Monsters Episode 5 Behind the Scenes: Cooper Koch and Ari Graynor Interview - Netflix Tudum

  • Behind the Scenes

    Cooper Koch and Ari Graynor Talk Filming Episode 5 of Monsters in One Shot

    “It was a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity to tell a story like that on-screen.”

    Dec. 16, 2024

When Ryan Murphy and Ian Brennan’s Monsters: The Lyle and Erik Menendez Story debuted in September 2024, it was clear right away that Episode 5 would be a standout of the season that would be talked about for a long time. 

Clocking in at 33 minutes, “The Hurt Man,” written by co-creator Brennan, is noticeably shorter than the eight other episodes, and remarkably, it’s all shot in one take without any cuts or creative editing. It consists of one intimate conversation between Erik Menendez (Cooper Koch) and his defense attorney, Leslie Abramson (Ari Graynor), as he details the alleged abuse he suffered at the hands of his parents, José and Kitty (played by Javier Bardem and Chloë Sevigny), before he and his brother Lyle (Nicholas Alexander Chavez) brutally murdered them.

Related Stories

  • Interview
    Ryan Murphy Isn’t Afraid of the Controversy Surrounding Monsters
    Sept. 27, 2024
    Ryan Murphy at the 'Monster's premiere.

In an interview with Tudum in September, just a week after Monsters debuted on Netflix, co-creator Murphy said, “It’s already a very famous episode in my career.” The reason the entire episode was filmed in one shot — with Koch facing the camera and Graynor only seen from behind — was to get the audience to pay full attention to Erik’s story. “When Ian and I were working on it, the goal of that episode was to give Erik Menendez, basically, his day in court, to talk about what had happened to him uninterrupted with no bias.” 

Filming the episode was an emotionally arduous process. After just a single rehearsal, Koch and Graynor filmed eight episode-long takes over two days — tears were shed, breakdowns were had. The power of the final result comes in large part from the mutual support and true connection formed by Koch and Graynor, which you can feel in the following conversation.  Watch the video above and read on to learn how the two actors brought out the best in each other, and what surprising role sushi and wine played in the heart-wrenching episode.

On reading the script for “The Hurt Man,” Koch and Graynor instantly knew that the episode was special and would involve unique challenges, but that it was also an incredible opportunity.

Ari Graynor: I was completely overwhelmed and really in awe of [Ian and Ryan’s writing] and their incredibly strong point of view on this story, moving right into the hardest conversation to have and with such sensitivity and depth, and it went to such surprising places. I read it, and then I had to put it down for a minute. It just really rocked me.

Cooper Koch: Where were you when you read it first?

Graynor: I was at my house, and I read [Episodes 4 and 5] back-to-back. It was really intense, and it physically rocked me. I needed to take a breath. And then, I sort of put it down and, as you know, didn’t really look at it until we had a date to shoot it, which I know is so different from how you were approaching it … But what a gift. Also, I think, as an actor, it was a gift for both of us. We knew right away. It was a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity to tell a story like that on-screen.

Koch: He gave us a play.

Graynor: He gave us a play, and [and we knew] that it was just going to be the two of us because that one shot was written into the script. The script didn’t change over the course of a year.

Koch: It never changed.

Before shooting the episode, the actors had only a few conversations — with each other, with Brennan and Murphy, with director Michael Uppendahl, and with director of photography Jason McCormick — before rehearsing the whole scene just once.

Koch: We just had that one rehearsal, with Ian and Michael and us, and we did it one time in the room, in the space, and it went so well. I felt like we were so prepared and we were ready. And then basically they were just like, “OK, let’s shoot it.”

Graynor: Before we entered [the scene], I asked, “How do I correctly hold this space? How much am I pushing him, how much am I lawyer-ing, how much am I mothering, how much am I sharing?”

Koch: You crafted such a balance between all of those roles. You weren’t just the lawyer — you became his mother, you became his friend. And the gentle way that you held the space for him and guided him through his telling of his story was so beautiful. What’s crazy is, I was the only one that got to really watch your performance.

Graynor: A performance for one.

Koch: I’m so lucky. I’m so, so grateful. It was a really incredible performance.

Graynor: There are not enough words in the world to talk about what you did. And you know it.

Ari Graynor as Leslie Abramson and Cooper Koch as Erik Menendez in Episode 205 of ‘Monsters: The Lyle And Erik Menendez Story’
Miles Crist/Netflix

The rehearsal was almost effortless. But when the cameras started rolling for Episode 5, the first two episode-long takes were much more challenging — until a major breakthrough happened between Koch and Uppendahl.

Graynor: Our rehearsal was sort of one where you go, “Magic happened.”

Koch: [Sighs] Why weren’t the cameras rolling?

Graynor: Then we came into [the first shoot day] and sort of everybody around set was like, “Big day, you guys.” Like, wow. Episode 5, you ready? I mean, we’re all here, everyone’s here. We’re really excited, and the adrenaline was going. Even though I knew we weren’t doing what we did at the rehearsal, everything was still so honest. You just allowed it to be. You were present, and you didn’t push anything, and you just were like, “Here’s what’s coming, here’s what’s not.” I think it’s one of the most brave and important things as an actor to just allow yourself to be where you are in the moment, and see what happens. It was beautiful and honest.

Koch: I was so hard on myself after the first two takes. And then we went to lunch, right? And then we were in my trailer. I was so upset.

Graynor: We had a cry.

Koch: And we had a cry. You held me, and you were so supportive. Then we went back in for the third one, and I was like, “Michael, I need help. I need something.” And he said, “Dude, you’re chasing the dragon. You’re chasing the dragon of that first rehearsal. You need to just go in and be really open to her to try and defend your parents at every inch of the moment and find light in the dark.” And then that third take was so explosive and beautiful and amazing — they didn’t use that one.

After the rehearsal, the crew filmed eight continuous 36-minute-long takes over just two shoot days. The take that we can now see is the eighth and final one that was filmed, and much of the success was due to the genuine connection between the actors.

Koch: I remember after the last take, Sarah Brandes, our first AC, who was in the room with us pulling focus, she came up above her little monitor and was like [motions rock hands with tongue out], and she told me after, “They’re going to choose that one.” And she was right.

Graynor: [The final take] was different. I mean, there was such fluidity … I mean, we had become so close at this point.

Koch: We have to talk about the porch.

Graynor: We have to talk about the porch. The third character in this scene is really my former porch. I was renting a house in Silver Lake five minutes from where you were living, and it had this — ugh, what a gorgeous porch. I mean, it just really was a porch for the ages. It had beautiful fruit trees and the light was gorgeous. Almost every day after work, you would come over, and we would sit on the porch.

Koch: That’s where we also read the episode together for the first time. We just did it ...

Graynor: We came back there both days [after filming Episode 5].

Koch: First time we had Thai food, wine, and we were smoking. And then second time, wine, sushi … Even before we did the episode, we were hanging out at the porch all the time.

Graynor: The second I got to LA, the first person I spoke to was —

Koch: Was me.

Graynor: Was you.

Koch: And that’s always how I like to work, especially if something is so close.

Graynor: I mean, I’ve been incredibly lucky that I feel like there’s not really been a bad egg among the people I’ve worked with. But you know, you hear stories.

Koch: Yeah. So we were so lucky.

Graynor: We were very lucky.

Koch: Still are.

This interview has been edited and condensed for clarity.

Watch Monsters: The Lyle and Erik Menendez Story now.

Watch the Monsters: The Lyle and Erik Menendez Story Trailer #2

All About Monsters

  • Interview
    Ari Graynor and Sarah Paulson Make Their Case
    What does it take to play a tough-as-nails attorney in a Ryan Murphy production?
    By Alex Frank
    June 21
  • Interview
    Ryan Murphy’s anthology series’ cast and crew on portraying real people.
    By Jenny Changnon
    Jan. 17, 2025
  • News
    Javier Bardem, Chloë Sevigny, Nicholas Alexander Chavez, Cooper Koch star.
    By Tara Bitran and Phillipe Thao
    Jan. 8, 2025
  • Explainer
    Who are the real monsters? 
    By Ruth Kinane
    Sept. 25, 2024

Shop Monsters

GO TO NETFLIX SHOP

Discover More Behind the Scenes

  • Behind the Scenes
    From Trafalgar Square to Kate’s wardrobe, every detail shapes the show.
    By Alex Frank
    Yesterday 3:00 pm
  • Behind the Scenes
    With the first episodes of Black Rabbit, the actor takes the reins as director. 
    By Ruth Kinane
    April 29
  • Behind the Scenes
    From ‘Bloody Mary’ to ‘The Dead Dance,’ the singer helped shape the series’s viral dance legacy.
    By Christian Zamora
    April 15
  • Behind the Scenes
    The creator weaves a tale of hope with the ending of the drama series.
    By Miranda Tsang
    April 8
  • Behind the Scenes
    The producer-actors share the process of crafting the thrilling limited series.
    By Ruth Kinane
    April 8
  • Behind the Scenes
    Costume designer Alison McCosh on the return of the classic Peaky Blinders look.
    By John DiLillo
    March 20
  • Behind the Scenes
    Check out BTS photos of Alexandra Breckenridge and Martin Henderson in Mexico.
    By Jean Bentley
    March 13
  • Behind the Scenes
    The show’s location scout on British Columbia, moving equipment in a gondola and why Mel’s cabin is sinking.
    By Amanda Richards
    March 12

Discover More Drama

  • What To Watch
    Stories so absorbing you’ll forget to check your phone.
    By Mary Sollosi and Caitlin Busch
    Yesterday 3:00 pm
  • News
    Discover your next TV obsession.
    By Tudum Staff
    Yesterday 2:00 pm
  • What To Watch
    A sequel? For spring? Groundbreaking.
    By Caitlin Busch
    Yesterday 2:00 pm
  • News
    Mark your calendars.
    By Tudum Staff
    Yesterday 2:00 pm
  • Deep Dive
    A family is split between two worlds in this sci-fi drama.
    By Krutika Mallikarjuna
    Yesterday 7:00 am
  • News
    Get ready for the new A.J. Quinnell adaptation, starring Yahya Abdul-Mateen II.
    By Ariana Romero
    Yesterday 5:21 am
  • New on Netflix
    Stream Remarkably Bright Creatures, Swapped, Lord of the Flies, and more.
    By Ashley Lee
    April 30

Related Videos

  • Trailer
    Murder, scandals, and the haunting question: Who are the real monsters?
    Sept. 10, 2024
    2:30
  • Trailer
    Brothers. Killers. Victims? Monsters?
    Sept. 4, 2024
    2:30
  • Trailer
    When picture perfect isn’t perfect.
    Aug. 27, 2024
    0:54

Popular Now

  • News
    The Battle for the Fans results are in. Celebrate with performances of “Soda Pop” and “How It’s Done.”
    By Olivia Harrison
    April 28
  • News
    Plus: Viewers choose new series Unchosen, and Running Point Season 2 is nothing but net. 
    By Ananda Dillon and Ashley Lee
    April 28
  • News
    Tom Bateman and Michelle Keegan in the latest Coben adaptation.
    By John DiLillo
    April 29
  • News
    “This isn’t a rewind. It’s a reintroduction.”
    By Olivia Harrison
    April 29