惯性聚合 高效追踪和阅读你感兴趣的博客、新闻、科技资讯
阅读原文 在惯性聚合中打开

推荐订阅源

N
News and Events Feed by Topic
让小产品的独立变现更简单 - ezindie.com
让小产品的独立变现更简单 - ezindie.com
月光博客
月光博客
freeCodeCamp Programming Tutorials: Python, JavaScript, Git & More
大猫的无限游戏
大猫的无限游戏
T
Tailwind CSS Blog
S
SegmentFault 最新的问题
V
V2EX
阮一峰的网络日志
阮一峰的网络日志
C
Cisco Blogs
博客园 - 叶小钗
P
Privacy International News Feed
Jina AI
Jina AI
Apple Machine Learning Research
Apple Machine Learning Research
T
Threatpost
IT之家
IT之家
博客园 - 聂微东
Know Your Adversary
Know Your Adversary
Help Net Security
Help Net Security
罗磊的独立博客
I
Intezer
S
Schneier on Security
博客园_首页
C
CERT Recently Published Vulnerability Notes
雷峰网
雷峰网
Cisco Talos Blog
Cisco Talos Blog
宝玉的分享
宝玉的分享
cs.CV updates on arXiv.org
cs.CV updates on arXiv.org
Webroot Blog
Webroot Blog
TaoSecurity Blog
TaoSecurity Blog
MyScale Blog
MyScale Blog
P
Privacy & Cybersecurity Law Blog
T
The Exploit Database - CXSecurity.com
PCI Perspectives
PCI Perspectives
Security Latest
Security Latest
H
Heimdal Security Blog
S
Secure Thoughts
Hacker News: Ask HN
Hacker News: Ask HN
Y
Y Combinator Blog
cs.CL updates on arXiv.org
cs.CL updates on arXiv.org
Microsoft Security Blog
Microsoft Security Blog
cs.AI updates on arXiv.org
cs.AI updates on arXiv.org
SecWiki News
SecWiki News
The GitHub Blog
The GitHub Blog
A
Arctic Wolf
A
About on SuperTechFans
aimingoo的专栏
aimingoo的专栏
T
Threat Research - Cisco Blogs
Engineering at Meta
Engineering at Meta
Cyber Security Advisories - MS-ISAC
Cyber Security Advisories - MS-ISAC

The Hollywood Reporter

Netflix In Final Talks to Buy Radford Studio Lot at Around $330 Million Price Tag How Scriptation Broke Hollywood’s Addiction to Paper The Conservative Climate Activists Hollywood Ignores Diamonds Are Forever. But Are They Sustainable? Dave Mason, Traffic Co-Founder and “We Just Disagree” Singer, Dies at 79 ‘Secret Lives of Mormon Wives’ Will Resume Production Following Filming Pause Amid Taylor Frankie Paul Investigation ‘Michael’: What Critics Are Saying About the King of Pop’s Biopic ‘Texas Chainsaw Massacre’: ‘Obsession’ Filmmaker Curry Barker in Talks to Write, Direct T-Mobile Deepens Its Promise of Fastest 5G Internet With Same-Day Delivery, Powered by DoorDash Dwayne Johnson and Stephen Merchant Adapting ‘Fighting With My Family’ Into Stage Musical Inside ‘Blue Heron,’ the Most Acclaimed Film of 2026 So Far Broadway Box Office: Grosses Fall Amid Spring Openings, Daniel Radcliffe Cracks Top Five How Peaches Gives Dan Levy’s ‘Big Mistakes’ a Queer Thrill ITV’s ‘Believe Me’: Daniel Mays on the Toll of Playing the “Black Cab Rapist” and Writer Jeff Pope on Focusing on Victims Rather Than the Predator K-pop Icons BigBang Announce World Tour, Tease Group’s “Reset” During Final Coachella Set John Oliver Mocks Trump for Calling Pope “Weak on Crime”: “OK, But Who Gives a Sh**?” Taylor Frankie Paul Posts About “Ugly Parts” of “Healing” After Learning She Won’t Face Additional Domestic Violence Charges ‘Euphoria’ Defecating Pig Starts a Drug War, With Rue Stuck in the Middle Frank Marshall Says ESPN Pulled His Doc ‘Rachel, Breathe’ “An Hour Before Broadcast” Over Rights Disagreement Barack Obama Says His and Michelle’s Production Company Higher Ground Will Go Independent After Netflix Deal Ends Asobi System Artists, Executives on Global Aspirations and Asobi Expo Hawaii 2026 ‘Facts of Life’ Star Mindy Cohn Reveals Cancer Diagnosis How a Gold House Dinner Helped ‘Beef’ Creator Lee Sung Jin Land Season 2 Star Charles Melton Dave Chappelle Pitches Eddie Murphy on Joining Potential ‘Chappelle’s Show’ Reboot at AFI Gala Noah Wyle on the Origins of and Real-Life Connection to His Dark ‘Pitt’ Season 2 Journey Billie Eilish and SZA Join Justin Bieber for Coachella Weekend Two Headlining Set PinkPantheress Throws Star-Studded Birthday Bash During Coachella Set With Slew of Celeb Guests Former U.S. Presidents, Entertainment, Sports and Media Leaders Convene in Rare Gathering to Celebrate Country’s 250th Anniversary Olivia Rodrigo Debuts “Drop Dead” Live During Surprise Appearance at Addison Rae’s Coachella Set Nadia Farès, ‘The Crimson Rivers’ Actress, Dies at 57 Charlize Theron Jabs at Timothée Chalamet’s Ballet, Opera Remarks: “AI Is Going to Be Able to Do His Job in 10 Years” Andrew Lloyd Webber Says He’s a Recovering Alcoholic Nathalie Baye, French Actress Known for ‘Downton Abbey’ and ‘Catch Me If You Can,’ Dies at 77 She Broke Barriers as a Production CEO in the Middle East. Then She Had to Evacuate the Region L.A. Production Crisis Now Mayoral Race Flashpoint Horror Highlights from the 2026 Overlook Film Festival Why Sundance Winner ‘Ricky’ Is Self-Distributing: “We Refuse for You Not to See It” Meet a Hollywood Advocate for Animal Welfare Brandi Rhodes, Wife of WWE Champion Cody Rhodes, Is Getting a New Reality Show (Exclusive) Hollywood Winners & Losers: CinemaCon Edition — Marvel Soars, DC Slips Jill Biden Tried to Win a Role on ‘Heated Rivalry’ — But She Was Outbid Online Personalities and Comedians Overtake TV and Newspapers as Primary News Sources Tyrese Haliburton Launches Production Company, Signs Multiyear Development Deal With Wheelhouse (Exclusive) Why the New ‘American Gladiators’ Doubled Down on Pro Wrestlers Hulu Nabs Four More Video Podcasts As Licensing Heats Up (Exclusive) ‘Humboldt USA’ Explores How Our Relationship With Nature Has Changed Through the Prism of a German Proto-Environmentalist ‘Heat’ Is a Doc That Asks Who We Become When Being in Our Own Skin Is Unbearable (Exclusive VdR Trailer and Chat) ‘Perfect Crown’ Scores Disney+’s Biggest K-Drama Debut to Date Ben Stiller Reveals He Didn’t Love All the ‘Meet the Parents’ Sequels ‘American Pie’ Star Shannon Elizabeth Says She Joined OnlyFans After Hollywood “Controlled the Narrative” of Her Career How ‘Hacks’ Finally Killed Its Central Feud Pam Abdy and Sandra Bullock Talk Paramount-Warners Deal and ‘Practical Magic 2’ ‘The Pitt’ Boss Says Noah Wyle’s Season 2 Storyline “Shows What Can Happen if You Don’t Take the Time to Resolve Mental Health Issues” Lynette Howell Taylor, Sara Murphy and Nastasya Popov to Discuss Power at Archer Film Festival The Best HBO Max Deals and Free Trial Hacks to Watch ‘Euphoria,’ ‘The Pitt’ and More Singer D4vd Arrested for Murder of Teen in Los Angeles, Police Say ‘Street Fighter’ Movie Trailer Brings the Pain — and the Camp Why CBS Remains Bullish on First-Run Syndicated Shows Pete Hegseth Reads Tarantino’s Fake Bible Quote From ‘Pulp Fiction’ at Prayer Service Tribeca Festival 2026 Lineup: Katie Holmes-Joshua Jackson Reunion Movie ‘Happy Hours,’ Films With Susan Sarandon, Dustin Hoffman, Quentin Tarantino Brian Williams Returns: Former NBC News and MSNBC Anchor Launching Netflix Podcast USC Has Just Launched an AI “Institute” for Actors For ‘The Roots of Madness,’ a Filmmaker Traveled to Conflict Zones to Explore Why So Many People Become Refugees ‘Lee Cronin’s The Mummy’ Review: Jack Reynor and Laia Costa Grapple With Ancient Evil and Grand Guignol Gore in Visceral Family Nightmare Juilliard Names Interim Drama School Leadership Team, Including Laura Linney Jamie Dornan Gets Puffy for Moncler by Eating Popsicle and Blowing Piece of Bubble Gum Carey Mulligan on Going Ballistic in ‘Beef’ Kit Connor, Taika Waititi to Voice Animated ‘Charlie vs. the Chocolate Factory,’ Netflix Drops First Look Roku Hits 100 Million Streaming Households Worldwide Behind the Hacker Leak of ‘Legend of Aang: The Last Airbender’ Nicholas Hoult Leads a Crew of Criminal YouTubers in First ‘How to Rob a Bank’ Footage Anne Hathaway and Dakota Johnson Face Off in First ‘Verity’ Trailer ‘Four Minus Three,’ Film About Family, Tears, Clowns and Hope That Won a Berlin Award, Sells to France, Canada, Australia Mel Brooks Unveils Title to ‘Spaceballs’ Sequel James Bond Casting Process Teased by Amazon MGM: “A Responsibility We Don’t Take Lightly” Jason Statham Unleashes ‘The Beekeeper 2’ Footage on CinemaCon “All Hail the Queen”: Donna Langley’s Power on Full Display as Snoop Dogg, Christopher Nolan, Steven Spielberg Bet on Universal ‘Masters of the Universe’: Camila Mendes Saves Nicholas Galitzine’s Life in New Footage Michael B. Jordan, Adria Arjona Get Flirty in Action-Packed ‘Thomas Crown Affair’ Trailer ‘The Fear of 13’ Theater Review: Adrien Brody Brings Unquestionable Commitment to a Death Row Drama Dulled by Pedestrian Writing Survival Horror Video Game ’99 Nights in the Forest’ Movie in the Works at 20th Century Studios Alec Baldwin on Career Ups and Downs, ‘Rust’ Prosecution’s Toll on His Health and Future Plans: “I Want to Retire” ‘Rooster’ Star Danielle Deadwyler Has Always Been the Goofball ‘The Audacity’ Creator Looks for Humanity in Silicon Valley: “It’s the Only Way Forward” Katy Perry Denies Ruby Rose’s Graphic Sexual Assault Claim: “Dangerous Reckless Lies” Lena Dunham Talks Adam Driver’s Temper and Being a “Lamb to the Slaughter” Making ‘Girls’ in New Memoir Mario Adorf, German-Italian Star of ‘The Tin Drum’ and ‘Winnetou,’ Dies at 95 Trump’s $10 Billion Lawsuit Over Epstein Story in Wall Street Journal Dismissed — but Not for Good Valerie Lee, One of the Young Munchkins in ‘The Wizard of Oz,’ Dies at 94 Netflix’s ‘Big Mistakes’ Took Dan Levy Out of His Comfort Zone. He Wants Hollywood to Know Why That’s OK Israeli Artist Noga Erez Gets Emotional During Coachella Set: “I’m Just Heartbroken and Sad” Justin Bieber’s Low-Key Coachella Performance Fuels Sexism Debate Prince Harry and Meghan Markle Attend Ted Sarandos’ ‘Beef’ Season 2 Event Following Netflix Drama Coachella Hot Shots: All the Highlights From Weekend One in the Desert Scarlett Johansson Says It “Was Tough” in the Early 2000s Because Actresses Were “Pulled Apart for How They Looked” Lila Raicek Broke Up With Roy Price Amid Scandal. Her Debut Novel is Definitely Not About It. When Wonder Woman Gave Primetime a Lift Justin Bieber Goes Heavy On ‘Swag’ In Much-Anticipated Coachella Headlining Set Trump Calls Tiger Woods From Rehab as Melania Addresses Her Epstein Statement on ‘SNL’ Box Office Milestone: ‘Super Mario Galaxy’ Soars Past $300M in U.S. and $600M Globally
Curry Barker Got His Wish: Inside the ‘Obsession’ Director’s Wild Month (Exclusive)
James Hibberd · 2026-06-15 · via The Hollywood Reporter

Curry Barker was deceived. 

Last week, the 26-year-old writer-director of Obsession was told was going to a routine meeting at the Focus Features offices in Universal City. Instead, he arrived at the production company to find himself facing 250 employees — all holding glasses of champagne.

Barker thought — for perhaps the hundredth time in recent weeks: Holy shit.

Focus Chairman Peter Kujawski declared, “Congratulations on the biggest movie Focus has ever had!” The employees burst into applause and toasted Barker’s success.

Then Kujawski held out a box. “In the music business, they hand out gold records,” Kujawski said. “We don’t do that. So here’s this.”

Inside the box was, of course, a One Wish Willow — the spell-casting prop from Barker’s hit film. Only this willow was in a glass case … and gold. 

Photographed by Mark Griffin Champion

It was a fitting gift for a young filmmaker from Alabama who, during his film’s pre-release marketing tour, had snapped a One Wish Willow toy as part of a press stunt. “I wish for Obsession to be a huge hit at the box office,” Barker declared at the time.

Then, like a character in his own story, Barker’s wish was fulfilled to an almost supernaturally sarcastic extent: His movie shot for just $750,000 has toppled one box office record after another on its gravity-defying trek toward $300 million globally. Almost overnight, Barker became the hottest young horror director in the industry (he has already shot his follow-up, Anything But Ghosts, and has signed to write and direct an A24 reboot of Texas Chainsaw Massacre). One company even offered Barker $10 million for literally whatever idea he wants to pitch next. 

“It is like when The Wish gives you more than you bargained for,” agrees Barker, who got his start by posting sketch comedy and horror shorts online while working in a coffee shop. Producer James Harris took a chance on his Obsession script, then Focus picked up the project at last year’s Toronto International Film Festival.

Below, in his first-ever cover story interview, Barker gets candid about what the last month has really been like for the Gen Z filmmaker. From those tumbling box office records, to being overwhelmed with career options, to suddenly having famous friends, Barker lets us live vicariously through his Hollywood dream come true.

First, I want to walk you through the wild ride you’ve been on since Obsession was released. The film was initially projected to open at $8 million to $10 million, which seems funny now. What was your reaction when you heard that?

A little disappointed. I’m a dreamer. The film was bought for $15 million, so I was hoping it would make at least that [on opening weekend]. People told me that doesn’t really happen. 

Then it made $7 million its first day … 

I told myself, “I’m not going to turn off my phone. I’m going to check the numbers every moment I can.” So when I woke up that morning and I saw that number, my jaw dropped. I was like, “Holy shit. What does this mean?” My agent, manager and I made a pact: If it passed $20 million that weekend, we would get tattoos of the One Wish Willow. But it didn’t.

It came close — $17 million. Then weekend two is when things began to get crazy. Because the numbers went up, which almost never happens.

When it made $27 million, I couldn’t believe it. I didn’t know that was an option. Like I didn’t think it was mathematically possible. It became a word-of-mouth movie. I started going to the theater to sneak in and watch the film too because I wanted to be part of this thing.  

Did it feel different to watch it with a non-premiere, non-festival audience?

Yeah. It was so exciting to be with a crowd “in the wild.” I told my friends, “I’m not going to watch the whole thing. I’ve seen it too many times.” I ended up watching the whole thing. I’m not going to lie — I’ve done that three or four times.

And your phone must have been ringing …

The opportunities were just unbelievable. I realized I can do whatever I want now. My whole career, I’ve had to come up with crazy ideas and pitch them and if it didn’t go over well, I’d have to come up with something else. They were like, “If you could do any movie you wanted, what would it be?” I was like, “Whoa. Let me think about that for a second.” 

Alexander Wang jacket; Todd Snyder tee; Jacques Marie Mage sunglasses; Craftd London jewelry. Photographed by Mark Griffin Champion

When the box office numbers went up yet again for weekend three, it tied a record for week-over-week growth that went all the way back to 1982’s E.T. the Extra-Terrestrial. Did other filmmakers reach out?

Yeah, that’s when people really started to reach out. Nathan Fielder reached out. Tim Robinson, who I freaking love. Steven Spielberg, Christopher Nolan and Paul Thomas Anderson publicly said things. I was becoming numb because it was so unbelievable, my brain couldn’t really process it.

It also seemed like every entertainment outlet was suddenly doing a “rise of the YouTubers” story given Kane Parsons’ Backrooms opened to $118 million globally that weekend. But you actually did the classic Hollywood thing of moving from Alabama to L.A. when you were 18 to make it in showbiz. Like that’s the old-school way of breaking in. 

Exactly. I never thought of myself as a YouTuber. I feel my journey isn’t that much different from the greats we know and love like Spielberg — not to compare myself to those people, but they started by making short films. They made films over and over until finally someone gave them a chance. YouTube was just a platform. Also, most of our fame started on TikTok, then we started putting [videos] on Instagram, and then we started putting them on YouTube. It’s just a buzzy thing to say “this is a YouTube thing.”

Did you trade messages with Parsons as all this was going down?  

We very briefly chatted but haven’t really talked. He followed me on Instagram, I followed him back, and that’s been it — nodding our heads at each other in a way that feels very internet style. I’ve heard he’s such a nice kid and wish him nothing but the best. I’m definitely down to chat. I’d love to talk to him because we’re having very similar experiences.  

Do you think you still would have been able to accomplish what you did if you had stayed in Alabama and made content from there? 

I feel like people can stay in Alabama and accomplish this. For me, moving to L.A. kind of put me in a city where I felt like this was possible. The industry is all around you, and it’s contagious. It fuels you to drive past Warner Bros. every single day and wish I could go on the other side of that fence. In Alabama, [Hollywood] feels so far away that it doesn’t feel real. If my parents weren’t so supportive, I don’t know if I would’ve had the guts to move out here.

During the fourth week of release, there was a viral Instagram post from the film’s art director (Sally Choi, who criticized being paid $6,741 and advocated for industry change on low-budget films). I know you didn’t produce the movie and aren’t responsible for writing checks. But I wondered if you have feelings about this. 

I have nothing but respect for the art department, and the work they did was extraordinary. Everybody on this film worked so hard and they deserve to be recognized. This movie was made for so little money that it’s typical that the only people who [directly] benefit from its financial success are the people who took on some sort of risk. But what I hope is that every person that worked really hard on this film will see opportunities to catapult their careers in ways that can be very financially fruitful for them — like what’s happening for me.

Speaking of which, I heard there’s been a bit of a feeding frenzy over your short films — that people are looking to see if there’s like another Obsession in there.

The Chair could definitely be a horror film. I think eventually it would be cool to bring a feature version of the haunted chair story to life. Milk and Serial [about a serial killer with a YouTube prank channel] is probably going to happen [as a film]. I wonder if there’s an opportunity to bring somebody else onto Milk and Serial and I’ll produce but not necessarily direct. 

There’s been debate over what lessons Hollywood should take from Obsession. What lessons would you like to see Hollywood take from it?

I saw — I think it was Hollywood Reporter actually — a “Who’s the next Curry Barker?” story. I did comment on a video like, “Guys, I just got here!” But as for what Hollywood should take away from it — and not to sound conceited — but they let me do my own thing. And because it was such a low-stakes movie for these people, they didn’t feel like they needed to babysit the process. So let a filmmaker take the reins and have creative freedom and not try to stick your claws into it is a lesson Hollywood should learn.

Inde Navarrette and Michael Johnston in Obsession. Courtesy of Focus Features

What do you wish studios understood about Gen Z audiences — who are now the biggest moviegoing population? 

I wish they understood that we’re tired of slop. We want good movies back. People are still hungry for movies that are original without some big IP, as long as the story is good.

You’ve said there were multiple moments on Obsession where you fought for things that others doubted. What’s an example?

The [scene where there’s] money dropping from the ceiling was a big battle for me.

I wouldn’t have expected that. Because there’s an element of comedy to it?

Yeah. I wrote the script and pitched it as a horror movie. Some people got to that scene and were like, “Oh, this is silly. This is a silly movie where money falls from the ceiling. You have to take it out.” I’m like, “No, it’s not silly. It’s crazy that it’s real.” They didn’t understand that the way I was going to shoot it wasn’t going to feel silly. I had to fight for it. 

I found it fascinating how the movie handled the tricky issue of consent. From the first night Bear (Michael Johnston) and Nikki (Inde Navarrette) spend together when he’s worried about crossing a line, to the Hansel and Gretel poem at the party, and many other moments, it’s clear you put that issue front and center — only in subtle ways. I wondered if there was nervousness about that aspect, and if anybody wanted to make it more clear what side the movie was on. 

Yeah, there was. When we were shopping this around, there were companies that told me they would give me $2 million if I just rewrote the script to make Bear a hero. I was like, “I’m not rewriting the script to make Bear a guy that does all the right things. It’s so much more interesting that he doesn’t do the right thing and instead tries to make [the relationship] work and he just keeps making bad decision after bad decision.” The movie would have been so boring if Bear was going on a journey to figure out the lore of the One Wish Willow. So I turned down more money to tell the story that I was more interested in telling.

You’ve talked about casting Inde and how she nailed the wide range of notes the character needed. Was there a particular moment you knew you made the right choice?

There was a moment when shooting that we were nervous about, because we hadn’t yet seen her do any of the big explosive [acting]. She’s very reserved in rehearsal, which is pretty common. We were on set and she was on the bed kissing Bear. My producer, Haley Nicole Johnson, and I looked at each other like, “OK, here we go. I hope she can do this.” I [said to Inde], “You’re going to look at Bear, look around the room, realize where you are, and freak out.” Then she did it and — boom. First take! That’s what we used. I was like, “OK, this movie might work.”

Has Focus given you a sense of whether there will be an Oscar campaign? 

There’s going to be an awards campaign. I’m not sure exactly what that entails. I’m not trying to get my hopes up about it and stay focused on what I’m doing next. 

Let’s get into that. I know you haven’t written the script for your take on Texas Chainsaw Massacre. But how do you take something that’s been made and remade so many times and make it feel fresh?

I wouldn’t be interested if I didn’t think I could find a way in that feels fresh and new, while still respecting the original. The canon itself is all over the place, so there’s not much to stay loyal to other than the original. I want to make a new generation of people scared and give them this feeling of: “What if you went on a road trip with your friends and this happened to you?” I want to capture the rawness and the grounded-ness of the original. 

You recently watched the previous 10 films. Is there anything you learned about what works and what doesn’t in this franchise?

Some of those movies just turn out to be a guy with a chainsaw chasing a person around. It doesn’t work to just have a chase movie. They’re hiding in a barn. It gets old. And I don’t buy it — a chainsaw is loud but they don’t hear it? I hate when you’re watching a movie and you’re thinking, “Just do this [instead].” 

You’re currently editing your next film, Anything But Ghosts (which stars Barker and his YouTube channel partner and Obsession actor Cooper Tomlinson as ghost hunter con artists who encounter their first real haunted house — which is owned by characters played by Aaron Paul and Bryce Dallas Howard). Is there anything from the reaction to Obsession that’s impacted your post-production on that film?

There was a time when Obsession was on the festival circuit that Cooper and I were thinking we needed to make Ghosts scarier. It affected the script a little bit. It’s a buddy comedy, but it’s still going to be scary and messed up. You can’t not have these feelings when your first movie is breaking box office records and you’re in your room editing your next movie thinking, “Oh my god, did I take this beat from Obsession?” Thank God I have people around me to ground me and tell me that Anything But Ghosts is good and different, and that’s OK. Nobody wants the same movie twice. So people can expect it to be very different than Obsession, but my voice will still be very strong in it.  

You shot this film before having any idea of how big your profile was going to get. Now that you know your second film is going to be a big deal, does it make you nervous to put yourself front and center as a lead in the film?

No, because I was meant to play this character. This character is really fun because I got to play a really selfish guy who doesn’t realize how rude the things he says sound when he’s saying it. He’s a con artist and lacks empathy and he has to learn to empathize with people. There’s real growth to the character, and to Cooper’s character. If I’m worried, it’s comparing it to Obsession that’s hard.

Todd Snyder tee; Madewell jeans; Jacques Marie Mage sunglasses; Melindamaria bracelet; Craftd London ring. Photographed by Mark Griffin Champion

You’ve said you were nervous to direct Aaron and Bryce. What about acting opposite them?

It was only intimidating for a day, then I got over it. And it wasn’t [nerves] about acting with them, but about being in the film in general. I knew the producers were going to be watching and [thinking], “We let these YouTubers be the leads of this movie. I hope they can carry it.” I was like, “I got to show them I’m supposed to be in this.”

I don’t think people realize you’ve appeared in a few things as an actor and went to tons of auditions. When you first moved to Hollywood, how much of your goal was to be a filmmaker versus an actor?

My love for acting started at a very young age. When I moved out here, I went to film school, but I was in the acting program. I tried to audition for everything and luckily booked a couple things here and there. But my love for filmmaking is something that grew and grew and grew. 

You’re still living in an apartment with Cooper and The Chair star Anthony Pavone. Have you guys talked about getting a bigger place, or your own place?

I still live in the same apartment I’ve had for the last three years in my tiny room. We’re still going to live with each other and we’re just going to try and get an upgrade. I’m not going to go crazy. I just want enough closet space for my clothes and shoes.

Somebody said you also have 200 pairs of eyewear.

About 60 or 70. As a kid when watching Kingsman, I thought those glasses were so cool. Even watching Harry Potter as a kid, I would search at the glasses shop to see if they had round glasses. I think Jacques Marie Mage is my top favorite.

Do you expect Cooper to continue to be your creative partner on all projects? Or do you see yourself doing solo work? 

Absolutely. We’ll always work together. I have my solo things. I don’t think Cooper’s going to help me write Texas Chainsaw. But we’ve got a lot of stuff going on and I’ll always ask him for input. I’ll ask him to come on and produce. We’re becoming our own production company. 

Who do you turn to for professional advice at this point?

I’ve been reaching out to my heroes, and they’ve been reaching back. I’ve befriended [Weapons director] Zach Cregger. [Hereditary director] Ari Aster. I had a dinner with Zach and [Alien: Romulus director] Fede Álvarez the other night and picked their brains and asked them for advice. They’re all so welcoming and I feel like I’m part of this community now. Apparently there are these dinners where a bunch of directors get together and talk about stuff.

What part of success has been disappointing, or not what you thought it would be?  

All you see is the glory of [celebrities] and you assume they’re living this super fun life. I think it would surprise people if they saw my day to day. I live pretty humbly and my life is kind of boring. I’m not complaining because I choose this. I could make my life more interesting, but I’m a pretty boring guy.

So what do you want to do next? 

The big conversation is: Do I want to do an IP movie? Or do I want to do my original? I have an idea for my original, but I have so many ideas for Chainsaw as well. I have a lot to weigh and that’s where the stress really comes from. I don’t know what to do next.

Is there something you know you don’t want? 

I don’t want to go straight into Obsession 2. I have such a cool idea for it that I won’t say. I’m not saying it has to be five, six years from now. But I think people would be just as excited for it if it came a little down the road. It’s a whirlwind and I’m trying to figure it out. 

THR Newsletters

Sign up for THR news straight to your inbox every day

Subscribe Sign Up