[on actually caring about the characters in The Cabin in the Woods (2012)] This movie was definitely a reaction to that, because [Drew Goddard] and I both felt like, "Well, there's a bit of a devolution going on here" and it happens in all genres. This is something that I've only realized talking about this movie lately, but you look at action movies and eventually it's just a series of explosions. If you look at romantic comedies and eventually it's Love Actually (2003), it's just, like, hit you over the head and horror movies become a series of inventive killings of people you don't care about. I am unable to write about people that I don't care about and that goes for everybody. That goes for Mordecai . . . I love that guy! I don't necessarily want to have dinner with him, I'm just saying I love him. The point of this movie to a larger extent is these are textured interesting humans who love each other and they are being forced to devolve into horror movie clichés and it's the one cliché that I'm not interested in, which is, "Oh look it's okay, they are expendable". They smoke pot, they have sex, so it's okay to kill them. I'm like, "When did that come into the equation?" . . . It was always that everybody in this movie is doing what they think is right, including the terrifying Buckners, because they have a belief system, which writing that diary . . . [Drew Goddard] was like, "Hey, do you want to write a 14-year-old girl's turn-of=the century diary about worshiping pain?". I'm like, "Yeah, I can do that". "Okay". You know, that was one of the great things about this. He's like, "Okay, I'm going to write a girl making out with a wolf's head! I'll catch up with you". Absolutely, you have to have sympathy for all of the characters. You have to understand both sides of the conflict, otherwise it's not a conflict, it's just a fight. Sometimes it's fine to just say, "Okay, bad guys are bad and we've got to get out of this situation", but it's much more interesting, especially in a situation like this where you are going to spend a lot of time with both sides of this weird filmic equation to understand that everybody is doing what they think is best. You can absolutely go, "Wow, some very bad decision making went on" and we're not just talking about the pot and the sex. At the same time, that sort of dehumanizing of people is what we were reacting to and the movie has a very sort of humanistic message in the sense of "I will stand by my friend". That's how humanity is supposed to work and if it doesn't work that way, then what else have we got?
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