Tackling the horrors of global warming in The Last Winter
Itâs been ten years since Larry Fessenden made his urban vampire film Habit, a movie thatâs been kept alive thanks to the amount of airtime available on cable television, but since then, heâs continued his career as one of New Yorkâs maverick indie film stalwarts, producing and appearing in some of the scarier independent horror films of the last few years. (He also appears in a studio movie from time to time, as he did in Jodie Fosterâs The Brave One.)
His new movie The Last Winter takes on the larger topic of global warming in an Arctic horror tale that stars Ron Perlman as an oil worker who refuses to stop drilling despite the deaths and disappearances plaguing his crew and warnings by an environmentalist, played by James Le Gros, that the damages being done to the land are unleashing spirits bent on revenge. Itâs a surprisingly bigger budget film than what weâve seen from Fessenden in the past, but a lot of his sensibilities are retained.
ShockTillYouDrop.com had a rare chance for an extended conversation with the eclectic New York filmmaker about his latest movie and other things going on in his world and ours.
ShockTillYouDrop.com: Itâs been five years since you made âWendigoâ and thereâs definitely some references to that in this movie, so is this part 4 of your âtrilogy of horrorâ?
Larry Fessenden: Yeah, Iâm moving on, but the irony in a way is âThe Last Winterâ is sort of a distillation of the other three. I mean, I see it that way, as having elements from the other three movies, the echo message of âNo Tellingâ and the sort of subjective madness of âHabitâ and then of course the Wendigo presence, the revenging spirit presence from âWendigo.â To be honest, it was written first as an attempt to try to make a sequel of some sort to âWendigo.â It was in our contract with Ed Pressmanâs company Content Film, so we thought, âSure, what would a sequel look like?â Not really using the same characters or setting, but just the same thematic, vengeful comeuppance themes.
Shock: Because of the location, you get more into global warming, which is a hot topic right now.
Fessenden: Yeah, hot topic indeed!
Shock: You actually wrote this years ago, but it must be fortuitous that itâs being released now.
Fessenden: Well, you know Iâve been interested in global warming and all sorts of environmental elements since the âÂÂ90s when I read a book called âSilent Springâ and I first started reading more and more and a book called, âThe End of Natureâ started to present this idea of global warming and then Al Goreâs first book âEarth in the Balanceâ, so Iâve always been interested. I even wrote a book called âLow Impact Filmmakingâ which was a little thing to help people make some good choices on the set. In that book, written in 1990, I have a paragraph talking about global warming, so itâs sad because Iâm speaking with great urgency about something that hasnât been dealt with for 17 years now. (chuckles)
Shock: At least this will reach another audience who might not go see a documentary on the subject.
Fessenden:Yeah, and similarly maybe the global warming crowd would come to a horror film which they might not do otherwise, so itâs good for everyone.
Shock: You worked with a new writer on this. Is this the first one youâve collaborated with another writer on?
Fessenden: My first movie âNo Tellingâ I wrote with Beth Underwood who is my wife now, and in the past I had, so itâs not a big deal. The fact is that âHabitâ was my own story to tell so I did write that. I give the primary credit to myself, but I had written with a couple of other writers over the years. That story Iâve been telling for a long time. âWendigoâ, I just wrote very fast and very much on my own and so it was sole credit. This is my first time working with Robert Lieber and it was a great collaboration. I knew him as a friend, and I knew that he was interested in writing screenplays. Heâs written a couple of his own that hadnât been produced and I just felt his energy would be a great way to fuse my ideas and just have somebody to talk to about the project.
Shock: What was the process like? Was it a matter or you had something already written and then you brought him in?
Fessenden: I didnât have anything written, but I had a strong idea of what I wanted it to be and we would sit for a couple of hours every other day and we talk things through, every detail, like what are the names of the characters and what are the nature of characters, and then he would go off and write stuff down and then feed it back to me. Then I could critique it as if it was sort of a fresh thing. It was a really great process. I had hired him, so I was still the boss, and I could direct the story in a way that was true to my thinking. Which is important, because when I direct the film, I have to understand it. So worked for me naturally, you get this strange feeling when the movie goes off and gets made. I think Robbie had his own issues of separation and you know, loss of control, but in the end I think weâre both happy with it.
Shock: Would you do another movie with Robbie in this way?
Fessenden: In fact, weâre talking about writing another movie together, which would be a non-horror movie and that will be a fun project. Once again, Robbie just has a very robust imagination, and it plays well with mine. I have just very specific things that interest me, so it works together.
Shock: However it worked out, I think it worked really well. Did this movie have a bigger budget that you normally work with?
Fessenden: No, it was much bigger. It was my first in 35 mm, and of course we had to go to Iceland to film, so thereâs a lot of just practical things that raised the budget, and then we had a crane everyday.The crew was actually the same size as âWendigoâ but as I say, in a whole different environment, so it was much more expensive. I donât knowâÂÂŚ it cost ten times as much as the last movie.
Shock: How are Icelandic crews to work with as far as shooting up there?
Fessenden: I loved the crew. They were a very robust group and everybody shares in all the tasks. Itâs not as delineated as American crews, who are very conscience of the union rules, even when their not making a union film. They sort of have been trained that way in their thinking, whereas in Iceland, everybody sort of pitched in. Itâs an interesting community. They all know each other from childhood, so thereâs old rivalries and old affections that play out in this arena of filmmaking. Everybody knew the DP who was actually a very young guy, who was like 26 I think, and it just was a lot of affection and warmth on the set and I work best that way. We have a really have a fun time on the set, even though weâre telling a somber story, and Ron Perlman was a gas and we all had a lot of laughs. I like to run a ship that way, because it keeps the morale up and you actually get more out of people.
Shock: The DP did a really great job with the look of the film. Do have any sort of film school up in Iceland?
Fessenden: Well, I donât know if they have a film school actually, but I think Magni (the DP) went to England and did a lot of commercials throughout Europe and even in America, but more specifically they have a great film community and of course, Clint Eastwood shot both his war movies there, the recent Batman, the whole beginning scene. They are constantly hosting Hollywood films and a lot of independent, Hal Hartley made a movie there called âNo Such Thingâ and they have their own filmmakers, so itâs a great film community actually.
Shock: I was going to ask you if you did any research into global warming but you answered that before with all those books. Did you go back and reread some of them for this?
Fessenden: Itâs a good question actually. The research element of this movie was my producerâwhich was awesome and not everyone would have done thisâhe financed a trip, he and I went to Alaska. We went to Prudhoe Bay, which is the very tippy-top of Alaska where the oil pipeline starts, and very few people go there, citizens I should say. Thereâs a lot of oil guys there and every now and again, an environmentalist will go through on their way to the pristine landscape called Anwar. It was just a very unusual trip and there I learned that the landscape Robbie and I had written about was not accurate. We had beautiful pine trees and all this, because it was Alaska, but in fact it was a very flat landscape, which is why they want to drill up there. It really affected the script and I learned a lot about oil drilling and actually more about that stuff and sour gas and a lot of the things, even ice roads. Everything in the movie was sort of revised once we got up there. You can read about stuff all you want, but until youâre actually there, you donât soak it in. It was a great trip and really affected the script, and of course I researched global warming and what might happen and so on. In the film, all that stuff is happening basicallyâÂÂŚ
Shock: Right, except for that giant creatureâÂÂŚ
Fessenden: No, thatâs happening, too!!! You just donât see it yet!
Shock: You found that out as part of your research.
Fessenden: Yeah, exactly. You canât imagine, but theyâre just wandering around the plains out there. (laughs)
Shock: James Le Grosâ environmentalist is a very interesting character, and the relationship between him and Ron Perlman is also interesting, having this love triangle amidst all of the deaths and strange occurences. Can you talk about how that developed?
Fessenden: Well, that came out of me and RobbieâsâI have no idea who thought of itâbut we just knew that we wanted that element because it would really eat away at Ron Perlman. Itâs funny. I never in my mind was sure that Perlman had actually had a relationship with her. He clearly always pined away for her and I pictured that Abby, played by Connie Britton, had somewhat climbed through the corporate structure by kind of leading him on. I donât know if any of that comes through, and most people just assume they had an affair in the past, and thatâs fine, but I think I was trying to point out that Abby, whoâs kind of a neutral characterâsheâs kind of on both guysâ sidesâÂÂthat she was also kind of an operator and an opportunist and maybe had used Perlmanâs affections to get where she was. You can tell he has a tremendous soft spot for her. But in any case, the triangle is at least an emotional one. I also wanted to say that in a way weâre all, as the everyman citizen, hearing about global warming. Weâre kind of in Abbyâs position. We kind of believe Perlmanâs take, which is that progress is essential and you must go forward and be bold and we were certainly hearing the other side, which is the concerns. The movieâs kind of like âWhereâs she going to land?â and she pretty much stays on Perlmanâs side until things get really bad and then she seems to kind of come to the belief that maybe Hoffman is right. The movie plays on the fact that Hoffman canât quite define whatâs wrong, which of course the way that the global warming deniers, if you will, play on the fact that you canât predict the future, so thatâs a very important element in the national debate. Itâs also on a personal level what happens when youâre not quite sure that somethingâs wrong, and youâre not sure, like Iâm trying to express anxiety here, I think we should look into this. Itâs easy to dismiss that and say, âWell, youâre a coward or a fool.â
Shock: I just saw the global warming documentary âThe 11th Hourâ which deals with that a lot.
Fessenden: The first half of the trailer, youâre absolutely horrified and the second half the music changes, and itâs like, âAnd this is what you can do.â Even Al Goreâs movie didnât really have a solution. (laughs) I think itâs good that Leoâs turned that cornerâÂÂŚI didnât see the movie yet.
Shock: He does a good job, but itâs very deep, though you might appreciate it having read all of those books.
Fessenden: Iâd probably recognize half the characters.
Shock: Probably. I personally think that most people wonât have any idea what theyâre talking about, including myself half the time.
Fessenden: Well thatâs interesting. Then you have to ask, âWas it a good movie?â in terms ofâÂÂŚdo you personally believe that global warming is happening? I think these movies are great. Itâs important for people to get with the program.
Shock: As far as Ron Perlman, I thought that was great casting. He hasnât appeared in that many movies, although he does have the background doing horror movies for Guillermo del Toro. What made you think of him?
Fessenden: Well, Iâd have to admit, it was seeing âHellboy.â I mean Iâve known Perlman from all the way back, heâs in âCronosâ, âThe City of Lost Children.â I remember him of course from the Alien movie heâs in, and I was aware of âBeauty and the Beastâ which was on TV. So Perlman, heâs a movie star that youâre aware of, but I saw
âHellboyâ, and I just thought he was immensely charming and sympathetic even as a gruff character and even as obviously this grotesque red creature, and I thought thatâs the vibe I want for Pollack. I want him to be sort of repellent and robust and a blowhard, but I want him to be kind of like a kid underneath and show his other side. I really thought Perlman would deliver that, plus itâs a nice reference to the genre. Look, hereâs our genre favorite and letâs see him in this other kind of genre movie.
Shock: Youâve kind of become almost like the poster child for the indie horror movies, where you appear in all of these movies like âSession 9â and âHeadspace.â Youâre going to be in Ti Westâs sequel to âCabin Fever.â
Fessenden: Yeah, well itâs funny, because Iâm not also everybodyâs cup of tea. My kind of movies are quite subtle and so on, and maybe when I appear in these other movies, theyâre actually more of a favorite. I know Tiâs movie is going to have plenty of blood for the gore fans. Itâs absolutely appallingly grotesque and that will be fun and I get to die in that movie like I do in all my others. Then âSession 9â I think is a beloved film. Itâs definitely one on the creepiest films ever, so itâs just great. I love being invited to do these things.
Shock: Do you feel that TI is one of your graduating class, having produced and released most of his early films?
Fessenden: Yeah, I mean quite honestly I did support him when he was young, and I knew that he was going to be great and heâs proved it. I donât know if heâll stay in the horror genre, but heâs going to be a filmmaker for sure that weâll reckon with. I think heâs a really good filmmaker. I knew that from the start. His shorts are great, and itâs pure cinema. Thatâs what I like about Ti. Heâs not as much about the writing, though heâs a good writer. He writes what he needs to film, but heâs just a really good filmmaker.
Shock: So we now know you die in the movie, but who do you play? Should we keep that a secret?
Fessenden: Nah, I play the guy who drives the delivery truck over the water, which causes the virus, so Iâm obviously affected because Iâm drinking my own product, and then I just perish early on and start the whole thing going, so itâs a great role.
Shock: You kind of have to die if you started it all.
Fessenden: Absolutely! Ti lives in a highly moral universe. Ha ha!
Shock: Whatâs going on with Scareflix these days? I know you have a couple of movies in the works, so have you finished shooting them?
Fessenden: We are in the middle of shooting one (âI Sell the Deadâ), which is where we took a hiatus while weâre waiting for Ron Perlman to come back from the Hellboy shoot. Thatâs a great movie in the tradition of the Hammer films from the âÂÂ60s, and itâs a beautiful period piece by Glen McQuaid, whoâs done a lot of the effects on my own films. Iâm very excited about that. Thatâs not even finished and weâre just finishing up a movie called âI Can See Youâ by Graham Reznick, who is Tiâs sound man, so if you know Tiâs work, you know how important the sound is so imagine Graham having control over a whole movie. Itâs going to be very special, and then Jim McKinney made this robot movie weâre just going to release this year called âAutomotonsâ, a release on video. Theyâre slowly trickling out on DVD now. The first two are already out and then two more are coming out this year, so itâs very cool. Itâs a great project, the Scareflix thing.
Shock: Are you going to go right into another movie yourself?
Fessenden: Iâm going to try to have a faster turnaround than before, yeah. I want to shoot in the spring, a very small film and just get that under way and then maybe next fall, meaning in a year, have something a little more substantial, but itâs hard, man. Itâs hard to find the money and the backing, especially when youâre a strange filmmaker like myself. Itâs not guaranteed that this is what people want. Iâll make my way, but itâs always a mystery. Look, even Martin Scorsese used to have trouble raising money and he made some of the best films ever. Itâs not an easy gigâÂÂŚfilmmaking.
Shock: So in thirty years, weâll see you at the Oscars when youâre 70 years old?
Fessenden: Yeah, yeah, exactly. I mean, look at that. He had to wait that long. I donât know, itâs weird. As for the Oscars, I only take you up on that question because well, itâll be interesting. The great goal is to make a truly great movie or even a really good movie and you know, thatâs a very elusive goal. (chuckles)
Shock: Well, whatâs ironic is that he went back and made the same type of movie he made in his early years and thatâs what won him the honor.
Fessenden: Yeah, it had the same flavor, but we all know he got the award for being Marty and you know not specifically âThe Departedâ, though itâs perfectly good.
Shock: Going back to Iceland. We talked about the crews, but what about the actual environment? Did everyone have to go through some sort of survival course to know how to survive out there?
Fessenden: Not for the Icelandics. They live that life. We were very safe to the degree that we could be. (chuckles) We were up in the northern part of Iceland filming the exterior scenes, and we all lived in these remote hotels and weâd drive 20 minutes in the morning down this one single road. At a certain point, you veer off to the left and youâre off road and youâre driving over lava flows with a thin coat of ice and snow. Thatâs where we had our little base camp. We ate in these school busses, that was the accommodations and then, weâd go out and film and weâd carry the 35mm camera around on these skidoos. It was just great, very much the way I like to work and very adventurous. Iâm a fan of Herzog, and though we werenât in the jungle, we were in the cold and it was really like an adventure. It just keeps things real. Youâre not acting like your coldâyou are cold.
Shock: The movie is set-up in a way in that it does ask some questions that are left unanswered and open-ended for some sort of sequel. Did you envision continuing the story or doing something else in that same setting?
Fessenden: Mm. Well, I think my movies are like⌠they all could fit together. You could have a film festival. The only one thatâs out of order is, Iâd make âHabitâ before âNo Tellingâ, which I donât know if youâve seen but thatâs more about a couple, so they sort of almost take you through the stages of life. Like in âNo Tellingâ, theyâre not married yet. Iâm not saying theyâre literally sequels, but there is this kind of growing up going on, and I do have in mind my next film is perhaps what happens after âThe Last Winter,â whatâs the world look like then. Itâs not a sequel at all, and certainly weâve had enough âWendigoâ for now. I think Iâll take a break from the Wendigo.
Shock: Are we going to give the CGI guys a break also?
Fessenden: Oh, I canât say that. (laughs)
Shock: Having mentioned Herzog, do you think you might continue doing more man vs. nature type horror films like these last two?
Fessenden: You know, Iâm really a misanthrope. That means Iâm very discouraged with the human species, and I always include nature in the backdrop of things. I find that to be essential. Then again, âHabitâ is a city film and it has a great affection for New York City, but I would argue itâs also about the night, and itâs still about something bigger then just the people. Thatâs just my approach.
Shock: The horror in this movie is based on stuff going on in the real world, something that George Romero shepherded along with his zombie movies, though his politics was more subliminal. Do you feel that this is the direction where horror is going?
Fessenden: I donât know that thatâs where itâs going, but thatâs where Iâm taking it. Iâm with George on this topic. I really think that the best horror is derived from real life and the fact is, real life is filled with issues. I donât know if they need to be partisan issues, but theyâre political and that there are solutions and thereâs debate as to how to address things. Wendigoâ is about a class struggle and the usurpation of the land by the Indians, and then by the white settlers and then by the rich people from the country people, so thatâs political, but Iâm not telling people what to do. Iâm just saying this is the way it is and this is where violence and sudden violence comes from. It comes from resentment. In the case of âThe Last Winterâ, we can disagree all we want about how to solve problems, but the problems donât change. They can get worse and worse and you can keep arguing all you want, but the fu*cking world can collapse around you. You can do something or not, but the world ainât waiting for us to come up with solutions. Itâs going to do what itâs doing and itâs moving in a very scary direction.
The Last Winter opens in New York at the IFC Center on Wednesday and in other cities over the next few weeks. You can read more about Larryâs other projects, including those for Scareflix at his website.
Source: Edward Douglas