SXSWorld
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SXSW.COM | M A R C H 1 4 , 2 0 1 9 | SXS W O R L D 2 5 In addition to casting Clarke as Louis and Amy Seimetz as his wife Rachel, the filmmakers cast veteran crowd- pleaser John Lithgow as the Creed's neighbor Jud Crandall, who introduces the family to the infamous cemetery. "John was our first choice for the role," Kölsch says. "He's amazing. He really is the only actor we had in mind when we were thinking of somebody that could really pull off the duality of Jud — this guy that's the kindly, nice neighbor who also has this dark secret because of his knowledge of this place." Arguably the most important char- acter in King's novel is the pet cemetery itself, a chilling memorial made up of deadfall and handmade gravestones. Crafting the loca- tion was a challenge, and not least because of the geographic peculiari- ties of the place as King describes it. "You'd think it would be easy to find a house by a dangerous road," Widmyer sighs. But add in the acres of wooded area behind the Creed's home and "it's like creating an almost impos- sible algorithm for yourself." In Saint-Lazare, a small off-island suburb of Montreal, the directors found their cemetery (or sematary). "We basically spent the whole after- noon letting [the homeowner] take us on a hike through the woods. And lo and behold, 15 minutes into the woods at the main trail, there was a big, open clearing," Widmyer remembers. "So literally if you drove to set, you could walk up to the house, walk into the backyard, go down the trail into the woods, and actually come upon the pet cemetery that [production designer Todd Cherniawsky] had built. Just having all that geography was great." Fans of the book should take a close look at the gravestones sprinkled amid the site. "You'll see all the names of the pets from the book," Widmyer says, but he, Kölsch, and Cherniawsky added a more personal touch as well. "Something really cool that we did was they asked for the names of all the deceased pets of all the crew, and everybody gave the names of their pets. And then they actually peppered that all throughout the grave markers … it's a nice little love letter to our animals." Of course, there's one pet in par- ticular glaring out at you from the book cover and movie poster for Pet Sematary — the Creed family cat, Winston Churchill. Though the tradi- tional sentiment is "never work with animals," avowed cat lovers Kölsch and Widmyer had no problem with the Churchill scenes. "Lots of Fancy Feast," Kölsch laughs. With Pet Sematary headlining as SXSW's Closing Night Film, the directors smile at the symmetry of their return to the festival. "It means a lot to us," Kölsch says. "Starry Eyes premiered at SXSW, and it was from that screening that we got reps. Our reps are the ones who vigorously put in these rounds of meetings, and that eventually got us Pet Sematary." "Yeah, not to mention we love Austin," Widmyer added. "All roads lead back to SXSW." Pet Sematary will world premiere as SXSW's Closing Night Film at the Paramount Theatre (713 Congress Ave.) on Saturday, March 16 at 8pm. See schedule.sxsw.com or SXSW GO for more details. "You can't ignore the first film, but we really tried to put it out of our heads there for a while and just went back and read the book a number of times ..." (L–R) Kölsch, John Lithgow, and Widmyer on the set. Photo by Kerry Hayes / 2019 Paramount Pictures