There’s a certain kind of tension that doesn’t announce itself. Energy that simmers, lingers, and then hits all at once.
It’s the kind of energy Fuze trades in, and at its New York premiere at Metrograph, you could feel it before even stepping inside. On a night buzzing with anticipation, Aaron Taylor-Johnson, director David Mackenzie, and producer Jonathan Saba arrived ready to pull back the curtain on a film that’s as sleek as it is explosive.
Speaking from the red carpet, the trio leaned into what makes Fuze tick and not just the high-stakes action, but the slow-burn psychology underneath it. Taylor-Johnson brings a magnetic intensity to a role built on control and quiet calculation. At the same time, Mackenzie continues his knack for crafting worlds that feel both grounded and ready to erupt. Saba, balancing the big-picture vision, reflected on bringing the project together with Roadside Attractions and Saban Films, and why this story feels particularly charged right now.
What became clear over the course of the conversation is that Fuze isn’t interested in easy thrills. It’s about pressure, the kind that builds behind the eyes, in the silence between words, and in the moments just before everything detonates. And if the energy at Metrograph was any indication, this one won’t just land, it’ll linger.