PUBLIC VERSION. Actor and MOVIE CRYPT “Hall of Fame” guest Kim Coates (SONS OF ANARCHY, WATERWORLD, GOON, BLACK HAWK DOWN, PEARL HARBOR) returns to catch up with Adam, Joe, and Arwen about all that he has been up to since his last appearance on the podcast 5 years ago (Episode 196 - February 15, 2017). From the making of Kim’s latest film NEON LIGHTS (now available On-Demand and Digital) and what it was like shooting the psychological thriller at the height of the COVID-19 pandemic… to what it was like starring in the film alongside his daughter- actress Brenna Coates… to the making of Kim’s upcoming HBO series THE WHITE HOUSE PLUMBERS… to Kim’s triumphant return to the SOA universe in the latest season of MAYANS… to how Kim stays so down to earth… to how Kim deals with paparazzi… to the original much darker ending of WATERWORLD that the world never got to see… to what it was like shooting nude scenes on SONS OF ANARCHY and which actor was the toughest member of SAMCRO in real life … this candid conversation is such a blast that it’s easy to see why Kim remains one of THE MOVIE CRYPT’s absolute most beloved guests 9+ years into the life of the podcast! Dr. Arwen provides “Hollywood Therapy” for a writer looking for the right place to start and Kim reveals the one personality trait that he credits as the secret to his success!
PUBLIC VERSION. Comic creator and screenwriter Tim Seeley (HACK/SLASH, REVIVAL, REVEALER) follows up his LIVE Yorkiethon 5 appearance from 2020 with this far more comprehensive discussion about his career journey. Starting with how Tim made the most of the pandemic while under lockdown with a brand new baby at home… to turning lemons into lemonade by writing REVEALER (now streaming on Shudder) under incredibly specific COVID-safe parameters and in an insanely short amount of time… to how Tim’s comic book experience proved invaluable in writing the screenplay… to shooting the movie during the height of the pandemic when quarantine was still the norm and vaccines were still a long time away… to going way back to the very beginning and how Tim went from a child comic book fan to the creator of one of the most beloved comic series in the horror genre (HACK/SLASH)… to the importance of recognizing the difference between art that you admire and art that you yourself can excel at… this conversation exploring the creative process is one that fans and fellow artists will surely benefit from hearing! Dr. Arwen provides “Hollywood Therapy” for a returning patient who has followed every MOVIE CRYPT suggestion and is now just trying to get her work read by the right people, Tim gives the boys a full update on where things stand with turning HACK/SLASH into a film or series, and Adam and Joe reveal a story about the time they went to a strip club together.
PUBLIC VERSION. Musician and filmmaker Spider One (lead singer of POWERMAN 5000, ALLEGORIA, TV’s DEATH VALLEY) stops by the ArieScope studio to share his career journey with Adam, Joe, and Arwen. From a punk rocker growing up in Northern Massachusetts… to a rapper getting airplay and huge accolades on Boston radio… to forming the successful platinum selling rock band POWERMAN 5000… to producing MTV’s DEATH VALLEY… to an on-air personality hosting all kinds of interviews and events for FEARnet… to his feature film directorial debut ALLEGORIA (on Shudder and VOD August 2nd) and his already-in-the-can follow up BURY THE BRIDE… Spider One is one of the best examples of an artist who is constantly and fearlessly evolving, challenging, and transforming himself into whatever his creative passions pull him towards. Dr. Arwen provides “Hollywood Therapy” for a filmmaker at an “option it or make it myself” crossroads and the boys discuss the pros and cons of dating someone else in the industry.
PUBLIC VERSION. Musician Spencer Charnas (lead singer of ICE NINE KILLS) joins Adam, Joe, and Arwen in the ArieScope studio to share his incredible career journey from playing clubs in the Boston area to sharing stadium stages all over the world alongside juggernauts like METALLICA and SLIPKNOT. From playing cover songs in a punk/ska band in High School… to making the decision to pursue music for his lifelong career and taking the time to truly learn the business… to never giving up no matter how badly the odds were stacked against him… to how Spencer’s decision to creatively lean into the horror genre he loves so much changed the game for ICE NINE KILLS … to recognizing the power that music videos can still have in a post-MTV era and utilizing the art form to its fullest extent by passionately making extremely well crafted and extraordinarily high quality productions to accompany INK’s music… to Spencer’s song writing process and where he finds his lyrical inspiration… to getting “the call” to come open for METALLICA… to meeting Lars Ulrich for the first time and the legendary drummer’s unforgettable first words to Spencer… to becoming the band that KERRANG! hails as “Horrorcore Icons”… this is a conversation that you are going to wish never had to end. Dr. Arwen provides “Hollywood Therapy” for a screenwriter seeking other screenwriters, Joe gets real about a current summer blockbuster, and Adam and Spencer remember the great SPOOKYWORLD. To find out more information about ICE NINE KILLS’ upcoming “Silver Scream Con” (August 26th - 28th in Danvers, MA) visit: www.SilverScreamCon.com
PUBLIC VERSION. Actor and filmmaker Dean Cameron (“Chainsaw” from SUMMER SCHOOL, BAD DREAMS, ROCKULA, SKI SCHOOL 1 & 2, IT’S ALWAYS SUNNY IN PHILADELPHIA, WE BARE BEARS, SHAMELESS, WILL & GRACE, ALF and so many more) joins Adam, Joe, and Arwen in the ArieScope Studio to discuss his career journey. From stealing the show at just 6 years old when he starred in a play alongside his father… to performing in plays as a teenager alongside actors like John Ritter and Eric Stoltz… to moving to Los Angeles right out of High School and working odd jobs for 4 years before beginning to work steadily as an actor… to the crushing disappointment of the first TWO major roles he booked not actually happening… to knowing from the moment he read the script for SUMMER SCHOOL that the role of “Chainsaw” was absolutely going to be his… to the important lesson that director Carl Reiner taught him during his audition… to the late 90's when the exciting roles were no longer coming his way… to finding himself so disenchanted with the industry that he stepped away and found himself once again working odd jobs like a computer programmer, a karaoke band musician, and a Las Vegas magician… to discovering that taking a break from Hollywood was precisely what he needed to fall in love with it all over again… to returning to his true calling by immersing himself in all aspects of storytelling (writing, directing, producing), working with friends and good people that he chooses to work with, and not giving a f*ck what anyone else thinks… Dean’s extremely clear, totally sincere, and brutally honest perspective on the entertainment industry is one that every artist (aspiring or veteran) will benefit from hearing. (SUMMER SCHOOL fans are going to have their minds blown by all of the behind the scenes anecdotes that Dean shares in the spectacular second half of this phenomenal episode!) Dr. Arwen provides “Hollywood Therapy” for a writer who has created an ideal set-up to write in but who is having trouble getting any actual writing accomplished… Dean wins Adam’s heart with his true love of metal… and the boys fail miserably at controlling their excitement over meeting one of their cinematic heroes in this heartfelt and fantastically fun conversation that is THE MOVIE CRYPT at its very best!
PUBLIC VERSION. Filmmaker Charles Dorfman (BARBARIANS) joins Adam, Joe, and Arwen to discuss his career journey in this refreshingly honest filmmaker on filmmaker conversation about the long process of bringing an idea to the big screen for the first time. From a child enamored with his grandfather’s vast collection of VHS films… to reading every book about film directing that he could get his young hands on… to studying theater as a student at University where he initially started acting as a means to becoming a better director… to working as a development executive where he earned Associate Producer credits on films like THE KING’S SPEECH, SHAME, and TRACKS… to setting up his own theater company where he acted in several plays… to the long process of writing BARBARIANS while figuring out what exactly he wanted to do with his life… to how he ultimately came to the conclusion that if he would be directing the film he would not also act in it like he had originally planned… to the importance of always keeping an eye on the entire process of producing a film and not developing tunnel vision on only the task at hand… Charlie’s experience making BARBARIANS is one that aspiring filmmakers can surely gain insight and inspiration from. Charlie also shares what 80’s soft rock song his film’s live foxes preferred to hear on set and the boys’ fingers get bitten when they fall down a YouTube rabbit hole in a discussion about why filmmakers and other content creators shouldn’t base the value of their work entirely on the number of views or “likes” each effort receives.
THE MOVIE CRYPT’s special roundtable series continues as Adam sits down with Mick Garris (THE STAND, NIGHTMARE CINEMA), Darren Lynn Bousman (SAW 2-4, REPO! THE GENETIC ROCK OPERA) and Tom Six (THE HUMAN CENTIPEDE 1-3, THE ONANIA CLUB) to discuss violence in cinema and where they draw the line with the art that they put out into the world. From the films that disturbed them… to whether or not it is an artist’s responsibility to consider who might wind up seeing their work… to dealing with the MPAA’s often nonsensical editorial demands before release… to today’s “participation trophy culture”… to trying to push an audience’s limits in modern “woke” times where acting offended has become America’s new favorite pastime… to what each artist says they just would never personally do in a film… to how their perspectives may or may not have changed with age or becoming a parent… this conversation has never been more poignant than it is today. As with all of our roundtable episodes, we hope you will continue this conversation with your own friends and family the next time entertainment is blamed for a real life atrocity. Joe was on location directing his latest film when this roundtable was recorded but he weighs in with his perspective on the subject during an extended introduction. This conversation was recorded on May 11, 2022, several weeks before the most recent string of mass shooting tragedies in the United States of America. To hear the roundtable that was specifically about gun violence, check out episode 459 which premiered on March 21, 2022.
PUBLIC VERSION. Actress and filmmaker Hannah Fierman (V/H/S, SIREN, ST. AGATHA, DARK CIRCLES, CREEPSHOW, VAMPIRE DIARIES) shares her career journey with Adam, Joe, and Arwen. From making ends meet financially in the early days… to the inspiration Hannah found in seeing Baz Luhrmann’s ROMEO + JULIET for the first time… to adapting the play she wrote for her college senior thesis into her first short film… to learning that the first feature film she ever acted in just so happens to be “huge in Nigeria”… to the success of V/H/S and the process of turning the segment that Hannah starred in (AMATEUR NIGHT) into a stand alone feature film (SIREN)… to studying the movements of both cats and bats in shaping her performance as “Lily” in V/H/S and SIREN… to stepping into the director’s chair on the upcoming DARK CIRCLES (currently in post-production)… to the beauty of being part of a filmmaking community filled with solid and reliable artists/friends you can call upon… to the importance of always continuing to move forward rather than dwelling on difficult past experiences… Hannah’s positive outlook and sincere love of storytelling is absolutely contagious. Dr. Arwen provides “Hollywood Therapy” to a filmmaker who agreed to work on a project that is beginning to show some serious red flags, Hannah shares her strangest encounter with a fan, and Adam and Hannah profess their love for cinematographer Jan-Michael Losada (VICTOR CROWLEY, DARK CIRCLES) “one million percent” in this extremely enjoyable artist on artist conversation about the filmmaking process.
PUBLIC VERSION. Actor Akie Kotabe (EVERLY, THE BATMAN, THE FALCON AND THE WINTER SOLDIER, VENOM: LET THERE BE CARNAGE) joins Adam, Joe, and Arwen to discuss his career journey. From majoring in computer science at UT Austin before randomly noticing a casting call and on a whim actually auditioning… to bombing that very first audition but catching the acting bug… to fearing the odds of ever becoming an actor and deciding to move to Japan to teach English instead… to his mother’s passing causing him to go for broke and chase his real passion… to making the move to Southern California only to discover that Los Angeles wasn’t exactly as depicted in LAST ACTION HERO… to his days of working odd jobs doing everything from waitering to selling spoons as a telemarketer… to acting in student films and then booking his first TV commercial… to becoming a working actor in TV and film… to Akie’s deeply personal process in developing “Dead Man’s” motivation in EVERLY… to the importance of bringing a grounded point of view and realism to even the most supporting role in a film… Akie has remained as down to earth a guy as you’ll ever meet despite traversing through everything from TV commercials to performing in the biggest budget Hollywood blockbusters being made today. Dr. Arwen provides “Hollywood Therapy” for a writer who feels like they may never write again due to their long haul COVID-19 symptoms and the guys share some of their most awkward celebrity encounters in this fantastic conversation that should be required listening for anyone who has ever wanted to pursue their passion instead of stick with the safer status quo.
PUBLIC VERSION. Musician, actress, and filmmaker Lola Blanc (AMERICAN HORROR STORY: HOTEL, FATALE COLLECTIVE: BLEED) joins Adam, Joe, and Arwen for a heartfelt conversation about the personal side of the creative process and and the pressures an artist faces from an industry that’s always chasing after the next “hit.” From what can happen when you focus only on trying to create something that “everyone will like” rather than creating art that means something to you… to the internal scars that can inevitably develop when too much weight is put on outside opinions… to the crucial moment when your art is shared with an actual audience for the first time (a step that so many find themselves robbed of in today’s straight to streaming world)… the three artists discuss the life changing freedom that comes with not letting your art (or yourself) be defined by an externally perceived outcome. Joe also professes his undying love for the drive-in and Adam steps outside again to discover that society is a much better place than what the last 6 years of social turmoil have painted the world to be. We have no doubt that by the end of this honest conversation you’ll feel inspired to create from the heart and not for the approval of the masses.