Watch The Creepy Pitch Reel That Got Barbarian Made
20th Century Studios By Sandy Schaefer/Sept. 13, 2022 2:39 pm EST
“Barbarian” has quietly emerged as one of the biggest surprises of 2022. Written and directed by Zach Cregger, the subversive horror film centers on Tess (Georgina Campbell), a woman who rents an Airbnb ahead of a job interview in Detroit, only to find the house has been double-booked by a fellow named Keith (Bill Skarsgård). To say too much more would be to spoil the fun for those who’ve yet to see the movie (which you absolutely should asap), so I’ll leave it at that.
In terms of its influences, “Barbarian” feels practically tailor-made for the current era of horror, in which filmmakers like Jordan Peele have come to fame making movies that blend imaginatively creepy imagery with biting humor and sharp social commentary. It’s also a film that’s hyper-aware of where the horror genre is at right now, flipping common tropes on their heads, embracing an unorthodox narrative structure, and casting well-known actors with the understanding audiences will immediately assume certain things about the characters they’re playing (be those assumptions accurate or not). If there were any doubts Cregger knows his horror, then the creepy pitch reel he and his wife, actor Sara Paxton, put together for “Barbarian” will lay them to rest. The video doesn’t actually spoil anything about the film and instead uses clips from movies as varied as “It,” “Don’t Breathe,” “Mama,” and even Michael Haneke’s 1997 Austrian thriller “Funny Games” to allude to its story’s ever-changing tone.
Watch The Creepy Pitch Reel That Got Barbarian Made
20th Century Studios
By Sandy Schaefer/Sept. 13, 2022 2:39 pm EST
“Barbarian” has quietly emerged as one of the biggest surprises of 2022. Written and directed by Zach Cregger, the subversive horror film centers on Tess (Georgina Campbell), a woman who rents an Airbnb ahead of a job interview in Detroit, only to find the house has been double-booked by a fellow named Keith (Bill Skarsgård). To say too much more would be to spoil the fun for those who’ve yet to see the movie (which you absolutely should asap), so I’ll leave it at that.
In terms of its influences, “Barbarian” feels practically tailor-made for the current era of horror, in which filmmakers like Jordan Peele have come to fame making movies that blend imaginatively creepy imagery with biting humor and sharp social commentary. It’s also a film that’s hyper-aware of where the horror genre is at right now, flipping common tropes on their heads, embracing an unorthodox narrative structure, and casting well-known actors with the understanding audiences will immediately assume certain things about the characters they’re playing (be those assumptions accurate or not). If there were any doubts Cregger knows his horror, then the creepy pitch reel he and his wife, actor Sara Paxton, put together for “Barbarian” will lay them to rest. The video doesn’t actually spoil anything about the film and instead uses clips from movies as varied as “It,” “Don’t Breathe,” “Mama,” and even Michael Haneke’s 1997 Austrian thriller “Funny Games” to allude to its story’s ever-changing tone.
In terms of its influences, “Barbarian” feels practically tailor-made for the current era of horror, in which filmmakers like Jordan Peele have come to fame making movies that blend imaginatively creepy imagery with biting humor and sharp social commentary. It’s also a film that’s hyper-aware of where the horror genre is at right now, flipping common tropes on their heads, embracing an unorthodox narrative structure, and casting well-known actors with the understanding audiences will immediately assume certain things about the characters they’re playing (be those assumptions accurate or not).
If there were any doubts Cregger knows his horror, then the creepy pitch reel he and his wife, actor Sara Paxton, put together for “Barbarian” will lay them to rest. The video doesn’t actually spoil anything about the film and instead uses clips from movies as varied as “It,” “Don’t Breathe,” “Mama,” and even Michael Haneke’s 1997 Austrian thriller “Funny Games” to allude to its story’s ever-changing tone.
The pitch vs. the official marketing
When trying to sell your movie you gotta cut together a ‘Rip Reel’. I used youtube videos/other peoples movies/and my wife’s voice about 2 years ago. #barbarian https://t.co/SU8Vu0w96S
— Zach Cregger (@zcregger) September 11, 2022
Interestingly, the pitch reel is similar to the official “Barbarian” trailer in that it teases the scene in the film where Tess finds a hidden door in the rental house she’s staying at (unaware of the horrors lurking behind it). The phone call, on the other hand, isn’t in the movie at all, although the details it conveys — that Tess had a fight with her now-ex-boyfriend right before her trip to Detroit — still come across clearly in the first act. As for the music, it’s almost exactly the same as the deeply unsettling score Anna Drubich wound up crafting for the film.
Having seen the film, I have to commend both Cregger (for his pitch reel) and the movie’s marketing team for finding very different ways of selling the premise for “Barbarian” without revealing many (or, rather, any) of its secrets. To learn just what those are, you’ll just have to check out the film for yourselves in theaters.