Presence' writer David Koepp on the devastating reveal of who is the ghost in the house, working with Steven Soderbergh and ...
Steven Soderbergh’s “Presence” requires some initial audience disorientation. Mistake? If so, why do we miss David Lynch so ...
In 1989, both Steven Soderbergh and "Presence" screenwriter David Koepp had movies at the Sundance Film Festival. While the ...
Credit: NEON Koepp expanded on this: "In the last 10 to 15 years, horror has really been prominent and changed. Gore and jump ...
Over Zoom I spoke to Koepp about writing within the confines of the film’s single point-of-view, the value of what’s left out ...
Koepp's writing is thorny and cuts deceptively deep, like a scrape that looks like a surface wound until it won’t stop ...
The writer teams with Steven Soderbergh on this haunting story with a twist: The entire film is shot from the point-of-view ...
The actor admits that Soderbergh's unusual way of capturing the film — told from a ghost's point of view — was a challenge to ...
The Presence then looks below to see their motionless bodies splayed in the driveway. “I don’t know where that guy came from or why. I know it’s really sick,” screenwriter David Koepp says ...
In 1989, both Steven Soderbergh and “Presence” screenwriter David Koepp had movies at the Sundance Film Festival. While the two didn’t meet that year — Koepp was not in attendance for his ...
as with David Fincher’s home invasion thriller “Panic Room” or Soderbergh’s own tech-skeptic “Kimi,” released three years ago. But “Presence” put Koepp in a darker place than usual.