
Columbia Pictures’ new horror-thriller Slender Man stars Joey King (The Conjuring), Julia Goldani Telles (The Affair), Jaz Sinclair (Paper Towns), Annalise Basso (Ouija: Origin of Evil), Alex Fitzalan (Season and I Miss You), Taylor Richardson (A Most Violent Year) and Javier Botet (The Conjuring, Insidious 4, IT).
Slender Man is directed by Sylvain White (Stomp the Yard and The Losers) and produced by Bradley J. Fischer, James Vanderbilt, William Sherak, Robyn Meisinger and Sarah Snow. The film is written by David Birke (Elle).

“Here is this tall man in a suit—but take the face away!” marvels producer Sarah Snow. “It’s a figure of authority that’s after you, and that’s something that can be very frightening.”
Slender Man may have these eye-of-the-beholder elements, but he “certainly harkens back to existing concepts of mythology,” adds executive producer Louis Sallerson. “There’s the Pied Piper and other medieval and more modern ideas of something that takes your children away. In some ways I think we’re most horrified by what is essentially an undermining of society. This idea that something can take your children, make them unrecognizable or take them altogether off the grid in a way that you can’t imagine what has happened to them is not just a frightening thing for you, personally, but extrapolated is just as frightening a thing for society at large.”

We don't know his motives. If we see his actions as something terrifying, it is something terrifying. If someone sees it as something safe or something good, that's how she perceives it. I want Slender Man to almost be above those concepts, above the concepts of good and evil, malicious or benign. It seems all terrifying, because it's so unknown to us.”
“I like that ‘viral’ aspect in both ‘going viral’ and in virus,” adds producer Sarah Snow. “You can’t get rid of a typical virus. Once you’ve got it, it’s there forever. There may be some ways of controlling its effect on you. But not with Slender Man—once he’s found you he has you. Well, think about it like this: Slender Man exists within the Internet but until you’ve let him into your life he’s just on the Internet. Once you have made this connection with him, he becomes real. He becomes a part of the real world around you, the shape and the fabric of your life. And whether that’s just a perception or whether it’s physically legitimate, he’s standing in the corner of your bedroom.”
In Philippine cinemas September 26, Slender Man is distributed in the Philippines by Columbia Pictures, local office of Sony Pictures Releasing International.
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