Metro.us recently conducted an interview with
rocker-turned-filmmaker Rob Zombie. A couple of excerpts from the chat follow
below.
Metro.us: You said with ["The Lords Of Salem"]
you wanted to try something different. Did you mean different from the
"Halloween" films or just in general?
Rob: Just in general. I felt like the last group of films
I did were in the same wheelhouse. I just wanted to break out of that within
the structure of what we were making. I hate that phrase "horror
director." It sounds so limiting. I just want to make movies. That's why
my next film isn't even remotely a horror or genre film.
Metro.us: "The Lords of Salem" had a lower budget
than you've had recently. Was that the plan?
Rob: That was a freedom thing. Because after doing the
two "Halloween" films, which were with Dimension Films — that's a
very hands-on studio. So you're always fighting to retain some sense of what
you're trying to do. But with this film I had complete control, contractually.
That was the appeal. Working with a small budget is kind of a drag. But the
other part was great.
Metro.us: This film is less gory than your other films,
with a lower body count.
Rob: I don't really think my films are that gory. I think
"Halloween II" is pretty violent, but it's not that gory. I'm not a
fan of gore, necessarily. I think when things become too gory it just becomes
cartoony — it becomes like a bloody Roadrunner cartoon. This one isn't that
violent. It's not even that vulgar, in terms of the language. I tried to make
it different. The art direction's a lot cleaner and sparser, more composed.
It's the opposite of what I normally do.
Read the entire interview from Metro.us.
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