

Shepard Lambrick, a seemingly philanthropic aristocrat, expresses an interest in helping them. In the wake of her parent’s death, Iris struggles to make ends meet while caring for her terminally ill younger brother. Plus, when you have all this talent in one place, it’s not hard to start feeding off other people’s energy, too. And I think that once we found our rhythm, it became easier and easier to keep that energy up between us.

David thankfully knew what he was doing because he really keeps the story and the characters interesting even though they’re not running around in the woods or anything like that. I think that was something we were all worried about coming into this- that maybe things could lag because people would be watching almost the same “scene” for most of the movie. I really dug that duplicity.ĭread Central: Because you guys were stuck to that table for so long, was it hard keeping up the energy at all? There’s definitely some truth to the things she says, but she also says a lot of things that aren’t as convincing, making it hard to read her at times. She had so much pain and suffering in her life that she decided to embody the one person responsible for that pain – her husband – in that performance during the game. Everything about Amy was a front sitting there in that room was a performance for her. I know we get a little bit of Amy’s backstory towards the end of the movie, but was there more going on?
WOULD YOU RATHER CAST MOVIE
This wasn’t about shocking you necessarily it was made to really make you think and maybe feel a little uncomfortable, too.ĭread Central: We get a sense in the movie that a lot of Amy’s “attitude” (as Lambrick puts it) is just a front and that’s she’s been through some incredibly rough things recently. Then after I met with David, I knew he was going to make the movie that maybe people weren’t expecting, and I knew I wanted to do it because it was going to be something different.
