Lauren Cohan is well on her way to becoming a scream queen. She's given her voice box quite the workout on The Walking Dead, and she's hoping that fans of her AMC series will be interested in hearing her shriek a bit more in her upcoming horror movie, The Boy.
In The Boy, Lauren Cohan plays an American nanny, named Greta, who heads to a creepy Gothic mansion in a remote area of England for a babysitting job interview that takes a very bizarre twist. When Greta discovers that the "child" she'll be taking care of is actually a porcelain doll, she laughs and asks if she's been "punk'd." However, the incredulous nanny is informed that she really will be doll sitting, and she ultimately decides to take the unusual gig. After all, who wouldn't want to get paid a handsome sum to watch an inanimate object?
Of course, Lauren Cohan's character eventually discovers that the creepy doll isn't so inanimate after all, and viewers will likely spend a large chunk of the horror movie trying to decide whether "the boy" is haunted by the spirit of an undead child or something more sinister. There's also a chance that all the horror is actually happening inside Greta's head.
During a recent interview with Celebuzz, Lauren Cohan[1] said that she believes fans of The Walking Dead will enjoy The Boy, even though it's a zombie-free film.
"It's a different type of disturbance because she's isolated and she's not quite sure what's real and what isn't real, and I think it's a different type of journey that she goes on," Cohan said. "But yes, I think they will."
During an interview with The Young Folks, Lauren Cohan pointed out that The Boy[3] also differs from The Walking Dead because Greta doesn't have a Glenn or a family of fellow survivors who work to protect each other from the undead.
"She's just sort of drowning by herself in this and she doesn't know throughout the film whether or not it's really happening or whether she's losing her mind," Lauren said.
"Even though he is inanimate, the emotional satisfaction is real that she's getting from this care-taking."