know about the future of Doctor Who.

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    Cheryl Eddy

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  • Osgood Perkins’ Mysterious ‘Keeper’ Is About the ‘Horror of Heterosexuality’

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    If there’s one thing Osgood Perkins fans can count on, it’s that you never know what to expect from his films. Longlegs had a deliberately and persistently mystifying ad campaign—then, when it hit theaters, it proved to be a serial-killer tale that then mutated into something far stranger. The Monkey was a Stephen King adaptation—but only to a point, with Perkins’ script adding layers of gore and weirdness as the titular cursed object crossed generations. His next film, Keeper, is similarly enigmatic, though we now have a slightly better idea of what it’s about.

    So far, what we’ve seen of Keeper are posters and a couple of trailers, one of which is anchored by praise from Guillermo del Toro and other horror titans. Today, Entertainment Weekly has some insights from Perkins and star Tatiana Maslany, though they are vague and guarded while talking about the movie. Of course.

    “I’d always liked the idea of doing a relationship horror movie, so a horror movie where the relationship is the scary thing,” Perkins told EW.

    The central relationship in Keeper is between Liz, played by Maslany, and Malcolm, played by Rossif Sutherland.

    “It’s these hot-button topics like toxic masculinity or the patriarchy. You try to give it a shape in the way that horror passes through these eras where the monster is merely the shape of some bigger issue,” Perkins added.

    For Maslany, “It’s like the lies that we tell ourselves about ourselves and about our partners in order to stay there. I don’t know how to word this without giving anything away, but the trap of the roles that we fall into and heterosexual expectations, I would say … Yeah, the horror of heterosexuality.” (The EW article noted she was laughing as she said that last part.)

    One other nugget that emerges from the piece is that Keeper is definitely supernatural, with The Shining specifically noted as a reference point—interesting, but also bewildering. Sounds just like the right frame of mind to be in while sitting down to watch a Perkins movie.

    Keeper opens in theaters November 14.

    Want more io9 news? Check out when to expect the latest Marvel, Star Wars, and Star Trek releases, what’s next for the DC Universe on film and TV, and everything you need to know about the future of Doctor Who.

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    Cheryl Eddy

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  • ‘Keeper’ Continues Its Relentlessly Enigmatic Marketing Campaign

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    Osgood Perkins’ latest horror movie drops a new trailer filled with praise from Guillermo del Toro and other genre heavy-hitters.

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    Cheryl Eddy

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  • Lola Tung, Nico Parker to Star in Osgood Perkins’ ‘The Young People’

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    Osgood Perkins is set to direct The Young People for Neon, with Lola Tung and Nico Parker starring.

    The film’s plot is being kept under wraps, with production set for this fall in Vancouver. Neon will release the film theatrically in the U.S. and start shopping the project to international buyers at the Toronto Film Festival.

    Tung has credits that include Season 3 of The Summer I Turned Pretty, and she just wrapped production on the upcoming horror feature Forbidden Fruits, directed by Meredith Alloway. Parker starred in Universal’s How To Train Your Dragon live-action remake, Maude Apatow’s directorial debut Poetic License, and the HBO series The Last Of Us.

    The Young People is the first film as part of a first-look deal between Neon and Perkins, who will direct the film based on a script he wrote. Neon is co-financing the project with Lyrical Media, with Perkins is producing along with Chris Ferguson and Brian Kavanaugh-Jones.

    As part of the first look deal, Perkins launched a new banner called Phobos, which he runs with Ferguson. Neon serves as the home for Perkins’ projects, which he and Ferguson will produce. It will also allow Perkins and Ferguson to produce other filmmakers’ movies for Neon, which will release the projects theatrically in the U.S. and represent international rights.

    Neon and Perkins first partnered together in 2024 on the indie Longlegs, which grossed $75 million in domestic box office. They also worked together on Monkey. Perkins and Neon are also behind the filmmaker’s next film, Keeper, ahead of a Nov. 14 release.

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    Etan Vlessing

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  • “Daddy! Mommy! Save Me From the Hell of Living!”: Longlegs

    “Daddy! Mommy! Save Me From the Hell of Living!”: Longlegs

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    As the 90s seem to be taking hold of the box office this summer (with Twister also reanimating as Twisters), it’s only right that someone should take a stab at what amounts to an updated version of The Silence of the Lambs and Seven. That person is none other than the son of Anthony “Norman Bates” Perkins himself, Osgood Perkins (formerly known as “Oz”). And yes, being a child of such a particular kind of actor has undoubtedly influenced Perkins’ overall “spooky” bent in terms of generally opting to make creepy films (some of his previous ones include The Blackcoat’s Daughter, The Girl in the Photographs, I Am the Pretty Thing That Lives in the House and, more commercially, Gretel & Hansel). That in addition to playing “Young Norman Bates” in 1983’s Psycho II. But, obviously, more than anything, the lives and deaths of Perkins’ parents would be enough to inspire him to pursue this genre.

    It was already bad enough that Anthony, his long-closeted father (though, of course, it was an open secret in Hollywood), died of AIDS in 1992 (along with Robert Reed a.k.a. “Mr. Brady”), but then, nine years later, his mother, model/actress Berry Berenson, died in one of the planes that was hijacked and crashed into the World Trade Center. Really, shit doesn’t get more horrific than that in terms of parent-related trauma and loss. Which is exactly why one of the most standout lines from Longlegs is: “Daddy! Mommy! Save me from the hell of living!” This delivered hauntingly and, it goes without saying, memorably by Nicolas Cage in the titular satanic killer role.

    As for the nickname, well, it pertains to “Longlegs” approaching children with a life-size replica doll of themselves and, instead of bending down to meet them at their eye level, saying, “It seems I wore my long legs today.” The “jovial” saying usually directed at children (especially in a pre-twenty-first century era) is, thus, turned on its ear (or leg)—rendered bone-chilling in a way that one never thought possible, and all done so simply, too.

    Indeed, “simplicity” is the keyword for this film. As Perkins put it to The Wrap, in terms of conceptualization, “The basic step is to pick something that’s true. Write to a theme that’s a true theme for me. In the case of this, that true theme was, it’s possible for parents to lie to their children and tell them stories. It’s very basic and easily understandable. If you want to start building projects that way, it should be simple.” What builds out of that simplicity is a haunting, unforgettable story centered on a young FBI agent named Lee Harker (Maika Monroe, who, like Perkins, is also known for making mainly horror movies). Tasked with tracking an untrackable killer in the already ominous setting of the Pacific Northwest (rendering the supplemental Twin Peaks nod complete), Harker falls as far down the rabbit hole as Clarice Starling ever did. And, among one of her more unique skills (besides being what Karen [Amanda Seyfried] from Mean Girls would call “kind of psychic” and having a “fifth sense”), Harker is extremely well-versed in the Bible. A knowledgeability that leads her to decode Longlegs’ formerly undecodable letters to the police. Accordingly, Agent Carter (Blair Underwood), Lee’s superior, is starting to understand why he enlisted her to take on this case.

    Alas, the case quickly starts to take her on instead, permeating Lee’s entire life until it leads her down the path of having to question her mother, Ruth (Alicia Witt, who, incidentally was in Twin Peaks: The Return), about Longlegs’ appearance in Lee’s childhood decades prior, at a time when Marc Bolan and T. Rex would have been all the rage. As far as Longlegs is concerned though, T. Rex remains “king” in his world (well, apart from Satan) as he constantly belts out chilling ditties of his own in the style of Bolan. This, of course, was already foreshadowed by the opening title card featuring the “Get It On (Bang A Gong)” quote, “Well you’re slim and you’re weak/You’ve got the teeth of a hydra upon you/You’re dirty, sweet and you’re my girl.” “His girl,” unfortunately, extends to many children who grow up not fully aware that they’re under his spell (in this sense, there’s more than a touch of Charles Manson [no stranger to satanism and the occult] to the Longlegs character). Chief among them being Carrie Ann Camera (Kiernan Shipka, who also starred in Perkins’ The Blackcoat’s Daughter), the sole survivor of one of Longlegs’ killings, which always follow the pattern of infiltrating a family’s home and miraculously getting the father to slaughter his wife and children, with no signs of outside force anywhere.

    With Lee’s gift for what some might call “supernatural” intuition (though not quite to the extent of Phoebe Halliwell’s [Alyssa Milano] premonitory abilities in Charmed), Perkins adds another element into his elixir of ideas that are often incorporated into different sub-genres of thriller/horror films. As he described, “This movie is very pop. And it starts with reproducing Silence of the Lambs. If it’s pop art, then you want to adhere to certain indicators. And so the nineties became an easy indicator that we were in the realm of Silence of the Lambs and Seven. We were wanting to sit alongside the good ones and invite the audience into a safe space.” Of course, what’s also important about the nineties as the film’s backdrop is that it makes it much more difficult for law enforcement to track a killer without the modern technology of today. And yes, even the Longlegs of 2024 would be forced to have a phone, freakshow or not.

    But no matter what decade Longlegs existed/came of age in, he seems the type that was doomed to be a failure. And it is precisely that failure that turns him toward darkness, toward channeling his “talents” toward killing. Like the aforementioned Manson, Longlegs might not have become a satanic serial killer if his music career had taken off. As Perkins speculated, “Longlegs probably wanted to be a guitar player in a glam rock band called Longlegs. One day, the Devil started sounding through his headphones and through his records in the Judas Priest sense.”

    More than being a movie about a devil/glam rock-worshiping serial killer that targets children as the weak link for entry (a.k.a. possession), it is a movie that speaks to the ways in which parents lie to their children from an early age. All under the pretense of “protecting” them, of course (even from music like the kind T. Rex made)—but, in the end, that protection usually turns out to be a disservice. Especially as the child, in their “grown-up” years has to learn how to actually grow up after being insulated from harsh reality for too long. Again, Perkins knows all about this, better than most people, in fact. To that point, he would also state of this particular theme in the film, “It’s a bad world, and when Ruth finally comes out with her truth and tells the story, it makes me think about my own parents. That resonates as the most dynamic section of the movie; the revelation.” No biblical pun intended…probably.

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    Genna Rivieccio

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  • Nicholas Cage Made Longlegs a “Deeply Personal” Role

    Nicholas Cage Made Longlegs a “Deeply Personal” Role

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    Say what you will about Nicholas Cage, he always goes for it in whatever movie he’s in. The newly released Longlegs has kept him out of the movie’s marketing in a direct capacity, but slivers of footage and pre-release hype about his reportedly freaky look have drawn a lot of attention. And in playing the titular serial killer targeting families, Cage used parts of his own family history to inform his performance.

    Talking to Entertainment Weekly, Cage recalled a moment from his childhood where he saw his mother Joy Vogelsang putting on Noxzema cold cream. Being two at the time, he remembers seeing her “turn her face really fast and stared at me after [putting on] the cold cream. The whiteness of [it] just really spooked me.” In the film, Longlegs has a ghastly white complexion similar to that moment with Cage’s mother, but without a clear motive. The actor doesn’t have a specific reason as for why his character is so white, but noted the “strange connection” between killer and color. “He says it’s just a force he’s aware of, and you don’t question it too much,” Cage notes. “He knows it when he sees it.”

    Performance-wise, Cage previously called this a “deeply personal” role owing to his mother’s schizophrenia throughout her life. In June, he told EW about how she’d talk in poetic terms, something he also brought into Longlegs. To Cage, the character is a tragic figure because he’s “at the mercy of these voices talking to him.” Ahead of shooting in early 2023, he’d record his performance on his phone to nail the character’s “rhythms and melodies. […] By the time I got on set, it was so dialed in and became almost like performing a song or a bit of music.”

    Cage’s interview also contains Longlegs spoilers, so if you haven’t seen the film yet, don’t go past the banner below.

    In the film’s climax, Maika Monroe’s Harker finally comes face-to-face with Longlegs, who’s been giving dolls possessed with Satanic energy to families of girls born on specific days. It’s eventually revealed that he’d targeted her as a young girl, but was spared thanks to her mother’s intervention. The meeting where they “reunite,” and Longlegs’ suicide in front of her, is why Cage joined the film in the first place. The two actors didn’t socialize prior to that point–a move he believes was intentional from director Osgood Perkins–and he’d been really looking forward to the “explosive” encounter between their characters.

    Turns out, the scene has a meta layer added onto it. Cage professed to being a fan of Monroe and her horror chops in films like It Follows and Watcher. Like with some audiences, It Follows was his first time seeing her, and he called the film “one of my favorites in the genre.” Cheekily, he also drew parallels between the adoration for his costar and Longlegs’ years-long obsession with Harker, calling her “a hero of sorts” his character finally had the pleasure of meeting.

    Before that point, the movie goes out of its way to not shoot Longlegs directly. Instead, he’s glimpsed through different angles or reflections. Perkins explained it as showing how the killer left such an impression on Harker as a child, even as she supressed that memory. He’s there, in a sense, said Perkins, but he’s “totally not there, but [also] totally there.”

    From the pre-release buzz, Cage is delivering a pretty unnerving (complimentary!) performance in Longlegs that’s enough to get folks to see it in droves. After seeing him do so many roles over the decades, it’s nice to know that he can find new ways to freak people the hell out.


    Want more io9 news? Check out when to expect the latest MarvelStar Wars, and Star Trek releases, what’s next for the DC Universe on film and TV, and everything you need to know about the future of Doctor Who.

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    Justin Carter

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  • ‘Longlegs’ Will Leave You Terrified

    ‘Longlegs’ Will Leave You Terrified

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    Scary moves are a dime a dozen. I think we have had a new horror movie at least once a month this year. So when a film really stands out in the genre, you take notice. And that film is Longlegs.

    Osgood Perkins’ Longlegs is an eerie story about Agent Lee Harker (Maika Monroe) investigating a string of murders for the FBI. Longlegs (Nicolas Cage) is a man who uses the occult to seek out his victims and as Lee begins to discover that she has her own connection to him, we see a story unfold of a woman trying desperately to stop a killer while he is almost taunting her.

    I watched this movie both on the edge of my seat and hidden behind my fingers. I was so captivated by what Perkins had created but at the same time, I felt like my skin was crawling every time Cage was on screen. Lee is often standing in a room with dark hallways or corners and I found myself yelling at her to turn on a light.

    Agent Carter (Blair Underwood) is the beam of light in that darkness. He cares for Lee, invites her into his home, and wants to solve the case with her. Lee is determined, odd, and someone who separates her feelings from what she is working on. Their dynamic is a fascinating thing to see play out on screen.

    Because Lee is a female FBI agent trying to stop a killer, the comparisons to The Silence of the Lambs write themselves. But Longlegs’ eerie energy isn’t because of what you know Longlegs can do but instead because you don’t know why.

    A frightening feat

    It isn’t easy to scare an audience anymore and I found myself just terrified. There were so many moments within Perkins’ Longlegs that had me wondering what was going to come next. Whenever I felt “safe” for a moment, I knew that it wouldn’t last and it left me so unnerved that I haven’t stopped thinking about Longlegs. You never quite know where it is going, you’re on edge the entire time, and the end of the movie resolves and doesn’t necessarily give you the release that you want and that makes it all work together.

    Monroe plays Lee’s detachment with such a cold yet sincere approach that I couldn’t help but be captivated by her. Whenever Lee was too involved in the case and not about the people around her, I knew it wouldn’t work out but I still was invested.

    This might be one of my favorite horror movies of all time and you need to see Longlegs as soon as possible.


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    Rachel Leishman

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  • Longlegs Director Explains the ‘Privilege’ of Working With Nicolas Cage

    Longlegs Director Explains the ‘Privilege’ of Working With Nicolas Cage

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    Nicolas Cage is ready to fuel your nightmares with his performance in Longlegs. Cage plays the titular serial killer behind a string of Satanic killings. Cage has always been a fearless performer, willing to do whatever it takes to give a memorable performance. Longlegs director Osgood Perkins raved about Cage’s performance and intense commitment to the craft.

    “He’s everything that you want him to be, I’m so happy to report. It’s like you’ve come down on Christmas morning and there’s a Nicolas Cage-shaped package under your Christmas tree,” Perkins told GamesRadar+ and Inside Total Film. “You open it up and he just starts going? He’s intensely prepared. He has read everything. He’s seen every movie that you could ever want to reference. He knows everybody’s name. He knows every performance, he can quote every song. He likes all the same things you do. He’s in complete control of his instrument. He’s just on it. It was a privilege. What can I say?”

    What’s the secret to directing a unique actor like Cage? For Perkins, it was important to allow the Oscar winner to do Cage-like things before stepping in to make adjustments.

    “It’s like having a racehorse in your movie. It’s like, ‘Well, I guess it’s just gonna do its thing, and I’ll just stand by and make sure that nothing goes too far one way or doesn’t go far enough another way,’” Perkins explained. “I mean, I can’t imagine directing Nicolas Cage with a strong hand; it’s a very gentle touch. You’re just positioning little things here and there, every once in a while. He’s like a cello or a harp, or a saxophone.”

    Who Stars Alongside Nicolas Cage in Longlegs?

    The official synopsis for Longlegs reads: “In pursuit of a serial killer, an FBI agent uncovers a series of occult clues that she must solve to end his terrifying killing spree.”

    Maika Monroe stars as Lee Harker, the FBI agent tasked with finding Cage’s Longlegs. The rest of the ensemble includes Blair Underwood, Alicia Witt, Michelle Choi-Lee, Dakota Daulby, and Kiernan Shipka.

    Perkins writes and directs Longlegs. Producers include Cage, Dan Kagan, Brian Kavanaugh-Jones, Dave Caplan, and Chris Ferguson. Neon will handle distribution of the film in the United States.

    Longlegs heads to theaters on July 12, 2024.

    (Source: GamesRadar+ and Inside Total Film)

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    Dan Girolamo

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