Jason Blum

Jason Blum
Jason Ferus Blum is an American film producer. Blum is the founder and CEO of Blumhouse Productions. He won the 2014 Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Television Movie for producing The Normal Heart, and was nominated for the 2014 Academy Award for Best Picture for producing Whiplash...
NationalityAmerican
ProfessionProducer
CountryUnited States of America
good great horror interested movies people series
When there's a great horror movie, people are like, 'Horror's back!' And when there's a series of not so good ones, 'Horror's dead.' I think it's all about the quality. When there are one or two good horror movies in a row, people come out interested again.
audience filmmakers helps minutes people scare spend stuff
I try not to put pressure on filmmakers to come up with a big scare at the beginning. I think that helps let the audience settle in and get to know the people they're about to spend 90 minutes with. Once the scarier stuff happens, it's scarier because of that.
weekend thinking people
I think there's a limit. People want to be scared, but not every weekend, maybe every third weekend.
love-is people underdog
I love being the underdog. It's one of the reason I like making horror movies, because a lot of people don't like them or are prejudiced against them. So it's one of the many reasons I like horror and it's also the reason I like low budget, because it automatically makes us the underdog.
thinking creating people
I think good suspense and horror is really about creating situations that are relatable, and throwing a wrench in it and watching how people respond to it.
thinking space people
I think the most honest responses to the movies you get to watch are in houses and people's most private spaces, like the bedroom or in your own intimate space. I think that's where you feel safest, so when you're threatened in the place you feel safest, it makes for the scariest situations.
people annoyed looks
A lot of the reasons why people are annoyed at found footage movies is because people look at it like it's easy and that they could do it, too.
thinking interesting people
I try to work with people who you're not used to seeing in scary movies. I think it makes for a more interesting mix, when you're watching the movie.
giving people creative
The model we established was to give creative people complete creative freedom in exchange for betting on themselves, so they work for the minimums you're allowed to work for, and if the movies work in a big way, everyone does very well. If the movies don't, nobody loses too much money. The benefit to doing all the movies low budget is we can tell different types of stories and take creative risks. The Purge would have been irresponsible to do for $20M, but to do it for $3M makes sense.
laughing people scared
For some reason, people value being scared less than they value laughing.
love-is long people
People love being scared, even for long periods of time.
art people found
I found that a lot of people ridiculed contemporary art. I decided I wanted to be involved in art everybody could understand.
drives movies people snobby
I think being snobby about the kind of storytelling people do, it just irks me. It irks me. And in fact, it's one of the things that drives me to make as many horror movies as I do.
concepts people
YouTube is found footage. It's here to stay, and people will always come up with new concepts that will make sense for found footage.