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 Wrong Turn 4 in production

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PostSubject: Wrong Turn 4 in production   Wrong Turn 4 in production EmptySun 03 Jul 2011, 4:16 pm

http://www.bloody-disgusting.com/news/25034

Quote :
Just when you thought it was safe to wander off the
beaten path once again, the murderous Hilliiker Brothers are back for
another go-round with Wrong Turn 4: Bloody Beginnings (coming out on DVD October 17th), a prequel to the first film that sees "WT3"
director Declan O'Brien returning to the director's chair. Back in
March B-D reporter Chris Eggertsen was given the opportunity to visit
the set, located at an abandoned asylum formerly known as the Brandon
Mental Health Centre about two hours outside of Winnipeg. While there he
got the chance to check out some of the filming (a bloody scene
involving both a severed head and a barbed wire noose), as well as
interview O'Brien and several of the cast members. Get the full report
inside.

Being a native of Southern California, I hadn't
enjoyed the dubious privilege of experiencing -20 degree weather until
this past March, when courtesy of Fox Travel I was flown up to Winnipeg,
Canada to visit the set of "Wrong Turn 4", the latest installment in the studio's long-running killer-hillbilly franchise.

Ha, but I said Winnipeg, didn't I? The set was actually located outside
Winnipeg – like, way outside – at an abandoned mental asylum near
Brandon, a town of less than 50,000 people that still retains the
distinction of being the second most-populated metropolitan area in the
Manitoba province.

The asylum – formerly the Brandon Mental Health Centre – wasn't bad,
actually, as abandoned hospitals go. Fully vacated only back in 1999, it
wasn't the crumbling, eerie monstrosity I would've expected given my
previous experiences on film sets located in deserted structures, many
left unoccupied for several decades. Peeling paint and decaying
stairwells were in short supply here, as it if all the doctors,
patients, and nurses had picked up and left the premises mere months ago
instead of years.

The day's set was located in an old auditorium on one of the upper
floors, where I imagine the staff once hosted screenings of classic
Hollywood movies: Singin' in the Rain, The African Queen, Sunset Blvd. (that last one, perhaps, being the product of some rebellious orderly's sick joke).

We watched from a balcony above the auditorium as the current scene
played out below us. The bit in question involved about six of the
film's young cast members, and I imagined each of their characters as I
spotted them – the voluptuous, dark-haired Slut; the porcelain Ingénue;
the hunky Boyfriend. It went a little something like this:

The Ingénue speaks in a tone that is hushed and breathless; she's
afraid something terrible has happened to a friend of theirs who's gone
missing. The Boyfriend radiates unconcern as he regards her with
skepticism, his pressed lavender v-neck blending nicely with the pastel
tones of his female companions' winter-wear. The Slut stands idly by,
her long hair cascading in waves of L'Oreal perfection.


Suddenly, something is catapulted from the darkness of the stage at
the other end of the room. It's a small jacket-wrapped bundle, twirling
through the air and then tumbling across the wooden floor in a hollow
roll. The group spins around all at once as it registers at the edge of
their vision (the Slut; the Ingénue; the Boyfriend; the long-limbed
Model-type with the conspicuous afro), instantly unified in their sudden
state of alarm.


The bundle comes to rest a dozen feet away. They stare at it,
uncomprehending. The jacket belongs to their missing friend, the Ingénue
asserts gravely. She hesitates for just a moment before slowly stepping
forward, her demeanor suggesting she knows of the horror the bundle
contains but can't keep herself from advancing the plot.


The Ingénue kneels before the bundle as the others slowly follow
behind her, gathering around in a tight half-circle as she unwraps it
with trembling fingers. As the edges fall away, her sudden screams echo
against the walls of the high-ceilinged room, drawing all eyes to their
friend's severed head lying vacantly in the center of the garment – the
ragged borders of his cleaved flesh encircling a dark, gaping expanse of
blood and sinew that spills from where his neck used to be like a thick
clump of raspberry jelly.


The Ingénue continues to scream as she recoils and stumbles away from
the bundle in a sudden whirlwind of floundering horror, her jagged
wails cutting through the musty air of the auditorium as she staggers
back against the Boyfriend and clings to him with bone-white fingers. He
keeps his eyes fixed numbly on the object of her alarm, the sharp angle
of his precisely-styled bangs disturbed only slightly by the sudden
force of her body against his…


In screenwriting terminology, the incident just described might accurately be labeled a first act "plot point"
– an event near the 30-minute mark of a film that spins the story
around in a completely new direction. Of course, when you consider that
this is the fourth entry in a slasher franchise not exactly renowned for
its narrative daring, the discovery of a severed head doesn't exactly
rate as an unexpected development. Attractive Young Adults find
themselves in Creepy Abandoned Location; Alarming Signs are soon picked
up on by More Perceptive Members of group; Shit Hits Fan shortly
thereafter.

That paradigm is more or less expressed in "WT4"'s basic plot: A
group of twenty-something friends go on a snowmobiling trip as a last
hurrah before their college graduation. They soon find themselves
stranded in an abandoned mental hospital after getting lost in an
unexpected snowstorm. But the hospital isn't really abandoned; a few of
its former patients still reside there. Three guesses who those former
patients are, and the first two don't count (cough, killer mutant
hillbillies).

It should also be mentioned that the film is actually a prequel, the
category of franchise entry that is apparently no longer the sole domain
of big-budget science-fiction movies. Later, we briefly sat down with
returning director Declan O'Brien (he also helmed the third installment)
to get some specifics.

"I finished 'Wrong Turn 3' and it did pretty well. You know, it sold well, I was happy with it", said O'Brien, a youthful, bright-eyed presence who I pegged as being in his late 30s or early 40s. "And
Fox called again and said 'hey, do you wanna do Wrong Turn 4'? And you
know, [they] said 'well, maybe you can bring Three Finger back'. And I'm
like, 'I killed him six ways from Sunday [in 'Wrong Turn 3'], there's
no way he's coming back. Give me a weekend to think about the story and
let me get back to you.'
"

That's when he decided to go the prequel route, in effect showing how
the mutant killers from the previous films became who they became.

In a nutshell, fans will get to see Three Finger (Sean Skene), Sawtooth
(Scott Johnson) and One Eye (Sean's brother Dan Skene, both of whom also
acted as stunt performers under the direction of their
stunt-coordinator father Rick) – aka the Hilliker Brothers – in all
their pre-pubescent glory, before flashing forward several years later
as they embark on their first ever (?) massacre of innocent wayward
civilians.

Wrong Turn 4 in production 2wrongturn4bloody062111"It's a brother story. It's like 'My Three Sons'!" laughed the director. "People
just really relate to it. I guess they loved the characters that Stan
Winston originally created. I'm really proud of [special effects makeup
artist] Doug Morrow on this, because he took us right back to what
Stan's work looked like. These guys I think look better than [in parts]
'2' and '3'.
"

True to the inventive kills featured in the previous three installments,
O'Brien will be taking full advantage of the setting here, chock-full
as it is of left-over equipment from the hospital's bygone era as a
working mental asylum.

"These guys have the run of the place. If they get locked up, they know they can get out", said O'Brien of the killers, alluding to the fact that they were once patients of the institution. "So they use the surroundings like, you know, electric shock machines, and stuff like that."

In addition to the tortuous potential of abandoned implements left
inside the hospital, the snowy landscape that surrounds it also holds
potential as a killing field, with tools normally used for both fun and
survival in the freezing environment milked for their potential as
instruments of bodily defilement, including, among other things, a
snowmobile and an auger (a drill used for ice-fishing).

Indeed, it sounds as if hardcore slasher fans are in for a treat this
time around, with a kill count of nine (a record for the franchise). The
nastiest bit described during my visit was a gag in which one of the
characters is eaten alive by black flies.

"The hardest thing was pacing back and forth in my living room thinking about how to kill people", said O'Brien of trying to one-up the murders in the previous installments. "'No,
I can't do that, that's been done, can't do that, that's been done.'…I
killed like seven people the last time, and there's nine new ones. I had
the egg-slicer last time that didn't quite work practically, so we had
to put lousy CGI in it. [Laughs] But [in] this one, all the kills are
99% practical.
"

I spoke with several members of the cast later that day, after hours
spent milling about the craft services table and wandering through the
abandoned hallways of the former BMHC (highlight: the large, eerie white
room upstairs with cheerful cartoon murals adorning the walls – Barney
Rubble from "The Flintstones" here, a smiling Garfield there, a brilliant butterfly, a jubilant sun).

The young thesps – all of them Canadian – greeted me with amused eyes
from a line of tall folding chairs as I shuffled into the room, recorder
in one hand and a battered notebook in the other, sweating beneath the
layers of cotton I'd armored myself with against the elements outside –
only to have those layers turn against me once I spent an hour or so
within the super-heated confines of the hospital.

I regarded them in turn as I do all young and beautiful entertainers –
in awe of their apparent immunity to looking bad, even when faced with
the brutality of intense 12-hour workdays and endless retakes requiring
them to run, and scream, and die – often with pints of spilled corn
syrup soaking through their clothes.

Wrong Turn 4 in production 1wrongturn4bloody062111The only male actor in the room was Dean Armstrong, who plays "Daniel". You may remember him from his role as Bobby's friend "Cale" in last year's "Saw 3-D" (aka the blindfolded guy who was hanged in the room with no floor).

"[Daniel] is a stripper, who was picked up…" he began of his
character, and then stopped as the others began to laugh. A joke,
obviously, except I wanted it to be true. A male stripper in a slasher
movie? Now that would be interesting!

Daniel is actually the med student boyfriend of Kenia, played by
Jennifer Pudavick (aka the screaming Ingénue). The long-limbed actress
offered up an interesting tidbit on the art of the horror-movie scream.

"You've heard of 'Throat Coat'?" she asked me. I hadn't. "It
really helps soothe your throat when you're doing screaming scenes. So
you drink it in between to make sure you don't get a raw throat
", she explained. "I know what it's like to scream for my life now…I know what that feels like and how much you want to puke after." In other words, being a scream queen isn't for sissies

Joining Armstrong and Pudavick were Terra Vnessa as "Jenna", the girlfriend of "Vincent" (Sean Skene, working both sides of the fence here); Ali Tataryn as "Lauren", who braves the elements outside the hospital to ski for help once things go south; Kaitlyn Wong (aka "the Slut") as Bridget, a bitchy lesbian; and Tenika Davis as "Sara", Bridget's girlfriend (she's the Model-type with the afro mentioned earlier).

"At the end of the day, [the gore] is the stuff that makes people turn away from the T.V.", said Davis (a former contestant on "Canada's Next Top Model"), speaking to a big part of the "Wrong Turn" franchise's grimy appeal. "That's
the thing that gives you that feeling in your stomach that you almost
wanna, you know, hurl or something like that. But at the same time you
can't stop looking at it.
"

Speaking of gore, we got a good dose of it during a kill scene filmed
later that day, in which unfortunate actress Samantha Kendrick ("Claire") was dangled from a harness above the floor of the auditorium with a "barbed wire noose" encircling her neck.

In the continuity of the film, this bit directly follows the "severed-head-in-a-jacket"
moment, with Claire wandering into the theater and startling her
friends from their discovery just as the Hilliker Brothers lower the
noose from the balcony above and use it to hoist her off the ground by
her neck. Her boyfriend "Kyle" (Victor Zinck Jr.) then rushes forward and attempts to save her as the wire slices mercilessly through her nubile flesh.

As I watched the pretty blonde actress hanging from the harness, her
white sweater matted with a chaotic spread of scarlet, spitting out
ribbons of fake blood in take after take after take, I found myself
feeling both sorry for her (she was up there for a good majority of the
day) and ever-so-slightly ashamed at my own rubbernecking. Her
barbed-wire lynching might have been fake, but this horror movie
business isn't exactly a cake-walk for those working behind the scenes
either.

so who cared about the first 3 movies?
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Wrong Turn 4 in production Empty
PostSubject: Re: Wrong Turn 4 in production   Wrong Turn 4 in production EmptySun 03 Jul 2011, 10:43 pm

I only liked the first one since I like Faith!
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