In celebration of the one-year anniversary of Phasmophobia, developer Kinetic Games has announced that they're releasing a new patch for the game, which includes a long-awaited single-player mode.
The new mode also allows gamers to play completely offline. However, the gameplay remains the same: you still grab your equipment from the van, explore the area you've chosen, and find suspicious activities and clues to determine what kind of supernatural entity is haunting the place, all while trying to not get killed. The game still encourages playing cooperatively with friends, but if you're looking for scares in a solo setting, that option is now available.
There were also a few other things added to the patch, notably an overhaul to Phasmophobia's journal which has now been completely redesigned, making it easier to use and navigate. Kinetic Games also added some new features, allowing players to now cross off evidence on the ghost evidence page, having the pause menu integrated into the journal, and granting access to all settings using the journal while in a game.
A few other minor changes include how much money players now get if they fail a contract, being able to see ghost types if a contract is failed, and the changing of ghost orb positions in the ghost room. Lastly, the anniversary patch included bug fixes, including an exploit where players were able to glitch their heads inside something so the ghost would no longer be able to see them.
Phasmophobia is an investigative horror game. In it, up to four players work together to complete a given contract, where they must identify what type of ghost is haunting a specific site while trying to not get killed by the same entity. The game was released on September 18 and is available for free on Steam. You can check out the patch announcement tweet, which includes a link to the full patch notes, below:
National Geographic has just released a new trailer for its upcoming limited series, The Hot Zone: Anthrax. Based on the real events around the wave of anthrax letters that followed the 9/11 terrorist attacks, the six-part series aims to shed light on the untold layers of the story the eye-grabbing headlines missed.
The trailer introduces Matthew Ryker, played by Lost's Daniel Dae Kim, an FBI agent with a specialty in microbiology who is convinced the United States is vulnerable to a bio-weapon attack. When letters containing anthrax are discovered at Capitol Hill and several news outlets, killing five people, Ryker is tasked with hunting down the killer. His investigation is assisted by Dr. Bruce Ivins, played by Scandal's Tony Goldwyn, a brilliant microbiologist whose growing instability and paranoia eventually make him a prime suspect.
Aiding in the investigation are an array of FBI agents, from seasoned lifers to fresh-faced Quanitco graduates, played by Dawn Olivieri, Ian Colletti, Dylan Baker, and Morgan Kelly. Carlos Gonzalez-Vio and Vanessa Matsui play Irvins' colleagues at the United States Army Medical Research Institute of Infectious Diseases. Also starring are Enrico Colantoni as New York City Mayor Rudy Giuliani, and Harry Hamlin as NBC news anchor Tom Brokaw.
Following up National Geographic's 2019 miniseries The Hot Zone, about the 1976 Ebola outbreak in Zaire, the anthology series continues to be a chillingly timely look into invisible health risks and the brave men and women who protect us from them. Kelly Souders and Brian Peterson return as showrunners and executive producers. Jordan Sheehan, Richard Preston, and Lynda Obst are also executive producing, along with Ridley Scott and David W. Zucker for Scott Free Productions.
The Hot Zone: Anthrax will premiere over three nights on National Geographic, starting November 28. Check out the trailer below:
Here's the official synopsis for The Hot Zone: Anthrax:
With the world still reeling after the attacks on 9/11, America faces a second wave—the anthrax letters. Targeting journalists and politicians, mail with anthrax powder kills five people and causes panic across the United States. Limited series The Hot Zone: Anthrax follows FBI Special Agent Matthew Ryker (Kim) as he tracks down the killer, finding himself ensnared in an unstable web of psychological warfare. Bruce Ivins (Goldwyn) is the brilliant microbiologist who becomes embroiled in the hunt.
Sung Kang has had an interesting journey in the Fast and Furious franchise. He made his Fast debut as Han in 2006’s The Fast and the Furious: Tokyo Drift. Even though he didn’t make it out of that film alive, he did wind up appearing in Fast & Furious, Fast Five and Fast & Furious 6. How exactly did the series get away with that? By restructuring the timeline so that the events of Tokyo Drift happen after Fast & Furious 6. The thing is though, that still meant the fan favorite character died eventually. Or so we thought.
In the Fast & Furious 6 credits scene, it’s revealed that the accident that appeared to kill Han in Tokyo Drift was caused by Jason Statham’s Deckard Shaw, teeing him up as the antagonist of Furious 7. However, then the trailer for F9 came out and revealed Han’s return. How exactly did that happen and, perhaps more importantly, how does the franchise justify the character’s return story-wise? While one is bound to want to see a favorite character live on, it must be done with purpose.
While celebrating the release of the F9 director’s cut, Kang took a moment to walk us through the conversations he had about Han’s return and explain how director Justin Lin was instrumental to it. He began:
“I think if it was another director I’d never worked with before and I didn’t have the history I have with Justin, those conversations would have been very hard. And it might have never happened, right? Because how do you trust a character that is so beloved to someone that didn’t grow up with it or wasn’t there from the foundation? And in many ways, we started our career together, Justin and I. And we started this character together, right? The conversations have always been organic over the years of, ‘What if? What if?’ And, ‘How are we gonna do this?’ Justin being so precious with the Han character, if anyone was gonna take care of it it was gonna be him, right? I tell people Justin is more like Han than I am in real life. I think he knows the character maybe sometimes better than I do.”
Even after playing Han in four feature films, it turns out, the eight-year gap between the release of Fast & Furious 6 and F9 caused Kang to fall out of step with the character a little bit. He explained:
“When I went back to Fast 9, it was many years since I went back into Han’s shoes so my cadence was different in a way. I think I was anticipating too many things, especially forcing things with activities. Even the snacks, right? It became a gimmick because everyone associates a snack with Han where before it was a choice as an actor to make sure that I had an activity where I’m observing. And that’s where developing and growing with a director over the years, you’re able to have that shorthand and so there were times where I felt like I wasn’t really sure where Han was going and even my cadence was a little off, and then we would talk about, why is he here? Who is Han? How is he seeing the world? What are those snacks for? What are those tools for?”
So now for the big question — what about that magic trick? In F9, we see Kurt Russell’s Mr. Nobody watches Han’s car explode before it’s revealed that Han is standing right beside him. Han tells Mr. Nobody, “Pretty nifty magic trick,” but we never find out exactly what that magic trick is. Does Kang himself even know? Here’s what he said:
“I wish I could tell you what that magic trick is, but to be honest with you Perri, I have no idea what that trick is.”
Looking for more F9 conversations? Stay tuned because we’ve got interviews with Jordana Brewster, Vinnie Bennett and JD Pardo coming your way soon!
From writer/director Corinna Faith, the horror thriller The Power is set in London in 1974 and follows a trainee nurse on her first day at the East London Royal Infirmary. With electrical blackouts sweeping across the country, making an already creepy environment even more terrifying, Val (Rose Williams) is stuck working the night shift in a nearly empty building and quickly learns that there’s a lurking malevolent power that will force her to confront her own traumatic past in a way that she could never be prepared for.
During this 1-on-1 interview with Collider, Williams talked about being drawn in by the message of the film, getting into the headspace of someone that is processing trauma, the experience of work in an abandoned psychiatric hospital, exploring the physicality of the character, and her new appreciation for horror. She also talked about returning to the TV series Sanditon, which was picked up for a second and third season after having initially been canceled, and what she’s most enjoyed exploring in Season 2.
Collider: How did this script initially come your way?
ROSE WILLIAMS: The first time I came across a script, it was just the regular process that you have with an agent, where the script comes through. I was really drawn to the project just within the small description that comes through with the audition breakdown. And then, I absolutely loved the script. It was such a specific world that intrigued me, not only for the genre, but for the time period, for the location, set in the east end of London, for its supernatural quality because that’s something I’ve always been interested in and drawn to, and for the meaning behind the film and Corinna Faith’s message, so I was really, really hoping to get the part. I sent a tape first from L.A. When I got the script, I was out in L.A., and then I came back to the UK and I had a really great chat with Corinna about her vision and the story, and abuse, and ghost stories and the origins of ghost stories, horror, and the character of the world that she had created and had been researching. We really creatively clicked and we stayed great friends ever since. I respect her so much, as a filmmaker, a writer, and a woman. It’s been a really, really amazing gift, this project, from shooting to the creative relationship that continues with Corinna. I feel very lucky to have been given the part.
This seems like the kind of script that is equal parts exciting and terrifying. Were there also things that made you nervous about shooting it?
WILLIAMS: Yeah, getting into the headspace of somebody with a spirit and getting into walking in the shoes of somebody that is processing trauma in a very heightened, visceral way, through the metaphor of being possessed was interesting. Especially coming from doing a show like Sanditon, which is wonderful in its own world of Austen and there’s a lightness to that, to then go into a world of darkness, where the world of darkness is there to explore abuse and to walk with this character through experiencing trauma and exploring female rage, I wasn’t necessarily scared. It was more bracing myself for a different kind of creative experience than I’d ever been through and touching on subjects that were more raw than I ever have in a project before. Corinna was incredibly compassionate, empathetic and protective of me and of everyone involved. It was a challenging place to shoot, in an abandoned psychiatric hospital. It’s serious subject matter and a serious place to shoot, but Corinna was protective of everybody in that space.
What did it feel like, the first time you walked onto this set? Is it something where you gradually get more comfortable, or does it always feel a bit unsettling when you’re in a location like that?
WILLIAMS: Personally, I felt, from the beginning, that the space definitely had a different temperature, emotionally and energetically, to other buildings. It definitely had that feel about it, that there was an impression of pain and suffering and a sense of loss. It was abandoned. You could walk through it and the offices still had papers and equipment. When I speak about it, what’s most important to me is having respect for every soul that passed in that space and having respect for every patient that spent time there and person that worked there. I enjoy ghost stories and I enjoy learning about the supernatural, but I take it very seriously because I think and feel for those people that either lost her life or lost themselves psychologically. That’s something that I have an incredible amount of sympathy with. It was about connecting to the space and wanting to have an emotional understanding of the people that were there. My main focus was respect of the building and of the people that came before. It definitely informed my performance and it was definitely felt throughout the crew.
The second part of the shoot, we shot on the other side of the hospital, where the temperature really did drop. You hear this when people talk about one haunted spaces, but the temperature literally dropped and it felt like a degree colder. I definitely felt more of a presence on that side of the hospital, and that was echoed throughout the crew. There was an occasion when the generator broke down while we were shooting on that side, which happens in the story in the film, and then the backup generator also broke down. And then, out came electricians and they said, “We don’t understand like what went wrong here. It doesn’t make sense, as to why these broke.” I do feel as though there was an energy about that, that has an effect on the process, potentially.
Fans didn’t think that they were going to get any more seasons of Sanditon, so it was a happy surprise when it was announced that it was renewed for Season 2 and 3. When and how did you find out that the show would be returning, and were you surprised at all that you’d actually get to return to that role?
WILLIAMS: There had been conversation back and forth, since it got canceled, and hints of it and rumors of it, but I really had thought that it had gone away, so it was a huge surprise. It was a conversation towards the end of last year. I’d seen pieces online that said, “Oh, is it going again?,” but I left it up to the universe, and then it happened. I’m shooting it right now, actually. We’re almost finished shooting Season 2. We have two more weeks. And then, we’ll start on Season 3. I’m very much back in the world of Sanditon, and grateful to be there.
We’ve heard that your character will have two new love interests this season. What can you say to tease those dynamics and how the show will be different when it comes back?
WILLIAMS: I’m not sure how much I can say. I can say that Charlotte comes into her own, in a new way. There will be characters that you know and love, but there are new ones that are definitely introduced. Having the army into Sanditon definitely creates a new environment. I’m working with this lovely actress called Rosie Graham, who plays my sister, so that’s lovely to explore. Jane Austen, herself, had a younger sister called Cassandra, and in my imagination, I wanted to bring that influence of Jane and Cassandra to Charlotte and Alison. It’s nice to explore that sister relationship. Otherwise, you’ll just have to wait and see when it comes out.
One of the things in this film that I was most impressed by, in The Power, was how you really have to contort and twist your body a fair amount, which is not necessarily an easy thing to do or people wouldn’t be so in awe when they watch contortionists. What was it like to figure out how to approach that and how far you could push your body without hurting yourself, during those scenes?
WILLIAMS: That was something that I was actually really excited about and wanted to do. I really wanted to push as far as I could go with that. In the audition, I was like, “Can I show you how I would imagine that?,” and I went for it. I’m quite flexible, naturally. I’ve always loved to dance and I’ve always wanted to use and explore physicality with a role. We took a couple of days with a movement coach with Corinna and myself to really choreograph that sequence like a dance. I’m inspired very much by friends of mine who dance in the style called Flex dancing, or “bone breaking.” It’s amazing, what they do. They’ve gone on tour with Rihanna and Beyoncé, and done a bunch of music videos. I’ve always had such admiration for how they push their bodies and the way in which it is disturbing, but at the same time, it’s beautiful. It’s otherworldly, but also animalistic. So, I wanted to try to bring a bit of that to the possession sequence. For Corinna and I, it was important for that sequence to make sense, story wise. In that main possession sequence, Gail is showing how she was abused. She’s reliving the abuse. And so, we wanted to capture how disturbing and evil, but it wasn’t disturbing movements for the sake of it. It came from imagining this spirit showing Val what it was like to be abused.
You’ve previously talked about being a fan of horror. Is there a type of horror that you find yourself most drawn to?
WILLIAMS: As a teenager, I was interested in horror films, and then I took a hiatus because I didn’t want to get scared anymore. And then, it was Corinna who reintroduced me to horror with a fresh perspective. She sent me an amazing list of references and films that she was really inspired by, including old Jack Clayton movies, Korean and Japanese horror movies, like A Tale of Two Sisters, and [Robert] Altman movies. Three Women was a big influence for this film. Horror that has a moral message behind it really allows the viewer to let their body be scared. It can be weirdly healing to experience fear and terror in a contained environment and to allow the body to feel through it. It’s a specific skill and creative talent to be able to create that amount of suspense and feeling. It’s so specific. Corinna has a real and true understanding of the genre, and she taught me about it and how to see it in a new way. It’s really a thank you to her influence.
The Power is available on VOD, Digital HD and DVD.
Netflix’s Monsters Inside: The 24 Faces of Billy Milligan follows the story of a Billy Miligan, a man charged with sexually assaulting four women on the Ohio State University campus in the late 1970s. Milligan gained wide attention because his lawyers argued that he suffered from multiple personality disorder, and he was subsequently ruled not guilty by reason of insanity.
Olivier Megaton, the director of the four-part docuseries, says he set out not just to tell Milligan’s story, but to honor the victims whose stories were overshadowed by Milligan’s very unusual legal defense.
“I didn’t want to begin the series with his life being a kid,” Megaton, whose credits include Columbiana and Taken 2, told MovieMaker. “I decided to begin with the rapes just to have the audience keeping in mind that he raped, from what we know, four girls in 10 days.”
He added: “I wanted to talk about his social and his trauma condition and so on for sure, but at the very beginning, I just wanted to have everybody thinking, ‘What about the victims?’”
He said that Milligan didn’t seem to regret his crimes, because in Milligan’s mind, he didn’t commit them — one of his alternate personalities did. What was called multiple personality disorder in the late 1970s is now more commonly known as dissociative identity disorder.
Milligan died of cancer in 2014, but appears through extensive interview footage. Doctors treating Milligan concluded that Milligan’s frequent switching between accents and personalities meant that he was not in control at the time of the attacks. He said he had 24 personalities in all. Milligan explains in the Monsters Inside footage that when one of his many alters would come forward, his true self would go to sleep.
After being ruled not guilty, Milligan spent a decade in mental institutions, where he underwent extensive psychiatric treatment designed to fuse all his personalities into one. During this time, author Daniel Keyes wrote a best-selling book called The Minds of Billy Milligan. At one point, James Cameron considered making a movie about him, but the project fell through.
The docuseries explains that Milligan says he suffered severe abuse at the hands of his stepfather, Chalmer Milligan. The doctors who treated Billy Milligan say he formed the alternate personalities to cope.
Chalmer Milligan, who died in 1988, denied that he ever abused his children, though friends of the Milligan children who are interviewed in the docuseries say they witnessed the abuse.
Megaton said the production was only able to find contact information for two of Milligan’s victims, and that neither responded to requests to be interviewed for Monsters Inside.
“The thing is that it’s very hard to try to reach people with that kind of experience 20 or 40 years after,” Megaton said. “I couldn’t imagine saying on the phone, ‘Are you the woman that was raped by Billy Milligan forty years ago?’”
Megaton wanted to make it clear that although Milligan may deserve some sympathy for the abuse he experienced as a child, he is not the victim of this story.
“During the fourth episode, we needed to be… aware about him not being the victim of all this,” Megaton said. “For sure he was a victim, for sure we needed to have empathy about it, but the thing is that he committed a couple of crimes.”
Milligan’s sister, Kathy, was adamant that no mental illness should excuse her brother’s crimes.
“The interesting thing is that his sister, the first time we met, the first thing that she told me was that she was caring about the victims all the time, every day,” Megaton said.
Megaton says he hopes Milligan’s case highlights the effects of child abuse on a person’s mental health.
“The origin of all this is about — what did he live when he was a young boy? And this is the problem,” Megaton said. “He was not the victim of his own personality, he was the victim of his trauma.”