
(Watch the film’s trailer at https://youtu.be/JLzLdMLVAvs.)
When a massive hurricane hits her Florida hometown, Haley (Kaya Scodelario of The Maze Runner franchise) ignores evacuation orders to search for her missing father (Barry Pepper of Maze Runner: The Scorch Trials). Finding him gravely injured in the crawl space of their family home, the two become trapped by quickly encroaching floodwaters. As time runs out to escape the strengthening storm, Haley and her father discover that the rising water level is the least of their fears.
Director Alexander Aja talks about Crawl and the horror genre in the following interview.
Question: What’s it about Crawl that drew you to take it as your next project?

Before I read the script I was almost like fantasizing what I would love to see. Something that came to my mind right away between the logline was the idea for a home-invasion movie. Something where you have the disaster, you have no food, you have the water coming inside your house, and with the water comes the alligators. And I saw that the domestic setting was a very interesting take on the genre. That’s what we just loved on the script.
Q: The father-daughter duo Barry Pepper and Kaya Scodelario, have really good chemistry. Tell us about how their casting came about.

Q: How about Barry Pepper?
Aja: I was picturing first, a dad that would be slightly older. But then I thought it would very interesting if they were closer in age. In fact, Barry has a daughter that’s the same age as Kaya’s character. It was interesting the way they were interacting on set, because Barry first became almost the character. They worked together on The Maze Runner sometime before and really began like that father figure and she was really here to save him.
Q: You made some of the most influential horror films of the early 2000s, what do you think is different about making horror movies now after your experience with Crawl?
Aja: You know, it’s interesting because when we started making movies, we all came from the same place of being very frustrated with the 90s and wanted to kind of bring back that spirit from the 70s early 80s that was a visceral type of cinema, that was really scary and brutal. And then years after, we thought it would stop, but then it keeps going and people were more and more into it.

In Philippine cinemas August 7, Crawl is distributed in the Philippines by United International Pictures through Columbia Pictures. Follow us on Facebook at https://www.facebook.com/uipmoviesph/ ; Twitter at https://twitter.com/uipmoviesph and Instagram at https://www.instagram.com/uipmoviesph/. Use the hashtag #CrawlMoviePH
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