How Rick Baker Inspired the ‘V/H/S/Halloween’ Segment Pitched as an R-Rated ‘Goosebumps’ Episode

The popular found footage franchise V/H/S brings the holiday spirit with its latest entry, V/H/S/Halloween, featuring six segments of Halloween horror carnage and mayhem.

Home Haunt,” the segment written and directed by filmmaking duo Micheline Pitt-Norman & R.H. Norman, comes closest to capturing the classic Halloween aesthetic with a story centered around a home haunt gone wrong when a cursed record, featuring music provided by Joseph Bishara, transforms the decor and animatronics into murderous denizens.

Speaking with Bloody Disgusting ahead of the film’s debut on Shudder this Friday, the filmmakers revealed that they conceived multiple ideas for their segment in the latest V/H/S, but their logline for “Home Haunt” was too good to resist. “They asked us for different pitches, and we’re like, well, this one is Peter Jackson directing an R-rated Goosebumps episode,” Pitt-Norman says.

Further helping sell the concept is that the Normans enlisted a family friend to appear in their segment: retired SFX legend and Oscar winner Rick Baker (An American Werewolf in London, The Wolfman, Men in Black). Baker did, after all, inspire “Home Haunt.”

Photo Credit: Micheline Pitt-Norman and R.H. Norman

R.H. Norman explains, “Have you ever seen his big Halloween thing he does? He’s actually the inspiration for this; he does this big thing every Halloween. We’re very fortunate to be good friends with Rick and his wonderful family. They’re very close to us, and we try to go as often as we can whenever we’re in town to go to his big Halloween thing. You see kids lined up for a mile in Toluca Lake, and he always has his makeup effects that are crazy, but he also will have some kind of stage show with walls built and everything. We were thinking, well, ‘What if Rick killed all of Toluca Lake with his maze? We were over at his house for dinner one night, and I’m telling him, ‘I’m working on this thing, it might sound familiar to you. This guy who makes this home haunt maze in LA, and it kills half the neighborhood.’ He’s looking at me, and his wife just goes, ‘Well, you gotta put him in it.‘ I was like, done. We love Rick dearly, and that was the best part of this whole thing for us. It was like a full-circle moment, because I got to work on his last project before he retired, and then he got to work on our first feature film.”

It’s a killer concept, but one that’s incredibly ambitious. The practical effects and technical demands of “Home Haunt” presented unique challenges for the filmmakers, who are also working on the body horror movie Cosmetic with James Wan. Considering the sheer variety of classic Halloween monsters included in the segment, and not a huge budget to build them, Pitt-Norman and team got creative with the makeups.

“Home Haunt” Gore SFX. Photo Credit: Micheline Pitt-Norman and R.H. Norman

Pitt-Norman explains, “What’s interesting about our makeups is we actually did something called kit bashing. When you have very little money to work with, and you are as ambitious as we are, you can’t really do custom creatures, because that’s $10,000 to $20,000 and up. Then you’re talking about full suits, you’re in the six figures at that point. So, we went to a company called RBFX, which has pre-made, high-quality industry prosthetics. And so these are pieces that he had, and we kitbashed, which means we cut things up, took pieces from other pieces, put everything together to create unique and new characters. He also did our lenses for our ghouls, because we didn’t have enough money to have contacts; we ran out of money, so he and I problem-solved with plastic dome lens. I’ll also say Carleigh Herbert, our makeup artist, is brilliant. She’s the one who applied everything, collaborated with us on the designs, and honestly, we couldn’t have successfully kit bashed makeups like this without someone as talented as Carleigh and her entire team.”

Bringing the monsters to life on screen wasn’t the most intimidating aspect of helming “Home Haunt.” For R.H. Norman, the most stressful part of production was tackling the challenging final sequence that unleashes a wicked green witch as she zips around on her broom to slaughter.

If you pay attention to the credits, note the actor portraying this quintessential Halloween icon, the Flying Witch, in this technically ambitious sequence: “Witcheline.” 

“Home Haunt” behind the scenes. Photo Credit: Micheline Pitt-Norman and R.H. Norman

That’s co-director Micheline Pitt-Norman herself, who breaks down how daunting this sequence was to tackle. “At the end sequence, where the witch steals the camera and starts killing kids, and trust me, we would have killed more kids if we had more time and money. We’re both really nervous, because they said it’d be on a moving rig that was not being pushed by a person, but the Rickshaw, a three-wheel, go-kart kind of thing. It had to be whoever was gonna be the witch you saw, forearm forward, and they had to hit all these different marks. You have a cameraman, you’ve got another operator, you’ve got someone running the blood tank. You’ve got a child’s body attached to it; they have to rip their head off, and we’re just both sitting there, thinking this is insane, what we’re trying to achieve in one take, one shot, no cutaways. I think I should do it. Because then our line of communication and what we’re trying to achieve, I feel like no one’s gonna take this as seriously as me, and I feel like I could do it.”

Norman adds, “We had to hit 15 marks for that on a moving thing. There were three people on this Rickshaw. There was a guy on a skateboard with a blood pump, and there was a dummy, and there was a dummy hanging off the side. The blood had to pump from the skateboard at the right time that the dummy was taken off, and the girl had to cross over at exactly the right second. Micheline had to pull it off, keep the head in the frame of the camera, and hit the right mark with throwing it. We should not have tried that. They were all having fun, and I’m just sitting here going, ‘oh my god, this doesn’t work, and this is a whole day, and they’re gonna eat us alive.’ I was watching it from the sidelines, terrified, and they were laughing gleefully.”

See the tricky camera and stunt work in action; V/H/S/Halloween arrives on Shudder on October 3.

Micheline Pitt-Norman as “Witcheline.” BTS Photo Credit: Micheline Pitt-Norman and R.H. Norman

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

The post How Rick Baker Inspired the ‘V/H/S/Halloween’ Segment Pitched as an R-Rated ‘Goosebumps’ Episode appeared first on Bloody Disgusting!.

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