In the French grindhouse thriller High Tension, Marie (Cécile De France) and Alexia (Maïwenn) are schoolmates and best friends. Hoping to prepare for their college exams in peace and quiet, they decide to spend a weekend in the country at Alexia’s parents' secluded — very secluded — farmhouse where there isn’t even a cell phone within 20 miles. In the dead of night, a stranger knocks on the front door, and with the first swing of his knife, the girls' idyllic weekend turns into an endless night of terror (or 91 minutes… but who’s counting?).
The movie hits theaters Stateside on June 10, 2005 and Horror.com was lucky enough to get this exclusive interview with writer/director Alexandre Aja over the phone while he was scouting locations in
Staci Wilson for Horror.Com: I imagine you must be pretty excited about all the attention your horror movie has been getting.
Aja: Yeah. On one hand I am very shy about that and at the same time, I am very excited. I’m so sorry to not be able [to be there in the
Aja: When we started writing this story, years ago, we were working on our first feature film in 1998 or 99 and we tried to make this very simple, classical storyline which is: two girls, a house, one night and one killer. We made a tribute to all the movies and all the stories and all the different influences over the years. I know Intensity, I know Dean Koontz, and I am a big fan of his work.
We [my partner Grégory Levasseur and I] grew up with all these books, we grew up with Stephen King, and all these films. Tobe Hooper, John Carpenter, Dean Koontz, Stephen King — all these people are influences in a way, but this movie is really a tribute to all these different kinds of stories.
I was very surprised, reading on the Web, people saying “Oh, that’s Dean Kootz’s Intensity,” or “Oh, that is Tobe Hooper’s Texas Chainsaw Massacre.” Yeah, we are making a movie which is classic. I mean, the storyline doesn’t get more classic than that. There are dozens and dozens of movies with this simple storyline, so what we tried was to make a tribute to all the people we like. Dean Koontz was not the first one to try this; he is just one of many. I’ll give you an example: Maniac, the William Lustig movie, is also set in… We tried to take the essence of what it is with [our] maniac. The scene in the gas station restroom [in High Tension] is exactly an homage, a tribute, to Maniac.
I’m happy at the same time, because people understand that we are making this film [as fans of the genre]. Before we became filmmakers we were the core audience, we were the ones who go out and watch all those movies.
Aja: I’m still very young. I’m 26. I don’t know if I really have a style; what I tried in High Tension was to make a kind of… It’s very hard to say in English [chuckles]… I tried to stay more distant. I don’t like when you’re watching a movie and you just see the movement of the camera.
You’re still watching a movie, but this movie is so strong it takes you out of your seat, into the screen and you are taking part in all the decisions of protagonist in the story. In High Tension [you ask] What are you going to do? Are you going to hide under the bed, are you going to jump out the window? That kind of stuff.
Aja: Yes.
Wilson: I interviewed Cécile briefly when she was here doing press for Around the World in 80 Days [remake] and she struck me as being a very up and vibrant person; what was she like to work with?
Aja: She is amazing. She is the best French actress working right now. She can do everything, she can play anything. We shot High Tension before she did Around the World and you watch the two films, it’s hard to believe. I’ve told people, “You know the girl from High Tension, she is in Around the World,” and they go, “No. It’s impossible.” She is so different and that’s what makes her such a good actress. I think no one could play Marie like her, and I have to thank her everyday because brought so much to the movie. She brought something so real, so strong, and our collaboration was also a very, very strong one.
It was the perfect collaboration, and it was not so easy to find a girl to be able to play that because Marie in High Tension is 99% [of the time] on-screen. She plays so many different kinds of fear. We looked at all the young French actresses while casting and all of them were playing the fear the same way every time, but Cécile played the fear so differently. She is never repeating herself. She is always playing something different and that is very, very difficult.
Aja: When you are making this kind of movie, it’s actually very funny. On the screen, it’s scary, it’s traumatic, there is blood and violence. But when you’re on the set, it’s kind of a kindergarten spirit because you are playing with the prop blood like you’re painting, it’s sticky, and it’s very funny, in fact. Sometimes it’s very hard to start working and play the situation. We are having a lot of fun making this kind of movie, even if on the screen you get a scary feeling — it’s actually really funny to do.
Aja: What we cut is really nothing. It’s like a couple of minutes.
Aja: In fact, when Lion’s Gate picked up the movie, they were facing two situations: One was to make the movie with subtitles in limited release, and the other was to release the movie in wide platform with dubbing. But the action is taking place in
Aja: Yeah, I think it’s nine or ten minutes. What we tried to do is, find a solution, making the action take place in
Aja: High Tension is a very real and scary roller-coaster inside the mind of a nightmare. I think it’s something that, at the end of the night, the protagonists of the movie are more than exhausted — they are barely alive, and what I like is watching the people coming out of the screening room and feeling that they are also barely alive. [chuckles]
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