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That wasnt her first horror rodeo, either.
She also played Mina in the BBCs Dracula adaptation, and Beth in the creature thriller Crawl.
“I love freaky weirdos,” she laughs.
“I just love weird things so I feel very comfortable in it.
Starve Acre certainly allows for that.
But while it leans into chilling subject matter, at its heart is a meaty character study of loss.
However, it wasnt the easiest topic to navigate while making the film, she explains.
She was helped by a breadth of support on set.
“We were really lucky when we were filming as well, actually.
I think seeing it be handled by everybody with a lot of care was very important.”
“I’m fascinated by sisters,” Clark grins when we bring up their dynamic.
“A sisterly relationship can be the greatest or the worst.
Juliette and her sister are kind of in between in some ways.
I mean family is horrific sometimes.”
In this story, this manifests in a decomposing hare that Richard is convinced is coming back to life.
“I think it’s always fun to mess with ambiguity.
I think that’s sometimes where the most interesting stuff starts to get done.”
“I think I’ve come into horror at a really lucky point,” she reflects.
“I think I’m standing on the shoulders of lots of people before me.
I think that it’s really interesting how horror genres pick up on that quite quickly.”
Well, perhaps Galadriel and Juliette are not worlds apart after all.
Starve Acre is in theaters now.
For more read ourStarve Acre review.