


“Obviously, you bounce back and forth a little bit, but on a short-scale time frame where you’re telling a story like that, to keep the emotion, the mood consistent is always a challenge for actors.” “We were lucky that, because we were on the farm, and then there was an interior set, that we got to shoot fairly chronologically,” Ashmore said. David BukachĪ 24-hour film shot out on a farm in a remote area, Devil’s Gate provided a bounty of challenges for its actors, beginning with the idea of achieving a certain tonal and emotional consistency with characters operating in real time, within a short time frame. “The idea here is that I wanted to create something where the tropes were familiar to people, but then we would be twisting those completely on their heads, and take you down a road that, when you start the film, where you end the film is completely different,” Staub said of the film which he co-wrote with Peter Aperlo, joining stars Milo Ventimiglia, Amanda Schull, Bridget Regan and Shawn Ashmore at Deadline’s Tribeca Studio. 'Devil's Gate' Tribeca Clip: Milo Ventimiglia's Family Goes Missing In Suspense Thriller
