Chris Messina Compares Making 'The Boogeyman' and 2010's 'Devil' (2024)

I’ll take a Chris Messina performance in any genre, but as a diehard horror fan, I wouldn’t mind seeing him do more films in that realm.

While 2020’s She Dies Tomorrow is a genre-bending movie with horror touches, there’s a 13-year gap between The Boogeyman and Messina's last film that falls squarely in the horror genre, 2010’s Devil, the M. Night Shyamalan-produced movie about a group of people trapped in an elevator. In that one, Messina plays the detective investigating the spooky happenings going down in the elevator, but The Boogeyman has him going head-to-head with the film’s evil entity himself.

Messina plays Will Harper, a therapist and father of two (Sophie Thatcher and Vivien Lyra Blair) who recently lost his wife in an accident. While struggling to cope with the loss, Will throws himself back into work. When a new patient (David Dastmalchian) shows up at his door without an appointment, Will reluctantly agrees to see him. Unfortunately, little does Will know, this man has a darkness in tow, a darkness that feeds off of heartbreak and vulnerability making his own family a prime next target.

Chris Messina Compares Making 'The Boogeyman' and 2010's 'Devil' (1)

With The Boogeyman now playing in theaters nationwide, I got the chance to chat with Messina about his return to horror. What exactly was it about The Boogeyman that made now the right time and this the right project? Here’s what Messina said:

“I think with this was, first and foremost, Stephen King and joining his pantheon in some sort of way was a real honor. And then reading this script and talking to the director, Rob Savage. He knows this genre so well, I felt like I was in great hands. And the first conversation we had, he said, ‘Have you seen Ordinary People,’ which is one of my favorite movies of all time, and so we talked a lot about that and a lot about grief, and that combo made me want to do the movie.”

Given horror storytelling and genre filmmaking techniques have evolved quite a bit since 2010, I opted to ask Messina for something on the set of The Boogeyman that made him think, ‘I can’t believe that’s what it takes to make it look like that on screen.’ Here’s what he went with:

“I had not done that much green screen stuff, so that was incredible. The mo-cap suit that the actor had, who was just fantastic chasing us around, and we were wrestling with him and fighting with him, and that was amazing. It made me leave having even more respect for the filmmakers and actors that do that on the regular.”

Chris Messina Compares Making 'The Boogeyman' and 2010's 'Devil' (2)

Does building even more respect for performance capture artists mean Messina himself now has the desire to give the acting format a go?

“You know, it did! It did because it's such a physical thing, and when I grew up, I wanted to be a dancer, so I did think at times, I wonder if I could be any good at that. That's the thing, and you and I have talked about this, [the] thing about doing different genres [is] you get to learn from so many really talented people.”

Someone he learned a great deal from on the set of The Boogeyman? Director Rob Savage. Hopes are high we’ll see Messina in more horror films in the near future and if that happens, he credits Savage with giving him a better understanding of what it takes to build dread and spark tension in such films.

“Rob would do these things — it sounds so little, but there's a scene at the beginning, which is the short story with David and I, and there's a section where I'm getting scared and amped up and worried, and I get up and go for the door, and so every time I would get up and go for the door rather quickly, it sounds so small, but Rob would say, ‘Slowly get up and slowly walk to the door, and then look back at David.’ Again, it sounds like nothing, but you do it, and it creates so much more tension. So it's little things like that along the way that Rob kind of directed me to do that I learned a lot from [and] if I do this again, I hope to carry.”

Chris Messina Compares Making 'The Boogeyman' and 2010's 'Devil' (3)

[Editor's note: The following contains spoilers for The Boogeyman.]Before wrapping up our chat, I did get the chance to throw in one brief spoiler question. After spending much of the film avoiding discussing his wife’s passing with Sadie (Thatcher) and refusing to believe Sadie and Sawyer’s (Blair) claims that there’s a monster in the house, Will comes face-to-face with the creature himself, challenging everything he thought he knew about this life and world. So how might all of that change Will’s approach to his work as a therapist going forward? Here’s Messina’s take on the matter.

“I would imagine going back to work that he would maybe take on different philosophies in therapy. Maybe go even deeper. And I would imagine that he would, hopefully, grow to be an even better dad. So maybe the answer to the question is, he might move more away from helping others and more towards helping the people he loves most.”

Looking for even more on the making of The Boogeyman? Be sure to check out my extended conversation with director Rob Savage below:

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Chris Messina Compares Making 'The Boogeyman' and 2010's 'Devil' (2024)

FAQs

What are people saying about The Boogeyman movie? ›

The Boogeyman is one of the better Stephen King adaptations. It's planned out well with its casting and horror sequences. But it shouldn't be the top choice when looking for intense scares. Content collapsed.

Is The Boogeyman a metaphor for grief? ›

The boogeyman is used as a metaphor for dealing with grief and accepting death. Sadie attempts to talk about her mom, but her father is less willing to have that conversation, intent on keeping his emotions to himself and living in denial.

What did Stephen King say about The Boogeyman movie? ›

Savage says it "means the world" to be sanctioned by King, who has given readers and audiences some of the most iconic scares of our lives. "His opinion was the one that really counted," Savage said. "Showing him the movie was a really terrifying experience. He said that he loved it and that it terrified him.

What is the movie Boogeyman about? ›

What is the main idea of The Boogeyman? ›

The story talks about being afraid of the unknown and being vulnerable, especially when it comes to children. Through Lester's story of how each of his children died by the Boogeyman coming out of their closets, King taps into our natural fear of monsters in the dark. There are two main sources of trouble in the story.

What is boogeyman argument? ›

Making up a non-starter argument or position defense based on a cheap, weak argument that the opposing viewpoint doesn't actually present or defend. Think of it as a type of boogeyman: it isn't real, it's a false threat, and it holds no actual meaning.

Is The Boogeyman movie demonic? ›

The Boogeyman turns out to be a real demonic force. The demon threatens the ones he loves, so Tim decides to take action. BOOGEYMAN the movie is filled with scary scenes and scary supernatural encounters with the demonic title character.

Is The Boogeyman based off a real story? ›

The boogeyman is not real, but most cultures have some version of the boogeyman myth, although they go by many, many different names. The actual "boogeyman" name most likely originated sometime in the 19th century, but the mythology of these kinds of "monsters" have been around for much longer than that.

Was that The Boogeyman quote? ›

Quotes. Laurie : It was the Boogeyman. Loomis : As a matter of fact it was. Lindsey : I'm scared!

What does The Boogeyman symbolize? ›

Bogeymen may target a specific act or general misbehaviour, depending on the purpose of invoking the figure, often on the basis of a warning from an authority figure to a child. The term is sometimes used as a non-specific personification of, or metonym for, terror, and sometimes the Devil.

Who killed The Boogeyman? ›

Actually, in the movie it is mentioned that there was another mafia who was called Baba Yaga/The Boogeyman. John Wick was hired to kill him which he obviously did after which he was know as the Boogeyman.

Is The Boogeyman good or bad? ›

Overall, The Boogeyman is good with its acting, suspense, and horror.

Is the new Boogeyman movie worth watching? ›

The Boogeyman has become a great horror film based on a short story by Stephen King. The film is exciting and the makers respond well to the childish fears of a monster in the closet or under your bed. No unnecessary filth or an extremely bloody whole, no, The Boogeyman plays more with the viewer's imagination.

Is The Boogeyman appropriate? ›

The MPAA gave The Boogeyman a PG-13 rating for terror, violent content, teen drug use and some strong language. As with all horror films, there are scary elements. A big part of The Boogeyman's eeriness stems from the terrifying nature of the titular creature.

Is the new Boogeyman movie demonic? ›

The Boogeyman turns out to be a real demonic force, and Tim runs into the ghosts of the missing children taken by the demon. When the demon threatens the ones he loves, Tim decides to take action. BOOGEYMAN the movie is filled with scary scenes and scary supernatural encounters with the demonic title character.

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