My interview With Rob Zombie Post your thoughts.

I was fortunate enough to sit down with zombie recently, and ask him so controversial questions, that everyone wants to know the answers to. enjoy { this not edited. its quote unquote]


Me: What’s the fun in horror movies? What’s it all about?

ROB ZOMBIE: For me, it’s just movies, period. Not just horror movies. I just like dark, violent material.

Me:Why?

ZOMBIE: I don’t know why. It’s funny because I’m writing this thing about A Clockwork Orange for the DGA magazine, and, while doing some research, I realized that Roger Ebert gave it a horrible review back in 1972, and every reason that he gave for hating it is exactly why I like it.

Me: Hard childhood?

ZOMBIE: I don’t know, I guess. Everybody’s life is weird and fucked up, so you like to see things that are weird and fucked up, I guess.

ME: What was the first movie to scare you as a kid?

ZOMBIE: I think probably the scariest thing, as weird as it sounds, was The Wizard of Oz and the flying monkeys with the witch. I remember seeing that - it STILL seems freaky. That was fucked up.

ME: Willy Wonka scared the shit out of me.

ZOMBIE: Yeah, that too. Even then, you would watch something like Frankenstein, and it wouldn’t even seem scary, but The Wizard of Oz was a fucking freak show, man.

ME:Obviously, you had quite a time restraint to get this movie into theatres, so I hope it didn’t compromise what you wanted to do. Is the movie in theatres what you set out to do? Will there be a longer, director’s cut?

Because I know that there is tons of material that didn’t make it into the movie.

ZOMBIE: Except for The Devil’s Rejects I feel that everything has been compromised in some way by scheduling, because it was the only movie that I ever worked on that had no release date. We worked on it until we got it right (or at least until we thought that we got it right.) I looked it at it and said, “there is nothing left that I want to change. There is nothing left that I want to do.” Whereas I have never had that luxury since, I’m not sure what would be different, but editing is a crucial time, and, when you get rushed through that process, you are never sure that you got exactly the perfect take of every actor - the perfect moment, because there is so much footage to go through.

I mean, you do your best to do it with the time you have, but, in regards to the director’s cut, there is another version of the movie that is very different that will probably be the “director’s cut.” There were two ways that we could have cut the movie. The difference really lies in Laurie’s character. In the theatrical, she is sort of holding it together, and she begins to spiral downward, but in the other version she’s an incredible mess and gets worse. I mean, she never has any good moments. She is horrible, messed up on drugs, and completely spun out through the whole movie, which makes for a really challenging movie to watch, and I feel like fans wouldn’t have embraced so much darkness.

** Spoiler warning**

ME: Is there still a white horse motif in that version?

ZOMBIE: Yeah, everything in that version is the same except for her scenes. Her relationship with Annie is horrible, and they are at each other’s throats throughout the entire movie, which they weren’t in the theatrical.

ME: Could you talk about the inspiration for the white horse?

ZOMBIE: The white horse thing was me trying to find some significant thing that would be a through line… It really could have been anything. It isn’t like that is so significant, but it’s a minor event in young Michael’s life that he has stuck in his brain that I can then tie through to Laurie. The white horse is such a great, visual image, and when I started researching the meaning of dreams (but that seems like a bunch of bullshit to me), they all had a lot of significance with the white horse, so it just seemed like the perfect, childlike image to carry through.

** End spoiler**

This movie seems to be more your style, so how did the two differ for you?

ZOMBIE: This film to me is more of a logical follow-up to The Devil’s Rejects, where Halloween felt like a weird sidestep that, I think because it was someone else’s material, kind of messed with me. I made the first half of the movie my thing and the second half, I felt, I should bring in more John Carpenter beats because that’s what people are going to be expecting, but, as soon as I started doing that, I don’t think I had quite the same enthusiasm for the film that I did when it was new stuff. That’s why, with this movie, I tried to flip all of them [them characters] upside down and make them my characters.

ME:What do you think of Hostel and the Saw series?

ZOMBIE: [After explaining that he doesn’t see many scary movies in theatres] It gets weird because I really want to go to Eli’s movies to support Eli. Saw - I saw the first one but haven’t seen the other ones. It’s not my type of thing. Even if they are awesome, it’s just not my type of thing.

His thoughts on labels such as “torture porn:”

ZOMBIE: I’m definitely of the mindset of “I wouldn’t want to be part of any group that would have me as a member.” If there is one thing that, as a director, you don’t want to be a part of, it’s a group. It’s the same thing with music. I don’t want to be a part of a scene. Just leave me alone. It’s just my nature, and it’s nothing against the people that are in that group, but I just like to be left alone.

ME:Is Tyrannosaurus Rex really about a dinosaur?

ZOMBIE: No, actually it’s not at all. It’s actually a boxing movie. It’s about this guy who’s name is Rex, and his nickname is Tyrannosaurus Rex. It’s about this washed up prize fighter who goes to prison for assaulting these guys in a bar because he’s got this born to lose personality. By the time he gets out of prison, he is too old to box, so he gets caught up in underground fighting and is so filled with rage that he can’t control himself in normal society. So that’s pretty dark. That might be my next movie.

ME:Would you hope that this would go back to, as you said about The Devil’s Rejects, giving you the freedom to take your time [in producing it]?

ZOMBIE: I will not make another movie under these circumstances. When you lock a movie’s release date and then movie it two months, it’s just not good. It’s good for everything but the cast, crew, and people who are creatively trying to make a film. Post is the part that can make or break a film. With Devil’s Rejects, we didn’t have reshoots [it had a low budget], but we had the time to craft it. Luckily, I always use the same editor, and he immediately gravitates toward the takes that I like. The problem is that nobody makes movies anymore - they make schedules and they make budgets.



ME: What do you think about those people who said you “killed” the halloween series?

ZOMBIE: I dont pay attention to those people all that much, they have their opinions, And the funny thing is, when i asked john Carpenter about how he felt of My Halloween intake. He pretty much said Give it your all Make it your fuckin movie. and we actually watched part of it together and he was satisfied with it. so for those who look down upon my movies, can say and think what they want. it doesnt bother me.


Me: Do you think The Halloween series will Be Remade completley?



ZOMBIE: Well, If it is it wont be as good as it’s original [to the die hard fans at least]. but for those who dont have a full understanding or prespective of Halloween Just may enjoy it a tad but more than the Hardcore fans. i do know that Patrick lussier has plans to make Halloween H3 which im looking forward to seeing.


Me: Do you have any part in it?


ZOMBIE: No. i have shared my thoughts and view of Halloween, And im proud of it.



Me: What do you think Of the internet fans.



ZOMBIE: well, the people on the internet love to start all kinds of bullshit. They always say they heard about so and so is making this movie, and so and so is making that movie. Where the fuck did you hear that [laughs] people like to excite others when its not true. i actually have a profile on a coupl of websites involving Halloween and its incredible, the stuff i read somrtimes is so far from ture.



ME: may i ask the Profile names and websites?



ZOMBIE: i would like to keep this classified for now.



Me:…ok, why was tyler mane your go to guy for michael? and do you think he’ll be in H3?



ZOMBIE: Tyler was always going to be michael in my film. I had planned on doing H1 at least for a year or so before the news broke out. And tyler was interested. but he had always had a shtick with people who wanted to try on the mask. It was his maks in his view which was funny, Because he loved pretending to beat up, skylar, and Daeg, who would put the mask on from time to time, but they enjoyed tyler’s company [at least when he wasnt playing Michael] as we all did. And as far as i know, Im not sure whos in H3.



Me: last question, Why dont you think anyone has come up with Michael Vs. jason?




ZOMBIE: im not sure, people would love to see it. iI think it’s because Michael’s world is just so different from jason’s and it just wouldnt make sense to make these diverse and horrifying monsters collide. There wouldnt be enough back story, or explanation as to why they’re fighting. it would be ambiguous.


ME: well Rob i want to thank you on behalf of Myself, and Michael-myers.net for taking the time to construct this hour and a half interview.


ZOMBIE: [extends hand] its been my pleasure. Take care.




I was doing this interview for a school project. the topic was heros and villians. i decided to Interview the man who made the most famous villian that much scarier. i got a fifty out of thirty on this assignment.

good read…he’s still a tool tho…hahaha

Well done!! I like Rob. He isn’t afraid to stick to what he believes in, he sets stuck into a project, hands on in every aspect of it and he is honest with himself and his vision. He doesn’t conform and has a very unique style which like Carpenter is inimitable.

Wow man…you’re a lucky guy to have been able to sit down and talk with the man himself!
Rob is my favorite mainstream horror director and I really enjoyed H2. I hope theres a killer directors cut dvd where we get to see all the footage that was left out of the theatrical release.
I’d like to see a prequel to House/Rejects one day!

i know man. I got his auto graph and pic with him as well. the funny thing is he Loved the fact that i was 14 and was so interested and in love with halloween. he though ppl my age still watched, Spongebob. But hes really nice in person.

I can’t wait to see this other less adjusted version of Laurie. Great interview. You’re only 14. Wow, those are so pretty solid questions. Rob doesn’t have to say sorry, and I hope he never downplays Halloween 2. I’m sure lots of critics and interviewers will continue to ask him why it failed at the box office. @#$% em!


I never once compared it to another film in the series. Those re-scene moments never happened. I can hear some fans saying hospital (save your breath) those scenes were nothing like the original hospital scenes in the original Halloween 2.

Part of me wishes someone would carbon copy the original film all over again. Not because I want to watch the cinematic equivalent of a phoned in cover song… No, I wish it- so all of these disgruntled OS fans could see just how boringly lifeless and predictable a Halloween like this would be.


Even with slight changes- Everything would be the same all over over again. Little to no originality with very few surprises in between the “Trying to be just like the original” stuff.

The characters would face the same challenges, act the same way, do the same things, resay the catchphrases from the original films- Essentially given the fans a homage, rescene handjob, beat for beat, raped out, replay of all the “It” scenes and ism’s from the original.

People say “Oh, but that’s not what I want. I just wanted Myers to be a normal boy, from a normal home, with his evil unexplained” but then someone else says “I want that too, but I also wanted him to be 5.9 feet tall” and someone else say “I just wanted him to wear the original mask again, and stalk and lurk in the shadows more” and so it just keeps on rolling along in that “I just wanted” funk, and if the creatives listened to the group. The movie would become the same damn movie you already have at home.

Can you imagine the drain that would have on someone who wants to be creative with the characters. Have you never watched a movie character and wondered how to put your own spin on it. I’m glad Rob tuned it all out made it his own.


Keep the spirit alive, changed everything else.

Scarface, The Fly, The Thing, The Magnificent 7, Universals Monsters Vs Hammer’s Monsters.

It’s either that or Gus Van Sant’s Psycho, or something way to close to it.


Look at the new Nightmare remake trailer. How many rescenes again- and the new stuff. The Superman Freddy sweater reveal scene made me giggle. The creative team behind this film, crib noted the original and tossed in some random thoughtless crap ideas to fill the rest of it out. Why, because they want the money. There’s no creative ideas feeding that fire.

I don’t understand the types who get off on this rescene homage crap.

There’s is no talent required to do it. The same can be said for those that slightly alter it or amp it up to 11.
Rob did it right, he has nothing to regret.

Thanks for posting. I always love to read the insight into films.

Agreed!!

ya man LUCKY!!! i’d love to be able to do that for a school project. i’d have no clue how to arrange somehting like that lol.