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‘Sisu’: ‘Rare Exports’ Filmmaker Jalmari Helander on Hyper-Violent and Bloody Crowd Pleaser [TIFF Preview]

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Sisu - Horror Adjacent Movies

Writer/Director Jalmari Helander’s Rare Exports quickly became requisite holiday viewing among horror fans for its delightfully twisted take on Santa Claus and his not-so-merry elves. Helander is upping the ante on genre-bending mayhem for his latest, Sisu, set to make its World Premiere at the Toronto International Film Festival on September 9, 2022.

The filmmaker reteams with Rare Exports actor Jorma Tommila for one epic and hyper-violent period adventure through the wilderness of Lapland in Northern Finland. Sisu sees Tommila playing Aatami, a solitary gold prospector that embarks on a trek to the nearest town to cash in his find of the century. Aatami crosses paths with a troop of Nazi soldiers led by the vile and villainous SS Obersturmführer (Aksel Hennie). The Nazis decide to take the gold for themselves, but they don’t realize they’ve picked a fight with the wrong man. Aatami is a one-man army of legendary proportions, and he’s willing to fight to the death.

In other words: expect one uproariously great time.

Ahead of the film’s festival premiere, Bloody Disgusting spoke with Helander about the gonzo violence, dark sense of humor, and trying to outdo himself on action and ambition.

Helander said of Sisu’s inspiration, “I always wanted to do a film in Finnish Lapland about the gold rush we had here in Finland. When I realized a couple of years ago that there actually were Nazis in Lapland at the end of World War II, I connected those things; now I could have a fight with the Nazis. That’s basically the idea.”

Don’t expect a wholly serious tone here. Keeping with previous films, Helander aims to deliver the fun, this time for an older audience.

I just wanted to be entertaining. I’ve been missing that because all my previous films have been PG-13. I guess Rare Exports was something else in the US, but in Finland, it’s PG-13. Because all my early films, when I just used a VHS camera, were about a lot of violence like they usually are. It’s fun to try to reinvent things like that. It was fun to try to invent ways to kill Nazis and survive all the Nazi attacks with some inventive ways which you haven’t seen before. That’s what I liked when I was writing, to have cool ideas of what to do if you are in a situation where Aatami is in the film.”

Image credit: Courtesy of TIFF

One noticeable trait of Sisu‘s protagonist, aside from his ability to dole out and receive punishment, is that he’s a man of few words. 

When asked if the minimal dialogue, at least on Aatami’s part, made it easier or trickier to convey emotion and intensity, Helander said, “Probably it’s harder. I was terrified that I didn’t want Aatami to talk in the film. When I started writing, I was quite terrified of how the fuck I was going to fill the pages of the script because I didn’t have any dialogue. Because dialogue is usually where you get enough pages. But in the end, I loved the process of writing without the main character talking because it’s a movie, after all, not an audiobook. So, I have to show things rather than explain them in dialogue, which is so stupid. So many times, you see that. Like in Keep Breathing. This woman is stranded somewhere in Alaska, and she’s constantly talking. Things like, ‘I need water. I need to get away from here,’ or stuff like that. You don’t need to say that. Everyone knows that. So, I think it was really fun [to write without dialogue].

“It was quite a lot of storyboarding. Also, when writing, I made these little models from paper for all the cars and stuff. Because it’s quite hard to imagine where all the cars are, in which order they drive and where Aatami will be at this time. I did quite a lot when I was writing. When I finished the script, it was quite clear what we would have to do. Then there’s quite a lot of VFX and SFX. You need to storyboard that to be able to pull it off in the shooting.”

Helander emphasizes practical SFX as much as possible. That means many crowd-pleasing, gory action set pieces. So gory that Helander lost count of the quantity of fake blood employed during the shoot.

“That’s a good question. I should ask that of the makeup department, but it was a lot. It was quite a lot of blood. It would be where they had big, big cans of it. Many liters. But it’s impossible to say how much; I can’t answer that,” he tells us.

For the filmmaker, making an R-rated, hyper-violent action movie let him cut loose. He explained with a grin, “It was like being a kid again with the fake blood bottles and all that shit.”

Details on Sisu‘s screenings at TIFF can be found here.

Horror journalist, RT Top Critic, and Critics Choice Association member. Has appeared on PBS series' Monstrum, served on the SXSW Midnighter shorts jury, and moderated horror panels for WonderCon, SeriesFest, and Popcorn Frights Film Fest.

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Interviews

‘Widow’s Bay’ Star Kate O’Flynn on Patricia’s Triumphant Final Girl Transformation

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Kate O'Flynn Widow's Bay episode 8 "Your Baggage"
Kate O’Flynn in "Widow’s Bay," now streaming on Apple TV.

As the inaugural season of Apple TV+’s stellar new seriesWidow’s Baybarrels toward its finale in two weeks, the latest episode gives Kate O’Flynn the spotlight as her character revisits her trauma with the Boogeyman.

Your Baggage“, directed by Andrew DeYoung (Friendship), sees O’Flynn’s scene-stealing Patricia once again renew her fight with the Michael Myers-like stalker that slaughtered her peers during her adolescence. Thrillingly, it makes for one extended chase sequence that sees Patricia trying to warn others, while evading the undead killer.

In short, this episode’s incredible riff on Halloween and the slasher subgenre transformed Patricia into a fierce Final Girl.

Well, that felt like a bucket list that I didn’t know was on my bucket list until I did it, but when I did it, I just lapped up every minute,O’Flynn tells Bloody Disgusting of her triumphant turn this episode.It felt fantastic for her to get that moment where she is becoming a badass. That was amazing.”

The actress turned to a few notable references for her performance.Horror-wise, I go back to my youth, which was referenced in some of the episodes: Wicker Man, Carrie, and Rosemary’s Baby, that sort of thing is my kind of vibe.”

O’Flynn also notes how the series’ unique tone allows for so much creative freedom to make bold swings.There’s something very freeing about it. Every moment is up for grabs, so it’s like we don’t have to totally land in one direction or another. It keeps it alive.

Patricia is the eccentric assistant to Matthew Rhys Mayor Tom Loftis, who’s at the forefront of trying to solve the island’s pesky curse predicament. Rhys felt the same aboutWidow’s Bayand its rare ability to make you laugh and scream in equal measure, stemming from series creator Katie Dippold. 

The mandate was, ‘It’s a real world with real people. You play for real.’ There’s no playing for comedy or horror,” Rhys echoes O’Flynn’s sentiments on how freeing the series’ tone has been.

New episodes will release every Wednesday through June 17 only on Apple TV+.

Kate O’Flynn in “Widow’s Bay,” now streaming on Apple TV.

 

 

 

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