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Tag: Terrifier 2

  • The Star Behind One of the Most Gruesome ‘Terrifier’ Kills Is Suing the Filmmakers

    One of the most unforgettable and disgusting kills in the Terrifier franchise (which is saying a lot) happens in the first movie. After a creepy encounter in a pizza shop, Art the Clown kidnaps two girls and makes one watch as he slices the other in half while she’s suspended upside down. Now, the woman whose character endured that violent end is suing the filmmakers over royalties and working conditions.

    Catherine Corcoran, who played Dawn in the original 2016 Terrifier, filed a lawsuit this week “accusing the producers of the film of breach of contract over her backend deal for one percent of all profits,” according to the Hollywood Reporter. In the complaint, it says Corcoran was paid the $100 daily rate, which was SAG minimum at the time, but also signed a deal that entitled her to “1% of profits generated from Terrifier, which reportedly included box office, streaming, live events, merchandise, and more. That probably didn’t seem like much in 2016, but after the release of sequels in 2022 and 2024, it’s significant.

    Corcoran, whose likeness also appears briefly in Terrifier 2, apparently received about $17,000 in royalties after the release of 2022’s Terrifier 2, which grossed almost $16 million at the global box office, but didn’t receive anything from the release of 2024’s Terrifier 3, which grossed over $90 million. “This case presents an all-too-common story of low-budget film producers taking advantage of a young actress through fraud, sexual harassment, and, ultimately, betrayal,” the complaint says.

    “Damien [Leone, director] and Phil [Falcone, producer] deny the claims in the complaint and will vigorously defend this lawsuit,” their lawyer said in a statement.

    To complicate things even further, in addition to the breach of contract, Corcoran’s complaint alleges that she “wasn’t told ahead of shooting that she would be fully nude in the scene in which she’s killed in violation of SAG rules, which require producers to obtain written consent from talent for such sequences.” It also “details allegedly grueling working conditions during filming,” during which she had to be hung by her ankles in 40-second increments over 10 hours. Doctors later told the actress she “suffered cranial swelling and eardrum damage as a result of being upside down.”

    The Terrifier franchise is a significant one in modern horror because it did something that few franchises have done in a long, long time: create a true horror icon. Art the Clown has reached the level of Jigsaw, Chucky, and others in that pantheon of more modern slasher horror stars, and a large part of that is because of that first movie. Fans of the first film helped get the second one made, which was then so successful that the third one got a wide theatrical release. A fourth film is currently in development.

    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.

    Germain Lussier

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  • What’s the Most Memorably Horrific Terrifier Kill?

    What’s the Most Memorably Horrific Terrifier Kill?

    Trick-or-treat time is nearly upon us, but spooky season’s been in full bloom ever since Art the Clown returned to theaters in Terrifier 3. Last year’s Terrifier 2 brought Damien Leone‘s bloodthirsty clown to a wider audience, and the third installment has only expanded his fan base. Terrifier 3 is now the top-grossing unrated movie ever—as well as being one of the top gross-out movies ever. However, it has some stiff competition from the other Terrifier films in that department.

    Which leads us to today’s stomach-turning question: in your opinion, what’s the most impressively awful, I-can’t-believe-they-did-that Terrifier kill? Here are our favorites—and shout out to our fellow sickos over at Vulture who did a ranker of 30 death scenes from the Terrifier series.

    Terrifier 3: Mall Bomb

    With its Christmas theme, Terrifier 3 opened up festive new arenas for Art to enhance his body count. With a Santa suit layered over his clown costume, he infiltrates a shopping mall’s North Pole photo op—getting rid of the “real” Mr. Claus and, alarmingly, interacting with several children. But just when you start to think maybe he isn’t going to start ripping kiddie eyeballs out, which would totally be well within his wheelhouse, he starts handing out wrapped gifts… before he makes his exit. The almost wholesome scene turns absolutely nightmarish when one of the children unknowingly opens a present that’s actually a bomb instead. Tasteless? Yes! Boundary-pushing? Of course! But is it the worst Art has up his fur-trimmed sleeve?

    Terrifier 3: Rats!

    No “nice” character is safe from Art the Clown’s wrath, which is bad news for the kindly Aunt Jessica. After opening her home to Sienna, the tenacious Terrifier 2 survivor who’s just been released from a long-haul stay in the hospital, Jess gets caught in the crosshairs when Art comes a-knocking, intent on mopping up his unfinished business. Though Art is a master of improvisation—a sort of MacGyver of murder—he also comes prepared for his most elaborate set pieces. With the help of his demonic sidekick Vicky, he ties Jess up next to the family Christmas tree, shoves a plastic tube into her mouth, and forces rats down her throat, then cuts her open and the rats emerge, still alive. Jess, of course, is not alive, and certain members of the audience may take this moment to repurpose their Art the Clown popcorn buckets as barf containers. Applause, applause.

    Terrifier 2: Bedroom

    In retrospect, Sienna’s best friend, Allie, should’ve just given Art the candy. After a few run-ins at the door with the killer, Art makes Allie pay with one of the most prolonged, disturbing deaths not just in the Terrifier franchise, but maybe all of horror. It starts with slashing her face from the eyeball down. Then he breaks her arms. Then he rips skin off her back. Throws in some stabbing. How about some bleach and salt? Oh, and then keep her alive just long enough so that her mom can see her completely ripped to shreds before she dies too. The scene is incredibly hard to watch, but that’s beauty of the franchise.

    Terrifier 3: Shower

    Two of the universal truths in horror movies are never having sex (thanks Scream) and never taking a shower (thanks Psycho). In Terrifier 3, Art-obsessive Mia and her boyfriend, Cole—the dorm roommate of Jonathan, Sienna’s brother—break both rules… and Art makes them pay. With a chainsaw no less. Channeling his inner Leatherface, Art cuts Mia about two million times and when Cole tries to run, well, he wishes he hadn’t. Art gives him the gender-swapped Dawn-death from the first Terrifier. In that earlier movie, Art kills Dawn starting between her legs and working toward her head. Here, he starts with Cole’s butt, makes his way through his penis and scrotum, and, well, yeah. That dude is dead. And we are mortified.

    Do you agree these are four of the worst, and therefore the best? Share your take on Art’s greatest below!

    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.

    By Germain Lussier and Cheryl Eddy

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  • 'Terrifier 3' Is 'Going for That Oscar' in 2024

    'Terrifier 3' Is 'Going for That Oscar' in 2024

    Art the Clown will return for another round of gun-happy supernatural slashings in Terrifier 3, written and directed by Damien Leone and produced by Phil Falcone.

    Originally played by Mike Giannelli, Art first appeared in the 2013 horror anthology film All Hallows’ Eve, Leone’s feature-length directorial debut. Set on Halloween night, the film is presented as a series of shorts on an unmarked videotape discovered by two children and their babysitter, all featuring the homicidal clown. The first All Hallows’ Eve incorporates footage from Leone’s short films The 9th Circle (2008) and Terrifier (2011), also featuring Art.

    In Terrifier (2016), Art returned, and again four years later, in the Screambox Original Terrifier 2 (2020), a supernatural force resurrects the killer clown so he can keep terrorizing the residents of Miles County. Known for extreme gore and practical effects, Terrifier 2 gained national attention after reports surfaced on social media of audiences “vomiting” and “passing out,” raking in over $15 million worldwide at the box office, earning over four times what it cost to make, according to Yahoo! Entertainment.

    While Art’s first appearances were love letters to slasher films and the horror genre as a whole, over time, Leone’s gore-filled shock fests started to develop their own voice. As such, the Terrifier franchise has gained a loyal following, thanks to some truly innovative violence (seriously, there was some stuff I’ve never seen before). Even comedian Pete Davidson is among those loyal fans, which led to Art’s cameo in Davidson’s strange hallucination sequence in the season 1 finale of the Peacock series Bupkis.

    In a May 2023 Cannes exclusive, Deadline reported that the women-led production company The Coven was again teaming up with the Art the Clown filmmakers Leone and Falcone to handle worldwide sales on Terrifier 3. The Coven founder, Priscilla Ross Smith, said, “There will be a much bigger budget this time around, which is intended to give the filmmakers more creative freedom and let them be as wild as they can be. And, all jokes aside, we are going for that Oscar this year.”

    Is there a trailer for Terrifier 3?

    In for a Pennywise in for a pounding, Art is ready to take over a new holiday in Terrifier 3. During the theatrical re-release of Terrifier 2 on November 1, Dark Age Cinema and Fuzz on the Lens Productions debuted the first trailer for Terrifier 3

    What is Terrifier 3 about?

    Terrifier 3 will be another boundary-pushing addition to the horror genre, continuing the no-holds-barred, uncompromising exploits fans of the franchise have come to expect and celebrate,” Leone told Deadline, alongside the threequel’s announcement. “If you thought Art the Clown’s reign of terror in Part 2 was extreme, you haven’t seen anything yet.”

    While no official Terrifier 3 plot synopsis has been released yet, Leone has hinted at the film’s storyline in several interviews. Speaking to Insider, the director teased his plans for expanding the mythology behind the killer clown in a big way, expanding on Terrifier 2‘s religious themes. “There’s blatant religious mythic imagery [in Terrifier 2],” explained Leone. “The clown is this resurrected demon, and Sienna is slowly becoming aware that she’s sort of this Old Testament angel ready to do battle and going through that metamorphosis.”

    The director added, “Because there’s a lot more to explore with Art the Clown, the pale girl, Victoria, and certainly Sienna as our final girl. We will be following her journey to the end of this franchise.”

    Who is in Terrifier 3?

    Samantha Scaffidi as Victoria Heyes in Terrifier
    (Dread Central Presents)

    Having played Art the Clown in Terrifier and Terrifier 2, David Howard Thornton (Nightwing: Escalation) will return as the homicidal prankster. Also returning for the threequel are Terrifier 2‘s Shaw siblings Sienna, played by Lauren LaVera (Iron Fist), and Jonathan, played by Elliott Fullam (Get Rolling with Otis), and in a much more prominent role, heroine turned villainess Victoria Heyes, played by Samantha Scaffidi (Demon Hole).

    Regarding Terrifier, Leone said his biggest regret was leaving Heyes underdeveloped. Originally, Terrifier 2 set up the character’s demise, but the director/writer deemed it too similar to the concept of 2021’s Malignant. While conceptualizing the birthing scene, he decided he wanted to keep Victoria alive and give her significant character development, as he enjoyed working with Scaffidi.

    Does Terrifier 3 have a release date?

    Art the Clown in Terrifier 2
    (Bloody Disgusting)

    In May 2023, it was also announced that Terrifier 3 was expected to begin filming in November or December 2023 for release in 2024, followed by an exclusive streaming debut on Cineverse’s Screambox service.

    (featured image: Bloody Disgusting)

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    Rebecca Oliver Kaplan

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  • ‘Terrifier 2’ Filmmaker Damien Leone Says ‘Terrifier 3’ Will Return to the First Movie’s Tone

    ‘Terrifier 2’ Filmmaker Damien Leone Says ‘Terrifier 3’ Will Return to the First Movie’s Tone

    Terrifier mastermind Damien Leone has pulled off the very rare feat of building a successful indie horror franchise from scratch. 

    The Philadelphia native created the franchise’s star, Art the Clown (David Howard Thornton), in a 2008 short called The 9th Circle, and while he only appeared briefly, Leone received enough feedback on the disturbing character design to double down on the clown. Within a few years, he made a Terrifier (2011) short film as a proof of concept for a proper feature film, and his DIY attitude would only intensify when he was told all over town that clowns don’t sell.

    Leone first cut his teeth as a special effects makeup artist, and through his work on Phil Falcone’s indie Joe’s War, he became fast friends with the producer-director who later decided to bankroll a $35,000 Terrifier feature. The 2016 slasher film would go on to make roughly twelve times its budget, prompting Leone and Falcone to pursue a sequel at a similar price point. However, the film developed enough of a cult following that an Indiegogo campaign landed them an additional $220,000 for the $250,000-budgeted sequel. 

    Eventually, Terrifier 2 received a theatrical release of nearly 900 theaters, and positive word of mouth propelled the film to positive gains of 28 percent and 70 percent in its second and third weekends, resulting in double the amount of theaters for weekends four and five. Prior to its current re-release as of Nov. 1st, the Bloody Disgusting-distributed film has totalled just under $16 million worldwide.

    Thus, Terrifier 3 became a foregone conclusion, and the Christmas-themed slasher is now dated for release on Oct. 25, 2024. And on the heels of Terrifier 2 taking a more heightened approach with supernatural and fantasy elements, Leone says the third film will also return to the grimy and more grounded tone of the first film.

    “I’m trying to go back to [2016’s Terrifier], tonally. So if part two is my [A Nightmare on Elm Street: Dream Warriors], I want to go back to the original A Nightmare on Elm Street tone with [Terrifier 3],” Leone tells The Hollywood Reporter

    Leone’s reasoning for returning to the original film’s tone is based on a lesson he’s picked up from other franchises that distanced themselves from their roots.

    “When franchises lose their way, one of the mistakes they make is forgetting what made the franchise great in the first place,” Leone says. “They just stray so far off of that path, so that’s something I’m trying to avoid. I just want to go back in that direction so I don’t forget where I came from … And I do think [Terrifier 3] is going to be the scariest, darkest, and most sadistic one, believe it or not, of the entire trilogy.”

    He also intends to offer more clarity on Sienna Shaw’s (Lauren LaVera) deceased father and why his sketchbook had drawings of both Art the Clown and the angel-warrior persona that Sienna would bring to life in more ways than just a Halloween costume.

    “Flat out, I can tell you that I intend to explain a lot of things that were brought up in Terrifier 2, because that mystique was there by design,” Leone says. “I knew I wanted to make more films in the franchise, and I didn’t want to just explain everything in one movie.”

    Below, during a recent conversation with THR, Leone also expresses his excitement over hiring a full-fledged makeup team on Terrifier 3 and not having to pull double duty for the first time.

    So the Terrifier movies got off the ground in part because a retired white-collar worker decided he wanted to make his retirement a bit more interesting by being both your producer and your FX assistant?

    A hundred percent. I tried to shop Terrifier around for years. I made a first short film with Art the Clown called The 9th Circle [2008]. That was the first time anybody ever laid eyes on that character, and while he was only in it for a few minutes, people loved him. They just said, “You have to make more things with that character.” So then I made a 20-minute short film years later called Terrifier [2011], and that was sort of a proof of concept, which really showcased Art the Clown and turned him into a slasher. That was going to be the calling card to get a budget behind this movie and turn it into a feature. So I shopped it around for so long, but nobody believed in it, even when it was growing a bigger fan base based off the All Hallow’s Eve horror anthology that included it. It just wasn’t big enough.

    At that time, you didn’t have the remake of Stephen King’s It or Twisty the Clown from [American Horror Story: Freak Show]. Clowns were just nowhere to be seen, and I would get the note back that clowns can’t sell a movie. So I was like, “Alright, I’ll still figure out a way. I’ve always done it on my own. I’ll find a way to raise money.” But it took years and years until I met Phil Falcone while working on his first film. When he retired, he wanted to make movies, and he made a movie called Joe’s War. It’s a war drama, and he needed special effects for a war sequence. And his cinematographer, Tom Agnello, also shot my first Art the Clown short film, and he said, “Hey, I know this guy. He’s pretty good with makeup effects. I’ll introduce you.” So I did all the bullet hits and blood spray in that sequence, and me and Phil hit it off. We became friends. 

    And then, years later, when I was trying to raise money for Terrifier, we wound up doing an Indiegogo campaign because nobody wanted to give us money. So I sent Phil the Indiegogo and said, “Hey, if you’re interested or know anybody else who might be interested in being a part of this, let me know.” And he just called me on the side and said, “What are you really trying to do? How much do you think you can make this movie for?” And I said, “Well, I maxed out a $5,000 credit card, and I made the 20-minute Terrifier short. With $35,000, we can make something that’s an hour and 20 minutes.” And he went, “I’ll give you the money tomorrow if you can make a movie for $35 grand. I just want to be there while you’re doing the makeup. I want to hang out. I want to be hands-on because I really love the makeup effects. Maybe you could teach me some things.” And we’ve been inseparable ever since. I owe that guy my life. He’s like my family now. So it’s beautiful, and I was so lucky.

    David Howard Thornton as Art the Clown in Terrifier 2

    Cineverse

    The first film then made twelve times its $35,000 budget and developed enough of a cult following that you could bring on more investors and crowdfunders for the sequel?

    Correct. We were going to do it the same way and make it for relatively the same budget, but if you’ve seen Terrifier 2, it is an epic compared to part one. So I just wrote the story I wanted to tell, and then we’d deal with reality later. And when we looked at it, we just knew we couldn’t possibly make it for $35,000 to $50,000, especially the Clown Cafe sequence. That was the sequence that I really wanted in the movie, but that was another short film in and of itself. It was a big set packed with the fire and people getting shot, and I was like, “There’s no way we can do this. We are going to have to try and crowdfund again. Now that we have a bit of a bigger fan base, maybe it’ll be easier to actually do a crowdfunding campaign, specifically just for the Clown Cafe sequence.”

    So we set the goal for $50,000, and within a day, I think we raised $220,000 through Indiegogo. And I was like, “Oh my God.” It was an eye-opening moment. We realized that we had a bigger fan base on our hands than we even thought. And thank God that we raised that money because we would’ve never been able to shoot the movie at all. Every nickel of that went into making Terrifier 2 what it is, and it still blows people’s minds that we made that movie for a quarter of a million dollars. It was a lot of work, and it took a lot of time with a very limited but dedicated crew. So we’re so grateful for the fans because they really made that movie happen.

    There’s a tonal change between the first and second, and the contrast blew me away since I watched the second film first. You added a pop element of sorts, as well as the supernatural and some fantasy mythology. How much of that shift was a response to feedback you received on the first movie’s tone? 

    Not much at all. That shift was a result of the Sienna character played by Lauren LaVera. To me, Terrifier 2 is really her movie. It’s not Art the Clown’s anymore. So that movie and that tone is really a reflection of her character. Part one is such a simplified, retro, gritty, grindhouse slasher movie. It’s straight to the point. Art is basically the star of that film. It’s a showcase for what he is as a character. It was such a low budget, and if I could just throw Art the Clown in your face, hopefully people would watch it, which they did. But going into part two, you can’t do that again. You have to grow as a filmmaker. You have to craft a story. You have to bring in some sort of mythology. More importantly, you need to bring in a protagonist that you care about and that you can empathize with, and you also need a worthy adversary to combat Art the Clown. So that’s where Sienna came in.

    We also really embraced the supernatural element this time around, because Art dies at the end of the first Terrifier. And like most boogeymen, he’s resurrected and comes back from the dead, but filmmakers and writers tend to gloss over that element. It’s just what the boogeyman does. But I really wanted to embrace that and explore what that supernatural evil is. What enables a killer to come back from the dead? Why? How? What’s driving him? So I really wanted to embrace that in a very David Lynch-ian type of way. 

    So once I knew I was exploring that element, I wanted to take from supernatural horror movies that I loved, and one of my all-time favorites that had the greatest marriage of the supernatural and that dark, gritty tone was A Nightmare on Elm Street 3: Dream Warriors. I felt like that had the best of part one, but also reinvented itself within the genre and within that franchise. So there were a lot of elements taken straight from Dream Warriors and its atmosphere. 

    Terrifier Still

    Lauren LaVera as Sienna Shaw in Terrifier 2

    Cineverse

    Lauren LaVera was a bit of a latecomer to acting. She started in martial arts and stunts, but caught the acting bug once she doubled for Anya Taylor-Joy on M. Night Shyamalan’s Split. How much back and forth was there until you knew she was the one to play the teenage angel-warrior known as Sienna Shaw?

    Oh my gosh, practically none. (Laughs.) There was never a runner-up. First of all, I designed the poster for Terrifier 2 before we even cast the character, so I knew what I was looking for, visually. If you look at the poster, you don’t see Sienna’s face, but it looks like Lauren in the armor. So I knew how intense and physical Terrifier 2 was going to be, and when I saw her and her reel and all the martial arts she was doing, I said, “Well, she can clearly take on the tasks and the responsibility of going through this hell on set.” But then it was like, “Can she act?” She definitely had some cool things in her reel, but I didn’t know how far her range would stretch. 

    So when I had her come in to do some chemistry reads in person, she read with [Sienna’s younger brother, Jonathan] Elliott Fullam and Casey Hartnett, who plays her fiend Allie in the film. And as soon as Lauren came in and started reading, I was like, “Oh my God, this is Sienna. It’s a no brainer.” I just knew she was going to elevate the material that I wrote to another level, and working with her has been the most beautiful collaboration. I’ve had actors, and still do, who are wonderful and really care so much about their characters, but Lauren just took it to another level. I’ve never seen anybody care as much for a character that I wrote as much as she does. 

    She called me all the time, asking me questions about the character that weren’t necessarily addressed in the script, but it would help her craft the character, internally. And then she’d go off and write journals of who she thought Sienna was and what she’s been through just to inject more dimensions into the character. So you can’t ask for more than that as a director. It fires you up. It makes you prouder of what you’ve written, and it really makes you want to give the best you have to offer. So it’s been wonderful, and we’re so excited to continue exploring this character. There’s a lot more you haven’t seen yet.

    So what’s the status of Terrifier 3?

    We are ready to go, basically. Of course, we’re hindered by the strike. So, hopefully, it ends very soon, but we’re ready to go. The feedback that I’ve gotten from the script has just been amazing. The few people who’ve gotten to read it think it’s really going to be something special, so I’m excited for it. I felt really good about part two, and I feel the same, if not even more confident, about part three and where it’s going. It’s got a really cool new twist on it. 

    As we discussed, part two really has that fantastical, poppy Dream Warriors vibe, and I’m trying to go back to part one, tonally. So if part two is my Dream Warriors, I want to go back to the original A Nightmare on Elm Street tone with part three. When franchises lose their way, one of the mistakes they make is forgetting what made the franchise great in the first place. They just stray so far off of that path, so that’s something I’m trying to avoid. I just want to go back in that direction so I don’t forget where I came from, and I want this one to be the scariest one. And I do think it’s going to be the scariest, darkest, and most sadistic one, believe it or not, of the entire trilogy. 

    But it’s still going to have that great element of fun, because I always want there to be levity. Art the Clown needs to be his charming, quirky self. I want the audience to know this is just a fictional world. We are here to have fun, and I don’t want them leaving the theater feeling miserable. But at the same time, there is a way to make this one seem as if you’ve never even met Art the Clown before. That’s how I want the audience to feel. I want them to feel like this is a very terrifying, unpredictable character, and while you think you might know him, you don’t know what’s coming.

    On Terrifier 2, you and Phil had to stop shooting for days at a time to create the makeup effects, but with the success of that film, you’ve presumably earned a sizable crew and a bigger budget to not have to shoulder everything yourselves.

    Yeah, it’s super exciting. I get to hire a professional makeup team for the first time in my life, and some people are like, “How can you give up the effects?” But I would give up every role aside from the writing and directing. The only reason I took on everything is because we never had the money to hire somebody who could do it better than I can, and there are so many people who are so much more talented than I am, especially in the makeup world. So, now, to have a Hollywood makeup studio come in and pick up the responsibility of the effects is so exciting. It’s such a relief. But I’m still so hands-on, and there’s such a wonderful relationship and shorthand that I have with them in designing these effects. I know exactly how I want to shoot them and how to execute them properly, and it makes their job so much easier and allows them to be a lot more creative.

    A lot of times, filmmakers who don’t come from a makeup effects background really don’t know how to shoot these effects. So what happens is the makeup team has to guess how it’s going to be shot. They’ll approach it the way they think it should be shot, and then when they get to set, the director has something completely different in their mind. So they’ve wasted months of their lives building effects or things that they didn’t even need to build, or they didn’t build something the director wanted because the director didn’t express their ideas to them in the right way. So it’s been exciting to have that relationship now and to geek out and get excited with these makeup people.

    Will we get some clarity about the mysterious situation with Sienna’s father? 

    Yes. Flat out, I can tell you that I intend to explain a lot of things that were brought up in Terrifier 2, because that mystique was there by design. I knew I wanted to make more films in the franchise, and I didn’t want to just explain everything in one movie. I like revealing things as we go and uncovering these puzzle pieces as if we’re uncovering a mystery. So you will learn a lot of things from Terrifier 2 in Terrifier 3.

    ***
    Terrifier 2 is now back in theaters for a limited time. This interview was edited for length and clarity.

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  • ‘Terrifer 2’ Submitted For Oscar Consideration

    ‘Terrifer 2’ Submitted For Oscar Consideration

    Art The Clown has been stacking up bodies in his second (technically third) outing, and soon, he could be stacking awards as well. That’s right, Terrifier 2 of all films has been submitted to the Academy for Oscar consideration. Of course, horror films aren’t particularly favored by the Hollywood establishment, and especially not this kind of horror. A few horror films have won before. There are even some who managed to pick up Best Picture. That being said, it’s not very likely Terrifier 2 will be among those.

    Terrifier 2 is the second film in the Terrifier franchise, which spawned from a section of the anthology film All Hallows Eve. The film follows the bloody rampages of Art The Clown, a mysterious and voracious murderer. The first film was notable for its particularly gruesome kills, and the second is no different. The much-reviled “bathroom scene” has gotten a decent amount of buzz — some audience members are supposedly puking right in the theater.

    Terrifier 2 has somehow managed to get a pretty wide release, raking in roughly $8 million dollars so far at the box office. The film was initially planned to appear in just one theater for a single weekend before moving to streaming services, but somehow, the fans made their voices heard. For such an extreme film, Terrifier 2 is certainly making some huge strides and doing exactly what its namesake implies.

    Here is the film’s trailer:

    So far Terrifier 2 has grossed $7.9 million in theaters. That may not sound like a lot, but when your film only cost $250,000, that’s a pretty good number before you consider the additional revenues the movie can make on home video, streaming, and by selling extremely horrifying merchandise.

    Cody Mcintosh

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  • Weekend Box Office: ‘Ticket To Paradise’ Nabs $16 Million As Terrifier 2’ Jumps 84%

    Weekend Box Office: ‘Ticket To Paradise’ Nabs $16 Million As Terrifier 2’ Jumps 84%

    Universal’s Ticket to Paradise finally opened in North America with a refreshingly robust $16.3 million weekend. The last of Universal’s four live-action comedies this year, after Marry Me, Easter Sunday and Bros, showed that the sub-genre (even without music, action or fantasy) isn’t dead yet. Ol Parker’s $60 million rom-com, about two bitterly divorced parents (George Clooney and Julia Roberts) who team up to sabotage their daughter’s wedding, should be leggy. Oscar season expansions aside, there’s nothing for adults who don’t like superheroes or horror films until Thanksgiving weekend. It has already earned $80 million overseas, on par with The Lost City’s $85 million lifetime cume, following a month of slow international rollout. This gives the indifferently reviewed (I liked it, and your parents will too) studio programmer a $96 million global cume.

    It’s not a blockbuster, as it’s mostly winding down overseas and may end up with over/under $145 million global. But that will still be 2.45x its budget, with plenty more to come from PVOD rentals courtesy of older audiences either not caring about theaters or not wanting to pay for a babysitter. It may be a grim example of the modern theatrical business that a Julia Roberts/George Clooney romantic comedy barely scraping by is considered a sign of hope, but that’s where we are in the streaming era. Besides, if Hollywood were better at making new stars, we wouldn’t have to rely on the Tom Hanks, Tom Cruises and Julia Roberts of the world 20 years past their relative prime. That’s what Top Gun: Maverick, which finally fell out of the top ten on weekend 22, is subtextually about.

    Paramount’s
    PARA
    Smile remains the scary movie of the scary season, earning $8.35 million (-34%) while adding 142 theaters in weekend four. With $84.5 million domestic, it has passed Scream ($81 million) and will soon pass Halloween Kills ($92 million) next weekend as it races past the $100 million milestone. Heck, at the rate it’s going, it might pass Bullet Train ($103 million) *and* Jordan Peele’s Nope ($123 million) to become the biggest R-rated domestic earner of the Covid era. Oh, and it has earned $150 million worldwide, meaning it’ll soon pass Nope ($171 million) as this year’s biggest live-action Hollywood original. Hell, it may even pass $200 million worldwide before leaving theaters. Not bad for a $17 million, R-rated original initially intended for Paramount+. It will be more valuable to Paramount+ via its theatrical success.

    Universal and Blumhouse’s Halloween Ends took a massive 80% drop in weekend two, grossing just $8 million for a $54.177 million ten-day total. The poor review, divisive word-of-mouth and concurrent Peacock availability killed this one quick. Again, Peacock didn’t help, but it’s not like either Halloween Kills ($92 million from a $49 million debut) or the well-received and Peacock-free Halloween ($159 million/$77 million) were remotely leggy. I’m also old enough to remember when the biggest Halloween movies earned $47 million (Halloween in 1978), $55 million (Halloween: H20 in 1998) and $58 million (Rob Zombie’s Halloween remake in 2007) in total. Come what may, the $33 million slasher threequel has earned $82 million worldwide and should crack $110 million global before exiting theaters. The new Halloween trilogy should end with over/under $500 million worldwide on a combined $63 million budget.

    Sony’s Lyle Lyle Crocodile earned $4.2 million (-43%) in weekend three for a disappointing $28.7 million 17-day cume. Sony’s The Woman King earned $1.93 million (-48%) for a $62.9 million domestic and $83 million worldwide cume. The $50 million Viola Davis-led action drama may not be a theatrical hit. Still, it’s doing great domestically and is the sort of film Sony can justify making for theaters thanks to the first-window pay-tv deal they signed with Netflix
    NFLX
    . Warner Bros. Discovery’s Don’t Worry Darling has earned $44 million domestically and $80 million worldwide on a $35 million budget. 20th Century Studios’ all-star (and $80 million) Amsterdam has grossed just $14 million domestically and $21 million worldwide. 20th Century Studios’ $4 million, R-rated original Barbarian will cross $40 million domestic this weekend, even while Smile stole much of its buzz.

    Bloody Disgusting’s Terrifier 2 got oodles of mainstream media attention this week, as reports of audiences fainting or vomiting led to petitions to ban the film. Those petitions are no more serious than the morons advocating for a remake of Halloween Ends or the idiots who tried to raise $200 million to remake The Last Jedi. It’s nice to see that an old-school video nasty-type flick can still get the torches and pitchforks in this fragmented media culture. Art the Clown’s 138-minute epic slasher sequel earned $1.895 million (+85%) in weekend three for a $5.256 million domestic cume. Even accounting for the notion of demographically specific event movies (think RRR, Christmas with the Chosen, BTS: Permission to Dance, etc.), this is entirely unexpected. Art the Clown’s Terrifier 2 is turning into The Greatest Showman of unrated slasher epics.

    In Oscar rollout news, Martin McDonagh’s terrific The Banshees of Inisherin debuted in four theaters yesterday, earning $181,000 in its opening weekend. That will give Searchlight’s dark Brendan Gleeson/Colin Farrell/Kerry Condon/Barry Keoghan dramedy a promising $45,250 per-theater average. The film opened with $1.62 million in the United Kingdom. United Artists’ Till expanded to 104 theaters in advance of its nationwide rollout next weekend. The acclaimed true-life drama, for which Danielle Deadwyler is earning serious Oscar buzz, earned $376,000 in weekend two (+55%) for a $3,617 per-theater average and $666,500 ten-day cume. Cate Blanchett’s TÁR will also go wide next weekend. It expanded to 141 theaters and made $470,000 (+42%) for a $3,333 per-theater average and $1.175 million 17-day cume. We’ll see how many of this year’s critically acclaimed Oscar contenders can outgross Terrifier 2 ($5.3 million and rising rather than falling).

    Scott Mendelson, Forbes Staff

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  • Box Office: ‘Ticket To Paradise’ Nabs Solid $6.4 Million Friday, ‘Halloween Ends’ Plunges 88%

    Box Office: ‘Ticket To Paradise’ Nabs Solid $6.4 Million Friday, ‘Halloween Ends’ Plunges 88%

    In even better news for the overall theatrical industry, Universal’s Ticket to Paradise opened with a rousing $6.4 million on Friday. The last of Universal’s four live-action comedies offered up this year, after Marry Me, Easter Sunday and Bros, showed that the sub-genre (even without music, action or fantasy) isn’t quite dead yet. With mixed-negative reviews (I liked it a lot, and your parents will too) and an A- from Cinemascore, we can expect an over/under $16.5 million domestic launch. Ol Parker’s $60 million rom-com, about two bitterly divorced parents (George Clooney and Julia Roberts) who team up to sabotage their daughter’s wedding, should be leggy as hell. Oscar season expansions aside, there’s nothing for adults who don’t like superheroes or horror films until Thanksgiving weekend. It has already earned $73 million overseas following a month-long international rollout.

    In Oscar rollout news, Martin McDonagh’s terrific The Banshees of Inisherin debuted in four theaters yesterday, earning $67,000 for a likely $161,000 weekend. That will give Searchlight’s dark Brendan Gleeson/Colin Farrell/Kerry Condon/Barry Keoghan dramedy a promising $40,348 per-theater average. United Artists’ Till expanded to 104 theaters in advance of its nationwide rollout next weekend. The acclaimed true-life drama, for which Danielle Deadwyler is earning serious Oscar buzz, earned $120,000 on Friday for a likely $351,000 weekend (+45%) and $3,377 per-theater average. Cate Blanchett’s TÁR will also go wide next weekend. It expanded to 141 theaters and should gross $510,000 over the weekend for a $3,617 per-theater average and $1.215 million 17-day cume. We’ll see how many of this year’s critically acclaimed Oscar contenders are able to outgross Terrifier 2 ($5.7 million and rising rather than falling).

    Universal and Blumhouse’s Halloween Ends took a near-record 89% drop on its second Friday, earning just $2.74 million for a likely $8 million (-80%) weekend and $54.177 million ten-day total. The poor review, divisive word-of-mouth and concurrent Peacock availability killed this one quick. I’m old enough to remember when the biggest Halloween movies earned $47 million (Halloween in 1978), $55 million (Halloween: H20 in 1998) and $58 million (Rob Zombie’s Halloween remake in 2007) in total. Paramount’s
    PARA
    Smile remains the scary movie of the scary season, earning $2.57 million (-32%) while adding 142 theaters in weekend four. We can expect an $8.5 million (-32%) weekend and $84.5 million 24-day total, putting it above the $81 million cume of Scream. It’ll pass Halloween Kills ($92 million) next weekend as it races past the $100 million milestone.

    Bloody Disgusting’s Terrifier 2 got oodles of mainstream media attention this week, as reports of audiences fainting or vomiting led to petitions to get the film banned. Those petitions are no more serious than the idiots advocating for a remake of Halloween Ends or the schmucks who tried to raise $200 million to remake The Last Jedi. It’s nice to see that an old-school video nasty-type flick can still get the torches and pitchforks in this fragmented media culture. Art the Clown’s 138-minute epic slasher sequel earned $545,500 (+118%) on Friday for a likely $2.29 million (+122%) weekend and $5.651 million domestic cume. Even accounting for the notion of demographically specific event movies (think RRR, Christmas with the Chosen, BTS: Permission to Dance, etc.), this is quite unexpected. Terrifier 2 is turning into The Greatest Showman of unrated slasher epics.

    Sony’s Lyle Lyle Crocodile earned $1.185 million (-41%) on Friday for a likely $4.19 million (-43%) weekend and a disappointing $28.7 million 17-day cume. Sony’s The Woman King earned $520,000 (-49%) on Friday for a $1.93 million (-48%) weekend and $62.9 million 38-day domestic cume. Warner Bros. Discovery’s Don’t Worry Darling will have $44 million by day 31, while 20th Century Studios’ all-star (and $80 million) Amsterdam will have just $14 million by day 17. 20th Century Studios’ $4 million, R-rated original Barbarian will cross $40 million domestic this weekend, a remarkable achievement even while Smile stole much of its buzz. Top Gun: Maverick will plunge 61% in weekend 22 for a $261,000 weekend to absolutely, unquestionably and probably permanently fall out of the top ten. It’ll have to settle for Titanic-worthy legs, $716.5 million domestic and around $1.48 billion worldwide.

    Scott Mendelson, Forbes Staff

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  • Friday Box Office: ‘Smile’ And ‘Terrifier 2’ Hold But ‘Amsterdam’ Drops 66%

    Friday Box Office: ‘Smile’ And ‘Terrifier 2’ Hold But ‘Amsterdam’ Drops 66%

    In holdover news for Friday, Paramount’s
    PARA
    Smile held its own against the mighty Michael Myers. Parker Finn’s buzzy breakout earned $3.73 million (-31%) on Friday for a likely $12.7 million (-31%) third-weekend gross. That will give it a jaw-dropping $71.5 million 17-day total. One more hold like this, and it’s sure to pass $100 million domestic (a milestone Halloween Ends may not reach since both previous Blumhouse entries were uber-frontloaded).

    In other ‘horror is good’ news, Barbarian earned $406,000 (-36%) on Friday for a likely $1.33 million (-39%) weekend and $38.9 million domestic cume. It’ll pass $40 million next weekend, a fine achievement for an R-rated, star-free grindhouse original. Bloody Disgusting’s Terrifier 2 earned $340,000 (-5%) while adding theaters in an extended theatrical engagement. We can expect a $810,000 (+1%) weekend and $2.255 million 11-day cume. That’ll do Art. That’ll do.

    Meanwhile, Columbia and Sony’s delightful Lyle, Lyle Crocodile earned $2 million (-45%) on Friday for a likely $7.6 million (-34%). That gives the $50 million family-friendly comedy a mediocre $23 million ten-day cume. I wish it were doing better, but the IP wasn’t as big a deal as Peter Rabbit, Paddington or Clifford the Big Red Dog.

    Sony’s The Woman King earned another $1 million (-24%) on Friday for a $3.91 million (-24%) weekend and $60 million 31-day cume. It should crawl to $70 million in the end, give or take Oscar season attention, with its overseas prospects still mostly unknown. It’s not a blockbuster, but it’s a great film pulling its domestic theatrical weight.

    Alas, David O. Russell’s Amsterdam crashed hard, earning just $888,000 (-66%) on Friday. We can expect the Christian Bale/Margot Robbie/John David Washington comic thriller to make just $2.85 million (-56%) for a miserable $12 million ten-day total. I liked this one a lot, but audiences no longer automatically show up for star-packed non-franchise films unless almost everything (reviews, high concept, ensemble cast, marquee director, promise of escapism) goes right.

    Warner Bros. Discovery’s Don’t Worry Darling earned $740,000 (-36%) on Friday for a likely $2.29 million (-35%) weekend and $42.5 million 24-day total. Again, it’s not a blockbuster or a franchise starter, but the $35 million Olivia Wilde-directed thriller will make money. Universal’s Bros earned $290,000 (-57%) on Friday for a $900,000 (-58%) weekend and poor $10.9 million 17-day total.

    Paramount and Skydance’s Top Gun: Maverick remained in the top ten with a $730,000 (-9%) weekend and a bonkers $716 million cume. By tomorrow, the Tom Cruise legacy sequel will have sold more tickets in North America than Black Panther. This will be its 21st consecutive weekend in the top ten, the first film to do so since Titanic in 1997 and Forrest Gump in 1994. I imagine this will be its last such weekend (at least consecutively), but we’ll see.

    Scott Mendelson, Forbes Staff

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