Every once in awhile a studio will throw a party prior to watching a junket screening. What theyâll do is have all the journalists who are covering the film get together at some swanky place and then set up an open bar with limited food to eat. What ends up happening is everyone gets trashed and has a great night. What also happens is everyone is in a great mood and usually the questions and answers at the junket the following day are a bit more relaxed.
The last time I went to something like this was for Jackass 2 and I had the same experience. We all drank way too much and had a blast in the theater. But unlike Jackass, this party was much bigger and I saw everyone I know from the online community. They even let in Stanley Kubrick. I mean Devin from CHUD.
Now I donât want you all thinking that I get drunk at all these parties and act like an ass. Well I guess I do, but for The Hitcher it wasnât all my fault.
When I arrived I was prepared for the open bar and I know what I can drink. My plan was for about an hour to sit back with some journalist friends and the members of the cast, have a few beers, and then watch the film. But what I didnât plan on was the one hour turning into two, and the entire time the open bar kept on serving.
The main culprit was the other screening that was running at the theater. The film started really late, so our screening got pushed back and we all just kept on drinking. By the time most of us got to the theater we were all feeling really good and ready to be entertained.
And this brings me to the film.
I saw it in a packed house of both sober and drunk journalists, and I think everyone had a good time. Itâs not like The Hitcher is going to cure cancer or be the next Lord of the Rings. You know what youâre going to get before you walk into the theater, so the big question is does it work?
For me, it mostly did. I thought Sean Bean was great as the highway killer and Sofia Bush was hot as hell as the damsel in distress. Dave Meyers, the director, has got a killer soundtrack to go along with his fun thriller and I think audiences will be entertained. What I also dug about the film was the way it reminded me of the movie Crank. What I dug about Crank was how we didnât learn that much back story, how that film opened up and the ride was on 100%. Thatâs also The Hitcher. We donât get a lot of back story, and Iâm glad, as we really donât need it.
So enough of my ramblings on the film, I sold this article as an interview and here it is.
The day after our drunk screening a crapload of us attended a press conference with all the cast as well as Dave Meyers, the director, and the Producers, Andrew Form and Brad Fuller.I color coded all of the answers so it will be slightly easier to tell everyone apart, but I left the two Producers as bolded black since they are both kind of the same person.
If you want to listen to the audio of the press conference you can click here to download it or right click this link to save it for later. Itâs an MP3 without any sort of copy protection so you can put it on an iPod or a portable audio player with ease.
I have a ton of other interviews about to post, check back tomorrow for more.
Q: Any Cheney jokes on the shot gun day? And second, you did a great job of making it realistic, but the Zack, 15 minutes moment?
Brad Fuller: You know we had to get Zack out of the room we had to get him out because we debated how we were going to get Sean in the room. The response last night was obviously -- there was some fun to be had there and we had a great shower scene. (Laughs.) It was fun for Sophia, so I dunno we just kind of went with it. I mean I wish I could give you a better answer. Anything you want to add to that?
Andrew Form: No, but itâs tricky, because how do you get Zack out of that room and get Sean in? Because we had this whole scene constructed where we did want Sean in bed with Sophia and we had to get Zack out of the hotel room.
Brad Fuller: And you know Sean is going to be in the bed. You know heâs going to be there. And youâre waiting for it to happen, so weâ¦
Sean Bean: There was a scene where I was in bed with Sophia? (Laughs.) Shit.
Q: And a Cheney moment from the shotgun day?
Brad Fuller: Itâs going to be on the DVD.
Q: Sean how difficult was this character to play for you because we donât really know anything about him.
Sean Bean: It was. There wasnât a great deal of back history to the guy. Not a lot of information about where he came from which I thought was quite interesting really, because it allowed me the freedom to create what I wanted and to invent as a person. And I always thought that it was somewhat scarier that you donât know anything about him or where he comes from. I always find that the less you know about people, the less you trust them. I usually like to have something to go on but for this particular movie I would say he was like an angel of death. Wandering the freeways and that quite appealed to me.
Q: This is for the producers the fact we donât know much of the hitcher does that mean will there be a prequel?
Brad Fuller: No. I donât see a prequel happening. As Sean said, give him a blank slate and let him do what heâll do with it. There was no thinking about a prequel until you brought it up.
Q: Sophia what are the challenges of playing a girl like this and avoiding the clichéâs?
Sophia Bush: Right, I think that was a big thing for me and something we definitely looked into in a lot of moments in filming, because I donât want to be that girl running around whining and irritating, but at the same time I donât want to come out like Lara Croft with guns blazing, because thatâs not quite right either. And I think that itâs something that made it great was or greater for me rather was a lot of what Zach and I got to do together. Because we spent weeks just working on the chemistry of our relationship and how Jim and Grace behaved and reacted and the ways we kind of messed with one another and the ways partners in a long standing relationship sort of do. So, what we had, I think this gave me some license to go on the emotional roller coaster instead of just being one kind of woman or another was when Grace wasnât going to make it Jim pulled her up and when Jim wasnât going to make it, Grace pulled him up. And it was a very symbiotic relationship, so it allowed me to show both sides. And it allowed me to flip the scales from her being kind of happy go lucky to her being stripped down and very animalistic. It let me do that slowly more in a see saw than in one quick flip and I think thatâs a more accurate of how people change and how people sort of tap into their strengths.
Q: Dave, this is really a lean film. Was there more stuff that got cut? And how was your relationship with the MPAA?
Dave Meyers: I had a really great MPAA experience. I didnât focus on violence in the film even though there is some. I tried to keep everything on thrills and suspense. We cut most of it out before we actually filmed it which is sort of how we kept the budget was extremely low, and yet we still have huge car action and all that stuff. And so, part of the relationship I had with the producers was trying to cut that stuff before we filmed it. And really cutting the fat everywhere we could. I pulled from my commercials and video background and keeping things really succinct. Itâs lean and there is only one scene that has only five different versions of it and that hopefully make it to the DVD.
Q: What scene is that?
Dave Meyers: Am I allowed to say?
Andrew Form: Sure.
Dave Meyers: The motel scene, we shot that so many times I think Sean might be made at me. He was like, âAgain?â
Q: Dave can you talk about the musical decisions for the film? I enjoyed the scene with âCloserâ coming into the scene.
Dave Meyers: I had a play list that I used to inspire me for the characters of the film. And it came through my exposure of music and what I love and I was distinctly told by the producers Iâd never afford any of it. So, the film came out we put it together and we had all that music in there as my own personal thing. And then one day Brad called me and said, âGuess what. The studio likes it and they are going to pay for this song.â I called Dave Matthewâs people and got a deal on that song. And then I started going and Trent Reznor signed off on it, and then like three or four days ago the studio paid for it, so it was just hanging on it. âNo, no, no, OK.â (Laughs.)
Q: This question is for Sean, how difficult was it stepping into Rutger Hauerâs shoes?
Sean Bean: I saw the film when it first came out about 20 years ago. And it made a big impression on me. It was a very well constructed film and Rutger Hauer gives a very good performance and I remember being scared by it, and I thought it made an impact but I really didnât want that running around my head and cluttering things up when we were making our version of it. So, I think working with Dave and obviously, Zach and Sophie I think we crated quite an interesting new version. And I really didnât have any reservations or concerns about being compared to another actor. I just wanted to stop and scratch and do it my way.
Q: Zack and Sophia in the same outfits most of the movie, how many different versions were there? How gross did they get by the end?
Zack Knighton: Iâll be back in 15 minutes. (Laughs.) It was the same outfit. I wore the same thing every day. It smelled really bad.
Sophia Bush: Yeah, there definitely got to a point where what did they have? Six? For continuity sake they had to keep a couple of pairs of all that clothes.
Zack Knighton: Yeah, but there were different stages, because we shot out of sequence.
Sophia Bush: There were a couple of days when we would be in sequence and weâd be in the same clothes and he looked at me one day and was like, âWe smell.â And Iâm like, âI know.â (Laughs.) It was interesting, but then again we were covered in dirt, blood and filth so we probably would have smelled anyway. I donât think anyone noticed, except for us.
Q: Sophie, Zack and Sean â how is the relationship between you guys and Sean since you had to be scared of him?
Sean Bean: Itâs quite good in a way -- that they were scared of me.
Zack Knighton: Iâm still afraid. (Laughs.)
Sean Bean: The first scene we did in Austin, Texas was a night shoot, was the scene in the car where they are picking up the garage and we shot the interior of the car which is quite a long scene and it was quite good that we didnât really know each other by then at all did we? Liked each other or not.
Zack Knighton: You didnât talk to us at all.
Sean Bean: Thatâs not unusual.
Sophia Bush: It took us a couple of weeks to all get speaking.
Sean Bean: But it actually worked because we werenât supposed to know each other so Iâm glad we did that.
Sophia Bush: Our first conversation was about how hard you could push the knife into my face. And I was like, âHI. How are you? Feel free to hit me.â (Laughs.)
Q: Was it hard to shoot the scenes with the heavy rain?
Zack Knighton: I can tell you if you shoot in the rain youâre going to have a lot of voice ADR to do after the movie and voice looping, stuff like that.
Sean Bean: If youâve got lines. (Laughs.)
Dave Meyers: I think rain is really restrictive to work in, but In our particular case we had 20 minutes of rain in a car and it couldnât have been any more challenging to keep it interesting and so that was one of my main focuses. Shooting a whole bunch of angles and catching the nuances of the scene and stuff so that the tension can stay alive and with the sound effects people, every single day I said, âI want 100 different tracks of rain. I want rain for this scene that sounds different than rain for the next scene.â Itâs a really subtle thing and I donât know how many people will really pick up on it, but I was just worried the same type of rain, for 20 minutes, would put people to sleep.
||SPLIT||
Q: Dave, CGI in the car sequence?
Dave Meyers: About 99.9% real. There is no CG at all in it. The only thing that was done was that we broke cameras. I gambled correctly and put the camera right in harms way. So, we shot each sequence with ten cameras. So, four or five of the cameras would be in the other cameras and we had to erase them. Itâs kind of just the art of invisibility. There is really only one major CG thing, which was the rabbit, which is pretty much out of the box now, but everything else was the art of trying not to have anything.
Q: Sophia, how challenging is it to find quality scripts?
Sophia Bush: I think itâs definitely hard to find films of quality that you want to make and particularly even when this script came itâs like prior to reading it did I really know it was going to be anything other than a typical movie of a scary genre. And as I was going through it did I realize that there was something special here. Because, not only did that tomboy side of me get to completely freak out and like in my stunt junkie way and do all of these amazing things and watch cars get blown up and watch helicopters fly over our faces and ride around the desert with guns, but there was such a development for this character and a sort of slope for this girl to fall down. And I think thatâs it of me is choosing something that gives me some work to do and things that I havenât done before. It was something just really very exciting. And the relationships between our characters is phenomenal and real and something that gets overdone in our age range a lot. And to be working with Sean and it was like, âYeah, I want to make a movie with Sean Bean. Totally scary!â (Laughs.) And itâs so great, because we had a moment in that first sequence, like he says, barely knowing each other and weâre fighting and Iâm like, âGod, this guy is so strong and he has my face in his hand and this is great, this is great.â And I made some noise that worried him and you looked at me and was like, âAre you alright?â And I was like, âOK.â And you were like, âOK!â And I was like, âOK, weâre back in the scene. Beat me up some more.â
Sean Bean: You liked that didnât you? (Laughs.)
Q: Question for Andrew and Brad â any update on âFriday the 13thâ?
Andrew Form: We are working on a script right now. And I think that next year, itâs not in the first two quarters for us, that movie, maybe at the end of the year next year. But right now we are still working on the screenplay.
Q: Director?
Andrew Form: No director yet at all. I mean Jonathan Liebesman is attached to the movie right now, the director of âChainsawâ.
Brad Fuller: But it really depends on his schedule. Heâs got a lot of things rolling around right now. So, if heâs available when we have a script, weâd love to work with him again. We had a great experience with him.
Q: Dave, how did you come to the project and was it something you always wanted to remake? And Zack, we spoke a little bit last night, can you talk about the cocksock?
Dave Meyers: The cocksock lives on buddyâ¦Brad, Drew and Michael are big fans of the Hitcher and were sort of circling it and found rights to it. I was circling their operation of sort of being a home for video commercial guys, making that jump to movies. The president of the studio happened ---to a year before do a movie with him. All of these stars sort of aligned. I studied the film and realized like Sophia said, thereâs character arcs in there. There is something more special than the typical horror film. It just all sort of worked. And to see a guy with a cocksock.
Zack Knighton: I always dreamed of wearing a cocksock so it was the perfect marriage of director and actor.
Q: Sophia, what do you think the fascination with girls kicking ass is?
Sophia Bush: Sorry Iâm still laughing. Okay, Iâm good. Iâm okay. I think whatâs great about is that weâve seen so many great heroes in men and your iconic with â
Q: How close to the original script did you stay to and how long was the shoot?
Dave Meyers: Shoot was 44 days. The original script of the remake?
Q: Your original script of this?
Dave Meyers: The structure of it stayed pretty close. We pretty much improved the whole movie. There was a greenlit draft that had a structure that had certain scenes that are still in the movie. I think one of the biggest things these movies is creating a believability. Everyday weâd show up and see a block of the scene and go, âoh thatâs not very real.â So weâd all go back to our corners and a lot of time it was the cast that would find the soul of it and weâd help guide it. Thatâs why there is an authenticity in the film.
Q: Eric Red gets credited on the film. Is that a WGA thing?
Brad Fuller: We had two writers write on it. Jake Wade Wall and Eric Red. We submitted to the WGA and they came back and gave Eric Red credit. We were surprised by that. We had no idea. That was the last thing we thought would happen actually.
Q: Any favorite villains of movies past?
Sean Bean: Other villains? I used to like the old style ones. James Cagney and Edward G. Robinson. People like that. Itâs quite hard to spring to mind. I suppose so. Quite rough and ready, no-nonsense gangsters. I tried to play this guy without being too aggressive in a sense. John Malkovich is someone I always admire as a villain. I like him in general, but I think he has an assertive quality about him.
Q: There was recent talk that they might do a prequel to Lord of the Rings and a movie about The Hobbit? Would you consider coming back if Peter Jackson isnât involved?
Sean Bean: Yeah. I donât know. Itâs very much a creation of Peter Jackson. Itâs difficult for me to answer that question because I havenât heard about it. It depends on the circumstances, the many many circumstances. The director, the writing, the whole idea behind it and what they are trying to achieve.
Q: No one smoked, no one drank, no drugs?
Dave Meyers: It wasnât the story of these characters really. There wasnât a need for it. He talks about drinking beers in one of the scenes. Itâs not meant to be conservative. We were focused on other things.
Q: Whatâs next for all of you?
Brad Fuller: We are trying to put another picture for Rogue called âAloneâ.
Q: An original script?
Andrew Form: An original script. Can you believe it?
Brad Fuller: We start production in a few weeks on a movie called âHorsemanâ. Itâs a thriller.
Andrew Form: In the vein of âSevenâ with Dennis Quaid and Ziyi Zhang.
Brad Fuller: Then weâve talked about âThe Birdsâ. Thatâs out there. Thereâs another movie we might do for Rouge. We might do âNear Darkâ for Rogue.We love the way Eric Red works.
Q: The Birds still likely to happen?
Brad Fuller: Absolutely. Yes. In the next two weeks, or the next week or so I think theyâll announce it because theyâre starting to talk about a new writer to come on and write that. It definitely feels like itâs moving.
Andrew Form: And weâre still working on the script for Friday the 13th.
Sean Bean: Iâm not really doing anything at the moment. I just finished this film in the artic called âTrue Northâ with Michelle Yeoh, but about three characters, but slightly different from this combination. So Iâve been over there for awhile and Iâve been flying around a bit. Iâm sick of it so Iâm off and looking and just looking at a few things now.Nothing definite.
Sophia Bush: Iâm finishing the fourth season of One Tree Hill. We start on hiatus half way through April and so itâs sort of in the next few weeks that we pull things that have started coming together and all the things that will be put together and figure out what pool we feel like diving in for the summer.
Q: How long do you think One Tree Hill will go for?
Sophia Bush: We never really do and I think itâs hard to say. Depends how long the kids keep watching. How long we keep the teenagers entertained. Weâll see.
Zack Knighton: Iâm going to start a job as Sean Beanâs new personal assistant. I am currently in the mix for some things and hoping that something works out and basically hanging out on the west side and surfing.
Dave Meyers: Iâm just waiting for the movie to come out. A lot of with a first time film, people wait to see the film before they decide what want to offer you. A lot of what I have been offered is sort of clones of âThe Hitcherâ and I donât really want to do that. Iâm developing a movie called âWitch Hunterâ. That will be the A plan if that actually gets greenlit. Itâs extremely expensive and I donât know where it stands, but itâs being read and if that happens then that will be the immediate one. Otherwise, Iâll wait.
Q: Can you talk about casting? I understand Zach went through a rigorous audition process.
Dave Meyers: Iâll hand that one to Brad.
Brad Fuller: Zack speficially? With Sophia it was very simple. She was an actress we had heard about and for Drew and myself we get a lot more from sitting down with an actor and actresses then actually auditioning them.Thatâs how we found Jessica Biel from âChainsaw.â Thatâs how we found Jordana Brewster for the other âChainsawâ. We had heard wonderful things about Sophia and she came in and we just kind of fell in love with her. We just kind of said weâre working on this thing âThe Hitcherâ and it was early on. When this script was being developed she was the person we had in mind and we kept her up to speed with what is happening with it. It was always Sophiaâs movie. By design she fits the bill for us. We thought she was likeable and at the same time can carry thar gun and blow his head off. That worked out. As far as Zack, Zack had a much more torturous process to getting this role. Zach was a guy who we really wanted to be in the âChainsawâ that we had just finished. For whatever reason it came down to Zach and this other guy and the other guy got the role. We loved him and you gotta choose an actor, Sophia is really hot and youâve got to choose a guy who you believe is such a cool guy because she can get any guy she wants. Youâve got to get a guy thatâs a real guyâs guy. When youâre casting actors, that was always a real hard thing for us to find, a guy who you believe is going to drive a Ford Oldsmobile 442 and land Sophia and be in those situations. Zach kept coming back. We didnât want to cut him and we kept on seeing other actors for lack of a better term, bigger names and people who are more well know. Zach, to his credit, doesnât have many credits. He did one show and that was pretty much it. But, he just kept coming back and every time he came back, he was better and better. At the end of it you canât think of the role any other way. He was the only guy who nailed it six times. I think you actually did come back six times. How do you not give the guy the role?He kept coming back. No one else had that longevity.
Zach Knighton: I also happened to be in the habit of drinking beers at the time and I had to drop a few pounds. I actually lost I think I lost 13 pounds in five days
Q: Did you stop drinking beer?
Zack Knighton: Yeah. I pretty much stopped everything. I realized that Iâm not the pretty boy type that you see in this film and I thought that Iâd try to improve myself physically and mentally for the thing.
Brad Fuller: For Sean too. It was very simple. For âThe Hitcherâ we were looking for a Sean Bean type, we didnât think weâd actually get Sean. We needed this great elegant actor who could play this role. Weâd checked on Sean and his dates werenât working and it wasnât good. Sean had just worked with out partner
Q: There was a rumor online about Naomi Watts being up for The Birds?
Brad Fuller: No actor or actress is going to commit to everything with a script. Weâve sat down with her and conceptually I think we all want to make the same movie, but until we have a script and a director, I think itâs a little premature. But, weâll all talking and sheâs who weâd like to have as the lead.
Andrew Form: Yes.
Q: Dave, what do you like best?
Dave Meyers: I love movies. Videos, the technical description is youâre marketing the product. That always keeps you sort of removed from the pleasureâ¦I mean there are MTV Awards that sort of fulfill the void, but with movies you are creating the product and you are the product. Youâre creating something that is marketed and that allows you to have a much more possesory relationship with it.Itâs more true to the directing crowd.
Q: What else do you have planned for the DVD?
Dave Meyers: I dunno, whatever Brad and Drew let me put on there. Thereâs a lot of material that we can play with. I think itâd be fun to have that. We actually have five complete scenes of how we addressed the motel each with their own flaw.
Producers at the same time: and two endings.
Q: In the rain, when the car comes up? Is that you? Did you enjoy the rain?
Sean Bean: Yeah, it was quite warm in
Q: Training to use weapons?
Sean Bean: Not really. I sort of used weapons a few times before. But they are all the same really. I felt quite comfortable with that.
Q: Sean any plans to go back to the Sharp series?
Sean Bean: I donât know. We did one in
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