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Kevin Bacon on the "quietest nights" of his life in Wales

Kerri-Ann Roper speaks to the actor about filming in Wales, and enjoying horror.
Kerri-Ann Roper speaks to the actor about filming in Wales, and enjoying horror.

Kevin Bacon is reflecting on what he says have been some of the "quietest nights" of his life. And it is a tranquillity he found in none other than Wales. The Hollywood star, 62, spent a portion of his time filming his latest film, You Should Have Left, in the countryside.

The psychological thriller required a specific type of holiday house, found in the Life House, located in mid-wales, near the village of Llanbister. "I loved Wales," he says via a Zoom video interview. "The writer/director David Koepp set the film in the Welsh countryside in a modernistic house, and I thought to myself, ‘I’ve never been to Wales, I don’t know if that house actually exists there.’ And sure enough, we found it.

"And once we saw the pictures of it we were like, ‘OK, there’s no other place we can shoot this’, and it was everything I had imagined; incredibly beautiful, rolling hills, a lot of sheep and very, very interesting and changing weather. Some of the most quietest nights I ever spent in my life were in Wales, and I had a great time."

Kevin Bacon stars in You Should Have Left (Blumhouse Productions/PA)

The Life House, designed by John Pawson, is one of the locations offered by Living Architecture, founded more than a decade ago by Alain de Botton. Despite immersing himself there for filming, the Footloose star isn’t about to start trying to do a Welsh accent though. "I can’t do a Welsh accent at all, I would not even approach it. But it really is a beautiful language."

"There’s a scene in the movie – it’s actually pretty funny – where my character goes down into the village and the shopkeeper says something to me and I say, ‘I’m sorry, I don’t speak Welsh and he says, ‘That was English’".

The film is by no means a first-time collaboration for Koepp and Bacon, who worked together on 1999’s Stir Of Echoes. In You Should Have Left, Bacon plays Theo Conroy, a wealthy man with a past, on his second marriage to a much younger actress named Susanna, played by Amanda Seyfried. The couple decide to take a much-needed holiday to Wales and their stay in what appears to be an idyllic house takes a terrifying turn.

"I love the genre of horror," explains Bacon. "I’m a little bit more drawn to the scary movies in the vein of Rosemary’s Baby, The Shining, Don’t Look Now and Get Out – that are a little bit more on the psychological side of things than the slasher, you know, Friday the 13th…"

"I like the genre because it’s very heavy character work," he continues, "it’s a complex character, it’s an interesting character and there was good stuff for me to play."

The film is based on the 2017 book of the same name, written by Daniel Kehlmann, and Bacon says the idea of Theo as a character had been percolating for some time. "In the case of this film, it started with my wife (actress Kyra Sedgwick) and I having a conversation about scary movies and developing a scary movie.

"And she said ‘Why don’t you do a scary movie that’s around a marriage? I didn’t really know how to take that (laughs), but I brought that up with David and we started to knock that idea around, so when I finally read the character of Theo, it was something we had discussed for hours and hours.

"I like the idea that it was a guy who feels like he’s on the precipice of losing his power; I think you see that a lot with men.

"You know our power, whether it be money or status or sexual power, becomes this super important thing to us, and when you get to a certain age and it starts to kind of wane, that’s a very, very interesting age to explore, and that’s exactly what we wanted to do with Theo.

"As well as the idea that there’s things he has in his past he hasn’t faced yet, and the question of how, when, why and where does redemption come from? Where do you find forgiveness for the things you’ve done that are wrong?"

You Should Have Left is out now on digital download, DVD and Blu-ray.

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