Interview: Oren Peli, Writer-Director of 'Paranormal Activity'
Filed under: Horror, Paramount, Interviews
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Two years ago a man named Oren Peli decided to make a movie. He didn't know exactly how, but he knew he had a good premise, and he knew he had some helpful friends, so he spent roughly $15,000, hired a few actors and then spent a mere seven days filming in his own home. What came out of that was Paranormal Activity, a haunted-house labor of love that barely made its way around the festival circuit before being purchased by DreamWorks (only after Steven Spielberg reportedly experienced some paranormal activity of his own after watching a DVD of the film by himself).
The studio's initial plan was to buy the film with the intent of having Peli remake it, but reactions to a test screening intended to attract new writing talent were so strong, the producers at DreamWorks decided that trying to bottle lightning twice was pointless. The film was slated for release in 2008, but got delayed due to an internal conflict between DreamWorks and Paramount. But studio politics couldn't hold the film back forever, not when calculated screenings at events like Fantastic Fest yielded monster buzz and sold out midnight showings.
Now after an unprecedented launch campaign in which fans literally got to demand that the film play near them, Paramount is ready to roll out Oren Peli's Paranormal Activity nationwide, a film I feel safe calling the scariest I've seen in years.
Cinematical: What is your background pre-Paranormal Activity? And how did you lead up to it?
Oren Peli: By trade, I am a software programmer, so I never really had any experience with movies before. I started out with Paranormal Activity.
So this was your very first stab at filmmaking?
Yes, pretty much, I never even made shorts or anything like that.
Do you think there is anything inherent to a technical background that lends your abilities to filmmaking? For example, Shane Carruth is another filmmaker who came from being an engineer to make Primer, one of the last great groundswell movies before Paranormal Activity, on a similar budget and scale.
I think there might be, I've always been very comfortable with computers and software, so one thing that's made my life easier is the fact that I was very quickly able to figure out how to edit the movie, how to do the audio mixing, and the CGI that's in the movie. So in that aspect my background definitely helped me with the technical aspects, just being very comfortable working with the camera equipment...it all came very natural to me.
Can you describe the fears that paved the way for Paranormal Activity and why you decided to film it in your own house?
When I moved into my house, it was the first time I lived in a detached family home as opposed to an apartment, and it's in a very quiet, suburban neighborhood. So you become very conscious of every little sound you hear because you don't have any neighbors above the walls, basically you're not supposed to hear anything. When you do hear little creaks and knocks and stuff like that, you wonder what's going on. I'm sure most of it was natural sounds of the house settling, but every once in a while you would hear things that would be weird and you couldn't figure out where they are.
That's kind of what made me think how I would go about trying to figure out what's going on and being the techno-geek that I am, my initial inclination would be to get video cameras and set them up around the house to see what was going on. I didn't actually go ahead and do that, but that's what started making me think how freaky it would be if you had cameras running at home while you sleep and actually did catch something.
When you decided to take that premise and turn it into a movie, did you go all on your own or did you talk to friends or try to bring in producers?Basically the entire crew for the original shoot of the movie was myself, my best friend Amir that I've known since I was 13 and my girlfriend I was living with at the time, and she became a reluctant helper because we didn't have a set and were shooting the movie at home, but she did help a lot in every aspect of production. The only thing I couldn't figure out how to do on my own was make-up, so I did hire a make-up artist. But that was basically the entire crew.
Did Micah actually operate the camera himself? Was he the impromptu camera man?
He was shooting most of the movie, though in a few scenes Katie was actually operating the camera. Most of the other time the camera is either stationary on the tripod in the bedroom or sitting on the kitchen counter etcetera.
Do you still actually live in the house?
Yep!
Has anything creepy happened in it?
Nope, not at all.
Your first draft of the movie was done in 2007. As far as your involvement since then has there been much refinement or has the film been mainly just sitting?
There has been some editing after a few test screening results in order to make the film a bit quicker and shorter, as we had some issues with pacing. So we tried to fix them, hopefully we did. That was the main part of it. Also, we shot the ending. That was the only real significant change.
I've heard varying numbers as to how many alternate endings there are. How many did you actually film?
Well I filmed a whole bunch, but most of them no one has ever seen, they were just for my own options. There was one ending that was shown at some festivals, and then another ending that was shown publicly only the one time. And then the current ending, which we've had for more than a year now.
Can you explain what those other two endings were or is that something we'll see find out later? [Possible Spoiler Alert]
The original ending... I'll just say very briefly, the movie ends with cops entering the house to find the scene of the crime. The other one...there's been some talks about it on the internet, but I'd like to keep quiet on it for now. Maybe one day we'll see them all on the special edition DVD.
How much raw footage did you actually film and how long did it take you to edit it all down?
Probably close to 70 hours; it was a lot. There were also some nights we just had the cameras rolling non-stop. It took about 10-months I would say to edit.
What was your approach to maintaining tension and the audience's interest with just 2 people and 1 camera?
It was very difficult to begin with having just two characters and one location, so I knew it would be a challenge. We just had to be sure the nights were progressively creepy and that there are enough interesting things happening during the day that actually contribute and weave threads into the plot that progress it so that the following nights have new meanings, particularly to what happened the previous day. It was very tricky, which is why it took so long to edit the movie.
Once it was picked up for distribution, were there any other reshoots other than the ending?
There were a couple of little things that came up on their own that weren't suggested by DreamWorks and some were a little suggested as areas of improvement, so we shot them and they turned out great and now they're in the movie. The ending was the one thing we had a lot of criticism about from the original version, so we knew we wanted to come up with something a little bit better.
Is it true that the new ending was heavily influenced by Steven Spielberg? One of the rumors going around the Internet is that after having seen it, he had to bring the film back to the studio in a trash bag. Have you heard anything about that?
Yeah, in fact I heard that story immediately after it happened, which was a couple of days after he saw the movie. So the whole story about how the doors to his bedroom got locked from the inside... personally I believe it. It's not something the marketing department just came up with before releasing the movie, I actually heard it a year and a half ago.
And yeah, the ending was suggested by Spielberg.
Have you two talked about other projects. I know when the Paranormal Activity remake was being considered you were on that, but have you guys brainstormed anything else.
I will say that anything that has to do with my future projects, I usually prefer to remain tight lipped, so I like as few people as possible knowing about it and when it's done, we'll show it to the world.
I'm assuming the answer is just great, but how does it feel to have people lining up around the block to volunteer themselves for sleepless nights thanks to Paranormal Activity?
Great! It's very rewarding to see the fans embracing the movie. This is totally a fan driven movie, because if it wasn't for the fans, we wouldn't be talking right now. This movie was launched by Paramount in a way that really allows fans to decide whether or not they want the movie to be released and where.
So if it weren't for the fans demanding the movie and saying "We want it to play in our home town" and if it weren't for the fans spreading the good word online in forums or on Twitter, the movie probably wouldn't have gotten anywhere. But because they've been so supportive and so generous and so flattering to the movie, that's why it's expanding everywhere next weekend.
What's your preferred brand of horror? Paranormal Activity is definitely a slow, restrained burn, and it works so well, do you have any intentions of going the more Hollywood, over-the-top route in the future?
Personally I like the slow burn; I don't think there is anything wrong with it. When I think about the movies that were most effective on me as a viewer I think of the original Haunting and the Exorcist, Rosemary's Baby, the Sixth Sense, the Others. These movies are not over the top at all, they are movies that rely on good story telling, good acting, good premise, good exposition and I want to stay true to that in future projects.
I know you don't want to give away too much about your next film, Area 51, but is there any forewarning you can give someone like me, someone who had childhood nightmare's about alien abductions?
Well I don't want to get into any details about Area 51, but I will say that one of the scenes from a movie that freaked me out the most as a kid – other than the Exorcist, which the whole thing freaks me out – but I remember as a kid watching the abduction scene from Close Encounters of the Third Kind and it definitely left an imprint on me.
Paranormal Activity still needs some help in reaching its goal of one million demands before Paramount releases it nationwide, so head on over and demand that this film screen in your neck of the woods today.
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Reader Comments (Page 1 of 2)
10-09-2009 @ 7:55PM
Liam said...
Did I overlook Micah. Who's Micah??
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10-10-2009 @ 11:09AM
Peter Hall said...
Micah is the boyfriend.
10-11-2009 @ 6:14PM
tj said...
so is it or is it not based on a true story?
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10-11-2009 @ 6:14PM
Peter Hall said...
It is not.
10-15-2009 @ 8:08PM
jo said...
i thought it was real until i read this page.hmm..thats away to get people to go & see the movie..geez
other than that the movie scaryed me & its hard to scare me.its worth the money! jo
11-02-2009 @ 10:50AM
Shando said...
Ya that's what I'm saying, Is it real or not, where is the real documentary tape!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
10-12-2009 @ 1:01AM
Lorenza said...
why did you thank the San Diego police department at the very beginning of the movie. Did the girl in the end stab herself or was that her boyfriend's blood on her chest?
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10-12-2009 @ 3:36PM
teresa said...
Lorenza that was Micah's blood on her shirt.
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10-15-2009 @ 8:08PM
joane said...
i loved the movie..i didnt think the show was real but then again i have had ghost things happen to me..so when i read that it was all fake that really sucks...boo hoo... good job on the movie thow..i am going to see the movie again with my kids..thxs again jo
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10-18-2009 @ 11:19AM
maizy said...
I dug the movie and I was up half the night, but I'm not sure why in the interview they're making Oren Peli seem like such a genius with such an original idea, because basically he just transferred the format of Blair Witch Project into another storyline. Even a couple of details were pretty similar--when Micah asks why his face is the only one that's scratched on the picture, that's almost exactly what happened in Blair when Josh's backpack was shredded and he was freaking out that his was the only one that was messed up. Also, I noticed very distinct similarities of the line delivery in Micah talking about finding out what was going on at the beginning of the movie and Heather talking about finding out about the Blair witch at the beginning of that movie. It was definately a scary movie! But come on, not original in the idea of found footage, and Peli needs to be giving props to the BWP folks for the actual movie format, not be acting like he dreamt it up himself. What are the chances he didn't know anything about BWP???
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11-07-2009 @ 11:50PM
Equal said...
Well its just Micah's personality, during the film he comes on as a really funny guy and you can't just change his personality in the middle of the movie, plus he wanted the movie to seem very real. I think he did a very good job making this film, and ever since Saw, noone has made a good, no, a decent horror film that is actually scary. And why are people freaking out that it was made the same way that the BWP was made, that and Paranoraml Activity are the two only movies that have had the same idea of filming while other horror movies are exactly the same, just blood, sex and violence. I think what scares people is getting into their head and using ideas that would scare just about anybody, which Oren Peli did, because im pretty sure this movie scared more people than any movie made since 2000.
10-18-2009 @ 9:39PM
C said...
It is real it said in the theatere at the end that Katies still alive and they found Michas body the day after she killed him
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10-30-2009 @ 2:25PM
cablebfg said...
holy crap people. Get a grip. This is a scary MOVIE. Not a documentary. This stuff never actually happened. I was freaked out by The Blair Witch Project at the time, but I was 13 then. If you are over the age of 18, you shouldn't be so gullible.
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10-22-2009 @ 2:03PM
MARIBEL said...
I went to go see the movie in theathers yestruday.. i really liked the movie even though i was fricked out at the end.. i thought it was based on a true story.. but iam still fricked out.. thats my first time i ever been scared on a horror movie.. i give it a ++10.. i like how it looked like it was actually the two actors holding and recording the camara.. well it was.. wut iam trying to say is that it fealt reall to me.. ill tell my friends to go watch it.. they cant miss this movie IS ONE OF THE BEST HORROR MOVIES EVER.. GREAT WORK..
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10-22-2009 @ 9:38PM
Denzel said...
this movie was like seeing my first Nightmare on elm street movie when i was 4, The Excorcist when i was 8, The Ring when i was 13 give or take and now im going to be 19 the 24th paranormal activity made me want to go home half way through. only because i thought it was real... i cant say if i'd be scared like i was if i knew it was real either way it was a great movie. for the people who have seen the movie try to not let that information out lol... oh yea and def. not a kids movie.
props.
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10-25-2009 @ 11:18AM
Tom said...
uh well i just saw it last night and it was really good but if its not base on true events dont say it is.
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10-25-2009 @ 10:10PM
Cory said...
It never said it was based on true events in the movie, it just *acts* like it it. The whole scary thing about the movie is, it leaves you to think that it could actually happen to you and that's why they put "thanks to the san fran. police department" and "micah's body was found and katie's body is still missing", mainly to give it that *real* effect. The movie was beyond great, I loved everyone second of it. Definately well worth seeing!
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10-26-2009 @ 11:53PM
mia said...
so how did they fake the foot prints, the covers, the fire, and her getting dragged of the bed down the hall?/? also the end how did they even do that??? idk the movie was good tho
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10-27-2009 @ 6:23AM
Chris said...
Its.....Hollywood? lmao How else?
11-10-2009 @ 10:15AM
andre said...
i think it was a great movie....the movie really freaked me out....the one part that got the best is wen she got taken out of bed and dragged to the other end of the house
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