One of the year’s most infectious horror comedies, The Blackening, arrives in theaters this Friday, June 16, 2023.
The Blackening centers around a group of Black friends who reunite for a Juneteenth weekend getaway only to find themselves trapped in a remote cabin with a twisted killer. Forced to play by his rules, the friends soon realize this ain’t no motherf****** game.
Directed by Tim Story (Ride Along, Think Like A Man, Barbershop) and co-written by Tracy Oliver (Girls Trip, Harlem) and Dewayne Perkins (“The Amber Ruffin Show,” “Brooklyn Nine-Nine”), The Blackening skewers genre tropes and poses the sarcastic question: if the entire cast of a horror movie is Black, who dies first?
The Blackening stars Antoinette Robertson, Dewayne Perkins, Sinqua Walls, Grace Byers, X Mayo, Melvin Gregg, Jermaine Fowler, Yvonne Orji, and Jay Pharoah.
Ahead of the film’s release, Bloody Disgusting spoke with Melvin Gregg (The Way Back) and Jay Pharoah (Bad Hair, Unsane), who play characters King and Shawn, respectively. The pair revealed whether they were horror fans coming into this movie and shared more about their characters.
Former “Saturday Night Life” main cast member and comedian Pharoah’s reputation for comedy precedes him, but how does he feel about horror?
“I love horror films,” Pharoah says. “I never find them to be scary. I always end up laughing. Unless it’s like The Exorcist or something, that ain’t funny. That’s real right there. We don’t mess with the spooks now. We don’t do that. We don’t do that. But I love Texas Chainsaw, Jason, the Halloween franchise, and even Scary Movie. I love it all. I think horror is one of the best genres ever. And we’ve done such justice with this movie that could be one of the biggest comedy horrors that’s ever been created. I have to say that.”
Gregg was a tougher sell when it came to horror, but The Blackening‘s approach addressed his typical frustrations with the genre. Gregg explains, “I wasn’t a big horror fan because I felt like the horror films aren’t realistic. They don’t act like they want to survive. They do the dumbest stuff ever and die. It’s like rightfully so. And this film approaches it from a different perspective, you know? I mean, you got a cast of all Black friends, and of course, we can’t all die first, but our goal is to actually survive and do things that would get us out of danger. That’s what I didn’t like about the other films; they didn’t feel like they wanted to survive, so this was a breath of fresh air in the genre.”
More than just breaking from horror conventions, The Blackening provided the opportunity to break from familiar roles. The actor shares how he found a kindred spirit in King, “Before this project, I had done a lot of characters who fit in that thug realm. I was like, ‘I don’t want to do that anymore. I’ve done it a couple of years; move on to something else.’ That’s what my character was dealing with. He was struggling with creating a new image of himself and wanted his friends to receive him as something more than the image that he had prior as a college student, as a kid. He had grown from that time and wanted people to see him as that and not the thug guy anymore. So I found that parallel to be attractive as an actor.”
Pharoah found the opposite to be the case with Shawn. He cracks, “I feel like a lot of the time, the characters I played are not like Shawn. Shawn is, he’s overzealous, and he’s super optimistic. That’s not usually something I do. Usually, I’m the first one, ‘Yeah, Nah, nope, I ain’t messing with this,’ and I’ll be out the door. But this guy, he was like on it like, ‘Ooh, yo, it’s spooky. Let’s try it out.’ I would never do that in real life, never do that in real life, and I’ve never been able to do that with any of my other characters. So to play that is fun. That was different for me, for Shawn.”
While Shawn might not know the rules of surviving horror, it’s clear that Pharoah does. The actor reveals why horror and comedy are two sides of the same coin.
“There’s so much of the same flavor, “Pharoah states. “I mean the execution of it, the command that actor has. When you watch them, you want to see what’s going to happen next—the same thing with a comedy. You want to be shocked. You want it to come from left field. And that’s how horror is. Horror comes from left field. You have to come from the left to scare somebody. You know what I mean? If I see you standing there, I’m not going to be scared. If you see the punchline, you’re not going to laugh at it. So it’s like sneaky.”
“Element of surprise,” Gregg adds.
“Element of surprise,” Pharoah confirms. “Comedy and horror do the same thing. It’s the same. It’s like boxing almost. It’s the same thing. Bop, bop.”
The Blackening releases in theaters on June 16.
In the meantime, check out the character posters for King and Shawn below.
The post ‘The Blackening’ Stars Melvin Gregg and Jay Pharoah on What Sets This Horror-Comedy Apart [Interview] appeared first on Bloody Disgusting!.