Joseph Brett is a Dr. Frankenstein of sorts. He reanimates lifeless objects through stop motion animation, a form ideally suited for horror due to its natural ability to live in uncanny valley. By recreating iconic horror scenes in claymation (which he has done for ALTER and DUST), he makes favorite moments feel new again. Whether it be Michael Myers rising behind Laurie, the bees flying out of Candymanโs mouth, or Caseyโs finale with Ghostfaceโฆ the results are a blend of beauty, charm and terror that only the human touch could produce.
To pick the brains behind the clay, I chatted with Joseph about his love for horror, animation and his ideologies around using genre as a vessel for social justice.
I read that you started animating when you were ten years old?
Yeah, my mumโs a teacher and she borrowed a camera from school over the summer. I grew up watching this company Cosgrove Hall; they did The Wind in the Willows animation. I had old videos of a British show called Trap Door. It was really chaotic. Whatโs really cool about stop motion is when youโre looking at it, youโre aware of the physicality. You immediately want to interact, because you know theyโre real. So when youโre watching stuff as a kid, youโre like, โWow, I know thatโs a real model somewhere.โ I throw a lot of animation workshops, and kids just love animating because itโs not abstract, itโs right there in front of you.
And you actively avoided plasticine for a while?
Thereโs an animator called Jan Svankmajer who animates with meat. He did this crazy animation of Alice in Wonderland, just called Alice. I started watching Czech animators and went through a phase of just thinking, whatโs the most awkward thing I can animate? Can I make stuff out of paper? Can I animate books? Just avoiding plasticine. I canโt remember why I went back to it, but I thought itโd be cool to try out some clay again.
How did you get into the horror recreations with clay?
I love horror and there are really iconic shots. The first shot I ever did was from Suspiria. I did it because it was coming up on Halloween and Iโm a big fan of doing stuff without any real intended purpose, because it makes you quite free with your creativity. Itโs the idea of being like, โHow could you do that but with plasticine? How can you do a scene with intense anxiety in a cab with vibrant colors shifting around rain falling down? Could you do that with the stuff I was animating with when I was ten?โ It was fun to play around with it. Then I did a few others, basically.
What makes you decide on which iconic shot to recreate?
Originally it was thinking about what shot scars you and imbeds itself into your mind. Also, what would be fun to see in clay. This was quite nice for the Twin Peaks stuff as well, because thatโs such an iconic series. To see that translated, it reinvigorates the image. Iโm usually like, โMy work is terrible!โ but I really like the shot of Dale Cooper in plasticine because you know that shot so well. Youโre getting to see that shot, but itโs not that shot, so you get this buzz from it.
Which clip was most challenging to make?
Theyโre all difficult in different ways. The other day I animated this shot from It Follows where he jumps through, which is really difficult because youโre trying to animate through the doorway. The shot of Sadako[The Ring] coming out of the TV is really interesting because you have to vaguely recreate a two-dimensional screen transitioning into something three-dimensional, and try to make them joining feel natural. Itโs usually things that are quite natural in the real world that should be simple, like a hand coming out of the water in the Terminator shot. Itโs like cool, you dip it in but when everything is solid, suddenly that becomes really challenging.
I thought about that for the Nightmare on Elm Street clip. Itโs a lot of prep. Can you walk us through how you make one?
I look at the original shot and figure out whatโs interesting. I do things at different scale depending on how much detail there is. How youโre making the model depends on what youโre planning to do with it. I just did one from Jenniferโs Body and sheโs got a hole in the back of her head because the tongue has to come through her mouth. I spent ages lighting it because I really want it to look exactly like the shot, obsessively, and thatโs part of the joy in it for me. How accurate you can get it. Then you get into the right headspace after that to just drone for four to eight hours.
Itโs so much work and then itโs like, cool thatโs two seconds of footage. I have a theory that effort always shows up on screen. Animation is a really good example of that. Thatโs whatโs satisfying when you watch it. You see this absolutely pointless amount of work just condensed down into this tiny little thing. Theyโre like jewels in that way.
Thereโs a huge misconception about how long stop motion takes.
I know, itโs insane! I did a short film for all of lockdown and someone asked โOh, is it like a feature?โ I said, โNo, itโs seven minutes.โ
Do you want to make a stop motion feature?
Iโd love to, but I love doing live-action stuff as well. Iโm really into social commentary and itโs very difficult in some ways to do that when the duration of making it becomes so long. Thereโs limitations to it in that way. Not to trash social animations, it would have to be the right project and know that in ten yearsโ time it will still be something Iโm happy to be putting out.
I was looking at your production company, Jackdaw Films. There are themes of social justice being British East Asian. Can you talk about its conception?
Jackdaw is me and my partner, Bec [Boey]. The first short film we made came out from Bec being frustrated with the casting situation of being an East Asian in the UK. We made this satirical short film about a Chinese takeaway with expectations put upon from the white interviewer, and I play on those dynamics.
In the UK there is a folk horror revival taking form. Thereโs something intrinsically problematic about how weโre reviving a lot of those traditions because they were quite racist. They come from the โ70s, it wasnโt a great time for racial equality and representation. The only black man in a Hammer horror film is playing the devil as an extra. Itโs terrible.
What weโre trying to do with Jackdaw is make horror that is theory-led in ways that represent our desire for social progress that incorporates the genres weโre working with. Utilizing those nostalgias and expectations to incorporate into the message.
That makes me think about your short, Stones.
Thatโs a prime example because itโs exploring home and landscape. The two leads in that are East Asian as an inherent presence, but itโs not about that. Thereโs an intrinsic sabotaging with the folksy good-old-England aesthetic of the stop motion films we all watched when we were kids. I think racism in the UK works in a different way to the states, because people donโt think itโs there. In a weird way, putting non-white people in certain settings becomes quite a revolutionary act in itself. Thatโs what weโve been exploring and what Stones does a little bit.
You have an eclectic portfolio of documentary, live action, music videos and stop motion. Do you feel like these all inform each other?
Definitely. Thereโs a demonization of being a Jack of all trades and master of none, but creativity is a dialogue between different things that you do. Often the best way to make progress in one area is to spend a little time in another. How those disciplines inform each other can breed a lot of development in terms of your work and what youโre able to do.
In one of the Hellraiser shots that Iโve done, I think, โWhat is the background here? Thereโs some blinds, theyโre in a hospital room.โ Whatโs nice about doing these is you really focus on the films, take them apart and put them back together again. Thereโs an intense studying of other peopleโs work. That fascination is what got me into it.
Last question for fun. Whatโs a horror character that you relate to on a spiritual level?
Thereโs this shot at the end of The Hills Have Eyes, the remake, where heโs just murdered a load of people, covered in blood, and heโs got this ax. Heโs just panicking, somehow has just come out of the other side of this absolutely feral clawing at surviving. I think because of some of the work I do, I come out the other side thinking, โIโm still hereโฆโ [laughs]
You can find Josephโs horror recreations on his Instagram and his stop motion horror short, Stones, here. The interview has been edited for clarity and brevity.
Throughout the month of October, ALTER will be releasing thirteen new iconic horror clips from Joseph Brett.