For director John Erick Dowdle, it was important to find just the right actors to create the story they were looking to tell…and getting the performers to trust them with an unorthodox process.
Whether it was asking them to strap on headlamps and serve as a scene’s primary light source or forgo the tradition of hitting marks on the ground-and work with experimental techniques and reaction-only shots-the entire team was game.
“This movie was intended to be a personalized experience for each character,” the writer/producer continues. “In doing so, we want audiences to have that experience as well. We don’t feel the need to go into great detail about each character’s personal demons and all of the backstory. Sometimes it’s just one image, and from that image you can extrapolate what’s weighing on their soul.”
In keeping with their style of creating characters who are inherently warm and compassionate, but still quite flawed, the Dowdles searched for a young woman who was believable as an adventure-seeking archaeologist on a mission, but also a young woman who brought humanity to a character hardened by her deep family loss.
John Erick Dowdle shares: “For the role of Scarlett, we wanted somebody who is not only someone you’d love to take a road trip with but someone who you believe could be smart to the point of genius…and also funny. Perdita Weeks is someone we really felt had the depth to carry this character.”
Weeks knew that much would be expected of her during the shoot. Not only would she be required to spend hours in makeup, she’d be slogging through wet mud for a good chunk of the production. She offers: “This was the most physically challenging role I have ever played: from sprinting with heavy cameras and battery packs on my head, to abseiling and crawling through bone tunnels on hands and bruised knees, all the while head to toe in ‘blood’ and dirt…it was exhausting and exhilarating in equal measure.”
Miles of twisting catacombs lie beneath the streets of Paris, the eternal home to countless souls. When a team of explorers ventures into the uncharted maze of bones, they uncover the dark secret that lies within this city of the dead.
A journey into madness and terror, Universal Pictures and Legendary Pictures’ new horror-thriller “As Above/So Below” reaches deep into the human psyche to reveal the personal demons that come back to haunt us all.
“As Above/So Below” will be shown exclusively at Ayala Malls Cinemas nationwide starting Oct. 22, 2014.