Pancho Moler has had an extraordinary career, from becoming the first ever professional Little Person skateboarder to turning his attention to acting following a devastating back injury, and finally finding a home in horror. The past few years alone have seen Moler make a serious impression in Candy Corn, American Fright Fest, and now, of course, 3 From Hell.
The highly-anticipated follow-up to The Devilâs Reject is Molerâs second collaboration with Rob Zombie after his take-notice role in 31 as a bloodthirsty Nazi. Wicked Horror caught up with Moler as 3 From Hell hit home video to talk working with horror icons, the eternal struggle of being a jobbing actor, how skateboarding prepared him for his current profession, and how welcoming the horror community is to talented newcomers, plus plenty more besides.Â
WICKED HORROR: You kind of show up a bit late in 3 From Hell; itâs not until the Rejects get to Mexico that you become involved in their story. Whatâs your character up to before they roll into town?
PANCHO MOLER: Thatâs a great question. My character, Sebastian, has been through a lot, and he doesnât really have anything. All he really has is his painting, thatâs what he does and thatâs what he loves. Heâs the town muralist; thatâs his passion. We shot a lot of it in Scottsdale, so thatâs where I was predominantly based. Sebastian is an assistant to the local hotel manager, who kind of treats him like crap, but he takes it. So he takes a liking, or he becomes fascinated by, and kind of builds up this brotherly relationship, with Sheriâs character in that heâs going to do anything to protect her. The best way of describing Sebastian is someone who would sacrifice his life for others.
Related: Horror Icon Bill Moseley Talks 3 From Hell [Interview]
WH: He forms this bond with Sheriâs character, as you say. Can you empathize with that? For horror fans, these guys arenât really villains, but I suppose thatâs kind of true for your character too?
PANCHO MOLER: I mean, he doesnât really know too much about her, but heâs never really been accepted and the one time he puts himself out there, he builds a bond with her even in this short time they spend together. Itâs really beautiful. And, for me, it was a great opportunity to show some range as an actor as well as getting to play around with Sheri, because she describes me as someone that she really loved and someone thatâs gone but someone she has beautiful memories of. Itâs fun to work with people who are willing to be that vulnerable. Doing a character so different from my character in Robâs other movie [31], Sick-Head, whoâs just this psychopathic killer, was good too. It was good to play someone more grounded.
WH: Was that what attracted you to the project, working with him again?
PANCHO MOLER: Rob is the dude who discovered me, not as an actor, but who trusted me to join this world. I was actually the only one who auditioned or 31 because everybody else heâd already worked with before, so he liked my work and he wrote me an email about a year and a half ago saying itâs movie time again, Iâve written this part for you in the sequel to Devilâs Rejects, Iâm not sure whether youâre familiar with it. And, I mean, Devilâs Rejects is one of my favorite movies, so there was that, and then he told me Sebastian is the complete opposite of Sick-Head, heâs a humble soul, heâll do anything for anybody, heâs just the heart of the whole movie. How can I say no to that? Rob brought me into this horror world, the convention world, the cult of Rob Zombie kind of world, that I never even knew existed and never got into before, and now I have this huge fan-base of people who are so loyal and love horror and love Robâs work and itâs just a surreal, humbling feeling. Iâm really happy and proud to be a part of Robâs movies and to get to work with such an amazing director.  Â
WH: Was there any pressure, knowing heâd written this role for you? Were you anxious about it in any way?
PANCHO MOLER: I donât really get nervous anymore, particularly with these characters he writes for you, even though itâs challenging and youâve really gotta do your homework and your research and be willing to be vulnerable and emotionally there. It wasnât any pressure, it was more excitement and just happiness that heâd accepted me into the Rob Zombie family, because itâs work, you know? Work begets work. And I get to stick around and be part of this horror world, so Iâm just so happy. No pressure at all.
WH: He definitely has a talent for bringing actors out of the background, putting them front and center, and really showing off what they can do.
PANCHO MOLER: Absolutely. Itâs a really amazing feeling to work with a director like Rob because certain directors just direct you the whole time, but Rob will stop you and tell you, this is your moment, take your time, you own this. As an actor, it doesnât happen that much, so itâs a great feeling to do what you do, what you trained to do, what youâre ready to do, and feel so supported. Itâs great.
WH: How was the shoot itself? âCause youâre involved in the, shall we say, more fun part, the back end after theyâve broken out of prison and everything else.
PANCHO MOLER: The Devilâs Rejects is one of my favorite movies of all time, so to be a part of that sequel, to work with people like Bill Moseley, who Iâve looked up to for ages, since Rejects and House of 1000 Corpses was incredible. That was the first scene I was thrown into, with him. You know, we havenât even met each other yet, and I run into the room to tell him the Black Satans are coming and I have to be so crazy, Iâm wearing my wig and my beard and my eye-patch, and we havenât even met! I think that Bill thought he was being punked or something because I run into the room and Iâm telling him this and heâs just like âWhat the f**k!?â Rob had to tell him, Bill, this is Pancho, Pancho, this is Bill, and you guys are working together, and thatâs how it happened, thatâs how we met for the first time. It was really funny because heâs sitting there with a gun in his tighty-whities and there are these naked girls in the room, too. It was just the craziest thing ever [laughs].

WH: Was there any aspect of the shoot that you found challenging?
PANCHO MOLER: Itâs always a challenge. I feel like the challenge for me was just going from being so grounded and chill in those moments with Sheri to being in a panic, and having to be so scared, truthfully and believably. That transition can be challenging.
WH: Youâve had quite a big couple of years, between this, Candy Corn, and American Fright Fest. Do you feel like youâve found a home in horror? Is that where the good roles are, do you think?
PANCHO MOLER: Thatâs a great question. I feel like being an actor and a Little Person, itâs always a challenge, Iâve always had good teachers and good people, Iâm a lifetime member of the Actors Studio, which isnât something you can pay your way into, you have to earn it, so I take what I get and I make the best out of it. Horror has been very kind to me. I donât want to pigeonhole myself and say thatâs where the only roles are for me, but Iâll take it because itâs fun and I just want to work, I just want to act, and play around because I love acting and I donât see myself doing anything else.
WH: I know you said you love Rejects, but are you a horror fan in general or have you sort of become one by working in the genre so much?
PANCHO MOLER: Iâve definitely become more of a horror fan, but Iâve always watched horror movies, some of my all-time favorite movies are The Exorcist, Cujo, and The Shining, Iâve always been a Stephen King fan, so I definitely feel like Iâve always been a horror fan but now itâs 100 percent more.
WH: Itâs definitely an exciting time to be a horror fan. Thereâs more choice than ever before.
PANCHO MOLER: Thatâs definitely true and I feel like, working in this genre, I see myself watching movies like Halloween again just to see how itâs shot and the pacing of it, how the actors work together, because you research and you see where the scary moments are, what works, what doesnât and itâs cool to see the growth from where it was then to where it is now. I think certain movies can be remade and made better and others just have to stay the way they are because theyâre already great.Â
WH: You were a pro-skateboarder before; do you think thereâs any correlation between that an acting? Anything connecting the two disciplines?
PANCHO MOLER: I feel like when I used to skateboard professionally and just skate, it was something I was going to do whether I was getting paid or not because it was my first passion, and I loved it. Then when Iâd be practicing a trick, and weâd film it, when the camera went on you werenât even getting close to making the trick anymore because it was this weird pressure. And it was the strangest feeling because youâre just skating, youâre not trying to impress anyone or be emotionally vulnerable, youâre just trying to land a trick, but when the camera was on after a while you started forgetting it was there and just ignoring it. So I think that definitely helped me in becoming an actor, because when youâre filming youâve just gotta ignore the camera and be in the moment. Skateboarding definitely helped me conquer that. Thank you, skateboarding [laughs].

WH: Is there another world youâd like to conquer, after skateboarding and acting. Would you maybe want to move behind the camera at some stage?
PANCHO MOLER: I definitely would. I work on things with my wife, sheâs an actress as well, a great actress. Itâs funny because you always want to work with someone whoâs great but we just barely started working together and weâve been married for five years now, together for nine, and only started filming our own content six months ago. It was one of those breakthrough moments where you just realize one of the greatest actresses in the world has been right next to me this whole time and I never noticed it so I definitely see us making content together and working behind the scenes more in the future. Itâs funny, because editing your own stuff makes you realize itâs way easier than I thought it would be. Thatâs exciting too, to move behind the camera. We make a lot of comedy together. I love comedy, but unfortunately I havenât really been seen in that way, but fortunately I have been seen as a horror actor as of now and Iâm proud of it.
WH: Horror can incorporate comedy too, often in really wonderful ways, so that could happen for you down the line.
PANCHO MOLER: Thatâs true, [American] Fright Fest was somewhat comedic, my role in that was quite comedic, but yeah youâre definitely right horror-comedy can be really fun.
WH: All is not lost.
PANCHO MOLER: Right! Â
See Also: Actor Emilio Rivera Talks 3 From Hell [Interview]
WH: What have you got coming up, after 3 From Hell?
PANCHO MOLER: Right now, Iâm working on a movie called Ben Makes a Film, with the writer of Bird Box, Iâm flying to Detroit actually in a couple hours. So weâll see where that goes. Iâve also got a couple pilots on the shelf that are comedies, but some of those things you have to wait around and see what happens, you know? Iâm also just kind of letting these movies that just came out breathe a little bit, because I feel like movie after movie after movie can just catapult you to the next level and hopefully catch the attention of some other amazing directors.
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