[talking about the casting of actor Peter Mullan in Session 9 (2001)]: The thing that appealed to Peter Mullan about playing Gordon was less the fact that this was a movie where he ends up killing everybody at the end, but more the fact that it was like an American tragedy. Here's this guy from overseas who's come here to try to make it, make it good in this country, marry, raise a family, start a successful business... and it's starting to unravel around him. For whatever reason, he cracks. And it's that thing which I know drew Peter to the project... because of that quality, he found that really moving... His story, in some respects, has horrific...It's a horrific story on the surface, but, like David Caruso was saying, underneath there's also the fact that there's this tragedy as well. That's really what makes it resonate, at least in my mind, a bit beyond just your run-of-the-mill slasher picture. If you look at the movie, I think, there's very little explicit violence, really. I mean, there's a little towards the end, but most of it's off-camera and implied. That's creepier to me. To me, that leaves a lot more up to the audience's imagination. Whether audiences are going to get that or not remains to be seen, but that might be the intelligence factor, which could be, you know...I think audiences are itching to be creeped out. I think something like The Blair Witch Project (1999), which I'm not comparing, because I think they're very different movies, but at the same time, I think that movie was appealing because it freaked people out.
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