Last Updated on March 16, 2024 by Julieann Stipidis
The high school setting and slasher movies go together like peanut butter and chocolate in Reeseโs pumpkin cups this time of yearโ theyโre a perfect compliment to each other. The โGolden Ageโ of โ80s slasher movies inserted high school teenagers into all-kill situations where they partied, banged, and made stupid decisions before they ultimately caught an ax to the head. Said teenagers were stereotypically so annoying, crass, and unlikable that audiences cheered on their grave fates. And then the โ90s (read: Scream) brought in a new era of high school slashers that featured a little more character development, a lot more self-awareness, and made empathy for its teenage victims look cool. Flash forward to 2021, Neflixโs Thereโs Someone Inside Your Houseโ based on Stephanie Perkinsโ novel of the same nameโ shares a similar depth, possesses a cool premise, and adds in some very contemporary social commentary, yet never neglects the meanness that makes a slasher, well, a slasherโ and it works like a charm.
The hook: When Makani Young (Sydney Park) moves to small-town Nebraska to get away from her past, her friends and classmates at Osborne High are gruesomely hunted down by a killer donning a mask of each victimโs face, (ร la you-are-your-own-worst-enemy) threatening to expose their darkest secrets.
โI was drawn in (from) the very beginning,โ star Sydney Park (Makani) told Fango during a recent press junket. โI read a lot of scripts, and I can usually tell if I like it, and if I respond to the writing within the first two or three pages. I loved the whole feeling it gave me.โ
With its memorable opening sequence, quippy dialogue, and even a kill nod to Drew Barrymoreโs dangling corpse, Thereโs Someone Inside Your House viewers will immediately see the influence of the aforementioned Scream franchise, which, yes, was totally director Patrick Briceโs (Creep, Creep 2) intent when planning for filming. โScream was definitely a movie that was on my mind when I read the script,โ Brice explained. โIt always had a place in my heart.โ
Yet, Brice didnโt want House to feel like a carbon copy of a movie from almost twenty-five years agoโ freshness was key to connecting with modern slasher audiences. โIn re-watching it (before shooting House), thereโs obviously aspects of that film that are timeless, but for me, the thing that really made it feel new and fresh at that time was that level of self-awareness that it has, (but now) made it feel outdated to me. That self-awareness was in our script (but) I felt very free in that I was able to take inspiration from that and also, ideally, have these rich, complex characters with their fears and reactions to these kills that are happeningโฆThereโs this added layer of โIs my secret going to be revealed to the entire town?โโ (The secret-exposing theme feels especially integral in an Internet age where, all of us, not just teens, forget that deleted tweets, screenshots, or any other โsecretโ conversations can always be saved and later revealed to incriminate us, I should add.) โHopefully, that was something that made things a little more grounded and connected audiences to the characters.โ

And thatโs a big part of the captivation. The friend group, consisting of Parkโs Makani, Alex (Asjha Cooper), Darby (Jesse LaTourette), Zach (Dale Whibley), and Rodrigo (Diego Josef), feel like authentic Gen Z kids navigating high school in the year of our lord 2021 (or at least as authentically as this thirty-something writer would assume). โWeโre not the stereotypical โdumb teenagersโ where the killerโs coming towards us, and weโre running towards the killer,โ Cooper laughed. โA lot of the decisions we make, other people would make under the same circumstances.โ
For Brice, authenticity came in the form of โnaturalistic performances,โ crediting Netflix for allowing the cast to be made up of who was truly best for each role, and not necessarily who was the most well-known. โI was really grateful that Netflix let us cast actors who werenโt necessarily that well-known, and who had interesting faces, and had a vibe where they were fully able to inhabit their characters and play off each other in a really natural way,โ Brice explained. โThatโs another thing that I think differentiates this from other slasher moviesโ when itโs not a slasher movie, itโs a โhang outโ movie with these kids.โ
And when the kids arenโt hanging out, theyโre being brutalized and outed for things such as white supremacy, hazing, bullying, and flat-out shittiness. One kill involves a church, a confessional, and a hate speechโ something that would only piss off the wrong people and will fill everyone else with glee. When asked what heโd say to the crowd that whines horror movies have gotten โtoo political,โ screenwriter Henry Gayden is unsympathetic. โWhat are you talking about? Theyโve always been political!โ Gayden laughed. โThe early slashers are obviously very conservative. Youโve had sexโ letโs kill you! This girl hasnโt, so she can survive. Itโs always been in the bones of horror movies. Thatโs what (Director Brice and I) wanted.โ
โThatโs one of the things that I was taken with [in] the scriptโ it felt contemporary,โ Brice added. โIt felt completely willing to go there, but also, at the same time, not be patting itself on the back with it or giving a huge wink to the audience. That was something that was built into the DNA of the material, without hammering the audience over the head with it.โ
Along with low-key political undertones, horror movies have always embraced women who knew how to fight back and/or final girls, and Parkโs Makani can be added to that category. โI think we all have inadequacies and secrets and traumas that have happened to us,โ Park said. โ[I can relate to] her navigating high school, this first love, and then dealing with killer(s) and all of these questions. I put myself in her shoes. So I journaled [sic] as her; I created a playlist for my character (consisting of Nirvana, Tupac, Lauryn Hill)โฆand a backstory for Makaniโ personal, intimate things that only she would know.โ When asked which women in horror sheโd compare Makani to, Park named Halloweenโs Laurie, Screamโs Sidney, and The Shiningโs Wendy, especially when reflecting on some of the โgruelingโ shoot days and critical fight scenes needed for her character. โThat level of exhaustion really adds to the story. You can see it; you can feel the angst, like, โNo, Iโm actually struggling right now,โโ Park laughed.

Struggles asideโ getting to the really important stuffโ how are the kills?
โThe kills are vicious,โ Darbyโs Jesse LaTourette told me, laughing. โThere is one kill, without disclosing too much, that was so shocking that I think I had to turn away for a moment! It was so extreme.โ
Diego Josef concurred: โI think the kill that opens up the movie is when I realized, โOh, this is a gory film.โโ And he would know. His character Rodrigo comes face-to-face, with, well, the killer donning his own faceโ a โweirdโ thing to witness on set. โI wasnโt expecting it to be so detailed,โ Josef said. โA month or two before we started shooting, they brought me to this place where they do a bunch of molding for the big cinematic movies like Marvel and DC, and they scanned my face, and I saw that 3D image on the screen, and a month later I came back, and they had it 3D printed out. It was all white, and then they had an artist come in and detail it/color it. It was a really nice collaboration between the tech company and the makeup artist.โ
A certain cast member I spoke to (who shall not be named in fear of spoilers) cited Christian Baleโs performance in a certain Psycho-tic role as a major influence. And, also like Bateman, this killer is complex and multi-layered, as House is just as much of who-is-the-behind-the-mask as it is a straight slasher.
โWe wanted the killerโs motivation, when you find it out, to be earned in their character, and not some greater point about the world,โ Gayden said. โBut it did say something about certain peopleโฆthat I will not name (laughs).โ
Thereโs Someone Inside Your House drops October 6 on Netflix.

