
"When Bryan Fuller set out to make his first feature film, his goal was to make the kind of family-friendly scares that he loved as a kid. Think Gremlins or Ghostbusters. The creator of Hannibal and Pushing Daisies ended up crafting a story called Dust Bunny, about a young girl named Aurora who hires a hitman to kill the monster under her bed."
""I was setting out to make a movie that people could take their kids to, and then - and this is probably why you shouldn't have me watch your kids - we ended up with an R rating," Fuller tells The Verge. "But it is intended as a family movie. It is intended for kids and adults alike." Dust Bunny started life as part of Amazing Stories, the Apple TV revival of Steven Spielberg's anthology series."
Bryan Fuller created Dust Bunny as his first feature to recreate the family-friendly scares of 1980s films such as Gremlins and Ghostbusters. The plot centers on Aurora, a young girl who hires a hitman to kill a monster living under her bed, blending humor, playful action, and a creature that is simultaneously lovable and creepy. Fuller intended the film for kids and adults alike, aiming for a family audience, but the finished movie received an R rating. Dust Bunny originated as an episode for Amazing Stories on Apple TV before being removed from the anthology and expanded into a feature.
Read at The Verge
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