STUDIO 666: Dave Grohl and Tony Gardner Talk Blood, Death, and Killing the Band
STUDIO 666: Dave Grohl and Tony Gardner Talk Blood, Death, and Killing the Band
EW: Studio 666 star Dave Grohl originally thought making a horror film was 'a f---ing stupid idea'
Studio 666 star Dave Grohl originally thought making a horror film was 'a f---ing stupid idea'
Foo Fighters frontman Dave Grohl had a strong reaction when he was initially pitched the idea of his band starring in a horror film. “Three years ago, a friend of mine texted me and said, ‘I just came out of a meeting with these people who want to make a horror film with the Foo Fighters,'” Grohl recalls. “I said that’s a f—ing terrible idea. Why would we ever do something so ridiculous?”
Cut to 2022 and Grohl is chatting over Zoom to EW about Studio 666 (out Feb, 25), a horror film that does indeed star the ex-Nirvana drummer as well as his bandmates Taylor Hawkins, Pat Smear, Rami Jaffee, Chris Shiflett, and Nate Mendel. So what changed Grohl’s mind? Turns out, the musician was struck by some horror-spiration while laying down tracks for the band’s 2021 album Medicine at Midnight at a house in Encino.

“We had moved into this house to record Medicine at Midnight,” he says. “I thought, wait a second, we already have the house; once we’re done with the record, let’s take a couple of weeks off, and then we’ll just shoot some low-budget run-and gun slasher thing. It’ll come out with the record, and it’ll be fun. Well, it then snowballed into a full-length feature film. As it progressed, I kept looking at everyone in the band, saying, ‘Oh my God, we’re making a movie.’ Like, that’s not something we ever expected to do.”

Directed by BJ McDonnell (Hatchet III), and written by Jeff Buhler and Rebecca Hughes, the film finds Grohl becoming possessed by supernatural forces while the band is attempting to record an album.
“Imagine! A rock band who’s tired of using all of those recording studios that all of your favorite records have been made in decide to find somewhere different,” says Grohl. “Enter: Creepy old house, which they have no idea is haunted. They begin to record, people start getting killed, but you don’t know who is doing the killing, until you discover that it’s the singer of the band, who’s possessed by the sprit of the house.”

The cast of Studio 666 also includes Will Forte, Whitney Cummings, and Scream star Jenna Ortega, while the film’s gruesome effects were masterminded by make-up designer Tony Gardner, whose many credits include Zombieland, several entries in the Chucky franchise, and last year’s Old.
“Four, five years ago, we made a video for a song called ‘Run,’ and the premise of that video was that we were senior citizens,” says Grohl. “We needed this prosthetic make-up to make us look old, so we called Tony Gardner, who is an old-school Hollywood special effects legend. Tony is such a gentle and kind, wonderful dude, who comes up with the most nightmarish, insane ideas of how to kill people. So, when we were writing the script, we made a list of the most ridiculous, inventive, creative, and hilarious ways to kill each person. We just walked around the house with a notepad and said, ‘Oh, you know what you could do? Chainsaw Rami in half. He’s having sex with Whitney Cummings, and just f—ing splay him.’ Or, ‘You know what you should do? Decapitate Taylor with a cymbal, just throw it right into this mouth.’ So, that was really fun.”
Grohl had more fun playing the villain of the piece. “It feels good to put on some fangs, some contact lenses, and become a f—ing demon,” he says. “You know, you spend most of your time trying to be the nicest, kindest person you could possibly be, until someone puts that s— on your face [and] you suddenly have license to be possessed by the f—ing devil. It was really cool.”
Original Article: https://ew.com/movies/dave-grohl-studio-666-stupid-idea/
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SlashFilm: One Unsung Genius Created The Gnarliest Designs In Your Favorite Horror Movies
One Unsung Genius Created The Gnarliest Designs In Your Favorite Horror Movies
BY BJ COLANGELO
FEB. 7, 2025 7:00 PM EST
When it comes to slasher films, the iconography of the killer is often more important than the story. As long as fans are being given the chance to watch Michael Myers show up in his white-painted Captain Kirk finest to slaughter anyone who gets in his way, no one cares about trying to make sense of the the nonsensical and convoluted timeline of the “Halloween” franchise. Even people who have never watched a horror movie in their life could probably identify Jason Voorhees from “Friday the 13th” in his iconic hockey mask, or clock Leatherface from “The Texas Chain Saw Massacre” even without his titular weapon. The look of a slasher villain should strike fear into the hearts of the audience … but it should also be memorable enough to be marketable.
It’s a delicate balance, and it’s not the easiest thing in the world to pull off. The basic “sackhead” look of Jason in “Friday the 13th Part II” is only memorable because it’s Jason, because when the design first emerged five years earlier in “The Town That Dreaded Sundown,” it didn’t hit with audiences. (It also didn’t hit when the film got a metafictional sequel in 2014, because the slasher was just … a guy in a sack mask). Even a “bad” slasher mask can still be memorable (I still love you, Fencing Mask in “Urban Legend: Final Cut), but if you want your killer to pack a punch, you gotta call in the experts.
One of the best in the business is Tony Gardner, whose design for the new Valentine’s Day slasher film “Heart Eyes” (read our review here) is already being hailed as one of the best slasher villain designs in years. This shouldn’t be surprising, considering Gardner has one of the most impressive genre film pedigrees of anyone working today in the makeup and special effects field.
Tony Gardner got his start on the biggest music video, ever
Epic Records
Before we move forward, it has to be noted that Tony Gardner has a wild origin story. As he discussed on The Flesh and Blood and Bone Podcast he co-hosts with his daughter, filmmaker Kyra Gardner (who we interviewed for her documentary “Living with Chucky”), the way Tony Gardner broke into the industry doesn’t really exist anymore. He grew up around Cleveland, Ohio, and became fascinated with special effects and creature designs. He made facehuggers and an E.T. mask in his spare time, as just a few examples, before moving to Los Angeles to go to college. Once in Los Angeles, he decided to use his position as a student to get him closer to his heroes like Steven Spielberg and effects artists Carlo Rambaldi and Rick Baker. He got himself onto the Universal lot by taking a page out of Spielberg’s book by dressing up, showing up, and acting important but the way he met Rick Baker would get someone put on a watch list if replicated today.
The at-the-time college student knew where Baker’s shop was, so Gardner drove to the city and looked up all of the people named “Rick Baker” in the phone book, wanting to interview him for a school project (that didn’t actually exist). He eventually found himself on Baker’s doorstep, but he was out of town shooting a movie so Gardner spoke with Baker’s father, and left him slides of his amateur effects work. Eventually, Rick Baker contacted Gardner and agreed to be interviewed. They spoke for hours and the interview became conversational, but nothing really came from it. However later that summer after 18-year-old Gardner had returned home to Ohio between semesters, Baker tracked Gardner down and called his family home to offer him a job on a music video set requiring a bunch of zombies. This way, Gardner would know if this was the industry meant for him. He eagerly agreed and was on a plane the next day to return to Los Angeles.
That music video was Michael Jackson’s “Thriller,” arguably the greatest music video of all time.
Tony Gardner is a living special effects legend
Rogue Pictures
Listening to Tony Gardner discuss his career with his daughter Kyra on their podcast is surreal at times because there’s a humble casualness to name-dropping projects like “Return of the Living Dead,” “Army of Darkness,” “Hocus Pocus,” “Hell Fest,” “Freaky,” “The Addams Family,” “Freaked,” “The Blob,” the “Zombieland” films, and the “Chucky” franchise. Gardner is so intrinsic to the latter, that he even plays a fictionalized version of himself in the faux-movie within a movie “Chucky Goes Psycho” in “Seed of Chucky,” and is killed on screen by the very puppet he’s been operating for over a decade. These titles alone are enough to put him in god-tier status, but Gardner’s work isn’t exclusive to the world of horror.
He’s also worked on films like “Honey I Shrunk the Kids,” “Ace Ventura: When Nature Calls,” “Happy Gilmore,” and “Batman & Robin,” not to mention the bodily transformations shown in “Shallow Hal,” “Hairspray,” the “Jackass” films, and “Beastly.” He’s also prolific in the world of commercials, creating the designs for the Geico Cavemen (and subsequent TV show I’m sure you forgot existed) and the delightfully weird Halloween Snickers commercial featuring the rubber-faced woman at the grocery store.
But the one that always knocks me back is knowing that he helped create the signature helmets for Daft Punk, as well as the absolutely cursed [complimentary], skinless robot for their “Technologic” music video (which is a “Seed of Chucky” animatronic repurposed to give me, specifically even more nightmares). His Alterian Inc. company has solidified itself as an industry leader in prosthetic makeup effects, animatronic design, and specialty prop creation, not to mention his growing roster of slasher masks.
The Heart Eyes mask is horror perfection
Sony Pictures Releasing
When it came time to create the Heart Eyes mask, Gardner and Bryan Christensen took the ideas from the film’s creative team and brought it all to life. The visible seams and exterior laces elicit both a BDSM-inspired gimp mask and that of “The Collector,” with a fabric choice that feels reminiscent of Dr. Decker in “Nightbreed,” the tanned flesh of Leatherface, and yes, even Sackhead Jason. It’s an incredibly classic approach to a mask but injected with the contemporary iconography of the heart eyes emoji, glowing brightly to evoke the ominous threat of red lighting or the emphasis of attention like a Tex Avery wolf admiring from a distance. The eyes are also bespoke, providing the killer the advantage of night-vision, a sexier take previously seen by Buffalo Bill in “The Silence of the Lambs.”
The mouth is, of course, carved into a Glasgow smile, a grotesque twist on the universally accepted presentation of happiness. Combined together, the Heart Eyes mask is truly unforgettable. During a recent Reddit AMA, “Heart Eyes” director Josh Ruben talked about the collaborative effort that went into the mask’s design, between Gardner, Christensen, and the team at Alterian turning ideas into a tangible reality, to the VFX team in New Zealand led by Stef Knight who applied a Vaseline-esque sheen to the mask so that even in the dark, “the slightest light is picked up and refracted in an eerie, sweat-like way.”
When looking at the mask for “Heart Eyes,” we’re not just seeing a cool slasher villain, we’re seeing the culmination of over 40 years of expertise and horror history brought into a single design through creative collaboration, led by an industry genius.
“Heart Eyes” is now playing in theaters everywhere.
Read More: https://www.slashfilm.com/1783247/heart-eyes-mask-creator-horror-movies/