When
codirectors
Scott
Beck
and
Bryan
Woods
started
thinking
about
who
could
play
the
antagonist
in
their
new
horror
flick
Heretic,
they
knew
he
had
to
have
a
few
specific
characteristics.
The
film
is
about
a
man
who
lures
missionaries
into
his
home,
eventually
turning
a
pleasant
chat
about
religion
into
a
nightmare
scenario.
So
he
had
to
be
able
to
disarm
with
charm
and
humor,
before
switching
gears
to
become
intense
and
terrifying.
“He
had
to
have
these
moments
of
feeling
dangerous,
of
feeling
safe,
contradictory
traits
that
had
to
coalesce
into
something,”
says
Beck.
Early
on
in
the
casting
process,
the
pair
landed
on
a
surprising
name
—
and
they
couldn’t
let
it
go.
“As
soon
as
we
thought
about
him
we
were
like:
‘This
has
to
be
Hugh
Grant,’”
says
Beck.
“That’s
the
only
person
we
could
see
in
this
role,
because
he
checked
all
of
those
boxes.”
The
idea
of
putting
you
at
ease
is
pivotal
to
the
movie
and
character.
Heretic
starts
out
with
two
young
Mormon
missionaries
—
Sister
Barnes
(Sophie
Thatcher)
and
Sister
Paxton
(Chloe
East)
—
who
approach
the
wrong
house
while
proselytizing
door-to-door.
At
first,
Grant’s
Mr.
Reed
seems
completely
harmless.
He
wears
a
cozy
cardigan,
stumbles
over
his
words,
makes
silly
jokes,
and
offers
his
guests
Cokes.
His
home
is
filled
with
the
smell
of
a
baking
blueberry
pie.
But
eventually,
the
cracks
start
to
show,
and
Reed
shifts
to
preaching
his
own
beliefs
before
moving
in
a
much
more
sinister
direction.
The
character
was
inspired
by
a
mix
of
real-world
figures,
including
notable
atheists
like
Richard
Dawkins
and
Christopher
Hitchens
as
well
as
the
cult
leader
Keith
Raniere.
The
directors
spent
around
four
months
emailing
back
and
forth
with
Grant,
as
he
picked
apart
the
character,
peppering
them
with
questions
about
Reed’s
origins
and
beliefs.
“I
think
through
those
conversations
the
character
started
getting
clearer
and
clearer
to
all
of
us,”
Woods
explains.
Raniere,
in
particular,
influenced
Grant’s
take
on
Reed.
Grant
“was
interested
in
the
word
salad
that
Raniere
is
capable
of
conjuring
in
a
way
that
makes
him
almost
feel
smarter
than
he
actually
might
be,”
says
Woods.
“He
also
responded
to
the
way
he
creates
the
illusion
of
listening,
which
makes
him
seem
less
threatening.”
The
directors
believe
that
Grant’s
past
work,
particularly
his
early
career
as
a
bumbling
romantic
comedy
star,
helps
set
the
expectation
that
this
isn’t
a
character
to
be
feared.
“Early
in
his
career…
he
didn’t
feel
threatening
at
all
in
any
of
those
roles,”
Beck
says.
“But
as
soon
as
you’re
putting
him
into
a
movie
that
has
the
aspect
of
a
suspense
thriller,
and
he’s
starting
to
challenge
in
a
way
that
you’ve
never
quite
seen,
it
weaponizes
what
we
otherwise
know
of
him.”
Woods
adds,
“We’re
leaning
heavily
on
his
charisma
and
charm
and
all
the
things
we
know
and
love
him
for.”
In
a
lot
of
horror
movies,
it’s
hard
to
believe
characters
will
stick
around
in
a
dangerous
situation.
But
in
Heretic,
you
can
understand
it;
the
warning
signs
are
subtle
at
first,
and
once
they
become
more
overt,
well,
it’s
too
late.
And
that’s
due
to
Grant’s
ability
to
showcase
both
sides
of
the
character
so
convincingly,
making
his
guests
—
and
viewers
—
feel
initially
comfortable.
“We’re
leaning
heavily
on
his
charisma
and
charm
and
all
the
things
we
know
and
love
him
for.”
“He’s
funny
and
open-minded,
he
wants
to
hear
what
they
have
to
say,”
Woods
says
of
the
initial
dynamic
between
Mr.
Reed
and
the
two
missionaries.
“There’s
this
feeling
of
two
young
women
that
are
talking
to
an
older
man
who
appears
to
be
very
knowledgeable
about
their
religion
and
all
religions.
So
we
buy
that
they
are
sitting
there
and
engaging
in
this
topic.
And
their
best
play
is
to
politely
listen
to
him
and
then
extricate
themselves
from
the
situation.”
There’s
another
aspect
to
Grant’s
character
that
makes
him
scary,
something
that
will
be
familiar
to
anyone
who
spends
much
time
on
the
internet:
he’s
a
debate
bro.
The
film
is
about
Reed
convincing
Barnes
and
Paxton
of
his
own
beliefs.
Without
spoiling
the
specifics,
he
holds
a
particular
disdain
for
nearly
all
organized
religion.
The
conversation
with
the
missionaries
is
almost
a
game.
He
has
studied
for
a
lifetime
so
that
he
can
anticipate
their
questions
and
defeat
them
with
logic.
Reed
doesn’t
have
much
interest
in
hearing
what
the
sisters
really
have
to
say
—
he
just
wants
to
prove
himself
right,
using
all
of
the
characteristics
that
Grant
embodies
so
well.
“What
scares
us
the
most
is
somebody
that
approaches
something
with
so
much
certainty
that
they’re
unwavering,”
says
Beck.
“The
great
thing
about
discourse
and
debates
is
that
you’re
actively
listening.
Something
about
the
movie
that
we’re
excited
about
is
that
we
can
throw
in
all
of
these
questions
and
conversation
pieces,
and
Reed
can
feel
like
that
guy
on
Reddit.”
Heretic
is
in
theaters
on
November
8th.
(Originally posted by Andrew Webster)
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