Podcaster
Episoden
25.07.2025
44 Minuten
“Write your own anxieties. Get into your own psyche. I think if
it scares you – like, I'm terrified of guns, and that's where The
Purge came from. But here, there were various generational fears
and whatnot that led to The Home, Adam's fears and my fears about
getting older and our anxiety. So I would say if it's born from
your fear, the majority of the audience probably has a similar
fear. I think we are communal in that way. Fears are not
singular, so I think you should work off your own fears, and on a
practical level, if you can keep the budget small, you're in a
much better place getting it made. That was key to The Purge
getting made, that it was one location,” says James DeMonaco,
director and co-writer of the new horror film, The Home.
On today’s show, we talk with both James DeMonaco and Adam
Cantor, co-writers of the new horror film The Home.
The Home is about Max (Pete Davidson), a troubled young man, who
starts working at a retirement home only to realize its residents
and caretakers harbor sinister secrets. As he investigates the
building and its forbidden fourth floor, he starts to uncover
connections to his own past and upbringing as a foster
child.
DeMonaco, best known for creating The Purge franchise, and
Cantor, an actor-turned-writer, talk about their favorite horror
films from the 1970s, the challenge of bringing a 70s vibe to
modern horror films, and working with their Staten Island buddy,
comedian Pete Davidson and bringing out his intense dramatic
performance.
DeMonaco also talks about the impact The Purge films have had on
our culture.
“I grew up watching Romero and Carpenter films and George Miller.
I always thought they put great mirrors up to society, and there
was always some kind of smuggler's cinema idea, where they were
smuggling socio-political themes into the genre's pieces. So
sadly, The Purge is reflective of the world we're living in and
becoming, I think, more reflective, which is scary. And
terrifying. I wish it wasn't, I wish it was a complete fantasy to
purge. Unfortunately, it's not right now, and it's seemingly
getting worse,” says DeMonaco who weighs in on whether something
like The Purge could happen in real life.
“I used to say, ‘Absolutely not!’ Now, I don't know if I would
say that any longer, and that's even scarier to me,” says
DeMonaco.
To hear more about The Home and the spooky events that
h appened on set, listen to the podcast.
Mehr
14.07.2025
37 Minuten
“Vampires hold incredible destructive power, and so we're very
drawn to them, sort of like moths to a candle, right? I think
that's sort of eternal, and that's the reason every culture,
pretty much around the globe has some version of the vampire
because it represents that very human conflict of what we desire
which is so in tune with and aligned to things that can also
destroy us. That just feels very honest and eternal, so I don't
think [vampires] will ever go away. I think they will be an
eternal part of our mythologies,” says writer/director Natasha
Kermani, about the everlasting appeal of vampires on film.
On today’s episode, we chat with Natasha Kermani about her new
movie Abraham’s Boys that extends the world of Dracula into a
psychological family drama with its own chills and thrills. The
movie centers on brothers Max (Brady Hepner) and Rudy (Judah
Mackey) Van Helsing, who have spent their lives under the strict
rule of their father, Abraham Van Helsing (Titus Welliver).
Unaware of their father’s dark past as a vampire hunter, they
struggle to understand his paranoia and increasingly erratic
behavior. But when the brothers begin to uncover the violent
truths behind Abraham’s history with Dracula, their world
unravels, forcing them to confront the terrifying family
legacy.
Kermani talks about adapting the Joe Hill short story of the same
name, shares tips for structuring a short story into a feature
film, and ways a writer can bring a classic monster story like
Dracula into a modern setting.
“I think it's about examining our world through an eternal lens
of these mythologies that don't change. Power dynamics.
Authority. Submission. These are eternal. So the question is, if
you take that structure, and apply it to our world, how do things
fall into place? And when you can start to look at the world
around us through that lens, I think you start to get really
interesting, truthful stories because you're not trying to come
up with a new structure, or a new classic. You are obeying the
laws of how our brains work and how our stories work.
“I think it's a question of, ‘What are the things that you
desire, but also fear? What are you drawn to, like a moth to
flame?’ For me, with Abraham's Boys, it's that we're so drawn to
the idea of someone coming to you and saying, ‘I know what the
monsters are, I know what the heroes are. Follow me and you'll be
safe.’ That's very dangerous,” says Kermani.
To hear more, listen to the podcast.
Mehr
30.06.2025
38 Minuten
“One thing I’ve found in the crime genre is that homicides are
always interesting. When somebody’s killed, whatever that case
may be, it’s usually compelling drama. So then it’s up to you as
the writer to surprise the audience and do things that they
didn’t think were coming. I’ve described it like this before: If
you can hit the sweet spot of, ‘I didn’t see that coming! I
should have seen it coming, but I didn’t see it coming,’ That, to
me, is the best writing. It’s like, when you got to the end of
The Sixth Sense, and you were like, ‘Oh my god, I should have
seen that coming!’ That was great writing,” says Derek Haas,
creator and writer for the show Countdown on Prime.
You may know Derek Haas from the popular NBC procedural dramas
like Chicago Med, Chicago Fire and Chicago PD. Now, he’s got a
new crime drama on Prime called Countdown that tells one twisty
crime story over 13 episodes – all written by Haas. Set in Los
Angeles, Countdown follows a secret task force who discover a
sinister international plot that threatens millions of lives. The
show stars Eric Dane, Jensen Ackles and Jessica Camacho as
undercover agents all harboring dark secrets of their own.
On this episode of the podcast, we chat with Haas about starting
his career as a crime novelist, writing movies like 2 Fast 2
Furious, 3:10 to Yuma and Wanted before making the switch to TV.
Haas talks about working with director John Singleton, prolific
TV producer Dick Wolf and writing characters that hook audiences.
He also shares his advice for writing action sequences that both
stun visually and surprise the audience.
“When I think about action sequences, I always go back to Raiders
of the Lost Ark. My favorite action sequence of any movie ever is
when Indiana Jones has to fight this gigantic Nazi guy, and – in
any other movie – that would have been the only thing that’s
happening. But they put Marion in a plane where she gets trapped
because the cover of the plane closes. Then the plane’s
propellers start spinning. The plane starts spinning, gas is
leaking out of the plane, there’s other people running by with
machine guns. So it’s not just, ‘Oh, here’s a fight,’ it’s
‘Here’s a fight, but there’s eight other things happening at
once.’ I really try to do that in these chase sequences, because
you have seen a million of them. What’s the other factors I can
bring to it? How can I show you something you haven’t seen
before? Sometimes it’s character, and sometimes, it’s the stunt
itself,” says Haas.
To hear more screenwriting advice from Haas, listen to the
podcast.
Mehr
16.06.2025
40 Minuten
“In my mind, Belle is going through life, at least our version of
Belle – I've never met the real Belle – she’s going through life
with this hole inside, this overwhelming need for approval, that
social media absolutely capitalizes on and she just keeps trying
to feed the beast. She hasn't grown up with the healthiest of
role models herself. She has learnt that being sick is a shortcut
to being loved and to getting attention,” says Samantha Strauss,
creator and showrunner for the Netflix limited series Apple Cider
Vinegar, about understanding her main character’s disgraceful
motivation to lie about having brain cancer.
Adapted from the book, The Woman Who Fooled the World, by Beau
Donelly and Nick Toscano, Apple Cider Vinegar chronicles the
incredible and heartbreaking rise and fall of the real Belle
Gibson (Kaitlin Dever), a notorious health and wellness
“scamfluencer.”
Strauss talks about starting her young life in Australia as a
ballet dancer before a terrible injury led her to discover TV
writing. She also talks about how her previous TV show, The End,
got the attention of Nicole Kidman, who championed her writing
career. Strauss gushes about how she was inspired by Kidman’s,
“Fierce intelligence, just exactly what you'd expect, and rigor.
You know, she would be giving notes at the end of a really long
day of filming. She wasn’t resting on her laurels at all. There's
just such a generosity of spirit there and to think she’s helped
other emerging Australian creatives is pretty special,” she
says.
Strauss discusses the challenges of adapting a true story while
the subject is still alive, tips and tricks for making the show
feel immediate and seductive while mimicking the addictive nature
of social media, and getting the primal relationship of mothers
and daughters authentic on screen.
To hear more about Apple Cider Vinegar and Strauss’s advice for
writers adapting true stories, listen to the podcast.
Mehr
09.06.2025
38 Minuten
“The most important thing that I've learned as a storyteller is
that I have to treat every character in the show as though
they're the lead in the show, and they are never doing anything
so that I can prompt a move from another character. They are
doing things that are true to what they want and their
motivation. So that's what makes that architecture hard, because
you know you want things to happen, but they have to happen
coming out of character, not coming out of what the room wants to
see happen. So it's like the merging of those two. We know what
architecture we want, but if it doesn't feel true to the
character, the character wouldn't do it. Every time, you’ve got
to say no, even though it's tempting, because that is who you
have to protect – your characters,” says Jennie Snyder Urman,
creator and showrunner of Matlock, about creating story
architecture in a series.
On today’s episode, we talk with Jennie Snyder Urman, who created
the reboot of Matlock starring Kathy Bates as Madeline Matlock.
We chat about reinventing the beloved character once played by
Andy Griffith, the joy of building a show around an older female
lawyer and the generational changes in social attitudes women
experience, and the sacrifices women often make when it comes to
sexual harassment, including Matty herself.
“[Matty] realizes now, coming back [to the legal profession],
what it cost her. And it's not like every day she was thinking
about it. It was just, ‘Oh my gosh, I made these changes to avoid
this. And why do I have to make these changes? Why didn't that
person make the changes so I could be in the space where I was
comfortable?’ And I think what's so exciting about Maddie is that
she's still learning new things at 75. I think there’s also a
little bit of a wish fulfillment, that you can still evolve, and
you still learn, and you still feel new things,” says
Urman.
To hear more about Matlock, what we can expect from season 2, and
Urman’s advice for writers, listen to the podcast.
Mehr
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