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‘Thanksgiving’ – Nell Verlaque and Milo Manheim on Slasher Kills and Collaborating with Eli Roth

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Netflix Thanksgiving Nell Verlaque

A new holiday horror classic emerged this season with the arrival of Eli Roth’s Thanksgiving, now playing in theaters and on PVOD

In Thanksgiving, “After a Black Friday riot ends in tragedy, a mysterious Thanksgiving-inspired killer terrorizes Plymouth, Massachusetts – the birthplace of the infamous holiday.” 

Roth directed from a script he co-wrote with Jeff Rendell. 

For the slasher’s surprise PVOD drop, Bloody Disgusting spoke with actors Nell Verlaque, who plays final girl, Jessica, and Milo Manheim as Ryan, Jessica’s love interest. The pair shared their experiences working on Roth’s slasher, ensuring that their characters were authentic and their favorite kills in the film.

In a previous chat with Roth, the director spoke of enlisting help from actual teenagers when it came to penning his high school characters. Verlaque reveals that the cast also pitched in when it came to maintaining authenticity.

“I’m laughing because we so did, so much,” Verlaque says of collaborating with Roth. “Thank god Eli is Eli. I would go to him and say, ‘The thing is, girls in high school don’t actually just talk about lip gloss.’ And he would be like, ‘Oh, so you’re saying a 50-year-old man doesn’t know what girls in high school talk about?’ I would say ‘No.’ Then, he would say, ‘You’re right. That’s why we need you to say that, so thank you.’ So, he was really great about accepting those notes, and it made it more authentic, so I’m glad.”

Manheim shares that it wasn’t just dialogue that the cast collaborated on; Roth sought input on the music the characters liked, too. 

“To open the movie, the song that you guys are singing in the car,” Manheim says to Verlaque, “I think was a suggestion from Tomaso [Sanelli] or Gabe [Davenport] or something. We were just like Duke Deuce. That’s such a perfect thing for them to be listening to, which Eli accepted and was open about.”

Eli Roth directing in Thanksgiving

Director Eli Roth on the set of TriStar Pictures and Spyglass Media Group, LLC THANKSGIVING

While Verlaque loved the physical aspect of playing Jessica, it was the personal relationships among the characters that she took greater care in fostering to ensure the friendships on screen felt real.

“I had a good time developing a backstory for my relationships with everyone, and I hope that it made them very specific,” she tells Bloody Disgusting. “This felt like a personal touch in a way because I remember with Gabe, who plays Scuba, they have a really sweet friendship, and they go through this together and come out together. Gabe and I did a lot on our own outside of that to make sure that that relationship came through. I think there are always little things that you try to add yourself and develop outside of work so that it comes through in your characters.

Manheim’s Ryan had a trickier arc as the seemingly sweet love interest with a darker side that places him firmly on the suspect list. The actor credits Roth’s direction for bringing that out of his performance.

He explains, “I think that just goes to show how genius Eli is. He’s really playing mental chess with all of us, and I think that the movie we saw is not really the movie we expected. I don’t know; I thought it was going to be a lot scarier than it is. It’s really disgusting, and it’s funny. When I auditioned for the role, he had me do it like a psycho, and I was screaming. I booked the role in that audition, so I thought to myself, ‘This is exactly what I need to do. I’m crazy. I’m nuts, and they’re not going to like him.’ And then I get to set, and he’s like, ‘You’re a really sweet guy, and we really root for you.’ My world kind of exploded, and I was like, ‘I had practiced it this way.’ I think through that, through me trying to be nice but not really being able to get there fully because that’s not where my head was at. We created this sort of untrustworthy element in Ryan, and I think that’s really Eli. Eli did so many things to really sculpt the feeling of each character, whether we knew it or not. So yeah, I liked being that little red herring though. They never say it in the script. You have to create that vibe for yourself.”

The pair, both horror fans, also picked favorites when it came to the feast of gory kills in Thanksgiving. If you haven’t yet seen the film, consider this a spoiler warning.

Thanksgiving

Thanksgiving Parade from TriStar Pictures and Spyglass Media Group, LLC THANKSGIVING

Verlaque didn’t hesitate to reveal her favorite Thanksgiving kill: “Okay, that’ll take a while. Just kidding. Tim Dillon’s. I love that they used the cat. It was the first kill that I wasn’t on set for, so I hadn’t seen it. So, I got to see it for the first time, and I was dying, and I just thought the anticipation was great. The cat was great. That cat should get an Oscar, and Milo, you go.”

Manheim obliges, “I think that when I read the script, I was so excited to see Yulia’s death. It did it justice and more, but I think I’m kind of with you. The way things translate from script to real life surprised me, and I think Tim Dillon really, and the cat, made that death special. And Tomaso’s at the end, too, just because of how much time and prep needs to go into something like that.”

The actors also touched on the climactic Thanksgiving dinner. Specifically, they reveal how Roth purposefully kept the cast in the dark until it was time to film the gruesome scene.

They hid all of the prosthetics, specifically for the dinner scene where we all sit down and we see all of these people who have been killed,” Verlaque shares. “They hid them in a room and had a sign on the door that said, ‘Do not go in.’ Of course, if I see a sign on a door that says that, I go right in. There was a guy there who was like, ‘Get out.’ I didn’t know what was going on, and then I realized that that’s where they were holding all of the heads and all of the bodies. By the time it came for us to shoot, all of those were so real, and they’re so good at what they do that you feel like you’re opposite these real people with these horrific things that have happened to them. So it was so much fun to get to do that.

While Ryan wasn’t at the forefront of this grisly scene, Manheim was excited to observe. He joked, “I mean, to be honest, in the movie, my character doesn’t experience too much of that, but Milo got to experience all of that because I was there as much as I could be. The dinner scene is the only day that I left because I was kind of feeling sick, I think because of the performances, especially Rick Hoffman. I was listening to it on a monitor, and I took my headphones off, and in the distance, I just heard screams, and it was just chilling. That room, I actually never went in that room because, to be honest, there is a naked body prosthetic in there of somebody in the cast, and I was like, ‘I don’t want to cross any boundaries there.’ However, I appreciated every single prosthetic that I saw. The parade with the ship? I was there for that. I got to watch that in real time, those two little girls. That was a memorable death in the moment for me.”

Thanksgiving is now available in theaters and PVOD, and you can watch an exclusive “Behind the Screams” featurette for even more slasher fun.

 

Horror journalist, RT Top Critic, and Critics Choice Association member. Co-Host of the Bloody Disgusting Podcast. Has appeared on PBS series' Monstrum, served on the SXSW Midnighter shorts jury, and moderated horror panels for WonderCon and SeriesFest.

Interviews

“Chucky” – Devon Sawa & Don Mancini Discuss That Ultra-Bloody Homage to ‘The Shining’

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Chucky

Only one episode remains in Season 3 of “Chucky,” and what a bloody road it’s been so far, especially for actor Devon Sawa. The actor has now officially died twice on screen this season, pulling double duty as President James Collins and body double Randall Jenkins.

If you thought Chucky’s ruthless eye-gouging of the President was bloody, this week’s Episode 7 traps Randall Jenkins in an elevator that feels straight out of an iconic horror classic.

Bloody Disgusting spoke with series creator Don Mancini and actor Devon Sawa about that ultra-bloody death sequence and how the actor inspires Mancini’s writing on the series. 

Mancini explains, “Devon’s a bit of a muse. Idle Hands and Final Destination is where my Devon Sawa fandom started, like a lot of people; although yours may have started with CasperI was a bit too old for that. But it’s really just about how I love writing for actors that I respect and then know. So, it’s like having worked with Devon for three years now, I’m just always thinking, ‘Oh, what would be a fun thing to throw his way that would be unexpected and different that he hasn’t done?’ That’s really what motivates me.”

For Sawa, “Chucky is an actor’s dream in that the series gives him not one but multiple roles to sink his teeth into, often within the same season. But the actor is also a huge horror fan, and Season 3: Part 2 gives him the opportunity to pay homage to a classic: Kubrick’s The Shining.

Devon Sawa trapped in elevator in "Chucky"

CHUCKY — “There Will Be Blood” Episode 307 — Pictured in this screengrab: (l-r) Devon Sawa as President James Collins, K.C. Collins as Coop — (Photo by: SYFY)

“Collectively, it’s just amazing to put on the different outfits, to do the hair differently, to get different types of dialogue, Sawa says of working on the series. “The elevator scene, it’s like being a kid again. I was up to my eyeballs in blood, and it felt very Kubrick. Everybody there was having such a good time, and we were all doing this cool horror stuff, and it felt amazing. It really was a good day.”

Sawa elaborates on being submerged in so much blood, “It was uncomfortable, cold, and sticky, and it got in my ears and my nose. But it was well worth it. I didn’t complain once. I was like, ‘This is why I do what I do, to do scenes like this, the scenes that I grew up watching on VHS cassette, and now we’re doing it in HD, and it’s all so cool.

It’s always the characters and the actors behind them that matter most to Mancini, even when he delights in coming up with inventive kills and incorporating horror references. And he’s killed Devon Sawa’s characters often. Could future seasons top the record of on-screen Sawa deaths?

“Well, I guess we did it twice in season one and once in season two, Mancini counts. “So yeah, I guess I would have to up the ante next season. I’ll really be juggling a lot of falls. But I think it’s hopefully as much about quality as quantity. I want to give him a good role that he’s going to enjoy sinking his teeth into as an actor. It’s not just about the deaths.”

Sawa adds, “Don’s never really talked about how many times could we kill you. He’s always talking about, ‘How can I make this death better,’ and that’s what I think excites him is how he can top each death. The electricity, to me blowing up to, obviously in this season, the eyes and with the elevator, which was my favorite one to shoot. So if it goes on, we’ll see if he could top the deaths.”

Devon Sawa as dead President James Collins in Chucky season three

CHUCKY — “Death Becomes Her” Episode 305 — Pictured in this screengrab: Devon Sawa as James Collins — (Photo by: SYFY)

The actor has played a handful of distinctly different characters since the series launch, each one meeting a grisly end thanks to Chucky. And Season 3 gave Sawa his favorite characters yet.

“I would say the second one was a lot of fun to shoot, the actor says of Randall Jenkins. “The President was great. I liked playing the President. He was the most grounded, I hope, of all the characters. I did like playing him a lot.” Mancini adds, “He’s grounded, but he’s also really traumatized, and I thought you did that really well, too.”

The series creator also reveals a surprise correlation between President James Collins’ character arc and a ’90s horror favorite.

I saw Devon’s role as the president in Season 3; he’s very Kennedy-esque, Mancini explains. “But then given the supernatural plot turns that happen, to me, the analogy is Michelle Pfeiffer in What Lies Beneath, the character that is seeing these weird little things happening around the house that is starting to screw with his sanity and he starts to insist, ‘I’m seeing a ghost, and his spouse thinks he’s nuts. So I always like that. That’s Michelle Pfeiffer in What Lies Beneathwhich is a movie I love.”

The finale of  “Chucky” Season 3: Part 2 airs Wednesday, May 1 on USA & SYFY.

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