SDCC 2019: AMC’s ‘The Terror: Infamy’ is a Beautiful Terrifying Retelling That Blends History and Horror

Credit: AMC Networks


AMC’s
 horror anthology ‘The Terror’ focuses on the history behind internment camps combined with Japanese horror. Two things that are terrifying in their own right. Fans were treated to some never before seen footage including the opening credits that were creepier than the original trailer that had been released. The J-horror elements were really brought out in the new clip.

The second season was co-created by Max Borenstein and Alexander Woo, who also serve as the showrunner. Consisting of 10 episodes, it takes place on the west coast of the United States during World War II and will “center on an uncanny specter that menaces a Japanese-American community from its home in Southern California to the internment camps to the war in the Pacific”.

George Takei, who stars in the series, was originally brought on as a consultant on the show, but that turned into a role on the show. Takei recalls how it went down.

“One day I got a telephone call from Alex (Woo) and said he would like to drop by and talk to you about from something, so I said sure.

He started talking about my childhood imprisonment in US internment camps and we could like to have you authenticate the situation and the set and props and so forth. I was flattered and didn’t know he had another agenda. The consultant thing was to wet my appetite and set the bait and then he said your an actor to aren’t you? 

Andrew wrote in a lot of wonderful scenes for my character. Once we got closer to production he over wrote the script and their was to much material – so I lost a wife before we even got started. (laughs) 

It is a fantasy – I am married to a guy. It was a relief.” Takei said.

SDCC Panel Terror
Credit: AMC Networks

Derek Mio also had some personal connections to the source material.

“This project was special to me personally. It was a role of a lifetime and my grandfather lived where the series starts out – when the FBI came and took away his family – and my family has history with internment camps. 

Knowing that, I knew I had to be a part of the project. 

Chester (Mio) is going through a lot, he’s got some generational conflict going on and he wants to remain more traditional. He has a forbidden love (Cristina Redlo) 

Redlo plays a hispanic nurse and in the 1940’s mixed relationships were frowned upon so they have to fight for their love to survive. 



Kiki Sukezane
She’s a mysterious character as seen in the trailer.

SDCC Panel Terror
Credit: Birth Films Death