Nobody expected Scare Package to be as much of a hit as it was â not least co-creator Aaron B. Koontz who, alongside collaborator Cameron Burns, re-energized the horror anthology in a time when many of us were wondering whether it was dead for good. Koontz and Burnsâs lively, frequently laugh-out-loud collection of shorts, most of which were presented by up-and-coming filmmakers rather than established names, and shepherded by Joe Bob Briggs wannabe Rad Chad (Jeremy King) was a massive success for streaming service Shudder and a sequel seemed inevitable. And now, Scare Package II: Rad Chadâs Revenge has been unleashed upon the world.
Wicked Horror sat down with Koontz to discuss horror sequels, the incomparable star power of returning lead King â so powerful, in fact, that Chad dying in the previous movie didnât stop him coming back â why the Saw franchise was so ripe for lampooning, and lots more. Mild spoilers to follow for both movies.
See Also: Scare Package II: Rad Chadâs Revenge is a Riotously Funny Take on Horror Sequels [Review]
WICKED HORROR: You have the Rad Chad puppet!
AARON B. KOONTZ: I do! That was one of the ones I kept myself, because it was an expensive prop to have made. We had Tate Steinsiek, who made the puppets for the Puppet Master movie, the new one [The Littlest Reich], so I was like I need somebody who can make this little animatronic thing. And then I ended up voicing the puppet, so we kind of forged a little connection, and so I keep him and then he creeps me out because in the middle of the night I forget heâs there and then I see this thing sitting on a windowsill and he gets in your dreams and itâs not good but anyway [laughs].
WICKED HORROR: Your narration is so deadpan and soft, and not really creepy at all. It just cracked me up so much.
AARON B. KOONTZ: Yeah, itâs very odd, itâs just like âokay, moving onâ [laughs].
WICKED HORROR: So, I guess the first thing I really want to ask â puppet aside â is how did this movie come about? The last time we talked, you were telling me how frustrated you were making your first movie and how you just wanted to do something fun with your friends. Did you feel like there was more story to tell, or was it because of the demand? How did Scare Package II: Rad Chadâs Revenge happen?
AARON B. KOONTZ: I definitely did not think this was gonna happen. This was really⊠Like you said, I just had this idea to do something with my friends, and then all of a sudden, wait, people beyond this little circle of friends that I have are laughing at these jokes!? And other people think this is a fun world to play in? So, we just had to continue. We just had so much fun doing it, that we were like oh my god thereâs gotta be something, so we definitely had an appetite for it. But we didnât think that the rest of the world was going to notice, and then they did! People did all the fan art, people got tattoos, they dressed up as Rad Chad for Halloween, all this crazy stuff happened, and it just was so special. But then I was like oh no, but we killed some of my favorite people in this [laughs]. So, like, what do you do, you know? I had to find the right way of bringing them back and the right angle for that, too, but thankfully when youâre making a movie about tropes, there are no bigger horror tropes than in the horror sequel, where there really are no rules, anything can happen â Jamie Lee Curtis can cut off Michael Myersâs head in H2O and he can show up in the next movie â and, at the time, the new Saw movie was coming out, Spiral, so I was watching all those movies. Cary Elwes shows up at one point and youâre like what the hell is going on here. Theyâre so absurd, and Iâm literally trying to write down like, okay, so this is this, but then how â just trying to understand the cannon of it, I got so into it, and I was like wait a second, this is it. This is what the movieâs about. Going into the absurdity of horror sequels, thatâs what this should be. So, then we kind of had our hook and Shudder was onboard right after the release, like I would say a week after, they were like âthe numbers are fantasticâ and I was just like âwhat?â and then the Joe Bob [Briggs] thing was huge, and all this, so I was just like okay, and we were off and running.
WICKED HORROR: On that note, do you see this becoming a franchise and just getting more and more convoluted along the way?
AARON B KOONTZ: Convoluted is such a nice way of putting it, right? âCause itâs just like convoluted on acid, like spit in the blender⊠Yes, I will say that Cameron [Burns], who created this with me, and I have a Google Doc spreadsheet that has about twenty Scare Package movies â just the names of all the Scare Package movies is fun enough to play with. This was originally called 2 Scared, 2 Packaged, and then Craig [Engler], who unfortunately is no longer there, was like âno,â so we had to go with something else.
WICKED HORROR: Aw! That wouldâve been amazing!
AARON B. KOONTZ: Right?! But yeah, we definitely have ideas, and now weâre just keeping our fingers crossed that people still like it and if they do and thereâs still an appetite, we definitely⊠In particular, I have a âRad Chad trilogy ideaâ thatâs really important to me. But beyond that, we have so many absurd ideas.
WICKED HORROR: Since you mentioned Rad Chad, we have to talk about Jeremy King, because I just think heâs such a star. Were you always intending to bring him back for the sequel, or did you ever consider letting Bo Buckley lead the charge? And also, what the hell is that character? âCause as soon as he popped up, I was like âI love thisâ but also âwhat is going on?â
AARON B. KOONTZ: Oh my god, Iâm glad you do, because itâs so⊠I have to kill Jeremy King in every movie I make, so I had to bring back some form of a Buckley â even in The Pale Door, thereâs Bill Buckley, in Camera Obscura thereâs Tad Buckley â thereâs this whole Buckley Universe that I wanna do, and itâs just this challenging little rule that I have, so that was always gonna happen. But also, I knew that Rad Chad was so integral to what Scare Package was all about, and he just had this really optimistic view of horror, and the way he was looking for friends and all this, and thatâs when it became fun to play around with, like what happens when that becomes desperation and people are making fun of horror and talking about toxic fandom â I have actual commentary within this completely stupid movie! [laughs] Anyway, I kind of envisioned him appearing posthumously either way, either just on the video screen just kind of talking, he would have left tapes of what he had done, it just felt very Rad Chad to me, so I knew that was going to be in there. Now, the level at which that became a thing kind of grew as we were moving along and figuring that out. But Bo was just because I had to bring another Buckley in, âcause I gotta kill one. And then, all of these characters have to feel unique and do something specific, so I was thinking what can we have Bo do? He canât be boring, it has to be something weird, and I was looking up the oddest jobs that people still have that youâd be surprised they still have, and I came across a chimney sweep and was like what? Thatâs still a thing? Even when Kelli Maroney was like âthatâs still a thing?â that was me, researching, and being like âthatâs still a thing?â Then it was Alex Euting, my editor, who was like âGive him a cockney accentâ and initially I was like âwhat? Why!?â but then I thought âwait a second, youâre right.â Because I thought that was absurd meant we had to do it. And Jeremy was so dedicated, that guy researched so much stupid stuff. We had to do a huge number of takes though, âcause Jeremy kept losing the accent [laughs]. Totally absurd, so yeah, a very, very silly character.
WICKED HORROR: I think the fact the accent is so bad just makes it funnier. Like, I put in my review âpurposely(?) bad accentâ âcause I assumed it was part of the joke but wasnât quite sure.
AARON B. KOONTZ: Itâs so bad. We world premiered at Frightfest, too, in London and then I realized, like, âoh no.â
WICKED HORROR: The Brits! You know they have zero sense of humor about it, too.
AARON B. KOONTZ: I was like great, this is going to go over just wonderfully, our world premiere, Iâm already nervous enough. But, yeah, we definitely leaned into the things that he got wrong, because so much of Scare Package is literally like â and it happens on set too â if itâs making me laugh, just point the camera there and do more of it, you know? Just keep going. We kind of create a schedule that allows some freedom to do that, and to improvise, because you get a bunch of funny people in a room together and it just becomes something. There are entire set-pieces in this that were just a line to me that was funny, like one in particular was, I wrote down when I was in Jigsaw writing style day â I had a day where I was just writing parody dialogue while watching the Saw movies â and then this one line came to me: âYou call horror a B-movie, well the real horror is the 10,000 bees I just put inside of you.â And I had no idea what that was going to be, we werenât trying to make a Wicker Man thing, I just thought that line was so stupid and funny so when the time came, we just leaned into it and wrote an entire piece around it because I couldnât get that line out of my head. And thatâs how things like this start.
WICKED HORROR: And thatâs what makes it so special, really.
AARON B. KOONTZ: Yeah, âcause even Cameron was like âWait, what? Weâre going to put bees inside of people? This is insane, it doesnât make any senseâ and that, to me, means we have to do it.
WICKED HORROR: But even the Saw wraparound itself, itâs so dumb and doesnât make any sense but itâs also perfect for this movie. I know you said you were on a real Saw kick at the time, but did you ever consider using another movie franchise instead? Or did you just know immediately this one would be perfectly stupid?
AARON B. KOONTZ: Because the Saw movies are â no offense to the people who made them â stupid and nonsensical, like thereâs a moment when Dwightâs character, Graham Skipper, asks everyone else âDo you know whatâs going on?â And that was me, watching Saw 7 you know? Just going like, what is happening? So that was immediately very funny to me. I will say, though, the other one that I did think about was more of a Ring style thing, because there are tapes and someone coming out of the TV, and I was thinking there might be something fun in there that we could play with it, but that just didnât really land because, number one, writing Jigsawâs silly dialogue was so much fun and then, two, you get to create these escape room type things, which I was really into escape rooms and I was also in lockdown at the time, writing this, and figuring shit out. But, most importantly, to me, was that I now get to come up with the dumbest Saw traps of all time, and that became⊠I just felt like this is great, this is so much fun.
WICKED HORROR: What about the filmmakers you collaborated with on this, was it a case of reaching out to people or were you just inundated with requests after the first Scare Package?
AARON B. KOONTZ: We definitely had a number of people who were reaching out, and we were talking a lot, but each of these were folks that I went and talked to. I will say, Jed [Shepherd], in particular, who did âSpecial Edition,â he did petition. He was helping me contact another person and then their schedule fell through, and I was like I have to find somebody else now, and then Jed was like âIâm right here, can we please talk about this?â And then he started petitioning me, like, âIâm Filipino, Iâve got the Host girls, Iâve got all this,â so eventually I just gave in, and it was great. And as for the others, like, Alex Barreto, who did âWelcome to the â90s,â sheâd made a short that I loved called âLady Haterâ and she was also a good friend of my producing partner, Ashleigh Snead, and she was a horror fan, so that worked. And then, I had this desire, I really wanted to make a sequel to a segment because Iâd never seen that done before and if Iâve never seen it before, I wanna do it, and Anthony Cousins was already living in the sequel world âcause he made a sequel in the first one. So, it just became this story that felt like it needed to continue, so that one just kind of naturally fit in. And then Rachele Wiggins, who did âWeâre So Dead,â which Cameron and I wrote, I met her at the world premiere of Scare Package, oddly enough, in Sitges, where we almost got arrested together because Jeremy King â Rad Chad â was driving the wrong way down a one-way road in Spain, got us pulled over, and they thought he was drunk even though he wasnât.
WICKED HORROR: Well, to be fair, itâs Jeremy King, so itâs kind of hard to tell [laughs].
AARON B. KOONTZ: You canât take the Rad Chad out of Jeremy, you know? Iâve known him for so long, I wrote these characters for him, knowing that. I can also speak in such a Rad Chad way now that it just becomes⊠Itâs almost annoying when he and I get together, and heâs in character, and we can riff back and forth, itâs a weird thing. But yeah, all these filmmakers are just wonderful. One of the best things about this is that I love producing, Iâve produced a lot of movies, and I love working with different directors and seeing their craft and helping them develop their story. And Scare Package is just the best of all those worlds. I get to direct something thatâs my baby, that Iâm writing and producing, and kind of overseeing these other segments, and working with these other super-talented directors and just putting this all together, thatâs Scare Package, you know?
WICKED HORROR: Totally. You mentioned âWeâre So Dead,â which I think is probably my favorite short this time around, I laughed pretty much the whole way through. How did you guys get involved with that one? And did you want to do more, or were you content to just sit back and help everyone else to flourish?
AARON B. KOONTZ: We were, basically, again during the pandemic I just couldnât go anywhere so at one point Cameron and I had written a couple features and I was like âI wanna write Scare Package stuff.â We didnât know exactly what we were doing, but we had written the main wraparound idea, so we just started writing segments. And we actually wrote three different segments just in case, because of everything going on at the time. But honestly, I didnât want to direct any more of them, my vanity had already reached such a level â I directed too much of this movie anyway [laughs]. I was like, I gotta settle down, âcause itâs just fun and I love staying in this world. The idea there really came out of this trope of kids in these adult movies where the adults have no clue whatâs going on, and the kids are just doing the most absurd shit, and that just made me laugh. I re-watched The Goonies in particular, and the kids are just saying âshitâ the whole time, theyâre running around doing whatever they want, and it just made me happy and I just wanted to have a bunch of kids standing around cursing and doing shit they shouldnât be doing, and I gradually leaned into the Pet Sematary and Stand By Me of it all, and it just became â Stand By Me became a linchpin, in particular, because that was such a fun narrative device on how to write this. Iâm really proud of it, and the ending came at the very end, it was the last thing we did. Weâd written the segment and I was like we need a punch, we need a bigger hit, at the end and then I was like oh my god, the cat and The Fly, and that just made me laugh. Of course, then Iâm editing it all and my fellow producers are like âAaron, youâre a producer, you understand we now have to make this thing at the end of this, and this is not an easy thing to do.â And Iâm like âyeah, but that means we have to do it.â âCause Iâm ridiculously ambitious with these little films. But thatâs also my favorite gag, when he shows up at the end. That kid too is so funny. He actually has my favorite line delivery, when the other kid with the glasses asks, âwas climbing Mount Everest a bad idea?â and he says, âfor some people?â Just the way he says that kills me. I think Rachele did such a great job directing that and it has such wonderful performances. And it wasnât written to be an Australian thing, Cameron and I just wrote that for us, which is why there are Sunny Delight jokes â thereâs no Sunny Delight in Australia but thatâs a commercial that I remembered as a kid, and I was like we have to keep that in. But then I let her Aussie it up a bit and have some fun with it. And Rachele and Helen [Tuck], her producing partner, just did a wonderful job.
WICKED HORROR: There was no child actor obnoxiousness about them either, which I always appreciate. You know, when they just seem like real kids and theyâre not performing for the camera?
AARON B. KOONTZ: Yeah, I mean, again thatâs credit to Rachele because she was able to get kids who knew each other. Theyâd all worked on commercials together, itâs a really small community of actors there, so for the bigger child actors theyâre always auditioning for things together, so for them to all be working on the same thing was really, really special for them. They already had this sense of camaraderie, and that shows even in that little segment, the inter-connectivity between them really shone through on the screen. And again, credit to Rachele for putting them together because we were going through the videos â and it was one of the easiest casting processes, even though I was so worried about it â and I was just like âThat one, that one, that one, that oneâ and Rachele was like âYup, my top ones as well. Perfect, letâs go.â
WICKED HORROR: Before I let you go; I have to ask you â thereâs CGI in this movie. There was none in Scare Package, it was all so wonderfully practical, and I feel like it must be a deliberate choice because of the time period in horror that youâre making fun of in this movie?
AARON B. KOONTZ: Yes, there are specific things â youâre good, youâre good, you get it! â in late nineties and early 2000s horror, there was this interesting mix of â I think of Ghost Ship is one in particular that does this â but there were these movies that it was all practical and then there was this one kind of janky effect, but mixed with a practical element, and I was just like âno, leave it because this feels like a 1998 horror movie right now,â you know? And thatâs what I wanted. Kelli Maroneyâs death, for instance, which we do CGI and then we do practical, and I remember we were doing it and it was like oh no, they didnât fall the right way, and I was like no, no, no, they did, that one fell in an eighties style way and this is kind of like a nineties style way, and thatâs funny to me. Itâs hard for people to understand what Iâm trying to do, but everything is kind of a reference, and we definitely put a lot of time into little things like this. Even certain performances at certain times that go a little heightened, and different things, itâs all deliberate, and I think a lot of people donât get that, and thatâs okay, I donât blame someone not understanding why certain performances are a little crazy or certain effects are a little shoddy â thatâs supposed to be the charm of it. Itâs very deliberate, but thatâs okay, I mean, itâs not for everyone. Itâs really for⊠folks like yourself that get it and understand what this era of horror was about. From the first Scare Package to the second one, itâs been a transition now.
WICKED HORROR: I think it was the chains that tipped me off. I was just thinking why would you CG chains, it seems needlessly complicated for a relatively simple, small moment. But then once you realize itâs supposed to look dodgy, it just makes it even funnier.
AARON B. KOONTZ: Well, itâs funny âcause if you watch the later Hellraiser sequels, thatâs exactly what they look like. Theyâre not always using real stuff, especially in the third and fourth movie, thatâs just what they do, and I was like well thatâs what we need to do. And we used real chains in other places, but thereâll be these moments where itâs just like âwhat?â We even have blood dripping on one of the chains at one point, which doesnât even make sense, because itâs coming from a direction where there wouldnât be blood dripping down, but it just makes me laugh. Little things like that.
WICKED HORROR: There are tons of great practical gags throughout anyway, so I feel like even if someone is getting annoyed by the CG and doesnât understand why itâs there and why it looks the way it does, thereâs enough other stuff that it shouldnât really matter. But for hardcore horror fans, Iâm sure itâll really tickle them.
AARON B. KOONTZ: Yeah, it is subtle, and it is still, like, 95% practical effects. And we do go full bore into all of them, like Dwight is in a bloody skin suit the entire time, thereâs no CGI on him whatsoever, the cat kid is zero CGI, a lot of these things are just as is. Thatâs the beauty of Scare Package, you never know what youâre gonna get.
Catch Scare Package II: Rad Chadâs Revenge streaming exclusively on Shudder now
** Interview has been edited and condensed for clarity.