Abigail co-writer wowed by Alisha Weir's vampire act

Alan Corr Alan Corr | 04-20 00:15

Abigal co-writer Stephen Shields has described Alisha Weir as "beyond amazing" in her role as a teenage ballerina vampire in the new horror comedy.

The film sees the 14-year-old actress, who rose to fame in the lead role of Matilda the Musical, play the titular young girl who is kidnapped by a bungling gang and taken to a spooky mansion until her crime boss dad coughs up the $50 million ransom.

Alisha Weir really goes for the jugular in Abigail

However, they get far more than they bargained for when the novice ballerina bares her teeth and some killer dance moves.

Review: Fangs a million. Alisha Weir bites into horror with Abigail

"The movie came from a really, really dark part of my imagination," he added. "I wanted to see a really good vampire movie mixed with a heist movie and I thought `you know what would really scare people? A little girl in a ballerina dress covered in blood’ and hopefully I think it will."

Alisha Weir pictured at a special preview screening of Abigail at Light House Cinema, Dublin. Picture Andres Poveda

A vampire was a natural choice, as Shields always had a particular affinity for the fanged fiends in movies including Salem’s Lot, The Lost Boys and Fright Night.

Abigail features buckets of blood and gore. "When you sign up for a movie like this, you know there’s going to be a lot of blood and a lot of blood there is!" he said.

The movie was shot in the historic Glenmaroon House, the former residence of brewing scion Arthur Guinness, in Castleknock on the outskirts of Dublin, and it also stars a motley crew of actors as the kidnap gang, including Dan Stevens of The Guest and Downton Abbey fame and Giancarlo Esposito, who played drug kingpin Gus Fring in Breaking Bad and Better Call Saul.

But this is also a heist movie. "Heist movies are just really good," Shields said. "There’s a lot of tension and thrill rides and a lot of paranoia, especially in this movie.

"I grew up watching movies from the seventies like The Parallax View and Three Days of The Condor and I love those movies where you’re not too sure if the characters are on the level or if the whole situation is on the level full stop."

Alan Corr @CorrAlan2

Abigail is in cinemas now

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