'As Above/So Below': Filmmaker brothers from St. Paul shoot horror pic in Paris catacombs

A new horror pic by the St. Paul-raised brothers was shot underground in Paris. Waaaay underground.

By Kristin Tillotson, Star Tribune

August 30, 2014 at 9:37PM
Perdita Weeks and Ben Feldman in “As Above/So Below.”
Perdita Weeks and Ben Feldman in “As Above/So Below.” (The Minnesota Star Tribune)

If you had to guess which movie director was recently the first to be granted access to the nonpublic areas of the catacombs six stories beneath the streets of Paris, you might say, Luc Besson, Leos Carax or another of France's most prominent names.

Mais non. That honor has gone to John Erick Dowdle and Drew Dowdle, filmmaking brothers raised in St. Paul's Highland Park who have made a name for themselves in Hollywood with smartly scary indie horror films like "Quarantine" and "Devil."

Opening today, their new film "As Above/So Below" follows two young archaeologists (Perdita Weeks in the lead role and Ben Feldman, best known as the troubled Ginsberg on "Mad Men") as they and a claustrophobic cameraman (Edwin Hodge) pursue a fabled philosopher's stone said to be buried deep in the uncharted catacombs.

Along the way they discover secrets that cause them to examine their own personal demons, hence the movie's title.

Getting permission to shoot wasn't easy. "We had to jump through a lot of hoops, but it was more a matter of cutting through bureaucracy than resistance," said John, 41, the directing half of the duo.

That hurdle turned out to be minor compared with what was to come. Shooting hundreds of feet underground in dank pitch-black tunnels with cameras and lights strapped to their foreheads presented their biggest logistical challenges to date.

"We'd be up to our chests in water, with just a little access to air, having to keep everyone in the crew calm," he said. "Ten hours a day down there, you'd start to feel a little loopy. The walkie-talkies and wireless didn't work because the walls were too thick, so every scene it would be the actor, then the sound guy, then us all running through spaces with our head lamps turned off. We'd really take a hit where the ceiling dipped lower. Our camera guy was wearing a head brace by the end."

The psychological effects were also notable, said Drew, 40, the film's producer, who also cowrote the screenplay with his brother.

"On our first location scouts, we went in with the sound system, crawling on our elbows and knees for 50 yards at a time through these holes in the ground," he said. "About four hours in, when we were like a mile deep, one member of the crew had a full-on meltdown. We thought, 'Wow, this space really works. We need to repackage that.' "

Despite the complete saturation of the horror genre, especially with straight-to-streaming options proliferating like maggots on a corpse, the brothers are confident that an original, intriguing horror film is still not impossible to pull off.

"We just try to think of what would get us to go see a movie," John said. "Plus, this one is really an Indiana Jones-type adventure, but with a female lead, that leads into a horror space: something epic in scale, done in a personal, intimate setting, that gets the audience invested in the search."

Their next film, scheduled to be released next spring by the Weinstein Co., marks a higher-profile departure for them. "The Coup" stars Owen Wilson as a father frantically trying to protect his family during a violent takeover in an unsettled Asian country where foreigners are being executed.

"All our films are about some sort of crisis, but this time we're exploring a different dramatic element, a family survival tale," John said.

The brothers, who attended St. Thomas Academy in St. Paul and used to plot out filmmaking scenarios in the bedroom they shared in those days, looked to the Coen brothers as role models. Emulating Joel and Ethan Coen respectively, John enrolled in film school at NYU and Drew went into business, picking up tips on film financing while doing a stint as an investment banker. Their first film, a sex comedy called "The Dry Spell," didn't make any money, but earned a top award at Sundance in 2005. Three years later, their low-budget thriller "Quarantine" rocked the box office, beating Leonardo DiCaprio and Russell Crowe's $100 million "Body of Lies" on opening weekend.

The Dowdles can trace their interest in horror to before they were born.

"Our mom saw 'Psycho' at too young an age," Drew said. "That's the kind of stuff we would congregate as a family to watch, like 'The Shining' and 'The Omen.' And of course 'The Wizard of Oz' was our first favorite. Mom would hide and run out behind us and scream in a perfect Wicked Witch of the West impersonation. As soon as we were old enough, we'd hide in her closet and scare her back."

They haven't grown out of it, apparently. During the "As Above/So Below" shoot, John said, "I'd sneak higher up in the catacombs and grab Drew from above."

"Now we just get paid to do that stuff," Drew said.

Kristin Tillotson • 612-673-7046


ADVANCE TO GO WITH TRAVEL STORY FOR HALLOWEEN ON WORLD S CREEPIEST PLACES, ATTENTION BETH HARPAZ - Human bones pile up in the catacombs of Paris, Friday Aug.14, 2009. (AP Photo/Jacques Brinon)
The Dowdle brothers set their film in the Paris catacombs. (The Minnesota Star Tribune)
Drew and John Erick Dowdle
Drew and John Erick Dowdle (The Minnesota Star Tribune)
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Kristin Tillotson, Star Tribune