TALES FROM BEYOND THE PALE

[Fangoria.com (June 9, 2010—“Sounds Scary: Glass Eye Pix Goes ‘Beyond the Pale’!” by Michael

Gingold]

Glass Eye Pix, the New York-area horror factory run by independent filmmaker Larry Fessenden

(pictured), has been busier than ever these days, with four features in a coproduction deal with Dark Sky

Films wrapped and being readied for release, and SATAN HATES YOU, a collaboration with

MonsterPants, just premiered and about to hit the festival circuit. As if all this big-screen activity wasn’t

enough, Fango got the scoop that Glass Eye will be terrorizing the audiosphere via an on-line series called

TALES FROM BEYOND THE PALE.

Fessenden and Glenn McQuaid, writer/director of I SELL THE DEAD, are overseeing this project,

a series of half-hour episodes inspired by the classic radio chillers once recorded by the likes of

Alfred Hitchcock, Orson Welles, Boris Karloff and Peter Lorre. It was one of the latter programs,

in fact, that sparked the whole idea. “Glenn and I were driving through a fog-drenched evening

with my kid,” Fessenden explains, “and we were playing an old Karloff/Lorre radio show. We

turned to each other and both said how much we loved it, and how important radio plays were to

us growing up. Then it dawned on us—we had to do this ourselves.

So we called in a lot of our comrades,” he continues, “and then people outside our circle, who haven’t

made movies with Glass Eye but are artisans whom Glenn has met on the road.” In addition to Fessenden

and McQuaid themselves, those from the Glass Eye stable who are taking part include THE HOUSE OF

THE DEVIL’s Ti West, Jim Mickle of the upcoming STAKE LAND, SATAN HATES YOU’s James Felix

McKenney, Joe Maggio of this year’s BITTER FEAST and sound designer/I CAN SEE YOU director

Graham Reznick. Among the outside talents involved are PHANTASM mogul Don Coscarelli, THE

BURROWERS’ J.T. Petty and his novelist wife Sarah Langan, GRACE’s Paul Solet, Douglas Buck of

CUTTING MOMENTS and the SISTERS remake, SWEATSHOP scripter Ted Geoghegan, MIDNIGHT

MEAT TRAIN screenwriter Jeff Buhler, short filmmaker Ashley Thorpe and LIBERTY KID’s Ilya

Chaiken.

McQuaid believes that harking back to the days when horror was sometimes heard but not seen will

encourage fresh levels of creativity from all these contributors. “One of the inspirations on this project, for

me, was that I believe audiences are spoiled these days,” he says. “Filmmakers are struggling to show them

something new, trying to surprise people visually. To pull that rug out from under ourselves as artists, and

having to channel terror in a different way, speaks to all of my influences as a filmmaker. You’ll never be

able to show the most horrific thing in everyone’s minds, so leave it up to them. When we simmer

everything down, this is at the core of what we’re doing.”

“It’s fun to challenge so many of our comrades,” Fessenden adds. “Everybody was rather tickled by the

idea, and we’ve got such an amazing variety. It’s a format that’s all about the writing, but what Glenn and I

also love is that you can do so much with sound effects and music. We really want to create these audio

environments.”

“That was my initial spark of interest,” McQuaid notes. “You can really isolate the listener. For me, it’s all

about selling these pieces in obscure and very diverse locations. For instance, you may be on a trawler with

a troubled crew, or maybe struck out on a desert moon…”

“The sound of the ocean waves, the sound of the desert wind!” Fessenden interjects. “That’s the whole

idea: the sounds participating in and creating the environment. It is so much a celebration of the

imagination. It’s the opposite of CGI; we’re going back to a more spare storytelling experience.”

Glass Eye’s films have frequently been noted for their chilling aural environments, courtesy of Reznick and

composer Jeff Grace. And Fessenden confirms that both artists will be involved with TALES FROM

BEYOND THE PALE, revealing, “I just spoke to Jeff today—one of the most overworked and underpaid

men in show biz—and he will provide the theme song, which will be tremendously good fun. We’ll

certainly encourage each contributor to use a sound or a musician they want; everyone’s welcome to find

their own muse. We’ll always offer Jeff; it’s just up to the director to make the decision. Jeff is such a

resilient and malleable talent that we feel confident offering him, and Graham will be involved too. We’re

borrowing these guys from our features, so it’s going to be a delicate balance, but we hope it will all come

together.”

“What’s inspiring for me,” McQuaid says, “is that I have a lot of ideas, but they’re all insane, and not many

of them are going to make it to the big screen. So to have an outlet like this for them is fantastic. And who

knows, if they get through this stage of audio theater, they could bounce on from there to some other form.”

Adds Fessenden, “I told Glenn we’ll need a rating system, because some of the episodes will be, ahem,

unsuitable for children.”

Scripts are currently coming in and production begins in August, with some of the cast also set to be

brought in from past Glass Eye projects. The duo hope to have the first episodes available for listening by

Halloween; they’ll be posted at the series’ official website (which opens tomorrow), and will be

downloadable via iTunes and Amazon.com. Each installment will have its own accompanying poster

artwork, painted byRue Morgue’s Gary Pullin (who also did the title art seen above). In closing, Fessenden

offers an explanation for the program’s moniker:

“The pale—which is from the same terminology as ‘impaled’—is an Old English reference to a stake of

wood. In the old days, when you had your little village, you would put a fence around it, which was a series

of pales. So anything beyond the fence—or beyond the pale—“

“Was beyond all perception,” McQuaid says.

“Most disturbing and unorthodox,” Fessenden adds.

“Uncanny, even,” McQuaid continues. “Our tales are generally about people who wander outside the pale,

into the unknown. They’re inspired by Roald Dahl, Richard Matheson, Shirley Jackson…all these

contributed to the seed of the idea. But everyone is coming in and adding their own flavor, so it’s very

exciting.”