![]() Rob Savage: We kind of had this idea that the creature, like you said like a haunted house movie, we went by Insidious rules. What's a piece of the lore Bible that audiences may not have picked up on, but impacted your approach as a director? ![]() You created a whole lore Bible for The Boogeyman. He gave a couple of notes on the edit, but he loved it when we showed it to him. He really loved the script and he was always kind of shouting out about the movie as we went into production. He knew that we were building this out into our own thing and he wanted us to feel free to do that. ![]() Mostly true to King like it felt like it could sit on the shelf with the rest of the Stephen King adaptations.ĭid Stephen King provide any notes on any of your scripts? From there, it was me and Mark Heyman, who I worked with on the script, we were just trying to build it out, but make sure it felt true to the short story. This character comes in, and then almost infects this family with a demonic presence and that becomes our story. They came up with the genius idea of having that be the inciting incident for a big movie or a bigger movie. Which is basically just two people in a therapy session talking for eight pages. I developed it off in a very different direction, but they laid this great foundation, and had come up with a really cool idea of how to expand the short story. There was already a script that existed by Beck and Woods who did A Quiet Place. I did this movie Host, and I got offered this right off the bat of that. ![]()
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