In speaking to the press this week at the Cannes Film Festival (where he received the Golden Coach award), writer, composer, director and master of horror John Carpenter teased his interest in a possible return to the director’s chair, as well as to the horror genre itself.
While speaking with The Hollywood Reporter, the filmmaker, whose impressive body of work includes the genre classics Halloween (1978), The Fog (1980), Escape from New York (1981) and The Thing (1982) among others, stated, “I’m working on some TV stuff and a couple of feature ideas. It’s a different time now, so it takes a long time for them to get set up. You’ll know it when you know it. I don’t know it (yet).”
Expounding to Collider, Carpenter (whose last directorial feature was 2010’s The Ward) observed, “I made a lot of movies and I got burned out, and I had to stop for a while. I have to have a life. Circumstance would have to be correct for me to do it again. I’d love to make a little horror film that would be great or a big adventure film. It would be a project that I like that’s budgeted correctly. Nowadays they make these young directors do a movie for $2 million when the movie is written for $10 million. So you have to squeeze it all in there and I don’t want to do that anymore.”
What kind of flick would you care to see Carpenter helm? Sound off in the comments below.