zombie film with a heart

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8/7/2019 Zombie Film With a Heart http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/zombie-film-with-a-heart 1/3 [email protected] (912) 489-9405 Print This Article Zombie film with a heart GSU professor's story subject of grad's film It’s a story of the walking dead but unlike any other you’ve ever seen. “Followed” is a big-budget short film based on a short story by Georgia Southern professor and Hugo Award-winning writer Will McIntosh. The story is about a professor, Peter, who finds his life turned upside-down by a little zombie girl who finds him and follows him where ever he goes. This socially conscious film, directed by Georgia Southern alumnus James Kicklighter, was shot in Macon at Mercer University and Wesleyan College with more than 140 people hired as extras for roles as students, Secret Service agents and zombies that symbolize society's disadvantaged and oppressed. The film will officially debut at the National Film Festival for Talented Youth as the lead of "The Human Condition" block. A special screening of the film, however, will be held at GSU’s Russell Union Theater on Tuesday at 7 p.m. The screening is free and open to the public. Although Kicklighter and McIntosh both have ties to GSU, they had no previous ties to each other. “The irony of all this is the short story that Dr. McIntosh wrote came to me from a writer in New Mexico,” Kicklighter said, “Even though I went to school there. I did not know he existed.” Kicklighter met the writer of the screenplay, Maureen Cooke, at a film festival three years ago when Kicklighter was showing another film he made called “Di Passaggio,” and after first hearing about the story, he was unsure that he was the right person to make the film. “She said ‘Hey, I got this script from this author. It’s a sci-fi story. It’s a zombie story. You might be interested in it,’” Kicklighter said. “I was like, ‘Well have you seen any of my other work? I don’t have a clue how to make a zombie film,’ but then she said, ‘It’s a different kind of story. You should seriously take a look at it,’ so I did, and I was really impressed with it.” Kicklighter said it was only later that he realized that he had finished his senior year at the same school McIntosh was teaching. “It was a really nice ‘small world’ kind of moment,” he said it. “Followed” is not your typical zombie story and Kicklighter said that’s what really appealed to him. “I was just really impressed with the way that it handled some serious themes. I like that the zombies are symbolic rather than the traditional flesh-

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[email protected](912) 489-9405

Print This Article

Zombie film with a heart

GSU professor's story subject of grad's film

It’s a story of the walking dead but unlike any other you’ve ever seen.

“Followed” is a big-budget short film based on a short story by Georgia

Southern professor and Hugo Award-winning writer Will McIntosh. The story is

about a professor, Peter, who finds his life turned upside-down by a little zombie

girl who finds him and follows him where ever he goes.

This socially conscious film, directed by Georgia Southern alumnus James

Kicklighter, was shot in Macon at Mercer University and Wesleyan College with

more than 140 people hired as extras for roles as students, Secret Service

agents and zombies that symbolize society's disadvantaged and oppressed.The film will officially debut at the National Film Festival for Talented Youth as

the lead of "The Human Condition" block. A special screening of the film,

however, will be held at GSU’s Russell Union Theater on Tuesday at 7 p.m. The

screening is free and open to the public.

Although Kicklighter and McIntosh both have ties to GSU, they had no

previous ties to each other.

“The irony of all this is the short story that Dr. McIntosh wrote came to me

from a writer in New Mexico,” Kicklighter said, “Even though I went to school

there. I did not know he existed.” 

Kicklighter met the writer of the screenplay, Maureen Cooke, at a film festival

three years ago when Kicklighter was showing another film he made called “Di

Passaggio,” and after first hearing about the story, he was unsure that he was

the right person to make the film.

“She said ‘Hey, I got this script from this author. It’s a sci-fi story. It’s a

zombie story. You might be interested in it,’” Kicklighter said. “I was like, ‘Well

have you seen any of my other work? I don’t have a clue how to make a zombie

film,’ but then she said, ‘It’s a different kind of story. You should seriously take a

look at it,’ so I did, and I was really impressed with it.” 

Kicklighter said it was only later that he realized that he had finished hissenior year at the same school McIntosh was teaching.

“It was a really nice ‘small world’ kind of moment,” he said it.

“Followed” is not your typical zombie story and Kicklighter said that’s what

really appealed to him.

“I was just really impressed with the way that it handled some serious

themes. I like that the zombies are symbolic rather than the traditional flesh-

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eating zombies,” he said. “It’s not very often, especially in genres like Zombie

films, where you really have the opportunity to do something truly unique.” 

For McIntosh, the idea for the story started in his graduate social psychology

class a few years ago.

“We were talking about cognitive dissonance and the idea of having to

rationalize things that make us uncomfortable, and the discussion we were

having was about discomfort people often feel when they’re living well and

knowing that there are other people who are suffering terribly,” he said. “It just

got me thinking, and that’s where ‘Followed’ came from. In a way, it’s an

expression of my own, working through my own feelings of conflict and guilt

over it.” 

Even though the story was published in a zombie anthology, McIntosh said

the walking dead in his story are not really zombies.

“I pictured them as newly dead people, not overly scary, but these almost

lifeless corpses that just move around, pale and stiff and kind of more pathetic in

some ways than scary,” he said.“The way I approached it was that they are somewhat of a crossover between

a zombie and a ghost,” Kicklighter said. “Everyone can see the zombies, but like

a ghost, kind of comes back for a reason, for unfinished business. They won’t

bite you. They’re not going to change you. They’re going to follow you around,

be a shadow that’s with you all the time. It’s sort of like a ghost but in the

physical form of a zombie.” 

This is the first time Kicklighter has adapted a film from source material and

said that although there were some changes made in the story in the process he

was determined not to change the story’s message.

Erryn Arkin (“CIA: Crime Investigation Australia”) plays the socially conscious

professor, Peter, whose life is changed by a tag-along child zombie (Abigail de los

Reyes). The film is the Australian actor’s American film debut. Arkin was found

through the The Internet Movie Database’s Fresh Faces Program.

“We really had several options where we had some name American actors

that really wanted the role, but I wanted to get someone that was a fresh face

for it but not one that was brand new either,” Kicklighter said. “That’s why I

started looking internationally. I found Erryn, and he was quite a find. He’s a

great actor, a great guy, we were very fortunate to have him.” 

But the most difficult person to cast was the zombie girl. For Kicklighter, therole was the most important one to get exactly right.

“We really looked all over the country, and we found Abigail, ironically,

through Twitter,” he said. “One of my former professors … saw that we were

posting about how we were looking for someone to fill the part and she said

‘Hey, there’s this guy I know in San Francisco, and he’s a pastor and his

daughters are in acting. You should look at them,’ and that was it."

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According to Kicklighter, the film would not be officially completed until this

weekend, and Statesboro’s screening will be the first time the public will get to

see it.

The film’s premiere is set for April 30 in Seattle, Washington.

 

http://www.connectstatesboro.com/news/article/2479