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Posted on
Jan 16, 2026

Hayden Panettiere Talks New Psychological Thriller ‘Sleepwalker’

Moviefone speaks with Hayden Panettiere about ‘Sleepwalker’. “I look for interesting stories that keep the audience on the edge of their seats,” she said.

Opening in theaters and VOD on January 9th is the new psychological thriller ‘Sleepwalker’, which was directed by Brandon Auman (‘Star Wars: Resistance’) and stars Hayden Panettiere (‘Heroes’ and ‘Scream 4’), Beverly D’Angelo (‘National Lampoon’s Vacation’), Justin Chatwin (‘War of the Worlds’), and Mischa Barton (‘The Sixth Sense’).

Moviefone: To begin with, can you talk about your first reaction to the screenplay, what spoke to you about the material and why you wanted to be part of this project?

Hayden Panettiere: It was a combination of things. When I read scripts, I look for interesting plot lines, and stories that keep the audience invested and on the edge of their seats. That’s how films like this work, and I look for characters that have lots of layers to them. I’m really drawn to characters that have been through trauma. It’s something that I relate to, I think a lot of people relate to, and just characters that give me something to really sink my teeth into as an actor. It was also combined with the fact that it had an amazing cast attached to it. Beverly D’Angelo, Justin Chatwin, Mischa Barton, Lori Tan Chinn, and our two kids, Corinne Sweeney and Laird LaCoste. I love working with kids. So that was a big pull for me, and then getting to work with Appian Way and Verdi Productions and getting to executive produce, too. So, it was a combination of a lot of good stuff.

MF: Can you talk about your approach to playing this character and the loss and guilt that she is dealing with?

HP: Guilt and loss, they’re topics that I’m familiar with, so I had a lot to pull from my real life. I mean, we did this film in 15 days, which was a breakneck pace. We had a lot to get done, and it was very dark. But I was surrounded by such a great team of people that we were able to pull each other in and out of those dark scenes and those dark moments and have light moments. Beverly D’Angelo and I became very close, and I knew her growing up. She was my neighbor down the street when she lived with Al Pacino when I was a kid. So, we got to finally run into each other, and we look so much alike. It’s crazy that we have not played mother and daughter before

MF: To follow up, what was it like to work with Beverly D’Angelo after all these years later?

HP: I mean, you never know. You never know until you’re on set and you have been around somebody, but we have such similar personalities. She’s so spunky and so funny. We kept each other laughing, and that chemistry just came like that. It was just that easy. It made my job incredibly easy and fun. I couldn’t have asked for anybody better to play my mom and to play across from. She’s a legend. She’s a legend, and she’s just a character, a firecracker, and somebody that you just want to hear all her stories. I hope to work with her again for sure.

MF: The film also stars Mischa Barton and Justin Chatwin, who both began their careers around the same time you did in the early 2000s. Had you met either of them over the years and what was it like working with them on this project?

HP: I don’t know that Mischa remembered this, but I used to be in the same audition rooms as her and her sister growing up in New York. So, I knew her in passing for a long time. Justin, we had met in passing, but I wasn’t as familiar with him as I was with Mischa. I didn’t have as much of a personal relationship with him.

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