Director Can Evrenol Talks Baskin!

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Ahead of the UK premiere screening of Baskin (review) at the Glasgow Film Festival, the folks over at FrightFest asked the film’s director, Can Evrenol, a few pertinent questions…

Q: What were the challenges of elongating the BASKIN short film ideas into a full feature?

A: A brief history of Turkish genre cinema and the must-see movies virgins should see? Please refer to the awesome award-winning documentary Remake, Remix, Rip-Off (2014) for a brief history Turkish genre madness. Must see movies: Man Who Saves The World, aka Turkish Star Wars, Tarkan vs. Viking, and Deathless Devil, tho be sure to have your fast-forward button close. And last but not least… Dort Yanım Cehennem, whose English subtitles are done by Evrim Ersoy and I!

Can Evernol

Q: BASKIN is visually and narratively very ambitious for your first feature…

A: I guess it is a continuation of the same visual and narrative journey that I’ve been experimenting and progressing on through my short films. I’m learning as I go.

Q: Lucio Fulci, Hellraiser, Hansel and Gretel… what were your other main inspirations for BASKIN?

A: Once Upon a Time in Anatolia, David Lynch, Texas Chainsaw Massacre, Frontieres, Calvaire, Only God Forgives, The Twilight Zone.

Q: Ulas Pakkan’s electronic score really creates a fabulous mood. Was it always the idea to invoke an 80s vibe of creepy unease?

A: Yes it was, actually. A mixture of that 80’s feel and modern dark synth in the footsteps of Trent Reznor, Clint Mansell, and Cliff Martinez.

Q: BASKIN begins as an arthouse shocker and then turns hardcore gore – you seem to favour genre collisions and shifts?

A: It was always my intention to make a movie that begins as a European arthouse festival film – slow, controlled, and orchestrated – [that] later progresses into the mad world of surreal horror and a visual attack on the audience. That’s what I tried to experiment with Baskin.

Can Evernol

Q: Alp Korfali’s cinematography is exceptional. Was the Nicolas Winding Refn vibe intentional?

A: Only God Forgives, Frontieres, and I Saw The Devil were particularly the films that we studied together in terms of light.

Q: Let’s talk frogs…how many did you use and why?

A: Frogs are doom bringers in mythology. In Baskin, they lead the cops to their doom, in their nightmarish journey. They symbolise the film getting off its tracks. We used quite a few, although if I had the budget, I’d love to have hundreds more…

Q: Mehmet Abi cuts quite a strong impression as Father. Where did you find him, and is he the new Michael Berryman?

A: I found Mehmet Abi’s headshot while randomly going through the old archives of a cast agency. I was just looking for a creepy-looking extra for my short film, Baskin (2013). I noticed him right away when I arrived at the set. He was the centre of attention. Yet, everybody was looking at him from a distance. I went straight to him, casually introduced myself, and shook his hand. Turns out that he’s a car park attendant. No acting experience. He just enrolled at a cast agency 10 years ago and been waiting ever since.

When it was time for the feature, I wrote the Father character with him in mind. But it was obviously a huge gamble to give this most important role of my first feature film to a non-actor. I rolled the dice and sent him the script. Mehmet Abi told me that he would read the script during the religious holiday, while he visits his hometown Samsun. A couple days later he sent me, on my phone, some of the scenes that he actually painted. I was flabbergasted. I loved it. I asked for more, and he painted some more. Soon after seeing these amazing paintings, I said, ‘That’s it; this is a much more special case than I thought.’ After the Turkish premiere of Baskin, his paintings were exhibited in “Bant,” the coolest independent art gallery in Istanbul.

To prepare him for his character, I asked him to watch such films as Apocalypse Now, Hellraiser, and Zeki Demirkubuz films. He loved them all. His feedback to me was pretty deep and poignant. I was touched. There and then, I trusted that we had a new Michael Berryman at hand! Today, whenever we are at a festival Q&A, it is my great pleasure to hear Mehmet Abi (Brother Mehmet) talk about Baskin…

Q: You already have the sequel written?

A: Yes we do have a crazy idea for a sequel actually, but currently I’m working on something else.

Baskin screens at part of FrightFest Glasgow 2016 (tickets here) on Saturday 27th February at the GFT Screen 1, 7.05pm. Can Evrenol will be in attendance.

The film stars Gorkem Kasal, Ergun Kuyucu, Mehmet Cerrahoglu, Sabahattin Yakut, Mehmet Fatih Dokgoz, and Muharrem Bayrak.

Synopsis:
Five cops working the graveyard shift in the middle of nowhere are dispatched to investigate a disturbance. Isolated and without back-up, they find themselves confronting a labyrinthine ruin. Pushing ever further into the depths of the lair, it becomes clear they have stumbled into the darkest pits of a terrible evil… a squalid and blood-soaked den of ritual led by The Father – the master of all their nightmares – who will plunge them ever deeper down the rabbit hole and into the very mouth of madness.

Baskin

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