Let's talk about this opportunity you have with Stanley, you dropped that on us the other day and that sounded incredible.
The Stanley Film Center. Basically the owner of the Stanley Hotel, John Cullen, called me one day come down to the the Stanley and wanted to talk to me about something. We had been working on a similar project for a while so this is the extension of that project that did not happen if you will. He said he wants to build film center that is going to be dedicated to horror. It is going to be the permanent home for the horror genre on the grounds of the Stanley Hotel which of course has an extraordinary history of horror. This is now celebrated now with the Stanley Film Festival which has been a huge success for the past three years. “I want do this thing and I want you to be the chief creative officer of that”. “Okay, sir. I'll go ahead and do that”.
It is an extraordinary opportunity. I think John and his team have a real vision for it. I am really proud that I have been able to build a phenomenal international coalition right now to support the project because at this point we're asking for 12 million tax rebate from the state of Colorado. John will find a way to fund the rest of it because it is a 24 million dollar film centre which will include a museum, a 500 seat auditorium, 45 seat VIP theatre and 2 amphitheatres outside for film under the stars in the summer.
There is going to be a film archive. Our goal is to house the largest horror film archive in the World down the road. We want to work with archivists, cinematheques and private collectors to take films from their collections, do beautiful 5k transfers, share those with them - of course return the prints and everything - but especially have this massive archive of rare films as well. What I am really excited about is that we have an opportunity to find some gems from around the World that are probably deteriorating on the shelves.
There will be an education component as well. We're working with the Colorado film school as well. They're going to be making films there. There is going to be a sound stage, green screen, edit suites, a restaurant. It is a big really vibrant centre-
That’s a fair chunk of real estate!
Oh yeah. The way that it is going to be curated and I am leading those efforts is very much the way that a museum works in the sense that you'll have an exhibit and then you'll have special screenings and programs that are linked to that. In a way one would look at it is going to be a mini Stanley Film Festival year round. There's always going to be some kind of program. I am hoping of course in those special screenings that we will be showing films, rare films from archives around the World, that would not normally get the chance to experience anywhere else. So we have some great commitments right now: Charlie Adlard (The Walking Dead), we have Rick Baker, Clive Barker for exhibits. On our Board we have like Elijah, Daniel and Josh from Spectrevision. We have George Romero, and Mick Garris and Simon Pegg. These are the founding board members that we have.
The Simon Pegg? Those board meetings will be-
(laughter)
Oh my god. Can you imagine? “Everybody stop geeking out over each other. We’ve got to get down to business. Can we stop being excited about everything? Let's be professional for once! Stop kissing Romero's feet”.
They're very very supportive. I've built an international coalition with the European Federation of Fantastic Film Festivals with (consultant) Tom Davia (and 78/52 producer) Annick Mahnert as consultants. I could go on and on, I am forgetting so many people. But the whole idea is that I am going to have some international ambassadors to the film centre, people who will help facilitate dialogue with archives with collections in their own territory so we can get the good stuff.
I think it is going to transform Colorado. I think it is really going to transform the world of horror. The fact that we have all these horror events around the world we still don't have this permanent home I think it is very important. And it is going to become the horror destination. John has this idea that down the road he wants do the Stanley Awards, which is kind of the Oscars of horror. We'll have an academy, or Stanley academy, voting members, every year we'll be handing awards for best picture best actor best actress etc etc etc.
This is a huge vision.
It's a big, big, big vision. We will know November 12th if we have the funding from the state and everything will sort of go from that. I'm positive about it.
Back in Toronto at tiff Lightbox they do a very good job of retrospective screenings and every so often there will be exhibits there. If you're in the city at the right time there is certainly something like this, but not to this extent, not this committed. And to be so specifically horror centric too. We just chance along to have something really good to come along to Toronto but to have a dedicated home like this? We're going to have to find the straightest route from Toronto to Colorado.
We felt very strongly that people are going to come not just from out of state but from out of the country. We want to be really at the forefront of horror trends and do some really edgy exhibits. But also exhibits that will please the whole family. I mean you have to have something for kids.
No you don't! (laughter) But something like that, you don't know what that will set off for somebody. You talked about yourself when you were ten years old and already hosting screenings and Q&As. Think of how many paths are going to come out of this. In a few years time someone is going to talk about coming to your exhibit and being inspired to be just as fucked up as the rest of us.
Probably. It is an extraordinary opportunity and of course I jumped at the chance to do this and help shape it into something that I think is going to be exciting for horror fans around the world. We still have some hurdles, but again, the recent development, just the media coverage we have is really tremendous. Clearly there is a global need for that. And the enthusiasm. People are coming out of the woodwork. How can we help? How can we support? We want to be a part of this.
I got an email from Mike Flanagan the director of Oculus. He said he wants to donate the Oculus mirror to the museum. We'll take it! We’ll take it! That would be really cool. I don't know how much of a permanent collection we will have. Of course we'll take donations, but we will certainly have exciting rotating exhibits. If all goes well we will open our doors in 2017. We'll start breaking ground hopefully in the Spring.
Post Interview Notes:
After this interview it was announced a couple weeks ago that the state of Colorado will provide financing for this ambitious project! Philippe will be the Chief Creative Officer (in charge of exhibitions and year-round programming not related to the Stanley Film Festival). The project is spearheaded by Grand Heritage Hotel Group and John Cullen, owner of The Stanley Hotel.
Philippe is in negotiations with Quirk Books to create a companion book about the shower scene. It will include everything he was unable to include in the film, and will be the most comprehensive, almost frame-by-frame analysis of that scene ever released. He will be the author.