Whipping Boy Transports Us To A Disconnected Future


We’re searching for the next great sci-fi filmmaker with the Prototype contest, where eight filmmakers are vying for a chance to win a feature film deal with New Regency. You can check out the short films by all eight finalists right now, but if you want to go behind the scenes to learn more about the creation of these movies, we’re publishing interviews with the Prototype filmmakers. Today, you can take a peek into the minds behind Whipping Boy in our interview, where writer Aiah Samba explains where the film concept came from: For more, check out our interview or go watch Whipping Boy for yourself. So I imagined a place where we dwell in the extreme end of that spectrum. Where people don’t have a reason to leave their homes anymore because they’ve become so reliant on the newest techno gadget. Where you’re so in tune with technology but not with people, that you begin to crave contact anyway you can get it. So that led to a new fetish because… why not. Men who would go to your place of residence and allow you to pummel them into a bloody pulp. Getting all your frustrations and loneliness out in the session. They’re called Whipping Boys. And you have to understand that the Whip we follow, Napalm, is getting something out of this deal as well. He’s very much a part of this desensitized society that’s gone adrift. So by allowing the client to take all their rage of the current state of the world, out on his body, Napalm in that instance, gets to connect with them. So I loved the dynamics of such a relationship.