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Maniac (2011 film)

Maniac
Maniac2011poster.jpg
Promotional poster
Directed by Shia LaBeouf
Produced by Jeff Balis
T.J. Sakasegawa
Lorenzo Eduardo
Written by Chris Palko
Shia LaBeouf
Scott Mescudi
Starring Scott Mescudi
Chris Palko
Shia LaBeouf
Music by Scott Mescudi
Dot da Genius
Production
company
Release date
  • October 31, 2011 (2011-10-31) (United States)
Running time
10 minutes
Language French

Maniac (stylized as MANIAC) is an American short slasher film, directed by Shia LaBeouf. It was released on October 31, 2011. The short film stars American rappers Kid Cudi and Cage, as French-speaking serial killers. Mescudi and Palko also co-wrote the film with LaBeouf.

Filmmakers document the exploits of two serial killers.

Shia LaBeouf first directed a music video for New York-based rapper Cage in 2009, for his track "I Never Knew You": "I’m 22 and I’m directing my favorite rapper’s music video,” LaBeouf told LA Weekly of the project, "This shit is better than riding unicorns." It was through that project that he met Cleveland-bred rapper Kid Cudi, which led to LeBeouf filming and directing Kid Cudi's video for "Marijuana", which was shot at the 2010 High Times Cannabis Cup in Amsterdam. LeBeouf subsequently went on to collaborate with Cudi and Cage on a short film titled MANIAC. Kid Cudi first spoke of the short film on March 5, 2011, via his Twitter feed, when he announced: "[the] maniac horror short will be released on halloween, rager short this summer, marijuana video this spring. i got you guys, no worries."

The short film was inspired by Cudi's song of the same name, from his 2010 album Man on the Moon II: The Legend of Mr. Rager and is an homage to the 1992 Belgian black comedy crime mockumentary, Man Bites Dog. In an interview with Complex, Cudi went into detail about the short film, as he discussed how Shia LaBeouf reached out to him to do the project, playing the role of a killer, funding the video and why was it in French: "It was me creating the back story for this person in my mind. What you see just seems like senseless acts of crime happening but in my character’s mind it was always justified. When you watch it, it’s like, ‘Why are these things happening?’ You want answers but there’s no answers really given. When I was in character, it was always justified for me." He also added "When it came time to shoot, it was as real as possible and you were scared of this character. I literally transformed into this person. I didn’t talk much on set, didn’t crack many jokes, I kept to myself."


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