DAVID DASTMALCHIAN-LATE NIGHT WITH THE DEVIL - podcast episode cover

DAVID DASTMALCHIAN-LATE NIGHT WITH THE DEVIL

May 20, 20247 min
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Transcript

This is Later with Lee Matthews, the Lee Matthews Podcast more what You Hear weekday Afternoons on the Drive. You've seen him in that fantastic production of Oppenheimer, but he's also been in Dark Nights, a Million Little Pieces, and many others like Dune and The Suicide Squad. His newest project is a thrilling production that's getting a lot of buzz, especially in the international film festivals, Late Night with the Devil, and it stars David Dustmalchen, who is joining

us now. David, this is a different kind of horror movie. It really is. Thanks for having me on the show, by the way,

it's great to be here. It's in my heart. Wanting this movie to succeed would mean accomplishing something that felt like taking you back into the nineteen seventies, that spooky horror Halloween kind of energy mixed with what it might have felt like to watch, you know, the Johnny Carson Show on any given night at ten thirty and just not expecting that after he did a couple of great bits and interviews, suddenly dread and horror would unfold before your eyes. That

was the goal, and I'm really proud of the film. We made, and thanks for letting me come on and talk about it. Well, Late Night with the Devil, it's not only a horror film, it's a bit macab and your character sets the tone with his eyes from the beginning. Did you have to wear some sort of contact lens to kind of blow out your pupil? No, that just happens, that's actually you know, But I

did have to. I had to listen to a lot of people who do what you do because the character I'm playing is inspired by a number of real people who were entertainers and DJs and talk show hosts from the you know, from the past. And so the character I'm playing, Jack Delroy, was a radio DJ in Chicago who then became a big late night talk show host. And so just finding that way of presenting myself and speaking and looking directly into the camera and talking to it, you know, TV audience or finding

the mics on set. It was very different than when you would normally performing a scene. But I knew if we got that right, if people felt like they were really watching a late night talk show, then when things do take a turn for the worst, they would be hopefully so caught up in the moment that it would be more impactful. Late Night with the Devil is

the film. David Desmalchin is with us. He's the star. It's kind of a Rosemary's Baby meets Network, and it takes place in that era, isn't it where horror movies and yakab were they were really getting more gritty. Yes, yes, it's nineteen seventy seven, it's October thirty. First, basically, my character is in second place to Carson in the ratings and he is about to get canned, and so he has to pull out all the

stops. So what he does brings on this young woman who has been being studied by the psychologist who wrote a recent book that Clay aims to be possessed by this entity. And of course, for my character, this is an incredible opportunity to get the ratings boost, get the shock value, et cetera, et cetera. So you think about those films of that era. You

wanted to feel natural, you wanted to feel seventies. You want the aesthetic to look right, from the Cassavetti's movies to things like Rosemary's Baby, the Exorcist, Network, even those made for TV horror films of that era, like Burnt Offerings. I just wanted that energy, and thankfully Colin and Cameron Karen's who I give all the credit, who wrote and directed the film, invited me to be a part of it and to help produce it. They just nailed it. Their whole team did such a great job and I'm so

proud of the way this film looks and feels. David Desmalchin Late Night with the Devil. It is out now everywhere getting a lot of as I started the conversation, getting a lot of buzz with the international and independent film festivals. Why is that? Is it because it has more of an independent production value? I think so. I think people get really excited when they know

you made a film for a very very very small amount of money. We went to Melbourne, Australia to make this movie, which is where Colin and Cameron are from. So the entire crew is basically their friends and family. The cast was all local Melbourne actors except for me. I'm the only American that was a part of the production. And they made this movie for you know, one tenth of even the smaller budgeted or like the things that you

see right now in theaters that are smaller horror films. This is still like a tenth of those budgets, and I think it's exciting for people when they go, oh, wow, you don't have to spend you know, five million or ten million, or twenty million or one hundred million dollars on a

film to create something that is captivating and engaging. If you use the old school style of filmmaking where you put the writing, the performance, and then they used a lot of practical effects which take more time and they're not as you know, easy to fix, as say doing then there's nothing wrong with you know, digital effects. I do lots of films with cool digital effects,

but we just didn't have the money for that. So I think people got excited by the reality that there we were just like we're making an old John Carpenter film with the makeup artists trying to put the the latex over the wound and make the blood splatter it just the right time. You've only got one take to do it. You can feel it on the screen, you

know, it's a it's a cool feeling. I was going to ask you about that too, because that's that immediately when I was looking at it was like Wow, they used very little CG in this if at all got it right. We had, we just didn't have the money for it. So the planning that went into making sure we nailed it now there is if you've seen the film, anyone who's seen the film, and I hope you revisit

it because it's a fun movie. And I'm not just saying this because I'm think after producer, and I do think it's a fun movie to watch a couple of times because then you catch stuff you missed the first time. But there's one big moment in the film which we knew was going to require some visual effects and some CGI. So the idea was, let's get everything that we possibly can hand with practical you know, Latex kro Syrup and guyed Red and all the old school tricks, and then we know we can make this

one moment really shine and put whatever bit we've got to do that. And so it's always a collaborative effort if you're making a good film, it's always, you know. And everybody was pitching in. Like I said, it felt like a little family down there, and I was just so lucky. I couldn't believe how great all the dialects were too, because I showed up and I thought, oh my gosh, I'm the only American. And then all of the other cast were just pitch perfect in their voices and their performances.

It was really impressive. See it all with Late Night with the Devil David Dustmunchin is the Star and it's available livery where you get movies. Thank you for joining us, David, Thank you so much. It's great to talk to you. Have a great one. Nice Lee. Thanks for listening to Later with Lee Matthews, the Lee Matthews Podcast, and remember to listen to The Drive weekday afternoons from five to seven. And iHeartMedia presentation.

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