“Them” tells the story of the Emorys, a Black family in the 1950s who moves into the — at the time — all-white community of Compton, California. As they start to settle in, the family faces not only face rampant racism from their white neighbors, led by Betty Wendell (Alison Pill), but also a strange supernatural entity.
Little Marvin said the terror of navigating the country in Black skin, which goes all the way back the creation of the United States, was a secondary goal for him in developing the series. A self-confessed lover of Los Angeles history, he didn’t know much about the transition of Compton from a white to a Black community, so the research process was deep and involved. “To think that only 60, 70 years ago that … those [white] folks were virulently protective of their whiteness and of their block, to me, was like a lightbulb,” Little Marvin said. He also drew inspiration from the horror thrillers of the 1950s, ’60s, and ’70s, including Alfred Hitchcock, William Friedkin, and Brian De Palma. “‘Carrie’ is a massively influential movie to me,” he said. Little Marvin also said he’s a huge fan of melodrama, and that a heavy dose of the series’ inspiration comes from the work of director Douglas Sirk, as well as Todd Haynes’ subversion of Sirk’s work in the 2002 feature “Far From Heaven.” Adding to that sense of timeliness is the appearance of Pill, who has hearkened back to the Golden Age of Hollywood in films like “Midnight in Paris” and “Hail, Caesar!” She said what draws her to a project isn’t necessarily the period angle, but the story itself. “Before I was like ‘Yeah, it’s a job,’” she said. “Now [I’m] looking more at why we tell stories and what stories we need to be hearing and amplifying.” This video was produced by Creative Producer Leonardo Adrian Garcia. Sign Up: Stay on top of the latest breaking film and TV news! Sign up for our Email Newsletters here.