Greetings, all. Ambush Bug here with another AICN HORROR: ZOMBIES & SHARKS column. This time around, I chat with one half of the mad duo who brought you [REC] and [REC]2. Paco Plaza took full control of his newest installment in the series [REC]3: GENESIS while he will be serving as producer for his [REC] collaborator Juame Balaguero for [REC]4: APOCALYPSE. But today, he’s here to talk about [REC]3. Here’s the conversation we had about the film. Look further down for a review of the film.

PACO PLAZA (PP): Well first of all thank you very much for your words. Of course we never expected something like that to happen. Where it all began was Jaume Balaguero and me having a coffee one afternoon in Barcelona and we were complaining about difficult it was to get our next respective films financed and we were lazy saying “It’s so difficult” and we said, “Wouldn’t it be great to do something like back when we were short filmmakers, just grab a camera, gather a few friends, and just make something?” “Yeah, that would be spectacular” and we looked at each other like “What’s stopping us? Let’s do it.” We began to think about a film we could shoot with a video camera and a few friends and that was where we became more and more obsessed with the idea of doing something, really really small, something we could control one hundred percent.

BUG: And it really came around at the beginning of all of this found footage trend and just the kind of handheld first person point of view. I’m sure you saw THE BLAIR WITCH project when it first came out, was that influential in you making the film?
PP: Yes, THE BLAIR WITCH and especially CANNIBAL HOLOCAUST and it was an influence. There was another Belgium film and I don’t know the English name, but there were many films that had an influence on us, but even there was a chapter of the TV show THE X-FILES which was called “THE X-COPS” that was a mixture of Mulder and Scully that was like a reality show. It was really interesting, but it’s true that the main influence on us was the television and the language of reporting the news.

BUG: What I loved about the series in general is the unpredictability. You went from going from a story about an infection in the first one to more of a religious tone with demons and everything and it was very seamless and then going into the third film you kind of elaborated on that religious theme. When you were making the first film did you think that there were going to be… Were these religious themes in there? I guess they were very subtle in the apartment at the very end, but going into it did you have the mythology planned out for the three films?

We loved mixing zombies and demons. We thought it was a fresh response and it was something we haven’t seen in the past and that was really exciting for us. We sort of succeeded in the first film, like saying about the possessed girl and… referring to this aspect of the church being involved in the creation of these zombies, but we didn’t have a whole mythology. We knew that we wanted to tell… went to a dog and then everything spread. But we didn’t have like a mythology, especially because when we were shooting REC we felt that was going to be it, a solo film.

PP: I knew I wanted to make this decision in the film, that I wanted to have a very long prolog. I think in the film it’s like eighteen minutes or something like that and I wanted a more cinematic filmmaking for many reasons. The first, this is something different. It’s different for me, but especially for the audience. I’m a filmgoer. I go to the theater three or four times a week. I love it. Something that happens to me is that more often I feel like I just went to the theater to check how the film is exactly how I expected, because of all of the anticipation and the trailers, the information you can read on the internet, it’s very difficult that a film surprises you and that’s what we wanted to have back, because I remember when I was a teenager there was very, very little information about the film and you really discovered the films in the theater while watching them and there’s something magical there, and that mystery of the film revealing itself on the screen was something that I was trying to achieve. That’s part of the weight of trying to make something very, very different.

BUG: Definitely. Did you find it easier or harder to make a cinematic film? It seems like setting up a found footage film where there are continuous shots and everything would involve a lot of preparation, especially in ones that are moving around and you are incorporating a lot of different actions at once in the same location. Was it easier for you to film it cinematically where you can do cuts and you can edit scenes and things like that?

BUG: Okay, so with REC 4 being made now, how involved are you in that? Are you involved as far as writing or producing? Or is it all completely on your writing partners?
PP: I was writing it with Manu, who was the writing partner on REC 2, and I’m going to be Creative Producer. So somehow I will be involved, but only if I’m… I’ll be around, but not that much.

PP: Yeah, it’s too early. Time will tell, you know. We have been collaborating together for the last ten years, so we will see what happens. I have an idea for having like a crazy REC 5, but I think we will have to take each step at its time and see what comes from REC 4. But the idea is that the fourth is the last one. That’s our idea.
BUG: Okay, so can you give us any hints about what we have to expect with REC 4?
PP: No. I don’t really want to get into trouble with Jaume. I don’t want to say too much. It’s better that when the time comes, he explains what he wants.

PP: That’s really interesting. No, I think for me it’s like a comment on family and it’s a kind of subversive film with the institution of family, like being… For me it was very interesting to spoil someone’s happiest day of their life. It was like being a kid, like taking the happiest day of her life and spoiling it. I love that. (Laughs) I love these kind of social or political subjects in horror films, because I think that even if you don’t want to do it, you end up doing it, because you can’t help that your film in the end reflects how you see the world or how you are or how you think about different things, so I think all of those readings are worth a value.

PP: I was raised Catholic and in Spain the religion has a big influence in our social daily lives and it’s a special institution and it’s something that Jaume and I talked a lot about. We have been to France with all of the films and in France they really find it a bizarre topic, the religious. For us it’s more natural. It’s something that has been in Spanish society for centuries. It’s really routed in our culture, but I guess it’s something in making this we became like superheroes… I think there’s something that’s really particular of this film.

PP: Yeah, I have some things in the air, but nothing confirmed. It hasn’t been too long since the release and I’m still trying to make up my mind in other projects about what I’m doing next.
BUG: Do you consider yourself a horror director or is that pigeonholing you too much?
PP: Well I love horror and it’s what I have done in the past and I think that’s what I want to be in my life. I would love to be a horror film director. I think I would be proud of that when I’m seventy or seventy-five years old and I look back and see that I have done a bunch of horror films. This is exactly what I want to do, but at the same time more and more I’m more keen on comedy and I wouldn’t say I wouldn’t write or direct a comedy, but there’s something with horror that is so fun to shoot with all of the fake blood and the effects. It’s having so much fun, like being a kid at the playground at school again. I don’t know if I will stop doing it, because I really love it.

PP: In general with horror films… The last film that really impressed me was SHAME by Steve McQueen. I’m crazy about that and when I walked out of the theater I bought… I don’t know if you have seen it.
BUG: I don’t think I’ve seen that one.
PP: It’s amazing. It’s a masterpiece. So I guess HUNGER, but Steve McQueen is the last movie that really shocked me. It hasn’t come out yet, but I watched THE IMPOSSIBLE by Juan Antonio Bayona, the director of THE ORPHANAGE, and it’s an amazing film. It really moved me and made me feel something. It’s amazing.
BUG: I have not seen it yet no, but I definitely will seek it out. I’m a big fan of THE ORPHANAGE, so I definitely have to see that one.
PP: It’s incredible.
BUG: Well thank you so much for taking the time out today to talk with me. And congrats on the great film with REC 3.
PP: Thank you very much.
BUG: [REC]3: GENESIS is available On Demand now and in theaters September 7th! Here’s my review for the film below!

[REC]3: GENESIS
Directed by Paco PlazaWritten by Paco Plaza, Luiso Berdejo, David Gallart
Starring Leticia Dolera, Diego Martin, Javier Botet, Alex Monner, Ismael Martinez, Claire Baschet, Mireia Ros, Ana Isabel Velásquez, Borja Glez. Santaolalla, Carla Nieto
Find out more about this film here!
Retro-reviewed by Ambush Bug
Though much ballyhoo is heaped on THE BLAIR WITCH PROJECT as the one that made found footage the popular trend in horror that we have today, I have to disagree and say that, while there were some found footage films after BWP, it wasn’t until PARANORMAL ACTIVITY and internationally [REC] came along before people realized the potential fright factor those types of films possess. I remember the first time I saw [REC] and how blown away I was from it. Now, there are those who hate QUARANTINE, but for it being the shot for shot remake that it is, I have to admit my fondness for that film as well, mainly because Dexter’s freaky sister always creeps me out.

Dropping the hand held, found footage motif fifteen minutes in seems to be a conscious statement by the director that we are moving past the allure of making the same film all over again for the third time and want to do something different in the same universe, using the same rules, and telling a much broader story. [REC]3 GENESIS does this by doing what the previous two [REC] films did so well—that is, taking expectations of something we take for granted (in [REC] it was the reality television show, in [REC]2 one could argue it was the COPS based reality show or even our fascination with on the spot war news as it followed the response team around the same building through the soldier’s eyes) and tossing them on its ear. In [REC]3 GENESIS, Plaza takes another standard, the wedding and twists it into a nightmare.
By doing this, I feel Plaza has made the most thematically strongest entry in the series to date. Every cliché is met in the first few minutes from the creepy uncle who drinks too much to the fat aunt who likes to pinch cheeks to the chicken dance. In showing this is your typical wedding, Plaza draws the audience in and helps them get comfortable before sinking its teeth in. These establishing scenes as seen through the intimate hand held lens of the camera in the first minutes solidify the audience’s investment and the film relies on that for the rest of the film.

Carrying out these themes are the loving newlywed couple who are separated for most of the film Leticia Dolera and Diego Martin. Martin does a decent job as the committed husband who won’t give up until he finds his new bride, though I was distracted as to how much Martin looks like a Spainish Jason Segal. Leticia Dolera is fantastic and is able to suck you in as the adorable bride, then shock you at the ultra-violence she is willing to enflict on her special day. The scenes of the bride going apeshit with a chainsaw could have been campy, but the wide-eyed frantic nature of her performance is reminiscent of Marilyn Burns performance in TEXAS CHAINSAW MASSACRE.
[REC]3 GENESIS works best when it is subtle. From the beginning, having seen the previous two films, there are signs that things are slowly going wrong. From the coughing uncle to the hazmat team in the background of some scenes; if you’ve seen [REC] & [REC]2, you know where this is going and the patience Plaza takes to get there really works well on our expectations. Once shit does fly, it does so at a frantic pace. While I can see the point of some folks that without the hand held found footage motif, this cinematic approach is nothing more than one of the millions of zombie films available today, but the way Plaza handles the key scenes of this film—be they the wedding setup or the truly moving ending of this film, [REC]3 GENESIS proves that, though this may be a found footage/zombie mash-up film, it is definitely is the best of its kind.
[REC]3 GENESIS is in theaters now and available On Demand! See it! It’s good.
See ya next week, folks!




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