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GINGER SNAPS Review!! And Anton Sirius Interviews The Director!!

Published at:  May 11, 2001 4:26:19 AM CDT

Hey, everyone. "Moriarty" here with some Rumblings From The Lab.



All the Austinites who saw GINGER SNAPS at South By Southwest this year seem to have walked away smitten. I understand the feeling. That's how I was with JEEPERS CREEPERS. Maybe it's that we're all fans of horror films, and we'll embrace anything that makes the tired feel fresh again. Anyway, here's Abe Froman, the Sausage King of Chicago, with a less-enthusiastic view on the film. See you after with a special treat:



Just wanted to let you know (well, I'm sure you
already know but just in case) that Ginger Snaps had
it's Toronto premiere last night. The director,
screenwriter and some of the stars were on hand (but
not the two girls, who were off somewhere "doing
press"). Anyway, before the movie started, the
director told the crowd "for the love of god, if you
like the movie, tell your friends to see it this
weekend." I didn't like it nearly as much as you did,
so I have no idea if you want to use my slightly
negative review, but if you do, you can call me Abe
Froman.

It's disheartening to watch a movie like Ginger Snaps
and slowly come to the realization that it's just not
that good. It's disheartening because it's Canadian,
and when was the last time a Canadian film got a
release this wide? It's disheartening because it had
the potential for so much more, yet winds up wallowing
in its own detached ironic humour.

Katharine Isabelle and Emily Perkins stars as Ginger
and Brigitte, sisters and best friends. They have a
antisocial world-view and spend most their days making
fun of their fellow classmates and plotting elaborate
ways to off themselves. One day, they decide to take
revenge on one particularly cruel student by
kidnapping her dog and making it look like it's dead.
The plan goes awry, though, when Ginger is attacked by
what appears to be a large animal. Bleeding
profusely, Brigitte takes Ginger home only to discover
that her immense wounds are already healing. Massive
changes in behaviour follow, which Ginger assumes is
part of her ascension to womanhood (she coincedentally
had her first period arount the same time, you see),
but Brigitte knows better.

Ginger Snaps (now do you get it?) is a routine,
slightly above-average horror flick, but that's not
saying a whole lot. When what passes for horror these
days is Scream and I Know What You Did Last Summer, it
really doesn't take much effort topping those
self-referential "scary" movies. But what Ginger
Snaps does have going for it is a terrific sense of
mood. Set amongst the cookie-cutter homes of
Suburbia, the film captures the dull lifestyle of
living in the 'burbs perfectly, right down to the
myriad of minivans that skulk about the streets like
an Spanish armada.

The film takes a really long time to get going,
though, with the first hour containing little other
than various sequences detailing Ginger and Brigitte's
disgust with everything around them. While the
screenwriter has to be applauded for not creating more
Neve Campbell/Jennifer Love Hewitt clones, these two
girls are essentially of the Heavenly
Creatures/Heathers ilk. Frustrated with the
Barbie-esque lifestyle they're expected to adopt, the
duo confide in each other their fears and desires and
mock everyone else. But when everyone around them is
as cartoonishly over-the-top as they are, it has to be
expected that they'll view people with complete
disdain. Prime example of this: Mimi Rogers. Rogers
plays their mother, Pamela, a woman that is completely
oblivious to the fact that her daughter now craves
human flesh, and just chalks it up to "horomonal
changes." This character is played for laughs
(initially), but as the denoument approaches, the
screenwriter jettisons her sardonic approach to the
character and Pamela becomes just another frightened
cast member (and in addition to that, towards the end
she wanders off into a party and is never seen again).

In the end, this is what causes Ginger Snaps to
tumble. It spends the entire film walking a fine
balance between straight horror and cynically black
humour - a balance which never really works - and
finally eschews the comedy aspect of the film for pure
thrills. But by that time, the audience is filled
with apathy for the characters, so it's really
difficult to actually care what happens to these
people.

But Ginger Snaps, made on a budget of less than $6
million (Canadian! That's, what, $23.50 American?),
is a worthy successor to the detached horror films
made by David Cronenberg early in his career. Just
don't go in expecting another Blair Witch Project or
In the Mouth of Madness.

Well, I'm not much of a fan of IN THE MOUTH OF MADNESS (give me PRINCE OF DARKNESS any day instead), so I don't know quite how to take that. I was getting ready to put up Abe's review when ANTON SIRIUS came bounding into the Labs, unannounced, and slammed a document down on my worktable. He started to explain something about how he was embarrassed to turn his six-month-old interview in while Harry was here, but figured he had nothing to lose with Mr. '90s List himself. I think he said something after that, but I wouldn't know, as that's about when I opened fire. Winged him, too, on his way out the door. Now that I've read the groovy little interview with the director of GINGER SNAPS that he left behind, I almost feel bad. Almost.



Now, where does the time go.

Between Cloudmaking and my extra-heavy party schedule recently, I’ve had very little free time. So today I finally got a chance to sit down and have some quiet type fun, bounce around, chat on the phone… you know, Sunday-type stuff, only on a weekday.

Well, as I was surfing la ‘Net I zipped over Harry’s review section, and saw that he’d seen Ginger Snaps. “Oh, brill!”, I thought to myself, “I wonder if Harry liked it.” I open up the link and what do I find?

“Anton Sirius had mentioned it, was supposed to do an interview with the director…”

SUPPOSED to? Of course I did! What do you mean supposed to? I did it and typed it up and, um, oh. I didn’t type it up. Oops.

(Sigh) Your Earth technologies are so exhausting, you know that? Back home the thing would have been done for me on the spot by my personal pre-fab Bot Friday. But no, here I have to record it on MAGNETIC CASSETTE of all things, play it back, type it up… such a waste of precious time. But for you darlings, I do it all gladly.

If not promptly.

Thus I give you, six months late, my interview with Ginger Snaps’ director John Fawcett, conducted at the Toronto International Film Festival.

AS: How long did it take you and Karen (Walton) to write the script?

John Fawcett: We started on the script early ’95. I guess the idea had been rolling around in my head for a few years before that. She was someone that I’d met, and we were looking for something to do together, and so I pitched her this horror concept that I had, involving these two girls and a werewolf, and she was a little hesitant at first. I don’t think it had ever occurred to her to write a horror film. But I basically assured her that I wasn’t interested in making just a standard horror film. So we started on it, I think it was even January ’95, and wrote treatments and outlines on it for about ten months or so before we actually started to write a draft. It probably took us a solid three years of writing to get to some place we thought was pretty good. Our first draft we did manage to get some Telefilm support for development- we wrote a draft and then took that to Telefilm.



(Anton notes: Telefilm is a Canadian government funding agency for indie films, I believe.)

Telefilm has been really supportive of the project from the beginning. So it’s been five years.



AS: Excellent! One of the things that really impressed me about the writing was that you managed to avoid all the obvious Scream/Buffy traps- you’re doing a horror movie involving teenagers, but there’s no hip, ironic dialogue. The characters seemed very real. Did you find you had some trouble slipping into that mode, and having to pull back out?

JF: No, not so much, because I think one of the things we wanted to do from the beginning was to try and create real teenagers. To a degree. Considering that the two girls started in my head as cartoon characters, little stick-y Edward Gorey girls. They were just really stylized versions of what Brigitte and Ginger became. I knew early on that what we wanted to do was give those characters a bit of grit and a bit of edge, and in doing so hopefully make them feel real. In first drafts of the script I think there probably was some… Karen’s a really witty writer, so she can write that stuff. And there is to some extent some of that cool dialogue in there.



AS: Yeah, but there’s no references to other movies or witty banter between them…

JF: The whole way along it was always the mandate to try and avoid clichés. And I was the horror ‘expert’, so I was there to help with ideas and help in an editorial fashion. But also I was there either to steer us clear of certain conventions that we wanted to avoid, or to let Karen know that these were conventions that we wanted to stick with and we wanted to twist a bit. I was always just to try and make the most unique thing that we possibly could.



AS: So having said that you were the horror ‘expert’, what were you going for tone-wise, in terms of the classic horror films?

JF: I think it was, to me, I really wanted to make a truly classic horror film. The thing that made me the most afraid for the project was the fact that it could get labeled a ‘teen horror comedy’ and get lumped in there with the Faculty and Scream and all those sort of things, which was exactly what we didn’t want to make. We wanted to make the exact opposite of those. I dunno- does that answer your question?



AS: It’s close enough. You could throw in the specific movies you’d consider classic. I guess beginning with American Werewolf in London, which is I guess the only recent ‘classic’ werewolf film?

JF: I tended to find… American Werewolf in London had a nice tone to it, it had a nice blend of comedy and horror.



AS: I’m asking because this actually came up last night at the American Nightmare screening at midnight. Were you planning on seeing it?

JF: I don’t know- should I?



AS: I think you’d probably like it. It’s a documentary just about 1968 to ’78, the last ‘classic’ period of horror, with interviews with Romero and Carpenter and Tobe Hooper and Savini and Cronenberg…

JF: Well, they were great horror movies made then. I didn’t necessarily find inspiration so much from the werewolf movies that I’d seen and liked. It was more from other things because I think that we immediately were making that was so different from a ‘werewolf’ movie. Certainly there are certain similarities, but I think early on we kind of laughed about the fact that we thought this movie was going to be Heavenly Creatures meets The Fly.



AS: That’s actually a good description. Call Variety with that one.

JF: The nice thing about the film in terms of pitching it was that it was actually a fairly pitchable project. All I had to do was go, “Oh, it’s Heavenly Creatures meets The Fly” and everyone would go, “Oh… that’s really weird!” But I think we found inspiration from other sources. I’ve always loved David Cronenberg and all his old movies, well, pretty much down the line. Dead Ringers was truly one of the best horror movies I’ve ever seen.



AS: Yeah, that’s my favorite too.

JF: That’s a creepy, creepy movie. I don’t think it was so much the werewolf movies. I think it was the fact that there weren’t many good werewolf movies that inspired me to make a werewolf movie. Because I went, “There’s a genre that really hasn’t been done well that many times.”



AS: So it was always your intention to get away from the wolfsbane blooming at night, transformation under the full moon, that kind of stuff.

JF: Always. Always. I was more interested in biological horror, in a kind of slow metamorphosis movie, than I was in full moons and silver bullets and that kind of thing. To me when I think about things that really sort of frighten me… I think everyone likes a good monster movie, but I think that ultimately what works for me is the fact that you could go to your doctor tomorrow and find out that you have cancer. And that it’s been in you for years. Right? Or you could discover that you have a brain tumor. It’s that not knowing what’s going on inside your body. Or the fact that you could become infected by a virus. All these invisible things that could get into your body. Those horror stories are going on every day. That to me was truly creepy and scary, that idea of a slowly mutating transformation.



AS: Let’s switch tracks for a minute. How did you happen to find the two actresses, Emily Perkins and… ah, her name just slipped out of my head, played Ginger?

JF: Katherine Isabelle.



AS: Right! Their chemistry together on screen is just fantastic.

JF: It’s kind of a weird story. We cast in a lot of places- we cast in Toronto, Vancouver, LA, New York, a little in Montreal. And they put themselves on tape in Vancouver. So I got this tape that had a bunch of girls on it from Vancouver. I watched it, saw Emily, and went nuts for her immediately. She wasn’t doing exactly what I saw as Brigitte, but I saw that she was a good actor, and I could also see that she was exactly the kind of person that I wanted to see play that part. Katherine was on the same tape, and my producer really liked Katherine initially, and I liked her, but I wanted to keep looking. But Steve (Hoban) kept saying, “No, she’s my favorite, I really like her” and I kept saying, “Well, Emily’s my favorite” and ultimately it led to, after seeing hundreds of people, us bringing those two girls from Vancouver. And what I found out was the fact these two girls knew each other, and had known each other. Their families knew each other. They went to the same school. Born in the same hospital, had the same agent, and not only that they read for each other in that video audition! Emily read off-camera for Katie, and Katie read off-camera for Emily. And I didn’t know that because they were just sort of voices off-camera when they were reading. So they came out with this already very comfortable feeling with each other. So that was kind of the boost that on screen relationship needed. Bringing two total strangers together and saying, “Create this chemistry. Make us believe that you’re sisters”, it can happen certainly with good actors-



AS: - but if they’ve got that history-

JF: -it was a huge, huge bonus, right. Because it was really just the three of us making this movie. The two girls, me, and then a bunch of people around us. It just made the whole thing really comfortable. We spent probably ten days rehearsing. I’d just shoot scenes basically with my little video camera, cover all the different angles for them, as much as we could we’d do it on the set. I just wanted them to clearly see what was in my head in terms of the way I thought these characters should play out, the kinds of girls they were.



AS: Now, the budget for this was teeny tiny, compared to the result you got. Three million US?

JF: A shade over three million US. For a Canadian film kind of a high budget, really, because Canadian movies are usually landing in the range of… well, I made my first feature for like 1.2 million. But I think that now the average budgets are ranging between 1.5 and 3 million Canadian. And we were at about 4.7, 4.8 million Canadian. So for a Canadian movie we were very fortunate to raise barely enough to do it.



AS: And yet that doesn’t show on screen at all. The effects are all top-notch. I mean it doesn’t look like a Steven Spielberg-level production, but it compares easily with Hollywood.

JF: That’s good. You want it to look good, you want it to compete in the marketplace. It’s this weird thing of growing up Canadian around the Canadian movies that were getting made, and to an extent are still getting made, this slightly arthouse vibe in Canada. And then being influenced by the Americans who are right next door, and you can’t help but go see their movies. So I think my sensibilities are a bit of both, always trying to find a nice sense of balance between the art and the commerce.



AS: Again, sort of walking the line Cronenberg walks.

JF: I suppose, yeah.



AS: If you’re approaching it from the critical perspective you can go “Well, the metaphor is this, and the underlying themes blah blah blah blah”, but then at the same time it’s just a hell of a scary film and you jump in your seat.

JF: Yeah. And to me that’s important. I think my favorite films personally are the films that work totally on an entertainment level. Just on that strict, buy a bag of popcorn and enjoy the flick kind of level. You don’t have to be super-smart to go, “Wow, that’s cool.” But at the same time there’s something else there, something else that you can enjoy at a higher level, characters and relationships that exceed normal expectations and that it ultimately has something to say.



AS: So do you see yourself as a horror director, or did you just happen to make a horror film this time out?

JF: Horror is certainly one of my favorite genres. And maybe it’s not horror per se I’m ultimately interested in, but the things I tend to think up are a little on the twisted side, and little bit on the dark side. I don’t think anyone would think I was the right person to do their family drama or kid’s film.



AS: Well, you say that, but look what Sam Raimi’s been doing the last three years.

JF: Well, people change. I think it was totally right for Sam to go and make a movie like The Gift. Because it just shows a maturing director. But I think there’s a decent chunk of horror stories that I wouldn’t mind telling down the track.



    + Expand All

    Readers Talkback

  • May 11, 2001 4:39:40 AM CDT

    Aargh!

    by scudd

    Why doesnt this movie get released in the US? The last image of werewolves I have in my mind is that American Werewolf in Paris tragedy. Even if Ginger Snaps is subpar, it couldnt be much worse than a bogie. Road trip to Canada, anyone?

    Reply to Talkback

  • May 11, 2001 5:17:12 AM CDT

    ginger snaps in Oxford, England: dates CONFIRMED

    by brendon

    The Ultimate Picture Palace in Oxford is such a cool little cinema. It's truly independant and shows so much great stuff. On this program alone there's a Hal Hartley retrospective, anime season with Wings of the Honneamise and Perfect Blue amongst others... and Ginger Snaps! I can't wait... but by the time it comes on, I'll have moved to California. Damn! But for those of you lucky or brave enough, the dates are Friday 13th July to Thursday 19th July. The e-mail address on their program - s.marham@virgin.net - should be a good lead to getting more info, or a copy of their cool, full colour program mailed to you....

    But when I get to California - at the start of June - where will I be able to see Ginger Snaps?????

    Reply to Talkback

  • May 11, 2001 5:17:20 AM CDT

    Telefilm & Indie Films

    by darvin

    Telefilm is a government organization that was designed to fund indpendant films and support "canadian culture".

    What telefilm actually does is give 75-95% of its yearly budget to commercial corporations such as Can-west Global Television (national broadcaster), Alliance-Atlantis (producer and distributer of films), and CTV,(national broadcaster). It is all but impossible for any production that is not part of this "old boys network" to obtain any kind of funding.

    Kudos to Gingersnaps for getting Telefilm funding in the first place and being a GREAT horror film in the second.

    Reply to Talkback

  • May 11, 2001 6:42:45 AM CDT

    Hrmph!

    by anton_sirius

    You nearly ruined a perfectly stunning ruffled shirt, too, Old Man. Good thing it's the same color as my blood (royal blue) or I'd be ticked.

    Reply to Talkback

  • May 11, 2001 7:18:50 AM CDT

    IGNORE THIS REVIEW!!!!

    by green ghost

    ...and TRY to see this movie.
    If it doesn't get a US release than it's a damn shame. It deserves an audience. I was at that screening in Toronto with my girlfriend who hates horror films, and she loved this.

    I've seen this movie thrice, and it get's better with each viewing...funny, creepy, bloody as hell. It's a breath of fresh air for the horror industry. Hell, it's just a cool movie even if your not a horror fan.

    If your expecting a Buffy knock-off you will be VERY disappointed.

    Reply to Talkback

  • May 11, 2001 7:36:48 AM CDT

    IGNORE THIS REVIEW!!!!

    by green ghost

    ...and TRY to see this movie.
    If it doesn't get a US release than it's a damn shame. It deserves an audience. I was at that screening in Toronto with my girlfriend who hates horror films, and she loved this.

    I've seen this movie thrice, and it get's better with each viewing...funny, creepy, bloody as hell. It's a breath of fresh air for the horror industry. Hell, it's just a cool movie even if your not a horror fan.

    If your expecting a Buffy knock-off you will be VERY disappointed.

    Reply to Talkback

  • May 11, 2001 7:47:35 AM CDT

    Yeah, well...

    by mr_sinister

    I must be in the seeming minority of people who don't love this movie all that much. It's been out here in Australia for MONTHS now. I couldn't really put my finger on what I didn't like, but I think Abe Forman says it. GINGER SNAPS just doesn't know what it's supposed to be. Seriously, I think Harry and others may be overhyping this a little too much. OK, it may not be terrible, but I don't think it's a movie that's going to 'restore' horror. And yes I know the trailer looks good, that's the reason I rented it. Oh well, at least the holographic video cover was cool.

    Reply to Talkback

  • C'mon! Any reviewer that liked Mouth of Madness and Blair Witch or uses them as an example of what great horror is really needs a great, big swift kick in the ass! This is a great horror/black comedy film that uses the tools of past horror movies to tell a wonderful story. You really get to know the charactera and actually care for them. When was the last time that occurred in a horror flick that you saw? NOT FOR A LONG TIME! Not to mention all the great parallels it draws in teens becoming adults (particularly women)and the transformation into a creature of the night. It really is an original and fun ride. The performers were great and the director of the piece sets the mood right from the beginning and does not let up. This is better than anything hollywood has put out in this genre in AGES! GO SEE IT! GO SUPPORT IT! Screw all the silly tenny bopper Valentines, Blair Witch 2s, Mummys and Halloween sequelitis. If you want an original take on a horror movie see this flick. I only hope to god that it gets a release here in the U.S. GO SEE IT!

    Reply to Talkback

  • May 11, 2001 12:13:20 PM CDT

    Im in Canada and Im seeing it Saturday...

    by eric draven

    I was really shocked when i saw the preview..i mean, I live in Canada and, well, as much as i love my country, we dont have a lot of great movies...mabey we do, and i've missed them, but i'm really psyched to see Ginger Snaps this weeknd.
    Oh..NightBreed...there is a pretty cool Canadian flick..
    yeah...we have a few...here and there.

    Reply to Talkback

  • May 11, 2001 6:03:33 PM CDT

    Max The Silent!

    by mr_sinister

    Hey I didn't know you were another Aussie! So have you seen GINGER SNAPS yet? And where did you find out that BRUISER comes out on DVD next week? I'm interested in seeing it even though I've heard it wasn't that great. Hopefully it won't be as disappointing as GINGER SNAPS.

    Reply to Talkback

  • May 12, 2001 7:25:51 PM CDT

    really cool Canadian horror/sci-fi flick CUBE

    by tall_boy

    usually Canadian filcks get the rep of being more somber ala Sweet Herafter, Last Night or Hard Core Logo(the last one is more funny, I find), but yeah, pick up Cube & you won't dislike it. hopefully, I mean...

    Reply to Talkback

  • May 12, 2001 10:43:59 PM CDT

    Cube is great but not horror at all

    by lord_soth

    I like it very very much! As for GS: the trailer looked me not as good as I expected, seems to me like yet another teenhorror flick I'll hate. But I'll watch it, because it's canadian.

    Reply to Talkback

  • May 13, 2001 4:48:12 AM CDT

    I have Seen Ginger Snaps! and not only does the bitch snaps...SH

    by paquitacustard

    ROCKS! I was lucky enough to catch Jeepers Creepers and Ginger Snaps just recently in LA, and all I have to say is, not since being on VICODIN and a 4 cocktail high while watching DEAD ALIVE with 6 of my friends who have never seen it, Have I ever had such a good time watching a HORROR MOVIE! Hands Down a Classic for the Ultimate movie you put on for your friends after a fun night of Cocktails and ........well if you have ever shown yer buddies the Custard scene at 3 in the morning from DEAD ALIVE, you know exactly what I am talking about.....

    Reply to Talkback

  • May 13, 2001 7:00:59 AM CDT

    Canadian Independence

    by tortis

    Finally, a true Canadian art house film, that deserves to be recognized.
    The reason I say art house is because, when you think about it, box-office wise, this movie is going to do shit ass business. The reason I say that is because A Knight's Tale has been released the same day as Ginger Snaps, so obviously, we all know which movie will prevail, and to tell you the truth, it really pisses me off.
    The same thing happened with Memento. When released here in Canada, it didn't even crack the weekly top ten. But the good thing is that through that release ,Memento garnered a great cult following, and to this day, it is still doing killer business.
    Now, back to Ginger Snaps. This movie premiered at the Toronto International Film Festival to great acclaim, and rightly so! It is funny, scary and is totally fucking original. Which is exactly what the movie business is missing nowaday's, ORIGINALITY!!!!
    So, get up off your fat asses, grow some balls and catch a great independent movie, even if it is Canadian, (cause I know most of you out there don't like our films, but watch it anyway, you may grow to love it).

    Reply to Talkback

  • Hey, that rhymed (it also sucked but lets not go there). Anyways I saw Ginger Snap way back in December down here is Oz when it first hit the vid shelves, and while it was an enjoyable enough slice of hokum it isn't anything that is going to re-invent the genre, or influence future films, or even be all that memorable, truth be told. I'll tell you this straight folks, seeing it without knowing anything about it beforehand I had a fair enough time, but had I been hyped up about it before watching this flick then I feel that it would have come as a definite letdown as it's just not *that* impressive of a film. Sure it has it's moments, but all in all I doubt many people are going to remember or be referencing this one in ten, five, or even two years time. A solidly entertaining b movie and nothing more, at least in my opinion. My advice, for maximum enjoyment you might want to leave your expectations of greatness at the door, or else you'll find yourself longing for The Howling, Wolfen or American Warewolf In London, all of which are honestly still better than this particular wolf flick. Good (if hokey) fun, but not great film. The lead actress that played Ginger was cute though, and could actually act to boot, which always helps...

    Reply to Talkback

  • May 14, 2001 10:40:03 AM CDT

    Cube was so good, I didn't know it was Canadian!

    by mister_pink

    That was a joke. It really was very interesting though. I thought the end could use a little work. I'm really looking forward to seeing Ginger snap, but I get the feeling it's going to be a while. BTW, what's this film rated in the US? I hope they didn't go for pg-13.

    Reply to Talkback

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