Category Archives: Interview

Interviews

Exclusive Interview with Lucifer Valentine, Controversial Director of the Vomit Gore Trilogy (2010)

I recently sent Lucifer Valentine, most notable for the now cult hit The Vomit Gore Trilogy, a few questions. With it being Halloween today, LV talks about his love of the holiday in addition to his thoughts on pop culture, movies, and his own methods of making art. This interview shows that the man behind the films is just as interesting and unique as the subject of his films.

Slaughtered Vomit Dolls

Ameara Lavey as Angela Aberdeen from "Slaughtered Vomit Dolls"

CN: Are you familiar with the work of Usama Alshaibi (if not, you should look up his DVD Solar Anus Cinema [so should fans of LV's work])?
LV: Oh, cool, yeah I checked out a trailer of his stuff on Youtube just now and it looks great!

CN: We’ve had a few exchanges before and I’ve listened to your commentary on your VGT DVDs regarding the philosophical content of your work. But for those who aren’t familiar with you, can you briefly sum up what your films are all about?
LV:
In the broadest sense, I can say my films are about me and my friends diving very very deeply into our personal experiences of darkness and often trauma, and, because we have a true connection and bond of trust, we embrace and explore that darkness fully which gives rise to a new kind of experience and energy associated with going beyond the norms of how the human condition would usually interpret darkness, sadness and traumatic events in one’s life.

CN: You seem to have a connection with the leading women in your films. Do you adapt the ideas you already have around them or do they serve more as a muse that lead to the ideas (or a mixture of both)?
LV: That’s a great question ! It’s a combination of both scenarios that you describe there; to varying degrees the actual events and experiences from my leading ladies’ real life are woven into the themes and scenarios in my movies, with Ameara LaVey, for example, a great deal of her biographical experiences, such as her actually having ran away from home at the age of 14, being a stripper and working in porn movies, are put directly into Slaughtered Vomit Dolls and then “shaped” by her my conversations and collaborations in coming up with the elements that make up the various scenes in SVD, so that “shaping” of her role allows her to have the freedom to go off on any tangents she feels may help her performance. With Hope Likens’ portrayal of Angela in Slow Torture Puke Chamber, she was a severe bulimic when I met her, and she and I had several conversations about how we could create a story about her version of Angela and how Ameara’s would intersect in STPC and how Ameara’s Angela would seem to prey upon and infect and envenom her with a Satanic Curse. I’d say approximately 90% of Ameara and Hope’s dialogue is completely spontaneous and improvised with the exception of when i have them recite Pacts with the Devil onscreen, I have them repeat lines after me as in those cases my character is indoctrinating them into total Satanic submission.

CN: Name one film that no one would likely guess you are a fan of…?
LV: Gosh, I don’t know man, I’m not a fan of anything, I LOVED how the show Arrested Development had a latent incest theme !

CN: So far your films have been very experimental and metaphorical. Do you have any plans for future work involving a more “conventional” plot?
LV: That’s hard to say, I mean, I don’t actually plan anything, so Black Metal Veins (a documentary about a group of heroin junkies) may flow with a more recognizable plot or narrative which is totally cool with me, but it all just happens on its own when I start editing all the footage and creating the sound design etc. The main reason why I never plan anything in my movies is so they are alive and can be free to can take on a life of their own and I am there to help guide and shape the flow of energy of each movie; when editing, for example, certain pieces of footage will want to be side by side and scenes will seemingly merge and weave into one another and make combinations and I let it piece itself together and in that sense it has very little to do with me but I’m dedicated to making it come alive; as a director, I’m not there to force anything or make my movies be a certain thing or a certain way, so I will never write a script and i obviously don’t care about the idea of a so-called plot or any of the conventional “rules” of filmmaking, that kinda stuff is totally irrelevant to the kind of artwork I like to make and is a real buzz-killer on set because it creates restrictions and I can’t have any inhibitions due to the nature of my movies.

CN: With it being the Halloween season and all, do you get into it? Any plans for the festivities?
LV: I love Hallowe’en ! I don’t dress up because I don’t want to scare away any evil spirits, and so i just wear my regular clothes and go as Death. Often on Hallowe’en I’ll indulge in Bloodsports, meaning, I will mutilate a consenting girls’ flesh and drink their blood as a friendly fun way to relax and have a few drinks.

CN: Absolute worst movie you’ve seen?
LV: Haha, I don’t know man, there’s so many movies and I really don’t rank movies or watch them in comparison to each other, and definitely I wouldn’t trust the human mind with making interpretations based on good and bad toward anything let alone movies. So, nothing to me is good or bad, or the “best” or “worst” thing i’ve ever seen, it’s all just people supposedly making representations of whatever they are capable of.

CN: If you weren’t making movies you’d be….
LV: Still taking care of my little sister, and we’d likely be married by now with “experimental” children.

CN: Any thoughts on 2012 end of the world theories?
LV: Hahaha ! oh my, well, to me there is no “world” that could end, so yeah, people love to make global expressions of a collective consciousness founded almost entirely on fear and doom which seems to come from self-loathing and can essentially be reduced to the hilarious pettiness of the human ego, so, yeah, a global apocalyptic affirmation is human beings’ way of illuminating and publicly declaring the weakness of their lowest common denominator mentality, how sweet ! I wish people all the best of luck with that.

CN:  What do you say to someone who believes that horror movies and violent video games are responsible for desensitizing society and contribute to violent crimes amongst youths?
LV: That’s another great question, well, presently it seems that young people spend huge amounts of time playing video games and are engaged predominantly in computer-based or technologically-based devices which forms the bulk of their social interactions especially during their formative years; that would be a very important issue that parents should be acutely aware of in this day and age. The actual fabric, if you will, of today’s youth culture, with respect to horror movies, video games and online social networking etc. in and of themselves are amazing beautiful things and should not be blamed in any way for the desensitization of young people or any violent crimes they commit per se, in fact, there’s no actual blame to be had, the reality is, if a child is in this case literally left to their own “devices”, without any or sufficient parental instillation of actual meaningful human interaction and a real appreciation for life and the experience of positive and thereby rewarding behaviors to others and oneself, the parents will have created a huge emotional-experiential void for their children, and obviously kids will fill that void with terrifying antisocial behaviors to express their feelings of rejection and neglect as they seek out negative and seemingly entertaining subject matter to represent a deep-seated need for connectedness to a positive sense of self.

Thanks to Lucifer Valentine for his participation in this interview. Please check out his work which is available on many mainstream and underground online DVD retailers. You may also want to read my review of the Vomit Gore Trilogy!

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Exclusive Interview with Actor and Filmmaker Matt Farley

Interview date: 12-Jan-2010 | First interview!

In the New Year we’ve been doing some new and exciting things. Aside from book reviews, interviews are a new addition we’re bringing to the site. To kick things off, we interviewed writer, director, producer, and actor Matt Farley. Farley is behind such films as Freaky Farley and Monsters, Marriage, and Murder in Manchvegas. Mr. Farley was gracious enough to do this e-mail interview discussing his love for movies, favorites, and even a few tips for aspiring filmmakers.

CN: When did you first realize you wanted to be involved with movies?
MF: When I was growing up, I loved movies.  When my family got a video camera when I was 13, I started making movies with my friends.  Since then, I’ve always had a project in the works.

CN: Growing up, what were some of your favorite films?
MF: As a kid, I loved the Star Wars and Indiana Jones movies.  I also loved the horror movies that would play on local TV on Saturday afternoons.

CN: Are there any filmmakers today that you are heavily influenced by?
MF: I love the great directors like Stanley Kubrick, Alfred Hitchcock, Woody Allen and Clint Eastwood.  Of today’s directors, I like Wes Anderson, Quentin Tarantino and P. T. Anderson.  My movies are also heavily influenced by ultra-low-budget directors like Don Dohler and Bill Rebane.  I guess the films we make are an attempt to merge the styles of great, respected directors with the tricks and pure entertainment value of low-budget filmmakers.

CN: Quick list…5 favorite films of the past decade?
MF: Punch Drunk Love.  Zodiac.  The Royal Tenenbaums.  The Man Who Wasn’t There.  Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind.

CN: Do you prefer writing and being behind the camera or acting?
MF: Writing is the best part of the process because your possibilities are unlimited.  Once it’s time to start filming, you need to make lots of compromises.  The filming process is fun and exciting, but it also involves dealing with one problem after another.

CN: Are any your stories and characters inspired by real life individuals and events?
MF: No.  The stories are more inspired by the elements we love best from low-budget films of the 70s and 80s.  If we know in advance who is going to play a certain character, we’re more likely to write lines that would sound right being delivered by that actor.

CN: You certainly seem to have a passion for telling quirky tales in classic b-movie fashion. Do you have any desire to go more mainstream in the future?
MF: With our incredibly limited budget, the only movies we can make successfully are quirky B-movies.  If we somehow got enough money, I’d love to make a more mainstream movie.

CN: Are there any teasers you can give us about the next film you’re working on?
MF: The next film is going to be called Don’t Let the River Beasts Get You.  It’s going to be a fun, old-fashioned monster invasion movie.  We’re in the process of writing it now.  Filming won’t begin until 2011, because that’s how long it’ll take to save enough money to make it.  It will be released in 2012.

CN: Quick list…5 recent films that most people haven’t heard of but should see?
MF: The only recent one I can think of is The Room, from a few years ago.  Here are a few not-so-recent titles that are pure entertainment: The Pit; Slumber Party Massacre 3; Silent Night, Deadly Night Part 2; Creature From Black Lake.

CN: Best movie you saw in 2009 and why? What movies are you most looking forward to in 2010?
MF: Inglorious Basterds was the best movie of the year.  It was wildly entertaining from start to finish.  I loved it.  I don’t know too much about what to expect in 2010.  But I love going to the movies.  I go every week or two.

CN: Any advice you can give to aspiring independent film makers out there?
MF: The most important thing is to get your projects finished.  So many people will start a project and then let it linger for years and years.  It’s much better to have a compromised finished product than nothing at all.  You need to accept that it will never be perfect, but still do it anyway.
I like having deadlines.  If you get the whole thing done in three weeks or so, that’s the way to go.  Otherwise, you might have actors drop out, change their hairstyle or leave town.  It’s easy to lose focus if you’re just filming on the weekends for a year.  So I say, take a few weeks off of work and make the whole thing happen.

Also, it’s good to work within your limitations.  Don’t write a script that takes place in a hospital if you don’t have access to a hospital.

Chances are, you’ll be working with inexperienced actors, so write lines that they can handle.  And don’t try to make it a heavy drama, because then it’ll be quite laughable to watch poor actors trying to pull off emotional material.  We write our scripts with the understanding that most of the performances will be laughable.

CN: You seem to cast a lot of unknowns and relatively inexperienced actors.  If one wished to obtain a role in one of your films, how would they go about getting in touch with the right people?
MF: Most of our actors are friends and families.  We’ve gotten a few actors from craigslist, and that has worked well.  If anyone is insterested in working with us, we can be reached through www.shockmarathons.com .  It’s a lot of work for no pay.  But the end result is usually worth it.

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