How 'The Boogeyman' director scared up a big-screen release for Stephen King film (2024)

The last few years have seen many planned big-screen releases premiering on streaming services. But the horror movie The Boogeyman, about a grieving family tormented by a darkness-dwelling monster, is the rare example of a film that took the opposite route. Director Rob Savage's adaptation of Stephen King's short story was originally set to debut on Hulu, but instead will hit theaters nationwide on June 2.

"It was a Hulu movie when I signed up," the British filmmaker tells EW. "But just through arrogance, [and] with Stephen King's force behind it, I always felt that it was destined for the big screen."

Ironically, Savage's breakthrough film Host was very much designed as a small-screen venture. Shot on iPhones at the start of the pandemic, the found-footage movie about a Zoom seance gone terrifyingly awry delighted horror fans when it premiered on Netflix in July 2020. That film led to the director signing on for The Boogeyman, the initial screenplay for which was by A Quiet Place writers Bryan Woods and Scott Beck.

How 'The Boogeyman' director scared up a big-screen release for Stephen King film (1)

"I got a deluge of scripts that I was offered right after Host hit big," Savage says. "I saw the title for this one, The Boogeyman, and I kind of rolled my eyes. Then I remembered reading the Stephen King short story as a kid. The script, which was a draft by Beck and Woods, found this ingenious way of adapting the short story, which I remember really messing me up as a kid, but it's just two people in a therapy session, and there's a twist reveal at the end. Beck and Woods had the genius idea of using that almost as the inciting incident for a larger feature. They said the movie is like an adaptation of the short story and a sequel, all within one movie. I was like, 'Oh, there's a real opportunity here.'"

Savage cast Chris Messina, young actress Vivien Lyra Blair, and Yellowjackets star Sophie Thatcher as the three members of the central family that attracts the attention of the movie's monster after Messina's therapist is visited by a new patient, played by David Dastmalchian. The director recalls swiftly bonding with Thatcher over their mutual fondness for the weird-as-hell 1981 horror film Possession.

"I'd seen her in this movie called Prospect that I liked with Pedro Pascal, and I watched 20 minutes of Yellowjackets, I thought she was fantastic [in that]," the director says. "But the reason I knew she was going to be perfect for this is, I went on the Zoom call, and I had on a T-shirt for Possession, and she said, 'Ah, Possession, I love it!' We spent the whole Zoom talking about niche arthouse horror movies. I was like, okay, we've got a common language here."

For her part, Thatcher recalls thinking, "This man knows everything about horror. You could tell he was very passionate and it was going to be a very special movie."

How 'The Boogeyman' director scared up a big-screen release for Stephen King film (2)

Savage's enthusiasm was more than evident to Messina during the film's shoot in New Orleans. "He directed that movie like he was directing Apocalypse Now," the actor says. "He was very passionate, and that kind of love and care trickles down to every department, so we were all fighting the fight to try to make the best movie we could."

Savage reveals that casting a horror fan in Thatcher paid off when they shot the film's scarier scenes. "She understood what it took to put a scare scene together, she was literate to the language of horror, which was so useful," he says.

Thatcher explains that having experience self-taping auditions helped when it came to scenes where she interacted with the film's monster, a CG creation added in post-production. "It was hard having to act to a silver ball for the last couple of scenes, when I'm actually fighting the Boogeyman, and being like, this is the climax of the movie and I'm crying at a ball!" she says. "But that's acting. I grew up in the era of self-tapes, so I've really had to learn to use my imagination, and that ball turned into something very grandiose. I don't know how, but it did!"

How 'The Boogeyman' director scared up a big-screen release for Stephen King film (3)

The cast and crew's spirits were kept high by King himself, who had read a new version of the script with input from Black Swan screenwriter Mark Heyman.

"He read Mark's draft of the script and loved it," Savage says of the master of horror. "He was doing a press tour [for] his new book, and every now and then he'd mention how much he loved the script for The Boogeyman. We'd have a particularly hard day, and I'd get pinged on my phone that Stephen King had shouted about our script. I'd read that out to our crew, and it would give us a second wind to finish the week."

Savage admits that King's fondness for the script did add an extra layer of stress to his task of bringing the story to the screen: "I knew that he loved the script, so if he didn't love the movie, it was all my fault!"

King also gave his thumbs-up after seeing The Boogeyman on the big screen. "We rented out his favorite cinema in Maine," Savage says. "He went there with a bucket of popcorn, and he said the film was expletive-terrifying and it made him jump several times. It was a real relief."

How 'The Boogeyman' director scared up a big-screen release for Stephen King film (4)

Audiences at test screenings enjoyed the movie as well, and it was those positive reactions that led 20th Century Studios to give it a theatrical release.

"Even our first test screening, which didn't have the CG creature in it at all, scored really high," Savage says. "You could just tell, being in the room, that the audience were with these characters and on the journey. We started hearing mutters from the studio, and I found out just after Christmas that we got the go-ahead to go into theaters."

Savage teases that, should the film's theatrical release prove successful, he has something up his sleeve to entice audiences back into the darkness of theaters. "If people go and see this movie," he says, "then we've got a really exciting idea for a follow-up."

Messina admits that he is "not a big horror guy," but he's also thrilled The Boogeyman is getting a theatrical release, having watched it with a crowd for recent Los Angeles premiere. "It was so fun to see it in a theater," he says. "Because it's not a genre I choose to go to, I forgot that it's such an interactive experience, where people were screaming, and then they'd start laughing. It was such a nice communal experience. To have this in movie theater, it means a great deal to me."

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How 'The Boogeyman' director scared up a big-screen release for Stephen King film (2024)

FAQs

Why are Stephen King movies so scary? ›

Both his books and adaptations are riddled with lines and moments that hint at what's to come. This is why King's stories have an overarching sense of doom and dread. Unlike most horror novels and films, it's not the uncertainty of danger that has you on edge, but exactly when that danger will finally happen.

Is the Boogeyman still alive at the end of the movie? ›

The Boogeyman's ending teases that the creature is not actually dead, and that it could come back to attack Sadie and Sawyer. The Boogeyman is relentless in preying on its victims, and there's no way to determine whether the monster is permanently dead or if setting it on fire was just a temporary setback.

How scary is the Boogeyman? ›

What to Know. The Boogeyman might fall short of its terrifying source material, but a spooky atmosphere and some solid performances help keep the chills coming. If you don't mind spending a lot of time waiting for things to happen, The Boogeyman is worth watching for some solid jump scares.

What was in the closet at the end of the Boogeyman? ›

Billings then hears a creepy voice from the closet say "so nice" before the door swings open and the Boogeyman comes out. And if that doesn't get you, King's final line of the story certainly will: "It still held its Dr Harper mask in one rotted, spade-claw hand."

What movie was Stephen King too scared to finish? ›

That's when his son brought him a VHS copy of The Blair Witch Project. According to Slash Film, he had to turn the film off halfway through because he was too scared. One thing about "Blair Witch:" the damn thing looks real. Another thing about "Blair Witch:" the damn thing feels real.

Why is Stephen King the master of horror? ›

Stephen King's work is known for its recurring themes and motifs, which have become synonymous with the horror genre. One of the most prominent themes in his work is the concept of fear itself, and how it can manifest in different ways.

What is The Boogeyman's weakness? ›

- The Boogeyman's weaknesses are destroying the childhood fears that haunts the victim. (Destroying 5 items the child fears.) This will defeat the boogeyman.

Who died in Boogeyman? ›

Boogeyman (2005)
NameCause of deathNotes
Mary JensenUnknownOff-screen, phone call from Mike when she was dead
CrowCrashed into windshield
JessicaDragged down bathtub/drownedOnly blood on side of bathtub
Ome MikeWrapped in plastic sheet, dragged into closet, killed (off-screen)
2 more rows

Is The Boogeyman based off a real story? ›

Interestingly, while The Boogeyman isn't based on a true experience, Savage has been influenced by another horror movie and how it used the night as a cover to kill.

Why are people scared of The Boogeyman? ›

Being a master manipulator, the Boogeyman often preyed on its victims psychologically. Its knowledge of people's worst fears allowed it to unnerve its enemies and enjoyed watching them squirm, often leaving their fates to their imagination through thinly-veiled threats before finishing them off.

Who is the most scariest horror movie? ›

1. The Exorcist. When a young girl is possessed by a mysterious entity, her mother seeks the help of two Catholic priests to save her life. The scariest movie of all time.

What is the scariest thing in horror movies? ›

The Top Ten Things That Make Horror Movies Scary
  • Fear of death. This is the ultimate fear, both existentially and psychologically. ...
  • The dark. ...
  • Creepy, crawly things. ...
  • Scary places. ...
  • Disfigurement. ...
  • Dismemberment. ...
  • Suspense (anticipation and expectations). ...
  • Spooky music.
Oct 21, 2014

What happened to the mom in Boogeyman? ›

Plot. Therapist Will Harper is struggling to overcome the death of his wife, who died suddenly in a car crash. His daughters, Sadie and Sawyer, are likewise struggling to deal with their mother's passing. One day, a disturbed man called Lester Billings visits Will's office.

Does The Boogeyman have a happy ending? ›

The Big Picture

The movie centers around Dr. Harper and his family, who become the perfect target for the Boogeyman due to their grief and vulnerabilities. Although the family defeats the Boogeyman in the end, the final scene suggests that the monster may still be lurking, representing the ongoing struggle with grief.

What is the monster in Boogeyman movie? ›

The Boogeyman is the titular main antagonist of the 2023 horror film The Boogeyman, based off the Stephen King short story of the same name. It is a monster of unknown origin that targets and murders entire families, usually ones that have experienced a loss of a family member.

Why does Stephen King think we crave horror movies? ›

It deliberately appeals to all that is worst in us. It is morbidity unchained, our most base instincts let free, our nastiest fantasies realized . . . and it all happens, fittingly enough, in the dark. For those reasons, good liberals often shy away from horror films.

What are the three elements that make a story scary according to Stephen King? ›

So what is it about King's writings that captivates and torments us so much? According to the acclaimed author, there are three levels of horror: The Gross-Out, Horror, and Terror. It is these elements that allow the genre to be diversely shocking and hypnotizing in not only literature but in cinema as well.

Is Stephen King's It a psychological horror? ›

It (also known as Stephen King's IT) is a 1990 ABC two-part psychological horror drama miniseries directed by Tommy Lee Wallace and adapted by Lawrence D. Cohen from Stephen King's 1986 novel of the same name.

Why is Stephen King so good at writing horror? ›

One of the things that sets Stephen King apart from other horror writers is his ability to create fully-realized and relatable characters. His characters are not just one-dimensional caricatures, but rather complex and nuanced individuals with their own wants, needs, and fears.

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