All language subtitles for In.Search.of.Darkness.2019.

af Afrikaans
sq Albanian
am Amharic
ar Arabic
hy Armenian
az Azerbaijani
eu Basque
be Belarusian
bn Bengali
bs Bosnian
bg Bulgarian
ca Catalan
ceb Cebuano
ny Chichewa
zh-CN Chinese (Simplified)
zh-TW Chinese (Traditional)
co Corsican
hr Croatian
cs Czech
da Danish
nl Dutch
en English
eo Esperanto
et Estonian
tl Filipino
fi Finnish
fr French Download
fy Frisian
gl Galician
ka Georgian
de German
el Greek
gu Gujarati
ht Haitian Creole
ha Hausa
haw Hawaiian
iw Hebrew
hi Hindi
hmn Hmong
hu Hungarian
is Icelandic
ig Igbo
id Indonesian
ga Irish
it Italian
ja Japanese
jw Javanese
kn Kannada
kk Kazakh
km Khmer
ko Korean
ku Kurdish (Kurmanji)
ky Kyrgyz
lo Lao
la Latin
lv Latvian
lt Lithuanian
lb Luxembourgish
mk Macedonian
mg Malagasy
ms Malay
ml Malayalam
mt Maltese
mi Maori
mr Marathi
mn Mongolian
my Myanmar (Burmese)
ne Nepali
no Norwegian
ps Pashto
fa Persian
pl Polish
pt Portuguese
pa Punjabi
ro Romanian
ru Russian
sm Samoan
gd Scots Gaelic
sr Serbian
st Sesotho
sn Shona
sd Sindhi
si Sinhala
sk Slovak
sl Slovenian
so Somali
es Spanish
su Sundanese
sw Swahili
sv Swedish
tg Tajik
ta Tamil
te Telugu
th Thai
tr Turkish
uk Ukrainian
ur Urdu
uz Uzbek
vi Vietnamese
cy Welsh
xh Xhosa
yi Yiddish
yo Yoruba
zu Zulu
or Odia (Oriya)
rw Kinyarwanda
tk Turkmen
tt Tatar
ug Uyghur
Would you like to inspect the original subtitles? These are the user uploaded subtitles that are being translated: 1 00:00:25,900 --> 00:00:31,614 Well, the good thing about the '80s is that there was such a cornucopia of great horror 2 00:00:31,948 --> 00:00:32,865 films that I remember. 3 00:00:33,199 --> 00:00:33,616 The Shining. 4 00:00:34,200 --> 00:00:34,867 Pet Sematary. 5 00:00:35,243 --> 00:00:35,993 The Halloween movies. 6 00:00:36,285 --> 00:00:37,286 A Nightmare on Elm Street. 7 00:00:37,620 --> 00:00:37,954 The Thing. 8 00:00:38,246 --> 00:00:38,871 Child's Play. 9 00:00:39,205 --> 00:00:40,373 Elvira: Mistress of the Dark. 10 00:00:40,706 --> 00:00:41,165 XTRO. 11 00:00:41,457 --> 00:00:42,166 The Company of Wolves. 12 00:00:42,500 --> 00:00:42,917 Cub. 13 00:00:43,209 --> 00:00:44,168 Jaws 3 in 3-D. 14 00:00:44,460 --> 00:00:45,044 The Howling. 15 00:00:45,336 --> 00:00:45,878 The Hunger. 16 00:00:46,212 --> 00:00:46,671 Basket Case. 17 00:00:47,004 --> 00:00:47,505 Maniac. 18 00:00:47,922 --> 00:00:48,631 The Lost Boys. 19 00:00:49,006 --> 00:00:49,549 Near Dark. 20 00:00:49,924 --> 00:00:50,591 Friday the 13th. 21 00:00:51,008 --> 00:00:51,342 Evil Dead. 22 00:00:51,634 --> 00:00:52,093 Evil Dead 2. 23 00:00:52,468 --> 00:00:53,052 The Return of the Living Dead. 24 00:00:53,386 --> 00:00:53,970 Day of the Dead. 25 00:00:54,303 --> 00:00:54,554 Poltergeist. 26 00:00:54,887 --> 00:00:55,596 An American Werewolf in London. 27 00:00:56,013 --> 00:00:56,639 Monster Squad. 28 00:00:56,973 --> 00:00:57,223 The Fly. 29 00:00:57,515 --> 00:00:57,974 Hellraiser. 30 00:00:58,266 --> 00:00:58,933 The Changeling. 31 00:00:59,225 --> 00:00:59,684 Re-Animator. 32 00:00:59,976 --> 00:01:00,560 Sleepaway Camp. 33 00:01:01,102 --> 00:01:02,853 Pumpkinhead and Friday 13th Part 4. 34 00:01:04,146 --> 00:01:08,192 In the '60s and '70s, horror was looked down on. 35 00:01:08,693 --> 00:01:12,363 The Hollywood community has always looked at it as the redheaded stepchild. 36 00:01:12,822 --> 00:01:17,076 There was a huge blossoming of creative energy. 37 00:01:17,368 --> 00:01:21,247 The '80s had a lot of really good horror films made. 38 00:01:21,956 --> 00:01:24,542 It's a time of such artistic freedom that you could make anything. 39 00:01:24,834 --> 00:01:26,460 It was a free-for-all for concepts. 40 00:01:26,794 --> 00:01:30,172 Visual effects got incredibly elaborate in the '80s. 41 00:01:30,464 --> 00:01:34,176 There was this strange sort of rebellious nature. 42 00:01:34,468 --> 00:01:39,098 It started to be normal to have really kick-ass women in great parts. 43 00:01:39,390 --> 00:01:43,477 We were getting creature movies, we were getting vampire movies, we were getting more slasher movies. 44 00:01:43,811 --> 00:01:46,063 Everybody realized that horror could be fun. 45 00:01:46,355 --> 00:01:47,648 Like the lid was off man. 46 00:01:48,024 --> 00:01:52,194 Like you could do and say and create whatever you wanted. 47 00:01:52,695 --> 00:01:55,448 We would just like completely nerd out about all this stuff. 48 00:01:55,781 --> 00:01:58,534 It might have been cheesy but it was also like holy crap. 49 00:01:58,909 --> 00:02:01,912 We have such sights to show you. 50 00:02:50,169 --> 00:02:54,382 I think every single person on this Earth has a little bit of darkness in them. 51 00:02:54,757 --> 00:02:59,678 A horror film is a good avenue to really let some of those feelings out. 52 00:03:00,221 --> 00:03:03,808 Being confronted with your fears in a movie is so safe. 53 00:03:04,225 --> 00:03:06,435 Like the old cliché about the roller coaster. 54 00:03:06,811 --> 00:03:10,523 You get on, you're terrified, you know you're not going to die, you get off, you went through 55 00:03:10,815 --> 00:03:15,194 something that you can share with your buddies or your girlfriend or whomever and say 56 00:03:15,486 --> 00:03:16,946 "Wow, we did that." 57 00:03:17,571 --> 00:03:24,161 But there's also the confrontation of psychological fears and most of us particularly as our hair 58 00:03:24,453 --> 00:03:28,416 grays, the fear is more about mortality than it is about anything else. 59 00:03:29,083 --> 00:03:32,795 Why do we make up horror when we have so much horror in the real world? 60 00:03:33,379 --> 00:03:36,590 And I think it's because it's a coping mechanism for a lot of people. 61 00:03:37,133 --> 00:03:41,303 People love to watch horror because it's a way of sublimating their own fears. 62 00:03:41,637 --> 00:03:46,308 Even though as a kid I couldn't watch them, I was too afraid but there's something of 63 00:03:46,851 --> 00:03:48,227 I'm glad that's not me. 64 00:03:48,519 --> 00:03:53,274 They can enjoy someone else doing it and get a little bit of a release. 65 00:03:53,649 --> 00:03:56,652 In everyone when they're watching a horror movie likes to think of what they would do 66 00:03:56,986 --> 00:03:57,862 in that situation. 67 00:03:58,279 --> 00:04:01,157 That's why you always have the stereotype of people yelling at the screen of like, "Don't 68 00:04:01,449 --> 00:04:04,869 go in there, don't go up the stairs"and it's so fun to watch that and think about 69 00:04:05,202 --> 00:04:07,204 would I survive this horror movie?" 70 00:04:07,830 --> 00:04:12,251 The greatest war between good and evil always takes place within our own souls. 71 00:04:12,960 --> 00:04:16,881 Horror tries to resolve that, tries to contend with that. 72 00:04:17,339 --> 00:04:19,300 That's what all those stories are about. 73 00:04:19,967 --> 00:04:21,260 It's classic mythology. 74 00:04:22,136 --> 00:04:26,599 One of the reasons I think horror movies appeal to a younger audience, there's a sense of 75 00:04:27,016 --> 00:04:27,725 immortality. 76 00:04:28,100 --> 00:04:32,730 They don't think about life or death and so the body being rent asunder is more entertaining 77 00:04:33,022 --> 00:04:34,273 than it is personal. 78 00:04:34,690 --> 00:04:40,279 I think the more painful and the more genuine the fears are that are confronted in horror 79 00:04:40,571 --> 00:04:46,535 movies the more therapeutic and more deeply enriching the experience can be. 80 00:04:51,832 --> 00:04:55,336 So much stuff going on in the '80s - mind blowing when you think back of you know, 81 00:04:55,753 --> 00:04:56,629 how much stuff there was. 82 00:04:57,379 --> 00:05:05,471 Movies or music or radio or we started the MTV generation which led to a million other things 83 00:05:05,763 --> 00:05:09,767 that influenced movies and influenced television and influenced more music. 84 00:05:10,142 --> 00:05:12,019 MTV was the hottest thing on Earth. 85 00:05:12,394 --> 00:05:13,938 You just had it on all the time. 86 00:05:19,026 --> 00:05:24,532 You know Cyndi Lauper of course, Torn Petty and Jackson Browne, Bruce Springsteen. 87 00:05:25,366 --> 00:05:26,826 I knew the words to everything. 88 00:05:27,952 --> 00:05:31,205 The top 4O stuff was off the chain. 89 00:05:31,580 --> 00:05:33,415 I mean it was hit, after hit, after hit. 90 00:05:33,874 --> 00:05:35,709 Great group after great group. 91 00:05:36,168 --> 00:05:38,379 And there was a lot of good metal music in the '80s. 92 00:05:38,712 --> 00:05:40,798 You know Metallica and Ozzy. 93 00:05:42,508 --> 00:05:48,973 Really saccharine Olivia Newton-John, romantic ballads on the one hand and you had punk 94 00:05:49,515 --> 00:05:50,182 on the other hand. 95 00:05:50,599 --> 00:05:52,643 We had slicker action heroes. 96 00:05:53,561 --> 00:05:55,646 A lot of '80s hair going on. 97 00:05:56,021 --> 00:05:59,066 It was a lot like Mel Gibson's hair in Lethal Weapon. 98 00:05:59,692 --> 00:06:00,734 Not sure I liked it. 99 00:06:01,527 --> 00:06:02,361 Mullet. 100 00:06:03,028 --> 00:06:04,613 Yeah, it wasn't pretty. 101 00:06:05,072 --> 00:06:07,408 We all had this big huge hair and Aqua Net. 102 00:06:07,825 --> 00:06:08,951 The hair was beyond teased. 103 00:06:09,410 --> 00:06:10,244 It was bullied. 104 00:06:10,744 --> 00:06:15,541 I remember Jane Fonda Workout watching people walk down the street in workout outfits 105 00:06:15,916 --> 00:06:19,044 which to me was like completely bizarre. 106 00:06:19,503 --> 00:06:23,674 Big hair, big shoulder pads and cocaine. 107 00:06:24,049 --> 00:06:25,426 Lots of cocaine. 108 00:06:26,093 --> 00:06:28,429 Maybe Ronald Reagan inspired all the horror. 109 00:06:29,430 --> 00:06:35,269 You had the fuddy-duddy sort of older generation saying no we let the kids play long enough 110 00:06:35,644 --> 00:06:37,771 at the wheel and now we're going to take the wheel back over. 111 00:06:38,105 --> 00:06:39,315 And that was really the Reagan era. 112 00:06:39,607 --> 00:06:42,026 And it was a very oppressive and dark time. 113 00:06:43,652 --> 00:06:48,115 It was hard to be gay in that era, it was hard to state certain political views in that period. 114 00:06:48,616 --> 00:06:51,827 Because the '80s were an era of excess in every conceivable way. 115 00:06:52,328 --> 00:06:55,789 Drugs, disco, sex, the tragedy of the AIDS epidemic. 116 00:06:56,206 --> 00:07:01,795 There were a lot of very heightened things going on in that decade and the horror movies 117 00:07:02,338 --> 00:07:03,714 were an absolute reflection of that. 118 00:07:04,089 --> 00:07:09,887 And they say there's a theory that horror thrives when there's a repressive government. 119 00:07:10,512 --> 00:07:13,474 What scares us says a lot about the society. 120 00:07:30,658 --> 00:07:33,994 After Halloween I had a deal with AVCO Embassy to make two films and 121 00:07:34,370 --> 00:07:35,913 the first one turned out to be "The Fog". 122 00:07:36,246 --> 00:07:40,584 It was a ghost story conceived on a trip to England and Stonehenge. 123 00:07:41,043 --> 00:07:47,633 I said to Debra Hill, man it's really amazing here. And it's a fog bank at the time was off 124 00:07:47,967 --> 00:07:48,968 in the distance. 125 00:07:49,385 --> 00:07:51,011 "I wonder what's in there?", we said. 126 00:07:51,971 --> 00:07:55,099 I was gonna get hired for horror films. 127 00:07:55,557 --> 00:07:58,644 That's what was gonna happen because that's where I had a hit. 128 00:07:59,687 --> 00:08:00,854 So, off we went. 129 00:08:01,355 --> 00:08:04,441 You know, it's kind of an old-fashioned ghost story. 130 00:08:05,067 --> 00:08:07,736 It's not big, gory, scary stuff. 131 00:08:08,654 --> 00:08:11,073 The Fog was shot up in Point Reyes, California. 132 00:08:11,448 --> 00:08:12,992 It was a beautiful area. 133 00:08:13,867 --> 00:08:16,036 My dear friend Adrienne Barbeau. 134 00:08:16,578 --> 00:08:22,793 She spent the entire time up in that tower and so, we were never ever on-screen together. 135 00:08:24,503 --> 00:08:25,129 Jamie Lee. 136 00:08:25,629 --> 00:08:30,926 She's hitchhiking and the first thing she says when she gets in the car is, "Are you weird?" 137 00:08:31,719 --> 00:08:32,553 Are you weird? 138 00:08:35,764 --> 00:08:39,143 And then I offer her a sip of beer and then they cut and there we are in bed. 139 00:08:39,852 --> 00:08:43,564 Just like that. It's that easy because I'm smooth. 140 00:08:46,692 --> 00:08:53,615 I don't think it bothered her to get on that scream queen path as long as she thought she 141 00:08:54,158 --> 00:08:56,076 might be able to get off of it. 142 00:08:56,869 --> 00:08:58,120 And she did. 143 00:09:00,122 --> 00:09:02,416 The Fog has Nick Castle as the lead. 144 00:09:02,708 --> 00:09:04,084 That's the name of the character in it. 145 00:09:04,501 --> 00:09:08,922 I also remember that very fondly because as you pan across inside Adrienne's room, she's 146 00:09:09,256 --> 00:09:11,592 holding a baby and that's my son. 147 00:09:13,594 --> 00:09:18,599 The guys that come out of the fog at the end into the church, take Hal Holbrook to heaven 148 00:09:19,266 --> 00:09:20,768 or hell, somewhere. 149 00:09:22,853 --> 00:09:24,396 The seaweed dudes, did not like. 150 00:09:24,688 --> 00:09:27,066 I did not like the seaweed dudes at all. 151 00:09:27,524 --> 00:09:31,820 They look great in their own seaweedy oogy outfits. 152 00:09:34,656 --> 00:09:42,915 Big box fans and fog machines at the end of a street trying to make enough fog to look 153 00:09:43,457 --> 00:09:45,334 eerie and creepy, threatening. 154 00:09:45,751 --> 00:09:52,216 The slightest breeze took it all away and then to start over again kind of build it 155 00:09:52,633 --> 00:09:54,093 up and get it going. 156 00:09:55,469 --> 00:10:03,102 That was re-vamped after we finished it as it didn't work and the script was changed. 157 00:10:05,104 --> 00:10:08,816 It didn't get going quick enough somehow. 158 00:10:09,983 --> 00:10:11,944 I was (sighs)... that was a nightmare. 159 00:10:12,402 --> 00:10:14,029 I don't ever want to do that again. 160 00:10:23,122 --> 00:10:27,334 In the Changeling, George C. Scott discovers something's rotten in Seattle while investigating 161 00:10:27,751 --> 00:10:30,587 the death of a young child who used to live at his creepy new mansion. 162 00:10:31,046 --> 00:10:35,592 He plays John Russell who's a composer recovering from the tragedy of losing his family and 163 00:10:35,884 --> 00:10:39,680 he actually stars opposite his real-life wife Trish van Devere as he comes to realize that 164 00:10:40,055 --> 00:10:42,766 the underage ghost wants to do more than just play. 165 00:10:43,767 --> 00:10:51,775 It's a brooding melancholy tone poem and I just really you know, I was hypnotized by that movie. 166 00:10:52,276 --> 00:10:56,321 You think its sort of a haunted house movie but it's about so much more. 167 00:10:56,822 --> 00:10:58,782 It's so interesting and deep. 168 00:10:59,241 --> 00:11:06,665 The acting in it is incredible. The house that they shot that film in is gorgeous and 169 00:11:07,166 --> 00:11:08,917 you think it's a real house but it's not. 170 00:11:09,418 --> 00:11:10,586 That was a set. 171 00:11:10,878 --> 00:11:16,717 And the exterior of that film was built over another house that was existing. 172 00:11:17,509 --> 00:11:22,014 It's very mood inducing and anxiety producing the whole way through. 173 00:11:24,182 --> 00:11:27,603 There's plenty of classic ghost story chills in this one and The Changeling makes for a 174 00:11:27,936 --> 00:11:32,357 nice companion piece to Peter Straub's Ghost Story adaptation which came out the following year 175 00:11:38,238 --> 00:11:43,952 I can remember seeing John Carpenter's Halloween which unlike some sort of British horror 176 00:11:44,369 --> 00:11:47,831 you know, ghosty movie, it was very real feeling. 177 00:11:48,415 --> 00:11:50,876 I thought very well acted, extremely well shot. 178 00:11:51,418 --> 00:11:57,215 The idea that you could create a really simple story that had scary elements connected to it 179 00:11:57,758 --> 00:11:59,676 opened the door to Friday the 13th. 180 00:12:03,805 --> 00:12:08,101 A lot of people make their first horror movies because they're cheap, they don't require 181 00:12:08,435 --> 00:12:14,066 stars or anybody familiar and particularly in the 1980s all you needed was a string of 182 00:12:14,441 --> 00:12:19,404 creative kills to make a successful movie thanks to Friday the 13th in its ilk. 183 00:12:19,905 --> 00:12:24,159 We didn't have a clue that it was ever going to be successful or going to be changing horror 184 00:12:24,534 --> 00:12:25,327 or anything like that. 185 00:12:25,869 --> 00:12:30,249 What we were trying to do is come up with a credible movie that would run 9O minutes 186 00:12:30,707 --> 00:12:35,587 and have sound and words coming out of people's mouths at the right time and hope that it 187 00:12:36,004 --> 00:12:36,797 worked out okay. 188 00:12:37,172 --> 00:12:38,924 That was our entire ambition. 189 00:12:39,383 --> 00:12:43,220 I think we were all flying by the seat of our pants having a good time doing this. 190 00:12:44,096 --> 00:12:45,847 My death scene was really, really fun. 191 00:12:47,891 --> 00:12:52,813 Tom Savini made the mold of my neck and when I lifted my head back like that, 192 00:12:53,730 --> 00:12:55,524 you know it would open up perfectly. 193 00:12:58,360 --> 00:13:02,864 There was the POV of the killer but you never saw the killer. 194 00:13:03,448 --> 00:13:06,868 All you knew was like wow, this person's upset. 195 00:13:07,452 --> 00:13:12,916 When the music comes in then you're seeing what the killer sees as opposed to just 196 00:13:13,250 --> 00:13:14,751 a shot with the camera. 197 00:13:19,756 --> 00:13:24,386 Everybody loves the Harry Manfredini signature Friday the 13th, Ki-Ki-Ki, Ma-Ma-Ma. 198 00:13:29,099 --> 00:13:30,851 He says it's ”ki, ki, ki, ma, ma, ma... 199 00:13:31,226 --> 00:13:33,854 Because it's "Kill" and ”Mom" but I always hear "ch, ch, ch, ah, ah, ah". 200 00:13:34,271 --> 00:13:35,188 But maybe it's my hearing. 201 00:13:35,689 --> 00:13:40,235 I thought it was "ha, ha, ha, ha" but it's really"kill, kill, kill, kill." 202 00:13:40,819 --> 00:13:45,324 Ch - Ch - Ch. Ha - ha - ha. That's how I do it anyway. 203 00:13:46,616 --> 00:13:52,956 So many gory, scary moments but the one that really comes to mind is Kevin Bacon's kill. 204 00:13:53,957 --> 00:13:55,208 So sick. 205 00:13:57,502 --> 00:13:58,837 Oh, it's horrible. 206 00:13:59,504 --> 00:14:01,423 The brilliant Betsy Palmer. 207 00:14:01,798 --> 00:14:03,091 I mean she was in Mister Roberts. 208 00:14:03,425 --> 00:14:04,634 She was a very good actress. 209 00:14:05,052 --> 00:14:08,180 How in the world does she become the crazed killer? 210 00:14:11,975 --> 00:14:16,813 She smiles when she says it, meanwhile they've cut to the little Jason drowning and I'm going like 211 00:14:17,314 --> 00:14:18,774 you're crazy. 212 00:14:19,608 --> 00:14:23,070 You know you're crazy and you don't care. 213 00:14:23,779 --> 00:14:26,073 That's one scary personality. 214 00:14:29,951 --> 00:14:31,703 Shooting Friday the 13th was a piece of cake. 215 00:14:31,995 --> 00:14:36,041 A bunch of us having a great time and you know making this movie and it wasn't scary at all. 216 00:14:36,625 --> 00:14:39,961 But the first time I saw it, I actually had some nightmares. 217 00:14:41,004 --> 00:14:44,633 The end scene I did not know was coming. 218 00:14:45,342 --> 00:14:52,391 Alice is in the canoe so relieved and Jason the kid he jumps out of a lake and looking 219 00:14:52,849 --> 00:14:55,060 so weird and distorted. 220 00:14:55,477 --> 00:14:58,271 Thank you Tom Savini for scaring the hell out of me. 221 00:14:59,064 --> 00:15:03,819 The fact that it became as successful as it did was mostly luck. 222 00:15:04,111 --> 00:15:06,113 Being at the right place at the right time. 223 00:15:06,571 --> 00:15:08,240 It just all came together. 224 00:15:09,199 --> 00:15:14,496 It was a scary film ya know for what it was at the time but I don't think anybody thought 225 00:15:14,913 --> 00:15:17,624 there was going to be uh, I don't know what are we at? 226 00:15:18,083 --> 00:15:19,334 Like 12 of these things? 227 00:15:29,803 --> 00:15:32,556 The Shining is an incredibly powerful movie. 228 00:15:33,390 --> 00:15:37,102 The reviews when it came out were absolutely terrible across the board. 229 00:15:37,727 --> 00:15:42,482 There may have been the occasional exception but it was not a well-liked movie. 230 00:15:42,983 --> 00:15:48,530 However, it connected with a young audience in such a powerful way that it became iconic. 231 00:15:49,364 --> 00:15:54,786 And I was so crashingly disappointed with it because I loved the book and it's not the book. 232 00:15:55,328 --> 00:16:00,667 It was something about Kubrick's take on that that was just so arch. 233 00:16:02,043 --> 00:16:06,006 Sometimes it takes you a few watches before you gain appreciation for something. 234 00:16:06,590 --> 00:16:11,052 But it has that Kubrick quality of hypnotic fascination that you can't get away from and 235 00:16:11,344 --> 00:16:13,263 if I happen to click on it, I'm gonna watch it. 236 00:16:13,722 --> 00:16:18,768 I think The Shining is probably the best performance in any horror film, maybe ever. 237 00:16:25,901 --> 00:16:28,612 Boy, does he go off the rails in that one. 238 00:16:31,823 --> 00:16:33,783 All work and no play makes Jack a dull boy. 239 00:16:36,870 --> 00:16:37,746 Terrifying. 240 00:16:38,205 --> 00:16:42,501 Shelley Duvall looks honestly terrified and Jack Nicholson honestly looks like 241 00:16:42,876 --> 00:16:43,668 he can't stand her. 242 00:16:44,085 --> 00:16:47,797 I mean to the point where I'm thinking, "Am I seeing the characters or am I seeing the actors 243 00:16:48,131 --> 00:16:49,758 on set like freaking out?" 244 00:16:50,217 --> 00:16:51,510 And that's just how good they were. 245 00:16:54,095 --> 00:16:58,058 That's always the hardest part to play is the wife who has to like make the decision, 246 00:16:58,350 --> 00:17:00,018 is my husband nuts or is it just me? 247 00:17:00,310 --> 00:17:04,773 And I think every woman on the face of the planet wants to give their husband the benefit 248 00:17:05,190 --> 00:17:09,027 of the doubt until the very last minute when it's like ah, I got to get out of here. 249 00:17:14,157 --> 00:17:15,158 The two twins. 250 00:17:15,617 --> 00:17:16,868 I mean I'll never forget that image. 251 00:17:17,160 --> 00:17:18,453 And the woman in the bathtub. 252 00:17:18,787 --> 00:17:22,165 That's something that was seared into my brain forever and ever and ever. 253 00:17:23,708 --> 00:17:26,211 The scene that always sticks out to me is when he's at the bar. 254 00:17:26,628 --> 00:17:29,548 He's talking and then we cut and there's actually a bartender there. 255 00:17:30,257 --> 00:17:34,177 Every line every like beat in that whole scene he just chews it up. 256 00:17:34,803 --> 00:17:37,055 It's just you can't take your eyes off him. 257 00:17:39,516 --> 00:17:45,021 I think any movie where a parent is a villain is really hard to watch. 258 00:17:45,313 --> 00:17:50,068 It really hooks into for me this feeling of trusting the men around you and how it would 259 00:17:50,360 --> 00:17:54,114 feel to all of a sudden be scared of the person that you love. 260 00:17:55,031 --> 00:17:56,032 It's so scary. 261 00:17:58,285 --> 00:18:00,829 The big ending is out there in the maze. 262 00:18:01,496 --> 00:18:05,959 Now you look at that movie, what's missing in that sequence? It's supposed to be out in the 263 00:18:06,251 --> 00:18:09,254 freezing cold but they shot it on a soundstage. 264 00:18:09,921 --> 00:18:11,756 They didn't get any oxidation of breath. 265 00:18:12,215 --> 00:18:18,054 Kubrick is such a stickler for detail and everything's got to be just right and how 266 00:18:18,471 --> 00:18:24,686 much money does it cost doesn't matter. Let's get it right and yet no oxidation of breath. 267 00:18:28,565 --> 00:18:33,653 The Shining was promoted as a Stanley Kubrick movie, not a Stephen King movie. 268 00:18:34,112 --> 00:18:40,368 There was a long period of time when the name Stephen King was avoided by marketers because 269 00:18:40,827 --> 00:18:46,291 it identified the movie as a horror film and a horror film was still considered disposable trash. 270 00:18:46,750 --> 00:18:49,085 Stephen King himself said he hated it. 271 00:18:49,377 --> 00:18:54,090 King had actually written a script for Kubrick for The Shining which Kubrick just tossed aside. 272 00:18:54,549 --> 00:19:00,221 I think it was painful to King to see this because it was such a personal book to him. 273 00:19:01,306 --> 00:19:04,267 When Kubrick turned his hand to The Shining, I think it sort of was like well, you know 274 00:19:04,643 --> 00:19:06,227 now anybody could make these pictures. 275 00:19:06,645 --> 00:19:13,401 It became a very viable genre for all budget levels which was not true before. 276 00:19:24,829 --> 00:19:30,043 Dressed to Kill was pretty obviously even though I think DePalma denies this. 277 00:19:30,418 --> 00:19:35,215 I think DePalma says he had never seen an Argento movie and that may in fact well be 278 00:19:35,590 --> 00:19:38,593 the case sometimes these things just sort of seep into the consciousness. 279 00:19:39,010 --> 00:19:47,185 But it did seem like he was bringing certain aesthetic concepts of the Giallo into American 280 00:19:47,560 --> 00:19:48,478 horror films. 281 00:19:48,812 --> 00:19:52,899 You know how he used the star filters first as like reflections would show up and they'd go 282 00:19:53,608 --> 00:19:59,447 "ping" and just like this sort of gliding cinematography and everything felt sort of 283 00:19:59,864 --> 00:20:00,990 dreamlike. 284 00:20:03,827 --> 00:20:07,539 It has a sexual feel to it even more than most horror films. 285 00:20:08,957 --> 00:20:18,341 I was really interested in the contrast between the depiction of violence and an incongruously 286 00:20:18,758 --> 00:20:20,635 beautiful presentation. 287 00:20:36,818 --> 00:20:41,030 Fade to Black starring Dennis Christopher it's a reaction to the burgeoning slasher genre. 288 00:20:41,448 --> 00:20:46,327 So, it's about a horror nerd who dresses as different classic monsters to kind of enact 289 00:20:46,745 --> 00:20:48,246 these sort of revenge murders. 290 00:20:48,538 --> 00:20:50,749 People that have wronged him throughout his life. 291 00:20:52,208 --> 00:20:54,878 It's finale takes place on top of Grauman's Chinese Theatre on Hollywood Boulevard. 292 00:20:55,378 --> 00:20:59,924 It's a very weird time capsule portrait of people living on the fringes of Los Angeles 293 00:21:00,383 --> 00:21:01,259 in 1980. 294 00:21:01,593 --> 00:21:05,764 And it's a nice illustration of the horror fan as outcast which is a pretty big shadow 295 00:21:06,139 --> 00:21:07,932 hanging over the '80s, I think. 296 00:21:16,524 --> 00:21:19,611 In one corner people are going to say Motel Hell is complete garbage. 297 00:21:20,028 --> 00:21:22,405 Violent, gruesome, sickening and perverse. 298 00:21:22,781 --> 00:21:27,076 In the other corner people are going to defend Motel Hell saying it's a comedy that achieves 299 00:21:27,368 --> 00:21:32,415 a kind of demented satirical genius in the way it criticizes such other sleazoid trash 300 00:21:32,749 --> 00:21:34,292 as The Texas Chainsaw Massacre. 301 00:21:35,210 --> 00:21:40,298 Genius in how they got the title because it was Motel Hello and the neon was burnt out. 302 00:21:40,965 --> 00:21:42,884 It blew my mind, I thought it was so awesome. 303 00:21:43,551 --> 00:21:47,096 Then you get into a movie that you're like wow, this is creepy and scary. 304 00:21:47,472 --> 00:21:50,266 You know, to be buried up to the neck and you're just like that got me. 305 00:21:50,767 --> 00:21:52,101 Two great villains. 306 00:21:52,602 --> 00:21:55,104 One who wore a pig head and wielded a chainsaw. 307 00:21:55,522 --> 00:21:56,815 That was really great. 308 00:21:58,441 --> 00:22:02,904 This was one of the last pictures of cowboy actor Rory Calhoun who was very skinny and 309 00:22:03,363 --> 00:22:04,906 I think probably had cancer at the time. 310 00:22:11,871 --> 00:22:13,832 That chainsaw fight at the end. 311 00:22:14,290 --> 00:22:18,378 The chainsaw is the worst weapon you could ever use for any kind of fight. 312 00:22:18,711 --> 00:22:24,425 All you have to do is throw anything into the web of a chainsaw and it stops. 313 00:22:25,009 --> 00:22:28,221 So, it's about the worst weapon you could ever use. 314 00:22:30,974 --> 00:22:35,979 If you want to go to something that really catches the spirit of the '80s don't look any further. 315 00:22:36,521 --> 00:22:38,356 Also, quite a great title. 316 00:22:51,870 --> 00:22:53,454 Oh, I love Maniac. 317 00:22:54,247 --> 00:22:58,418 The thing that makes Maniac a true stand apart film is the quality of the performances. 318 00:22:59,168 --> 00:23:03,214 Top-notch casting, top-notch storytelling, amazing editing. 319 00:23:03,590 --> 00:23:05,508 That movie moves like fucking lightning. 320 00:23:06,050 --> 00:23:10,179 When he slows the movie down, he does it for a reason, to set you up for the next thing. 321 00:23:13,516 --> 00:23:15,476 It's a little strong for my tastes. 322 00:23:15,768 --> 00:23:18,062 It's a testament to its power. 323 00:23:18,605 --> 00:23:24,235 You have Tom Savini doing the makeup effects who had come from Vietnam and knew all about 324 00:23:24,527 --> 00:23:26,446 what bodies rent asunder looked like. 325 00:23:26,738 --> 00:23:30,742 You've got scalpings in that movie that are incredibly effective because they're so real. 326 00:23:31,242 --> 00:23:34,746 That's a very independent movie that could not get on movie screens today. 327 00:23:35,163 --> 00:23:41,419 But there was a small but hungry audience for that and that's the precursor to torture 328 00:23:41,836 --> 00:23:47,800 porn that you know, Hostel came along much later and started a whole new sub-genre. 329 00:23:52,305 --> 00:23:57,852 The VHS era is hard to convey to someone who grew up in the post Napster digital era when 330 00:23:58,269 --> 00:24:00,813 everything is available by some means. 331 00:24:02,690 --> 00:24:09,155 You suddenly had access to a world of cinema beyond just your hazy memories of the Hammer 332 00:24:09,656 --> 00:24:13,117 films they played when you were a kid on Channel 11. 333 00:24:13,993 --> 00:24:18,414 It was the age of the video store and there was one on every street corner. 334 00:24:18,748 --> 00:24:23,962 You could browse forever and watch things that no normal person would ever normally 335 00:24:24,379 --> 00:24:29,759 watch and this was a goldmine for young indie directors who had no budget but had a good 336 00:24:30,218 --> 00:24:31,386 imagination. 337 00:24:38,226 --> 00:24:39,560 Everybody went to the video store. 338 00:24:40,019 --> 00:24:41,229 That was the way you started your evening. 339 00:24:41,646 --> 00:24:45,483 Running down to the local rental store to see ooh what can I get away with renting without 340 00:24:45,984 --> 00:24:46,985 my mom here. 341 00:24:47,527 --> 00:24:50,029 And we had the Beta versus VHS battles. 342 00:24:50,530 --> 00:24:54,617 It was like the Coke - Pepsi battle of the video tech world at the time and obviously 343 00:24:55,076 --> 00:24:57,453 VHS won out and that's what the stores had. 344 00:24:57,787 --> 00:25:00,581 There was a certain magic to the VHS tape. 345 00:25:00,915 --> 00:25:05,420 I remember the first one we rented was A Nightmare on Elm Street and Critters 346 00:25:05,878 --> 00:25:07,088 and something for my mom. 347 00:25:07,714 --> 00:25:10,633 And then you had the personal curation aspect. 348 00:25:10,925 --> 00:25:12,468 I could collect videos. 349 00:25:12,760 --> 00:25:16,097 Now I could have the equivalent of albums but in film form. 350 00:25:16,556 --> 00:25:21,310 Suddenly I felt a kind of ownership of the content in a way that I never had felt before. 351 00:25:21,602 --> 00:25:23,813 Nobody cares about owning movies anymore now. 352 00:25:24,439 --> 00:25:26,107 No one covets holding it. 353 00:25:26,649 --> 00:25:28,234 It's all just like in the cloud. 354 00:25:28,735 --> 00:25:35,575 Everything's through your digital device, your phone, your iPad and there's definitely 355 00:25:35,867 --> 00:25:38,286 a certain coldness to the process. 356 00:25:45,752 --> 00:25:48,421 We were the first generation to really discover all this stuff 357 00:25:48,713 --> 00:25:51,883 through cable which meant we got it earlier which meant it was even more 358 00:25:52,258 --> 00:25:57,722 taboo than like the earlier generations that had to kind of sneak into theaters and whatnot. 359 00:25:58,139 --> 00:26:01,017 Now all of a sudden it's being beamed into my house. 360 00:26:01,726 --> 00:26:05,813 I'm by myself for three hours because my mom works, ooh what's on Cinemax? 361 00:26:06,355 --> 00:26:07,690 What's on HBO? 362 00:26:07,982 --> 00:26:11,402 I had the benefits of cable and I had the benefits of the rental system. 363 00:26:11,778 --> 00:26:14,781 You had to make some decisions about what you wanted to watch that night. 364 00:26:15,198 --> 00:26:19,243 It would have everything from a Universal Picture that you know, Tobe Hooper got tapped 365 00:26:19,577 --> 00:26:21,579 to make to stuff that was shot on video. 366 00:26:22,288 --> 00:26:24,624 Like the Ripper. Tom Savini starring in the Ripper. 367 00:26:24,916 --> 00:26:26,042 We rented that and 368 00:26:26,417 --> 00:26:28,753 I thought I was gonna get a real movie and it was like shot on video. 369 00:26:29,128 --> 00:26:30,463 I couldn't believe I was watching, 370 00:26:30,755 --> 00:26:35,885 like I just paid the same $3 that I would have paid for a studio release and it was Tom Savini 371 00:26:36,260 --> 00:26:38,471 running around in a shot on video thing. 372 00:26:38,763 --> 00:26:43,768 You suddenly had this great outpouring of poorly written, poorly directed, poorly acted 373 00:26:44,143 --> 00:26:46,979 films but then you would have the occasional gem. 374 00:26:47,480 --> 00:26:50,942 Guys like Charlie Band, guys like Roger Corman found a whole new life on home video after 375 00:26:51,275 --> 00:26:52,819 the VHS explosion happened. 376 00:26:53,194 --> 00:26:57,031 Charlie Band really invented direct-to-video. 377 00:26:57,824 --> 00:27:00,076 Charlie was churning them out. 378 00:27:00,743 --> 00:27:08,709 Empire Pictures and Charlie Band at the time provided opportunity to up-and-coming talent 379 00:27:09,627 --> 00:27:10,878 to make their mark. 380 00:27:11,504 --> 00:27:18,219 They're chasing trends that the bigger guys are doing and trying to get there more quickly 381 00:27:18,678 --> 00:27:19,929 and more cheaply. 382 00:27:20,805 --> 00:27:28,563 Charles Band provided this sort of unending flow of product and some of it had real worth. 383 00:27:29,438 --> 00:27:30,398 They're cheesy. 384 00:27:30,898 --> 00:27:36,696 A lot of blood and gore bad effects and bad acting and ridiculous storylines. 385 00:27:37,071 --> 00:27:39,532 They were right up my alley and I loved them. 386 00:27:40,449 --> 00:27:46,205 A lot of fans have said to me that saw Hellraiser for the first time because they were browsing 387 00:27:46,622 --> 00:27:50,877 through the shelves of Blockbuster and they paused when they got to the image of Pinhead. 388 00:27:51,335 --> 00:27:54,714 He's making very direct eye contact with you. 389 00:27:55,256 --> 00:27:58,176 What the image says is, look what I did to myself. 390 00:27:58,718 --> 00:28:00,761 Now imagine what I could do to you. 391 00:28:01,304 --> 00:28:07,018 Video cover art didn't seem that important initially and until some of these key horror 392 00:28:07,393 --> 00:28:08,853 films started appearing. 393 00:28:09,270 --> 00:28:15,318 And on the base of their success then suddenly those covers became quite important. 394 00:28:15,902 --> 00:28:20,406 Obviously the brighter and the more shocking it could possibly be than the better and 395 00:28:20,781 --> 00:28:22,700 more chance of that video being picked up. 396 00:28:23,409 --> 00:28:27,205 They had to have that art there to get you to grab an unknown title as opposed to something 397 00:28:27,622 --> 00:28:29,874 you might be familiar with from its theatrical release. 398 00:28:30,374 --> 00:28:32,793 Back then you really had to go looking for stuff. 399 00:28:33,211 --> 00:28:37,465 You had to be willing to take chances and if it had a really cool poster on the front 400 00:28:37,882 --> 00:28:39,634 or cover art I was hooked. 401 00:28:40,843 --> 00:28:44,722 It's the staff pics that usually would pick something that would be like, you want to rent this. 402 00:28:45,139 --> 00:28:46,015 Don't rent that. 403 00:28:46,474 --> 00:28:48,643 You'll always be able to rent that. You want this. 404 00:28:48,935 --> 00:28:49,769 Those people knew. 405 00:28:50,186 --> 00:28:52,146 They knew what the good films were because they had access to them. 406 00:28:52,521 --> 00:28:57,985 One of my sort of Bibles of '80s horror was the poster for Terror in the Aisles because 407 00:28:58,319 --> 00:29:01,614 the skull on the front of Terror in the Aisles was made up of all the titles of the 408 00:29:01,906 --> 00:29:03,699 names of the movies in it. 409 00:29:03,991 --> 00:29:08,120 So, I would go pick up Terror in the Aisles in the video store and I'd start to go through 410 00:29:08,537 --> 00:29:10,831 and I'd walk through and I try to find different movies. 411 00:29:11,374 --> 00:29:15,253 But it really opened me up to a lot of movies I would have never rented otherwise. 412 00:29:16,337 --> 00:29:22,426 I worked for the company that did the Halloween posters, that fabulous iconic knife going through 413 00:29:22,927 --> 00:29:24,595 the pumpkin of the jack-0'-lantern. 414 00:29:24,887 --> 00:29:27,515 That kind of said it all without saying anything. 415 00:29:27,848 --> 00:29:30,977 I thought that was a brilliant, brilliant ad campaign. 416 00:29:32,019 --> 00:29:36,482 The Nightmare on Elm Street poster features Nancy's face and she's lying in bed. 417 00:29:37,024 --> 00:29:37,984 It's a great poster. 418 00:29:38,359 --> 00:29:39,819 I mean it's art. 419 00:29:40,194 --> 00:29:42,863 It's not a photo, like a lot of movie posters are nowadays. 420 00:29:43,155 --> 00:29:46,575 You just have like a photo of the stars and they're like in a cute position 421 00:29:46,867 --> 00:29:51,664 and that photo art is now kind of dominant but back then they really commissioned someone 422 00:29:51,956 --> 00:29:53,124 to create a painting. 423 00:29:53,874 --> 00:29:58,379 Matthew Peak was able to do all of the posters for A Nightmare on Elm Street which is rare. 424 00:29:59,005 --> 00:30:02,008 There's a continuity and they're really beautiful and unique. 425 00:30:02,800 --> 00:30:07,763 That reflects to me the high level of artistry that went into all parts of A Nightmare on Elm Street. 426 00:30:08,055 --> 00:30:10,641 Even though it was a really low budget movie. 427 00:30:12,727 --> 00:30:19,817 I have a memory of driving on Sunset Boulevard and there was a high-rise building and the 428 00:30:20,109 --> 00:30:26,282 whole side of it was the painted poster of Texas Chainsaw Massacre 2 like on a giant 429 00:30:26,657 --> 00:30:28,993 building. I remember being very impressed with that. 430 00:30:29,952 --> 00:30:33,748 Kit Carson, it was his idea to make a Breakfast Club parody. 431 00:30:34,749 --> 00:30:37,418 I thought that was brilliant. I think that also 432 00:30:38,085 --> 00:30:43,924 let people know that we were not as serious as they maybe wanted Chainsaw 2 to be. 433 00:30:45,009 --> 00:30:49,722 The original poster art that Tobe wanted to go with was not going to be The Breakfast Club. 434 00:30:50,097 --> 00:30:55,436 He ended up going with The Breakfast Club to sort of trick a lot of exhibitors into 435 00:30:56,479 --> 00:31:00,274 putting it up in their displays because it looks very innocuous. 436 00:31:00,649 --> 00:31:02,360 It doesn't look like a horror movie really. 437 00:31:02,777 --> 00:31:05,279 It looks like a Halloween movie. It looks like a costume movie. 438 00:31:05,905 --> 00:31:10,993 You have to remember that advertising very seldom actually represents the movie correctly. 439 00:31:11,494 --> 00:31:14,955 Had I seen the artwork for Chopping Mall, I also would not have rented it. 440 00:31:15,956 --> 00:31:17,750 It has nothing to do with the movie. 441 00:31:18,667 --> 00:31:23,381 The gimmick with The Howling was that we wanted to position it as a normal slasher-ish kind 442 00:31:23,756 --> 00:31:27,551 of movie and not give away the fact that it had supernatural elements and werewolves. 443 00:31:28,094 --> 00:31:31,514 Eventually, they came up with what I think was a very clever poster of a clawed hand 444 00:31:31,972 --> 00:31:35,267 ripping the poster and behind it is a woman screaming. 445 00:31:35,893 --> 00:31:38,354 And in Europe for whatever reason they decided they didn't want to use the woman, they wanted 446 00:31:38,729 --> 00:31:40,439 to use a snout for the werewolf. 447 00:31:40,856 --> 00:31:45,861 So, in the British ads, it's the same ad but instead of a woman's face, it's a snout. 448 00:31:46,529 --> 00:31:52,118 You wanted to try to differentiate your product from movies that were aimed at a somewhat 449 00:31:52,576 --> 00:31:58,416 lower market and the idea was to try to vault over the expectations and be able to appeal 450 00:31:58,833 --> 00:31:59,708 to a wider audience. 451 00:32:00,167 --> 00:32:03,003 You try to get them in, through whatever means you can. 452 00:32:03,295 --> 00:32:06,715 However you have to misrepresent the movie and then by the time they've seen it 453 00:32:07,133 --> 00:32:07,925 it's too late. 454 00:32:08,300 --> 00:32:09,510 They can't get their money back. 455 00:32:24,984 --> 00:32:27,486 Well, back in the '80s the slasher films not withstanding, 456 00:32:28,112 --> 00:32:30,072 they weren't really ruled by trends so much. 457 00:32:30,448 --> 00:32:32,825 I mean there are a lot of people doing all different kinds of horror. 458 00:32:33,242 --> 00:32:37,371 You had a lot of directors who had kind of started off in low budgets in the 70s getting 459 00:32:37,746 --> 00:32:42,543 discovered by semi majors like AVCO Embassy and being given a chance to do bigger films. 460 00:32:42,960 --> 00:32:46,839 You had John Carpenter going from Halloween to The Fog, Escape from New York and The Thing. 461 00:32:47,131 --> 00:32:49,467 You had Joe Dante going from Piranha to The Howling. 462 00:32:49,967 --> 00:32:53,220 You had David Cronenberg who went from Rabid and The Brood up to Scanners and then 463 00:32:53,637 --> 00:32:54,680 The Dead Zone. 464 00:32:55,055 --> 00:32:58,017 So, you really saw a lot of kind of star directors coming up. 465 00:33:00,060 --> 00:33:04,106 Scanners was one that I saw probably too young. 466 00:33:05,191 --> 00:33:09,278 My friend and I rented it because of course, the cover art alone. 467 00:33:09,987 --> 00:33:11,363 Michael lronside like this on the cover. 468 00:33:12,072 --> 00:33:13,532 I thought we need to see this movie. 469 00:33:14,200 --> 00:33:16,035 Well, I didn't know what I was getting into. 470 00:33:22,458 --> 00:33:26,086 You can't talk about '80s horror and not mention the Scanners head blowing up. 471 00:33:26,754 --> 00:33:32,760 When that happens, it is so gruesome and visceral that even as a kid I was like this is the 472 00:33:33,135 --> 00:33:35,888 coolest thing I've ever seen. Obviously, this is before CGI. 473 00:33:36,222 --> 00:33:39,058 And all of a sudden homeboy with the glasses just... 474 00:33:43,604 --> 00:33:45,523 As a kid I just went... 475 00:33:47,316 --> 00:33:48,234 What the... 476 00:33:48,984 --> 00:33:50,528 Cronenberg, dude. 477 00:33:51,070 --> 00:33:54,823 And just stuff is flying everywhere and I know they took a shotgun and they used, they 478 00:33:55,115 --> 00:33:58,369 filled it up with bunch of l think chicken livers or something and just shot it out. 479 00:33:58,827 --> 00:34:01,121 But oh, my goodness, did that look so real. 480 00:34:02,623 --> 00:34:10,381 That explosion is probably the shot across the bow of the old guard. 481 00:34:11,131 --> 00:34:14,552 Just basically saying, ”Okay, we'll take it from here." 482 00:34:16,011 --> 00:34:20,140 So much of those performances in Scanners work because the actor's face has to sell it. 483 00:34:20,641 --> 00:34:22,059 So, you have Michael lronside. 484 00:34:22,518 --> 00:34:27,189 He's got to basically take all of these themes from the movie and project it through his face. 485 00:34:27,690 --> 00:34:30,150 It all hinges on whether or not we believe him, right? 486 00:34:30,609 --> 00:34:32,278 And he's so great at it. 487 00:34:47,209 --> 00:34:50,838 My Bloody Valentine might be my favorite slasher of 1981. 488 00:34:51,338 --> 00:34:56,844 It's just this culmination of characters whodunit and at the time especially it's unique. 489 00:34:57,428 --> 00:35:00,431 It's just the minors and Valentine's Day. 490 00:35:08,480 --> 00:35:10,190 The interesting thing about My Bloody Valentine 491 00:35:10,649 --> 00:35:15,279 is that it was really graphic with awesome practical effects but they cut 9 minutes of them 492 00:35:15,654 --> 00:35:16,572 out of the film. 493 00:35:18,324 --> 00:35:21,577 My favorite kill is definitely one that was cut for the theatrical release. 494 00:35:22,077 --> 00:35:26,206 It was this character named Happy, this old drunk guy at a bar who went out to visit the 495 00:35:26,498 --> 00:35:28,292 mine to inspect what was going on. 496 00:35:28,667 --> 00:35:32,963 He gets a pickaxe swung up through his chin and just the effect is so gnarly and it's 497 00:35:33,380 --> 00:35:35,132 one of those kills where I watched it and I'm like, 498 00:35:35,424 --> 00:35:37,134 "How did they even fake this?" 499 00:35:41,680 --> 00:35:45,059 One of the things I love about this movie is how authentic it feels and part of that 500 00:35:45,351 --> 00:35:47,644 is because they shot in an actual mine underground. 501 00:35:48,145 --> 00:35:51,231 Apparently the mine owners when they found out that the movie was going to film down there 502 00:35:51,690 --> 00:35:55,778 spent a lot of time cleaning it up which is the opposite of what the film crew wanted 503 00:35:56,153 --> 00:36:00,491 so they had to re-dirty this actual mine to get the look that they want for this movie. 504 00:36:04,370 --> 00:36:05,287 Of course, it's cheesy. 505 00:36:05,662 --> 00:36:06,622 It's a slasher. 506 00:36:06,955 --> 00:36:12,378 All the tropes are there but there's something about that one that just grabs me. 507 00:36:12,836 --> 00:36:15,798 I mean, My Bloody Valentine's got a lot of heart what can I say. 508 00:36:27,434 --> 00:36:29,853 The early '80s had a shape-shifter trend. 509 00:36:30,354 --> 00:36:33,857 Everybody's making transformation monster movies -The Howling, The Beast Within. 510 00:36:34,233 --> 00:36:34,983 All this other stuff. 511 00:36:35,317 --> 00:36:38,946 In The Howling we were trying to get away from the traditional villagers chasing the 512 00:36:39,363 --> 00:36:40,781 werewolf template. 513 00:36:41,115 --> 00:36:44,243 We wanted to actually position it as a slasher movie because they were very popular at the 514 00:36:44,535 --> 00:36:46,870 time and supernatural movies were kind of not. 515 00:36:47,454 --> 00:36:49,581 They were kind of considered a little old hat. 516 00:36:49,915 --> 00:36:53,752 So, in the first half hour of the picture there don't seem to be any supernatural elements at all. 517 00:36:54,169 --> 00:36:58,090 And so when we finally did introduce the werewolf angle I did it through watching 518 00:36:58,382 --> 00:37:02,261 The Wolf man on television which is a pop culture reference that audiences can immediately get. 519 00:37:08,559 --> 00:37:11,729 That was really kind of the first time that had been done and then it eventually became 520 00:37:12,146 --> 00:37:16,024 very popular with the Scream movies to have characters who were aware of the tropes of 521 00:37:16,400 --> 00:37:18,277 the genre. It became a sort of a genre staple. 522 00:37:18,694 --> 00:37:20,863 Joe Dante loves to put his friends in his films. 523 00:37:21,488 --> 00:37:25,242 So you can find his mentor Roger Corman, Famous Monsters icon Forrest J. Ackerman, 524 00:37:25,784 --> 00:37:30,748 Howling screenwriter John Sayles, good pal Mick Garris and his lucky charm Dick Miller. 525 00:37:32,875 --> 00:37:37,254 I remember seeing the Howling and just thinking, "Oh, finally" like somebody has created 526 00:37:37,838 --> 00:37:42,593 a werewolf and done an on-screen transformation that is just absolutely mind-blowingly great. 527 00:37:44,011 --> 00:37:47,681 We had told the studio that we can do a transformation all in one take. Which we learned for 528 00:37:48,015 --> 00:37:50,893 various reasons was impractical and also it wasn't particularly dramatic. 529 00:37:51,268 --> 00:37:53,604 We ended up shooting it conventionally with cutaways and stuff. 530 00:37:55,981 --> 00:38:02,070 The character of Eddie Quist, we finally see his full Rob Bottin assisted transformation. 531 00:38:02,696 --> 00:38:05,365 Holy shit, look what is happening to this guy. 532 00:38:07,326 --> 00:38:10,120 There's always going to be the great debate between The Howling and An American Werewolf 533 00:38:10,496 --> 00:38:14,333 in London and as amazing as the effects in American Werewolf in London are, I think at 534 00:38:14,750 --> 00:38:18,378 that scene, I mean it's all very brightly lit with a lot of close-ups and 535 00:38:18,670 --> 00:38:22,132 to me it's kind of a special-effects reel and not really a dramatic scene. 536 00:38:22,508 --> 00:38:27,346 And in The Howling, you have this great shadowy lighting in that scene, you have Robert Picardo's 537 00:38:27,846 --> 00:38:32,643 character who is not a victim, he wants to transform, he wants to show Dee Wallace's 538 00:38:32,976 --> 00:38:36,313 character what he really is and I think that gives it a lot of power. 539 00:38:36,730 --> 00:38:41,401 What we didn't want to do was what had been done before but that iteration of a guy 540 00:38:41,693 --> 00:38:44,488 who has a werewolf head and the werewolf hands and a tucked in shirt 541 00:38:44,905 --> 00:38:47,324 didn't seem to be modern to us. 542 00:38:47,616 --> 00:38:51,662 I was always eager to do something new and different and we tried it man and then it 543 00:38:51,954 --> 00:38:53,413 ended up photographing like a bear. 544 00:38:53,705 --> 00:38:58,252 So, we ended up using a combination of puppets and separate legs and indeed a guy in a suit 545 00:38:58,544 --> 00:39:00,754 but you had to shoot it in such a way that you didn't see his waist. 546 00:39:01,505 --> 00:39:03,006 We managed to pull off a pretty good illusion. 547 00:39:14,101 --> 00:39:15,310 I love The Burning. 548 00:39:15,769 --> 00:39:19,606 I didn't know about it for years and then when I found out about it, I was like where 549 00:39:19,982 --> 00:39:21,108 is this been all my life? 550 00:39:21,525 --> 00:39:24,361 It's a slasher film at a camp like I need to see this film. 551 00:39:24,945 --> 00:39:28,448 Well, first of all it's got Jason Alexander and Holly Hunter in it which is just mind-blowing 552 00:39:28,824 --> 00:39:30,450 considering the careers they've had since then. 553 00:39:34,955 --> 00:39:37,666 The writing, the way the kids interacted and of course 554 00:39:38,000 --> 00:39:39,334 Tom Savini's effects. 555 00:39:39,751 --> 00:39:42,838 I mean that whole scene when they're coming up on that raft and he just comes up 556 00:39:43,213 --> 00:39:46,133 in front of the sun and it just plunges down in the guy's neck. 557 00:39:48,427 --> 00:39:50,012 It's one of my favorite slashers. 558 00:40:08,989 --> 00:40:11,867 I love John Landis movies. In general, I just love them. 559 00:40:12,326 --> 00:40:17,372 But there's a particular movie like Animal House and An American Werewolf in London 560 00:40:17,664 --> 00:40:23,545 where he was so skilled at recreating a real environment and a real snapshot in time. 561 00:40:24,254 --> 00:40:25,839 It was totally engrossing to me. 562 00:40:26,298 --> 00:40:29,968 A perfect comedy-horror hybrid because it starts off light-hearted. 563 00:40:30,802 --> 00:40:32,554 There's sheep shit on my pack. 564 00:40:33,013 --> 00:40:37,517 It's a couple pals they're walking around and the next thing you know the one friend is eviscerated 565 00:40:37,976 --> 00:40:41,897 by a werewolf and the other one is slowly transforming into a werewolf. 566 00:40:45,484 --> 00:40:52,866 Jack is a zombie corpse that keeps reappearing in front of David and it's continually becoming 567 00:40:53,325 --> 00:40:55,535 more and more decrepit every time it shows up. 568 00:40:55,952 --> 00:40:57,454 It's a hilarious performance. 569 00:40:59,706 --> 00:41:02,000 The makeup is just absolutely gross. 570 00:41:03,585 --> 00:41:07,881 I remember seeing his trachea and feeling like I was looking at an anatomy book. 571 00:41:09,091 --> 00:41:12,344 Jenny Agutter plays a nurse who takes in David Naughton and their love story really gives 572 00:41:12,636 --> 00:41:17,057 an added layer of heart and soul to the film. Not to mention some added scares. 573 00:41:19,643 --> 00:41:21,937 It's got certainly horrific moments in it. 574 00:41:22,479 --> 00:41:25,148 The end where he's just in the streets of London running around. 575 00:41:25,607 --> 00:41:26,650 I mean that's scary. 576 00:41:27,025 --> 00:41:28,443 And that was done so well. 577 00:41:28,735 --> 00:41:33,490 And of course, Rick Baker's werewolf transformation...you can't talk about the movie without talking about that 578 00:41:33,782 --> 00:41:34,700 of course. 579 00:41:37,327 --> 00:41:40,956 Rick Baker was originally going to do Joe Dante's werewolf work in The Howling but 580 00:41:41,540 --> 00:41:44,501 John Landis kept him to a promise and scooped him up at the last minute. 581 00:41:45,711 --> 00:41:48,839 If you're going to go see a werewolf movie in the '80s, you're going to see a werewolf 582 00:41:49,339 --> 00:41:51,508 become a werewolf out of a man. 583 00:41:53,719 --> 00:41:59,266 I actually got queasy at the scene of his foot extending into a paw. 584 00:41:59,766 --> 00:42:03,603 It was all fleshy and was stretching and there was. .. nothing like that had been done before. 585 00:42:04,771 --> 00:42:07,441 It was startling to me to see that transformation. 586 00:42:07,733 --> 00:42:13,071 In my mind it will always be a level that really changed the look and the appeal of '80s movies. 587 00:42:14,322 --> 00:42:17,909 It's a classic and they both came out the same year along with Full Moon High 588 00:42:18,326 --> 00:42:19,202 and Wolf en. 589 00:42:19,828 --> 00:42:22,289 I mean it was it was a lupine year. 590 00:42:36,178 --> 00:42:38,472 I thought I was making the only werewolf film. 591 00:42:38,847 --> 00:42:44,311 Except for I Was a Teenage Werewolf which had been done 2O years before in black and white 592 00:42:44,895 --> 00:42:48,023 and AIP owned it so they weren't going to sue me. 593 00:42:48,648 --> 00:42:50,734 I told them I wanted to make a comedy version of it. 594 00:42:55,030 --> 00:42:56,656 I don't think it was what they really wanted. 595 00:42:57,115 --> 00:43:00,619 I guess if you're going to make horror movies you got to make scary horror movies. 596 00:43:01,244 --> 00:43:02,829 Funny horror movies... I don't know. 597 00:43:03,497 --> 00:43:07,083 Is the horror audience going to like this? ls anybody going to like this? 598 00:43:07,584 --> 00:43:08,960 I liked it. I had a good time. 599 00:43:09,336 --> 00:43:12,714 I got to work with Adam Arkin and his father Alan Arkin. 600 00:43:13,006 --> 00:43:14,049 Wonderful actor. 601 00:43:16,760 --> 00:43:20,806 I told him to make the werewolf look like Henry Hull did in Werewolf of London. 602 00:43:21,431 --> 00:43:23,058 And that's what they did. It was simple. 603 00:43:23,850 --> 00:43:27,979 We had a wonderful cast of comedians and I had a good time making the picture. 604 00:43:28,772 --> 00:43:29,981 I can say it now. 605 00:43:40,200 --> 00:43:42,744 Evil Dead scared the crap out of us. 606 00:43:43,036 --> 00:43:46,039 Sitting down to watch it, it really unnerved us. 607 00:43:49,376 --> 00:43:53,130 In the Evil Dead a very young Bruce Campbell has his first starring role. 608 00:43:57,050 --> 00:44:00,762 Campbell and Raimi were high school pals who made short films together before going all 609 00:44:01,137 --> 00:44:05,684 in on the 30-minute super 8 film Within the Woods which is kind of like the first version 610 00:44:05,976 --> 00:44:08,353 of Evil Dead and it was designed to attract investors. 611 00:44:10,939 --> 00:44:16,278 The effects, the practical effects, just the nastiness and just her in the basement 612 00:44:16,653 --> 00:44:20,699 it's like. .. with the trapdoor going up and down and screaming and the way they tracked the 613 00:44:20,991 --> 00:44:23,910 camera through the house. It was just so unnerving. 614 00:44:25,996 --> 00:44:30,292 I love the claymation stuff that they did with the melting bodies in there. 615 00:44:34,337 --> 00:44:38,383 Seeing Ellen Sandweiss get like essentially raped by tree branches. 616 00:44:40,802 --> 00:44:46,808 That's a fairly clear analogy of that idea of nature itself being a malevolent force. 617 00:44:47,267 --> 00:44:52,856 The sincerity of it is impossible to fake because this was just a bunch of kids going 618 00:44:53,273 --> 00:44:56,610 out to a cabin in Tennessee and filming what they could with no budget. 619 00:44:59,070 --> 00:45:03,033 They were doing things that you didn't think were possible on such a low budget. 620 00:45:03,366 --> 00:45:04,451 I mean they were so creative. 621 00:45:04,910 --> 00:45:08,496 The most interesting thing about Evil Dead is it came out after the invention of the 622 00:45:08,830 --> 00:45:12,500 Steadicam but they couldn't afford a Steadicam and so all those shots running through the 623 00:45:12,876 --> 00:45:17,213 woods they just strapped a camera to a couple of two by fours and had guys on either end 624 00:45:17,547 --> 00:45:19,674 of the two by fours running through the woods with the camera. 625 00:45:19,966 --> 00:45:20,884 And it works! 626 00:45:21,301 --> 00:45:24,721 The shakey cam is actually scarier than the Steadicam. 627 00:45:25,847 --> 00:45:31,061 This cinema verité effect and the grittiness to it, makes it feel almost like a documentary. 628 00:45:32,020 --> 00:45:36,024 The Evil Dead is a perfect example of cult film creative genius born out of low-budget 629 00:45:36,399 --> 00:45:37,067 necessity. 630 00:45:52,415 --> 00:45:56,628 Halloween was conceived by not just John Carpenter but by Debra Hill. 631 00:45:57,128 --> 00:46:03,343 And you had a very strong woman and her voice in the development of the characters and I think that has a lot 632 00:46:03,843 --> 00:46:09,266 to do with why you like Jamie beyond her own inherent skills which she is obviously very talented. 633 00:46:11,268 --> 00:46:16,815 After Halloween was a success, partners that I had in the movie wanted to make a sequel. 634 00:46:17,565 --> 00:46:19,359 I just didn't think there was any story left. 635 00:46:19,859 --> 00:46:21,778 I couldn't stop them from making it. 636 00:46:22,362 --> 00:46:25,824 So, I figured well, might as well go along with them. I wrote the screenplay. 637 00:46:26,574 --> 00:46:29,661 It wasn't very good. I didn't do a great job. 638 00:46:30,161 --> 00:46:35,834 And now you're repeating gags and you’re just repeating what's happened in one. 639 00:46:36,293 --> 00:46:37,961 This worked once, not this time. 640 00:46:38,378 --> 00:46:40,880 I wasn't scared in Halloween 2. I was just grossed out. 641 00:46:41,673 --> 00:46:45,969 You know, it's ironic that the original Halloween inspired so many countless dozens of imitations 642 00:46:46,594 --> 00:46:49,556 and for two years we got nothing but movies in which their only ambition was to litter 643 00:46:50,056 --> 00:46:51,224 the screen with dead teenagers. 644 00:46:51,599 --> 00:46:54,352 Now we get Halloween 2 and it's a pale imitation of the imitations. 645 00:46:54,811 --> 00:46:56,104 It's not worthy of the original film. 646 00:46:56,604 --> 00:47:01,818 Not until the very last sequel recently, did we have actually a new story to tell. 647 00:47:02,193 --> 00:47:05,780 So, I was disappointed in it and disappointed at what I did. 648 00:47:08,575 --> 00:47:10,118 I didn't want to direct Halloween 2. 649 00:47:11,995 --> 00:47:15,665 Rick Rosenthal is now directing instead of John Carpenter and Dick Warlock replacing 650 00:47:16,041 --> 00:47:17,584 Nick Castle wearing the Shatner mask. 651 00:47:18,043 --> 00:47:20,712 Nick Castle was not asked to return as The Shape. 652 00:47:22,422 --> 00:47:23,715 One of the big flaws. 653 00:47:24,174 --> 00:47:28,386 I think by that time I had already directed so yeah, I don't know, they had no even reason 654 00:47:28,845 --> 00:47:30,972 to think I'd want to be the shape again so, 655 00:47:31,264 --> 00:47:33,349 and nor would I have probably done it at that point. 656 00:47:33,975 --> 00:47:37,479 Debra came to me and said, "Nick, do you have the mask from the first one?" 657 00:47:37,854 --> 00:47:42,067 Because for whatever reason we've tried to redo it again and we can't get it right. 658 00:47:42,817 --> 00:47:44,027 So, I said, "Oh yeah, I got it here." 659 00:47:44,402 --> 00:47:45,403 It's in my living room. 660 00:47:45,862 --> 00:47:51,826 She took it and never gave it back unfortunately but I'm sure it would be powder by now anyhow. 661 00:47:52,160 --> 00:47:53,078 So, what the hell? 662 00:47:53,578 --> 00:47:57,582 Jamie Lee Curtis was a real sport in this film since she essentially had to go it alone 663 00:47:58,124 --> 00:48:01,920 without the support structure she had in her breakout hit in 1978. 664 00:48:03,004 --> 00:48:07,509 Plus, since she cut her hair for another movie she had to wear a wig that once you notice it, 665 00:48:08,051 --> 00:48:09,094 you can't unsee it. 666 00:48:10,095 --> 00:48:14,140 Contained mostly in the Haddonfield Hospital, the film follows the standard slasher formula 667 00:48:14,641 --> 00:48:18,978 much closer than the groundbreaking original with more creative kills and much more gratuitous 668 00:48:19,312 --> 00:48:19,938 nudity. 669 00:48:22,315 --> 00:48:26,653 I think the most memorable kill from Halloween 2 is probably the nurse who gets her head 670 00:48:27,028 --> 00:48:28,655 dunked in the boiling hot, hot tub. 671 00:48:29,114 --> 00:48:33,118 But for me my personal favorite is actually the other nurse who gets the scalpel in the back 672 00:48:33,660 --> 00:48:35,078 and just raised off the ground. 673 00:48:37,497 --> 00:48:41,126 My buddy from The Last Starfighter, Lance Guest plays a prominent role in there. 674 00:48:41,501 --> 00:48:45,880 I didn't realize until I saw it again how big a role he had and he survived, I think. 675 00:48:50,009 --> 00:48:52,887 I guess Michael Myers had to take a break to recuperate after getting torched at 676 00:48:53,179 --> 00:48:54,139 the end of Halloween 2. 677 00:48:57,350 --> 00:49:01,062 But he'd come back after the collective what the fuck of Halloween 3. 678 00:49:11,447 --> 00:49:15,994 Ghost Story is based on the Peter Straub novel and it stars Hollywood legends Fred Astaire, 679 00:49:16,286 --> 00:49:21,374 Melvyn Douglas, John Houseman and Douglas Fairbanks Jr. as the chowder society. 680 00:49:23,543 --> 00:49:25,628 Basically, a bunch of old dudes sharing horror stories. 681 00:49:33,344 --> 00:49:37,056 Of course, John Houseman similarly tells ghost stories by a campfire at the beginning of 682 00:49:37,432 --> 00:49:38,892 John Carpenter's, The Fog. 683 00:49:39,559 --> 00:49:44,230 Maybe that's why I grew up loving stories. That movie is like such a great marriage 684 00:49:44,564 --> 00:49:46,483 of old-time stories. 685 00:49:47,192 --> 00:49:49,152 It brought that into the '80s. 686 00:49:49,486 --> 00:49:51,362 At a time that we weren't really seeing that. 687 00:49:59,204 --> 00:50:03,541 The transition of Alice Krige throughout that movie is absolutely horrifying where she starts 688 00:50:03,958 --> 00:50:10,882 off as this beautiful woman sort of fluttery and flirty and full of life and very much 689 00:50:11,174 --> 00:50:14,010 sort of just a carelessness to her carriage. 690 00:50:14,844 --> 00:50:20,016 And by the end once things are revealed with her functionality in this film, it's such 691 00:50:20,433 --> 00:50:22,018 an interesting descent. 692 00:50:25,063 --> 00:50:27,357 Ghosts in movies are so hard to pull off. 693 00:50:27,774 --> 00:50:31,861 And I don't think anybody had pushed this idea of ghosts the way that Dick Smith had 694 00:50:32,237 --> 00:50:33,488 pushed them in Ghost Story. 695 00:50:33,863 --> 00:50:37,700 Dick Smith who is a guy who's best known for his work on The Exorcist or even The Godfather. 696 00:50:38,159 --> 00:50:42,872 At this point in the '80s, like he was stepping back a little bit while this new talent was coming 697 00:50:43,248 --> 00:50:47,126 forward but yet still was out there making memorable creations and though obviously, 698 00:50:47,544 --> 00:50:51,631 we see that in Ghost Story. It was something completely different than we had seen before. 699 00:50:56,928 --> 00:50:58,763 Yeah, I love that movie a lot. 700 00:51:04,394 --> 00:51:09,566 One of the really great things about 1980s horror movies was that everything happened 701 00:51:09,899 --> 00:51:11,067 in front of the camera. 702 00:51:11,651 --> 00:51:13,653 There was no such thing as CGI yet. 703 00:51:14,237 --> 00:51:19,951 An actor was interacting with either an actor covered in latex or puppets or things that 704 00:51:20,243 --> 00:51:22,453 were really in the frame with them. 705 00:51:25,081 --> 00:51:30,712 There was an artistry of the special makeup effects geniuses of the time, the Rick Baker's and 706 00:51:31,296 --> 00:51:36,426 Tom Savini's and Steve Johnson's and all of these people who really launched their 707 00:51:36,718 --> 00:51:38,344 careers during that time. 708 00:51:38,803 --> 00:51:44,892 You get your first Oscar for makeup and it was An American Werewolf in London in 1981. 709 00:51:46,686 --> 00:51:49,897 First of all, I'd like to thank the Academy for creating this new category and I'm very 710 00:51:50,315 --> 00:51:51,816 proud to be the first winner. 711 00:51:53,943 --> 00:51:59,282 When I think of 1980s horror, that's to me one of the best things about it. 712 00:52:00,700 --> 00:52:04,871 Once they saw what you could do it was like all bets were off and everybody wanted to 713 00:52:05,246 --> 00:52:07,165 go out and make horror movies which is exciting. 714 00:52:15,298 --> 00:52:22,180 Filmmakers realized that the tools that they had at their disposal allowed them to create 715 00:52:22,847 --> 00:52:25,683 bigger and bigger worlds, bigger and bigger moments. 716 00:52:34,108 --> 00:52:39,364 It's just such a vibrant, alive, new time because we had materials and we had techniques and 717 00:52:39,739 --> 00:52:43,951 we had all of these movies that were being made that gave us an opportunity to push the 718 00:52:44,410 --> 00:52:45,119 envelope. 719 00:52:45,745 --> 00:52:50,041 I love the magic of the movies and the magic of theater. 720 00:52:51,584 --> 00:52:55,171 How we take a situation and make it look how we want it to look. 721 00:52:55,713 --> 00:52:57,548 To make you believe what I want you to believe. 722 00:52:57,882 --> 00:53:00,760 What sticks in your mind the most is how did they do that? 723 00:53:01,427 --> 00:53:08,351 You become interested in the illusion and the magic that's happening behind the scenes 724 00:53:09,060 --> 00:53:13,022 and that gets you interested in film making. 725 00:53:15,108 --> 00:53:18,820 And the reason that Torn Savini, the reason that Stan Winston, the reason that Rick Baker 726 00:53:19,320 --> 00:53:24,409 and Rob Bottin were the visionaries that they were and still are, was because they 727 00:53:24,784 --> 00:53:28,663 approached all of these effects as if they were magic tricks. 728 00:53:29,122 --> 00:53:30,790 And a lot of it is misdirection. 729 00:53:31,874 --> 00:53:35,712 In-camera effects are always much more, more impactful. 730 00:53:36,045 --> 00:53:38,423 However, they're very expensive to do. 731 00:53:38,965 --> 00:53:41,217 They're very, very time-consuming. 732 00:53:51,644 --> 00:53:55,356 If you do them right, practical effects are much more powerful. 733 00:53:56,691 --> 00:53:58,234 How do you build a better werewolf? 734 00:53:58,693 --> 00:54:01,696 How do you build a better decapitation? 735 00:54:02,363 --> 00:54:05,366 I mean these are things that still obsess me. 736 00:54:06,868 --> 00:54:09,704 30-some years later this is still my work. 737 00:54:10,246 --> 00:54:17,170 There's an almost sort of childlike aspect to what we do that I feel very grateful for. 738 00:54:17,628 --> 00:54:23,301 This is impressive art; This is impressive stuff and it drives and propels the story 739 00:54:23,885 --> 00:54:27,263 and those visceral reactions that you have to horror. 740 00:54:27,597 --> 00:54:31,768 I'm always trying to sort of push things beyond the realm of good taste in it and sometimes 741 00:54:32,185 --> 00:54:33,603 even beyond the realm of possibility. 742 00:54:34,020 --> 00:54:35,313 You want to do the impossible things. 743 00:54:35,688 --> 00:54:37,690 You shouldn't be limited to what's possible. 744 00:54:38,024 --> 00:54:42,195 You should be able to make the audience believe something that's impossible is happening 745 00:54:42,487 --> 00:54:43,780 right in front of them. 746 00:54:44,322 --> 00:54:45,323 Everything was on the table. 747 00:54:45,823 --> 00:54:47,283 You could really do whatever you want. 748 00:54:47,950 --> 00:54:51,287 The only thing that you would have to contend with was the ratings board. 749 00:54:51,662 --> 00:54:56,000 It was always a fight because the directors felt they had creative freedom to tell the 750 00:54:56,417 --> 00:54:58,044 story and do whatever they wanted to do. 751 00:54:58,461 --> 00:55:02,340 And of course, there were people that found some of the subject matter and some of what 752 00:55:02,799 --> 00:55:04,675 we did offensive. 753 00:55:05,426 --> 00:55:10,223 For a certain amount of blood, you get an X and an X means the distributor can't release 754 00:55:10,556 --> 00:55:13,059 in almost all the theaters that wants you. 755 00:55:13,434 --> 00:55:16,437 You've got a very small release which means it's a very small profit. 756 00:55:17,396 --> 00:55:18,815 So, you have to be mindful of that. 757 00:55:19,232 --> 00:55:22,360 I've helped several films get X ratings because of the violence and the blood. 758 00:55:23,569 --> 00:55:27,365 Often they'll resubmit it, they'll cut out a few frames here and a few there. 759 00:55:27,657 --> 00:55:29,492 Finally, you might get an R - rating. 760 00:55:29,784 --> 00:55:34,580 It was often that this fear of getting an X - rating so they would go with blood that 761 00:55:34,997 --> 00:55:39,085 wasn't red right from the beginning like in Phantasm or Evil Dead 2. 762 00:55:39,752 --> 00:55:44,090 There's such a focus on blood and gore particularly in movies in the '80s and to be honest with you 763 00:55:44,590 --> 00:55:46,008 I never quite got it. 764 00:55:46,467 --> 00:55:51,055 Once filmmakers got into that whole blood thing and the bloodletting and it became bigger 765 00:55:51,430 --> 00:55:53,474 and bigger and like who can outdo the other person? 766 00:55:53,933 --> 00:55:59,438 And yeah, that's fun but to me it wasn't quite as realistic as what happens in real life. 767 00:55:59,897 --> 00:56:03,860 The effects artists creating stuff usually knows best how to shoot it. 768 00:56:04,902 --> 00:56:09,824 Some things are going to be shot from a certain angle, they work best not from this angle. 769 00:56:10,867 --> 00:56:15,496 And a good director is going to trust their effects people but if you shoot it from something 770 00:56:15,788 --> 00:56:18,875 a little bit different it's going to reveal itself to be the magic trick and you don't 771 00:56:19,292 --> 00:56:21,878 want to ever show the rabbit in the hat. 772 00:56:26,883 --> 00:56:31,596 There was so much work that everybody was keeping busy and it never felt like competition. 773 00:56:32,013 --> 00:56:33,681 It felt more like a coexistence. 774 00:56:34,098 --> 00:56:37,476 We all had the same backgrounds, we all grew up reading Famous Monsters of Filmland, 775 00:56:37,768 --> 00:56:41,439 we all grew up making movies with our Super 8 cameras. 776 00:56:41,731 --> 00:56:46,527 There was a sort of a shared heritage in what got us to where we were at that point. 777 00:56:47,069 --> 00:56:53,284 In the early '80s, Fangoria magazine came out and now we had a group of people that were 778 00:56:53,576 --> 00:56:57,538 celebrating the actual special effects makeup of those movies. 779 00:56:58,164 --> 00:57:01,292 Before it was like yeah, you're a guy, you do special effects, that's cool. 780 00:57:01,584 --> 00:57:05,630 But then Fangoria really made this like cool personality around them because they really 781 00:57:06,005 --> 00:57:09,842 focused on the work they were doing because it was so innovative and so different and 782 00:57:10,217 --> 00:57:11,510 also so graphic. 783 00:57:11,802 --> 00:57:14,889 They printed the pictures that no one else would print. 784 00:57:15,348 --> 00:57:17,266 It wasn't the fangs that the kids wanted it was the gore. 785 00:57:17,642 --> 00:57:22,313 And they had pictures of bloody corpses and people with slashed throats and tongues coming 786 00:57:22,605 --> 00:57:24,273 hanging out and stuff. 787 00:57:24,690 --> 00:57:28,319 I wouldn't exactly call it porn but it had the same effect in a way because it was a 788 00:57:28,694 --> 00:57:32,406 high for kids because it would seem so forbidden and it was so transgressive. 789 00:57:32,990 --> 00:57:36,619 Fangoria was the authority on what's about to come out and what do you need to see. 790 00:57:37,119 --> 00:57:41,874 Without an internet, without an endless resource of images at your fingertips you would stare 791 00:57:42,249 --> 00:57:44,460 at that fucking Fangoria until the pages fell apart. 792 00:57:45,169 --> 00:57:49,507 Fangoria had a lot of trouble in the early days getting taken off of news stands and things 793 00:57:49,882 --> 00:57:53,302 like that because the imagery was too shocking or bloody or whatever. 794 00:57:53,803 --> 00:57:56,847 Fangoria, Cinefantastique, Cinefex 795 00:57:57,848 --> 00:57:59,350 and American Cinematographer. 796 00:58:00,059 --> 00:58:02,436 Yeah, those were my little Bibles every month. 797 00:58:02,979 --> 00:58:08,567 It was a wonderful way to see how other effects were being done, what films are being 798 00:58:08,859 --> 00:58:09,485 done. 799 00:58:09,777 --> 00:58:11,404 A great teaching tool. 800 00:58:11,904 --> 00:58:15,825 Everybody in special effects and special makeup effects was reading all those magazines. 801 00:58:16,242 --> 00:58:20,246 It actually generated more interest because somebody would watch that movie, or they'd see 802 00:58:20,663 --> 00:58:23,332 some behind the scenes story and they say, ”Wait, what? 803 00:58:23,749 --> 00:58:25,501 You did what with yak hair?" 804 00:58:25,876 --> 00:58:29,046 And they'd go see the movie and they'd suddenly realize, "Wow, that's cool. 805 00:58:29,422 --> 00:58:33,592 I understand how it all comes together and look and I'm seeing it now and I'm believing it 806 00:58:33,884 --> 00:58:35,511 and it's a monster and I'm buying it... 807 00:58:35,803 --> 00:58:39,306 I think a lot of the special effects in the '80s movies have aged well. 808 00:58:39,640 --> 00:58:43,477 You're doing it live really, essentially in front of the camera, ya know they're practical effects. 809 00:58:43,769 --> 00:58:49,442 There's something about CG that I think makes it seem distant and not really, it's not really 810 00:58:49,734 --> 00:58:51,027 happening in front of you. 811 00:58:51,610 --> 00:58:56,407 Actors would prefer to work with something they can see and react to rather than a green 812 00:58:56,699 --> 00:58:58,075 ball on a stick. 813 00:58:58,743 --> 00:59:07,084 I would be hard-pressed to pick the all-time great '80s practical effect but chances are 814 00:59:07,543 --> 00:59:08,794 Rick Baker did it. 815 00:59:24,894 --> 00:59:30,483 Cat People is an unusual moment in '80s horror because it's this attempt at legitimacy. 816 00:59:30,816 --> 00:59:35,362 You've got all the horror guys doing their stuff but then you've got Paul Schrader who had 817 00:59:35,780 --> 00:59:38,532 written Taxi Driver and American Gigolo and Mishima. 818 00:59:38,824 --> 00:59:43,079 And he's more or less a respectable filmmaker and here he is getting in on the shapeshifter 819 00:59:43,370 --> 00:59:44,955 trend that was started by An American Werewolf in London. 820 00:59:45,289 --> 00:59:46,415 So, that's very interesting to me. 821 00:59:46,791 --> 00:59:50,002 He cast it with Nastassja Kinski and Malcolm McDowell. 822 00:59:50,795 --> 00:59:51,754 It's like raising the game a little bit. 823 00:59:52,171 --> 00:59:58,969 That movie brought a sort of euro sensibility into American horror that I found really, 824 00:59:59,512 --> 01:00:00,721 really interesting. 825 01:00:01,013 --> 01:00:06,018 Cat People takes the sort of barest lift from the original's premise and makes it more about 826 01:00:06,393 --> 01:00:10,106 these siblings who have this sort of borderline incestuous relationship. 827 01:00:15,694 --> 01:00:19,115 The transformation is actually almost like watching a work of art. 828 01:00:19,865 --> 01:00:21,659 It's very different in its purpose. 829 01:00:22,576 --> 01:00:25,371 They'd seen what had happened in The Howling and in An American Werewolf and so they're 830 01:00:25,788 --> 01:00:27,248 taking it into this other space. 831 01:00:27,665 --> 01:00:30,042 And what I like about the Cat People transformations is that they're both kind of different. 832 01:00:30,709 --> 01:00:34,046 Malcolm McDowell likes being the cat and so it's kind of a different thing but in Nastassja 833 01:00:34,380 --> 01:00:37,800 Kinski's transformation is painful and she's not into this. 834 01:00:38,217 --> 01:00:41,637 Tom Berman and his crew thought about that and sort of worked the characters feelings 835 01:00:42,054 --> 01:00:44,765 into the transformation and made it a very painful and uncomfortable thing. 836 01:00:45,057 --> 01:00:48,144 And it was just an interesting pivot from where we had been just a year before 837 01:00:48,602 --> 01:00:50,938 with Baker's stuff and Bottin's transformations. 838 01:01:03,284 --> 01:01:07,913 Basket Case is an amazing super low budget movie. 839 01:01:08,664 --> 01:01:12,334 I Love New York at that period as well and that's one of the last movies that captured 840 01:01:12,751 --> 01:01:14,086 Time Square as it was. 841 01:01:14,587 --> 01:01:20,843 That really grimy place that you would not go to unless you're looking for drugs. 842 01:01:21,635 --> 01:01:26,557 There's a lot of weird, seedy New York stuff that you don't get to see any more on screen. 843 01:01:27,349 --> 01:01:31,770 When Belial throws his tantrum in the hotel room and suddenly we're in stop motion and 844 01:01:32,271 --> 01:01:36,108 we're smashing TVs and stuff. That's when like we kind of all went... 845 01:01:36,901 --> 01:01:38,819 That's when you learned that you're in this unsafe space. 846 01:01:39,195 --> 01:01:42,823 They're like oh, this guy is not playing by anybody's rules and he needed stop motion 847 01:01:43,199 --> 01:01:44,199 for this scene and he's going to do it. 848 01:01:44,533 --> 01:01:46,827 That's where Basket Case crosses over into greatness for me. 849 01:01:47,912 --> 01:01:53,459 Frank Henenlotter, the director of Basket Case once said to me, "I'm a strange little man." 850 01:01:53,918 --> 01:01:54,710 And he is. 851 01:01:55,211 --> 01:02:00,758 There are things that he would put in a movie that most people would recoil from. 852 01:02:01,050 --> 01:02:09,099 And in fact, there are scenes in Basket Case that are so sexual and violent and gross that 853 01:02:09,516 --> 01:02:13,062 the crew of the film actually walked off and left the film. 854 01:02:13,687 --> 01:02:19,777 There's one shot at the end of Basket Case where Belial the monster is actually on top 855 01:02:20,069 --> 01:02:24,865 of the female lead. She's completely naked and he's obviously doing something that you 856 01:02:25,491 --> 01:02:29,370 don't want to think about a little scrawny monster doing to a beautiful woman. 857 01:02:29,995 --> 01:02:32,581 But I think the shot has to be in the movie. 858 01:02:33,082 --> 01:02:35,584 By that time, you have to see that. 859 01:02:36,252 --> 01:02:39,463 Thank God that Henenlotter got to make those movies when he got to make them, where he got 860 01:02:39,838 --> 01:02:44,343 to make them, because they were maybe the last gasp of that grindhouse thing. 861 01:02:56,021 --> 01:03:01,151 There's a certain kind of horror film that says big studio production, big studio budget. 862 01:03:01,735 --> 01:03:07,324 That means it's safe for people in the suburbs to go see it and Poltergeist was one of those 863 01:03:07,700 --> 01:03:08,200 movies. 864 01:03:08,701 --> 01:03:12,955 No matter how scary it gets, it was okay to take the family to see that particular movie. 865 01:03:15,291 --> 01:03:18,919 Another movie that kind of just highlighted that horror could be just as much fun as 866 01:03:19,378 --> 01:03:22,298 any kind of other rollercoaster tentpole movie you were seeing at the time 867 01:03:22,673 --> 01:03:23,966 like Indiana Jones or something. 868 01:03:24,633 --> 01:03:26,927 What is this little girl in the front of the TV with nothing on it? 869 01:03:27,219 --> 01:03:31,056 Because when we used to actually snap our channels and you hit the snowy UHF channel 870 01:03:31,640 --> 01:03:34,852 or the Channel 4 or whatever didn't come in your region, you're like get off of that. 871 01:03:35,311 --> 01:03:37,354 This girl is sitting in front of it intrigued by it. 872 01:03:40,691 --> 01:03:41,859 What is this about? 873 01:03:42,818 --> 01:03:49,116 Anything that dealt with kind of suburbia dealing with like aliens or the old ghosts' 874 01:03:49,533 --> 01:03:51,452 spirits, I don't know those really appeal to me. 875 01:03:51,910 --> 01:03:55,914 I just felt like all of us live in some form of suburbia now and who knows what Indian 876 01:03:56,415 --> 01:03:59,835 graveyards we're all like living on top of. 877 01:04:00,127 --> 01:04:06,383 Poltergeist takes an old staple of the horror movie which is the seance, the communication 878 01:04:06,842 --> 01:04:10,429 with the other side and amps it up about a hundred times. 879 01:04:11,096 --> 01:04:13,349 That's the genius of that movie, I think. 880 01:04:16,226 --> 01:04:17,519 Let me set the record straight. 881 01:04:18,020 --> 01:04:20,356 Tobe Hooper directed Poltergeist. 882 01:04:20,773 --> 01:04:25,819 There was a horrible scurrilous myth that it was ghost directed by Steven Spielberg 883 01:04:26,153 --> 01:04:30,366 because it was executive produced by Steven Spielberg because it has that Spielberg glow 884 01:04:30,699 --> 01:04:31,158 about it. 885 01:04:31,700 --> 01:04:36,246 But every Robert Zemeckis film was executive produced by Steven Spielberg and had that 886 01:04:36,580 --> 01:04:37,998 Spielberg glow about it. 887 01:04:39,249 --> 01:04:42,669 Tobe was a really good friend and I miss him every day. 888 01:04:43,212 --> 01:04:45,798 I got to watch him work on Poltergeist. 889 01:04:46,173 --> 01:04:47,633 I was on the set. 890 01:04:48,342 --> 01:04:51,011 His mark on the movie is indelible. 891 01:04:51,303 --> 01:04:53,472 Steven Spielberg is a very powerful producer. 892 01:04:54,139 --> 01:04:58,018 He hired Tobe because he loved Texas Chainsaw Massacre. 893 01:04:59,061 --> 01:05:04,316 When the storm is happening and all of the coffins are coming up and spilling out all 894 01:05:04,983 --> 01:05:09,947 the corpses and the like, it's very surreal and very Tobe. 895 01:05:10,823 --> 01:05:14,660 That I think is probably the most Tobe Hooper scene in the movie. 896 01:05:15,244 --> 01:05:20,332 And yet it's a collaboration of two incredibly powerful and unique filmmaking minds who come 897 01:05:20,707 --> 01:05:23,460 to the same destination from opposite directions. 898 01:05:37,391 --> 01:05:41,520 I never wanted to remake The Thing From Another World. 899 01:05:42,062 --> 01:05:44,064 That was one of my favorite movies. 900 01:05:44,523 --> 01:05:46,358 I was a big fan of Howard Hawks. 901 01:05:46,817 --> 01:05:53,949 I just never wanted to touch it and along it came and it would be my first studio film. 902 01:05:54,283 --> 01:05:55,325 I couldn't say no. 903 01:05:55,909 --> 01:05:58,078 I thought well, what am I gonna do that's different? 904 01:05:59,246 --> 01:06:04,960 And then decided well, one of the things is I can go against the cliché and actually bring 905 01:06:05,419 --> 01:06:08,088 the monster out into the light and show it. 906 01:06:08,380 --> 01:06:12,759 I can do the imitation part of this story which was not done in the first movie. 907 01:06:15,095 --> 01:06:17,139 Childs was like your strong silent type. 908 01:06:17,598 --> 01:06:19,475 He didn't have a whole lot of words. 909 01:06:23,770 --> 01:06:28,984 To have Roger Mosley to thank because I believe he was the first consideration for the Thing 910 01:06:29,651 --> 01:06:34,656 and then he got Magnum, P.l. and that changed his world and mine. 911 01:06:42,831 --> 01:06:48,045 Rob Bottin's work in The Thing was amazing but it came at a huge cost to us. 912 01:06:50,422 --> 01:06:57,429 Rob Bottin did an extraordinary job creating the Thing that was morphing into this and 913 01:06:57,804 --> 01:06:58,931 morphing into that. 914 01:07:00,182 --> 01:07:02,309 It could look like anything that they wanted. 915 01:07:02,684 --> 01:07:07,064 So, when they started designing the effect sequences, they thought about it in terms 916 01:07:07,481 --> 01:07:09,399 of this thing's been to a thousand different planets. 917 01:07:10,067 --> 01:07:15,489 The DNA contains stuff that looks like tentacles and crab legs and spider legs. 918 01:07:15,989 --> 01:07:20,661 That was just miles beyond its time and just throwing all the rules out. 919 01:07:21,245 --> 01:07:29,336 The most fun was Norris's head hitting the floor and out come these little legs and eyeballs. 920 01:07:31,880 --> 01:07:34,758 The best part of that scene isn't even the spider. 921 01:07:35,259 --> 01:07:39,554 It's everyone's fucking reaction as they just go... 922 01:07:41,306 --> 01:07:43,976 They all turn and they're just like, "Are you seeing this shit?" 923 01:07:47,896 --> 01:07:53,777 And then they light it up but it's that moment of like a real human reaction that sells that 924 01:07:54,319 --> 01:07:55,070 whole scene. 925 01:07:57,698 --> 01:08:00,909 The first time I saw the movie I went whoa... 926 01:08:01,243 --> 01:08:06,248 The special effects and them being so out front and explicit were the reasons that I 927 01:08:06,582 --> 01:08:08,083 got criticized for The Thing. 928 01:08:08,375 --> 01:08:09,585 The barf bag movie of July. 929 01:08:09,918 --> 01:08:10,877 I have some problems with it. 930 01:08:11,336 --> 01:08:16,091 The story is totally implausible and the movie just basically is an excuse for this very 931 01:08:16,383 --> 01:08:18,885 gruesome and repellent creature to gross us out. 932 01:08:19,219 --> 01:08:21,888 It is the most nauseating thing I've ever seen on a movie screen. 933 01:08:22,347 --> 01:08:26,393 They wanted me to be more like the original or classier. 934 01:08:27,102 --> 01:08:29,271 The blood test scene is my favorite scene in the movie. 935 01:08:29,563 --> 01:08:31,898 It's just a great suspense scene. 936 01:08:32,274 --> 01:08:36,111 The strength of one person or one group's paranoia can spread. 937 01:08:36,445 --> 01:08:39,489 It makes everybody look at everyone else differently. 938 01:08:39,865 --> 01:08:41,575 In fact, even the way you look at yourself. 939 01:08:48,332 --> 01:08:50,208 It was a great Donald Moffat moment. 940 01:08:50,709 --> 01:08:56,131 The first time that we heard, "Gentlemen, I know you've been through quite an ordeal. 941 01:08:56,506 --> 01:09:03,597 But when you find the time, I'd rather not spend the rest of this winter tied to this fucking couch!" 942 01:09:04,931 --> 01:09:10,187 We cracked up but we were also like Oh, like freaked out. 943 01:09:11,021 --> 01:09:12,564 That's my favorite moment in the movie. 944 01:09:26,411 --> 01:09:29,247 I thought I don't think there's any more story in the Halloween movies. 945 01:09:29,956 --> 01:09:32,501 Why don't we veer off and do something brand-new? 946 01:09:33,126 --> 01:09:34,294 And that's what we did. 947 01:09:34,711 --> 01:09:36,296 It shows you how wrong I can be. 948 01:09:36,755 --> 01:09:41,927 There were a whole lot of people who were deeply disappointed to put it kindly 949 01:09:42,260 --> 01:09:44,680 that Michael Myers was not in it. 950 01:09:45,389 --> 01:09:46,890 Everybody wanted more of the same. 951 01:09:47,265 --> 01:09:48,266 And what do you get? 952 01:09:48,684 --> 01:09:52,729 You get this kind of like company that's creating Halloween masks that melt children's heads off 953 01:09:53,271 --> 01:09:56,483 and turn them into like worms, snakes and spiders. 954 01:09:56,858 --> 01:09:59,027 I mean it is incredibly dark, man. 955 01:09:59,778 --> 01:10:04,991 It's that whole plot to take over the world through a holiday that everyone loves. 956 01:10:05,951 --> 01:10:10,747 Torn Atkins in Halloween 3 is very interesting to me because he's like a '70s anti-hero in 957 01:10:11,373 --> 01:10:14,960 an '80s post-Spielberg plot which is an interesting juxtaposition. 958 01:10:22,801 --> 01:10:34,312 We find this den of iniquity and evil in the far north reaches of California with (Zonal Cochran. 959 01:10:35,313 --> 01:10:40,318 When we were driving through that town, we felt like we were being watched. 960 01:10:40,861 --> 01:10:45,323 It was really spooky creepy kind of town. 961 01:10:46,450 --> 01:10:54,166 Garn Stephens, my first wife is in that movie and she is Marge who's face is eaten in the 962 01:10:54,458 --> 01:11:00,046 motel room while she's sitting there reading and Stacy and I were in the next bedroom and 963 01:11:00,464 --> 01:11:02,340 she was in this bedroom. 964 01:11:02,632 --> 01:11:05,469 I always thought that was kind of awkwardy. 965 01:11:12,601 --> 01:11:16,480 Three more days till Halloween, Halloween, Halloween. 966 01:11:17,063 --> 01:11:20,400 Three more days till Halloween Silver Shamrock. 967 01:11:22,611 --> 01:11:26,782 Boy, did we hate it by the time we were finished shooting it. 968 01:11:35,373 --> 01:11:43,089 After Halloween 3 came out that sunk any idea of doing Halloween as anthology stories. 969 01:11:43,507 --> 01:11:44,382 That was the end of it. 970 01:11:44,925 --> 01:11:48,136 But Halloween 3 was not a very big hit with people. 971 01:11:48,595 --> 01:11:52,182 They wanted to see the guy with a mask and the knife. So... 972 01:11:52,557 --> 01:11:56,394 We'd already been conditioned to think that Halloween equals Michael Myers. 973 01:11:56,686 --> 01:12:02,400 If Halloween 3 was Halloween 2 it would have been a hit and we would have a whole different 974 01:12:02,776 --> 01:12:03,693 Halloween franchise today. 975 01:12:04,069 --> 01:12:05,362 It should have never been called Halloween 3. 976 01:12:05,779 --> 01:12:08,240 It should have just been called Season of the Witch and it might have done better. 977 01:12:08,615 --> 01:12:16,414 If John was able to mount a yearly or every other year Halloween anthology, let's just 978 01:12:16,915 --> 01:12:21,419 call it John Carpenter's Halloween. The expectation was that John was going to give you yet another 979 01:12:21,711 --> 01:12:23,964 iconic character. That could have worked out just fine. 980 01:12:24,422 --> 01:12:25,715 It just didn't work out that way. 981 01:12:26,424 --> 01:12:31,346 Well, Tommy Lee Wallace I thought he did a wonderful job directing and putting together 982 01:12:31,846 --> 01:12:32,973 Halloween 3. 983 01:12:33,431 --> 01:12:35,100 Nobody sets out to make a bad movie. 984 01:12:35,934 --> 01:12:42,607 People have very much rallied to it and embrace it, it's a good standalone movie by itself. 985 01:12:43,483 --> 01:12:47,445 It doesn't need Michael Myers and never did, and if they're disappointed tough. 986 01:12:58,665 --> 01:13:01,042 Q is perfection to me. 987 01:13:01,543 --> 01:13:05,797 I love seeing Q the winged serpent flying over New York in all his stop-motion glory. 988 01:13:06,464 --> 01:13:11,177 There's just some great Larry Cohen-isms where there's like somebody on the rooftop doing 989 01:13:11,595 --> 01:13:15,515 push-ups and there's a guy just going okay, he's counting them off and then Q comes in 990 01:13:15,807 --> 01:13:17,559 and steals one of them. It's so good. 991 01:13:17,976 --> 01:13:20,061 It's such a weird campy movie. I love it. 992 01:13:20,437 --> 01:13:22,898 We went to New York, I had one day's prep. 993 01:13:23,648 --> 01:13:27,986 We got the helicopter the next day, we shot all the helicopter stuff and when I brought 994 01:13:28,361 --> 01:13:33,116 the picture to the special effects people, they said to me oh, you did this all wrong, 995 01:13:33,700 --> 01:13:35,535 you're supposed to come to us first. 996 01:13:36,161 --> 01:13:40,415 And we outline it and we draw everything for you storyboards and tell you where to put 997 01:13:40,832 --> 01:13:46,004 the monster and where to put the actors and everything is all planned in advance and you've 998 01:13:46,421 --> 01:13:50,800 come in and shot the whole picture, all the footage and now you expect us to put the monster 999 01:13:51,176 --> 01:13:53,136 into it? And I say yes. 1000 01:13:53,887 --> 01:13:57,557 He shot with Dave Allen doing his stop-motion... So poor David. 1001 01:13:58,475 --> 01:14:01,227 He had all these helicopter backgrounds bouncing like this. 1002 01:14:01,561 --> 01:14:04,564 And he's got to try to figure out it how to put his monster in it. But it works out great. 1003 01:14:05,440 --> 01:14:12,447 These guys who do these effects they're meticulous guys but they have a very narrow focus 1004 01:14:12,822 --> 01:14:14,616 and not much of a sense of humor. 1005 01:14:25,460 --> 01:14:31,383 Creepshow is the reaction of the sort of the Spielbergification of horror from two guys 1006 01:14:31,675 --> 01:14:33,843 in the cheap seats in Bangor, Maine and Pittsburgh. 1007 01:14:34,678 --> 01:14:38,014 So Stephen King and Romero get together and they're going to make their funhouse horror movie. 1008 01:14:38,431 --> 01:14:42,060 It's unlike anything Romero had ever done and it's unlike anything King had ever done 1009 01:14:42,394 --> 01:14:44,562 and I think that informs the energy of that movie. 1010 01:14:44,854 --> 01:14:47,565 It's five short stories, there's not a dud in the bunch. 1011 01:14:47,857 --> 01:14:50,777 They are all moral fables. Every single one of them. 1012 01:14:51,236 --> 01:14:53,697 The one with Leslie Nielsen deals with greed. 1013 01:14:54,155 --> 01:14:59,077 He wants to get revenge on the man who's seducing his wife and stealing her away from him. 1014 01:14:59,703 --> 01:15:04,833 E.G. Marshall who wants to remain closeted in his little insular cocoon. 1015 01:15:05,542 --> 01:15:10,547 Viveca Lindfors whose father treated her badly but she still shows up for Father's Day and 1016 01:15:11,089 --> 01:15:12,924 she still goes to his grave. 1017 01:15:15,385 --> 01:15:18,013 Nathan crawling out of his grave is amazing. 1018 01:15:18,555 --> 01:15:21,558 The musical sting when the hand comes out. 1019 01:15:23,560 --> 01:15:24,436 It's magic. 1020 01:15:24,894 --> 01:15:28,148 Beyond the fact that has great effects in "I want my cake." 1021 01:15:31,359 --> 01:15:34,612 You can't not talk about that segment and not talk about Ed Harris's dancing. 1022 01:15:34,904 --> 01:15:36,322 It's the greatest thing ever. 1023 01:15:40,160 --> 01:15:44,164 I think that's one of the fun things about '80s horror is you see a lot of actors who 1024 01:15:44,622 --> 01:15:49,002 now have gone onto do like prestige movies, these big things but they're all in these 1025 01:15:49,335 --> 01:15:54,132 like weird quirky little roles in '80s horror and you're like "Wow, that's kind of cool". 1026 01:15:54,549 --> 01:15:58,470 And just getting to watch like somebody like Adrienne Barbeau who I knew from The Fog 1027 01:15:58,803 --> 01:16:02,891 playing like this crazy, ditzy, drunk lady yelling at her husband all the time. 1028 01:16:07,020 --> 01:16:12,484 She was nervous about playing such a bitchy character. 1029 01:16:13,026 --> 01:16:16,362 Then you get to watch her get eaten by this beast in the crate. 1030 01:16:20,825 --> 01:16:23,036 It's a movie that offers a lot for everybody. 1031 01:16:24,537 --> 01:16:29,375 I love Fluffy, I love the creature in the box, I love Bedelia and her birthday cake. 1032 01:16:31,169 --> 01:16:35,131 And I loved seeing Ted Danson buried in sand and all of that. 1033 01:16:35,590 --> 01:16:39,636 But the most memorable part of that is Stephen King covered in meteor shit. 1034 01:16:40,095 --> 01:16:41,679 Yeah, meteor shit. 1035 01:16:45,975 --> 01:16:49,646 George Romero said is there anything in there you would love to do? 1036 01:16:50,313 --> 01:16:52,148 I said yeah, I would love to play Jordy. 1037 01:16:52,690 --> 01:16:55,652 He said well, Stephen King's going to play that role. 1038 01:16:56,194 --> 01:17:02,200 Would you do me a big favor and play the dad in the wrap around, the beginning and the end? 1039 01:17:04,035 --> 01:17:12,252 Stephen King's son Joe King, he played my son and I threw that comic book into the garbage 1040 01:17:12,752 --> 01:17:21,636 can out front and then he voodoos me to death at the end over my cornflakes but I had to 1041 01:17:21,970 --> 01:17:28,852 smack him early on and Stephen was never out of the room. 1042 01:17:29,727 --> 01:17:31,771 Tom, you're not going to hurt him, are you Tom? 1043 01:17:32,230 --> 01:17:34,399 You're not going to really hit him, are you Tom? 1044 01:17:35,024 --> 01:17:38,236 He is my boy, you're not going to, he's only 9 years old Tom. 1045 01:17:38,736 --> 01:17:43,658 And I said Stephen come on, I'm a professional actor. 1046 01:17:45,034 --> 01:17:48,538 How do you wrangle the hundreds of cockroaches? 1047 01:17:48,872 --> 01:17:54,252 Some exotic cockroaches were allowed to escape into the wilds of Pennsylvania. 1048 01:17:55,670 --> 01:17:56,796 Don't tell anybody. 1049 01:18:00,425 --> 01:18:03,887 It's such a pivotal movie that didn't get them the credit they deserve I don't think. 1050 01:18:04,470 --> 01:18:07,724 Because in the years following that Twilight Zone: The Movie comes out the next year and 1051 01:18:08,308 --> 01:18:11,769 then Tales from the Crypt comes out as a series but I think it all stems from Creepshow. 1052 01:18:17,233 --> 01:18:21,654 With the success of John Carpenter's Halloween, we did see a lot of films sort of come out 1053 01:18:21,946 --> 01:18:28,536 in response to that idea of well, if we have this holiday and we can turn it into this moment 1054 01:18:28,828 --> 01:18:31,748 in the genre why not capitalize on that? 1055 01:18:40,506 --> 01:18:45,803 And we did see the onslaught of My Bloody Valentine, April Fool's Day, Leprechaun basically 1056 01:18:46,137 --> 01:18:47,889 cashing in on St. Patrick's Day. 1057 01:18:48,389 --> 01:18:52,644 We saw a ton of Christmas horror come out especially in the '80s with Silent Night, Deadly Night. 1058 01:19:00,234 --> 01:19:05,740 The recurring theme with having a holiday become a horrific experience. 1059 01:19:06,074 --> 01:19:11,079 It's an obvious grab whether it's Carrie or Night of the Creeps, these are prom night movies 1060 01:19:11,579 --> 01:19:14,916 but they go horribly different than what you're expecting because it's supposed 1061 01:19:15,250 --> 01:19:18,920 to be your coming-of-age and celebration and like prom night movies are transitioned into 1062 01:19:19,295 --> 01:19:20,463 adulthood almost. 1063 01:19:28,012 --> 01:19:33,393 Valentine's is supposed to be all about your significant other and that smashing together 1064 01:19:33,851 --> 01:19:40,108 of that juxtaposition of what's supposed to be good and light-hearted and celebratory 1065 01:19:40,733 --> 01:19:44,779 into holy crap, this is bloody and evil and people are dying. 1066 01:19:45,279 --> 01:19:51,286 That idealism and that adolescence that comes to a screeching halt when it slams into something 1067 01:19:51,619 --> 01:19:52,203 horrific. 1068 01:19:52,620 --> 01:19:56,958 There's a universality to these moments in the year and I think that's a good way to 1069 01:19:57,292 --> 01:19:59,836 sort of bring the genre into that fold. 1070 01:20:13,099 --> 01:20:20,648 The relationship of body to mind is a potent one in Cronenberg's world and I think particularly 1071 01:20:21,065 --> 01:20:23,192 in the '80s he attacked it with quite a bit of relish. 1072 01:20:24,402 --> 01:20:30,992 Cronenberg had a history of really getting at the psychic horror around physical afflictions. 1073 01:20:33,703 --> 01:20:36,331 Videodrome was a step further. 1074 01:20:37,040 --> 01:20:42,587 Sort of saying we are entering a period of humanity of human existence, cultural existence 1075 01:20:43,046 --> 01:20:46,799 that is going to fuse technology and the body in organic ways. 1076 01:20:53,639 --> 01:20:59,687 One of the most potent sequences to me is when James Wood's character sticks his hand 1077 01:21:00,021 --> 01:21:04,067 in the vagina-like slit in his stomach that has developed. 1078 01:21:05,026 --> 01:21:07,987 His hand becomes a flesh gun. 1079 01:21:08,279 --> 01:21:16,913 You have a very Gigeresque image of machinery and flesh and metal becoming one and shooting 1080 01:21:17,288 --> 01:21:22,877 out cancer bullets basically that cause a decay of the flesh of the victim which you 1081 01:21:23,294 --> 01:21:25,296 shoot with these bullets. 1082 01:21:25,671 --> 01:21:32,011 And it's unbelievably imaginative and potent and allegorical and repellant all at the same 1083 01:21:32,512 --> 01:21:35,056 time but devilishly entertaining. 1084 01:21:35,723 --> 01:21:39,227 It's all about videocassettes and you look at it now and you just think gosh, it is so 1085 01:21:39,602 --> 01:21:43,898 like arcane but it's really genius because it really was predicting in many ways where 1086 01:21:44,357 --> 01:21:48,236 culture was going and how much more involved the average consumer was going to become 1087 01:21:48,569 --> 01:21:50,363 pre-sort of where things went in the information age. 1088 01:21:50,947 --> 01:21:54,992 And Oblivion is this kind of cross between a cult leader, a political figure and a complete 1089 01:21:55,368 --> 01:21:56,953 low-grade huckster. 1090 01:21:57,453 --> 01:22:02,500 It's predictive of the darkest side of the Reagan era of like where those types of people 1091 01:22:03,000 --> 01:22:05,837 would lead us as a culture. 1092 01:22:06,379 --> 01:22:12,051 The movie really encapsulates the beginning of the transition of global culture from analog 1093 01:22:12,468 --> 01:22:18,724 into digital, from how the consumer took in their media and what impact that had on you. 1094 01:22:23,604 --> 01:22:25,940 No matter how often you see it, it will get under your skin. 1095 01:22:40,121 --> 01:22:44,667 Well, horror films of the '80s even the ones made on slightly higher budgets still had 1096 01:22:45,001 --> 01:22:46,919 that kind of down and dirty feel about them. 1097 01:22:47,420 --> 01:22:51,424 They didn't feel like commercial movies even if they were being made by the studios. 1098 01:22:52,008 --> 01:22:55,845 And you had a lot of directors like Tony Scott for example doing The Hunger and bringing 1099 01:22:56,137 --> 01:22:59,682 a very different kind of European aesthetic to a big-budget studio assignment. 1100 01:23:08,316 --> 01:23:11,986 The Hunger was such a sensual, sexy movie. 1101 01:23:12,278 --> 01:23:17,366 It was just melding this scary, creepy vibe with you know vampires. 1102 01:23:18,117 --> 01:23:21,662 And it was all so kind of sexual and creepy at the same time. 1103 01:23:29,462 --> 01:23:35,718 A lot of people dismiss The Hunger for being nothing more than style. 1104 01:23:36,344 --> 01:23:42,141 I disagree because I think the movie is specifically about style and about emptiness. 1105 01:23:43,476 --> 01:23:49,232 What's scary about it is the disposability of relationships and how Catherine Deneuve 1106 01:23:49,690 --> 01:23:55,112 as soon as her lover becomes too old, she can't even bear to touch him or kiss him. 1107 01:23:55,404 --> 01:23:59,533 Just puts him in a box stows him in the attic moves on to the next one. 1108 01:24:00,243 --> 01:24:07,542 That's extremely horrifying and a universal horror that all of us have experienced if 1109 01:24:07,959 --> 01:24:09,961 you live long enough. 1110 01:24:23,599 --> 01:24:27,186 You don't think of Psycho as a slasher movie but that was what kicked it all off. 1111 01:24:27,478 --> 01:24:31,440 That's what inspired Halloween which inspired everything afterwards. 1112 01:24:34,318 --> 01:24:36,487 Psycho was the beginning of my love of movies. 1113 01:24:36,988 --> 01:24:41,242 It was psychological, it was visual in ways that you'd never seen before. 1114 01:24:44,078 --> 01:24:49,083 Before Norman Bates, Anthony Perkins, there wasn't a serial murderer. 1115 01:24:49,500 --> 01:24:52,169 There wasn't a killer that had psychological dimension. 1116 01:24:52,670 --> 01:24:54,547 That's all Hitchcock and Joe Stefano. 1117 01:24:56,048 --> 01:25:02,054 It was inevitable that he would return in the '80s because that was an era of cinematic 1118 01:25:02,471 --> 01:25:08,019 horror that celebrated the serial killer, the slasher and he was the original, he was 1119 01:25:08,311 --> 01:25:09,604 the granddaddy of them all. 1120 01:25:10,229 --> 01:25:17,028 Richard Franklin came to me, an Aussie director who'd done Road Games and said let's do Psycho 2 1121 01:25:17,528 --> 01:25:20,239 and I said you are crazy. 1122 01:25:20,781 --> 01:25:24,201 This is prior to sequels being a way of life in the movie business. 1123 01:25:24,493 --> 01:25:29,040 Nobody wanted to do it because you knew you were going to get ripped apart by the critics. 1124 01:25:29,623 --> 01:25:35,212 In Psycho 2 Norman Bates was afforded a great deal of humanity and sympathy. 1125 01:25:35,630 --> 01:25:37,298 He's been released from prison. 1126 01:25:37,590 --> 01:25:44,263 He served his time, gone through his therapy and he sincerely kind of apologetic for having 1127 01:25:44,764 --> 01:25:47,683 snapped and killed all of those women and his mother. 1128 01:25:48,184 --> 01:25:54,523 And he's just trying to make a go of it, trying sincerely to be the best version of himself 1129 01:25:55,149 --> 01:25:57,610 but society won't let him be. 1130 01:26:02,323 --> 01:26:08,037 And so, they turn him into a monster again so by the end of that movie he is sort of 1131 01:26:08,537 --> 01:26:11,374 returned back to square one. 1132 01:26:13,834 --> 01:26:19,256 Everybody's dying around him but he doesn't kill anybody but we don't know that to the end. 1133 01:26:19,757 --> 01:26:24,261 He finally does kill somebody, this little old lady who had missed that she's his mother 1134 01:26:24,679 --> 01:26:28,891 and she's been doing some of the killings and he serves her poisoned tea. 1135 01:26:29,725 --> 01:26:35,898 And as she starts to gag and die in the poisoned tea, he picks up a shovel and brings it smashing 1136 01:26:36,315 --> 01:26:37,692 down on the back of her head. 1137 01:26:40,486 --> 01:26:45,199 And it's the first time that he's killed in the entire movie and you realize that 1138 01:26:45,491 --> 01:26:47,702 he's totally now totally insane. 1139 01:27:01,465 --> 01:27:07,054 I remember having to audition and screen test for a movie off this giant book that intimidated 1140 01:27:07,388 --> 01:27:08,055 the crap out of me. 1141 01:27:08,347 --> 01:27:11,600 I was supposed to read before I auditioned and was like this is a movie about a mom 1142 01:27:12,268 --> 01:27:14,061 and a kid are stuck in a car with this dog? 1143 01:27:14,478 --> 01:27:16,272 It's like oh, yeah, that's actually pretty scary. 1144 01:27:17,481 --> 01:27:19,984 For 2/3 of the movie it's two people in a car, right? 1145 01:27:20,317 --> 01:27:23,487 If you get out,you're dead and if you stay in like no one's going to find you and you're dead. 1146 01:27:23,863 --> 01:27:25,990 And it's sort of like the original Escape Room. 1147 01:27:27,700 --> 01:27:32,538 Anytime we put a young kid in a scary story it really brings it home because you never 1148 01:27:32,913 --> 01:27:37,418 want harm to come to a child and I think that resonates on a biological level with every 1149 01:27:37,835 --> 01:27:38,586 human being. 1150 01:27:40,379 --> 01:27:42,590 I was more terrified of Cujo than I was of werewolves. 1151 01:27:43,132 --> 01:27:45,259 The terror felt real, the panic felt real. 1152 01:27:45,968 --> 01:27:50,765 You could feel the heat, the stifling stagnancy of being inside that car with them and the 1153 01:27:51,265 --> 01:27:53,392 desperation of well, how do you get out of this? 1154 01:27:53,684 --> 01:27:57,229 And as an adult it's interesting because now I watch it and I feel kind of bad now for 1155 01:27:57,521 --> 01:28:01,775 Cujo where as a kid I was like you know, screw that dog and like now, I'm like oh, 1156 01:28:02,109 --> 01:28:04,153 but he got bit and I feel bad for him now. 1157 01:28:04,445 --> 01:28:07,406 So, it's interesting but as a kid Cujo was terrifying. 1158 01:28:07,823 --> 01:28:13,037 And I think that's what makes Stephen King's stuff so great is that he knew how to prey 1159 01:28:13,496 --> 01:28:16,373 on your fears and it wasn't always the same fears. 1160 01:28:26,550 --> 01:28:32,431 Sleepaway Camp is such a great little film because you're not expecting a lot from it, 1161 01:28:32,890 --> 01:28:36,060 you're thinking oh, it's another campground killer film. 1162 01:28:37,186 --> 01:28:42,233 It's mostly like younger kids that are getting killed and that's such a big no-no today. 1163 01:28:42,650 --> 01:28:47,112 It's really scary. It's really done well. It's got some amazing effects for such a small 1164 01:28:47,446 --> 01:28:50,282 little film and it's just really entertaining. 1165 01:28:52,785 --> 01:28:54,453 Sleepaway Camp breaks all the rules. 1166 01:28:54,954 --> 01:28:59,124 It's an upside-down slasher and I think that's part of its appeal. 1167 01:28:59,416 --> 01:29:00,918 All the males are sex objects. 1168 01:29:01,377 --> 01:29:06,382 Look at those camp counselors in those booty shorts that cut off all the circulation in 1169 01:29:06,674 --> 01:29:08,425 their you know genitalia. 1170 01:29:09,134 --> 01:29:10,970 The females in the movie are all monsters. 1171 01:29:13,055 --> 01:29:17,017 And of course, it has that final shot that's one of the most memorable moments in all of 1172 01:29:17,560 --> 01:29:18,644 horror history. 1173 01:29:19,019 --> 01:29:21,981 I remember watching it with a bunch of friends for the first time. 1174 01:29:22,481 --> 01:29:24,149 We knew nothing about it. 1175 01:29:24,441 --> 01:29:28,696 Before the internet was spoiling everything and back then we had no idea. 1176 01:29:28,988 --> 01:29:32,241 We are like hey, this Sleepaway Camp a horror movie in the woods and we're watching it 1177 01:29:32,533 --> 01:29:34,368 and enjoying it and then the end came. 1178 01:29:34,827 --> 01:29:37,413 Me and all my friends were just, ”What?" 1179 01:29:54,346 --> 01:30:00,352 Christine came along after The Thing and it was a Stephen King novel haunted car movie. 1180 01:30:00,936 --> 01:30:02,396 It just seemed right to do. 1181 01:30:02,730 --> 01:30:04,690 Do we live on? Do we have a spirit? 1182 01:30:05,065 --> 01:30:08,068 Can it live on in a 1958 Plymouth Fury? 1183 01:30:08,611 --> 01:30:11,780 That was taken on by Carpenter and he made it his own. 1184 01:30:12,364 --> 01:30:16,577 It's so lean, it's mean, it really gets to the nitty-gritty of what you would want out of 1185 01:30:16,911 --> 01:30:18,537 a movie about a killer car. 1186 01:30:18,996 --> 01:30:23,000 And I think Keith Gordon actually gives one of the best performances that we've ever seen 1187 01:30:23,375 --> 01:30:25,419 in a horror movie of the '80s. 1188 01:30:32,259 --> 01:30:38,599 There's a scene in Christine where the bullies had just destroyed the car and the kid is 1189 01:30:39,141 --> 01:30:45,898 standing in front of the car and he says, "Show me" and just the music kicks in and it's like... 1190 01:30:46,565 --> 01:30:47,566 Show me. 1191 01:30:50,694 --> 01:30:52,655 Christine put itself back together again. 1192 01:30:53,322 --> 01:30:59,953 We had to figure out how that worked and was convincing so we pull the car in and shoot 1193 01:31:00,329 --> 01:31:01,497 it in reverse. 1194 01:31:01,872 --> 01:31:06,669 We've got hooks on the car and you just crush it and then in reverse, it opens - 1195 01:31:07,711 --> 01:31:08,796 it becomes. 1196 01:31:09,338 --> 01:31:10,839 It worked out pretty well for us. 1197 01:31:13,133 --> 01:31:18,597 It's an amazing effect for something so simple but it's done so well and matching that up 1198 01:31:19,098 --> 01:31:20,182 with his score. 1199 01:31:20,557 --> 01:31:21,642 It just works perfectly. 1200 01:31:21,934 --> 01:31:23,352 I'm getting like goosebumps thinking about it. 1201 01:31:23,644 --> 01:31:24,520 It's so good. 1202 01:31:29,942 --> 01:31:32,653 I never wanted to work in 3D. 1203 01:31:33,404 --> 01:31:36,198 It's just a gimmick deal, it always has been. 1204 01:31:36,657 --> 01:31:43,789 I was always intrigued about what 3D could be and I'm still waiting for it. 1205 01:31:44,707 --> 01:31:48,836 The first 3D horror movie I saw was actually one of the 1950's classics, Creature from 1206 01:31:49,169 --> 01:31:50,129 the Black Lagoon. 1207 01:31:50,629 --> 01:31:52,381 The Gill Man had a huge impact on me as a kid. 1208 01:31:54,967 --> 01:31:57,761 3D lasted only a very short time in the 1950s. 1209 01:31:58,387 --> 01:32:01,974 There was this revival of 3D that began with the movie Comin' At Ya! 1210 01:32:03,726 --> 01:32:08,564 That kind of kicked off this whole wave of new 3D movies that were done in the 1980s. 1211 01:32:09,106 --> 01:32:12,151 Producers saw this as one more way to make a little more money. 1212 01:32:12,609 --> 01:32:17,614 You had a number of franchises that happened to be up to their third sequel. 1213 01:32:18,115 --> 01:32:22,453 So, it just seemed to make sense that hey, we'll do version 3D. 1214 01:32:22,953 --> 01:32:26,790 I like where things come at you, popcorn comes at you, harpoon comes at you, 1215 01:32:27,541 --> 01:32:28,834 and it was spectacular. 1216 01:32:29,460 --> 01:32:34,214 Really notable first off because this was the first time that Jason Voorhees actually 1217 01:32:34,631 --> 01:32:36,091 put on the hockey mask. 1218 01:32:36,759 --> 01:32:39,678 Every few minutes something pokes you in the eye. 1219 01:32:40,220 --> 01:32:46,769 There are so many 3D moments in this movie they find reasons for characters to have yo-yos 1220 01:32:47,311 --> 01:32:52,065 and baseball bats and all kinds of fun stuff that they can stick into the camera and then 1221 01:32:52,483 --> 01:32:54,860 there are some really great 3D deaths. 1222 01:33:00,574 --> 01:33:05,454 It messed with the storytelling because you had to wait for the 3D gag so people go oh, look 1223 01:33:05,746 --> 01:33:06,705 there at the machete. 1224 01:33:06,997 --> 01:33:10,375 There's a character who gets speared on a pitchfork. 1225 01:33:13,629 --> 01:33:18,634 Probably the greatest moment in the film is when Jason squeezes a character's head so 1226 01:33:18,967 --> 01:33:22,179 hard that the guy's eye pops out right into the camera. 1227 01:33:25,099 --> 01:33:29,645 The first horror 3D movie in the '80s wave was Parasite. 1228 01:33:33,649 --> 01:33:38,779 It marked one of the first screen appearances by a very young Demi Moore. 1229 01:33:39,404 --> 01:33:41,406 I have a pair of Parasite glasses here. 1230 01:33:42,032 --> 01:33:44,284 It was shown in polarized 3D. 1231 01:33:44,868 --> 01:33:47,788 Directed by Charlie Band released by Embassy Pictures. 1232 01:33:48,497 --> 01:33:56,588 This is a promotional kit that they put out for the movie, a pop-up promo that shows you 1233 01:33:56,880 --> 01:33:58,131 the Parasite. 1234 01:34:03,470 --> 01:34:11,478 Also released in 1982 was a picture called Rottweiler also known as Dogs of Hell or Rottweiler 1235 01:34:11,770 --> 01:34:12,771 The Dogs of Hell. 1236 01:34:13,397 --> 01:34:19,570 Genetically modified dogs that have been trained to be military weapons that end up in this 1237 01:34:20,195 --> 01:34:22,739 small North Carolina town where they go on a killing spree. 1238 01:34:24,199 --> 01:34:27,202 These are Rottweiler glasses. 1239 01:34:29,454 --> 01:34:35,669 3D can enhance a good movie but if you're already starting with a dog the 3D isn't gonna 1240 01:34:36,128 --> 01:34:37,504 really do much for it. 1241 01:34:40,966 --> 01:34:45,345 Amityville 3-D came out in 1983 directed by Richard Fleischer. 1242 01:34:45,762 --> 01:34:48,849 An early screen role for Meg Ryan. 1243 01:34:49,850 --> 01:34:53,562 There's a pit in the basement that apparently leads to hell. 1244 01:34:53,937 --> 01:34:56,481 There are some really good 3D moments in the movie. 1245 01:34:57,190 --> 01:35:02,029 And the pipe comes right through the windshield and ends up sticking right into your face. 1246 01:35:02,988 --> 01:35:07,868 There's a swarm of flies that's sort of composited in and meant to look like it's coming off the screen. 1247 01:35:10,871 --> 01:35:17,002 The moment that everyone remembers, this demon pops up through the hole in the basement floor and 1248 01:35:17,502 --> 01:35:18,962 grabs one of the characters. 1249 01:35:21,048 --> 01:35:26,845 The big three of the '80s 3D horror films were the ones that were all the third sequels. 1250 01:35:27,137 --> 01:35:32,267 So, the studios found interesting ways to promote these 3D movies and Jaws 3-D was no exception. 1251 01:35:32,976 --> 01:35:36,563 Another pop-up where the shark comes right at you. 1252 01:35:36,855 --> 01:35:38,732 The third dimension is terror. 1253 01:35:39,066 --> 01:35:42,778 Which I think this would have been a better movie if it wasn't called Jaws and they just 1254 01:35:43,070 --> 01:35:46,865 called it like Sharks in 3D or a Shark Attack - Coming at You. 1255 01:35:47,574 --> 01:35:53,247 Young Lea Thompson made one of her first screen appearances as one of the water skiers 1256 01:35:53,622 --> 01:35:54,831 who gets attacked by the shark. 1257 01:35:55,707 --> 01:36:00,003 The plot takes place at this aquarium sort of Sea World kind of place. 1258 01:36:00,587 --> 01:36:05,801 Probably the best 3D moment in the movie the shark has already eaten Simon MacCorkindale 1259 01:36:06,260 --> 01:36:07,761 and he was holding a hand grenade. 1260 01:36:08,178 --> 01:36:12,808 The arm with the hand grenade is still in the shark's mouth so they reach in and pull 1261 01:36:13,183 --> 01:36:19,856 the pin and the grenade goes off, blows up the shark and all these shark bits come flying 1262 01:36:20,274 --> 01:36:23,360 right at the camera including the shark's jaws. 1263 01:36:25,362 --> 01:36:32,619 Having a giant, bloody underwater explosion in 3D that may be why I give that 3D movie a pass. 1264 01:36:32,911 --> 01:36:38,542 I don't think that the 3D really helped any of these movies improve their box office. 1265 01:36:39,001 --> 01:36:42,421 For the most part the studios were using it just as a gimmick. 1266 01:36:43,046 --> 01:36:48,927 I should note that in 1991 the sixth movie in The Nightmare on Elm Street franchise 1267 01:36:49,219 --> 01:36:52,889 Freddy's Dead, the big climax of the movie was a 3D sequence. 1268 01:36:53,390 --> 01:36:58,937 It's kind of a shame that they waited until the sixth movie to do it rather than having a 1269 01:36:59,479 --> 01:37:02,649 A Nightmare on Elm Street 3D back when they could have. 1270 01:37:21,251 --> 01:37:25,922 Children of the Corn has taken from the Nightshift Stephen King short story and stars a pre-30 1271 01:37:26,340 --> 01:37:29,968 something Peter Horton and pre-Terminator Linda Hamilton as they find themselves in 1272 01:37:30,344 --> 01:37:33,722 the wrong the Nebraska town at the wrong time with the wrong kids. 1273 01:37:38,977 --> 01:37:43,648 If you're a kid who grew up in the '80s and somebody says to you Malachi or Malachi you 1274 01:37:44,066 --> 01:37:45,609 knew exactly what they meant. 1275 01:37:46,443 --> 01:37:48,320 Malachi. 1276 01:37:53,033 --> 01:37:58,705 The idea that kids would band together to kill an entire community of adults at the 1277 01:37:59,039 --> 01:38:01,917 behest of this other entity, that's horrific. 1278 01:38:02,417 --> 01:38:08,048 I never saw people my age as a threat and that was a movie where I realized like oh, 1279 01:38:08,465 --> 01:38:10,675 people my age can do horrible things. 1280 01:38:16,932 --> 01:38:20,018 In the whole movie they're talking about he who walks behind the rows and when you finally 1281 01:38:20,310 --> 01:38:24,689 see him it's just a big mound of Earth that's moving around and its actually kind of impressive 1282 01:38:25,065 --> 01:38:26,775 for 80's effects. How'd they do that? 1283 01:38:27,692 --> 01:38:32,030 The effects in the climax are kind of cheesy but if you're a King completist there's enough 1284 01:38:32,406 --> 01:38:33,657 in here to make it worthwhile. 1285 01:38:34,074 --> 01:38:39,413 It goes back to Lord of the Flies kind of the same type of story - kids unsupervised are evil. 1286 01:38:40,038 --> 01:38:41,957 It's automatically scary. 1287 01:38:53,635 --> 01:38:57,389 In the fourth installment of Friday the 13th we get Joseph Zito directing a new cast of 1288 01:38:57,722 --> 01:39:02,102 fresh meat ready for slaughter by Jason who's now in his full hockey mask mode after picking 1289 01:39:02,477 --> 01:39:03,979 up his new look in the last installment. 1290 01:39:04,271 --> 01:39:09,317 It's a great cast that features Kimberly Beck, Peter Barton and Corey Feldman as Tommy Jarvis 1291 01:39:09,860 --> 01:39:11,945 who's a recurring character that we will see two more times. 1292 01:39:12,279 --> 01:39:16,825 It's also got a pre-Back to the Future Crispin Glover who's got the best dance moves I've 1293 01:39:17,117 --> 01:39:18,702 ever seen this side of Footloose. 1294 01:39:19,578 --> 01:39:23,540 Crispin's dance is just one of the greatest moments ever. 1295 01:39:24,124 --> 01:39:26,126 He gives it his all and I appreciate that. 1296 01:39:26,543 --> 01:39:29,963 Amazing, like one of the greatest scenes in all of cinema history. 1297 01:39:33,175 --> 01:39:35,927 I don't know if anyone could do that dance but it's something like... 1298 01:39:41,308 --> 01:39:43,310 It's something like that. I don't know man. 1299 01:39:43,852 --> 01:39:44,728 Ask him. 1300 01:39:50,066 --> 01:39:55,614 I love that little Corey who was obsessed with like monster masks and he has his little computer 1301 01:39:56,114 --> 01:39:59,951 like whoo, he's like a monster nerd like me. That's pretty cool. 1302 01:40:01,411 --> 01:40:05,790 Ted White takes on the Jason Voorhees chopping chores and I know everyone loves Kane Hodder 1303 01:40:06,082 --> 01:40:09,085 and so do I but Ted White might be my favorite Jason. 1304 01:40:10,337 --> 01:40:14,925 Little monster man found courage and took Jason out in a big way. 1305 01:40:15,217 --> 01:40:17,010 I mean who knew shaving your head would have that effect? 1306 01:40:17,594 --> 01:40:18,094 Corey did. 1307 01:40:24,476 --> 01:40:28,355 The effects work of that machete going into the side of Jason's head and then he falls 1308 01:40:28,647 --> 01:40:30,857 on it and his head like slides down the machete. 1309 01:40:31,149 --> 01:40:34,361 That has got to be some of my favorite special effects in any horror movie. 1310 01:40:34,861 --> 01:40:36,780 I love that machete face slide man. 1311 01:40:43,203 --> 01:40:47,123 So, there was a kid in the candy store kind of thing happening in the early '80s with Stephen King adaptations. 1312 01:40:47,499 --> 01:40:49,167 Everybody's got to do a Stephen King adaptation. 1313 01:40:49,459 --> 01:40:52,379 We're going to do The Shining, we're going to do Christine, we're going to do Cujo 1314 01:40:52,879 --> 01:40:55,215 and Firestarter was part of that wave. 1315 01:40:59,928 --> 01:41:04,391 John Carpenter decides he wants to make Firestarter because it's got an anti-authoritarian streak in it, 1316 01:41:05,183 --> 01:41:07,936 it's a road movie and he's a westerns guy so he loves that. 1317 01:41:08,228 --> 01:41:11,231 It's got a father-daughter dynamic - an emotional core. 1318 01:41:11,648 --> 01:41:12,566 He's super excited about that. 1319 01:41:13,108 --> 01:41:14,568 But The Thing was received poorly. 1320 01:41:14,943 --> 01:41:18,071 The Thing bombed and John Carpenter got Firestarter taken away from him as a result. 1321 01:41:18,905 --> 01:41:24,953 Universal fired me from Firestarter because by the time The Thing came out the horror movie 1322 01:41:25,245 --> 01:41:26,955 market at that time had shrunk. 1323 01:41:27,247 --> 01:41:30,125 Teenage boys who couldn't get in, they were too young. 1324 01:41:30,542 --> 01:41:32,168 That was the market for horror films. 1325 01:41:32,460 --> 01:41:35,755 You couldn't do a big budget horror movie, you had to do a little tiny one. 1326 01:41:36,339 --> 01:41:38,174 And I couldn't do Firestarter that way. 1327 01:41:38,675 --> 01:41:42,178 Dino De Laurentiis comes in, puts in I think Mark Lester as the director. 1328 01:41:42,804 --> 01:41:48,268 Firestarter has its moments and all of the behind the scenes stuff can't take away from 1329 01:41:48,852 --> 01:41:52,022 those exchanges between Drew Barrymore and David Keith. 1330 01:41:52,355 --> 01:41:56,067 George C. Scott is in there doing his whole crazy ponytail blind eye thing and it's 1331 01:41:56,359 --> 01:41:57,235 a lot of fun to watch. 1332 01:41:57,819 --> 01:42:01,406 Art Carney and Louise Fletcher as the kindly couple. 1333 01:42:02,198 --> 01:42:06,161 It's really well cast, it's a nice-looking film and the pyro effects are pretty good too. 1334 01:42:06,453 --> 01:42:08,622 It's just, I will always lament what could have been. 1335 01:42:16,421 --> 01:42:19,841 Gremlins made a huge impression on me. 1336 01:42:20,300 --> 01:42:27,015 It took place at Christmas and the father gets the gremlin for his son as a gift. 1337 01:42:27,432 --> 01:42:29,684 That influenced me with Child's Play. 1338 01:42:30,393 --> 01:42:36,274 The obvious takeaway for me personally was the animatronics and just how sophisticated 1339 01:42:36,733 --> 01:42:37,651 they were. 1340 01:42:38,068 --> 01:42:41,363 Those puppets Gizmo, Stripe etc... 1341 01:42:41,821 --> 01:42:44,157 They all had distinct personalities. 1342 01:42:44,783 --> 01:42:52,123 It became obvious to me with that film, there's nothing that a writer could write that a good 1343 01:42:52,499 --> 01:42:57,796 animatronics team and team of puppeteers couldn't actually put on camera. 1344 01:43:00,590 --> 01:43:02,926 Gremlins is a kind of an anarchic movie. 1345 01:43:03,301 --> 01:43:08,473 It started out as a low-budget horror film because Spielberg wanted to create his first movie 1346 01:43:08,807 --> 01:43:12,644 for Amblin and he wanted to do it in a genre that he knew would be successful. 1347 01:43:13,019 --> 01:43:17,524 But as the picture went on and he got studio backing for it, it became apparent that it 1348 01:43:18,066 --> 01:43:20,694 was going to have a smaller audience the more gruesome it was. 1349 01:43:21,111 --> 01:43:22,320 We shot material we didn't use. 1350 01:43:22,779 --> 01:43:25,281 There are shots missing in the kitchen where morn stabs the gremlin with a knife, 1351 01:43:25,782 --> 01:43:28,410 There was a shot of the gremlin writhing with a knife in him. They took that out. 1352 01:43:28,827 --> 01:43:33,373 When Glynn Turman, the science teacher gets killed by the gremlin in the movie you just 1353 01:43:33,790 --> 01:43:37,001 see his rear end with one needle in it but in what we shot was his entire face covered 1354 01:43:37,377 --> 01:43:38,336 with needles like Hellraiser. 1355 01:43:38,712 --> 01:43:43,049 Once you look at what you've got, you say well, okay, what kind of movie is this becoming? 1356 01:43:43,758 --> 01:43:48,054 And it was obvious that this was a much more whimsical movie than a slasher horror movie and 1357 01:43:48,430 --> 01:43:52,892 so we toned all that stuff down and even then, got lots of criticism for like you're making 1358 01:43:53,268 --> 01:43:56,020 a horror film for children, it's horrible. But kids like it. 1359 01:43:56,938 --> 01:43:59,190 And it's remained remarkably popular. 1360 01:43:59,691 --> 01:44:03,403 The problem with the Gremlins was that we were inventing the technology as we went and so 1361 01:44:03,987 --> 01:44:06,740 many things that were called for in the script were impossible to do. 1362 01:44:08,450 --> 01:44:13,830 Gizmo, the little fuzzy character who originally was supposed to turn into Stripe the bad gremlin and 1363 01:44:14,456 --> 01:44:18,209 then at the last moment Steven Spielberg got the brilliant idea which I am convinced is 1364 01:44:18,501 --> 01:44:21,713 one of the reasons the picture still is popular that Gizmo should be in the whole picture 1365 01:44:22,088 --> 01:44:26,384 and he should be a hero's pal and we had no way of making him work. 1366 01:44:26,926 --> 01:44:30,889 He was made to run for one reel and then all of a sudden it was like now he's the star of the movie. 1367 01:44:31,514 --> 01:44:35,393 So we had to do a lot of quick R&D to try to figure out how to make him a character. 1368 01:44:36,478 --> 01:44:40,356 The one scene that was really complicated was the scene in the bar with Phoebe Cates. 1369 01:44:40,899 --> 01:44:44,277 We had to have her there and so we waited and shot it at the end of the picture after 1370 01:44:44,569 --> 01:44:48,948 everybody had gone home and we just spent one week in this bar with these puppets soaked 1371 01:44:49,324 --> 01:44:51,910 with beer and popcorn, making up gags basically. 1372 01:44:52,285 --> 01:44:53,870 Well, what would happen if there was a flasher gremlin? 1373 01:44:54,412 --> 01:44:56,331 What would happen if there was a Frank Sinatra gremlin? 1374 01:44:56,873 --> 01:44:58,500 And it took forever. 1375 01:44:59,042 --> 01:45:01,920 I mean it was really a long time and the smell... 1376 01:45:02,378 --> 01:45:04,881 I can't tell you how awful it smelled. 1377 01:45:14,808 --> 01:45:20,313 Of the three great slasher villains of the '80s, Michael, Jason and Freddy people argue who's better. 1378 01:45:20,939 --> 01:45:24,567 There's no question that the best character was Freddy Krueger. 1379 01:45:25,151 --> 01:45:30,698 Wes Craven created a well-rounded villain that comes out of the nightmares of children. 1380 01:45:31,574 --> 01:45:34,035 He's a child molester who can also kill. 1381 01:45:34,536 --> 01:45:36,246 There's nothing scarier than that. 1382 01:45:36,788 --> 01:45:38,498 Wes was a visionary. 1383 01:45:38,790 --> 01:45:40,583 A Nightmare on Elm Street was so brilliant. 1384 01:45:41,042 --> 01:45:46,130 It came at the right time when the slasher film was really starting to get a little tired. 1385 01:45:46,506 --> 01:45:50,385 All of a sudden it just wasn't a guy running around with a knife killing people. 1386 01:45:50,844 --> 01:45:53,304 That really changed the direction of horror films. 1387 01:45:54,180 --> 01:45:59,310 The reason I think that it has such a powerful effect on people it's because there's not 1388 01:45:59,602 --> 01:46:02,897 one person that doesn't have a dream but doesn't have a nightmare. 1389 01:46:03,356 --> 01:46:05,400 So, it was a reality there. 1390 01:46:06,317 --> 01:46:10,697 Wes Craven was a very well-read and intellectual person. 1391 01:46:11,197 --> 01:46:18,413 I would say every scene has a much greater significance philosophically and a worldview 1392 01:46:18,705 --> 01:46:22,876 that talks about the loss of innocence, how you approach fear, 1393 01:46:23,334 --> 01:46:28,047 the subconscious and the power it has over everything that we do. 1394 01:46:28,631 --> 01:46:34,846 I don't know of any other character that has the wits and the intelligence that Freddy has. 1395 01:46:35,263 --> 01:46:38,308 When I read the script, it didn't occur to me that he was that evil. 1396 01:46:38,683 --> 01:46:40,810 Like oh my God, this is hideous. 1397 01:46:42,562 --> 01:46:47,483 I think Tina's death scene might be the one scene that makes Nightmare on Elm Street not 1398 01:46:47,775 --> 01:46:49,527 only really scary but really great. 1399 01:46:50,320 --> 01:46:56,993 It was so sad and heartbreaking that when I saw it, I realized like wow, we're in a totally different league. 1400 01:47:00,246 --> 01:47:04,542 And there were shots that were shot that Wes didn't include that just went over the top 1401 01:47:04,834 --> 01:47:10,548 and I think Wes realized they can't go between the young girl's legs more than once in a movie. 1402 01:47:11,257 --> 01:47:18,848 He does that in my bathtub scene which was completely like crazy at the time to think of that 1403 01:47:19,182 --> 01:47:28,816 shot. The camera just where it's located was extremely provocative and menacing but also it was 1404 01:47:29,233 --> 01:47:37,575 definitely raising the bar for kind of the sexuality and brazenness of that young girl situation. 1405 01:47:38,576 --> 01:47:44,916 So, Nancy Thompson as a character is incredibly virtuous but she's by no means perfect but 1406 01:47:45,750 --> 01:47:50,463 I think the virtue she embodies the most is her ability to face fear which everyone is 1407 01:47:51,089 --> 01:47:53,883 struggling to do that every day of their lives, right? 1408 01:48:00,640 --> 01:48:05,812 Robert Englund, everything he did was studied and measured and he did it for a reason. 1409 01:48:06,312 --> 01:48:12,652 He used the glove really carefully and it was always choreographed exactly when he would 1410 01:48:13,069 --> 01:48:15,530 open up his fingers when he would clank them together. 1411 01:48:17,115 --> 01:48:19,492 He was just so generous as an actor. 1412 01:48:20,076 --> 01:48:23,579 He never wanted to be in the spotlight ironically. 1413 01:48:24,080 --> 01:48:26,541 It backfired obviously on him because everyone's watching Freddy. 1414 01:48:43,808 --> 01:48:48,646 You want to think if everybody was gone that you would figure out a way to survive. 1415 01:48:49,439 --> 01:48:52,525 Tom Everhart when he was writing this, he took some of his daughter's friends out and 1416 01:48:52,817 --> 01:48:55,403 he said okay, it's the end of the world what would you do? 1417 01:48:55,695 --> 01:48:58,906 And this is a lot of stuff that they told him that they would do. 1418 01:49:00,533 --> 01:49:03,661 He swears to God that this is not a social commentary. 1419 01:49:05,747 --> 01:49:07,290 Of course it's a social commentary. 1420 01:49:07,707 --> 01:49:08,624 It was a low-budget movie. 1421 01:49:09,000 --> 01:49:10,626 I thought this script was very funny. 1422 01:49:10,918 --> 01:49:13,838 I had no idea we were going to end up encapsulating the '80s. 1423 01:49:16,841 --> 01:49:21,054 It put me in bright colors because I was the last thing alive that was pretending like 1424 01:49:21,596 --> 01:49:22,680 everything was okay. 1425 01:49:23,181 --> 01:49:28,811 It was red and fuchsia and turquoise and they had Catherine Mary Stewart who played my sister 1426 01:49:29,228 --> 01:49:31,522 in drab outfits because she knew what had happened. 1427 01:49:31,856 --> 01:49:34,692 All those fashions, I mean that's just what we wore. 1428 01:49:35,818 --> 01:49:40,323 They built that cheerleading outfit for me so that it fit like a glove first of all because 1429 01:49:40,698 --> 01:49:41,699 cheerleading outfits... 1430 01:49:41,991 --> 01:49:44,660 The one I wore in Fast Times at Ridgemont High did not fit me that way. 1431 01:49:47,872 --> 01:49:48,998 Cheerleader with an Uzi. 1432 01:49:49,499 --> 01:49:51,542 I don't know that I can explain that. 1433 01:49:51,959 --> 01:49:54,003 When I did it, it made perfect sense to me. 1434 01:49:54,629 --> 01:49:56,964 In that scene where I start to cry. We're gonna cut that scene. 1435 01:49:57,298 --> 01:49:58,716 That's her arc. 1436 01:49:59,008 --> 01:50:02,595 That is the point when she admits that she knows, because at one point they were just 1437 01:50:03,012 --> 01:50:04,097 going to kill her. 1438 01:50:04,597 --> 01:50:06,099 She's just going to be annoying and she was going to die. 1439 01:50:06,641 --> 01:50:10,186 They went no, because she's like one of the most relatable characters. 1440 01:50:12,396 --> 01:50:17,819 There's a magic on a movie where everything could be right but it just lays there flat 1441 01:50:18,611 --> 01:50:25,076 and then you can have unknowns and $5 to make something with and just the chemistry or whatever 1442 01:50:25,451 --> 01:50:29,580 weird thing that is... boom! And that's why I think we all love it. 1443 01:50:35,044 --> 01:50:43,803 One of the most scary things about horror movies is having this villain who you can't 1444 01:50:44,428 --> 01:50:47,223 reason with and you're sure that you're going to die. 1445 01:50:47,765 --> 01:50:48,808 They're going to kill you. 1446 01:50:49,267 --> 01:50:53,604 Oh, there were so many villains in the '80s cannon that you were really into. 1447 01:50:53,980 --> 01:50:57,775 I gravitated to a little bit of the silly so I thought the Critters were really cool. 1448 01:50:58,067 --> 01:50:59,026 Gremlins were cool. 1449 01:50:59,318 --> 01:51:00,528 I always loved monsters. 1450 01:51:02,822 --> 01:51:05,741 The Tall Man kind of came into his own in the '80s, didn't he? 1451 01:51:06,033 --> 01:51:09,829 Phantasm always had that kind of cult status but when Phantasm 2 came around 1452 01:51:10,121 --> 01:51:11,164 that was rock and roll. 1453 01:51:15,960 --> 01:51:19,172 '80s horror was a good time for villains because it started to get a little heightened. 1454 01:51:19,630 --> 01:51:22,133 It started to get a little cartoonish and maybe little campy, a little colorful. 1455 01:51:22,925 --> 01:51:24,135 Greg Stillson in the Dead Zone. 1456 01:51:24,844 --> 01:51:26,304 He's very much on my mind these days. 1457 01:51:26,929 --> 01:51:33,728 I love the one-two punch of Dr. Hill from Re-Animator and Dr. Pretorius from Beyond. 1458 01:51:34,145 --> 01:51:38,774 Real old-school almost Karloff-like in the way that they come across. 1459 01:51:39,650 --> 01:51:42,278 Norman Bates is a guy who lives next door. 1460 01:51:43,321 --> 01:51:50,453 Leatherface, Freddy Krueger, Jason Voorhees, they were all exaggerations and they were 1461 01:51:50,912 --> 01:51:52,538 mythologized Slashers. 1462 01:51:53,122 --> 01:51:56,209 In the case of Freddy Krueger, he was burned in a fire and is scarred. 1463 01:51:56,834 --> 01:52:02,131 And Jason Voorhees also horribly scarred but hidden behind a hockey mask. 1464 01:52:02,965 --> 01:52:08,721 And Leatherface is literally wearing the faces of victims that he killed. But in Norman Bates 1465 01:52:09,180 --> 01:52:15,853 he's the boy next door but capable of the most horrendous murders to protect himself 1466 01:52:16,145 --> 01:52:17,355 and his family. 1467 01:52:17,813 --> 01:52:22,276 He was a little mad and we all go a little mad sometimes 1468 01:52:22,777 --> 01:52:25,363 was his motto and it should be his T-shirt. 1469 01:52:26,906 --> 01:52:31,869 Mentally unstable people with childhood traumas who then manifest those traumas into real 1470 01:52:32,245 --> 01:52:33,454 life horror shows. 1471 01:52:33,913 --> 01:52:37,750 For me Norman Bates was kind of a real reflection of things that could happen and that is scary. 1472 01:52:38,376 --> 01:52:43,214 My favorite '80s villain is Edward Herrmann from Lost Boys. 1473 01:52:44,340 --> 01:52:47,260 It was M. Night Shyamalan before M. Night Shyamalan. 1474 01:52:47,718 --> 01:52:51,889 It was that twist where you're like, ”Nooo... 1475 01:52:52,348 --> 01:52:56,852 Out of nowhere, he is the main vampire. What the fuck?!" 1476 01:52:57,395 --> 01:53:03,943 You watch that movie now with that knowledge and it changes everything. 1477 01:53:04,610 --> 01:53:10,074 Everybody else is just so overt in their evil whereas he... he's the cunning guy. 1478 01:53:10,700 --> 01:53:14,870 If the killer wasn't over the top then the kills were. 1479 01:53:22,837 --> 01:53:26,299 The Friday the 13th films are the backbone of horror in the '80s. 1480 01:53:26,882 --> 01:53:31,637 The fact that there were so many of them in the '80s, that's pretty impressive. 1481 01:53:31,971 --> 01:53:35,266 Audiences wanted that character back so many times. 1482 01:53:35,933 --> 01:53:41,856 Throughout the series of the films the makeup is completely different but you know what? 1483 01:53:42,440 --> 01:53:44,191 The fans don't give a shit. 1484 01:53:44,859 --> 01:53:51,866 They just want to see Jason again and that's why there has been twelve Friday the 13th films 1485 01:53:52,408 --> 01:53:57,121 basically and they got to do one more. 1486 01:53:57,830 --> 01:54:00,583 Michael Myers has spanned over several films now. 1487 01:54:01,042 --> 01:54:02,335 It's evil personified. 1488 01:54:02,752 --> 01:54:07,548 Yes, you could go off all day about how the sequels are and whether you like Part 5 1489 01:54:07,965 --> 01:54:13,721 or 6 or whatever or the Rob Zombie films or anything but still that character just remains. 1490 01:54:14,013 --> 01:54:19,143 It's an iconic image that just is part of the Horror Hall of Fame. 1491 01:54:20,311 --> 01:54:22,355 The Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse. 1492 01:54:22,688 --> 01:54:27,568 There's me and Freddy and whatever and whatever that come out and that people just loved to 1493 01:54:28,569 --> 01:54:31,030 revisit the characters and stuff like that. 1494 01:54:31,447 --> 01:54:33,949 This is what made them happy. 1495 01:54:37,453 --> 01:54:42,583 Pinhead's like an incredible character in those movies because he's genuinely terrifying. 1496 01:54:42,958 --> 01:54:48,214 I mean here is a guy that has like a hundred nails stuck in his head, comes from hell, 1497 01:54:48,839 --> 01:54:55,012 dressed in like BDSM leather outfit and just wants to play with you until you've been ripped 1498 01:54:55,388 --> 01:54:56,097 to pieces. 1499 01:54:57,890 --> 01:55:03,813 He's not hiding around a corner waiting to jump out on you with the stiletto blade. 1500 01:55:04,563 --> 01:55:06,399 There's a whole process that goes on here. 1501 01:55:07,066 --> 01:55:11,904 You have to be interested in the idea of exploring pain and pleasure. 1502 01:55:12,405 --> 01:55:17,827 You have to have the right motivation behind the thumbs to make Pinhead ultimately interested 1503 01:55:18,244 --> 01:55:24,792 in you even then he wants to stop and discuss the weather and the price offish with you. 1504 01:55:25,418 --> 01:55:31,340 It's the dark dirty corners of your mind and your heart and your soul that he's really 1505 01:55:31,841 --> 01:55:32,716 interested in. 1506 01:55:33,092 --> 01:55:34,844 Then we might get down to the hooks and the chains. 1507 01:55:37,888 --> 01:55:40,057 The '80s spawned a lot of franchises. 1508 01:55:40,516 --> 01:55:47,898 I mean Chucky was kind of a badass bad dude and super funny and fun to hate. 1509 01:55:55,030 --> 01:55:57,324 Chucky hides in plain sight. 1510 01:55:57,992 --> 01:56:03,205 He just sits in the scene with all of the other characters and they have no idea that 1511 01:56:03,706 --> 01:56:06,834 there is a ticking bomb in the room with them. 1512 01:56:09,378 --> 01:56:11,005 Who was the better antagonist? 1513 01:56:11,505 --> 01:56:14,091 Jason, Michael Myers or Freddy? 1514 01:56:14,758 --> 01:56:21,056 In my opinion there's no question the most complex and the most well-written of the three 1515 01:56:21,515 --> 01:56:23,142 is definitely Freddy Krueger. 1516 01:56:24,560 --> 01:56:26,687 How do you not love Freddy Krueger too? 1517 01:56:27,021 --> 01:56:32,943 I mean come on, he started out as something different in the first movie then they moved 1518 01:56:33,235 --> 01:56:34,028 away from that. 1519 01:56:34,320 --> 01:56:40,451 He killed children and yet we held him up on this pedestal and there were dolls and like 1520 01:56:41,035 --> 01:56:43,787 all these things that were for kids, marketed for kids. 1521 01:56:44,121 --> 01:56:45,414 A talking Freddy doll. 1522 01:56:45,789 --> 01:56:47,208 This is a child killer people. 1523 01:56:51,921 --> 01:56:57,051 Obviously, he runs the gamut from being really scary to being really corny across all the 1524 01:56:57,343 --> 01:56:58,260 different films. 1525 01:57:03,015 --> 01:57:10,481 But Robert Englund really brought a sense of style and charisma and just this attitude 1526 01:57:10,814 --> 01:57:11,607 to this character. 1527 01:57:12,107 --> 01:57:20,115 I respect how hard it is to create an iconic figure and marketing it to kids is the best 1528 01:57:20,407 --> 01:57:24,620 way to do that and certainly with Freddy that is a giant piece of his successes. 1529 01:57:25,120 --> 01:57:31,043 The marketing, the records, the gloves, the shirts, the hats, the costumes the... 1530 01:57:31,335 --> 01:57:34,004 Gosh, you can buy a onesie that has Freddy on it. 1531 01:57:34,463 --> 01:57:39,093 You can buy so much with Freddy on it and that really was the key to his success. 1532 01:57:39,385 --> 01:57:42,388 And then everybody else were like oh, there's the formula for that. 1533 01:57:43,222 --> 01:57:51,480 And the hockey masks, the chainsaws, it all becomes this big marketing extravaganza and 1534 01:57:51,981 --> 01:57:56,652 it works to make iconic characters, it really does work. 1535 01:58:14,295 --> 01:58:16,380 Company of Wolves is magical. 1536 01:58:17,172 --> 01:58:21,468 It takes little red riding-hood and turns it into something really provocative and Freudian. 1537 01:58:21,885 --> 01:58:26,056 It has to do with red dresses and menstrual bleeding and werewolves. 1538 01:58:28,183 --> 01:58:33,856 In this one the wolf head emerges out of the human mouth and that transformation takes 1539 01:58:34,273 --> 01:58:37,401 place in a totally different manner than you've seen before. 1540 01:58:37,943 --> 01:58:44,241 It's still makeup effects and it's still puppetry and change-o head type technology but in a 1541 01:58:44,533 --> 01:58:45,618 totally different way. 1542 01:58:46,118 --> 01:58:48,412 It's a really special movie that not enough people have seen. 1543 01:58:48,954 --> 01:58:51,206 Company of Wolves was I thought a really interesting movie. 1544 01:58:51,665 --> 01:58:55,294 I was a little miffed when Neil Jordan said he didn't want to make a piece of shit like The Howling. 1545 01:58:55,711 --> 01:58:59,256 So, it kind of prejudiced me a little bit but it's a good movie. 1546 01:59:12,811 --> 01:59:16,106 The Stuff which is a blob movie basically 1547 01:59:16,565 --> 01:59:21,153 is about killer yogurt and it eats you. 1548 01:59:22,321 --> 01:59:26,867 It manages to be hilarious and scary at the same time. 1549 01:59:33,666 --> 01:59:38,212 It's a comment on consumer society except you're not consuming the stuff out of the can 1550 01:59:38,504 --> 01:59:40,673 the stuff out of the can is consuming you. 1551 01:59:42,675 --> 01:59:43,884 It's terrific. 1552 01:59:44,551 --> 01:59:49,348 If you want to make a movie about American industry producing products that poison 1553 01:59:49,723 --> 01:59:54,353 the public that would be a wonderful movie but nobody would go to see it. 1554 01:59:55,354 --> 01:59:59,942 Then you take the same idea and you may get ice cream that they're putting out in the 1555 02:00:00,442 --> 02:00:05,030 marketplace that consumes you from within and now it's an entertainment movie. 1556 02:00:05,322 --> 02:00:08,283 Sell your message at the same time as you entertain. 1557 02:00:08,784 --> 02:00:14,498 The whole idea of our picture was that people go out and buy this product and eat it and 1558 02:00:14,873 --> 02:00:16,917 become addicted to it and love it. 1559 02:00:17,292 --> 02:00:19,253 So, it was about everything else that's addictive. 1560 02:00:19,962 --> 02:00:24,216 Michael Moriarty was remarkable in the first picture we did together which was Q and 1561 02:00:24,633 --> 02:00:26,301 nobody could have been better. 1562 02:00:26,844 --> 02:00:28,762 So, naturally I would want to work with him again. 1563 02:00:30,389 --> 02:00:34,685 We did the same thing as Fred Astaire and that famous dance routine where he danced 1564 02:00:35,018 --> 02:00:35,936 on the ceiling. 1565 02:00:36,311 --> 02:00:39,857 They turned the room; we turned the room 360 degrees upside down. 1566 02:00:40,441 --> 02:00:43,360 The only difference is that in this one it was on fire. 1567 02:00:46,822 --> 02:00:48,449 I beat this stuff with a stick. 1568 02:00:49,158 --> 02:00:52,953 When it didn't want to do what I told it to do, I didn't care. 1569 02:00:53,412 --> 02:00:58,292 When no one was looking, I'd give it a couple of whacks and that got it's attention and 1570 02:00:58,709 --> 02:01:01,044 it pretty well did what it was told after that. 1571 02:01:02,171 --> 02:01:07,760 With actors it's one thing because they have feelings and they have agents and they have 1572 02:01:08,093 --> 02:01:11,513 lawyers but the stuff was totally mine. 1573 02:01:12,181 --> 02:01:13,599 I could beat the shit out of it. 1574 02:01:29,198 --> 02:01:34,411 My father was one of the first horror hosts in the country in Pittsburgh, his name was Chilly Billy and 1575 02:01:34,787 --> 02:01:39,041 he had a show called Chiller Theater. And Night of the Living Dead, my father was in it. 1576 02:01:39,750 --> 02:01:43,295 George was a master and he was always ahead of his time. 1577 02:01:43,587 --> 02:01:48,050 As everybody says a giant of a man, a tall teddy bear. 1578 02:01:48,425 --> 02:01:52,429 He was approachable, he loved the actors, he gave us freedoms. 1579 02:01:57,226 --> 02:01:59,728 Sarah was holding it tight, trying to hold it together. 1580 02:02:00,103 --> 02:02:01,104 She had to hold it together. 1581 02:02:01,522 --> 02:02:05,567 She was a scientist trying to figure this out how to deal with all these jerk guys in the military. 1582 02:02:13,909 --> 02:02:17,913 She had warmth and compassion but mostly you don't get to see that. 1583 02:02:18,372 --> 02:02:20,666 You see her harder exterior. 1584 02:02:21,708 --> 02:02:26,296 At the time people were trying to compare Day of the Dead to Dawn of the Dead. 1585 02:02:26,588 --> 02:02:27,798 It was a completely different movie. 1586 02:02:28,215 --> 02:02:31,635 They were very disappointed and it was too talky 1587 02:02:31,969 --> 02:02:34,346 they would say or not enough gore although at the end 1588 02:02:34,763 --> 02:02:37,224 Tom Savini and his crew did a beautiful job. 1589 02:02:38,350 --> 02:02:41,478 The practical special effects on Day of the Dead are remarkable. 1590 02:02:43,605 --> 02:02:48,694 Greg Nicotero was a young guy on the show and he was like 19 years old but obviously 1591 02:02:49,152 --> 02:02:49,903 very talented. 1592 02:02:53,073 --> 02:03:00,080 Dawn of the Dead changed my life forever just in terms of never knowing where George was going to take us. 1593 02:03:05,586 --> 02:03:09,840 I was basically Tom's assistant so I ran the department for him and ordered all the 1594 02:03:10,215 --> 02:03:12,801 supplies, hired the crew, all that kind of stuff. 1595 02:03:13,385 --> 02:03:17,723 He always wanted to use real intestines as often as we could. 1596 02:03:18,223 --> 02:03:21,810 You can't get better than the real thing so we would use pig intestines. 1597 02:03:23,228 --> 02:03:27,190 The big showstopper in Day of the Dead is when Rhodes is torn apart. 1598 02:03:33,989 --> 02:03:37,910 The culmination of everything that we did in that movie led to that moment. 1599 02:03:38,577 --> 02:03:44,291 Then they just have a feast on his guts and his body and his fingers and his mostly the 1600 02:03:44,666 --> 02:03:45,918 guts inside. 1601 02:03:47,127 --> 02:03:52,007 When we shot that scene, we used rancid rotted intestines. 1602 02:03:52,466 --> 02:03:57,346 And I remember a couple of the zombies actually took earplugs and stuffed them up their noses 1603 02:03:57,721 --> 02:03:59,014 because the smell was so bad. 1604 02:03:59,598 --> 02:04:05,020 When George yells cut everybody's doing this to wave the smell of the rotting intestines 1605 02:04:05,437 --> 02:04:06,813 away from Joe Pilato's face. 1606 02:04:07,272 --> 02:04:09,900 We didn't know any better to just go out and buy new guts. 1607 02:04:10,484 --> 02:04:12,402 We didn't want to spend the 8O bucks I guess I don't know. 1608 02:04:14,071 --> 02:04:17,783 I think that the gore in Day of the Dead is actually very appropriate. 1609 02:04:18,283 --> 02:04:21,453 It's over-the-top at the end of course it is, that's George's humor. 1610 02:04:21,912 --> 02:04:24,623 That's what was so remarkable about George's films. 1611 02:04:24,915 --> 02:04:26,959 They get better and better with age. 1612 02:04:46,645 --> 02:04:49,356 Hot off the success of his Psycho 2 screenplay. 1613 02:04:49,731 --> 02:04:53,068 Tom Holland wrote and directed Fright Night and took everyone by surprise. 1614 02:04:53,694 --> 02:04:59,157 It left the great movie monsters behind and I wrote Fright Night in reaction to that and 1615 02:04:59,616 --> 02:05:05,205 also because I had grown up loving the Hammer AIP vampire films. 1616 02:05:05,664 --> 02:05:06,873 I love Christopher Lee. 1617 02:05:07,332 --> 02:05:12,379 It stars William Ragsdale, Amanda Bearse, Stephen Geoffreys and Roddy McDowall opposite 1618 02:05:12,796 --> 02:05:14,006 Chris Sarandon. 1619 02:05:15,007 --> 02:05:19,469 What you do is to have a gonzo horror fan look out the window and see his next-door 1620 02:05:19,761 --> 02:05:22,597 neighbor a vampire chomping down on somebody. 1621 02:05:22,973 --> 02:05:26,601 And then of course, if he's a horror movie fan running around saying vampire, vampire 1622 02:05:26,893 --> 02:05:27,519 next door. 1623 02:05:27,894 --> 02:05:29,563 Nobody's going to believe him. 1624 02:05:33,191 --> 02:05:35,569 You can't make the villain all bad. 1625 02:05:36,069 --> 02:05:41,616 You have to add the ambivalence where there are saving graces to the villain to make him 1626 02:05:41,908 --> 02:05:43,577 a three-dimensional character. 1627 02:05:43,910 --> 02:05:48,582 He's been given eternal life but he always loses the one he loves. 1628 02:05:52,794 --> 02:05:58,008 Roddy McDowall kills it as Peter Vincent who's a B-movie horror host named after Peter Cushing 1629 02:05:58,341 --> 02:06:01,678 and Vincent Price and he's forced to take on the real deal. 1630 02:06:07,225 --> 02:06:11,104 It was a cool movie that actually had a sense of history as well. 1631 02:06:11,605 --> 02:06:12,606 It had everything you wanted. 1632 02:06:13,148 --> 02:06:18,737 There was great gore, there were hints of nostalgia with McDowell and that kind of hit 1633 02:06:19,154 --> 02:06:20,405 towards the Hammer movies. 1634 02:06:21,156 --> 02:06:28,246 I had the best effects crew extant in Hollywood at that moment and Fright Night is full of 1635 02:06:28,830 --> 02:06:30,582 in-camera effects. 1636 02:06:33,794 --> 02:06:37,672 There's that final scene where Charlie and Peter Vincent confront Jerry Dandrige in the 1637 02:06:37,964 --> 02:06:39,633 basement and Amy gets in the way. 1638 02:06:40,383 --> 02:06:43,845 And she says Charlie you told me that you'd save me. 1639 02:06:47,724 --> 02:06:51,937 And then she comes back to him and when she came back to him, I realized there was a huge 1640 02:06:52,270 --> 02:06:53,605 scare that was there. 1641 02:06:54,022 --> 02:06:58,735 I went to Steve Johnson and I said Steve give her a shark's mouth that will scare the hell 1642 02:06:59,152 --> 02:07:00,612 out of every kid. 1643 02:07:04,825 --> 02:07:09,412 Then it ends up being the definitive image on the one street and has become cosplay. 1644 02:07:09,788 --> 02:07:10,372 Yes. 1645 02:07:10,747 --> 02:07:11,790 Who knew? 1646 02:07:24,177 --> 02:07:29,850 The Return of the Living Dead I think is such a great horror comedy because it never stops 1647 02:07:30,350 --> 02:07:34,688 being horrifying but it's so gut-bustingly funny. 1648 02:07:39,317 --> 02:07:43,363 I remember a very significant moment of watching The Return of the Living Dead when they brain 1649 02:07:43,822 --> 02:07:48,034 the thing and it doesn't work because then everything you think you know is out the window. 1650 02:07:48,368 --> 02:07:51,872 And it's one of the first maybe meta zombie movies that's playing with those expectations 1651 02:07:52,247 --> 02:07:54,457 where they take a moment to explain all the rules that they learn from watching 1652 02:07:54,916 --> 02:07:55,792 Night of the Living Dead. 1653 02:07:56,293 --> 02:07:58,211 I'd thought you said if we destroyed the brain it'd die? 1654 02:07:58,795 --> 02:08:01,173 It worked in the movie. Well, it ain't working now Frank. 1655 02:08:01,506 --> 02:08:02,757 You mean the movie lied? 1656 02:08:03,550 --> 02:08:07,387 And then when those rules don't apply to the situation you're in, it suddenly becomes... 1657 02:08:07,929 --> 02:08:09,264 very anything could happen. 1658 02:08:13,435 --> 02:08:16,188 They weren't the mindless flesh eaters. 1659 02:08:16,646 --> 02:08:20,859 They were fast, they were smart, they were not what you were expecting. 1660 02:08:21,234 --> 02:08:23,069 They're killing the paramedics; They're killing the cops. 1661 02:08:23,695 --> 02:08:28,658 And one of them gets on the CB radio and is like ”Send more cops." 1662 02:08:31,286 --> 02:08:35,790 And it's just hilarious because you've never seen that in a zombie movie before. 1663 02:08:38,043 --> 02:08:39,753 The Tarman scene, 1664 02:08:40,045 --> 02:08:43,548 I remember looking at it and thinking I had no idea how they did it because something 1665 02:08:43,840 --> 02:08:46,092 so specific is happening with the anatomy of that thing. 1666 02:08:46,426 --> 02:08:49,721 It's just one of those accidentally iconic moments of horror with the design, 1667 02:08:50,096 --> 02:08:52,140 with the actor, with the way he was carrying himself. 1668 02:08:52,682 --> 02:08:54,184 It's an indelible image of '80s horror. 1669 02:08:54,893 --> 02:08:59,356 That woman corpse that they cut in half, it was made by a friend of mine Tony Gardner 1670 02:08:59,731 --> 02:09:02,025 who has done Chucky for the last few movies. 1671 02:09:02,484 --> 02:09:08,782 They tie her down and have this conversation with her. They say, "Why do you want brains?" 1672 02:09:09,199 --> 02:09:10,075 And she says... 1673 02:09:10,700 --> 02:09:14,246 "It makes the pain go away." 1674 02:09:14,871 --> 02:09:18,667 That to me is one of the most horrifying concepts 1675 02:09:18,959 --> 02:09:23,964 I've ever heard in a horror movie and so hilarious at the same time. 1676 02:09:24,589 --> 02:09:26,549 I find that movie fascinating. 1677 02:09:36,893 --> 02:09:38,770 What can I say about Howling 2? 1678 02:09:39,187 --> 02:09:41,898 I can say that Christopher Lee apologized to me for being in it. 1679 02:09:42,357 --> 02:09:47,904 I can say that to whatever Phillippe Mora was thinking, I don't think it probably got on film. 1680 02:09:48,363 --> 02:09:53,785 It does have however Sybil Danning's dropping her dress 72 times during the end credits 1681 02:09:54,202 --> 02:09:55,453 which you know, that counts for something. 1682 02:09:55,870 --> 02:09:57,914 The problem with Howling 2 is that it just doesn't make any sense. 1683 02:09:58,581 --> 02:10:03,378 Particularly in that it completely blows the ending of Howling 1 in which the newscaster 1684 02:10:03,753 --> 02:10:07,966 turns into a werewolf in front of the entire TV audience and then in Howling 2 nobody saw it. 1685 02:10:08,800 --> 02:10:11,136 It's like it must have been the lowest rated newscast in history. 1686 02:10:11,469 --> 02:10:14,514 And it was shot in Transylvania or someplace like that. Ferdy Mayne is in it. 1687 02:10:14,973 --> 02:10:18,351 I mean there are things about it that are interesting but it just doesn't make any sense at all. 1688 02:10:31,197 --> 02:10:35,535 When Stephen King focuses in on small-town stories that's what I love as a fan. 1689 02:10:36,036 --> 02:10:39,998 Well, Silver Bullet was done by Dan Attias who was one of my assistant directors. 1690 02:10:40,332 --> 02:10:40,915 It's a werewolf picture. 1691 02:10:41,374 --> 02:10:43,376 Another one of those movies '80s movies with a kid hero. 1692 02:10:43,877 --> 02:10:48,006 Yeah, it's a pretty affecting movie because a lot of these movies much like I Was a Teenage 1693 02:10:48,381 --> 02:10:53,970 Werewolf are parables about adolescence and Silver Bullet it fits into that category I think much 1694 02:10:54,262 --> 02:10:57,057 more so than like something like The Howling or An American Werewolf. 1695 02:10:57,599 --> 02:10:59,601 The Coreys were kind of everything in the 1696 02:10:59,976 --> 02:11:04,314 Silver Bullet was my first-time seeing Corey Haim in anything and I just fell in love with that kid. 1697 02:11:04,689 --> 02:11:07,984 And I thought there was something very special about him in that movie. 1698 02:11:08,276 --> 02:11:13,531 And of course, Gary Busey, he knows Uncle Red with all his little Uncle Red-isms, you know? 1699 02:11:17,035 --> 02:11:20,747 And it made me scared of the dark again because there's something out there. 1700 02:11:21,039 --> 02:11:25,001 Everett McGill as Reverend Lowe it's such a great performance. 1701 02:11:27,253 --> 02:11:32,133 And it's interesting to me that in that movie he didn't even have to be the guy in the werewolf 1702 02:11:32,717 --> 02:11:35,512 costume but he did it because he was so method. 1703 02:11:53,071 --> 02:11:56,783 I had no idea that Re-Animator would become a cult classic. 1704 02:11:57,158 --> 02:12:01,079 We needed to find a way to separate our film from so many of the others because everyone 1705 02:12:01,454 --> 02:12:02,664 was making horror films then. 1706 02:12:03,123 --> 02:12:07,752 Basically, Lovecraft doing his version of Frankenstein it's about someone who has a 1707 02:12:08,169 --> 02:12:10,755 dream that's a very positive thing that turns awful. 1708 02:12:18,096 --> 02:12:19,973 It's sort of like be careful what you wish for. 1709 02:12:20,306 --> 02:12:24,144 The idea of bringing the dead back to life is something we all wish that we could do. 1710 02:12:24,602 --> 02:12:28,356 I like movies where the heads talk and The Brain That Wouldn't Die. 1711 02:12:29,023 --> 02:12:32,777 I just think there's something about that that's real horror to me. 1712 02:12:33,611 --> 02:12:36,448 Herbert West, he's so full of himself. 1713 02:12:42,203 --> 02:12:47,792 And yet we can't help but like him because he's so enthusiastic and he always makes a 1714 02:12:48,168 --> 02:12:50,128 choice you didn't guess it. 1715 02:12:50,920 --> 02:12:56,968 I think the unsung power of Stuart is his storytelling ability. 1716 02:12:57,343 --> 02:13:00,722 Stuart's gloriously outrageous, he just goes for it. 1717 02:13:01,139 --> 02:13:03,308 It's big and it's brave. 1718 02:13:07,228 --> 02:13:11,024 So, we had to invent a female character for Re-Animator and we invented the dean's 1719 02:13:11,441 --> 02:13:14,235 daughter Megan Halsey that Barbara Crampton plays in the film. 1720 02:13:14,777 --> 02:13:18,615 And of course, the scene that got all the attention is the scene in which we sometimes 1721 02:13:18,990 --> 02:13:20,366 call it the head gives head scene. 1722 02:13:20,700 --> 02:13:22,911 We knew that no one was going to do a scene like this. 1723 02:13:23,369 --> 02:13:27,499 It was a funny thing that they were doing, this visual pun. 1724 02:13:27,957 --> 02:13:32,837 And I thought I can't turn this down because of this moment on screen that I'm going to 1725 02:13:33,213 --> 02:13:34,047 have to do. 1726 02:13:34,506 --> 02:13:41,095 If I knew then what I know now I don't know if I would have been able to go through with 1727 02:13:41,471 --> 02:13:43,181 what I went through on Re-Animator. 1728 02:13:43,681 --> 02:13:45,517 It was quite exploitive. 1729 02:13:45,975 --> 02:13:48,186 It was really groundbreaking in a way. 1730 02:13:48,686 --> 02:13:51,814 That scene is still shocking and taboo. 1731 02:13:52,607 --> 02:13:59,781 The fortunate thing is it stopped before it really gets bad. 1732 02:14:00,114 --> 02:14:02,075 It just goes right up to the edge there. 1733 02:14:02,575 --> 02:14:07,247 There wouldn't be Re-Animator without that damsel in distress like that. 1734 02:14:07,789 --> 02:14:09,249 We wouldn't be talking about it. 1735 02:14:09,958 --> 02:14:17,423 Stuart Gordon's maybe signature achievement in horror is the ironic tone, the over-the-top 1736 02:14:17,840 --> 02:14:19,133 pleasure of the horror. 1737 02:14:19,634 --> 02:14:20,593 The fun of it. 1738 02:14:20,927 --> 02:14:27,183 He brought kind of an experience to Re-Animator that showed that a cheap horror movie 1739 02:14:27,642 --> 02:14:28,685 can be really good. 1740 02:14:29,143 --> 02:14:33,022 I honestly thought no one will ever see this bloody thing. 1741 02:14:33,398 --> 02:14:34,524 What did I know? 1742 02:14:42,282 --> 02:14:43,616 Ash played by Bruce Campbell. 1743 02:14:44,075 --> 02:14:49,080 He was one of the first actors who become famous in horror for playing a hero rather than a villain. 1744 02:14:54,210 --> 02:14:59,591 Horror stars from the 30s on down through to Vincent Price and Christopher Lee etc... 1745 02:14:59,966 --> 02:15:02,760 were tended to be known for playing the monsters, the villains. 1746 02:15:03,261 --> 02:15:07,015 The male horror stars were known for being the antagonists and Bruce Campbell's a little 1747 02:15:07,307 --> 02:15:08,057 different. 1748 02:15:09,851 --> 02:15:13,813 He was the Bruce Willis of horror. 1749 02:15:14,272 --> 02:15:20,028 He was just that every man who was like stuck in a situation that was way out of his league. 1750 02:15:20,403 --> 02:15:22,655 He just said screw it, I'm not going to die. 1751 02:15:30,330 --> 02:15:34,375 He was known for being the guy fighting back against the evil so that made him kind of 1752 02:15:34,792 --> 02:15:36,252 unique in horror history. 1753 02:15:42,550 --> 02:15:46,095 Every boy in the world must have wanted to be Kurt Russell in The Thing. 1754 02:15:47,555 --> 02:15:51,559 He battles an alien creature in sub-zero temperatures. 1755 02:15:58,733 --> 02:16:02,153 He's still badass all the way through even after everything he's been through. 1756 02:16:06,240 --> 02:16:07,408 Tom Holland's Fright Night. 1757 02:16:07,742 --> 02:16:11,162 I always wanted to be like kind of a mix between Charlie Brewster and Evil Ed 1758 02:16:11,746 --> 02:16:15,875 where I wanted to be the super horror nerdy kid but I also wanted the girlfriend. 1759 02:16:19,712 --> 02:16:20,755 In Phantasm 2, 1760 02:16:21,130 --> 02:16:25,551 Reggie Bannister is a likable, relatable character because he's basically playing himself. 1761 02:16:29,555 --> 02:16:32,684 He talks that way off set, "Hey, dude, man how is it going?" 1762 02:16:33,518 --> 02:16:35,061 He's the same way. 1763 02:16:35,395 --> 02:16:37,188 I think that's why people like him. 1764 02:16:43,861 --> 02:16:45,196 Tom Atkins is awesome. 1765 02:16:46,155 --> 02:16:47,740 He's always like a reliable presence. 1766 02:16:48,241 --> 02:16:51,619 You see him turn up and a lot of Carpenter stuff and then Romero borrows him for Creepshow 1767 02:16:51,994 --> 02:16:53,913 and then he's in Night of the Creeps as the cop. 1768 02:16:54,372 --> 02:16:55,289 He's great. 1769 02:16:58,042 --> 02:17:00,253 'Mo' Rutherford from The Stuff. 1770 02:17:00,545 --> 02:17:02,964 He is awesome. 1771 02:17:03,464 --> 02:17:07,093 On first glance you're like this guy's kind of a scumbag and he plays himself a little 1772 02:17:07,385 --> 02:17:12,807 like aloof but then as the movie goes on you really fall in love with him because you see 1773 02:17:13,182 --> 02:17:14,350 where he's coming from. 1774 02:17:22,400 --> 02:17:25,027 A lot of people will misunderstand him and think 1775 02:17:25,445 --> 02:17:29,282 that he's the doofus but really, he's outsmarting everyone. 1776 02:17:29,741 --> 02:17:31,117 He's such a good character. 1777 02:17:31,576 --> 02:17:36,122 So, when I think of '80s specifically and heroes, I think of movies like The Monster Squad and 1778 02:17:36,414 --> 02:17:37,415 The Lost Boys. 1779 02:17:37,707 --> 02:17:39,459 These are movies that I could relate to as a kid. 1780 02:17:40,293 --> 02:17:42,503 It's these cool kids that I wanted as my friends. 1781 02:17:42,962 --> 02:17:43,796 I wanted that tree-house. 1782 02:17:44,297 --> 02:17:45,339 I wanted that club. 1783 02:17:45,631 --> 02:17:50,303 Like I really wanted to have a Monster Club and ride around on my bike and try to actually 1784 02:17:50,678 --> 02:17:52,472 take out monsters if I could find them. 1785 02:17:53,139 --> 02:17:54,766 In Lost Boys you've got the Frog Brothers. 1786 02:17:55,224 --> 02:17:57,810 They hung out at this comic shop and they were vampire killers. 1787 02:17:58,227 --> 02:17:59,771 I was like man, this is me. I've got my bike. 1788 02:18:00,313 --> 02:18:02,940 After this movie I'm going to go ride around with my friends and try to recreate these things. 1789 02:18:04,650 --> 02:18:10,156 In the '80s the central character certainly Friday the 13th and Nightmare, and Halloween, 1790 02:18:10,531 --> 02:18:16,329 you started to see really strong women who start out to be victims possibly but at some 1791 02:18:16,746 --> 02:18:18,289 point, it turns. 1792 02:18:18,706 --> 02:18:20,416 They find a way to win the day. 1793 02:18:20,708 --> 02:18:22,794 Some guy doesn't come in and save them. 1794 02:18:24,295 --> 02:18:26,422 Yeah, it was not a time for kick-ass guys. 1795 02:18:26,714 --> 02:18:28,466 It was a time for kick-ass gals. 1796 02:18:28,966 --> 02:18:31,385 And it wasn't about women running away from fear. 1797 02:18:31,803 --> 02:18:33,346 It was about women confronting it. 1798 02:18:33,638 --> 02:18:37,266 The '80s was a great decade for women and I think people just sort of misconstrued what 1799 02:18:37,558 --> 02:18:39,894 horror was trying to say about female characters. 1800 02:18:45,650 --> 02:18:50,154 So many people who look at the genre outside they think it's just about victimizing women 1801 02:18:50,530 --> 02:18:55,535 and I think they think it's about basically living out these like lurid fantasies of violence 1802 02:18:55,910 --> 02:18:56,911 against women. 1803 02:18:57,537 --> 02:19:03,084 But for me as a kid growing up watching '80s horror it was about watching women persevere. 1804 02:19:03,459 --> 02:19:06,379 Horror has a love-hate relationship with women. 1805 02:19:06,963 --> 02:19:13,010 They glorify it but at the same time completely objectifying and slashing the girl in the nightgown. 1806 02:19:14,053 --> 02:19:16,138 So, there's something going on there. 1807 02:19:16,639 --> 02:19:19,475 I don't know what it is. What is it? 1808 02:19:20,601 --> 02:19:22,728 I love Jamie Lee Curtis in the original Halloween. 1809 02:19:23,312 --> 02:19:26,065 You think she's just a babysitter... Oh, no. 1810 02:19:28,526 --> 02:19:33,531 She has a quality of both being tender and strong at the same time and that's a very 1811 02:19:34,031 --> 02:19:35,449 attractive combination. 1812 02:19:36,117 --> 02:19:40,621 How she became iconic I think is that when she survives, she's there to protect the young 1813 02:19:40,955 --> 02:19:45,501 ones that she's in charge of and she survives trying to save other people too. 1814 02:19:46,252 --> 02:19:50,006 She was very vulnerable but still strong enough to fight back. 1815 02:19:50,882 --> 02:19:56,596 She was a fighter and so that was also something to aspire to. But I can sort of hook in to 1816 02:19:57,054 --> 02:20:02,351 the idea of like oh, yeah, I'm a fighter too and I can stand up for myself and I can take care 1817 02:20:02,643 --> 02:20:04,687 of myself and I can be brave. 1818 02:20:05,521 --> 02:20:09,400 So, there's a lot of that in there that I think is really cool for women and for everyone. 1819 02:20:09,901 --> 02:20:13,487 The beauty of being a woman in horror is you're an action figure. 1820 02:20:13,946 --> 02:20:17,909 You're running, you're jumping, you're playing, you're proactive, you're taking command of 1821 02:20:18,534 --> 02:20:24,206 plot situations and scenes that women in ordinary movies don't get to do. 1822 02:20:24,665 --> 02:20:28,461 For as much as people like to look down on say the Friday 13th movies when you really 1823 02:20:28,878 --> 02:20:34,425 look at it, Friday 2 was about Ginny and it was about Amy Steel being smarter than every 1824 02:20:34,717 --> 02:20:35,885 other person at that camp. 1825 02:20:36,385 --> 02:20:38,596 And she knew how to get into Jason's head. 1826 02:20:39,180 --> 02:20:42,224 She knew how to defeat the monster so to speak. 1827 02:20:46,979 --> 02:20:50,149 Barbara Crampton, the queen of low-budget horror throughout the '80s. 1828 02:20:50,524 --> 02:20:53,194 She just came across as someone that's like really strong. 1829 02:20:54,028 --> 02:20:59,283 She goes from a traditional girlfriend role in Re-Animator to the de-facto protagonist 1830 02:20:59,700 --> 02:21:03,663 of From Beyond. She becomes the seeker of that story which is a pretty cool transition. 1831 02:21:04,038 --> 02:21:08,584 Pretty emblematic of what Barbara has done with that legacy since which is pretty cool to see. 1832 02:21:14,090 --> 02:21:18,386 Somebody like Nancy Thompson who basically open arms at the end of Nightmare on Elm Street 1833 02:21:18,678 --> 02:21:21,597 is like come get me Freddy, let's do this. 1834 02:21:25,267 --> 02:21:27,478 And it was really Heather Langenkamp's movie. 1835 02:21:27,895 --> 02:21:35,778 She was an amazing force in that movie and that performance is really strong and one 1836 02:21:36,153 --> 02:21:40,157 of the best renditions of the final girl ever. 1837 02:21:43,744 --> 02:21:49,500 She creates all these traps and she plans out how she's going to trap the killer. 1838 02:21:50,084 --> 02:21:54,171 It's like some fucked up Home Alone style horror nightmare. 1839 02:21:54,839 --> 02:22:01,595 So, she decides to lay the booby traps around her house using an army manual called Booby 1840 02:22:01,887 --> 02:22:03,973 Traps and Anti-Personel Devices. 1841 02:22:04,765 --> 02:22:06,934 There's something so childlike about it that I love it. 1842 02:22:07,268 --> 02:22:08,102 It's effective. 1843 02:22:13,065 --> 02:22:16,652 And you see that now in conventions people dressing up as Nancy and drawing power from her. 1844 02:22:17,278 --> 02:22:21,824 There's like a real serious threat of women who have survived PTSD and have survived sexual 1845 02:22:22,116 --> 02:22:23,909 trauma and have gravitated to these heroes. 1846 02:22:24,535 --> 02:22:26,579 It makes perfect sense. It's amazing. 1847 02:22:27,079 --> 02:22:31,375 If you look at something like Hellraiser with Kirsty, her whole family life is just 1848 02:22:31,792 --> 02:22:36,964 one big Shakespearean mess between Julia and her Uncle Frank and her father. 1849 02:22:37,381 --> 02:22:41,594 But in the end it's her resilience that ends up sending the Cenobites back. 1850 02:22:46,432 --> 02:22:50,144 Are you going to be the type that does the wrong thing and makes the wrong decision 1851 02:22:50,728 --> 02:22:53,397 or are you going to buckle down and think it through and be a leader? 1852 02:22:55,232 --> 02:22:58,944 And I think those are our heroes and our heroines and that's who you remember. 1853 02:22:59,278 --> 02:23:03,616 You remember the final person or the final girl or the final hero or the heroine. 1854 02:23:03,949 --> 02:23:08,120 That's the leader that made a struggle, came through, but these are all just iconic 1855 02:23:08,496 --> 02:23:09,497 hero stories anyway. 1856 02:23:09,872 --> 02:23:11,499 This is just our new literature. 1857 02:23:12,958 --> 02:23:17,505 The '80s were about the people surviving the monster and somehow or another that got twisted 1858 02:23:17,838 --> 02:23:20,966 around where the monsters the star and the people were incidental. 1859 02:23:21,425 --> 02:23:24,678 And that's what the term final girl reared its head and it makes me sound like I'm 1860 02:23:25,096 --> 02:23:29,183 100 years old but I said in my day we call that the star of the movie. 1861 02:23:29,809 --> 02:23:33,729 It's almost like we had to qualify making these women the protagonist of the movie by 1862 02:23:34,063 --> 02:23:37,191 saying well, we're adhering to this formula and she's the final girl and she's a scream queen. 1863 02:23:37,691 --> 02:23:42,404 But really what you've got is a genre full of women protagonists which is pretty cool. 1864 02:23:42,822 --> 02:23:47,618 So much so that when it's a guy like Jesse in Elm Street 2 or Charlie 1865 02:23:48,035 --> 02:23:50,121 in Fright Night, it's almost an aberration. 1866 02:23:50,496 --> 02:23:52,790 Scream Queen, Final Girl, it's just fan shorthand. 1867 02:23:53,207 --> 02:23:54,708 It doesn't really mean anything to me. 1868 02:23:55,251 --> 02:23:56,418 My gender is specific. 1869 02:23:56,794 --> 02:23:57,419 I am a woman. 1870 02:23:57,878 --> 02:23:59,130 I love living my life as a woman. 1871 02:23:59,463 --> 02:24:05,970 I love living my life in horror films as a woman because the decisions and the instincts 1872 02:24:06,595 --> 02:24:09,306 and the actions I take are predicated on my gender 1873 02:24:09,974 --> 02:24:12,434 I don't act like a guy and I don't want to. 1874 02:24:12,852 --> 02:24:19,733 The fact that I'm physical, that I'm sexual, that I'm an intellectual, that I'm spiritual, 1875 02:24:20,025 --> 02:24:25,906 all of those things are grounded in the fact that I'm a woman so I don't necessarily want 1876 02:24:26,490 --> 02:24:30,828 equality of public perception or public acceptance. 1877 02:24:31,203 --> 02:24:38,252 When I think about the term final girl I wince because it's still differentiating between 1878 02:24:38,711 --> 02:24:39,837 a final boy and a final girl. 1879 02:24:40,546 --> 02:24:44,758 We're going to be judged about how we fought the monster and not because of the gender 1880 02:24:45,176 --> 02:24:46,760 that we were when we fought him. 1881 02:24:47,636 --> 02:24:53,809 Wes Craven was brave maybe to have a girl be his lead but I don't think anybody would 1882 02:24:54,226 --> 02:24:56,145 give him any credit for it today. 1883 02:24:56,770 --> 02:24:59,690 Equal opportunity ass-kicking is what I'm all for. 1884 02:25:00,691 --> 02:25:04,945 The openness of what gender means now is so wonderful. 1885 02:25:05,946 --> 02:25:10,868 It is how fluid it is and how people don't want to be identified by gender. 1886 02:25:11,202 --> 02:25:16,332 I'm so curious how this will play out in film and the horror genre. 1887 02:25:16,916 --> 02:25:22,254 I look forward to seeing more transgender more LGBTQ figures in horror and what they 1888 02:25:22,588 --> 02:25:27,343 will bring that will really bring an entirely new dimension to horror movies. 1889 02:25:27,801 --> 02:25:29,303 That's what's going to be exciting. 1890 02:25:29,803 --> 02:25:30,846 I want to see that. 1891 02:25:50,741 --> 02:25:53,786 Well, we're going to shoot at the Beverly Center and I went oh, this is going to be a 1892 02:25:54,078 --> 02:25:54,703 class act. 1893 02:25:55,246 --> 02:26:00,417 Chopping Mall is a movie with these robots in a mall that are security bots. 1894 02:26:01,043 --> 02:26:05,005 The building gets struck by lightning and it changes their algorithm and so they go 1895 02:26:05,631 --> 02:26:11,762 on a murderous rampage and there's a bunch of teenagers that are in the mall. 1896 02:26:12,304 --> 02:26:16,475 They've broken into the one store and they're all staying in there so they can drink and 1897 02:26:16,934 --> 02:26:17,810 have sex and whatnot. 1898 02:26:18,185 --> 02:26:20,938 They're then trapped in the store by the killbots. 1899 02:26:21,480 --> 02:26:22,398 It was called Robot. 1900 02:26:22,898 --> 02:26:25,442 I remember us all standing around hearing that it was going to be called Killbots 1901 02:26:25,776 --> 02:26:27,152 and we all went... 1902 02:26:28,112 --> 02:26:29,822 We didn't sign up to do Killbots. 1903 02:26:31,156 --> 02:26:32,908 Then they ran that title in it and didn't sell. 1904 02:26:33,325 --> 02:26:38,872 And when we heard it was Chopping Mall, I think that we all just died inside I guess. 1905 02:26:40,708 --> 02:26:46,005 Chopping Mall makes you think oh, people are chopped in a mall and that sounds really cool but 1906 02:26:46,380 --> 02:26:47,631 nobody got chopped at all. 1907 02:26:48,007 --> 02:26:51,969 They got lasered by the robots but I guess that's a moot point. 1908 02:26:52,678 --> 02:26:57,933 When we were all cast, we were friends in a mall having a party sort of living the movie 1909 02:26:58,350 --> 02:26:59,393 that we were making. 1910 02:27:00,019 --> 02:27:01,145 They didn't shut down the mall. 1911 02:27:01,687 --> 02:27:03,230 We had to wait for the stores to close. 1912 02:27:03,772 --> 02:27:06,317 When everybody was out of there, we set up really fast. 1913 02:27:06,650 --> 02:27:10,154 We shot until it was time for the stores to reopen. 1914 02:27:12,031 --> 02:27:14,783 Doing a movie at night, how do you even do that? 1915 02:27:15,075 --> 02:27:18,829 I've never stayed up like all night for a month in a row. 1916 02:27:19,330 --> 02:27:20,831 How am I going to sleep during the day? 1917 02:27:21,123 --> 02:27:26,128 Suzee Slater's head had to explode from being lasered by the robot. 1918 02:27:26,503 --> 02:27:29,048 That was a really cool kill. 1919 02:27:29,590 --> 02:27:30,883 If we want to get gleeful about kills. 1920 02:27:31,425 --> 02:27:33,510 My favorite kill is when I kill the killbot. 1921 02:27:41,977 --> 02:27:45,356 I definitely feel like I got the last laugh in Chopping Mall. 1922 02:28:01,955 --> 02:28:04,375 The Toxic Avenger is basically a satire. 1923 02:28:04,750 --> 02:28:07,503 The movies that Michael Herz and I have made it's all about the underdog. 1924 02:28:08,045 --> 02:28:13,133 We like comedy and we like social issues and politics and we like naked people, men and 1925 02:28:13,550 --> 02:28:16,845 women of course, and we like mixing the genres. 1926 02:28:17,221 --> 02:28:19,348 So, The Toxic Avenger is not a horror film. 1927 02:28:19,765 --> 02:28:21,016 It has elements of horror. 1928 02:28:21,350 --> 02:28:24,311 It probably has the first full head crushing scene in history. 1929 02:28:24,728 --> 02:28:28,607 The thirteen-year-old boy has his head crushed by the wheel of an automobile. 1930 02:28:34,071 --> 02:28:38,450 The MPAA made us cut I think 2O minutes out of the original Toxic Avenger. 1931 02:28:39,743 --> 02:28:43,580 The Toxic Avenger is a hideously deformed creature of superhuman size and strength. 1932 02:28:43,956 --> 02:28:46,917 His weapon unfortunately is only a mop and he can jump. 1933 02:28:47,376 --> 02:28:48,085 That's about it. 1934 02:28:48,419 --> 02:28:53,424 We thought that was amusing because the mainstream movies of that time have all sorts of super-duper 1935 02:28:53,924 --> 02:28:58,679 weapons and sound effects and special effects and we thought it would be funny just to have 1936 02:28:59,054 --> 02:28:59,680 it be a mop. 1937 02:29:00,139 --> 02:29:01,223 And the movie is an environmental movie. 1938 02:29:01,557 --> 02:29:02,891 So, what better weapon than a mop? 1939 02:29:04,518 --> 02:29:06,478 A guy wandered in here looking for a job. 1940 02:29:06,895 --> 02:29:08,397 I showed him the rough cut in the editing room. 1941 02:29:08,814 --> 02:29:11,442 He said you should call it, The First Super-Hero from New Jersey. 1942 02:29:12,192 --> 02:29:13,026 A guy off the street. 1943 02:29:13,652 --> 02:29:15,612 Great idea. People loved it. 1944 02:29:35,174 --> 02:29:36,091 They're back. 1945 02:29:36,550 --> 02:29:39,261 It's almost like they're trying to capture lightning in a bottle again but this time 1946 02:29:39,803 --> 02:29:44,391 it's the toy phone that has voices for Carol Anne as the otherworldly Poltergeist forces 1947 02:29:44,725 --> 02:29:47,144 follow the Freeling family to Phoenix, Arizona. 1948 02:29:48,187 --> 02:29:52,274 Britt director Brian Gibson was trying to make sense of this movie since Tobe Hooper 1949 02:29:52,649 --> 02:29:56,987 was out of the picture and Steven Spielberg was focused on making more serious fare like 1950 02:29:57,279 --> 02:30:01,533 Empire of the Sun with a kiddy Christian Bale and also probably wondering why the Academy 1951 02:30:02,075 --> 02:30:03,452 dissed him over The Color Purple. 1952 02:30:05,370 --> 02:30:09,541 This time they recruit Will Sampson as a Native American shaman to show the white folks how 1953 02:30:09,875 --> 02:30:11,752 to triumph over cult creatures. 1954 02:30:13,045 --> 02:30:17,508 HR Giger designed two of the film's creatures including the killer who knows what it is 1955 02:30:17,883 --> 02:30:21,011 that Steven barfs out after he swallows the worm and gets possessed. 1956 02:30:24,515 --> 02:30:26,850 But don't we all get a little possessed when we drink too much? 1957 02:30:27,309 --> 02:30:31,063 Poltergeist 2 definitely has its flaws but it's worth checking out alone just because 1958 02:30:31,438 --> 02:30:33,106 of Julian Beck as Reverend Henry Kane. 1959 02:30:33,607 --> 02:30:36,527 He's so creepy with his little hat and sing-songy voice. 1960 02:30:36,944 --> 02:30:38,654 You'll never forget that performance. 1961 02:30:46,662 --> 02:30:48,121 Next stop, Chicago. 1962 02:31:10,435 --> 02:31:16,567 Tony was probably the smartest actor that I've ever met but he had a European art film 1963 02:31:16,942 --> 02:31:17,651 sensibility. 1964 02:31:18,068 --> 02:31:22,114 So, when they came back for Psycho 3, he insisted on directing it. 1965 02:31:22,406 --> 02:31:24,074 Psycho 2 is a very respectful film. 1966 02:31:24,449 --> 02:31:26,493 It's sort of tiptoeing around a giant legacy. 1967 02:31:27,035 --> 02:31:28,745 Psycho 3 is crazy. 1968 02:31:29,329 --> 02:31:33,542 Psycho 3 is Anthony Perkins deciding that he's not going to tiptoe around that legacy 1969 02:31:33,875 --> 02:31:35,669 anymore and he's going to go to 11 with it. 1970 02:31:36,295 --> 02:31:40,966 Where Psycho 2 is very sort of measured and calm, Psycho 3 is colorful and garish and 1971 02:31:41,258 --> 02:31:43,510 weird and he bashes Jeff Fahey's 1972 02:31:43,844 --> 02:31:44,928 head in with a guitar. 1973 02:31:50,559 --> 02:31:55,314 It was sort of well-received at the time but I think Psycho 3 is due for a massive reconsideration 1974 02:31:55,731 --> 02:32:00,235 because it's Anthony Perkins grappling with this thing that he's had to live with for 1975 02:32:00,527 --> 02:32:05,198 20-some odd years at that point and decided to own it which I think is a significant moment 1976 02:32:05,490 --> 02:32:06,158 in the genre. 1977 02:32:06,950 --> 02:32:11,955 Psycho 2 and Psycho 3 are miles better than the remake of Psycho which is I wouldn't say 1978 02:32:12,372 --> 02:32:15,584 an abomination but I think it's just one of the most misguided ideas for a movie 1979 02:32:15,876 --> 02:32:16,960 I've ever heard of. 1980 02:32:17,336 --> 02:32:20,839 Not that it's terribly made or anything like that but it's just such a non-movie. 1981 02:32:21,798 --> 02:32:23,008 It's like, why? 1982 02:32:23,300 --> 02:32:25,469 And somebody said well, it's because kids won't watch black and white. 1983 02:32:26,219 --> 02:32:27,971 And you know what I say? Fuck em if they can't 1984 02:32:28,388 --> 02:32:31,558 watch black and white. You have to remake the movie with other actors? That's ridiculous. 1985 02:32:44,905 --> 02:32:49,785 What happens when a movie is made completely driven by cocaine? 1986 02:32:50,911 --> 02:32:55,415 Maximum Overdrive has Stephen King directing from his Night Shift short story Trucks. 1987 02:32:55,874 --> 02:33:00,754 His one and only time behind the camera as a director King has since said publicly that 1988 02:33:01,171 --> 02:33:03,674 he was coked out of his mind for the duration of the shoot. 1989 02:33:04,132 --> 02:33:06,343 He didn't know what he was doing and it shows. 1990 02:33:08,428 --> 02:33:10,889 Still, there's lots to love about this over-the-top movie. 1991 02:33:11,306 --> 02:33:15,560 And of course, Emilio Estevez coming off the Brat Pack and seeing him at the forefront 1992 02:33:15,936 --> 02:33:21,024 of Maximum Overdrive like look, I know it's not a great movie but boy is it fun. 1993 02:33:21,441 --> 02:33:25,696 A comet passes by bringing all machinery to life with a mind to kill naturally. 1994 02:33:26,446 --> 02:33:32,244 You have coaches getting pelted with soda cans and just ridiculous over-the-top moments. 1995 02:33:38,792 --> 02:33:42,462 It's also fun because the cast features a pre-Simpsons Yeardley Smith. 1996 02:33:44,464 --> 02:33:48,677 If it's anything great that came out of this movie it's that killer AC/ DC soundtrack. 1997 02:33:56,435 --> 02:33:58,270 I'm the biggest supporter of Maximum Overdrive. 1998 02:33:58,687 --> 02:34:04,443 People hated the movie but listen, I derive pleasure from watching that film and as well 1999 02:34:04,943 --> 02:34:09,197 as a lot of other bad movies and I think as long as I recognize those flaws and can admit that, 2000 02:34:09,489 --> 02:34:11,533 Just let me have my thing man, I like it. 2001 02:34:24,838 --> 02:34:30,343 Tommy Jarvis had his own kind of three picture arc in the Friday the 13th franchise. 2002 02:34:30,635 --> 02:34:35,515 He was played by different actors. Friday 6 begins pretty fast. 2003 02:34:35,932 --> 02:34:38,101 You got Tommy Jarvis, you got his friend and a pickup truck. 2004 02:34:38,393 --> 02:34:41,438 They're going to the grave site to go dig up Jason and make sure he's dead and I'm like, 2005 02:34:41,813 --> 02:34:43,148 why would you do that man? 2006 02:34:43,440 --> 02:34:47,819 Jason gets a resurrected in a very Universal monsters fashion with the bolt of lightning 2007 02:34:48,195 --> 02:34:49,279 and he becomes zombie Jason. 2008 02:34:49,696 --> 02:34:52,699 When Jason returns and there's all these kids at the camp, I was like, oh my God, Jason's 2009 02:34:53,074 --> 02:34:54,409 going to kill all these kids. 2010 02:34:54,785 --> 02:34:59,122 But when Tommy finally faced Jason in the lake of fire and then like he drops to 2011 02:34:59,414 --> 02:35:03,627 the bottom of lake I was like yeah man, you saved the kids. 2012 02:35:04,044 --> 02:35:07,214 That's all that mattered to me, just save the kids because I was about the same age as those 2013 02:35:07,506 --> 02:35:09,508 kids and I went to summer camp. 2014 02:35:09,925 --> 02:35:11,802 So, I didn't want Jason killing me. 2015 02:35:12,219 --> 02:35:15,138 And if I knew Tommy took care of Jason everything was going to be okay. 2016 02:35:27,901 --> 02:35:32,656 So many performances in horror in the '80s were slept on because horror was disreputable. 2017 02:35:33,406 --> 02:35:35,617 Seth Brundle is one of the great anti-heroes. 2018 02:35:35,992 --> 02:35:38,328 I mean he's a hero but he's his own worst enemy. 2019 02:35:38,829 --> 02:35:44,167 Seth Brundle's speech in The Fly about his insect politics may be the pinnacle of the decade for me. 2020 02:35:44,501 --> 02:35:51,299 Insects don't have politics. They're very brutal. 2021 02:35:52,342 --> 02:35:56,429 He's hero and villain and he's victim all-in-one. 2022 02:35:56,721 --> 02:36:00,392 But I think a horror protagonist that gets really overlooked in the '80s is Veronica from 2023 02:36:00,684 --> 02:36:01,268 The Fly. 2024 02:36:01,560 --> 02:36:06,481 She goes through a very powerful arc of falling in love of a breakup. 2025 02:36:06,773 --> 02:36:10,485 There's an abortion subplot in there which is pretty hot button for the '80s and she's 2026 02:36:10,777 --> 02:36:13,029 essentially euthanizing her life partner at the end of the film. 2027 02:36:13,488 --> 02:36:17,200 And her sobs at the end of that are maybe one of the most real moments of '80s horror 2028 02:36:17,534 --> 02:36:18,159 I've ever seen. 2029 02:36:25,876 --> 02:36:29,045 She's one of the most complex and most well-rounded women protagonists in the genre. 2030 02:36:29,379 --> 02:36:31,381 Cronenberg's always rife with allegory. 2031 02:36:31,673 --> 02:36:36,511 The Fly, he will tell you and I agree, it's not about AIDS, it's about death and dying 2032 02:36:36,803 --> 02:36:40,974 and watching someone who you love become a different person by degrees. 2033 02:36:41,516 --> 02:36:44,519 And whether that's about disease and aging or whether that's just about a relationship 2034 02:36:45,020 --> 02:36:49,107 running its course, I find The Fly to be a super powerful allegory. 2035 02:37:00,076 --> 02:37:05,165 I think what's interesting about Night of the Creeps, it's Fred Dekker's attempt at 2036 02:37:05,665 --> 02:37:10,003 making a current slasher kind of monster movie but he's still jamming some things together. 2037 02:37:10,378 --> 02:37:14,257 I mean it starts with aliens for crying out loud that get into your brain so now you've 2038 02:37:14,674 --> 02:37:20,555 got a zombie movie basically started from alien origins and Jason Lively running around 2039 02:37:20,847 --> 02:37:25,810 on prom night. It's coming of age, it's sex, it's dressing up, it's staying out late but now 2040 02:37:26,227 --> 02:37:29,898 you got to fight zombie aliens, slither monsters in your brain that have killed your 2041 02:37:30,231 --> 02:37:30,857 best friend. 2042 02:37:31,232 --> 02:37:32,901 It was just so bonkers and so '80s. 2043 02:37:33,610 --> 02:37:38,657 My personal favorite of any film that I've done. 2044 02:37:39,532 --> 02:37:43,119 It's sort of like the Invasion of the Body Snatchers only it isn't. 2045 02:37:43,662 --> 02:37:49,334 These little creeps, they look like slugs and they shoot into your mouth when you open 2046 02:37:49,668 --> 02:37:57,217 your mouth to go ah, they're in and then they eat you out inside and you're a zombie. 2047 02:37:57,759 --> 02:38:00,553 My job is to destroy them. 2048 02:38:04,641 --> 02:38:08,478 The girls are all waiting for their dates to arrive. 2049 02:38:08,853 --> 02:38:12,983 I walk to a window and I look out and I say, well girls... 2050 02:38:13,817 --> 02:38:16,027 I've got good news and bad news girls. 2051 02:38:16,736 --> 02:38:18,154 The good news is your dates are here. 2052 02:38:18,738 --> 02:38:19,698 What's the bad news? 2053 02:38:20,657 --> 02:38:21,491 They're dead. 2054 02:38:22,409 --> 02:38:23,201 They're dead. 2055 02:38:23,743 --> 02:38:26,955 Anything that Tom Atkins says in that is probably the best. 2056 02:38:27,455 --> 02:38:28,581 Creepy crawlies... 2057 02:38:29,791 --> 02:38:31,876 and a date for the formal. 2058 02:38:33,128 --> 02:38:34,546 This is classic, Spanky. 2059 02:38:35,088 --> 02:38:36,339 And of course, you got "thrill me." 2060 02:38:36,715 --> 02:38:38,133 So, that's just like what is that? 2061 02:38:39,634 --> 02:38:40,343 Thrill me. 2062 02:38:41,261 --> 02:38:41,761 Thrill me. 2063 02:38:42,721 --> 02:38:43,513 Thrill me. 2064 02:38:44,097 --> 02:38:44,806 Thrill me. 2065 02:38:45,598 --> 02:38:46,516 Thrill me. 2066 02:38:46,975 --> 02:38:49,936 That's an iconic statement that everybody knows now that we can use at anytime that 2067 02:38:50,311 --> 02:38:51,354 you want to. 2068 02:38:51,938 --> 02:38:55,358 In the bathroom scene, there's a Monster Squad easter egg. 2069 02:38:55,775 --> 02:38:59,195 On the back of the wall that was sort of I guess the week that Fred had learned that 2070 02:38:59,612 --> 02:39:03,575 Monster Squad had got a green-light and so we had his art department graffiti 2071 02:39:03,867 --> 02:39:05,785 Go Monster Squad on the back tile of that bathroom. 2072 02:39:07,245 --> 02:39:09,914 We had the best time shooting that movie. 2073 02:39:10,665 --> 02:39:19,299 The biggest treat of all is an action figure of Detective Ray Cameron with the shotgun 2074 02:39:19,758 --> 02:39:20,967 and a beer. 2075 02:39:21,843 --> 02:39:22,635 How about that? 2076 02:39:23,094 --> 02:39:25,013 Atkins - Man of action. 2077 02:39:40,653 --> 02:39:43,073 Tobe Hooper for me is a monumental figure. 2078 02:39:43,490 --> 02:39:48,495 He took risks as a filmmaker and he was making a sequel to his original classic that was 2079 02:39:48,787 --> 02:39:49,579 not lost on me. 2080 02:39:50,080 --> 02:39:52,373 Texas Chainsaw Massacre. 2081 02:39:52,707 --> 02:39:57,712 It's just those three words just had such power especially when combined. 2082 02:39:58,088 --> 02:40:03,426 But when I came out of Chainsaw, I was completely dumbfounded. lt just completely blew my mind 2083 02:40:03,718 --> 02:40:09,557 and I realized that the cure for Chainsaw was not to see it a hundred times and try 2084 02:40:09,849 --> 02:40:13,645 to dismiss it, but it was basically to join the Sawyer family. 2085 02:40:15,772 --> 02:40:18,525 He had already been hired off of a little movie 2086 02:40:18,817 --> 02:40:21,528 he had made a parody called The Texas Chainsaw Manicure. 2087 02:40:27,534 --> 02:40:32,539 A copy of it got to Tobe and Tobe hired Bill off of that film. 2088 02:40:32,831 --> 02:40:36,543 And I was shocked that Chop-Top was a big part. 2089 02:40:36,835 --> 02:40:41,548 Now the idea that Chainsaw 2 had a great sense of humor to it, I think really took people 2090 02:40:41,840 --> 02:40:42,924 by surprise. 2091 02:40:43,591 --> 02:40:49,222 One of my favorite scenes is the introduction of Chop-Top and I come in to threaten Stretch, 2092 02:40:49,722 --> 02:40:51,182 Caroline Williams, the DJ. 2093 02:40:51,641 --> 02:40:56,563 She's back on the record vault getting terrorized by Leatherface and I.G. Lou Perryman comes 2094 02:40:56,855 --> 02:41:01,818 in and l jump out of the record vault and start pounding his head in with a claw hammer. 2095 02:41:02,443 --> 02:41:04,737 The hammer itself was foam rubber. 2096 02:41:05,196 --> 02:41:08,992 When Tobe would call action, I started pounding on I.G.'s head. 2097 02:41:12,871 --> 02:41:17,417 And making up stuff like if I had a hammer and a one and a two and a three 2098 02:41:17,876 --> 02:41:18,793 and just pounding away. 2099 02:41:19,085 --> 02:41:22,964 We've done about 12 takes and Tobe goes yeah, yeah, that was great that was great. 2100 02:41:23,715 --> 02:41:25,967 Let's just do one more take. 2101 02:41:26,301 --> 02:41:29,387 I looked at Tobe and I said Tobe, "Am I doing something wrong?" 2102 02:41:29,846 --> 02:41:33,474 And he looked at me and he goes oh, hell no, Bill, I'm just having fun watching you. 2103 02:41:34,809 --> 02:41:39,439 Undoubtedly the signature moment in the whole movie is the chainsaw between my legs. 2104 02:41:39,898 --> 02:41:45,111 Considered to be at the time an anti-feminist moment, to the contrary I consider it to be 2105 02:41:45,570 --> 02:41:46,738 the quintessential feminist moment. 2106 02:41:47,405 --> 02:41:51,492 This is a woman who is being almost raped with a chainsaw with an implement. 2107 02:41:51,784 --> 02:41:56,372 She manages to take that moment in hand and turn it as much to her advantage as she can 2108 02:41:56,873 --> 02:41:58,208 saving her own life. 2109 02:41:58,750 --> 02:42:00,668 If she's killed in that moment the movie is over. 2110 02:42:00,960 --> 02:42:01,961 What does she do? 2111 02:42:02,420 --> 02:42:03,630 She's is going to go after him. 2112 02:42:04,297 --> 02:42:10,261 It sort of launches the rest of the action for the rest of the film and that crazy inverted 2113 02:42:10,803 --> 02:42:14,390 bloody, nutty trip through Oz. 2114 02:42:14,807 --> 02:42:16,809 It's one of the moments I'm proudest of. 2115 02:42:17,268 --> 02:42:21,439 At the time we shot it all I could think is I don't want my mother to see this movie. 2116 02:42:31,950 --> 02:42:37,997 In From Beyond, Stuart wanted to prove that it was going to be a more serious movie. 2117 02:42:38,665 --> 02:42:44,796 The humor element of Re-Animator perhaps took him a little bit by surprise so he wanted 2118 02:42:45,338 --> 02:42:51,094 to make sure that the tone of the next movie didn't replicate that. 2119 02:42:51,761 --> 02:42:57,767 I remember getting that note a lot that this is serious business this movie. 2120 02:42:59,352 --> 02:43:01,145 It's a very cinematic idea. 2121 02:43:01,521 --> 02:43:04,190 The idea that you can't trust your five senses. 2122 02:43:04,607 --> 02:43:07,819 That our senses are so limited, we're not even aware of all this stuff. 2123 02:43:08,236 --> 02:43:11,823 There's these other dimensions and things that are around us all the time. 2124 02:43:12,282 --> 02:43:14,242 It's a really great concept. 2125 02:43:15,034 --> 02:43:19,747 Lovecraft, he was a hypochondriac and the idea of these invisible things that are in the 2126 02:43:20,039 --> 02:43:21,791 air that can kill you. 2127 02:43:24,085 --> 02:43:27,672 In From Beyond, Barbara plays the mad scientist essentially. 2128 02:43:31,634 --> 02:43:34,762 And Jeffrey Combs is the victim in a way From Beyond reversed the roles that they played 2129 02:43:35,054 --> 02:43:36,014 in Re-Animator. 2130 02:43:37,181 --> 02:43:45,106 I was able to do a lot in that characterization in the space of one movie because of the Resonator 2131 02:43:45,523 --> 02:43:51,612 I was able to get in touch with my deep urgings and repressed feelings. 2132 02:43:51,988 --> 02:44:00,121 There's certainly more sadomasochistic kinky kind of - that the whole movie is about stimulating 2133 02:44:00,538 --> 02:44:02,915 the people's sexuality. 2134 02:44:03,333 --> 02:44:06,586 All of that pent-up comes roaring out. 2135 02:44:07,253 --> 02:44:10,214 Barbara Crampton used to say and I used to say I don't understand the expression 2136 02:44:10,673 --> 02:44:15,803 less is more and I used to say, I think it should be more is more and she said no, Stuart with you 2137 02:44:16,095 --> 02:44:17,764 it's more is not enough. 2138 02:44:18,097 --> 02:44:25,480 Look at Jeffrey Combs coming out of Pretorius's blobby figure and trying to save Katherine 2139 02:44:25,980 --> 02:44:31,527 McMichaels and then being absorbed by the monster and it was all this gooey slime. 2140 02:44:31,986 --> 02:44:37,909 I had it all over me, Jeffrey had it all over him,Ted Sorel as the monster had it on him 2141 02:44:38,493 --> 02:44:41,746 and it was just this grotesque disgusting mass. 2142 02:44:42,080 --> 02:44:48,044 And at one point the monster was like over my head and trying to absorb me and suck me 2143 02:44:48,419 --> 02:44:52,215 inside and it was a dirty business I got to say. 2144 02:44:52,590 --> 02:45:01,099 I never felt so ugly or hideous like Quasimodo in this makeup and you're in it all day. 2145 02:45:01,641 --> 02:45:06,270 Crawford has the pineal gland sticking out of his forehead. 2146 02:45:06,646 --> 02:45:11,984 Stuart used to say, well it's a red asparagus spear. 2147 02:45:12,360 --> 02:45:16,072 No, it's a dog dick, that's what it is. It's a dog dick. 2148 02:45:19,325 --> 02:45:21,411 Each movie carries its own signature. 2149 02:45:21,828 --> 02:45:26,707 It's the sounds that begin to intrude on the silence and on the darkness that create the 2150 02:45:27,125 --> 02:45:29,419 biggest element of fear in a horror film. 2151 02:45:30,002 --> 02:45:33,965 It builds the sense of anticipation that something is about to happen. 2152 02:45:34,340 --> 02:45:39,053 Sound design is really what gives the movie that kind of creepy feel. 2153 02:45:39,345 --> 02:45:45,101 For instance, just that image of Freddy in A Nightmare on Elm Street 1 walking down the alley. 2154 02:45:45,435 --> 02:45:49,439 The knives against the wall and it just like goes through you. 2155 02:45:52,692 --> 02:45:57,989 That's what creates really memorable lasting memories of movies. 2156 02:45:58,281 --> 02:45:59,198 It's not just the image. 2157 02:45:59,866 --> 02:46:02,368 It's like a bass player in a band if he does it right you never notice him but if he does it 2158 02:46:02,785 --> 02:46:04,454 wrong, you're like mad at them the whole time. 2159 02:46:05,079 --> 02:46:06,789 So, I think the sound design is the same way. 2160 02:46:07,081 --> 02:46:10,835 It's supporting this story and so you get lost in the story maybe you don't really notice 2161 02:46:11,127 --> 02:46:12,128 the sound design. 2162 02:46:13,838 --> 02:46:17,091 We talk about the point of view camera in Friday the 13th. 2163 02:46:17,467 --> 02:46:20,970 One of the things that makes that really work is that there was a sound that went with that 2164 02:46:21,262 --> 02:46:22,346 point of view. 2165 02:46:26,559 --> 02:46:33,024 Every time you were around Jason that sound would be there it'd be in the fabric of the music. 2166 02:46:39,238 --> 02:46:44,035 If you watch Friday the 13th or any movie without sound, it wouldn't be that scary 2167 02:46:44,577 --> 02:46:48,164 but oh boy you put that music in, it's everything. 2168 02:46:56,714 --> 02:47:02,553 Our first screening of Friday the 13th which was pretty much close to the final cut seemed 2169 02:47:02,970 --> 02:47:07,058 endless and so long and tedious because nothing happens 2170 02:47:07,725 --> 02:47:12,271 Cut to a month later and we had laid in the sound, we'd mix the whole thing and it became 2171 02:47:12,605 --> 02:47:14,649 exciting... same footage. 2172 02:47:15,233 --> 02:47:19,987 But somehow or other your emotions get involved because the music goes straight to your heart, 2173 02:47:20,279 --> 02:47:24,283 straight to your guts and it just, it tells you how you're supposed to feel and where 2174 02:47:24,659 --> 02:47:27,453 you're going and whether you can relax, or be afraid or whatever. 2175 02:47:32,959 --> 02:47:37,463 That's the vital, vital element of a very good score. 2176 02:47:38,631 --> 02:47:45,555 A creepy scene can be so much better with very cool music and Harry Manfredini is a genius. 2177 02:47:46,222 --> 02:47:47,765 The music delivers the drama. 2178 02:47:48,182 --> 02:47:52,520 Every film has tension, chase, kill. 2179 02:47:53,271 --> 02:47:57,149 Your job as a film composer in general you have to deliver the story. 2180 02:47:57,441 --> 02:48:02,238 Whether it's a scare or a laugh, a kill or someone crying. 2181 02:48:02,697 --> 02:48:08,494 Is it a better scare if it just jumps out at you or is it a better scare if I'm really 2182 02:48:08,911 --> 02:48:09,579 leading to it? 2183 02:48:10,037 --> 02:48:15,167 Those are actual mechanical compositional things that you deal with. 2184 02:48:16,669 --> 02:48:22,216 If you've already got the audience at a seven like they're really agitated and they're really 2185 02:48:22,675 --> 02:48:28,264 nervous, the biggest hit you're going to get is a three because you can only go to ten. 2186 02:48:28,848 --> 02:48:37,773 But if you pull the music out and you let the audience calm down then you hit, 2187 02:48:38,190 --> 02:48:44,322 then you've got a chance of getting a seven on the Richter scale of jump, ya know? 2188 02:48:49,285 --> 02:48:52,955 I think Harry doesn't get enough credit for his discofied Friday the 13th Part 3 score. 2189 02:49:01,088 --> 02:49:04,342 Well, the piece of horror music I'll always remember was John Carpenter's opening theme 2190 02:49:04,759 --> 02:49:09,263 from Halloween because I remember sitting in that theater and the lights go down and 2191 02:49:09,680 --> 02:49:13,059 that music comes on with that pumpkin on the side and that scared me. 2192 02:49:13,351 --> 02:49:14,935 Just the music got me frightened. 2193 02:49:19,982 --> 02:49:25,237 That was my first encounter with music that really set a mood and got me creeped out before 2194 02:49:25,529 --> 02:49:26,322 the movie even began. 2195 02:49:26,906 --> 02:49:31,452 Well, I don't know if John invented using the synthesizer for horror or something like that 2196 02:49:31,911 --> 02:49:34,955 but I mean he certainly capitalized on it. 2197 02:49:35,414 --> 02:49:40,294 We were both in a rock-and-roll group coming out of film school so I know his background, 2198 02:49:40,586 --> 02:49:45,091 his father was a musician and he grew up knowing how to play the piano, the guitar, the bass 2199 02:49:45,383 --> 02:49:46,342 and all kinds of things. 2200 02:49:46,759 --> 02:49:48,219 So, he's very accomplished. 2201 02:49:48,511 --> 02:49:52,515 He said he wrote that, the score to Halloween for instance I think in an afternoon. 2202 02:49:52,932 --> 02:49:58,354 He just had an idea and this 4/5 time was the clever way of approaching it. 2203 02:50:02,400 --> 02:50:07,571 If you have that skill you can think in pre-production about the music, you're thinking of 2204 02:50:07,863 --> 02:50:08,698 it when you're shooting. 2205 02:50:09,073 --> 02:50:12,159 The score then becomes a part of the life of the movie to you, I think. 2206 02:50:12,451 --> 02:50:14,328 It started out as economics. 2207 02:50:14,912 --> 02:50:19,166 When you have a little tiny budget, you don't have a budget for a big-time composer and 2208 02:50:19,667 --> 02:50:20,710 an orchestra. 2209 02:50:21,085 --> 02:50:24,797 You have to do it on a synthesizer and that, I could do it myself. 2210 02:50:25,256 --> 02:50:30,261 So, it started in Halloween and then it became a creative choice after a while. 2211 02:50:30,928 --> 02:50:35,641 Although, I worked with Ennio Morricone on The Thing and he was just a brilliant composer. 2212 02:50:36,350 --> 02:50:41,230 What they ended up with was a very Carpenteresque score that is very minimalist and 2213 02:50:41,647 --> 02:50:47,862 it's about the last thing you would have expected from the maestro Ennio Morricone and it works. 2214 02:50:55,327 --> 02:50:56,746 That's some spot-on stuff. 2215 02:50:57,163 --> 02:51:03,127 If you've seen the movie and I play you that opening, it just takes you someplace. 2216 02:51:03,419 --> 02:51:08,883 You're transported into this world that you remember from that experience. 2217 02:51:09,425 --> 02:51:13,262 And it just builds that feeling of dread, the same thing in Jaws. 2218 02:51:17,641 --> 02:51:19,435 They know how to get you. 2219 02:51:20,269 --> 02:51:25,316 After all this time I'm still moved by those different elements of craft. 2220 02:51:25,733 --> 02:51:32,364 Sound design and in composition, the differences that makes in your movie-going experience. 2221 02:51:32,782 --> 02:51:35,451 I really got into soundtrack collecting in the '80s. 2222 02:51:36,368 --> 02:51:40,289 Probably why I didn't get into pop music as much because I was collecting soundtracks 2223 02:51:40,706 --> 02:51:42,166 and listening to a lot of that. 2224 02:51:43,167 --> 02:51:47,755 The Shining soundtrack has a snowed-in ambience and you can't get out. 2225 02:51:48,172 --> 02:51:53,093 It kind of rolls over you and your captured within the sound of the movie. 2226 02:51:53,761 --> 02:51:59,934 Haunting, very dark, it's a sound-scape throughout the whole movie and I think the movie in itself 2227 02:52:00,309 --> 02:52:01,811 is also very cold. 2228 02:52:02,436 --> 02:52:04,522 They reinforce each other very well. 2229 02:52:12,988 --> 02:52:13,739 Super effective. 2230 02:52:14,114 --> 02:52:18,369 I think my favorite soundtrack that doesn't get brought up a lot is Halloween 3. 2231 02:52:18,869 --> 02:52:22,623 I'm not talking about the little jingle on the TV, I mean like the score that's in it. 2232 02:52:23,082 --> 02:52:26,544 It's one of the best John Carpenter scores in my opinion. 2233 02:52:32,925 --> 02:52:35,886 Music is very important to horror and very easy to get wrong in horror. 2234 02:52:36,345 --> 02:52:40,766 There's films that we watch that have just been carpeted with stock music and you can 2235 02:52:41,183 --> 02:52:45,646 tell and there's music that has been more carefully curated for a film and when you're 2236 02:52:46,021 --> 02:52:49,149 in the hands of say Howard Shore with Cronenberg stuff. 2237 02:52:57,074 --> 02:52:58,826 That's an unexpected union that really works. 2238 02:52:59,159 --> 02:53:01,412 Howard Shore goes very operatic with Cronenberg's scores 2239 02:53:01,954 --> 02:53:04,248 which you wouldn't think would be the case with some of these films. 2240 02:53:04,540 --> 02:53:10,254 Every horror picture is different. There's the essence of it, certain chord structures that appear 2241 02:53:10,546 --> 02:53:15,092 in all of them and many of them come from our friend Bernard Herrmann. 2242 02:53:15,718 --> 02:53:21,765 I can go through film after film and tell you how much he's affected the way music works. 2243 02:53:22,141 --> 02:53:25,519 So, when someone says to me that sounds like Bernard Herrmann, I go thanks. 2244 02:53:26,061 --> 02:53:31,400 In Re-Animator when it opens with that kind of sort of jaunty for want of a better word 2245 02:53:31,817 --> 02:53:34,904 rephrasing of Bernard Herrmann's Psycho theme. 2246 02:53:46,457 --> 02:53:50,502 I know a lot of fans have criticized Richard Band for ripping off Psycho but it was always 2247 02:53:50,794 --> 02:53:52,046 intended as a homage. 2248 02:53:52,546 --> 02:53:55,925 There's supposed to be a credit at the end saying with apologies to Bernard Herrmann or something 2249 02:53:56,342 --> 02:53:56,967 like that. 2250 02:53:57,384 --> 02:54:01,096 But that was another one where that music comes up and right away I could kind of tell 2251 02:54:01,513 --> 02:54:05,976 that this movie was going to have kind of a satirical kind of anarchic take on horror. 2252 02:54:06,435 --> 02:54:08,020 Just the way it used that music. 2253 02:54:08,604 --> 02:54:12,983 Bernstein's score for A Nightmare on Elm Street is mostly electronic. 2254 02:54:13,442 --> 02:54:19,949 It sounds very basic but it's a theme that sticks to your mind. 2255 02:54:27,790 --> 02:54:33,837 Simplicity and repetition is a great formula when you don't overdo it of course. 2256 02:54:34,380 --> 02:54:39,635 I also really like some of this smaller super low budget soundtracks. 2257 02:54:40,177 --> 02:54:45,599 So, The Slumber Party Massacre for instance, the entire soundtrack was made on a thirty-dollar 2258 02:54:46,016 --> 02:54:52,022 Casio keyboard and three crystal glasses that they would just sort of ping. 2259 02:54:59,571 --> 02:55:00,572 It cost nothing to make. 2260 02:55:00,990 --> 02:55:04,451 I don't think Giorgio Moroder is sitting here thinking about let me make an '80s synth horror 2261 02:55:04,743 --> 02:55:09,873 score but in congress with David Bowie he makes maybe one of the quintessential synths driven '80s 2262 02:55:10,290 --> 02:55:11,542 horror scores with Cat People. 2263 02:55:11,959 --> 02:55:15,212 It sticks in your mind and lingers in the memory in a way that a more traditional horror 2264 02:55:15,629 --> 02:55:16,588 score would not. 2265 02:55:24,138 --> 02:55:28,475 It was almost like a musical version of passing the torch. 2266 02:55:29,101 --> 02:55:35,315 Going from analog to digital, going from the past to the '80s where everything was expanding 2267 02:55:35,607 --> 02:55:41,071 and that fingerprint, I think is on all of those '80s movies. 2268 02:55:41,572 --> 02:55:48,662 The Day of the Dead score is just one of those really haunting electronic scores. 2269 02:55:49,079 --> 02:55:53,000 Now at first when you listen to you think is quite simple but there's actually 2270 02:55:53,459 --> 02:55:57,629 quite a lot of layers going on underneath that main refrain. 2271 02:56:05,387 --> 02:56:09,683 It's got a very clinical feel Day of the Dead and I think the music adds to that because 2272 02:56:09,975 --> 02:56:16,565 it's very stark kind of synth work and it makes it almost more alienating like as the 2273 02:56:16,857 --> 02:56:20,611 movie if that had like an orchestral score for instance, the whole feel of the film would 2274 02:56:20,986 --> 02:56:21,904 have been thrown off. 2275 02:56:22,654 --> 02:56:28,035 As far as the soundtrack of Hellrasier goes, it is to me by a distance the best horror 2276 02:56:28,368 --> 02:56:29,620 score of the decade. 2277 02:56:30,204 --> 02:56:33,916 It's beautiful, it's monumental, it's a requiem mass. 2278 02:56:41,799 --> 02:56:43,258 Magnificent. 2279 02:56:43,759 --> 02:56:49,640 I have no idea why heavy metal was so prevalent in 1980s horror movies. 2280 02:56:50,182 --> 02:56:57,106 I mean there was a glut of movies Slaughterhouse Rock and Trick-or-Treat, they were based on 2281 02:56:57,523 --> 02:56:59,149 heavy metal characters and bands. 2282 02:56:59,817 --> 02:57:03,445 And then every sort of hair metal band in America decided that they had to get a song 2283 02:57:03,862 --> 02:57:05,489 on a horror movie. 2284 02:57:05,781 --> 02:57:11,745 Rock and horror, they live so closely together. 2285 02:57:12,246 --> 02:57:17,876 For all its flaws the soundtrack to Trick-or-Treat is fucking amazing and I will fight anybody 2286 02:57:18,252 --> 02:57:19,962 who says differently man. 2287 02:57:27,219 --> 02:57:30,264 All of those songs are insanely catchy and really, really good. 2288 02:57:30,806 --> 02:57:35,018 Whether there was Bauhaus's Night of the Demons, Tangerine Dream and The Keep 2289 02:57:35,477 --> 02:57:38,272 The Lost Boys had such a great soundtrack to it. 2290 02:57:38,647 --> 02:57:43,777 Dokken in Nightmare on Elm Street 3, Alice Cooper in Friday the 13th Part 6. 2291 02:57:44,319 --> 02:57:46,905 These were speaking to the times. 2292 02:57:47,364 --> 02:57:50,826 They're speaking to the punk rock kids, they were speaking to the new wave kids, they 2293 02:57:51,201 --> 02:57:54,663 were speaking to the pure kids that were growing up on classic rock like I did. 2294 02:57:55,122 --> 02:57:57,583 It became the soundtrack to your own life growing up. 2295 02:58:16,143 --> 02:58:19,646 The third Nightmare on Elm Street film Dream Warriors has Heather Langenkamp returning 2296 02:58:19,938 --> 02:58:23,317 as Nancy Thompson to assemble a bunch of dream warriors. 2297 02:58:23,901 --> 02:58:27,654 Kids who are in a mental institute who battle Freddy Krueger in their dream with their dream 2298 02:58:27,946 --> 02:58:28,697 powers. 2299 02:58:32,784 --> 02:58:36,079 I feel like this is the Nightmare movie that everyone thinks of when they think of the 2300 02:58:36,371 --> 02:58:40,709 series because the first one's a classic but this one has all the fun and games of people 2301 02:58:41,001 --> 02:58:43,170 engaging with Freddy in their dreams and fighting him. 2302 02:58:43,795 --> 02:58:46,757 The Dream Warriors were collectively all pretty awesome. 2303 02:58:47,966 --> 02:58:54,681 And I played the role of Kincaid, the first black in A Nightmare on Elm Street to kick Freddy's ass. 2304 02:58:56,350 --> 02:59:01,939 Kincaid represented the minorities, not just African Americans but he represented the minorities 2305 02:59:02,397 --> 02:59:05,400 all over the world and he was a hero. 2306 02:59:09,988 --> 02:59:15,410 Heather and Robert Englund was like big sister and big brother to all of us. 2307 02:59:15,911 --> 02:59:22,334 She was a connecting dot to the Nightmare on Elm Street movies that was needed. 2308 02:59:23,001 --> 02:59:26,588 It's got so many standout special effects in it and one of my favorites is the giant 2309 02:59:26,880 --> 02:59:30,634 worm with Freddy's head especially because that's when he first sees Nancy Thompson again. 2310 02:59:36,181 --> 02:59:37,391 We had three units shooting. 2311 02:59:37,975 --> 02:59:41,561 Two were for the principal actors with two cameras. Chuck Russell the director would run 2312 02:59:41,979 --> 02:59:43,313 back and forth between each set. 2313 02:59:43,981 --> 02:59:47,818 And the third unit was specifically just for special effects. 2314 02:59:49,361 --> 02:59:53,115 Kevin Yagher did Robert's makeup on the second and the third one. 2315 02:59:53,740 --> 02:59:58,787 Rodney Eastman in Nightmare on Elm Street 3 he's stuck to a false bed with a false chest and 2316 02:59:59,329 --> 03:00:02,958 Bob Kurtzman and I had to rig all the letters to say come and get me bitch and that 2317 03:00:03,458 --> 03:00:05,669 took hours and hours and hours. 2318 03:00:08,380 --> 03:00:10,173 There was a lot of creative killings. 2319 03:00:10,590 --> 03:00:18,640 My absolutely favorite scene was when Freddy put Jennifer's head through the television 2320 03:00:19,016 --> 03:00:21,310 and said, "Welcome to prime-time bitch." 2321 03:00:26,148 --> 03:00:31,153 This is also the movie where the quippy almost fun Freddy Krueger comes into his own. 2322 03:00:35,365 --> 03:00:37,367 The brilliance of a lot of it was Robert. 2323 03:00:37,993 --> 03:00:40,412 Robert really came up with a lot of those lines. 2324 03:00:41,163 --> 03:00:42,873 Robert Englund was the boogey man. 2325 03:00:43,165 --> 03:00:49,338 He was the Mummy, he was Dracula, he was all of them because he could be in your dream. 2326 03:00:49,963 --> 03:00:52,591 My favorite Kincaid line was... 2327 03:00:53,091 --> 03:00:55,761 Let's go kick the motherfucker's ass all over dreamland. 2328 03:00:57,137 --> 03:01:00,932 Wes Craven had his own style and he made sure 2329 03:01:01,224 --> 03:01:06,938 that an African American was the first to survive a horror film and return to a sequel. 2330 03:01:11,401 --> 03:01:13,236 He had a great influence on horror. 2331 03:01:13,653 --> 03:01:15,489 Now we don't get killed. 2332 03:01:26,500 --> 03:01:28,085 I've always been kind of afraid of dolls. 2333 03:01:28,877 --> 03:01:32,923 I remember when I was a little kid somebody brought a ventriloquist dummy to my house 2334 03:01:33,465 --> 03:01:38,595 and took him out of a suitcase and I was like out of that room in a second and a half. 2335 03:01:39,054 --> 03:01:42,933 The thing I've discovered with dolls was of all the movies that I've done a lot of people 2336 03:01:43,225 --> 03:01:44,226 consider it the scariest. 2337 03:01:44,893 --> 03:01:47,646 Dolls certainly was a poster before it was a movie. 2338 03:01:48,105 --> 03:01:51,024 The little female doll that's holding her own eyes. 2339 03:01:51,316 --> 03:01:53,527 That's just wrong. 2340 03:01:53,985 --> 03:01:58,615 And we made sure that we shot that scene because of the poster. 2341 03:02:02,911 --> 03:02:04,955 I was not expecting to make that movie at all. 2342 03:02:05,497 --> 03:02:09,000 I was working on From Beyond and had a meeting with Charlie Band and he said we'd like you 2343 03:02:09,292 --> 03:02:11,128 to make another movie using the same sets. 2344 03:02:11,628 --> 03:02:16,842 And he tossed me a script for what was called ”The Doll”originally by Ed Naha. 2345 03:02:17,384 --> 03:02:25,100 Stuart's idea was to do it all practically and to do regular nice dolls but not scary dolls. 2346 03:02:25,559 --> 03:02:28,019 And he said well, it's what they do 2347 03:02:28,395 --> 03:02:29,312 that's scary. 2348 03:02:29,938 --> 03:02:32,649 You had literally hundreds of dolls coming to life in this movie. 2349 03:02:33,066 --> 03:02:33,984 An army of dolls. 2350 03:02:34,276 --> 03:02:35,152 It wasn't just one doll. 2351 03:02:35,527 --> 03:02:36,653 It wasn't just like Chucky. 2352 03:02:37,154 --> 03:02:41,450 That turned out to be major undertaking and we used to just about every technique 2353 03:02:41,825 --> 03:02:42,742 we could. 2354 03:02:43,034 --> 03:02:47,414 We used puppets, we used mechanical dolls and we got Dave Allen to do stop motion for the 2355 03:02:47,747 --> 03:02:54,337 scenes where we couldn't get it done any other way. It ended up taking an extra year to make 2356 03:02:54,713 --> 03:02:55,464 that movie. 2357 03:02:55,922 --> 03:02:58,967 It came out after From Beyond because the effects were so difficult. 2358 03:03:03,597 --> 03:03:08,643 Well, the big scene in Dolls is the one where the evil stepmother is killed by the dolls. 2359 03:03:09,186 --> 03:03:13,356 That's the first time you really see the dolls in action and that was my wife Carolyn played 2360 03:03:13,815 --> 03:03:14,774 that part. 2361 03:03:17,944 --> 03:03:20,947 My own kids came to the set when I was working on that movie. 2362 03:03:21,323 --> 03:03:26,369 The idea that I was taking their toys, their dolls and turning them into killing machines 2363 03:03:26,786 --> 03:03:28,288 did not sit well with them at all. 2364 03:03:28,914 --> 03:03:30,832 There is one scene in particular. 2365 03:03:31,124 --> 03:03:36,087 The characters hear a rustling in the woods and it's a teddy bear. 2366 03:03:36,546 --> 03:03:42,552 It's a kind of goofy teddy bear comes up out of the woods and the character is like no, not 2367 03:03:42,969 --> 03:03:43,637 that. 2368 03:03:44,095 --> 03:03:50,936 Then the teddy bear like transforms kind of into a real bear and devours them. 2369 03:03:53,605 --> 03:03:56,233 It kind of sums up the appeal of what that movie is. 2370 03:04:04,449 --> 03:04:09,037 Evil Dead 2 was a blast from the minute that we landed in North Carolina to the minute 2371 03:04:09,329 --> 03:04:10,080 that we left. 2372 03:04:10,622 --> 03:04:16,002 Working with Sam Raimi was just a complete experience that I'll never forget. 2373 03:04:16,294 --> 03:04:22,050 He was so imaginative, so funny. So much of what he loves and what he does is based on 2374 03:04:22,467 --> 03:04:23,510 the comedy. 2375 03:04:23,927 --> 03:04:26,179 If you look at the original Evil Dead it's pretty terrifying. 2376 03:04:26,596 --> 03:04:31,434 I think when we did Evil Dead 2 a lot of us were assuming it was going to be as relentless as the 2377 03:04:31,810 --> 03:04:37,190 first movie just a lot better special-effects makeup and Sam was a much more seasoned 2378 03:04:37,649 --> 03:04:38,567 director at that point. 2379 03:04:39,401 --> 03:04:44,197 He was really specific which helped me a lot because there was no doubt in my mind what 2380 03:04:44,489 --> 03:04:46,199 I had to do for each shot. 2381 03:04:46,741 --> 03:04:49,077 He had the whole script planned out to a T. 2382 03:04:52,914 --> 03:04:55,041 I remember we got the draft of the script. 2383 03:04:55,333 --> 03:05:00,130 There was a rewrite and it's the scene where Linda's head is in the vice in the tool shed 2384 03:05:01,131 --> 03:05:05,343 and the door flies open and Linda's headless corpse comes in with the chainsaw over it's head. 2385 03:05:05,802 --> 03:05:09,764 And I was like this is the most terrifying thing I've ever read. Because we shot that 2386 03:05:10,181 --> 03:05:11,349 early in the schedule, 2387 03:05:11,975 --> 03:05:16,646 I really hadn't at that point really understood Sam's sense of humor. 2388 03:05:17,063 --> 03:05:20,233 The fact that every time blood would spray it wasn't like you would never use just a 2389 03:05:20,692 --> 03:05:21,735 little syringe of blood. 2390 03:05:22,152 --> 03:05:24,404 You would use like a fire extinguisher. 2391 03:05:27,282 --> 03:05:31,953 I had like a couple of big trucks outside the stage with hundreds and hundreds of gallons 2392 03:05:32,287 --> 03:05:33,288 of colored liquid. 2393 03:05:33,913 --> 03:05:35,206 Let 'er rip boys. 2394 03:05:41,338 --> 03:05:45,133 It must have been thousands of gallons and Bruce was down there, there was no dummy, 2395 03:05:45,550 --> 03:05:46,468 there was no stuntman. 2396 03:05:46,801 --> 03:05:48,136 Very physical role. 2397 03:05:49,262 --> 03:05:52,807 Bruce Campbell was game for damn near anything in fact. 2398 03:05:53,391 --> 03:05:56,144 We're shooting the scene where he's smashing himself with the plates and he ends up by 2399 03:05:56,436 --> 03:05:59,022 flipping himself completely and that was all him. 2400 03:05:59,314 --> 03:06:00,815 That was not a stunt person. 2401 03:06:01,274 --> 03:06:06,112 He was up for anything and he did his own makeup for the cuts and all that, that he wore 2402 03:06:06,404 --> 03:06:07,197 for most of the movie. 2403 03:06:07,572 --> 03:06:08,615 That was his own makeup. 2404 03:06:09,240 --> 03:06:14,079 The first one he was just kind of this hapless guy just trying to survive any way he could 2405 03:06:14,537 --> 03:06:18,917 and then he became this very active and also snarky hero in Evil Dead 2 and then 2406 03:06:19,292 --> 03:06:20,669 Army of Darkness later on. 2407 03:06:22,128 --> 03:06:25,298 I guess with Ash we just get the sense that he's having a really bad day. 2408 03:06:26,007 --> 03:06:28,968 You don't feel like he's going to be scarred for life because of what's going on. 2409 03:06:29,469 --> 03:06:33,765 Like losing his hand, his reaction is just like oh, you bastards. 2410 03:06:36,810 --> 03:06:44,234 Everything in Evil Dead 2 is a very quotable moment from groovy to who's laughing now and 2411 03:06:44,567 --> 03:06:46,903 he's like chopping off his hand with the chainsaw. 2412 03:06:51,533 --> 03:06:53,535 We were such nerds in high school. 2413 03:06:54,119 --> 03:06:58,873 I mean we would quote that movie till our faces turned blue and no one knew what the hell 2414 03:06:59,249 --> 03:07:00,250 we were talking about. 2415 03:07:01,376 --> 03:07:04,754 When the hand comes off then it's running around and flipping him the bird and then 2416 03:07:05,380 --> 03:07:08,758 I think it was the moment where he puts it under the bucket and puts A Farewell to Arms 2417 03:07:09,175 --> 03:07:10,051 on top of it. 2418 03:07:10,468 --> 03:07:14,097 That's what I got what Raimi was going for and that's also kind of a perfect moment in 2419 03:07:14,389 --> 03:07:15,724 horror comedy history. 2420 03:07:22,105 --> 03:07:25,400 Oh, we got to shoot the evil hand doing this today and oh my God which one do we use? 2421 03:07:25,734 --> 03:07:31,156 We had a radio-controlled hand, we had stunt hands, a hand that would come up palm up on 2422 03:07:31,489 --> 03:07:34,325 the floor where it had a prosthetic stump glued to a guy underneath. 2423 03:07:35,118 --> 03:07:40,081 We had a palm down version with the same thing another stunt coming out so the hand can move 2424 03:07:40,457 --> 03:07:41,332 accordingly. 2425 03:07:42,500 --> 03:07:47,255 I don't think you've ever seen anything before that, that handled that kind of bridge of comedy 2426 03:07:47,630 --> 03:07:48,465 and horror so well. 2427 03:07:48,840 --> 03:07:53,595 Raimi was the first person who I think with legitimate genius blended those things together. 2428 03:07:53,928 --> 03:07:55,930 It ushered in a completely new genre. 2429 03:07:57,140 --> 03:08:00,435 That was when a lot of us perked up when oh, this is a masterpiece. 2430 03:08:12,614 --> 03:08:17,410 Rick Baker had been working with me ever since I started making films. 2431 03:08:17,744 --> 03:08:23,166 So, naturally when it came time to do the monster for It's Alive, I would give the job to him. 2432 03:08:24,083 --> 03:08:25,335 We didn't show it much. 2433 03:08:25,752 --> 03:08:31,090 I figured the more we showed it the less scary it would be and the more it was in your imagination. 2434 03:08:31,424 --> 03:08:35,386 I wanted to make The Return to the House of Wax and Warner Brothers said we can't give 2435 03:08:35,678 --> 03:08:39,307 you that title but if you want to make another It's Alive movie you can. 2436 03:08:41,559 --> 03:08:43,436 We had a lot of adventures on the picture. 2437 03:08:43,895 --> 03:08:49,400 Michael Moriarty was yelling into the bushes to the monster come on out, don't be afraid, 2438 03:08:50,026 --> 03:08:50,860 come on out. 2439 03:08:51,486 --> 03:08:56,699 And at that moment a wild boar ran out of the bushes right at him right into the camera crew 2440 03:08:57,325 --> 03:09:02,497 everybody running for their fucking lives and I'm yelling to the cameraman shoot it. 2441 03:09:02,789 --> 03:09:05,291 Get it on camera, get it but they didn't get it. 2442 03:09:05,583 --> 03:09:07,168 So, what the hell? 2443 03:09:08,002 --> 03:09:13,675 The monster was supposed to come up from a pond so he put the guy in the rubber suit 2444 03:09:14,092 --> 03:09:20,098 into the pond. On action he submerged and he's supposed to count for 1O and come up so we're 2445 03:09:20,598 --> 03:09:24,602 waiting a minute, minute and a half and the monster has not yet come up. 2446 03:09:25,019 --> 03:09:29,148 One of the actors runs into the pool and dives in and pulls him out. 2447 03:09:29,482 --> 03:09:34,529 His suit had filled up with water and he couldn't come up so he would have drowned. 2448 03:09:35,446 --> 03:09:37,532 So, he was rescued right on camera. 2449 03:09:37,949 --> 03:09:43,621 Daniel Pearl Lee, the cinematographer and his crew had this running joke of hiding a rubber 2450 03:09:43,997 --> 03:09:44,914 chicken in the scene. 2451 03:09:45,373 --> 03:09:49,752 I had to be on the lookout every day for a rubber chicken before we started rolling. 2452 03:09:50,169 --> 03:09:53,423 One day I missed it and the chicken showed up in the movie. 2453 03:10:01,514 --> 03:10:08,104 And that's what I like on this set is having a good time and I want everybody to have fun. 2454 03:10:18,448 --> 03:10:23,578 With Lost Boys it was almost impossible to see it working because it was such a bold 2455 03:10:23,995 --> 03:10:30,627 and almost audacious gambit which is let's take all of these standard rules of vampire 2456 03:10:31,044 --> 03:10:37,050 lore and let's squeeze them through almost like a big gaudy '80s teen sex drama, right? 2457 03:10:37,634 --> 03:10:39,135 And I was like that doesn't work. 2458 03:10:39,552 --> 03:10:41,429 That's like going to not work in spades. 2459 03:10:42,180 --> 03:10:44,223 It was Joel Schumacher and Richard Donner. 2460 03:10:44,641 --> 03:10:45,725 Donner was producing it. 2461 03:10:46,309 --> 03:10:49,979 I think we were lucky in the end that Joel, we got somebody who had like such an ironclad 2462 03:10:50,355 --> 03:10:52,482 vision for how to actually make that work. 2463 03:10:52,774 --> 03:10:55,360 He wanted the horror. 2464 03:10:55,652 --> 03:11:00,490 What Joel did was he took those tropes and he's like bridging the cinema of Nick Ray 2465 03:11:00,907 --> 03:11:04,535 and '80s horror and he's going to pull all of this stuff together. 2466 03:11:04,827 --> 03:11:07,789 The vampires represent the dark side of the other characters psyches. 2467 03:11:08,164 --> 03:11:14,504 Take all of the anxieties of being a teenager coming into your own as an adolescent and 2468 03:11:14,963 --> 03:11:18,633 your sexuality, isolation of being the loner in a new town. 2469 03:11:19,550 --> 03:11:23,596 I would argue an undercurrent of the AIDS epidemic and just to some of the phobias that 2470 03:11:24,013 --> 03:11:28,726 were afflicting the country at that time, the gay community and other communities and 2471 03:11:29,143 --> 03:11:33,564 then the sort of garishness of the 80's culture itself. 2472 03:11:33,982 --> 03:11:37,902 He's commenting on the garishness, he's not just showing you the garishness. 2473 03:11:40,279 --> 03:11:44,158 With Lost Boys you have sort of the perfect storm of horror meets rock and roll. 2474 03:11:44,659 --> 03:11:48,871 They were vampires that women wanted to be with, guys wanted to hang outwith, everybody 2475 03:11:49,288 --> 03:11:50,873 wanted to be with the Lost Boys. 2476 03:11:51,624 --> 03:11:54,502 What I think is really great about a lot of the stories in the '80s is there was a lot of stories 2477 03:11:55,086 --> 03:11:58,798 about single parents and there was a lot that I really enjoyed about Dianne Wiest in Lost 2478 03:11:59,215 --> 03:12:04,012 Boys in terms of the struggles she was facing raising Sam and Michael played by Corey Haim 2479 03:12:04,429 --> 03:12:05,513 and Jason Patrick. 2480 03:12:05,805 --> 03:12:09,684 There was something very realistic about the struggles she was facing in this very sort 2481 03:12:10,101 --> 03:12:12,770 of fantasy world of vampires. 2482 03:12:20,695 --> 03:12:26,617 To play this character who doesn't really say much, he's just this kind of teen, probably 2483 03:12:27,076 --> 03:12:31,164 a runaway, probably had a really fucked up background and then just gets to eviscerate 2484 03:12:31,622 --> 03:12:36,711 people sort of like gets to expunge all of his own anxieties like in these monstrous ways. 2485 03:12:37,211 --> 03:12:39,130 It was really satisfying. 2486 03:12:41,090 --> 03:12:43,051 We shot nights for a lot of our shoot. 2487 03:12:43,468 --> 03:12:47,638 We were vampires, we would go to bed in the morning and get up at night and we had blankets 2488 03:12:47,930 --> 03:12:52,060 taped over our windows and we were sort of treated like rock stars by the town. 2489 03:12:52,477 --> 03:12:54,937 So, we got up to a lot of trouble. 2490 03:12:55,521 --> 03:12:59,692 You have somebody like Ve Neill who comes in to do these vampires with the assistance 2491 03:12:59,984 --> 03:13:01,736 of Greg Cannom and Steve LaPorte. 2492 03:13:02,070 --> 03:13:06,574 They're all dressed up like glam rockers intentionally because she wanted to sort of emote 2493 03:13:06,991 --> 03:13:11,746 that 70s rock coolness of like Led Zeppelin but she was like well, if they're gonna explode and 2494 03:13:12,038 --> 03:13:14,499 do these cool things like I want glitter in there. 2495 03:13:14,791 --> 03:13:17,585 So, if you go and look at them, they're glittery vampires. 2496 03:13:18,711 --> 03:13:23,466 We had a full body cast of me that had like the blood pumping through it. 2497 03:13:24,050 --> 03:13:28,179 If you actually watch the shot of Corey staking me you can see the division of where it's going to 2498 03:13:28,596 --> 03:13:29,138 retract. 2499 03:13:29,597 --> 03:13:31,808 Pre-CGI days now they would just clean it up in three seconds. 2500 03:13:32,308 --> 03:13:37,855 And then Corey staked me and then they drop the body double, the rubber dummy and then 2501 03:13:38,231 --> 03:13:42,068 I landed in the dirt and then all the kids proceeded to kick so much dirt into my face 2502 03:13:42,360 --> 03:13:44,112 that I went to the hospital with a scratched cornea. 2503 03:13:44,654 --> 03:13:47,281 So, my screaming is real. 2504 03:13:52,036 --> 03:13:56,624 I like to tell Corey Feldman whenever I see him that uh, thank you for sending me to the hospital. 2505 03:13:57,834 --> 03:14:02,755 Being on the sets or just goofing off with the other guys is a really good memory. 2506 03:14:14,183 --> 03:14:18,104 The old cliché and the old kind of warning is don't work with kids, don't work with animals 2507 03:14:18,437 --> 03:14:19,689 and don't work with special effects. 2508 03:14:20,189 --> 03:14:21,607 And Monster Squad, that's all it is. 2509 03:14:21,899 --> 03:14:27,655 You're having this kind of swell of these slashers and villains and Dream Monsters and 2510 03:14:28,072 --> 03:14:31,033 guys in hockey masks which is awesome but then I think there's that question. 2511 03:14:31,409 --> 03:14:32,660 It's like how did we get here? 2512 03:14:32,952 --> 03:14:34,328 Where are the origin stories? 2513 03:14:34,745 --> 03:14:35,997 Where are the original monsters? 2514 03:14:36,581 --> 03:14:41,669 Fred Dekker what he did was take the original monsters that launched this whole thing. 2515 03:14:42,211 --> 03:14:45,756 Let's bring those back and pay a little tribute to those. 2516 03:14:46,257 --> 03:14:49,427 Characters who are meant to be Dracula, Frankenstein, Creature from the Black Lagoon, 2517 03:14:49,886 --> 03:14:53,723 they managed to skirt the Universal copyright through some clever dodges. 2518 03:14:54,891 --> 03:14:59,854 I actually think that improved them because you weren't recreating something. 2519 03:15:00,563 --> 03:15:05,359 Tom Woodruff Jr. is working with Stan Winston's shop at the time and he actually designed 2520 03:15:05,776 --> 03:15:08,487 the Frankenstein applications redesign. 2521 03:15:14,785 --> 03:15:19,832 My favorite man in a monster suit always was and still is the Creature From The Black Lagoon. 2522 03:15:20,458 --> 03:15:24,712 I wanted to be the guy in the monster suit and Stan gave me my first role when I played 2523 03:15:25,129 --> 03:15:26,631 the Gillman in Monster Squad. 2524 03:15:27,215 --> 03:15:29,800 Somebody else in the shop said well, have you worked out your walk yet? 2525 03:15:30,259 --> 03:15:37,099 And I'm thinking uh-oh. Not only is there a walk to figure out apparently but I haven't learned it 2526 03:15:37,558 --> 03:15:40,102 and now I'm thinking and I could feel my confidence now starting... 2527 03:15:40,436 --> 03:15:41,812 I'm thinking what did I do? 2528 03:15:42,104 --> 03:15:43,731 I said, I don't even know the terms. 2529 03:15:44,357 --> 03:15:50,696 The fascinating design done unlike any other creature design suit and build and actual application 2530 03:15:50,988 --> 03:15:54,700 of it than anybody had ever done at the time and then now Tom's zipped up and glued into 2531 03:15:54,992 --> 03:15:57,787 this one-piece suit and has to figure out how to be this character. 2532 03:15:58,412 --> 03:16:02,750 We're on the back lot at Warner Brothers and climbing out of the fake manhole cover and 2533 03:16:03,042 --> 03:16:10,675 going through a fight with some very enthusiastic stuntmen with hard rubber clubs and then having 2534 03:16:10,967 --> 03:16:16,597 to move in on the store with Horace stuck out front with his shotgun and that's when I finally 2535 03:16:17,014 --> 03:16:19,267 thought now it's time for my walk. 2536 03:16:25,606 --> 03:16:28,234 It was sort of like a monster effects buffet. 2537 03:16:28,609 --> 03:16:29,860 I got to sample everything. 2538 03:16:30,152 --> 03:16:33,906 Some stunts here and some squibbing and falling and my walking and breathing. 2539 03:16:34,365 --> 03:16:35,032 All that stuff. 2540 03:16:35,408 --> 03:16:37,326 And I got to die on screen. 2541 03:16:40,329 --> 03:16:46,711 I don't think I will ever be able to relive those glory days because it was pretty high up. 2542 03:16:47,753 --> 03:16:50,423 Monster Squad has a lot of memorable one-liners. 2543 03:16:51,007 --> 03:16:54,677 Other people have great lines like I wish I had that line but obviously Wolf man's got nards 2544 03:16:55,052 --> 03:16:56,554 is the line from that movie. 2545 03:17:02,560 --> 03:17:05,062 The problem with Monster Squad I think was a couple things. 2546 03:17:05,396 --> 03:17:09,400 The subject matter and the story and the action and the kind of monsters were a little too 2547 03:17:09,900 --> 03:17:15,656 much for the 8-9 to 10-year olds and it was too kid-like for the 15-16-17-year olds 2548 03:17:15,990 --> 03:17:17,867 that went to see the Lost Boys and dug that. 2549 03:17:18,326 --> 03:17:19,827 So, like I'm not going to go see a kid's movie. 2550 03:17:20,286 --> 03:17:24,165 So, really when he left a small sliver of an audience in there that couldn't go because 2551 03:17:24,623 --> 03:17:27,501 of the rating or their parents wouldn't take them so they got left out twice. 2552 03:17:28,502 --> 03:17:31,964 But we kind of made the first tween movie. 2553 03:17:43,100 --> 03:17:50,191 Hellraiser was written and directed by Clive Barker adapted from his own novella, 2554 03:17:50,608 --> 03:17:51,567 The Hellbound Heart. 2555 03:17:52,234 --> 03:17:58,199 Central to a lot of Clive Barker's work is the idea of the monsters being the good guys 2556 03:17:58,657 --> 03:18:03,204 or at least being more complicated than simply being the bad guys. 2557 03:18:03,579 --> 03:18:05,414 Pinhead is not the monster in the film. 2558 03:18:05,873 --> 03:18:10,002 The monsters in Hellraiser are Julia and Frank. 2559 03:18:10,586 --> 03:18:14,048 The humans are the ones causing the trouble. 2560 03:18:14,423 --> 03:18:18,803 I increasingly saw Pinhead as an impartial judge. 2561 03:18:19,303 --> 03:18:24,392 As far as Clive was concerned, he was not to be the focus of the film. 2562 03:18:25,059 --> 03:18:27,436 Clive's focus was all on Julia. 2563 03:18:27,978 --> 03:18:32,691 For Clive, Hellraiser was about creating the first great female horror monster. 2564 03:18:35,069 --> 03:18:39,990 I feel as though there's an element throughout the 1980s of people being given a chance. 2565 03:18:40,991 --> 03:18:42,493 Clive had never directed a film. 2566 03:18:42,993 --> 03:18:48,958 So, I knew absolutely where his imagination was but it is true that he arrived on set 2567 03:18:49,375 --> 03:18:53,212 on day one on Hellraiser and said, "So who's in charge here?" 2568 03:18:54,171 --> 03:19:01,387 He was extremely lucky I think in having Robin Vidgeon by his side as director of photography 2569 03:19:01,762 --> 03:19:04,890 who's no small part of the success of Hellraiser. 2570 03:19:05,182 --> 03:19:10,438 He worked with Clive and met Clive's imaginative vision head on. 2571 03:19:10,855 --> 03:19:12,982 I was blessed with a lot of wonderful lines. 2572 03:19:13,524 --> 03:19:16,318 We have such sights to show you. 2573 03:19:16,944 --> 03:19:21,282 There was one line that I highlighted and I wrote next to it - laugh. 2574 03:19:22,116 --> 03:19:28,038 And people ought to laugh but they ought to laugh slightly uncomfortably because 2575 03:19:28,664 --> 03:19:34,044 as well as being a joke, it's a threat and that line was, "No tears, please." 2576 03:19:40,634 --> 03:19:45,181 I've always said that Pinhead is a horror monster who would be perfectly at home at 2577 03:19:45,806 --> 03:19:49,852 a garden party with Noel Coward and Oscar Wilde trading epithets. 2578 03:19:55,566 --> 03:19:58,068 Kathryn Bigelow is probably one of my favorite filmmakers. 2579 03:19:58,444 --> 03:20:03,449 Particularly her work on Near Dark is incredible and I'd never seen a vampire movie like that. 2580 03:20:04,074 --> 03:20:08,162 She leans into sort of this western style - is a coolness to it. 2581 03:20:08,704 --> 03:20:14,084 It's a bunch of vampires that are traveling across the country and they bring in this 2582 03:20:14,585 --> 03:20:16,420 new kid into their fold. 2583 03:20:17,046 --> 03:20:22,009 It's so different because it really messes with vampire lore and you've got an incredible 2584 03:20:22,384 --> 03:20:23,260 cast with it. 2585 03:20:23,761 --> 03:20:25,262 You've got Lance Henriksen, you've got Bill Paxton. 2586 03:20:25,596 --> 03:20:27,097 It's so well done. 2587 03:20:27,598 --> 03:20:32,186 For as much as I'd grown up sort of trusting somebody like Lance Henriksen, seeing him 2588 03:20:32,478 --> 03:20:36,857 transformed into this creature with no set of morals. 2589 03:20:37,149 --> 03:20:42,071 Like he's just out to eat and to exist and to survive with something else. 2590 03:20:42,363 --> 03:20:48,285 The vampires take over this bar and they're just slaughtering everybody and laughing. 2591 03:20:51,789 --> 03:20:55,751 Normally, it's your vampire comes in bites somebody and this it's like no, they're reveling 2592 03:20:56,126 --> 03:20:58,045 in it that they're murdering people. 2593 03:20:59,880 --> 03:21:06,095 To see Bill Paxton becoming this sort of unhinged crazy man of a character was so awesome. 2594 03:21:06,512 --> 03:21:09,557 It's just such an interesting and different take on vampires than anything we saw during 2595 03:21:10,015 --> 03:21:11,183 the '80s. 2596 03:21:17,815 --> 03:21:24,446 Horror goes directly to our primal nerve centers and the things that are most basic about being 2597 03:21:24,947 --> 03:21:27,199 human and that's fucking and killing. 2598 03:21:27,491 --> 03:21:31,120 You get sex and nudity on screen and it's just as much of a hook as the violence was. 2599 03:21:32,121 --> 03:21:36,667 Nudity has never seemed that gratuitous to me in horror films. 2600 03:21:37,001 --> 03:21:38,043 It's always seemed part of it. 2601 03:21:38,377 --> 03:21:44,883 I mean if you look at the old movies from like the '60s and early '70s in Spain and Italy. 2602 03:21:45,175 --> 03:21:47,428 I used to show them on my show Movie Macabre 2603 03:21:47,886 --> 03:21:50,180 and we'd have to cut out three-quarters of the movie because everybody was naked. 2604 03:21:50,681 --> 03:21:53,517 I guess vampires and witches just run around naked all the time I don't know. 2605 03:21:54,143 --> 03:21:59,315 It's interesting to me how society during the '80s sort of projected their own especially 2606 03:21:59,773 --> 03:22:06,196 U.S. cultures projected their own hang-ups on nudity on to this genre of films when it 2607 03:22:06,488 --> 03:22:09,033 really wasn't, I don't think that much of an issue. 2608 03:22:11,410 --> 03:22:14,622 Oh, I think I'll take a shower now, it's hot in here. 2609 03:22:15,706 --> 03:22:19,960 I mean it's just out there with it and I think it was completely gratuitous and 2610 03:22:20,252 --> 03:22:24,048 I think it was used only to sell the movie and I think it was completely unnecessary but 2611 03:22:24,340 --> 03:22:27,301 you have to get young guys in there to see the movie and how are you going to do that? 2612 03:22:27,760 --> 03:22:32,556 They asked a lot of girls to be naked in these films, myself included. 2613 03:22:35,225 --> 03:22:41,065 But at that time it was a little bit more forbidden and felt more base and a lot of men were writing 2614 03:22:41,357 --> 03:22:46,278 the movies and so they were writing what they wanted to see and yeah, they wanted to see 2615 03:22:46,654 --> 03:22:47,655 naked ladies. 2616 03:22:48,155 --> 03:22:51,158 For me, it sort of felt like here it is again, okay. 2617 03:22:51,659 --> 03:22:53,535 And it felt like it was a rite of passage okay. 2618 03:22:54,286 --> 03:22:57,915 If I keep saying no to these roles, I'm not going to be able to work so I said yes and 2619 03:22:58,415 --> 03:23:01,460 it was fine as long as the script was good. 2620 03:23:02,252 --> 03:23:09,802 A lot of women were exploited for exploitation purposes just to see it because they would 2621 03:23:10,260 --> 03:23:11,011 say yes. 2622 03:23:11,428 --> 03:23:14,348 The nudity helped get the butts in the seats. 2623 03:23:15,057 --> 03:23:20,187 Like if I had two videos in my hand and one said nudity and one did not, which one do you 2624 03:23:20,688 --> 03:23:21,855 think I'm watching? 2625 03:23:22,272 --> 03:23:24,274 I do think they need to have more male nudity. 2626 03:23:24,566 --> 03:23:28,696 Even way back I was like I never see a penis ever in a movie. 2627 03:23:29,363 --> 03:23:32,241 And even now it's still rare although getting a little better. 2628 03:23:32,991 --> 03:23:37,871 But I feel like if you have a naked lady then have a naked man. 2629 03:23:38,414 --> 03:23:39,456 Equality. 2630 03:23:43,210 --> 03:23:45,921 Halloween 3, I think you see my ass. 2631 03:23:46,422 --> 03:23:47,715 I had an ass then. 2632 03:23:48,465 --> 03:23:52,970 I don't have an ass anymore. I'm too old, it's all gone away. 2633 03:23:54,388 --> 03:24:02,896 I don't know why an audience of teenagers would think that over sexed teenagers deserve 2634 03:24:03,480 --> 03:24:06,608 to die but that's what was happening in the '80s. 2635 03:24:07,276 --> 03:24:14,199 So, we must have had a lot of undersexed teenagers enjoying the death of 2636 03:24:14,491 --> 03:24:16,744 oversexed teenagers in these movies. 2637 03:24:17,411 --> 03:24:21,749 America has always been very schizophrenic in that 2638 03:24:22,374 --> 03:24:24,710 it's a puritanical place. 2639 03:24:25,544 --> 03:24:32,551 And so a lot of the movies, if you had sex you would die, that was kind of the Friday the 13th model. 2640 03:24:33,469 --> 03:24:38,432 Anyone who would have sex you knew was going to be dead by reel three. 2641 03:24:41,852 --> 03:24:49,276 I think a lot of people were trying to equate sex with sinning and you're gonna go frolic 2642 03:24:49,735 --> 03:24:51,028 and you get what you get, you know? 2643 03:24:51,528 --> 03:24:53,906 It's kind of how in Scream they talk about the rules. 2644 03:24:54,406 --> 03:24:56,158 You had sex, now you're going to die. 2645 03:25:09,505 --> 03:25:12,966 Maybe not the healthiest message to send out to people. 2646 03:25:13,759 --> 03:25:16,386 It's a kind of old-fashioned, isn't it? 2647 03:25:16,678 --> 03:25:22,976 Especially after the freedom and outrageous goings on of the 60s and 70s. 2648 03:25:23,519 --> 03:25:30,234 And that was so ingrained that it was a rule that they deliberately had to start breaking. 2649 03:25:30,526 --> 03:25:33,237 And reviewers pointed it out, they had sex and they lived. 2650 03:25:34,029 --> 03:25:36,240 That's how strong that was. 2651 03:25:36,907 --> 03:25:40,202 I like that women have sexual power over men. 2652 03:25:40,869 --> 03:25:42,454 A lot of the time in horror. 2653 03:25:42,788 --> 03:25:48,418 No matter how the male antagonist or the villain may try to subjugate and victimize 2654 03:25:49,002 --> 03:25:54,758 the woman, she has always been able to very proactively and aggressively act on her own 2655 03:25:55,217 --> 03:25:58,679 behalf and get her revenge on the bad guy. 2656 03:26:00,097 --> 03:26:01,014 That works for me. 2657 03:26:01,431 --> 03:26:03,976 So, it's like different kinds of nudity in horror. 2658 03:26:04,476 --> 03:26:08,605 There's plenty where it's used for shock value, I guess. 2659 03:26:09,147 --> 03:26:14,152 Like lots of violence is happening on top of it and you're really confused because if 2660 03:26:14,528 --> 03:26:16,947 you're getting aroused as this is going, it's like am I a terrible person? 2661 03:26:17,489 --> 03:26:19,408 It's like maniacs like slaughtering people. 2662 03:26:19,950 --> 03:26:25,747 At what point are you allowed to enjoy it and what point is it kind of disturbing? 2663 03:26:43,599 --> 03:26:45,100 I really liked Critters. 2664 03:26:45,517 --> 03:26:46,518 I had a good time with it. 2665 03:26:46,810 --> 03:26:48,562 It was very Spielbergian. 2666 03:26:48,979 --> 03:26:51,815 Sort of a modern-day western but with little monsters. 2667 03:26:52,232 --> 03:26:56,695 And one of the things I really like about the Critters world and in particular Critters 2 2668 03:26:57,362 --> 03:27:00,282 is one of my favorite themes of Norman Rockwell goes to hell. 2669 03:27:00,824 --> 03:27:06,079 So, this is taking the idealized small-town America and just kicking it in the balls. 2670 03:27:13,754 --> 03:27:20,177 My main job was try to create some characters who were memorable and just not fodder for 2671 03:27:20,677 --> 03:27:21,970 little puppets. 2672 03:27:24,765 --> 03:27:30,562 The cast was wonderful Lin Shaye and Scott Grimes and Liane Curtis and Barry Corbin. 2673 03:27:30,854 --> 03:27:32,481 A really good group of people. 2674 03:27:32,981 --> 03:27:35,192 And the Chiodo Brothers were amazing. 2675 03:27:41,323 --> 03:27:45,619 They made these amazing creations on no money. 2676 03:27:46,578 --> 03:27:51,917 Another memorable moment in Critters 2 that stretches the boundaries of the PG-13 rating 2677 03:27:52,501 --> 03:27:58,966 is when one of the alien bounty hunters picks up the Playboy magazine and sees the fold-out 2678 03:27:59,549 --> 03:28:05,055 and transforms into Roxanne Kernohan naked. 2679 03:28:09,226 --> 03:28:14,398 A really great idea that Bob Shaye, the head of New Line Studios had when we were doing 2680 03:28:14,690 --> 03:28:16,233 the scene with the fold-out. 2681 03:28:16,650 --> 03:28:22,406 When she transforms and plucks the giant staple out of her navel that was Bob's idea and I 2682 03:28:22,698 --> 03:28:25,492 have to give him credit because it's so good. 2683 03:28:29,746 --> 03:28:34,501 The most complicated scene maybe to this day that I've ever shot is that chase between 2684 03:28:35,002 --> 03:28:39,339 the pickup truck and the giant critter ball because there are several different versions 2685 03:28:39,756 --> 03:28:40,590 of that critter ball. 2686 03:28:41,091 --> 03:28:46,430 One of them must have weighed a ton and was on an axle connected to the pickup truck and 2687 03:28:46,722 --> 03:28:50,684 it had all these remote-control puppeted faces that are biting on it. 2688 03:28:51,685 --> 03:28:56,690 There's another version, it's just a bunch of critter pelts on an inflatable ball that 2689 03:28:57,024 --> 03:29:00,944 when it first comes into town you can see two of the Chiodo Brothers' legs behind 2690 03:29:01,403 --> 03:29:02,696 it as they're pushing it. 2691 03:29:03,196 --> 03:29:06,658 That's real high-tech visual effects. 2692 03:29:07,159 --> 03:29:11,788 But when the critters ball is rolling, one of the people running away from it gets rolled 2693 03:29:12,456 --> 03:29:19,087 over and reveals the skeleton of him immediately after you hear gobble, gobble, gobble and it's away 2694 03:29:19,671 --> 03:29:22,049 and there's the skeleton with a little meat left on it. 2695 03:29:26,595 --> 03:29:30,348 That's a favorite moment of mine and always gets an amazing reaction. 2696 03:29:41,151 --> 03:29:45,405 Friday the 13th Part 7 -The New Blood is the first one with Kane Hodder as Jason which 2697 03:29:45,697 --> 03:29:49,242 is surprising that the most famous Jason came in during the seventh movie. 2698 03:29:49,868 --> 03:29:53,663 The really memorable thing about this movie is of course the psychic character Tina who 2699 03:29:54,289 --> 03:29:57,709 serves as the first person who can actually stand up to Jason and fight back. 2700 03:29:58,376 --> 03:30:02,255 And it was directed by the late John Carl Buechler who did a fantastic job with it. 2701 03:30:03,173 --> 03:30:09,096 The single reason I ever became Jason was his insistence that I play the character because 2702 03:30:09,513 --> 03:30:12,766 nobody was against C.J. coming back from Part 6. 2703 03:30:13,183 --> 03:30:14,101 He had done a good job. 2704 03:30:14,476 --> 03:30:18,980 I still think he did a good job but Buechler was adamant that I play the character. 2705 03:30:19,356 --> 03:30:21,024 Unbelievable honor. 2706 03:30:21,733 --> 03:30:25,737 I said I have to do whatever I can to do this character justice. 2707 03:30:29,658 --> 03:30:33,912 Tina has a vision of me killing Bill Butler with the tent stakes. 2708 03:30:34,371 --> 03:30:37,290 So it's sticking out of him and I'm standing behind him and he's going like that. 2709 03:30:37,791 --> 03:30:40,752 That's the very first thing I ever shot with the hockey mask on. 2710 03:30:41,169 --> 03:30:43,171 So, that'll always be a cool memory. 2711 03:30:43,964 --> 03:30:50,095 My favorite fire stunt I've ever done is as Jason in Part 7 because there is so much 2712 03:30:50,512 --> 03:30:51,596 fire on me. 2713 03:30:52,222 --> 03:30:53,849 I'm on fire for so long. 2714 03:30:54,391 --> 03:30:56,309 Just an amazing looking stunt. 2715 03:30:56,977 --> 03:30:59,813 Everybody's afraid to offer me a fire stunt because one almost killed me. 2716 03:31:00,105 --> 03:31:01,940 I was in the hospital five and a half months. 2717 03:31:02,440 --> 03:31:06,820 It took a year to fully recover and get back to a somewhat normal life. 2718 03:31:07,320 --> 03:31:13,160 Even though it almost killed me I always looked back and said man, I just liked doing fire 2719 03:31:13,743 --> 03:31:15,829 stunts because they were so scary-looking. 2720 03:31:16,329 --> 03:31:19,833 With Kane Hodder behind the mask, Jason undergoes a ton of punishment. 2721 03:31:20,333 --> 03:31:25,005 He gets a house falling on him and electrocuted and nails stuck in him but then his ultimate 2722 03:31:25,380 --> 03:31:30,594 death comes from the hand of like a zombie dad coming out of the lake and dragging him 2723 03:31:30,886 --> 03:31:31,678 underwater. 2724 03:31:32,137 --> 03:31:35,473 It's totally bizarre and a little rushed but you definitely remember it. 2725 03:31:45,275 --> 03:31:48,528 One of the movies I would point people to is Killer Klowns From Outer Space by the amazing 2726 03:31:48,945 --> 03:31:49,863 Chiodo Brothers. 2727 03:31:50,947 --> 03:31:54,784 This is a movie that is not long on plot but is rich and intimate. 2728 03:31:55,493 --> 03:31:58,830 The designs for the Killer Klowns, clowns let's face it, always being kind of creepy 2729 03:31:59,247 --> 03:32:01,666 are really, really, really disturbing. 2730 03:32:03,627 --> 03:32:06,880 The horror is there, the comedy they keep it consistent. 2731 03:32:07,172 --> 03:32:08,882 They're killing people with pies. 2732 03:32:09,382 --> 03:32:12,552 They're taking people and wrapping them up in cotton candy. 2733 03:32:15,263 --> 03:32:18,850 Lon Chaney once said that the clown is funny in the circus ring but he's not funny at your door 2734 03:32:19,142 --> 03:32:19,893 at midnight. 2735 03:32:20,185 --> 03:32:24,231 These guys are at your door at midnight and even though the story is ridiculous it's filled 2736 03:32:24,814 --> 03:32:26,900 with strange slapstick violence. 2737 03:32:31,821 --> 03:32:34,783 It really, it gives it a special place in my heart. 2738 03:32:43,250 --> 03:32:46,336 When I got the script of Phantasm 2, it wasn't called Phantasm 2. 2739 03:32:46,753 --> 03:32:49,381 It was called either American Gothic or Morningside. 2740 03:32:49,798 --> 03:32:52,133 It went through different versions. It was top-secret. 2741 03:32:52,550 --> 03:32:54,261 You get page two and it says the Tall Man 2742 03:32:54,678 --> 03:32:56,513 and I'm like yeah, I think I can figure out what it is. 2743 03:32:57,097 --> 03:33:01,184 Angus Scrimm and his Tall Man character couldn't be further apart. 2744 03:33:01,685 --> 03:33:05,939 Angus was the sweetest most gentle human being, a wonderful actor. 2745 03:33:06,356 --> 03:33:08,108 Just a sweet gentle soul. 2746 03:33:08,608 --> 03:33:11,903 When he becomes the Tall Man he just switches it 0nH.and"B0yF 2747 03:33:13,905 --> 03:33:15,782 And then switches it off and he's Angus. 2748 03:33:16,241 --> 03:33:17,617 Yeah, I love working with him. 2749 03:33:18,118 --> 03:33:20,829 It's so clear that they had a big budget on the sequel. 2750 03:33:21,121 --> 03:33:25,041 They were able to do a lot of the concepts that Don Coscarelli had had with the original 2751 03:33:25,500 --> 03:33:28,461 that he couldn't fully flesh out because he just didn't have the money. 2752 03:33:30,839 --> 03:33:33,883 Steve Patino created a ton of different spheres for the film. 2753 03:33:34,175 --> 03:33:35,051 He did a wonderful job. 2754 03:33:35,552 --> 03:33:39,931 Spheres were flying, spheres were dropping, spheres that had a little blade come out and 2755 03:33:40,348 --> 03:33:43,268 start spinning and spheres just for blood pumping. 2756 03:33:43,643 --> 03:33:46,396 He had dozens of these things for different effects. 2757 03:33:49,482 --> 03:33:56,948 Anytime you got that completely shiny chrome ball on set, it's basically a mirror reflecting 2758 03:33:57,240 --> 03:33:59,451 everything around it including the film crew. 2759 03:33:59,909 --> 03:34:02,829 So, you had to be very clever about how you shot it like through a hole in the wall or 2760 03:34:03,246 --> 03:34:05,332 something so the camera wouldn't be seen. 2761 03:34:05,915 --> 03:34:07,000 We had a lot of fun with them. 2762 03:34:07,500 --> 03:34:09,002 I even tried one on myself. 2763 03:34:09,878 --> 03:34:16,301 My favorite scene has to be when the ball is chasing the dude through the mausoleum 2764 03:34:16,801 --> 03:34:21,848 and it just comes up right in his head and you're like ah, that sucks and then the drill 2765 03:34:22,265 --> 03:34:23,016 comes out. 2766 03:34:27,437 --> 03:34:31,816 Not expecting that at all and just... and his blood flying everywhere. It drills through 2767 03:34:32,108 --> 03:34:32,859 the guy's brain. 2768 03:34:33,318 --> 03:34:35,362 It's insane. It's so well done. 2769 03:34:40,033 --> 03:34:44,371 Phantasm 2 in terms of its effects takes the whole franchise to a completely different 2770 03:34:44,788 --> 03:34:50,251 level and I don't think any of the films since have ever touched what the work in Phantasm 2 2771 03:34:50,668 --> 03:34:53,922 was like because I think that really set a bar for that whole series. 2772 03:35:06,726 --> 03:35:10,855 The Blob is a film that I think deserves to be up there with The Thing and The Fly as 2773 03:35:11,147 --> 03:35:12,440 one of the great '80s remakes. 2774 03:35:12,941 --> 03:35:17,946 It's really an example of how you can take an older film and use the new cinematic technology 2775 03:35:18,488 --> 03:35:22,033 and really tell the story in the best possible way. 2776 03:35:22,867 --> 03:35:27,288 It's a monster that doesn't really get quite the recognition that it deserves. 2777 03:35:27,705 --> 03:35:33,420 They had a much bloodier story it was different from the original it made The Blob an even 2778 03:35:33,795 --> 03:35:34,921 bigger force to be reckoned with. 2779 03:35:35,505 --> 03:35:41,553 Here you have this thing from outer space that is just a mindless killing machine. 2780 03:35:42,011 --> 03:35:46,015 It's just carving a path of destruction across this town, eating everybody in its way. 2781 03:35:46,433 --> 03:35:51,020 It kills a theater full of children. It's just something that they would have a hard 2782 03:35:51,312 --> 03:35:53,398 time getting away with today. 2783 03:36:09,789 --> 03:36:13,460 The 4th Nightmare on Elm Street film The Dream Master picks up where The Dream Warriors left 2784 03:36:14,127 --> 03:36:17,547 off and then quickly just kills all the survivors from that movie. 2785 03:36:24,053 --> 03:36:29,058 Kincaid is the first African American to ever survive a major horror film 2786 03:36:29,434 --> 03:36:35,064 and return to a sequel but I think they forgot because in Part 4 they killed my black 2787 03:36:35,523 --> 03:36:37,358 ass off during the credits almost. 2788 03:36:37,775 --> 03:36:43,156 So, I used to tell people if you want to see me don't get popcorn, don't get no drinks, 2789 03:36:43,448 --> 03:36:48,369 go straight to the theater and after about five or ten minutes then you can go get some drinks. 2790 03:36:49,662 --> 03:36:54,042 We actually filmed that in a junkyard and it took us a week to film that scene. 2791 03:36:54,542 --> 03:37:00,507 It was where Freddy came back to life and it was because of my dog that was named Jason. 2792 03:37:03,343 --> 03:37:09,265 And the dog pissed fire so... and that's what brought him to life. 2793 03:37:11,142 --> 03:37:16,814 If you go back and look at it Robert Englund had develop a swag about himself and he just 2794 03:37:17,273 --> 03:37:20,318 put on his hat and he said, "You shouldn't have buried me." 2795 03:37:23,488 --> 03:37:28,117 He stuck his razors into my chest and grabbed my heart. 2796 03:37:28,493 --> 03:37:31,788 I think he was supposed to pull it out but that was going to be too gross. 2797 03:37:37,710 --> 03:37:41,339 It goes on to feature a new bunch of kids fighting Freddy in their dreams including 2798 03:37:41,756 --> 03:37:45,301 The Dream Master which is an all-new thing that this movie came up with. 2799 03:37:47,303 --> 03:37:50,974 My favorite effect from the movie is done by Screaming Mad George who's really good 2800 03:37:51,266 --> 03:37:54,227 with bug effects and it's when Debbie becomes a cockroach. 2801 03:37:54,644 --> 03:37:56,479 We're talking full-on Gregor Samsa here. 2802 03:37:57,021 --> 03:38:02,777 She just turns into this gross, gooey, icky cockroach who's got antennae and limbs popping 2803 03:38:03,236 --> 03:38:07,323 out before she's ultimately crushed in a roach motel by Freddy with a one-liner. 2804 03:38:21,963 --> 03:38:27,135 Ken Russell was a very distinctive filmmaker who had a very distinctive point of view that 2805 03:38:27,427 --> 03:38:28,469 was slightly mad. 2806 03:38:28,928 --> 03:38:32,640 He took on a Bram Stoker short story called The Lair of the White Worm. 2807 03:38:33,224 --> 03:38:37,562 Amanda Donohoe plays this priestess of the white worm, sort of. 2808 03:38:38,563 --> 03:38:42,692 It's crazy, it's funny, it's really haunting and spooky. 2809 03:38:43,151 --> 03:38:47,280 The Lair of the White Worm also has one of the first performances of Hugh Grant and he's 2810 03:38:47,697 --> 03:38:49,949 the fumbling, charming guy that we all expect. 2811 03:38:58,249 --> 03:39:02,629 But it's in the British countryside and it has to do with curses and ancient religions 2812 03:39:03,254 --> 03:39:06,716 and things and it's very much a Ken Russell special. 2813 03:39:07,342 --> 03:39:12,597 A really wonderful, unique movie that you would never expect came from a short story written 2814 03:39:12,972 --> 03:39:15,224 by the same guy who wrote the book, Dracula. 2815 03:39:24,817 --> 03:39:28,154 Elvira: Mistress of the Dark was like a dream come true. 2816 03:39:28,655 --> 03:39:34,243 We finally get to see Cassandra Peterson do an extended version of Elvira and some of her 2817 03:39:34,619 --> 03:39:36,120 little hosting snippets. 2818 03:39:36,579 --> 03:39:39,666 We get to see her personality and we were not disappointed. 2819 03:39:40,416 --> 03:39:46,589 It became such a great way to make the character three-dimensional, myself and the two writers 2820 03:39:47,173 --> 03:39:49,217 that I worked with John Paragon and Sam Egan. 2821 03:39:49,801 --> 03:39:53,346 It was like a discovery every day, kind of about myself. It was almost like a therapy session. 2822 03:39:54,263 --> 03:39:59,060 Here she is this woman that looks like something between some kind of a sorceress vampire witch, 2823 03:39:59,352 --> 03:40:02,814 we don't know what, and she wants to be a showgirl in Las Vegas. 2824 03:40:03,815 --> 03:40:06,067 It actually came from my real life so... 2825 03:40:07,402 --> 03:40:10,238 It was fun discovering who Elvira was. 2826 03:40:11,280 --> 03:40:15,368 She just went on a road trip where she's like a fish out of water and the townspeople just 2827 03:40:15,910 --> 03:40:19,580 want to crucify her. But we all know she's super cool. 2828 03:40:20,081 --> 03:40:24,043 I put my life on the line in that movie so many times being surrounded by fire 2829 03:40:24,335 --> 03:40:28,297 first on the pyre up there and then later when the house is burning down. 2830 03:40:28,798 --> 03:40:29,966 That fire is real. 2831 03:40:30,299 --> 03:40:34,262 I mean my wig would have gone up with all that hairspray, like a bomb. 2832 03:40:34,762 --> 03:40:40,601 So, I was covered from head to toe in flame-retardant which they failed to tell me made 2833 03:40:40,977 --> 03:40:46,566 you itch like mad and I have my hands tied behind my back so I couldn't scratch myself. 2834 03:40:46,983 --> 03:40:49,318 I was wanting to tear my skin off. 2835 03:40:49,610 --> 03:40:51,237 It's making me itch right now. 2836 03:40:57,869 --> 03:41:00,413 We had the casserole monster's scene we call it. 2837 03:41:00,705 --> 03:41:05,126 The pot monster was a puppet, the guys that were under the table had to get 2838 03:41:05,501 --> 03:41:10,173 very, very close to me and I was like oh, no just come on sit right here between my 2839 03:41:10,465 --> 03:41:12,800 legs and I guess they had a great time down there. 2840 03:41:16,929 --> 03:41:20,349 It's such a good movie. It's so well done and she was just a hero 2841 03:41:20,683 --> 03:41:23,352 to little horror girls like me, it's like... 2842 03:41:30,902 --> 03:41:34,238 So Pumpkinhead is an amazing film. 2843 03:41:34,655 --> 03:41:41,162 It has Lance Henriksen as the dad who loses his adorable little kid and understandably 2844 03:41:41,454 --> 03:41:43,039 wants revenge. 2845 03:41:43,498 --> 03:41:50,546 So, he brings back this crazy monster which is my favorite all-time monster ever and revenge 2846 03:41:50,922 --> 03:41:51,631 happens 2847 03:41:52,381 --> 03:41:58,429 It's makeup effects legend Stan Winston's directorial debut and Tom WoodruffJr. as 2848 03:41:58,888 --> 03:42:00,431 the dude in the pumpkin head suit. 2849 03:42:00,890 --> 03:42:02,350 People ask, "What was your favorite movie?" 2850 03:42:02,642 --> 03:42:03,935 And I always tell them it was Pumpkinhead. 2851 03:42:04,560 --> 03:42:09,482 And he turned over the design aspects of that entire show to us, his guys and we were going 2852 03:42:10,107 --> 03:42:12,819 to design Pumpkinhead and Stan was busy directing. 2853 03:42:13,402 --> 03:42:16,948 So, that was an affirmative nod from Stan to let us do that. 2854 03:42:18,407 --> 03:42:21,369 We always wanted to make sure that we were delivering something to the audience that 2855 03:42:21,911 --> 03:42:23,746 didn't seem like the guy in a rubber suit. 2856 03:42:24,205 --> 03:42:28,334 We would do things like extend the legs with a leg extension to make them long and skinny 2857 03:42:28,668 --> 03:42:32,421 and the suit was very thin in places so it didn't add a lot of bulk. 2858 03:42:33,172 --> 03:42:35,842 It was all practical but it was a little bit of puppetry, it was a little bit of man in suit 2859 03:42:36,300 --> 03:42:38,344 but I just love the design of what Pumpkinhead was. 2860 03:42:38,845 --> 03:42:42,807 There he was with this kind of bulbous head but he was very demonic, he had this long tail, 2861 03:42:43,349 --> 03:42:45,893 he was able to climb trees and take out people. 2862 03:42:48,688 --> 03:42:52,400 Whenever Pumkinhead was walking around you can hear this weird chittering noise 2863 03:42:52,859 --> 03:42:53,651 in the background. 2864 03:42:54,110 --> 03:42:57,488 It sounded like cicadas and you always knew if you heard that, you were doomed. 2865 03:43:05,079 --> 03:43:08,374 It was always hard for me in the suits to communicate but when Stan would get close 2866 03:43:08,833 --> 03:43:12,295 I'd say can we do the King Kong thing? And he goes the thing with the T-Rex. 2867 03:43:12,587 --> 03:43:16,090 So, we both knew exactly what we're saying and that was thing where you pick up Joel's 2868 03:43:16,549 --> 03:43:18,843 head and kind of move it around a little bit and play with it. 2869 03:43:19,260 --> 03:43:25,391 Even though this was an '80s movie it extended much further before that from when we both 2870 03:43:25,892 --> 03:43:31,147 had each had seen King Kong and we brought that into some kind of life for a moment. 2871 03:43:43,868 --> 03:43:48,289 After Halloween 3 confused the hell out of everyone and bombed at the box office, 2872 03:43:48,581 --> 03:43:50,791 they resurrected everyone's favorite slasher. 2873 03:43:51,500 --> 03:43:55,546 Halloween 4 has Michael Myers returning to Haddonfield this time to stalk his niece 2874 03:43:55,838 --> 03:43:58,132 Jamie Lloyd played by a young Danielle Harris. 2875 03:44:00,176 --> 03:44:05,306 My favorite kill in this one is mostly because of the victim who is played by Kathleen Kinmont 2876 03:44:05,681 --> 03:44:09,143 wearing a very memorable shirt that says, "Cops do it by the book.” 2877 03:44:09,560 --> 03:44:13,272 Michael just takes a shotgun and instead of using it to shoot her, he impales her into 2878 03:44:13,648 --> 03:44:15,983 the wall with the barrel of the shotgun. 2879 03:44:19,612 --> 03:44:24,492 I think Halloween 4 is really the movie that made Michael into one of the iconic slashers. 2880 03:44:31,582 --> 03:44:33,834 Michael Myers you're just like Jason Voorhees. 2881 03:44:45,054 --> 03:44:50,685 One of the things about the '80s it was just different than my belief system as the unrestrained 2882 03:44:51,143 --> 03:44:54,981 capitalism that came into being, Reagan brought it in. 2883 03:44:55,606 --> 03:44:59,902 The things that he implemented I felt were not real great for people. 2884 03:45:00,319 --> 03:45:02,113 Especially low-income folks. 2885 03:45:02,571 --> 03:45:04,573 This greed is good business was just... 2886 03:45:05,074 --> 03:45:05,866 I just couldn't... 2887 03:45:06,283 --> 03:45:07,535 I couldn't believe it. 2888 03:45:12,540 --> 03:45:14,583 They Live was the response. 2889 03:45:15,167 --> 03:45:19,755 John had upped his game as a director by the time we got to They Live. 2890 03:45:20,631 --> 03:45:29,056 It's political significance and resonance is probably more acute today than it was even then. 2891 03:45:29,598 --> 03:45:34,603 I had to come up with a visual device that showed the audience the hidden reality around them. 2892 03:45:35,187 --> 03:45:37,523 And so the sunglasses were a perfect metaphor. 2893 03:45:44,321 --> 03:45:48,701 Jim Danforth did these matte paintings and they would work in black and white with sunglasses. 2894 03:45:49,118 --> 03:45:50,536 Perfect for our low budget. 2895 03:45:51,370 --> 03:45:54,457 Subliminal messages put in advertising. 2896 03:45:54,915 --> 03:45:56,834 They Live addressed it head bang on. 2897 03:45:57,418 --> 03:46:00,254 You don't know what messages are being broadcast to us today. 2898 03:46:00,713 --> 03:46:03,007 That's not necessarily an alien concept. 2899 03:46:07,636 --> 03:46:10,389 The fight in They Live was fun to stage. 2900 03:46:10,681 --> 03:46:12,641 We rehearsed it for quite a while. 2901 03:46:13,059 --> 03:46:17,313 Roddy's a wrestler and he fights for a living, so we had to put a big fight in. 2902 03:46:17,772 --> 03:46:19,231 The guy I'm impressed with is Keith. 2903 03:46:19,648 --> 03:46:20,733 He did great. 2904 03:46:24,612 --> 03:46:25,905 We rehearsed it for like two weeks. 2905 03:46:26,614 --> 03:46:31,660 It was very well-choreographed, very well designed, fashioned after the fight in 2906 03:46:31,952 --> 03:46:33,079 The Quiet Man. 2907 03:46:34,914 --> 03:46:36,582 We had such, such fun. 2908 03:46:37,166 --> 03:46:39,251 I never felt safer in a fight in my life. 2909 03:46:39,752 --> 03:46:43,672 It was Roddy, he taught me more about selling it with a few great moves. 2910 03:46:47,843 --> 03:46:55,226 Roddy gave me a notebook of his that had lines that he would give for interviews 2911 03:46:55,684 --> 03:46:57,019 and at wrestling matches. 2912 03:47:04,819 --> 03:47:11,242 That was one he had written down and made up for I think Playboy Buddy Rose in a match 2913 03:47:11,617 --> 03:47:12,451 they had together. 2914 03:47:13,160 --> 03:47:14,537 So I just used it. 2915 03:47:14,995 --> 03:47:19,333 Roddy and I became good friends and over the years we would see each other and hang out 2916 03:47:19,750 --> 03:47:20,793 every once in a while. 2917 03:47:21,210 --> 03:47:24,046 One of the sweetest, most gracious human beings I've ever known. 2918 03:47:26,590 --> 03:47:29,135 I don't think there's been a movie quite like They Live. 2919 03:47:29,635 --> 03:47:35,474 It stands alone and in terms of its reference to the politics of the times and so forth. 2920 03:47:37,893 --> 03:47:41,897 I came here to chew bubblegum and kick ass and I'm all out of bubblegum. 2921 03:47:53,701 --> 03:47:57,913 I wanted to do a killer doll movie and I saw the commercial potential there. 2922 03:47:58,455 --> 03:48:03,043 When we were little kids all of us had thought to ourselves wouldn't it be cool if our toys 2923 03:48:03,502 --> 03:48:07,965 and playthings came alive... or wouldn't it be terrifying? 2924 03:48:08,757 --> 03:48:14,346 You saw it in Poltergeist with Tobe Hooper with the clown coming out from under the bed 2925 03:48:14,847 --> 03:48:16,682 and it was like the biggest scare in the movie. 2926 03:48:16,974 --> 03:48:20,853 That moment made me want to do Child's Play if I could pull it off. 2927 03:48:21,353 --> 03:48:27,318 I wanted Chucky to be a darkly humorous figure and in a way, you can sort of reduce Chucky's 2928 03:48:27,860 --> 03:48:34,950 appeal if you're so inclined to a cute little doll that says fuck a lot and knifes you to death. 2929 03:48:39,288 --> 03:48:43,876 There is something amusing about that because it's inherently absurd. 2930 03:48:44,877 --> 03:48:47,671 Who's going to believe a little seven-year-old kid about his doll coming alive? 2931 03:48:47,963 --> 03:48:51,217 With any kind of movie like Child's Play in order to make it believable you have to add 2932 03:48:51,675 --> 03:48:54,220 that moment where you say, "Look ma, no wires." 2933 03:49:02,519 --> 03:49:07,233 The scariest moment in Child's Play is probably when Catherine Hicks finally realizes that 2934 03:49:07,858 --> 03:49:11,445 her son, her little boy has been telling the truth and the doll is malevolently alive 2935 03:49:11,987 --> 03:49:14,865 and she opens the compartment and there are no batteries in there. 2936 03:49:15,157 --> 03:49:17,785 Okay good, but then you get The Exorcist. 2937 03:49:18,202 --> 03:49:21,914 The head does 180-degree turn and looks up at her and says, 2938 03:49:22,957 --> 03:49:25,084 Hi, I'm Chucky wanna play? 2939 03:49:26,418 --> 03:49:27,544 It scares the hell out of her. 2940 03:49:27,920 --> 03:49:31,882 And I put Brad Dourif's voice behind it and Brad had played the villain for me in 2941 03:49:32,299 --> 03:49:33,217 Fatal Beauty. 2942 03:49:36,470 --> 03:49:39,515 It's the fiendish glee that Chucky has. 2943 03:49:47,273 --> 03:49:53,779 Chucky subverts the status quo and he goes after authority figures and he has his way 2944 03:49:54,280 --> 03:49:55,072 with them. 2945 03:49:56,365 --> 03:50:03,914 I think the appeal of the killer doll trope is partly primal and maybe Freudian. 2946 03:50:08,210 --> 03:50:13,549 I think as long as there are flashlights and you can turn them on under a chin, under a 2947 03:50:13,882 --> 03:50:17,636 doll, it's sort of a no fail prescription for terror right there. 2948 03:50:29,565 --> 03:50:35,279 Hellbound is really the story of Kirsty's descent into hell to look for her father. 2949 03:50:40,993 --> 03:50:46,582 Dr. Channard who was well as being a brain surgeon has also developed his own fascination 2950 03:50:46,957 --> 03:50:48,500 with lament configurations. 2951 03:50:49,710 --> 03:50:53,422 The blood brings Julia back to life out of the mattress. 2952 03:50:53,922 --> 03:50:56,967 She becomes Dr. Channard's kind of pet. 2953 03:50:57,426 --> 03:51:01,889 I had talked to Clive obviously a lot about the character of Pinhead and I knew he had been 2954 03:51:02,264 --> 03:51:02,931 a human being. 2955 03:51:03,349 --> 03:51:08,020 I developed the idea that he was in mourning for a humanity that he couldn't remember clearly. 2956 03:51:08,520 --> 03:51:15,903 The opening sequence with Elliot Spencer acquiring the box and being transformed into Pinhead. 2957 03:51:17,780 --> 03:51:22,368 At the end of the film we see the transformation back when Kirsty confronts him with that 2958 03:51:22,785 --> 03:51:28,415 photograph of Elliot Spencer and he remembers the humanity that he had lost. 2959 03:51:31,627 --> 03:51:38,008 Hellraiser 2, it gave you an insight into the Cenobites that wasn't really there with the 2960 03:51:38,300 --> 03:51:39,051 first one. 2961 03:51:39,551 --> 03:51:44,139 Favorite scene from that is when the doctor is being turned into a Cenobite and then after 2962 03:51:44,556 --> 03:51:46,892 he comes out of the chamber he's like... 2963 03:51:47,351 --> 03:51:50,813 And to think, I hesitated. 2964 03:51:51,188 --> 03:51:53,899 It's so amazing because it's like he went through 2965 03:51:54,358 --> 03:51:57,903 this hell and he didn't want to but then he comes out afterwards and he's a Cenobite and 2966 03:51:58,195 --> 03:52:00,906 it's like oh, this is what it's all about. 2967 03:52:02,699 --> 03:52:08,580 Shift in the exchange rates shaved a substantial chunk off the budget and it was decided to 2968 03:52:09,039 --> 03:52:10,833 go ahead in compromised form. 2969 03:52:11,208 --> 03:52:16,964 And it's a shame, it would have given us that insight into where Clive's notions of this 2970 03:52:17,339 --> 03:52:23,470 realm, this place where the Cenobites are and the idea of Leviathan that is introduced 2971 03:52:23,846 --> 03:52:28,142 in the screenplay but never really fully explored. 2972 03:52:34,064 --> 03:52:37,151 Troma is a classic cult movie studio we're the last one. 2973 03:52:37,609 --> 03:52:41,822 We're the only ones who've been able to survive and the reason is our fans. 2974 03:52:42,197 --> 03:52:45,117 We've got a fan base who are very devoted and they're very active. 2975 03:52:45,617 --> 03:52:49,288 And now of course with the internet we've got 500,000 people every month with whom we 2976 03:52:49,663 --> 03:52:50,664 are interacting. 2977 03:52:51,039 --> 03:52:52,082 So, that's the secret. 2978 03:52:52,499 --> 03:52:58,672 Even if the horror film is cheaply, badly made, horror fans will support you. 2979 03:52:59,131 --> 03:53:00,674 The fans, they're the best. 2980 03:53:01,049 --> 03:53:04,470 It's like you're meeting your people, you're meeting your tribe. 2981 03:53:05,095 --> 03:53:14,062 They are the most loyal, the most knowledgeable fan base that anybody could wish to have. 2982 03:53:14,855 --> 03:53:21,820 I feel like horror fans are some of the most self-actualized people because they allow 2983 03:53:22,112 --> 03:53:27,159 themselves to see and experience the darker aspects of life. 2984 03:53:27,826 --> 03:53:29,244 We're all kind of the misfits. 2985 03:53:29,661 --> 03:53:32,498 We're all of cultural misfits. 2986 03:53:33,207 --> 03:53:38,170 A lot of us share the same sort of sense of not being the popular one, being the nerd 2987 03:53:38,545 --> 03:53:42,466 or the geek, which sometimes nowadays is sort of cool, back then it was not cool. 2988 03:53:43,133 --> 03:53:45,052 So, you bond over these things. 2989 03:53:45,469 --> 03:53:49,806 So, as we get older and we find these groups of people on social media or at conventions 2990 03:53:50,224 --> 03:53:54,144 you have an immediate understanding and a bond over the genre. 2991 03:53:54,937 --> 03:54:00,317 Horror fans who love horror and who passed it down to their children are some of the 2992 03:54:00,692 --> 03:54:02,194 most open people that I know. 2993 03:54:02,694 --> 03:54:08,033 Somebody will show me a picture of me at a horror convention holding an infant. 2994 03:54:08,575 --> 03:54:12,913 They go, "That's me", and they're now 25 years old. 2995 03:54:13,247 --> 03:54:19,920 I held that person at a horror convention when they were still shitting themselves. 2996 03:54:21,880 --> 03:54:24,841 And now, they're standing in front of me with their own kids. 2997 03:54:25,175 --> 03:54:30,472 I've had people come up to me and have me sign my name and then a couple hours later 2998 03:54:30,806 --> 03:54:33,183 they've gone and tattooed my name on there. 2999 03:54:33,600 --> 03:54:35,852 So they're like fans, those are the real fans. 3000 03:54:36,270 --> 03:54:39,523 I've met horror fans from all walks of life. 3001 03:54:39,982 --> 03:54:43,569 There is no stereotypical one, I don't think. 3002 03:54:44,194 --> 03:54:47,114 That's why it's hard to almost describe the average horror fan because you can see someone 3003 03:54:47,447 --> 03:54:52,703 walking down the street with a black shirt that has a horror design on it or ink or whatever 3004 03:54:53,203 --> 03:54:56,665 and then you can also see someone who just came from a business meeting in a suit and tie 3005 03:54:57,124 --> 03:54:59,710 but then they'll pull up their pants a little bit to show you their horror socks. 3006 03:55:00,252 --> 03:55:02,504 A horror fan can be anyone, they're everywhere. 3007 03:55:03,005 --> 03:55:06,258 I'm a fan who found his way into the profession. 3008 03:55:06,925 --> 03:55:13,265 I've went to my first convention in 1975 in Pittsburgh and it gave me a really unique 3009 03:55:13,682 --> 03:55:16,226 sense of being connected with something that I love. 3010 03:55:16,768 --> 03:55:19,855 I still go to shows as a fan and sometimes as a guest. 3011 03:55:20,439 --> 03:55:23,692 We celebrate it, we love it, we're passionate about it. 3012 03:55:24,234 --> 03:55:26,153 What I love about horror, it's this unifier. 3013 03:55:27,154 --> 03:55:28,614 You can be from any walk of life. 3014 03:55:29,323 --> 03:55:32,117 You can be straight, you can be gay, you can be white, you can be black. 3015 03:55:32,409 --> 03:55:33,493 It doesn't matter. 3016 03:55:33,994 --> 03:55:37,706 Horror knows no race. It knows no sex, it knows no age. 3017 03:55:38,415 --> 03:55:43,045 Horror is this universal thing that we all come together over. 3018 03:56:01,813 --> 03:56:03,523 I think The Burbs is a very unique film. 3019 03:56:03,940 --> 03:56:09,279 It is a comedy but it's dark, and that commercially was a problem. 3020 03:56:09,946 --> 03:56:15,243 It was marketed like a light Tom Hanks comedy at the time when Tom Hanks was just doing 3021 03:56:15,827 --> 03:56:18,955 very light, fun, enjoyable romps. 3022 03:56:19,539 --> 03:56:25,295 And it has a really dark kind of mean streak to it, that I think was embraced by Joe Dante. 3023 03:56:30,050 --> 03:56:34,137 The Burbs is nominally a horror film in that it's about creepy neighbors. 3024 03:56:34,429 --> 03:56:37,265 And when I was a kid, we had people in the neighborhood who people thought were creepy 3025 03:56:37,724 --> 03:56:41,019 and we would make up stuff about what was going on in there and you couldn't go there on Halloween 3026 03:56:41,311 --> 03:56:43,188 because then we wouldn't come out and all that nonsense. 3027 03:56:43,730 --> 03:56:48,443 It's a movie about the way these people behave when they're basically bored in their suburban 3028 03:56:48,902 --> 03:56:52,280 setting and need to invent some excitement for themselves. 3029 03:56:59,579 --> 03:57:03,166 In the original script it wasn't explained what the Klopeks were up to. 3030 03:57:03,834 --> 03:57:08,380 The audience had to imagine it and so all of these clues of the strange noises at night 3031 03:57:08,714 --> 03:57:12,217 and lights and people digging all that stuff was just blithely unexplained. 3032 03:57:12,676 --> 03:57:16,722 But then when Torn Hanks was cast the studio said you can't do the ending we've got now, 3033 03:57:17,222 --> 03:57:19,683 they take him off on an ambulance and he's going to die. You can't kill Tom Hanks. 3034 03:57:20,058 --> 03:57:21,476 Then we shot three different endings. 3035 03:57:22,060 --> 03:57:24,563 One of which is on the laserdisc and then one of which got destroyed where they open 3036 03:57:24,938 --> 03:57:28,024 up the trunk and the garbagemen from earlier in the movie, Dick Miller and Bob Picardo 3037 03:57:28,316 --> 03:57:29,192 are in the trunk. 3038 03:57:29,484 --> 03:57:31,403 And there is another ending where it was full of cheerleaders. 3039 03:57:31,695 --> 03:57:33,864 So, that was a topical joke and none of which made it. 3040 03:57:34,281 --> 03:57:36,283 We had ended it up being a bunch of skulls which we shot later. 3041 03:57:53,759 --> 03:57:58,680 976 - EVIL was Robert Englund's directorial debut and a lot of people don't know that. 3042 03:57:59,389 --> 03:58:04,436 Especially because it's such a corny idea for a film but back then 976 3043 03:58:04,853 --> 03:58:08,231 and 1-800 collect and all that like they were a thing. 3044 03:58:08,607 --> 03:58:10,525 Toll numbers were kind of a big deal. 3045 03:58:11,109 --> 03:58:15,655 You would call 976 - EVIL and you had a line in to the devil. 3046 03:58:18,950 --> 03:58:21,328 You murder this person and I will make you popular. 3047 03:58:22,204 --> 03:58:26,291 You had this one kid who's this social outcast and he's kind of nerdy. 3048 03:58:26,917 --> 03:58:30,212 He is giving the devil what he wants and he is turning into a demon. 3049 03:58:31,797 --> 03:58:33,965 His friend is trying to stop him. 3050 03:58:35,425 --> 03:58:40,347 It's actually kind of a sad really like neat movie and not as well-known as it should be 3051 03:58:40,680 --> 03:58:45,727 especially for something with Robert Englund attached. Because at the time, he was huge 3052 03:58:46,269 --> 03:58:47,729 with A Nightmare on Elm Street. 3053 03:58:49,397 --> 03:58:54,694 My favorite part of that, he's at his house and he has since killed his caretaker. 3054 03:58:58,156 --> 03:59:02,661 His friend and his teacher are coming to the house to try to either stop him or save him. 3055 03:59:03,203 --> 03:59:07,791 It opens up a gateway to hell and the whole house freezes because hell froze over. 3056 03:59:08,291 --> 03:59:11,711 So it was kind of a funny little thing that Robert Englund threw in there. 3057 03:59:26,101 --> 03:59:28,478 Pet Sematary was directed by Mary Lambert. 3058 03:59:28,895 --> 03:59:35,485 One of the few female directors in horror at that time and it scared the crap out of me 3059 03:59:35,777 --> 03:59:37,112 when I was little. 3060 03:59:37,696 --> 03:59:40,073 I literally slept with the lights on for like months. 3061 03:59:40,699 --> 03:59:45,662 It's based on a novel by Stephen King and he had to draw from some aspects of his life. 3062 03:59:46,454 --> 03:59:47,831 Probably not the cat coming back. 3063 03:59:54,087 --> 03:59:59,259 But I know that they live on a country road and his son actually went out in the street 3064 03:59:59,593 --> 04:00:01,887 and he had to save him from a big old truck. 3065 04:00:03,763 --> 04:00:08,518 Gage getting run over is just still to this day the most traumatizing thing ever. 3066 04:00:09,060 --> 04:00:14,774 Like just tears every time I see that little foot and his shoe and he's so sweet. 3067 04:00:15,358 --> 04:00:20,030 Pet Sematary is one of those interesting projects because it touches on a lot of different fears. 3068 04:00:20,447 --> 04:00:27,454 You have Mary Lambert going into the fear of death and the fear of what happens next. 3069 04:00:27,787 --> 04:00:32,417 Mary Lambert also confronts these things that a lot of us don't really talk about. 3070 04:00:32,876 --> 04:00:34,586 These deep, dark family secrets. 3071 04:00:35,462 --> 04:00:40,050 Of course Zelda who terrified a whole generation of horror fans. 3072 04:00:46,556 --> 04:00:50,435 The best thing about this movie for me is Fred Gwynne and his Maine accent he's doing. 3073 04:00:51,186 --> 04:00:52,854 Sometimes dead is better. 3074 04:00:56,024 --> 04:00:58,860 Well, then why you taking all these bodies up to the pet sematary Fred? 3075 04:00:59,277 --> 04:01:00,487 Why are you doing that? 3076 04:01:01,696 --> 04:01:06,201 When little Miko Hughes like jumps out of the attic with his little knife that was a great scene. 3077 04:01:06,618 --> 04:01:09,204 I mean there's some really great scenes in that movie. 3078 04:01:10,747 --> 04:01:13,458 He's the one who basically does most of the damage. 3079 04:01:13,750 --> 04:01:15,502 This tiny, little, adorable child. 3080 04:01:16,711 --> 04:01:21,883 When Dale Midkiff basically injects Gage with the drugs to essentially kill him at the end, 3081 04:01:22,258 --> 04:01:27,639 I love when he's walking down the hallway and Gage looks at him and goes, "No fair." 3082 04:01:32,268 --> 04:01:35,814 You don't hear Freddy Krueger when he's getting killed saying no fair. 3083 04:01:36,856 --> 04:01:40,819 It was towards the end of the '80s where you were starting to see a little bit of a shift 3084 04:01:41,152 --> 04:01:43,905 in the genre and there was a little bit more of a heaviness. 3085 04:01:44,322 --> 04:01:46,950 And I think Pet Sematary perfectly reflects that. 3086 04:02:02,632 --> 04:02:07,262 Friday the 13th Part 8 is Jason Takes Manhattan and people were so excited for him to finally 3087 04:02:07,679 --> 04:02:10,348 leave Camp Crystal Lake and go to the Big Apple, New York. 3088 04:02:10,682 --> 04:02:14,686 Except he spent the whole movie on a boat and then when he got to New York it was actually 3089 04:02:15,061 --> 04:02:16,271 Vancouver most of the time. 3090 04:02:16,730 --> 04:02:19,024 My favorite kill from this one is actually kind of a low-key one. 3091 04:02:19,441 --> 04:02:21,067 It's when he kills Kelly Hu. 3092 04:02:23,111 --> 04:02:24,654 That's another kill that I like. 3093 04:02:25,030 --> 04:02:28,158 See I've done so many kills I forget about some of my favorites. 3094 04:02:28,616 --> 04:02:34,581 Killing Kelly Hu in the disco it made me look so much better because it was a very low ceiling 3095 04:02:35,081 --> 04:02:36,124 on the dance floor. 3096 04:02:36,666 --> 04:02:40,462 So that we came up with the idea of picking her up by her neck and choking her against 3097 04:02:40,754 --> 04:02:42,422 the ceiling. Very creative. 3098 04:02:43,048 --> 04:02:47,719 She was so game to do whatever we needed to do to make it look good because that couldn't 3099 04:02:48,136 --> 04:02:49,387 have been comfortable. 3100 04:02:49,846 --> 04:02:54,476 When I throw the stunt girl, she has to hit the ground without breaking her fall. 3101 04:02:54,934 --> 04:02:59,731 So, those sometimes are the hardest stunts to do because you just have to hit 3102 04:03:00,023 --> 04:03:01,232 however you hit. 3103 04:03:04,194 --> 04:03:09,032 They did do one day in New York City in Times Square and that's the best part of the movie. 3104 04:03:09,657 --> 04:03:14,162 This wide circling shot of Jason Voorhees in the middle of Times Square. 3105 04:03:18,708 --> 04:03:23,963 We have the entire Times Square area right in the middle as where we're shooting. 3106 04:03:24,422 --> 04:03:28,718 Hundreds of people are watching, the NYPD is holding people back. 3107 04:03:29,010 --> 04:03:30,595 I felt like a rock star, man. 3108 04:03:30,887 --> 04:03:35,892 I never took the mask off that whole night because I didn't want to destroy the image 3109 04:03:36,351 --> 04:03:37,477 of people watching. 3110 04:03:51,825 --> 04:03:54,327 The Stepfather was another one of those great discoveries. 3111 04:03:54,786 --> 04:03:58,748 I went to an early screening of it knowing nothing about it and was just so impressed 3112 04:03:59,040 --> 04:04:04,003 by how well it was written, how well it was pulled off, Terry O'Quinn's performance in the lead. 3113 04:04:04,629 --> 04:04:06,381 It just surprised me in so many ways. 3114 04:04:06,881 --> 04:04:13,012 If you've seen the original film, Joe Ruben arranges the bodies of his movie family in 3115 04:04:13,388 --> 04:04:20,812 a tableau of blood and body parts and gore and stillness and silence. 3116 04:04:21,187 --> 04:04:28,361 What I liked about our script in Stepfather 2 the continuation of it, is it had an extraordinary 3117 04:04:28,903 --> 04:04:30,780 macabre variety of humor. 3118 04:04:31,447 --> 04:04:34,617 A very black, sick, twisted sense of humor. 3119 04:04:37,495 --> 04:04:44,544 The scene I like best in the film is when he puts the body of Meg Foster's suitor. 3120 04:04:44,836 --> 04:04:46,379 He murders him. 3121 04:04:49,924 --> 04:04:53,970 Rolls him up in a rug, puts him in the trunk of the car and then he takes the guy's car 3122 04:04:54,345 --> 04:04:59,767 to the wrecking yard to dump it. And he spends his time in the wrecking yard wrecking the 3123 04:05:00,226 --> 04:05:05,106 the car, running into things. So it can be camouflaged and stay in the wrecking yard. 3124 04:05:08,276 --> 04:05:11,905 And we came to the point where we were going to shoot my death scene. 3125 04:05:12,739 --> 04:05:17,702 The death scene that was originally scripted and shot, shows my character going to light 3126 04:05:18,369 --> 04:05:24,709 a fire in her fireplace and Terry O'Quinn shoves her head into the gas jet. 3127 04:05:25,335 --> 04:05:29,797 And for whatever reason I don't think it necessarily worked very well. 3128 04:05:30,298 --> 04:05:33,218 I think they wanted something a little more standard. 3129 04:05:33,885 --> 04:05:36,721 They want to hang you from your wind chimes in your kitchen. 3130 04:05:40,141 --> 04:05:43,603 It was the prop man's hands that you see around my throat strangling me. 3131 04:05:44,729 --> 04:05:51,861 And I had to wear a rig and they hung me up and there's a cat and there you go. 3132 04:06:06,918 --> 04:06:09,003 Society is directed by Brian Yuzna. 3133 04:06:09,379 --> 04:06:15,093 It looks like it's a 90210 Beverly Hills rich person type of problem situation but it turns 3134 04:06:15,510 --> 04:06:18,763 out that this kids' problems are a lot worse than you might expect. 3135 04:06:24,352 --> 04:06:27,272 The script was written by Woody Keith and Rick Fry. 3136 04:06:27,647 --> 04:06:29,649 It was so paranoiac. 3137 04:06:30,024 --> 04:06:33,569 It's not just about a secret society, it's about class. 3138 04:06:35,363 --> 04:06:37,657 I never could quite call it a horror movie. 3139 04:06:37,949 --> 04:06:39,909 It was just kind of weirder than that. 3140 04:06:46,207 --> 04:06:50,837 It's a sucker punch of a movie because of course, it pretends that it's some kind of a mystery 3141 04:06:51,296 --> 04:06:53,423 and then it turns into something else. 3142 04:06:53,965 --> 04:06:59,429 This movie's got conspiratorial elements, some incestual things and a lot of body transformation 3143 04:06:59,929 --> 04:07:03,308 courtesy of Screaming Mad George and it all culminates in the shunting. 3144 04:07:03,891 --> 04:07:05,643 What's the shunting? 3145 04:07:06,019 --> 04:07:08,438 You kind of just have to see it to understand. 3146 04:07:12,066 --> 04:07:14,944 There are so many images that stick with you. 3147 04:07:15,236 --> 04:07:16,946 Like I can see it all in my head. 3148 04:07:17,238 --> 04:07:19,449 Like everybody's joining and it's just madness. 3149 04:07:19,949 --> 04:07:21,242 An orgy of amazingness. 3150 04:07:21,951 --> 04:07:26,748 The wettest, goofiest movie I've ever seen because it's just like people turning people 3151 04:07:27,040 --> 04:07:27,915 inside out. 3152 04:07:28,333 --> 04:07:30,960 It definitely showed you that flesh could be super fluid. 3153 04:07:34,380 --> 04:07:38,593 The most fun I ever had on a set was doing the shunting because I just felt like I was 3154 04:07:38,968 --> 04:07:40,970 doing what I wanted to do. 3155 04:07:44,015 --> 04:07:47,560 The kid calls his dad a butthead because back then in the '80s butthead was like 3156 04:07:47,935 --> 04:07:48,978 a big term. 3157 04:07:50,980 --> 04:07:54,025 And we thought yeah, his dad's a butthead let's make his dad a butthead. 3158 04:07:59,781 --> 04:08:02,617 We had a lot of outtakes that were hilarious. 3159 04:08:03,159 --> 04:08:06,954 I think everybody thought their dad maybe was a butthead at one time or another. 3160 04:08:07,413 --> 04:08:09,415 Brian really hit it out of the park with that film. 3161 04:08:09,916 --> 04:08:12,627 It's now finally getting the recognition that it deserves. 3162 04:08:15,963 --> 04:08:21,135 A lot of my friends were actually kind of embarrassed for me when I showed them Society. 3163 04:08:21,761 --> 04:08:22,970 I thought it was great. 3164 04:08:28,434 --> 04:08:33,731 People think horror movies are kind of mindless but in actuality they're a way of making statements 3165 04:08:34,065 --> 04:08:37,318 about things that people really are afraid to talk about. 3166 04:08:37,777 --> 04:08:41,531 I always think that horror movies are very healthy because they're a way of taking those 3167 04:08:42,031 --> 04:08:46,244 fears and exorcising them in a way from your system. 3168 04:08:46,994 --> 04:08:51,749 I think the whole reason for repeated viewing of horror movies particularly the '80s horror 3169 04:08:52,041 --> 04:08:54,127 movies was that it was very cathartic. 3170 04:08:54,752 --> 04:08:56,003 They speak to the emotions. 3171 04:08:56,671 --> 04:09:00,800 This variety of emotions not just the dark emotions of fear and dread. 3172 04:09:01,092 --> 04:09:03,261 It's adrenaline, it's a drug. 3173 04:09:04,303 --> 04:09:06,222 You know, it's people love that. 3174 04:09:06,597 --> 04:09:12,145 The level of artistry is impressive undeniably and I think that if you look at the filmmakers 3175 04:09:12,645 --> 04:09:17,400 today that are working hard to uphold some of the more organic aspects of that work that 3176 04:09:17,817 --> 04:09:23,489 came out of the '80s. It is definitely homage and it is definitely growing completely out of 3177 04:09:24,198 --> 04:09:27,910 boundary-pushing and advancements that came out of the '80s that hold up if you go 3178 04:09:28,202 --> 04:09:29,495 back and watch them today. 3179 04:09:30,121 --> 04:09:35,543 The great thing about genre directors in the '80s, they were thinking what can we make? 3180 04:09:35,960 --> 04:09:37,462 Not what can we remake? 3181 04:09:38,045 --> 04:09:42,967 We're in a degenerate era today where all they think about is what can we remake? 3182 04:09:43,593 --> 04:09:45,720 Often titles from the '80s. 3183 04:09:46,262 --> 04:09:48,473 They were all about the original script. 3184 04:09:48,973 --> 04:09:52,977 They were all about the original idea, they were all about what hasn't been done before, 3185 04:09:53,603 --> 04:09:56,189 they were all about what will Hollywood refuse to make? 3186 04:09:56,647 --> 04:09:57,815 That's what we want to make. 3187 04:09:58,149 --> 04:10:02,111 There's nobody willing to get down and dirty the way they were in the '80s. 3188 04:10:02,403 --> 04:10:08,493 The problem today is everybody's trying to please all the people at all the same time 3189 04:10:09,118 --> 04:10:10,244 and you get baby food. 3190 04:10:10,745 --> 04:10:12,455 You can live on baby food but it's very boring. 3191 04:10:12,914 --> 04:10:18,085 Troma is the jalapeño pepper on the cultural pizza and there are a lot of people who want 3192 04:10:18,586 --> 04:10:21,047 jalapeño peppers on their cultural pizza, right? 3193 04:10:21,547 --> 04:10:24,800 I think as I get older, I don't subscribe to the term guilty pleasure, maybe when I 3194 04:10:25,259 --> 04:10:28,346 was a kid just because I was trying to defend myself and my tastes a little bit more. 3195 04:10:28,888 --> 04:10:32,266 Now that we have social media and everybody is a film critic, we all have these really 3196 04:10:32,642 --> 04:10:38,356 oddball tastes and we should all understand that while I might like Chopping Mall, I could 3197 04:10:38,856 --> 04:10:40,441 definitely understand why you wouldn't like Chopping Mall. 3198 04:10:41,067 --> 04:10:42,151 Just love what you love man. 3199 04:10:42,568 --> 04:10:43,903 It's nostalgia. 3200 04:10:44,195 --> 04:10:48,366 It's just well, I saw it when I was 11 so it's great because there's a certain lizard 3201 04:10:48,783 --> 04:10:51,160 part of your brain that's never going to be able to look critically at that movie that 3202 04:10:51,494 --> 04:10:52,578 did it for you at that certain age. 3203 04:10:53,037 --> 04:10:54,080 And we all have that movie. 3204 04:10:54,455 --> 04:10:58,751 By that same token, the classics are decided upon by the masses. 3205 04:11:00,127 --> 04:11:05,591 It's cool to watch these movies that we liked at the time get this critical reassessment 3206 04:11:06,092 --> 04:11:09,971 after a number of years and to see what gets sort of like decided as canon. 3207 04:11:11,806 --> 04:11:15,851 There's a real dilemma right now in terms of what I've been calling the digital divides. 3208 04:11:16,310 --> 04:11:21,649 Stuff was on VHS in the '80s and if it didn't make the leap to DVD then the odds are that 3209 04:11:22,024 --> 04:11:25,820 much less that it's going to make the leap to Blu-ray and now the odds are even much 3210 04:11:26,279 --> 04:11:28,864 less that somebody's going to like sell that transfer streaming rights somewhere. 3211 04:11:29,240 --> 04:11:32,952 And there is stuff that has vanished almost. 3212 04:11:33,244 --> 04:11:34,078 It's film history. 3213 04:11:34,537 --> 04:11:38,958 We talk about how the silent film era, how 75 or 8O percent of the films are all gone. 3214 04:11:39,250 --> 04:11:40,209 How could that happen? 3215 04:11:40,501 --> 04:11:41,961 But we're letting it happen again. 3216 04:11:42,420 --> 04:11:49,093 It's almost our duty as human beings to carry forth stories and not only as history but 3217 04:11:49,385 --> 04:11:52,138 as just talking about the human conditions. 3218 04:11:52,638 --> 04:11:56,809 It gives generations the opportunity to transfer information. 3219 04:11:57,351 --> 04:12:02,648 Regarding what we think is bad and evil and what good society looks like, what bad society 3220 04:12:03,065 --> 04:12:07,278 looks like. I think that information is crucial to pass down. 3221 04:12:07,612 --> 04:12:09,447 Maybe that's the job of the horror movie. 327222

Can't find what you're looking for?
Get subtitles in any language from opensubtitles.com, and translate them here.