Corddry was kind enough to give us a few pointers when it came to being a convincing zombie.
“Its interesting because you, and you guys will be faced with this later today, you dont want to be the George Romero zombie with their arms out and they cant bend their knees,” he said. “But also dont want to be the 28 Days Later rage virus zombies because theyre just like wild animals. Its sort of somewhere in between. Its really like, they dont feel pain, right? I tend to walk duck-footed in life, I just made M very pigeon-toed and that alone changes my entire kind of body language. So that was kind of enough.”
Once we were called to set we were given plum spots in front of the large gathering of zombie extras who had been waiting there all day for their chance to be on camera. I felt a twinge of guilt using my press credentials to get ahead of the crowd, but that’s Hollywood for ya.
The scene involved Corddry and the crowd bracing themselves for an attack from above by “Bonies,” the next step in zombie evolution which are essentially zombies who have been that way for too long and lost all of their humanity. What’s left is impossibly bony monsters who serve as the evil antagonists of the story.
“This is sort of my action bad-ass scene,” Corddry confirmed. “Which I love. Ive got a couple of those, [Eastwood voice] Dont worry about it, Ill go get em’ type of lines! And, ‘Take care of the girl Im gonna go kick some ass!’ Ive got a couple of those lines in the movie and today Ive got two of them. So thats what Im doing today. Im being a bad-ass zombie.”
All the while Levine projected a very chill attitude, sitting cross-legged on the floor as the scene played out, and working very collaboratively with the actors.
“He knows exactly the shots that hes doing and where the story is and the arcs of the story,” said Palmer of her director. “I think were working harder because we have a leader like Jon Levine who is just pouring his heart and soul into it, but also just being super-friendly and supportive of everyone. “
“I actually have less time to work with the actors because theres more going on,” said Levine of taking on the large project, which the studio Summit hopes will turn into another Twilight franchise for them. “On 50/50, even though it was 8 million dollars, it was all acting intensive. So we would sit down and talk about it and really get into it. And with Nick and Theresa we had a lot of rehearsal time so we were able to talk about it, but on the day we just have to do it.”
So how will Levine and Hoult ultimately imbue lifeless corpses with humanity and make a romance that borders on necrophilia palatable for mainstream America?
“We create our own mythology,” said Levine. “Theres voiceover in the movie so the degree to which it will be explained is still being determined, but we definitely have our own rules. For Nick were looking more at Edward Scissorhands instead of than R-Patz or whatever. Hopefully, and I think he is, hes endearing enough that people will overlook the eating brains part. Everyone has some negative things that they bring to a relationship!”
Ultimately we had to look to Corddry to tell us the real burning question we all had on our minds for a star-crossed undead romance: Can zombies get boners?
“Do I think zombies can get boners? Uh, no. Absolutely not. But I think that towards the end of then movie when they start becoming more human, I think M is probably the first to experience one.”
Warm Bodies shambles into theaters everywhere on February 1st.
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