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The Religious Inspiration Behind SHUDDER's The Last Thing Mary Saw



Jan 20, 2022

Peter Gray discusses with Vitaletti on the religious origins of the film, if he felt any pressure taking on such a controversial subject, and how as a first-time filmmaker he helmed such an impressive cast.

Following its acquisition by Shudder, Edoardo Vitaletti‘s horror film The Last Thing Mary Saw will commence its streaming season on the genre-centric service from January 20th, 2022.


To coincide with the film’s release (you can read our review here), Peter Gray discussed with the writer/director the religious origins of the film, if he felt any pressure taking on such a controversial subject, and how as a first-time filmmaker he helmed such an impressive cast.


I caught this film last year at the Fantasia Film Festival and, admittedly, what initially drew me to the film was the fact it starred Isabelle Fuhrman.  I love those slow-burning horror films that make you think, more than anything.  When it comes to this film, where did the origins of the story start for you?


It was a combination of a couple of things.  I remember from a visual standpoint when I wrote it a few years ago, I was doing a lot of school and independent research on the history of Northern European art, especially from the 19th century.  One thing I started to notice was that there were a lot of recurring visual threads, things like funeral scenes and stark houses and barren environments.  There’s this Danish painter who paints female subjects alone in these houses and they look very gloomy, but also peaceful and evocative to me.  I wanted to shoot something that evokes that, that has that look and feel.

That’s how I came up with the idea of the two leads being women, and then on a more personal side I grew up in Italy, and it’s quite a homogenous country when it comes to things like religious orientation.  I was always taught as a kid that when you learn Catholicism it’s something that preaches inclusivity.  Then you grow up and you’re faced with the reality of the truth that it promotes this idea of a God and a church that’ll accept you and love you IF…


I wanted to confront myself with a lot of the personalities and people I have met growing up, and how much that impacts talking about identity and talking about relationships and sexuality.  The visual style kind of brewed together in creating a journey of these two characters.


Did you feel pressure taking on the religious side of things?  Were there aspects you didn’t want to confront people with, or did you feel that the point of art is to make people think?


I kind of just went for it.  I got to a stage in my life where religion had taken such a backseat in my life, in how I approached the world.  As much as I was soaked in it, I just went for it because I think it was time.  In a lot of ways I approached it with anger and brewing frustration.  I didn’t feel the need to hold back from that.  There’s always time for a conversation that’s more nuanced than what this film makes it out to be, but it was time for me to have a different conversation, to confront it.  I never thought about holding back…it’s been a long time coming.


In terms of the folklore in the film, did you do any specific research or was it fabricated on your part?


It was hopefully a healthy combination between research and making things up as I went.  I’ve always been fascinated with folklore.  When I was in high school a lot of my studies revolved around Latin and Greek mythology, so I always had an interest in it.  For those who aren’t believers, the bible is a collection of mythologies, essentially, so that made its way into some of the things the (characters) read from the book.  I wanted to observe religion through the lens of folklore.


I think you always start off being hyper-specific in your research, but then you realise research should just be a starting point that you get inspired by and you make up your own stuff.


Is the horror genre always been one you’ve gravitated towards? Where did that relationship start?


I didn’t always gravitate towards it.  I think, in general, darker films like dramas and thrillers through the genre lens has always interested me.  I think horror is something I began to watch more recently in my life.  We’re living in a great time, in terms of horror films.  Movies are being made that choose to approach the genre differently.  I have a lot of respect for the jump scare/slasher-type movies, but then I love the opposite too.  It’s nice to lean into the genre, because it’s finally being appreciated for the umbrella that it always was.


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© 2023 Edoardo Vitaletti. All rights reserved.

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