In her new film I Am Lisa, versatile thesp Kristen Vaganos plays a young woman who, after
      being brutalised and left for dead in the woods, is bitten by a werewolf.
      We caught up with Vaganos to talk about her superlative performance in the
      film, comparisons to Ginger Snaps, and her blossoming producing career.
    
     
      
      Congrats on all your success this year! Do you remember the day you
        were pitched I Am Lisa?
    
    
      Yes, thank you! The writer Eric Winkler actually found me and my work
      online and sent me an early draft of I Am Lisa. At the time the script needed a bit of work - he’s a first time
      screenwriter - but I was so flattered that he’d pitch me a film that
      really stands on Lisa’s shoulders. When he sent me a new draft a year
      later, I was so stoked to take on the role.
    
    Are there any other movies you think its reminiscent of?
    
      Ginger Snaps is comparable in that both films use the
      werewolf transformation as a coming of age metaphor for their female leads
      but Ginger is much more excited by her change more than Lisa. She sees it
      as a near sexual awakening while Lisa is terrified of what she may become
      and even more so, what she might lose.
      When Animals Dream similarly depicts a young female werewolf
      killing those that bullied her.
    
    How would you describe the tone?
    
      I Am Lisa is more of a character driven revenge film than a
      gory horror film showcasing flashy effects - ours are actually quite
      minimal and realistic. We even incorporate brief moments of comedy or
      levity to break the tension which  (director) Patrick Rea, Eric and I
      all agreed on to help the film not take itself too seriously and give the
      audience a breather. In many ways, its a coming of age for Lisa, or coming
      into power may be more accurate.
    
    
      How much of the film was on the page and how much came together on the
        set – via improvisation and input from you and other actors?
    
    
      Most of what you see is scripted but the entire cast was very grateful to
      how open and collaborative Eric and Patrick were in terms of adjustments
      or alts. Any time an actor pitches an alternative line or questions an
      intention, they were open to discussing and Eric has said many times that
      his goal was to hire all the right people who are good at their jobs and
      then let them play, so it was a very open collaborative set. The only
      scene that is completely different to its scripted version is Deputy
      Nick’s death scene. Logistically we ended up shooting the scene with
      different SFX and in a different location so I remember Chris Bylsma, the
      actor, and I were rewriting the scene while getting our SFX makeup
      applied; it was kind of awesome!
    
    How did you approach playing Lisa?
    
      My first impression of Lisa was that she is an introvert whose happy place
      is sitting in a café with her best friend Sam, escaping into the fictional
      world of a good book, and smoking a joint. She doesn’t have much but is
      content and values what she has tremendously. I decided that her parents
      died young and she was raised by her grandmother, who dies just before the
      film starts and leaves Lisa the bookshop that I figure feels more like
      home to her than anywhere. I focussed on her devotion to those things
      because it's the threat of losing them that motivates her throughout the
      film. She’ll go down before anyone touches Sam and that store… she
      successfully saves one of them.
    
    What do you think audiences will like best about it?
    
      I think audiences will love watching the bullies go down… bit of a spoiler
      alert but Lisa is so easy to root for and it’s exciting watching her come
      into herself, take the reins on the changes, and avenge the town’s corrupt
      law enforcement. It’s so interesting to have several of the leads be
      female too because it’s more complex than just women win, men lose. The
      conflict in Lisa is hierarchal and the sheriff uses scare tactics and
      nepotism to control the town but Lisa fights back against that.
    
    What do you think you'll do next?
    
      I have a couple more films coming out this year but I’ve also leaned into
      writing and producing during the pandemic, while a couple films of mine
      are postponed. I just produced and have a role in a film called
      Bobcat Moretti starring Vivica A Fox, Taryn Manning, Matt
      Peters, Sally Kirkland and more. Eric Winkler and I are writing and
      developing an LGBTQ addiction-themed drama called Sober and
      I’m working on some projects of my own! It’s been really lovely to step
      into a higher position of creative authority on films; I’m eager to
      continue to do so.
    
    What do you love most about the horror genre?
    
      I love how devoted the fanbase is actually. Patrick, Eric, and our SFX
      makeup artist Jake can talk endlessly about horror films, comparing and
      reviewing, and I respect how much of an inner society it is and how read
      up fans are. It’s an honour to step into the world and play around. I hope
      I did the genre justice!
    
    
      I Am Lisa is currently playing US
      cinemas. A UK/ROI release has yet to be announced.
    
