Interviews
‘Imaginary’ – Dane DiLiegro on Unleashing His Inner Chauncey Beast and Earning His Number One Trophy Kill [Interview]
Dane DiLiegro‘s breakthrough role as the feral Predator in 2022’s Prey marked him as one to watch in the genre space. Now, the 6’8″ actor can be seen going feral on screen once more in Imaginary, as the more monstrous version of Chauncey the Bear.
Imaginary, out now in theaters, is directed by Jeff Wadlow (Cry Wolf, Kick-Ass 2, Truth or Dare, Fantasy Island, The Curse of Bridge Hollow) and stars DeWanda Wise, Tom Payne, Taegen Burns, Pyper Braun, Veronica Falcon, and Betty Buckley.
The horror film introduces a cute, imaginary teddy bear named Chauncey, brought to life via the award-winning animatronic and practical effects house Spectral Motion. But there are many iterations of the villain, with the DiLiegro’s Bear Beast delivering critical scares and at least one notable kill. Bloody Disgusting spoke with DiLiegro about his turn in Imaginary, where the actor provided more insight into the film’s practical effects while teasing what’s ahead for his horror career.
To start, Dane DiLiegro reveals surprising inspiration behind his turn as the monstrous bear.

“Obviously, this character is in the movie significantly less than the Predator, but it’s also an interesting juggle, because his origin is a cute and cuddly teddy bear. So, you’re talking two opposite ends of the spectrum. You’re taking this cute, cuddly teddy bear, and you’re making this terrible, horrifying, disgusting thing. You’re trying to get the best of both worlds of that. Essentially, it’s the teddy bear with the entity inside of him. So, part of me was thinking a little bit of Edgar [Vincent D’Onofrio] in Men in Black. He’s got the alien inside of him. This entity is kind of like It. It’s doing its best version of what it thinks this cute and cuddly teddy bear is. With weird ticking of the head and weird jerks and stuff like that. He’s not quite symmetrical; one shoulder’s higher than the other. I just tried to integrate all these things to just make him a little off and tap into that uncanny valley a little bit. Not to reveal all my secrets here, but just make him a little strange, like, ‘What the hell is that?’
“Then, yes, there were some quad on-all-fours scenes. I trained very hard for that. I was wearing weight vests, walking on all fours. I was dragging sleds with weight, with 200 pounds behind me, with weight. Jeff is a pro-athlete director. I didn’t know what was in store for me, so I needed to be prepared for anything. Fortunately, in that final scene, we did it quite slow, just to increase the creep factor, which I appreciate. But yeah, it was tough because I really had to make sure not to make it look like a primate. Anytime an actor goes down on all fours, very easy to look like a primate. And it was my goal not to do that, so it worked out. It worked out well.”
As for the creature costume, playing the Chauncey Beast wasn’t nearly as sweaty as donning the iconic Predator suit, though the head was animatronic and required puppeteering.
He explains, “This suit was actually quite nice. It was very breezy. Traditionally, I’m wrapped in a couple inches of foam latex, and I’m zipped up and locked into this, essentially, ‘rubber suit.’ It’s not rubber, but it’s foam latex, which is a sponge. This is more fabric and light foam. So compared to some of the other things I’ve worn, this was about half the weight. You can’t see it, but my legs actually were not Chauncey’s legs. I had black spandex on, and then they had these digitigrade practical legs outside of my legs. Think Doug Jones as the Fawn in Pan’s Labyrinth. And then they CG’d my legs out. But we’re in New Orleans in the summertime. It’s hot, it’s humid, and my upper body is wearing a full fur costume. The mouth was puppeteered by a guy named Richard Landon, who coincidentally worked on the first Predator movie as well. He’s a master animatronic and mechanic specialist at Spectral Motion, and he’s worked on countless films for 30 years. He was incredible. He puppeteered the mouth. If the mouth was closed, I essentially couldn’t see anything. My face was in the gullet of this character.”

Working on Imaginary gave DiLiegro a career highlight when it comes to onscreen kills. Spoiler Warning: Skip ahead to avoid spoilers about one prominent on screen death in the film.
In the third act of Imaginary, the characters venture into the “Never Ever” to save young Alice (Pyper Braun). It’s there where Chauncey Beast is unleashed in full, and where Betty Buckley’s character meets a bloody but quick demise.
The actor details how this scene was filmed and what makes Buckley’s onscreen death such an honor for him.
“Obviously, you only see the arm. If you took that door away, you would’ve just seen me with a furry forearm, like me in plain clothes with a furry forearm. But it was me. That kill, I told her at the premier the other night, I think I have 45 kills in my career, my long, illustrious four-year career as an actor. She’s number one. She’s the number one, most honorable kill for me. I was telling her, top of my mantle, so far, that’s my number one trophy kill. She’s a legend. Watching her act, it was better than going to acting school. I would just sit there, even though I wasn’t in the scene, I would just sneak on right next to the camera and just watch her go through this whole, all of her lines and everything. It was incredible.”

Dane DiLiegro as Bear Beast in Imaginary. Photo Credit: Parrish Lewis
DiLiegro isn’t slowing down anytime soon, either, when it comes to horror. Look for the actor to get hairy once more in Steven C. Miller‘s upcoming Werewolves.
He teased of his character, “I’m a werewolf. Yeah. That was also with Alec Gillis who built the Predator costume for Prey. He usually calls me for any larger non-human character. That was a lot of fun. Steven Miller’s incredible. That was a very, very quick shoot, but we were outside, we shot in the rain. I would’ve loved to play a human in that. But no, just a werewolf.”
While the actor’s dream role remains Jason Voorhees, he’s excited about the chance to explore horror even further, human or monster. When asked about what corners or subgenres of horror he’d love to tackle next, he didn’t hesitate with his answer.
“I love this new video game kind of riff that everyone’s going on right now. I know Dead by Daylight is on the way. I know there’s another Five Nights at Freddy’s on the way. I also know, additionally, Christopher Nolan mentioned he wanted to do some horror? And I know Kevin Williamson has some things potentially coming up that are exciting.
“I’m open. I am here for all of it.”
Interviews
Paul Tremblay on Fighting AI with Horror in New Novel ‘Dead But Dreaming of Electric Sheep’
Paul Tremblay didn’t start his writing career believing he’d be battling machines over the sanctity of his job, but like so many writers of his generation, the battle found him. In the years since Large Language Models (LLMs) and neural networks started gaining traction as an advertised shortcut to creativity, Tremblay has been active in lawsuits to prevent the use of his works in training AI models, and he’s found that, with each new project, he has to consider the possibility that some LLM, somewhere, is going to latch on to what he’s creating.
“Now I feel like I’m thinking about, ‘Man, how am I going to write things that would be really hard or impossible for an AI to replicate?’,” Tremblay told me, speaking by Zoom from his home in Massachusetts. “Maybe some of that is ego. I’m sure every writer thinks, ‘Oh, an AI could never write what I write.’ Yes, I’d be lying if I said that wasn’t part of the thought process.”
While that’s something Tremblay might consider with any new work at this point in his career, the Bram Stoker Award-winning author of A Head Full of Ghosts, The Cabin at the End of the World, and many other novels and short stories tackled it in a more direct way with his latest book. Inspired by Philip K. Dick, Harlan Ellison, and the quirky humor of the Coen Brothers, Dead But Dreaming of Electric Sheep is Tremblay’s attempt at a sci-fi-horror mash-up that’s both darkly funny and existentially nightmarish. It’s also, in his own words, a screed against the movement by AI companies to supplant human artists.
“I didn’t want to make it too didactic, but no, I playfully described this book as an anti-AI screed,” he said. “This book, in particular, was driven by anger and frustration, for sure. Not every book is going to be driven that way.“
Despite the emotions that fueled it, Dead But Dreaming of Electric Sheep does not read like a screed. Instead, wielding offbeat humor and tech concepts that feel both lived-in and frighteningly tactile, the book lays out tandem narratives all building to the same conclusion, each of them exploring our relationship to machine learning in a different way. One of these narratives belongs to Julia, a former gaming streamer looking for a new challenge in life, who gets a call from a California tech company with an interesting offer.

Paul Tremblay in documentary series “First Word on Horror”
The company has, it seems, implanted some new technology in a brain-dead middle-aged man which will, in theory, allow them to pilot the man’s body through a rudimentary, still-developing system of controls. Julia, with her gaming background, would be the pilot, in her own way just as much a test subject as the human vegetable she’s controlling.
Julia is a Gen Z streamer with an omnivorous pop culture appetite, inspired by Tremblay’s own adult children, who riffs on The Big Lebowski constantly and calls her strange new meat puppet “Bernie” in reference to Weekend at Bernie’s. Her wide frame of reference, and her interest in art and stories far beyond video games, is in part informed by Tremblay’s own experiences with Gen Z, and in part a response to AI companies who scrape art and culture as a means of consuming it for reference without really experiencing a story.
“I know that one of the arguments that OpenAI and other tech companies are trying to make is like, ‘Hey, you writers, you artists, you take pop culture, you take your influences, and you create something. That’s just the same thing that the bots are doing.’ And it’s just not,” Tremblay said. “I wanted to have Julia have her outlook informed by all this pop culture, and I wanted to make that feel really human as a way to show how inhuman the AI is.”
The other side of the story belongs to “Bernie,” who’s addressed in his point-of-view chapters as “You.” In these chapters, the technology in Bernie’s body starts to flicker images through his seemingly dead brain, delivering half-remembered imagery and perspective in a nod to the “hallucinations” of an AI model groping for understanding it can never reach. These chapters in particular show off Tremblay’s flair for formalist shake-ups, and echo the kind of hyperstimulated writing that Dick and Ellison made so influential.
“I think it was more just the general Philip K. Dick feeling of ‘The world is so strange,'” Tremblay said. “He’s a lot funnier, I think, than maybe a lot of people credit him. That’s definitely what I was thinking of when writing the book.“
Bernie’s chapters embody the strangeness of Dead But Dreaming of Electric Sheep, presenting imagery that’s at times puzzling, at times eerily filmic, and always unnerving. They also mirror Julia’s own journey in fascinating ways as the odd couple – the Gen Z gamer and the middle-aged vegetable – traverse the United States, and the tech in Bernie’s body wakes up to the possibilities of using his flesh for its own purposes. It’s a compelling narrative technique, but it presented some new writing challenges for Tremblay.
“I quickly realized I couldn’t write this book the same way I have in the past,” he said. “By that, I mean all my other novels I had written in the order in which it was presented, even things that are nonlinear, which is most of them. I knew I couldn’t do that in this book. It’s not a spoiler, but hopefully the readers figure out pretty early that the Bernie chapters are a little bit of a preview of the next chapter from Julia, what’s actually happening with Julia. It’s all refracted from him.”

Mary Roach’s Stiff
Dead But Dreaming of Electric Sheep began with a simple image, inspired by Tremblay’s reading of Mary Roach‘s book chronicling the history of our treatment of corpses, Stiff. As he read, Tremblay imagined a body sitting on an airplane, remote-controlled by someone else. At the time, it was a “silly what-if” concept, filed away in his head. Years later, when he became an author suing a tech company to keep AI from scraping his work for ideas, it started to feel frighteningly plausible, taking the “silly what-if” into the territory of a high-concept horror show about what happens when we try to exploit and commodify uniquely human aspects of consciousness.
“It stuck with me,” Tremblay said of that what-if imagery. “And then a few years later, when I was a part of the case suing OpenAI on behalf of writers, that what-if suddenly didn’t seem as silly. The more I learned about how that corporation operates and without really any sort of ethical thought to anything, I was like, ‘Oh, I’m going to play with that. That’s actually happening.”
So, what if someone actually in favor of generative AI picks up Tremblay’s self-described “anti-AI screed?” He hopes that, at the very least, he’s made the ride enjoyable in a distinctly human way that might begin to reshape the conversation.
“I think that was another reason why I wanted to have the humor,” Tremblay said. “If people are reading this book who aren’t on the side of like, ‘Hey, LLMs taking authors’ books is bad,’ maybe if they read something that’s cut with some humor, that maybe they’ll be more easily swayed.”
Dead But Dreaming of Electric Sheep is now in bookstores everywhere.

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