Editing Interview:2005/11/03 Dramatic New Scenes for Celebritarian Needs

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<blockquote>I think The Golden Age of Grotesque was me stumbling across something that was always there in front of me and didn’t realize the amount of expression that needs to be done and can be done. The Celebritarian art movement put more of a definition on it, personally. Golden Age of Grotesque, in a lot of ways, was a commentary for what was outside and it was also could be a metaphor for what I was doing. It was open for everyone to take it where they wanted to. Celebritarian art, behavior, anything, whatever it becomes – It’s more whatever you want to make it. It’s like a strange piece of clothing. Some people might wear it on their heads, some might wear it as underwear; some people might not wear it at all, but I think everyone has it in their closet, they just need to find it. I don’t really think that that was necessarily the best metaphor to describe it, but I’m standing in my closet, so that was the best thing that came to me.</blockquote>
 
<blockquote>I think The Golden Age of Grotesque was me stumbling across something that was always there in front of me and didn’t realize the amount of expression that needs to be done and can be done. The Celebritarian art movement put more of a definition on it, personally. Golden Age of Grotesque, in a lot of ways, was a commentary for what was outside and it was also could be a metaphor for what I was doing. It was open for everyone to take it where they wanted to. Celebritarian art, behavior, anything, whatever it becomes – It’s more whatever you want to make it. It’s like a strange piece of clothing. Some people might wear it on their heads, some might wear it as underwear; some people might not wear it at all, but I think everyone has it in their closet, they just need to find it. I don’t really think that that was necessarily the best metaphor to describe it, but I’m standing in my closet, so that was the best thing that came to me.</blockquote>
  
==Scoring Phantasmagoria==
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==Scoring Phantasmagorina==
 
'''What type of score will PHANTASMAGORIA have?'''  
 
'''What type of score will PHANTASMAGORIA have?'''  
  
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It will be very traditional in the sense that it's a period piece. But there are elements of uncertainty about the period and elements of uncertainty about, at times, is the people in the film that are the movie or the audience, so sometimes certain elements have to jump off the screen and live in other places. That may sound strange now, but you'll understand later. There's a song that's a huge influence on the way the movie ends called "In Every Dream Home A Heartache" by Roxy Music and it very well might make itself into a film, which would be very odd because it's a '70s song in a 19th century film. We'll see. I intend on collaborating with Pogo and Tim on the score but I don't intend to over extend myself when I already have acting and directing to be responsible for. Later, I can tell you and update you on the process of how it's going to be filmed because it's going to be done in a way that no one has done yet. I have a camera that I'll be the first person to use in cinema and I'm very excited about it. It's very unique and I want to bring back the experiments in terror, which is actually a DVD that documents that attempts of 1944 filmmakers to insert subliminal elements whether in sound or in frames of the film to enhance whatever tense or fear they're looking to create at that moment in the film. I think technology allows me to go much further than that. I'm going to do a lot of things that may end up being illegal, I don't know, but until they are, I will do them. I think it will change people's opinion about horror films and they will realize they're not all about slasher --<br>  
 
It will be very traditional in the sense that it's a period piece. But there are elements of uncertainty about the period and elements of uncertainty about, at times, is the people in the film that are the movie or the audience, so sometimes certain elements have to jump off the screen and live in other places. That may sound strange now, but you'll understand later. There's a song that's a huge influence on the way the movie ends called "In Every Dream Home A Heartache" by Roxy Music and it very well might make itself into a film, which would be very odd because it's a '70s song in a 19th century film. We'll see. I intend on collaborating with Pogo and Tim on the score but I don't intend to over extend myself when I already have acting and directing to be responsible for. Later, I can tell you and update you on the process of how it's going to be filmed because it's going to be done in a way that no one has done yet. I have a camera that I'll be the first person to use in cinema and I'm very excited about it. It's very unique and I want to bring back the experiments in terror, which is actually a DVD that documents that attempts of 1944 filmmakers to insert subliminal elements whether in sound or in frames of the film to enhance whatever tense or fear they're looking to create at that moment in the film. I think technology allows me to go much further than that. I'm going to do a lot of things that may end up being illegal, I don't know, but until they are, I will do them. I think it will change people's opinion about horror films and they will realize they're not all about slasher --<br>  
 
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<br>
No insult to Rob Zombie; People might predict that that would be the type of film I would make. That's absolutely the opposite of what I would do. That's not an interest of mine, anyway. If I had to pick, stylistically, people that I would admire, it would be Ingmar Bergman and it would be Roman Polanski and modern filmmakers Takeshi Mike - who made the film audition - and Gasper Noe made I Stand Alone and Irreversible. It's kind of a return to Hitchcock-style psychological horror about letting your mind do the damage and sometimes what you don't see is scarier.</blockquote>
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No insult to Rob Zombie; People might predict that that would be the type of film I would make. That's absolutely the opposite of what I would do. That's not an interest of mine, anyway. If I had to pick, stylistically, people that I would admire, it would be Ingmar Bergman and it would be Roman Polanski and modern filmmakers Takeshi Mike - who made the film audition - and Gasper Noe made I Stand Alone and Irreversible. It's kind of a return to Hitchcock-style psychological horror about letting your mind do the damage and sometimes what you don't see is scarier.</blockquote>  
  
 
==Groupie==
 
==Groupie==

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