Presence may not be your typical horror movie, but that doesn't mean it won't leave you a bit shaken up.
A ghost story seen through the ghost’s perspective? That’s the unusual if compelling premise for Steven Soderbergh’s “Presence,” in theaters this weekend.
Steven Soderbergh’s directorial credits include Erin Brockovich, Traffic, Ocean’s Eleven, and Magic Mike. His latest, Presence, is a supernatural thriller shot entirely in the first-person perspective using a Sony Alpha 9 III mirrorless camera.
Lucy Liu was taken aback by how different 'Presence' filmmaker Steven Soderbergh's approach to directing was compared to Quentin Tarantino on 'Kill Bill'.
The writer Christopher Isherwood put it this way, in his novel “Goodbye to Berlin”: “I am a camera with its shutter open, quite passive, recording, not thinking.” The not-thinking part may not apply,
The actor joins Q’s Tom Power to discuss her starring role in Soderbergh’s new horror thriller, Presence, which tells a haunted house story from the point-of-view of the ghost.
The camera is the ghost in Steven Soderbergh’s chillingly effective, experiential haunted house drama “Presence.”
Also starring Julia Fox, Chris Sullivan, and Callina Liang, Presence originally premiered at Sundance Film Festival last January, where Neon bought the distribution rights in a $5 million deal. Critics described the film as a “slow burn,” despite the film’s brief 85-minute runtime, so settle in.
The actress, who stars in Steven Soderbergh’s “Presence”’ talks about souls, painting and the possibility of a third “Charlie’s Angels.”
"I always operate the camera, but this was next level," the director says. "I’m really in there with the actors."
Director Steven Soderbergh succeeds at innovating and keeping the audience guessing with Presence.Hitting theatres across Canada on Jan. 24, Presence, directed by Soderbergh and written by David Koepp,