Sick: Production Designer Jenny Möller on Pandemic-Themed Horror

From "Bleeding Cool" : "Sick: Production Designer Jenny Möller on Pandemic-Themed Horror"

Production designer Jenny Möller talks to Bleeding Cool breaking down the pandemic-inspired horror Peacock film Sick, Kevin Williamson & more.

The COVID pandemic created a lot of uncertainty within the industry when it hit its peak in 2020. Still, as society slowly reacclimated itself thanks to preventative measures and the advancements in medicine, Hollywood found creative avenues to provide commentary. Director John Hyams and writers Kevin Williamson and Katelyn Crabb found such an opportunity in the Blumhouse horror film Sick for Peacock. The story follows Parker (Gideon Adlon) and her best friend Miri (Beth Million), who, due to the pandemic, decide to quarantine at the family lake house alone – or so they think. Production designer Jenny Möller spoke to Bleeding Cool about filming horror with the pandemic spin and its creative commentary.

Credit Peacock

How 'Sick' Speaks on Public Attitudes

Bleeding Cool: What intrigued you about 'Sick?'
Möller: I liked the script. It was intelligent and funny in a lot of ways. It had that 'Kevin Williamson' vibe and read that way. I like John Hyams. We had a great FaceTime chat. He seemed incredibly decisive. He seemed to know exactly what he wanted, which is great as a designer, walking in with somebody with a clear vision. That was an easy choice for me. In our interview, John said he wanted to do it as a straight-up slasher film, which I enjoyed. I like that high-energy, on-the-seat-of-your-pants kind of thriller horror film.

Credit Peacock

What type of things were you able to play with you wouldn't do in a more conventional horror film?
The story was pretty straightforward in what we were trying to achieve. There was that great twist at the end. Most of it was deciding how we would present this house that we had spent so much time on. How were we going to tell a story with that? In the final cut, they actually cut out a large story point; there was a little sister at one point who had died at. That's where we come into Parker's trauma as an adult and play with her intimacy and boundary issues, and get into the family side.

I don't think that made it into the final cut. When discussing how to present this house, if you notice, the house is pretty stark and has a real S cabin vibe, but it doesn't necessarily feel super homey. That was intentional. We wanted it to feel like these people have some privilege with the size of the house, to speak to Parker becoming more aware as the film continues. As a young woman of privilege, she was not aware in the beginning, and we wanted to drive that home. It was intentional you don't see family photos, that you don't see knick-knacks, that no one lives there. She says her dad comes up once a year, and that's what we wanted it to feel like, like a well-done, well-kept home, but a well-kept house, but not a home.

Credit Peacock

Given how 'Sick' deals specifically with the pandemic, was there any planning on the commentary with the spacing?
We planned out all of the spaces, but we weren't trying to make too much of a commentary on that. There were going to be some funny moments as there are when any actor gets a hold of the material and it reads as funny in some places. Some areas were funny; I didn't expect they would be. There were areas I thought would be funnier, and they played them differently. The grocery store, in the beginning, looks post-apocalyptic. That was intentional because of how we felt at the time.
It might have been it was an exaggeration of what was actually going on, but during the beginning of the pandemic, we were all worried about running out of food, and none of us knew what was going to happen [laughs]. We took those emotions we all remembered having and heightened them visually so that they looked like what we all felt, regardless of the actual situation. I remember that as being an extensive conversation about how to make that commentary, but the rest of it was left to the actors and John about how he would portray that. It was important to him that the girls were fully formed characters, and they weren't there to be killed or terrorized.

Credit Peacock

Was there a sequence that was the most challenging for you to lay out and plan?
This movie came together so well. It was one of those rare situations where everyone I interacted with was of the same brain. We were all of the same minds and had the same goal. There were always some challenges. The house is on a lake, and there's that deck scene where they jump into the river, into the lake. When we got there, the water was down so far that we couldn't do it there. We had to come up with another way to do it. John and Yaron [Levy], the DP, had to devise another way to shoot it. It was logistically impossible for us to do it there at the house we wanted.

It was one of those things where I wouldn't say that there were any massive problems that I can remember because anything that came up was handled, collaborated on, and worked with well. We had some good source material to work with, which is always amazing that there's not a ton of stuff that has to be reworked or had to think about. The house we found was an amazing resource for what we were doing inside. John had to block and choreograph it so that it worked in the space we found. It came together; many of our choices were intentional, but we didn't have to force it.

Sick, which also stars Dylan Sprayberry, Joel Courtney, Marc Menchaca, and Jane Adams, is available on Peacock.

Joel Courtney
15 Movies Like "Flipped"

Via The Bingeful: 15 Movies Like "Flipped"

12. The Kissing Booth (2018)

  • Director: Vince Marcello

  • Cast: Joey King, Joel Courtney, Jacob Elordi

  • IMDb Rating: 5.9/10

The next on our list of movies like Flipped is The Kissing Booth, a popular and exciting film.

Elle Evans (Joey King) and Lee Flynn (Joel Courtney) have been best friends for a long time. 

Their friendship rule includes staying away from each other’s siblings, but Elle finds out she has a massive crush on the perfect bad boy Noah (Jacob Elordi), who happens to be Lee’s older brother. 

Although Elle tries to stay away from him, it isn’t easy to do so. Noah kisses her when she signs up to run a kissing booth at the spring carnival, so what will happen next?

The Kissing Booth was directed by Vince Marcello and won the Kids’ Choice Award for Favorite Movie Actress.

Joel Courtney
Players starring Gina Rodriguez release updates, cast, and more

From "FanSided" : "Players starring Gina Rodriguez release updates, cast, and more"

A whole host of new Netflix films are on the streaming service’s 2023 roster! One of those movies is Players starring Gina Rodriguez.

Director Trish Sie, writer Whit Anderson, producers Ryan Christians, Ross Dinerstein, Marc Platt, and Adam Siegel, as well as executive producers Molly Breeskin, Ross Girard, and Sophia Lin, are all attached to the project. Rodriguez also serves as an executive producer.

Here is all we know about the upcoming production!

Players starring Gina Rodriguez release updates

A release date for the new movie has not been shared yet. All we know is that the film is set to drop sometime in 2023 on Netflix. Hopefully, the streamer won’t make us wait too long because this project has a star-studded cast we’re excited about!

Players starring Gina Rodriguez cast

Jane the Virgin star Gina Rodriguez is staying busy this year! The actress’s new ABC series Not Dead Yet is set to premiere on Feb. 8, 2023. And now, she is leading this new film this year as well.

Netflix viewers are more than likely familiar with Lucifer star Tom Ellis, who also takes on a lead role in the production. We’ve shared the cast list below:

  • Gina Rodriguez as Mack

  • Damon Wayans Jr. as Adam

  • Tom Ellis as Nick

  • Joel Courtney as Little

  • Liza Koshy as Ashley

  • Augustus Prew as Brannagan

Players starring Gina Rodriguez synopsis

We don’t have a full synopsis yet, but Netflix did share the movie’s logline. We’ve shared it below:

New York sportswriter Mack (Gina Rodriguez) has spent years devising successful hook-up “plays” with best friend Adam (Damon Wayans Jr.) and their crew, but when she unexpectedly falls head-over-heels for one of her targets (Tom Ellis), they all must learn what it takes to go from simply scoring to playing for keeps.

Joel Courtney
37 Movies Like Flipped For You To Watch

From "OtakuKart" : "37 Movies Like Flipped For You To Watch"

Following is a list of 37 movies similar to Flipped that we hope you’ll love.

1. The Kissing Booth

A pretty late bloomer named Elle Evans (Joey King), who has never been kissed, decides to run a kissing booth during her high school’s Spring Carnival. Unexpectedly, she finds herself sharing a kiss with Noah Flynn, the epitome of a bad guy and the object of her secret infatuation (Jacob Elordi).

There is only one minor issue, however: Lee, Joel Courtney’s character, who is her best friend, is the brother of Noah. She cannot date Noah since she is forbidden from dating Lee’s brother under the conditions of their friendship arrangement.

When Elle realizes she must ultimately make a choice, her entire life is turned upside down. She must choose between following the law and her love.

  • Cast: Joey KingJacob Elordi, Molly Ringwald

  • Rating: TV14

  • Genre: Romance, Comedy

  • Where To Watch: Netflix

Joel Courtney
Review: Kevin Williamson’s SICK

No spoilers!

From "Horror Society" : "Review: Kevin Williamson’s SICK"

There’s something about going direct-to-streaming on Peacock that shouts, “we have no faith in this movie!” At the end of the day, Sick isn’t Wonder Woman 2 or Halloween Returns. However, it’s in part brought to you by one of the greatest masterminds in horror – Kevin Williamson, who wrote and produced this feature. Williamson has worked on every single Scream movie as well as I Know What You Did Last Summer and The Faculty. His importance to the horror genre is singlehandedly the only reason I watched this flick with my husband last night. And you know what? It was actually pretty good! Read on to find out why!

Sick is written by Williamson & Katelyn Crabb and directed by John Hyams. It was produced by Williamson, Bill Block and Ben Fast. Cinematography was helmed by Yaron Levy and editing was performed by Andrew Drazek. Gideon Adlon, Bethlehem Million, Dylan Sprayberry and Joel Courtney star in this slasher-thriller. Set just as the COVID pandemic is kicking off, two college friends head to a remote cabin (mansion?) in the woods to wait out the disease in quarantine. Armed with nothing but a blender, a face mask and a pesky sort of ex-boyfriend, the girls soon find themselves as unwilling prey in a masked man’s terrifying game. Cabin Fever meets The Strangers in this surprising gem.

The biggest reason why I enjoyed Sick is it cuts through the stereotypical bullshit and gets right to the point very quickly. This is not a movie where you wait 45 minutes for the action to begin. This is not a movie where the suspense is steadily building throughout the first few acts. Sick brings its characters to the central location and then all Hell breaks loose before the first night can come to a close. I actually had to pause my viewing at the 45-minute mark because I was sure it flew by and was close to ending. Nope, I still had another half hour of cat and mouse games where the odds are stacked against the major protagonists. I was happy that I wasn’t jerked around for an hour and a half only to come across an “I saw that coming” or lackluster ending. Investing my time in this story was well worth it.

I also enjoyed the major homages to Scream and Friday the 13th. Some of the work that Kevin Williamson is known for bled into this picture, but it didn’t feel like copied material. Sick is also surprisingly bloody and comes with a modest body count that you’re not going to expect. Hello, Mr. Lyons. Sure, it’s a little cookie cutter at times, another one of Williamson’s trademarks if you look at his television history, but when it’s time to move the story along this one goes balls to the walls. Couple it with awesome production quality and a very talented cast, and Sick is one of my favorite films of the year so far. I mean, sure we’re only 18 days in… but still! I wish more people were talking about it because it’s definitely a film that deserves to be seen.

Sick is a twisted thriller and dramatic splatterfest, chopped up and administered with real life health hazard horror. Well done. Final Score: 8 out of 10.

Joel Courtney
‘Jesus Revolution’: Faith-based film ‘inspirational,’ ‘believable’

From "The Baptist Paper" : "‘Jesus Revolution’: Faith-based film ‘inspirational,’ ‘believable’"

A hippie-led revival that graced the cover of Time magazine in 1971 is the subject of an upcoming faith-based film that has the goal of sparking another movement of spiritual renewal. 

“Jesus Revolution” (PG) tells the story of the Jesus movement with a focus on three individuals who helped lead it: California pastor Chuck Smith, hippie evangelist Lonnie Frisbee and a young Greg Laurie. It stars Kelsey Grammer (“Cheers,” “Frasier”) as Smith, Jonathan Roumie (“The Chosen”) as Frisbee, Joel Courtney as Laurie, Kimberly Williams-Paisley (“Father of the Bride”) as Laurie’s mother and Anna Grace Barlow as Laurie’s girlfriend and future wife Cathe. 

It opens in theaters Feb. 24 and was produced by the same company — Kingdom Story — that made “I Can Only Imagine,” “I Still Believe” and “American Underdog,” among others.

Producer Andrew Erwin said the film’s themes — the search for truth and the meaning of life — are timeless, even if the events took place five decades ago.

‘The right questions’

“Every person in the country needs to see this film,” Erwin told The Baptist Paper.

“These were kids asking the right questions. They were seeking the right thing — they wanted the truth. They wanted meaning. They wanted love.” 

Many of the hippies, though, were searching for truth in the wrong places, Erwin noted.

The film opens in late-1960s California as Laurie and his friends embrace the love-and-peace culture of the era and its experimentation with psychedelic drugs. But this group of hippies soon meets another hippie, Frisbee, who rejects drugs and encourages his generation to follow Christ. 

Frisbee’s unique blend of gospel and hippie culture receives a boost when the straight-laced Chuck Smith welcomes him into his church in a controversial move that leads a few members to bolt. 

“There is an entire generation right now searching for God,” Frisbee tells Smith in the film. “The trouble is, your people reject them.”

Soon, hundreds of hippie Christians are attending Smith’s church, which grows so fast he sets up an outdoor tent. Smith’s view is simple: Frisbee may be barefooted, but he’s delivering the gospel to a new generation that desperately needs it. 

In the film’s final acts, Smith and Frisbee clash over the direction of the church, and Laurie launches his own ministry.

“Jesus Revolution” is one of the best inspirational movies, with a solid script, a music score that tugs at the emotions and an all-star cast that makes every scene believable. Roumie is so good, it doesn’t take long to forget he portrays Jesus in “The Chosen.”

Power of unity

The film includes multiple positive messages.

It reminds today’s church that evangelism is often uncomfortable but will — with patience and time — bear fruit. Methods may change, though the gospel does not. In one powerful scene, we watch Smith wash the feet of the hippies in a display of humility. 

It reminds us of another universal truth: People are always searching for truth yet often in the wrong places.

The film also includes solid messages about the power of unity (the church flourishes when Smith and Frisbee work together) and the power of love (Smith’s embrace of hippies contrasts with the message they typically hear). 

“They were told that drugs and LSD were going to be what unlocked their mind to truth,” producer Andrew Erwin said of the hippie movement. “But on the back of that, these groups of hippies had this legitimate spiritual awakening, and then it just swept the country. That’s where the term ‘Jesus freaks’ came from. It’s a fantastic story. It’s powerful.”

Roumie wants the film to spark another spiritual awakening: When people realize “God is their identity, everything falls into place.” 

The film is free of coarse language, sexuality and violence. It does include thematic elements, including one scene showing the aftermath of drug use (we see people hallucinate and one woman frothing from the mouth, though it’s brief). 

Joel Courtney
Sick (2023) Review: Kevin Williamson’s COVID Slasher Delivers Heart-Stopping Tension

No spoliers!

From "High on Films" : "Sick (2023) Review: Kevin Williamson’s COVID Slasher Delivers Heart-Stopping Tension"

The irony of a slasher film set around a lakeside cabin and being released on Friday the 13th should not be lost on horror fans. Even though Sick, the latest outing from horror icon Kevin Williamson, does not feature the murderous hockey mask-wearing son of Mrs. Voorhees, it is still an adrenaline-filled, gutsy, and brilliantly-paced flick that offers enough caustic wit and slasher thrills that fans have come to expect from Williamson.

Set amidst the COVID-19 pandemic and directed by John Hyams (the man behind the underrated Alone (2020)), Sick is another winning entry amidst the slasher revival that began in the preceding decade.

Before the film opens, the opening title cards already ground the narrative in a specific moment in time—April 3, 2020. COVID had evolved from being just an international conspiracy to spreading its tentacles all around the world. In the USA, where the film is set, most states had already imposed stay-at-home orders.

The opening scene of the film follows Tyler (Joel Courtney), an everyday college frat guy, shopping at a supermarket aisle. If one is familiar with Williamson’s slasher book, we know that the film is heading towards an opening kill scene. But preceding the carnage, the script (written jointly by Kevin Williamson and Katelyn Crabb) cleverly grounds itself amidst the paranoia prevalent during the early days of the pandemic.

Whether it be Tyler’s rush to pick up the last daily essentials at the supermarket or sneering suspiciously at a person coughing behind him at the billing queue—Williamson holds up a somewhat satirical mirror to our fears regarding an unknown virus. Just as he is shopping, Tyler receives a text message from an unknown number (a wink for the Scream fans) that asks, “Wanna party?” While Tyler is initially excited by the prospect promised in the message, his enthusiasm soon dissipates when his anonymous messenger becomes more stalker-like.

A nervous Tyler hurriedly heads back to his dorm room, where a surprise awaits him. 

Joel Courtney