Christian Nilsson (born December 31, 1987) is an American film director and screenwriter. He is best known for the psychological thriller Dashcam (2021)[1] and his short Unsubscribe (2020), a 29-minute horror film that topped the U.S. box office in June 2020 after Nilsson and YouTuber Eric Tabach exploited a loophole during the COVID-19 pandemic.[2]
Career
editDigital Media
editNilsson's career began in digital media, where he worked as a video journalist for various outlets like The Huffington Post,[3] Esquire,[4] BuzzFeed, MTV, VH1 and The Atlantic.[5] For his work, he was awarded a 2019 Silver Telly Award[6] for the BuzzFeed produced short documentary I Found A Roll Of Undeveloped Film From 1964[7] and a 2017 NY Emmy Award[4] for his HuffPost produced short documentary The Fight To Be The Oldest Bar In NYC[3].
Unsubscribe
editIn May 2020, YouTuber Eric Tabach called Nilsson to ask how he could potentially get one of his own YouTube videos to become the number one film in the U.S. box office. Nilsson explained "four-walling", the distribution technique where a filmmaker rents out an entire theater which allows them to keep all the profits. Because theaters were closed due to the COVID-19 pandemic, Nilsson predicted they'd be able to rent out a closed theater for very little money, buy every ticket themselves for several showings, then keep the profits—essentially, breaking even.[2]
Nilsson wrote the script for Unsubscribe in one day, and filming began the next day with Tabach's friends and fellow YouTubers including Charlie Tahan (Ozark, I Am Legend), Michelle Khare (HBO Max's Karma), Zach Kornfeld (Try Guys) and Thomas Brag (Yes Theory). A majority of the film was shot over Zoom in just three days[8]
The film follows five YouTubers who hold a video-call for their friend's birthday only to find themselves hunted and haunted by an internet troll.
On June 20, 2020, Nilsson and Tabach premiered the film at the Westhampton Beach Performing Arts Center in Westhampton Beach, NY. They bought out five showings and racked up $25,488 in ticket sales. The following day, the film was listed on Box Office Mojo and The Numbers as the number one film in the U.S. box office.[2]
The film garnered mostly positive reviews for its creation process and ability to gain high rankings during the COVID-19 pandemic. The Washington Post praised the film as "a testament to artistic ingenuity under lockdown",[2] while NME called the film an "entertaining hoax",[9] and Fox News opined that "garnering a No. 1 release – albeit short-lived since Unsubscribe failed to throw off weekend box office numbers – is a stout accomplishment in itself".[10] Other sources were more ambivalent, such as Decider, which stated that "[w]hether this stunt is a stroke of brilliance or a stroke of shameless self-promotion is up to you",[11] while Trillmag said that "Unsubscribe's status as a historical filmmaking achievement is indicated by the unorthodox (and deviously scheming) method through which it achieved box office success"[12]
Dashcam
editIn December 2020, Deadline Hollywood announced Nilsson and Tabach partnered with production companies Kamikaze Dogfight and Hood River Entertainment to finance Nilsson's feature-length directorial debut, Dashcam. The psychological thriller stars Tabach with Giorgia Whigham, Larry Fessenden, Zachary Booth, Guillian Gioiello and Noa Fisher in supporting roles.[13]
Dashcam world premiered virtually at Popcorn Frights Film Festival in Miami, Florida in August 2021,[14] and was released by Gravitas Ventures in the US on October 19, 2021.[15] The film was included on The New York Times list of "Five Horror Films To Stream" for November 2021, and wrote that the film is "at its creepiest when just audio and video clips, and Jake's surgical adjustments to them, steer the paranoia-driven story. Over 82 unnerving minutes, Nilsson squeezes big suspense out of seemingly throwaway moments, as when Jake just sits and listens to audio tracks."[1]
On review aggregator Rotten Tomatoes, the film holds an approval rating of 89%.[citation needed] One top critic[who?] wrote: "Dashcam is an extraordinary low-budget political thriller that does a lot with a little, and is a masterclass that sometimes, having the guts to punch above its weight can pay off just through sheer audacity alone." Another wrote, "Working with miniscule [sic] budget, writer/director Christian Nilsson upstages his better-financed moneyed counterparts with this gripping political thriller."[citation needed]
Westhampton
editIn November 2023, Nilsson wrapped production on his second feature film, Westhampton, which stars Finn Wittrock (American Horror Story), RJ Mitte (Breaking Bad), Jake Weary (How to Blow Up a Pipeline), Amy Forsyth (CODA), Sam Strike (The Boys in the Boat), Dan Lauria (The Wonder Years), Tovah Feldshuh and Ritchie Coster.[16]
Filmography
editFilm | Year | Director | Writer | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|
Unsubscribe | 2020 | Yes | Yes | Short film |
Dashcam | 2021 | Yes | Yes | Feature-length directorial debut[13] |
Westhampton | TBD | Yes | Yes | Feature film in post production[17] |
Personal life
editNilsson married Stephanie Hains on October 10, 2020.[18]
References
edit- ^ a b Piepenburg, Erik (2021-11-12). "Five Horror Movies to Stream Now". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved 2021-12-01.
- ^ a b c d Elfrink, Tim (June 18, 2020). "Want to top the box office during a pandemic? Film for free on Zoom and then rent out a theater". The Washington Post.
- ^ a b Donnelly, Tim (2015-09-17). "What's really the oldest bar in New York City?". New York Post. Retrieved 2020-12-21.
- ^ a b "Westhampton Beach Grad Wins New York Emmy For Short Film". 27 East. 2017-05-08. Retrieved 2020-12-21.
- ^ "A Clever Hack That Sent A 29-Minute Horror Movie To The Top Of The U.S. Box Office". NPR.org. Retrieved 2020-12-21.
- ^ "I Found A Roll Of Undeveloped Film From 1964". Telly Awards. Retrieved 2020-12-21.
- ^ "Local Filmmaker Finds 1964 World's Fair Footage In Grandmother's Old Film Camera". 27 East. 2019-01-29. Retrieved 2020-12-21.
- ^ "We Conned Our Way To #1 Movie At The U.S. Box Office - YouTube". www.youtube.com. Retrieved 2020-12-21.
- ^ "Box office busted: a short history of Hollywood's greatest ever hoaxes". NME. 2020-06-30. Retrieved 2020-12-21.
- ^ Young, Julius (2020-06-19). "'Unsubscribe' is a $0-budget movie that cleverly 'topped the US box office'". Fox News. Retrieved 2020-12-21.
- ^ "These YouTubers Had the No. 1 Film in America Thanks to a Pandemic Loophole". Decider. 2020-06-18. Retrieved 2020-12-21.
- ^ Kellner, Mia (June 21, 2020). "$0 Budget Movie "Unsubscribe" Tops U.S. Box Office".
- ^ a b Andreas Wiseman; Tom Grater (2020-12-16). "MediaPro CEO; Doc Org Of Canada Hire; CDG Casting Awards Nominees; "DASHCAM" Thriller — Global Briefs". Deadline Hollywood. Retrieved 2020-12-21.
- ^ "Popcorn Frights Announces Second Wave Of Programming". Fangoria. Retrieved 2021-08-05.
- ^ "'Dashcam' Trailer Reveals a New Psychological Thriller Starring Larry Fessenden". Collider. 2021-10-02. Retrieved 2021-12-01.
- ^ Nilsson, Christian, Westhampton (Drama), R. J. Mitte, Finn Wittrock, Ritchie Coster, TXE, retrieved 2023-12-13
- ^ Nilsson, Christian, Westhampton (Drama), R. J. Mitte, Finn Wittrock, Ritchie Coster, TXE, retrieved 2023-12-13
- ^ Issawi, Danya (2020-10-30). "From Melbourne to New York, Oceans Couldn't Keep Them Apart". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved 2020-12-21.