"Theres an obligation to be weird" – The making of sci-fi horror movie Synchronic – Scotland on Sunday

Arts and CultureFilm and TVJustin Benson and Aaron Moorhead tell Alistair Harkness that they wanted their new time travel movie to treat the future as a monster

Sunday, 3rd January 2021, 7:00 am

If theres a lesson that should be imparted to any aspiring filmmakers trying to break through with low-budget indie film its this: dont be boring. Dont just try to make a cheap version of the mainstream. You should actually feel an obligation not to do that, says filmmaker Justin Benson. If youre making an independent film, it should be bold, and it should feel personal. And it should feel maybe even kind of messy. Theres an obligation to be weird.

Benson certainly knows a thing or two about this. He and his co-director and writing partner Aaron Moorhead have been building up quite the cult following over the last few years with a distinctive body of work that stands out precisely because its unafraid of taking wild creative swings. Their debut feature Resolution (2012) was a micro-budget addiction movie with a paranormal spin. Their follow-up Spring (2015) came on like a hipster romance before mutating into an inventive creature feature. Their 2017 breakthrough movie The Endless, meanwhile, was a head-spinning cosmic horror about a two brothers (played by Benson and Moorhead) who return to the UFO cult they escaped as children.

Their new movie Synchronic may be a (slight) step-up in scale and budget, but it very much continues this pattern. Starring Anthony Mackie and Jamie Dornan, its a sci-fi horror movie about a designer drug that enables users to time-travel into the past, albeit with mostly fatal consequences. Unlike a lot of time travel movies (Back to the Future, say, or even Tenet), its explicitly not interested in exploring the so-called grandfather paradox where messing with the past alters the future. Those questions are fun, but all time-travel movies deal with them, says Moorhead. And most time-travel movies romanticise the past. Personally, we don't feel that almost any part of the past is better than the present. The idea that the past is somehow better is like a toxic drug in our culture. We liked the idea of the past being a monster.

Its thematic ideas like these, together with Benson and Moorhead's ability to find visually and narratively arresting ways to explore them, that make their films so distinctive. And appealing to stars like Mackie and Dornan who currently occupy a position in Hollywood many more rungs up the ladder than them. Dornans agent, though, had liked The Endless, so passed the script for Synchronic onto the 50 Shades of Grey star. With Mackie, whos become an integral part of the Marvel Cinematic Universe, they reached out to a filmmaker friend, Joe Lynch, who was directing him in the Netflix movie Point Blank. Lynch kindly talked them up to Mackie, but theyve also heard that Avengers directors Anthony and Joe Russo told Mackie he should work with them.

We've never met the Russo brothers in our lives, says Benson, so I don't know if that's true. But I do just like this idea that the Russos come home from directing the Avengers and throw on Resolution just want to watch two people chatting in a cabin for 90 minutes.

I tell them its actually not that implausible. The Russo brothers started their careers with an ultra low-budget, credit-card funded indie film, much like them, and they benefitted from Steven Soderbergh spotting their potential and helping progress their careers. It makes sense theyd look out for other up-and-coming directors.

I did not know Soderbergh had a hand in their success, says Moorhead. Thats cool. I like that keeping it in the family thing.

Benson and Moorhead began their own little filmmaking team shortly after arriving in LA. Moorhead was starting an internship at Ridley Scotts production company the day Benson was finishing his and so Benson was charged with showing him the ropes. We just got talking about the kinds of stuff we liked, recalls Moorhead, which is probably pretty embarrassing stuff now.

I literally think we talked about 300, laughs Benson, referencing the 2006 movie that made Gerard Butler a star. We were like, Thats a cool movie.

Mercifully, their shared love of film had deeper, more interesting roots. When he was eleven, Moorhead, who grew up in Florida, was introduced to stop motion animation by a school friend and his brother and was immediately hooked, saving up all his pocket-money to get a camera and then spending his spare time making stop motion Star Wars animations in his bedroom. I was just obsessed, he says.

Benson grew up in San Diego and was into the usual teenage stuff that kids who grew up in San Diego were into: surfing, skateboarding, the punk scene. Then a girlfriend in high school introduced him to Pulp Fiction, Kevin Smiths indie hit Chasing Amy and the original Texas Chainsaw Massacre and suddenly his world opened up. I didnt know that stuff existed, he says. There was something about seeing people using language like that made me think, I maybe know how to do that.

Even Texas Chainsaw Massacre?

Yeah, it felt very achievable. With very little resources, it took you on a roller-coaster ride.

And in indie film thats super-important to have those kinds of films, chips in Moorhead. Unless youre super arrogant, I dont think anybody watches a movie like The Lord of the Rings and thinks, I could do that. Im going to be a director. But if you watch a movie like Evil Dead

Or Peter Jacksons early horror movies

Exactly you can look at it and go, 'I see exactly how thats made.'

Though theres a lot of uncertainty about how the pandemic will affect the future of cinema, Synchronic suggests Benson and Moorhead are in a good position to do what they want on their own terms. Theyre currently in the final stages of a new script and while theyll occasionally go to meetings with studios to discuss doing a big franchise movie, and get turned down laughs Benson, a big mainstream breakthrough seems as inevitable as some kid discovering their work in the future and being inspired to make bold, smart, weird movies of their own.

Synchronic is released in cinemas and on digital on 29 January

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"Theres an obligation to be weird" - The making of sci-fi horror movie Synchronic - Scotland on Sunday

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