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Would you like to inspect the original subtitles? These are the user uploaded subtitles that are being translated: 1 00:00:06,000 --> 00:00:12,074 Support us and become VIP member to remove all ads from www.OpenSubtitles.org 2 00:00:18,393 --> 00:00:22,481 Do you ever wonder about the different ways of dying? 3 00:00:22,481 --> 00:00:24,691 you know, violently. 4 00:00:26,527 --> 00:00:31,406 Nostalgia plays such a heavy part in, you know, what you grow up with. 5 00:00:31,406 --> 00:00:34,326 The thing about horror that I really really love, 6 00:00:34,326 --> 00:00:36,453 it was just kind of counterculture, 7 00:00:36,453 --> 00:00:40,457 “Fuck you" attitude, and it was something that your parents hated. 8 00:00:41,667 --> 00:00:44,711 Sex, drugs and rock and roll in the '80s. Right? Well, 9 00:00:44,711 --> 00:00:46,463 it became a lot more than that. 10 00:00:46,505 --> 00:00:49,383 We were rock stars in the '80s. 11 00:00:49,424 --> 00:00:51,385 We were busier than we'd ever been. 12 00:00:51,385 --> 00:00:54,388 The amount of horror movies that came out in the '80s was enormous. 13 00:00:54,429 --> 00:00:57,683 The output was insane worldwide. 14 00:00:59,935 --> 00:01:03,939 Horror films really did open the floodgates 15 00:01:04,356 --> 00:01:06,650 Horror, splatter, gore. 16 00:01:06,692 --> 00:01:10,487 Great Grand Guignol. That horror stew. 17 00:01:10,487 --> 00:01:16,493 Why did it affect me so strongly? I mean, it really changed everything. 18 00:01:16,535 --> 00:01:20,539 A good horror film can be scary, but it can also make you laugh. 19 00:01:20,539 --> 00:01:24,459 And it just picked something in my brain. 20 00:01:24,459 --> 00:01:28,839 You're taken on this wild ride emotionally. 21 00:01:28,880 --> 00:01:30,841 You're being terrified, you're laughing, they relax you, 22 00:01:30,882 --> 00:01:32,509 they make you laugh, and they scare you again. 23 00:01:32,551 --> 00:01:35,429 I'm a scaredy cat. 24 00:01:35,470 --> 00:01:37,139 When I see a good horror movie, 25 00:01:37,139 --> 00:01:41,560 the first thing I want to do when I get out of there is I want to fight or fuck. 26 00:01:43,895 --> 00:01:45,272 I look now at the '80s, 27 00:01:45,314 --> 00:01:49,484 there's never going to be another time like it. that's for damn sure. 28 00:01:49,484 --> 00:01:53,488 Hey kids, welcome to prime time! 29 00:02:42,329 --> 00:02:45,415 The key to understanding what made the films at the '80s so great, 30 00:02:45,457 --> 00:02:50,379 is to understand the influences that all the filmmakers had as kids. 31 00:02:50,379 --> 00:02:55,509 It was clear that these filmmakers were showing love for the movies of the past. 32 00:02:55,509 --> 00:02:58,720 There's a cycle - people who grew up on something, 33 00:02:58,720 --> 00:03:01,348 relay that back for a younger generation. 34 00:03:01,390 --> 00:03:04,518 So it's always this wheel turning of like what's popular at one point, 35 00:03:04,559 --> 00:03:05,686 comes back around again. Good ones became 36 00:03:05,686 --> 00:03:07,312 all-time classics while the bad ones became cult favorites. 37 00:03:16,863 --> 00:03:22,369 When I was doing “Movie Macabre", I saw myself as kind of a librarian [laughter], 38 00:03:22,369 --> 00:03:25,747 exposing a new generation of new people to these horror 39 00:03:25,747 --> 00:03:29,459 films that I grew up with and that I loved when I was young. 40 00:03:29,459 --> 00:03:35,465 I think it was important to curate these movies from the past for a new audience. 41 00:03:38,385 --> 00:03:41,722 I was eight years old in 1954 when "The Creature 42 00:03:41,722 --> 00:03:45,350 from the Black Lagoon" hit the movie theaters, okay? 43 00:03:49,813 --> 00:03:55,402 But those days I believed that monsters were real - Frankenstein, The Wolf Man, they were real. 44 00:03:55,402 --> 00:04:01,283 It's not until I saw "Man of a Thousand Faces" that that showed me Oh, somebody creates this stuff. 45 00:04:01,283 --> 00:04:04,828 Yes, Lon Chaney was all of these: The Hunchback of Notre Dame, 46 00:04:04,870 --> 00:04:07,289 The Miracle Man, the Phantom of the Opera. 47 00:04:07,289 --> 00:04:09,666 If somebody says "oh, that's an old movie." Well, 48 00:04:09,666 --> 00:04:11,418 it's not old if you haven't seen it. 49 00:04:11,460 --> 00:04:15,297 I fell in love with horror when I was a young kid, 50 00:04:15,297 --> 00:04:18,258 bride of Frankenstein was my favorite. 51 00:04:18,300 --> 00:04:21,303 She's alive! Alive! 52 00:04:24,264 --> 00:04:31,563 In the early '50s, I saw "Thing From Another World“. Howard Hawks. Oh my god, 53 00:04:31,605 --> 00:04:34,316 that ah, jeez, I loved that. 54 00:04:36,318 --> 00:04:41,490 It was kind of serendipitous my life in horror movies. 55 00:04:41,490 --> 00:04:46,411 The very first horror movie that I remember seeing was actually 56 00:04:46,411 --> 00:04:51,291 a science fiction film called "it Came From Outer Space" in 3D. 57 00:04:51,333 --> 00:04:55,420 And that meant a gigantic impression, because of the 3D process. A 58 00:04:55,462 --> 00:05:00,258 Meteor in the beginning came out of the screen and blew up in my little face. 59 00:05:00,258 --> 00:05:07,224 I ran screaming, as a kid that's - I just couldn't get enough of. 60 00:05:07,265 --> 00:05:12,354 Horror of Dracula, Christopher Lee and Peter Cushing. 61 00:05:16,775 --> 00:05:22,197 The iconic first reveal of Dracula with the bloodshot contact lenses and the blood around 62 00:05:22,197 --> 00:05:27,452 his mouth when he snarls at Jonathan Harker, it's just, I'll never forget that image. 63 00:05:27,452 --> 00:05:30,831 Vampires, werewolves were always - they're staples. They're 64 00:05:30,872 --> 00:05:34,459 the original movies to show the manifestation of our monsters. 65 00:05:37,796 --> 00:05:41,591 The film that gave me nightmares for several years, and this is hard to admit, 66 00:05:41,591 --> 00:05:44,302 was "Abbott and Costello Meet Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde." 67 00:05:44,302 --> 00:05:49,724 That movie scared the crap out of me. And you know, it's funny when I look back at it, I 68 00:05:49,766 --> 00:05:55,397 see elements of "Re-Animator" in that film, to turn into Mr. Hyde by getting an injection. 69 00:05:55,397 --> 00:05:59,067 So these guys with syringes are running around, 70 00:05:59,067 --> 00:06:03,280 you know, in this movie, very much like “Re-Animator". 71 00:06:11,204 --> 00:06:17,794 "The Brain That Wouldn't Die". I was eight. It's really sort of a 72 00:06:17,836 --> 00:06:24,426 early echo of "Re-Animator". All she would say is: "Let me die." 73 00:06:28,221 --> 00:06:31,224 But the idea was horrifying to me. 74 00:06:31,266 --> 00:06:37,355 The first R-rated horror movie I ever saw was "The Omen“. 75 00:06:37,355 --> 00:06:39,190 It's all for you. 76 00:06:39,190 --> 00:06:44,279 I was 13 years old, my dad took me. I was raised Catholic, 77 00:06:44,279 --> 00:06:50,243 so that decapitation of David Warner it had a huge impression on me. 78 00:06:55,332 --> 00:07:00,211 And I've decapitated many people in my movies over the years. 79 00:07:05,175 --> 00:07:08,178 I think it's one of the finest ways of murdering someone. 80 00:07:12,182 --> 00:07:16,394 I was a big horror guy. In the '60s, 81 00:07:16,394 --> 00:07:25,278 we had Chiller Theater. That was my Saturday night go-to, I loved that stuff. 82 00:07:25,278 --> 00:07:33,244 My mother let me watch "The Birds" when it came on television. I remember saying, 83 00:07:33,244 --> 00:07:40,335 "How could you let me watch that?“ [laughter] But my mom was super cool. 84 00:07:42,712 --> 00:07:48,385 "Psycho". I was 10 years old, my parents took me. I don't know if they 85 00:07:48,426 --> 00:07:54,265 had a clue what we were going to see, but it certainly impacted my life. 86 00:07:54,432 --> 00:07:56,267 We all go a little mad sometimes. 87 00:07:58,269 --> 00:08:03,191 We're all ellllng lhere with our Chloe Ben Ben: and our hot 88 00:08:03,233 --> 00:08:09,239 buttered popcorn and our Good & Plenty, you know, waiting for the movie. 89 00:08:09,239 --> 00:08:15,286 That was like this great fan-boy memory for me of how important that was to us. 90 00:08:20,709 --> 00:08:26,297 I'm a "Silly Goose" [laughter], I'm telling you I love that old scary stuff. 91 00:08:44,232 --> 00:08:49,696 Dario Argento kicked off the 1980s with “lnferno", which was a continuation of his "Mother of 92 00:08:49,696 --> 00:08:55,285 Tears" trilogy after “Suspiria“ basically took us into an apartment building in New York City, 93 00:08:55,285 --> 00:08:58,204 and I think shows how the sort of desire to infiltrate 94 00:08:58,204 --> 00:09:01,166 into American cinema was very much there and prevalent. 95 00:09:01,207 --> 00:09:06,296 It feels like an amalgamation of a lot of Argento movies. For me, probably the biggest and 96 00:09:06,337 --> 00:09:11,342 most impressive set piece in that film is the underwater sequence that we see early on, 97 00:09:11,342 --> 00:09:16,598 where it feels impossibly long, you're kind of holding your breath with her. And yet it's so 98 00:09:16,598 --> 00:09:22,312 beautiful and so tranquil. And it's such a fun juxtaposition against everything else in that movie. 99 00:09:28,610 --> 00:09:33,364 And with "|nferno", you don't really get a full on viewing of the way. 100 00:09:33,364 --> 00:09:38,119 She gets sort of these glimpses of her and her hands and the cauldron. 101 00:09:38,119 --> 00:09:40,538 Argento, as opposed to just sort of showing his cards, 102 00:09:40,538 --> 00:09:43,166 he still plays with viewers and kind of still holds back. 103 00:09:49,547 --> 00:09:53,218 There's definitely moments of animal cruelty in 104 00:09:53,259 --> 00:09:58,389 Inferno that I think makes it uncomfortable for a lot of folks. 105 00:09:58,389 --> 00:10:02,602 Ultimately, "lnferno" wraps up with the reveal of the 106 00:10:02,644 --> 00:10:07,232 witch and then basically the building ends up in flames, 107 00:10:07,232 --> 00:10:11,569 which is very similar to how "Suspiria" ends, but then "lnferno" kind of 108 00:10:11,569 --> 00:10:16,157 takes it to another level with sort of death incarnate making an appearance. 109 00:10:21,121 --> 00:10:25,708 Inferno is Argento like really flexing his muscles, like he's got a couple hits under his belt, 110 00:10:25,708 --> 00:10:30,296 he's got some money, and he's going for it in the early '80s. "|nferno" is one of those films. 111 00:10:50,233 --> 00:10:55,822 "Humanoids From the Deep“. This is top notch exploitation from my buddy, 112 00:10:55,864 --> 00:10:58,366 Roger Corman. This one features 113 00:10:58,366 --> 00:11:04,205 fishy mutants trying to accost women so that they can be fruitful and multiply, 114 00:11:04,205 --> 00:11:06,124 not very PC is it? 115 00:11:09,586 --> 00:11:15,466 Corman‘s mantra for the film was literally the monsters need to kill all the men 116 00:11:15,466 --> 00:11:21,139 and rape all the women. It was actually directed by a woman, Barbara Peeters, 117 00:11:21,181 --> 00:11:24,392 now, whether or not Corman hired her to deflect some of the 118 00:11:24,392 --> 00:11:28,188 criticism from the movie's more exploitative elements - I don't know. 119 00:11:28,188 --> 00:11:32,650 I do know that he requested that a bunch of more violence and nudity 120 00:11:32,650 --> 00:11:37,197 be added in post production, which she was not happy with them about. 121 00:11:37,197 --> 00:11:42,410 The humanoid costumes are actually pretty cool rather than just the typical, 122 00:11:42,410 --> 00:11:46,331 you know, "Creature from the Black Lagoon" style fishman, 123 00:11:48,166 --> 00:11:52,670 “Humanoids From the Deep" was done so quickly. And it was a very low budget 124 00:11:52,670 --> 00:11:57,592 film on the producers part. I ended up playing a humanoid, every time three hours 125 00:11:57,592 --> 00:12:00,511 to get into the suit and three hours to get out of it, because of all the, 126 00:12:00,511 --> 00:12:03,181 you know, putting the slimy seaweed to hide unfinished parts on it. 127 00:12:07,018 --> 00:12:10,480 The finale of the movie just goes completely balls to the wall. 128 00:12:10,480 --> 00:12:14,108 It's fishmen killing people, they're ripping bikinis off of women. 129 00:12:14,150 --> 00:12:16,611 Corman was like, “You know what? This movie is rated R, 130 00:12:16,611 --> 00:12:18,112 we're going to earn that rating.“ 131 00:12:19,530 --> 00:12:23,034 Barbara really liked the way I took bullet hits. And so 132 00:12:23,076 --> 00:12:27,038 every time you see a humanoid get shot in that movie, it's me. 133 00:12:30,083 --> 00:12:35,838 "Humanoids From the Deep" is a better creature feature than you'd expect from Roger 134 00:12:35,838 --> 00:12:40,635 Corman. The end stinger is pretty much an "Alien Chestburster" rip off, 135 00:12:40,677 --> 00:12:42,262 but it's still fun. 136 00:12:57,568 --> 00:13:02,490 Two depraved brothers kidnap friends who are on a camping 137 00:13:02,490 --> 00:13:08,121 trip and then torture and rape them. This movie is very deranged. 138 00:13:08,121 --> 00:13:15,044 It's very depraved. It's very much something that you could never make in this day and age. Ike and 139 00:13:15,044 --> 00:13:22,051 Addley are just two filthy rednecks just psycho monsters and of course all orchestrated by the mom. 140 00:13:22,093 --> 00:13:26,139 [laughter] Darlings you have 141 00:13:26,180 --> 00:13:30,226 made your mother very proud. 142 00:13:30,226 --> 00:13:34,188 The house is just disgusting, it's cluttered. They eat like pigs, 143 00:13:34,188 --> 00:13:39,152 they eat like slobs and she thinks it's funny because she's the fucked up mother. 144 00:13:39,152 --> 00:13:46,993 It's just -- it's a real -- it's a dirty movie. One of the best deaths of all times when they finally do 145 00:13:46,993 --> 00:13:50,705 escape, pouring the drain down his throat -- they 146 00:13:50,705 --> 00:13:55,043 just vomiting up like red you assume it's his entrails. 147 00:13:58,004 --> 00:14:02,342 There's another amazing scene where they're trying to escape down the side 148 00:14:02,383 --> 00:14:07,013 of the house with a sleeping bag and the laces are just cutting into her palms. 149 00:14:07,013 --> 00:14:11,017 It just looks real, it looks gross, and like what would you do, you know, it's 150 00:14:11,017 --> 00:14:15,063 your friend. It does have some humor but once again it's very black dark humor. 151 00:14:15,063 --> 00:14:19,108 I swear sometimes you boys are just like little savages [laughing]. 152 00:14:19,108 --> 00:14:24,906 It's more of a social commentary gore and comedy and -- but it's a masterpiece, Charles Kaufman 153 00:14:24,906 --> 00:14:31,120 wrote it and directed it. In the '80s, when it came out, it had a full page ad in the New York Times. 154 00:14:31,120 --> 00:14:36,542 Full page, and - and was distributed as if it was a - a - a, you know, an MGM movie. It 155 00:14:36,584 --> 00:14:42,131 was distributed by an independent, they put a lot of money into the -- when it came out. 156 00:14:42,131 --> 00:14:43,841 It was-- would never happen today, 157 00:14:43,883 --> 00:14:46,969 but “Mother's Day" had at least 100 theaters when it opened. 158 00:14:48,971 --> 00:14:53,851 As horrific as it sounds, rape in the '70s and early '80s in horror movies was used as a plot 159 00:14:53,851 --> 00:14:58,981 device, specifically in "Last House On the Left", I mean the whole movie is based around that. 160 00:14:58,981 --> 00:15:03,861 You would never see that now and nor should you see that now, but "Mother's Day“ is the 161 00:15:03,861 --> 00:15:09,033 same for that, where it's just over the top horrific things happening to these poor women, 162 00:15:09,033 --> 00:15:11,536 that then have to go get the revenge by murdering 163 00:15:11,536 --> 00:15:14,038 the people who did these horrible things to them. 164 00:15:16,916 --> 00:15:21,212 It's hard to watch, because yeah, they get to comeuppance in the end, 165 00:15:21,212 --> 00:15:24,006 but was it worth it? Like these poor people. 166 00:15:26,342 --> 00:15:30,596 You don't leave those movies going, "Eh, yeah, whatever." you go like, "Wow", that 167 00:15:30,596 --> 00:15:35,101 really made you feel something and made you leave a piece of yourself with that movie. 168 00:15:40,898 --> 00:15:44,861 Once a picture like "Prom Night" came out and made a lot of money, the genre of the slasher 169 00:15:44,861 --> 00:15:49,031 film, which - which had really kind of started with Halloween, but nobody really called it that. 170 00:15:49,031 --> 00:15:52,952 But once "Prom Night" came out, it was a big hit, and the "Terror Trains" and all 171 00:15:52,994 --> 00:15:56,914 the other following pictures that were made, it became a viable genre unto itself. 172 00:15:56,956 --> 00:16:02,086 Our next movie is an exercise in gruesome stupidity. Now, you might ask what is gruesome stupidity? 173 00:16:02,086 --> 00:16:07,091 That's when everybody in the movie is stupid, and they're also either dead or covered in blood. 174 00:16:07,091 --> 00:16:10,011 This next movie is a horrible example of that. 175 00:16:11,888 --> 00:16:17,393 You know, it's like "Murder on the Orient Express" with teenagers. And the movie itself it's almost structured like 176 00:16:17,393 --> 00:16:22,982 an anthology. Everybody has their own little individual story line until they all kind of start to collide together, 177 00:16:23,024 --> 00:16:27,069 and you finally get where the terror train was going. 178 00:16:28,988 --> 00:16:34,785 That's when I started recognizing Jamie Lee Curtis. I just - I was just like, she's in 179 00:16:34,785 --> 00:16:41,042 everything. Those few years after "Halloween", she was it. You know, she was the final girl. 180 00:16:45,880 --> 00:16:48,466 Jamie Lee Curtis, 181 00:16:48,466 --> 00:16:56,182 she's a terrific every woman. She was an action figure. 182 00:16:56,891 --> 00:17:04,106 And what I do remember is how creepy the killer was. There was this ambiguous, 183 00:17:04,148 --> 00:17:08,069 androgynous sensitive him that as a young 184 00:17:08,110 --> 00:17:13,866 kid who was being picked on a lot, I could see myself in that, 185 00:17:13,908 --> 00:17:18,996 you didn't necessarily see yourself in the survivors. 186 00:17:20,873 --> 00:17:23,960 I said, "Move off, sir." 187 00:17:23,960 --> 00:17:28,965 You saw yourself in the people who were being antagonized. 188 00:17:30,883 --> 00:17:36,180 The mask on the killer, just to see through -- those are the kind of 189 00:17:36,222 --> 00:17:41,852 same type of mask from "Sweet Alice" actually, it was that kind of vibe. 190 00:17:41,852 --> 00:17:44,188 If you like early '80s Jamie Lee Curtis - and who doesn't? 191 00:17:44,188 --> 00:17:45,106 - it's worth the watch. 192 00:18:03,833 --> 00:18:05,835 The Nature Runs Amok movies of the '80s. 193 00:18:14,927 --> 00:18:17,930 Probably my favorite sub genre of horror. 194 00:18:19,849 --> 00:18:27,523 As a kid, I remember all of my friends telling the urban legend about this, nobody I knew wanted 195 00:18:27,565 --> 00:18:35,031 to go to New York City, because to them, the sewer system was just crawling with rogue pets. 196 00:18:36,324 --> 00:18:39,952 I just love all the humor in "Alligator", I mean, there's some outrageous 197 00:18:39,952 --> 00:18:43,914 moments like the alligator in the swimming pool with the kid walking the plank, 198 00:18:43,914 --> 00:18:48,044 the running joke about Robert Forster‘s thinning hair. 199 00:18:48,044 --> 00:18:52,965 You need to see a hair stylist. They let your hair grow down and whip the cross. 200 00:18:52,965 --> 00:18:57,386 There are just so many little moments that humanize the characters and also provide 201 00:18:57,386 --> 00:19:01,974 a good counter point. That's another movie that mixes horror and comedy really well. 202 00:19:05,811 --> 00:19:09,982 The thing that I remember the most about this movie 203 00:19:09,982 --> 00:19:14,654 was how realistic the the gator looked. I mean, the god 204 00:19:14,654 --> 00:19:20,868 damn thing's mouth was enormous! And then every time it would eat somebody, 205 00:19:20,910 --> 00:19:23,996 it just felt like you could feel it. 206 00:19:25,998 --> 00:19:32,797 I mean, just this slamming down and you're like [shrieking], 207 00:19:32,838 --> 00:19:38,344 it always made my skin crawl. Robert Forster is 208 00:19:38,344 --> 00:19:44,141 like he's up trying to get out of the manhole cover 209 00:19:44,183 --> 00:19:50,940 and it's stuck and he's just giving it as much as he can. 210 00:19:50,940 --> 00:19:57,279 And then you see the gator coming up behind him like oh, okay, so they can just climb ladders now? 211 00:19:57,321 --> 00:20:04,078 This is horseshit. I can just remember the panic as a kid, going, "Get out of there! Get out of there!" 212 00:20:10,209 --> 00:20:17,007 Very tense moment for a 10 year old [laughing]. 213 00:20:29,061 --> 00:20:36,360 Ken Russell just made the weirdest greatest movies in that time. I think he's totally underrated. I 214 00:20:36,360 --> 00:20:44,076 remember, in “Altered States" the big gag, the really cool thing was with the sensory deprivation tank. 215 00:20:47,037 --> 00:20:52,168 The storyline was really, I thought, intellectually challenging, 216 00:20:52,168 --> 00:20:58,090 and William Hurt, it will always be my favorite actor from that period of time. 217 00:20:58,090 --> 00:21:01,177 And then he did drugs in the sensory deprivation tank. Well, 218 00:21:01,177 --> 00:21:03,095 that sounds like a lot of fun. Right? 219 00:21:03,095 --> 00:21:05,306 That sounds like something you wanted to do. 220 00:21:07,099 --> 00:21:12,146 He has these horrible contortions that either is really happening to him, 221 00:21:12,146 --> 00:21:14,231 or he's imagining happening to him. 222 00:21:19,153 --> 00:21:21,113 “Altered States" was one of the first movies 223 00:21:21,113 --> 00:21:23,157 I saw that had like that crazy makeup effect, 224 00:21:23,157 --> 00:21:25,159 where the arm bubbles. 225 00:21:29,163 --> 00:21:30,498 This whole bladder technology, 226 00:21:30,498 --> 00:21:33,250 I think it actually began with "Altered States" in the '80s, 227 00:21:33,292 --> 00:21:36,212 Dick Smith's work. And it was still, you know, 228 00:21:36,212 --> 00:21:38,756 a groundbreaking technique to take skin, 229 00:21:38,756 --> 00:21:40,841 and have that skin change and be able to 230 00:21:40,841 --> 00:21:43,260 swell and do things that we hadn't seen before. 231 00:21:47,264 --> 00:21:50,893 And he transforms into some kind of a primal 232 00:21:50,893 --> 00:21:55,272 being that only indulges his own elemental appetites, 233 00:21:59,276 --> 00:22:03,280 There are things that happen when you're exploring these altered states, 234 00:22:03,322 --> 00:22:07,451 that are unexplainable and could be liberating, could be terrifying. 235 00:22:09,286 --> 00:22:13,666 At the end, when he's slamming around the room, changing from, 236 00:22:13,666 --> 00:22:17,294 you know, one state to another, is he imagining it? 237 00:22:17,294 --> 00:22:19,505 ls he actually becoming this creature? 238 00:22:19,505 --> 00:22:26,303 It's a mind blow in the best kind of way, but also cautionary tale, right? 239 00:22:26,303 --> 00:22:28,430 Which all great horror films are - cautionary tales. 240 00:22:28,430 --> 00:22:32,309 I recommend it. I'm gonna go make my son sit through that, 241 00:22:32,351 --> 00:22:34,311 because he's a senior in high school and I 242 00:22:34,353 --> 00:22:36,397 want to make sure that he never does drugs. 243 00:22:54,498 --> 00:22:57,126 If you, as I did, in the '80s walked into a movie theater 244 00:22:57,126 --> 00:22:59,920 and didn't know you're walking into an Italian horror movie, 245 00:22:59,920 --> 00:23:02,673 you were kind of caught wondering what the hell you just walked into. 246 00:23:02,673 --> 00:23:10,472 Because it's just a little different. I mean, they're truly foreign films, right? 247 00:23:10,472 --> 00:23:12,474 It's - it's foreign to our experience. 248 00:23:15,477 --> 00:23:19,481 The Italian culture: They love horror, they respect it much more than Americans. 249 00:23:19,481 --> 00:23:22,359 They respect it as a genre like the western or 250 00:23:22,359 --> 00:23:25,487 the gangster film or the film noir or the mystery. 251 00:23:25,487 --> 00:23:28,949 I think there is a reaction to the inherent fascism 252 00:23:28,949 --> 00:23:32,703 that was in or leftover in those cultures at that time. 253 00:23:32,703 --> 00:23:38,751 Italy was also sort of coming out from under a conservative authoritarian regime. 254 00:23:41,086 --> 00:23:45,549 When it comes to Italian filmmakers during the '80s, 255 00:23:45,549 --> 00:23:48,677 I think the three titans of Italian cinema were 256 00:23:48,677 --> 00:23:52,723 Lamberto Bava, Lucio Fulci and of course, Dario Argento. 257 00:23:52,723 --> 00:23:56,560 Argento's is very operatic, it's very colorful, 258 00:23:56,602 --> 00:24:00,648 it's a sensory experience with sound and color and set pieces. 259 00:24:00,648 --> 00:24:05,444 “Suspiria“ is one of my favorite 260 00:24:05,486 --> 00:24:11,742 movies. Not only because of the storyline, 261 00:24:11,742 --> 00:24:16,622 but also because of Dario Argento's color palette is so insane [laughing] 262 00:24:16,622 --> 00:24:23,754 and the kills are amazing in it. 263 00:24:23,754 --> 00:24:30,719 Opera to me is a classic Dario Argento's opera. He's a visual stylist, okay. 264 00:24:30,719 --> 00:24:33,263 The shot through the people in the door, 265 00:24:33,305 --> 00:24:36,850 when the guy gets the bullet and it takes out the phone! 266 00:24:36,850 --> 00:24:38,894 That's incredible stuff! Okay. 267 00:24:44,692 --> 00:24:46,902 To me, Dario is a volcano of the mind. 268 00:24:51,281 --> 00:24:56,829 Lamberto Bava was the wild card of the Italian maestros of horse in mid '80s. 269 00:24:56,829 --> 00:25:00,249 He was the guy who was going to take you on some really crazy journeys, 270 00:25:00,249 --> 00:25:03,836 that you possibly could not have ever expected you would go on. 271 00:25:04,253 --> 00:25:07,965 he would just take big swings that would connect in very unique ways. 272 00:25:15,806 --> 00:25:20,894 And then you have somebody like Lucio Fulci, who was sort of the maestro of 273 00:25:20,894 --> 00:25:26,817 these really over the top effects truly gory movies, 274 00:25:26,817 --> 00:25:29,945 where you could almost just feel the residue on your skin. 275 00:25:35,325 --> 00:25:39,872 Fulci is the weirdest to me because he doesn't give a shit about reality. 276 00:25:39,872 --> 00:25:42,041 He is creating a weird surreal hallucination for you 277 00:25:42,041 --> 00:25:45,961 and Fulci clearly has some kind of eye fetish [chuckles], 278 00:25:45,961 --> 00:25:52,009 where he needs to do eye trauma every time and it's horrible. 279 00:25:52,051 --> 00:25:55,929 What's more horrifying than to be stabbed in the eye. 280 00:26:02,019 --> 00:26:08,067 [laughing] They're into eyeballs, a lot of eyeballs. 281 00:26:08,067 --> 00:26:12,071 The Italians just went there immediately [laughing]. Boom. 282 00:26:15,491 --> 00:26:18,202 Argento did a little bit of that too, especially with "Opera", 283 00:26:18,202 --> 00:26:21,997 where you have a character who's completely defenseless, 284 00:26:21,997 --> 00:26:26,210 and is forced to watch these horrific macabre events. 285 00:26:26,210 --> 00:26:31,048 They have needles taped right underneath their eyes, so if they close their eyes, 286 00:26:31,048 --> 00:26:33,634 they will shred their eyelids, which to me, 287 00:26:33,634 --> 00:26:37,012 I can't think of a more terrifying scenario to be put in. 288 00:26:37,054 --> 00:26:41,558 Italian directors were sort of challenging us as viewers, with the eye trauma 289 00:26:41,558 --> 00:26:45,229 being like, well, if you're going to watch this, you know, this is what you get. 290 00:26:49,066 --> 00:26:51,485 reflective of our willingness to sit there 291 00:26:51,485 --> 00:26:54,154 and bear witness to a lot of this really crazy 292 00:26:54,154 --> 00:26:56,532 and over the top gore that they were willing 293 00:26:56,573 --> 00:26:59,118 to put into their movies for our entertainment. 294 00:26:59,118 --> 00:27:03,205 and "The eyes are the window to the soul". 295 00:27:03,205 --> 00:27:07,334 [snaps fingers] Bingo. And you know those smart Italians had thought about that. 296 00:27:13,090 --> 00:27:16,552 My heart with the Italians is in the style, the stylized horror, 297 00:27:16,552 --> 00:27:20,180 not that I have anything against Italian cannibal horror [laughing], 298 00:27:20,180 --> 00:27:24,226 because I know how influential it is and I know how hardcore it is, 299 00:27:24,226 --> 00:27:29,148 and I know what it represents in the world of - of horror, splatter, gore. 300 00:27:29,189 --> 00:27:35,279 I just was so taken with the sort of stylistics of the Italians. 301 00:27:41,201 --> 00:27:44,288 I am totally in love with Italian Giallo. 302 00:27:44,288 --> 00:27:48,208 There's a different reality in Italian Giallo films. 303 00:27:50,210 --> 00:27:52,504 The reality doesn't have to be so airtight. 304 00:27:54,214 --> 00:27:57,342 One of the things that fans say to me all the time is they go, 305 00:27:57,342 --> 00:28:00,470 “l love those Italian movies! They're just crazy! They don't make any sense!" 306 00:28:00,470 --> 00:28:04,266 Um, sorry - yeah, they do. 307 00:28:04,266 --> 00:28:06,476 But it's based on their culture, 308 00:28:06,518 --> 00:28:10,480 not ours. They make perfect sense within their culture. 309 00:28:12,274 --> 00:28:15,277 Giallo really takes your expectations and then completely 310 00:28:15,277 --> 00:28:18,488 obliterates them and comes at you in a totally different way. 311 00:28:18,488 --> 00:28:21,783 There's definitely motifs that we saw in Giallo movies, 312 00:28:21,783 --> 00:28:25,287 you'd have the the mystery killer who is stalking somebody, 313 00:28:25,329 --> 00:28:27,331 most of the time they were wearing gloves. 314 00:28:27,331 --> 00:28:29,416 It was never usually a gun. It was always 315 00:28:29,416 --> 00:28:31,418 something like a switchblade or a knife, 316 00:28:31,418 --> 00:28:35,214 which gave these movies sort of a sense of intimacy. Ultimately, 317 00:28:35,214 --> 00:28:38,342 like having sort of a collection of victims as well, 318 00:28:38,342 --> 00:28:41,386 Like there is always a larger picture in terms of sort of 319 00:28:41,428 --> 00:28:44,514 the body count that they wanted to amass in Giallo movies. 320 00:28:44,556 --> 00:28:50,479 It's a celebration of horror, of bodies, of bleeding, of screaming women, 321 00:28:50,479 --> 00:28:55,025 it's also the appreciation of the kills. The special effects make up, 322 00:28:55,025 --> 00:28:56,526 the supernatural. 323 00:29:02,407 --> 00:29:04,785 You'll always get a payoff even if it takes a 324 00:29:04,785 --> 00:29:07,412 while to get there and it's gonna make you, lloh!“ 325 00:29:07,412 --> 00:29:09,706 and it doesn't stop, so you can't just close your eyes, 326 00:29:09,706 --> 00:29:11,667 you know, it just goes and it goes and it goes, 327 00:29:11,667 --> 00:29:14,002 you know, it's right down your throat, 328 00:29:14,044 --> 00:29:17,547 we are going to make you recoil in terror no matter what. 329 00:29:25,013 --> 00:29:26,723 Fear is universal. It's, you know, 330 00:29:26,723 --> 00:29:30,477 it's another reason why horror does well in distribution around the world. 331 00:29:30,477 --> 00:29:33,480 You don't have to know the languages, everyone can recognize running, 332 00:29:33,480 --> 00:29:35,482 everyone can recognize fear. 333 00:29:35,482 --> 00:29:37,359 When you went to see these movies you 334 00:29:37,359 --> 00:29:39,736 didn't go because you knew anything about them, 335 00:29:39,736 --> 00:29:43,657 you went because of the poster, the newspaper ad, the title, 336 00:29:43,657 --> 00:29:47,577 you went because of the titillation of the ad campaign. 337 00:29:47,577 --> 00:29:51,623 All of the Italian horror films, for example, came out during this period, 338 00:29:51,665 --> 00:29:55,711 but nobody knew they were Italian. All the Italian names were changed to 339 00:29:55,752 --> 00:29:58,755 anglicize names and they were dubbed of course. 340 00:29:58,755 --> 00:30:00,757 I'll kill you, you son of a -- 341 00:30:00,757 --> 00:30:03,593 Are you trying to those girls are killed by 342 00:30:03,593 --> 00:30:06,638 someone you wouldn't define as a school friend? 343 00:30:06,680 --> 00:30:09,683 Dubbing in Italian horror I think takes a while to get used to. 344 00:30:09,683 --> 00:30:13,145 Because if you're not expecting it, it can be very off putting. 345 00:30:13,145 --> 00:30:16,898 best bad overdubs for sure, the worst overdubs, 346 00:30:16,940 --> 00:30:20,610 worse than then, you know, old Kung Fu movies. 347 00:30:20,610 --> 00:30:23,947 Listen to me, young lady. We're in a situation where -- You listen, 348 00:30:23,947 --> 00:30:25,615 you gang of bloodthirsty bastard! 349 00:30:25,615 --> 00:30:28,785 [male voice] "Hey, what's going on here? What's in that closet?" 350 00:30:28,827 --> 00:30:32,205 [female voice] "Don't open it." [male voice] "Oh, 351 00:30:32,205 --> 00:30:34,708 it's a zombie. Shoot it" [screaming] 352 00:30:38,670 --> 00:30:40,130 That's the inherent charm of it. Like 353 00:30:40,130 --> 00:30:41,840 that's the rough edges that I love about it. 354 00:30:41,882 --> 00:30:44,676 Because it doesn't feel super polished. 355 00:30:44,676 --> 00:30:46,094 When we laugh at dubbing we go, 356 00:30:46,094 --> 00:30:49,806 “Well the lips don't match" and for the rest of the world, that doesn't matter. 357 00:30:49,806 --> 00:30:52,809 Smoking is not allowed in here. - Excuse us. 358 00:30:52,809 --> 00:30:55,437 I've dubbed. I've dubbed myself, I've dubbed other 359 00:30:55,437 --> 00:30:58,774 people. It is an art form and it takes a while to get good at it. 360 00:30:58,774 --> 00:31:04,821 Huh, what I think does matter anymore. Bitch. 361 00:31:04,863 --> 00:31:07,366 I think Italian horror filmmakers are fans 362 00:31:07,366 --> 00:31:09,743 of American Horror and American dollars, 363 00:31:09,743 --> 00:31:11,912 that heightened Italian flavor gets into America, 364 00:31:11,953 --> 00:31:13,830 gets into theaters, gets into video stores. 365 00:31:13,830 --> 00:31:16,958 That lurid box art starts to show up on the shelves. 366 00:31:17,000 --> 00:31:19,920 The Italians were churning out splatter movies must 367 00:31:19,920 --> 00:31:22,798 have - must have been like 20 a week or something. 368 00:31:22,798 --> 00:31:24,925 So every week there was something new. 369 00:31:24,925 --> 00:31:27,594 They all have a very special place in my heart, 370 00:31:27,636 --> 00:31:29,930 they're not all necessarily great films. 371 00:31:31,807 --> 00:31:33,266 They were just doing what they wanted 372 00:31:33,266 --> 00:31:35,018 to do and telling these really crazy stories. 373 00:31:35,018 --> 00:31:37,813 And honestly, when you would pick up a movie at the video store, 374 00:31:37,813 --> 00:31:41,858 you'd never knew what experience you were in for. And that was the fun of it. 375 00:31:43,819 --> 00:31:46,071 I think what's interesting about Italian exploitation in general, is that 376 00:31:46,071 --> 00:31:50,992 it all starts as a ripoff, you'll get one hit, and then you'll get 30 copies. 377 00:31:50,992 --> 00:31:53,078 Going back to like a Hercules movie in the '50s, 378 00:31:53,120 --> 00:31:55,872 like they've got a hit Hercules movie, and then there's all the 379 00:31:55,872 --> 00:31:58,166 sword and sandal movies, you've got “Fistful of Dollars", 380 00:31:58,166 --> 00:31:59,876 and then the whole spaghetti western genre, 381 00:31:59,876 --> 00:32:02,379 and the horror genre is no different. They 382 00:32:02,421 --> 00:32:04,881 picked up on what was happening in America 383 00:32:04,923 --> 00:32:10,595 and copied it and then perverted it - I say that as a 384 00:32:10,595 --> 00:32:17,060 compliment - and made it gaudy and loud and funky, and naked. 385 00:32:17,102 --> 00:32:20,397 There's so much American DNA in Italian horror, 386 00:32:20,397 --> 00:32:23,900 but it's all just cranked up to this insane level. 387 00:32:23,942 --> 00:32:26,445 So a lot of times what you may have seen is people doing 388 00:32:26,445 --> 00:32:29,156 the best they can with the financial choices they were given, 389 00:32:29,156 --> 00:32:33,410 people still wanting to make their movie and like anything else, 390 00:32:33,410 --> 00:32:34,995 artistry is on a scale. 391 00:32:35,036 --> 00:32:36,913 So thanks to the Italians and thanks to 392 00:32:36,913 --> 00:32:38,999 "Suspiria" and everything that came after, 393 00:32:38,999 --> 00:32:42,544 suddenly '80s horror is very colorful, in a way that '70s horror was not, 394 00:32:42,544 --> 00:32:45,213 and I think you can tie that directly to the Italians. 395 00:33:05,066 --> 00:33:09,070 "The Funhouse" is a movie that kind of gets lost in Tobe Hooper's filmography, 396 00:33:09,070 --> 00:33:12,449 because it's between "Texas Chainsaw Massacre" and then 397 00:33:12,449 --> 00:33:16,119 those crazy movies he made for Cannon Films in the mid '80s. 398 00:33:16,161 --> 00:33:17,954 Which is a shame because it's actually 399 00:33:17,954 --> 00:33:20,248 like a solid little haunted house slasher movie. 400 00:33:24,628 --> 00:33:27,422 Well, it was funny because I was actually dating Elizabeth 401 00:33:27,422 --> 00:33:30,342 Berridge for a while there, so it was great to see her work. 402 00:33:34,137 --> 00:33:37,432 I think that's one of my favorite Tobe movies. I certainly loved the monster, 403 00:33:37,432 --> 00:33:38,683 I thought that was fantastic. 404 00:33:38,725 --> 00:33:40,143 I loved that whole movie. 405 00:33:40,143 --> 00:33:42,145 The monster in "The Fun House“, a guy named Gunther, 406 00:33:42,187 --> 00:33:48,193 wears this Frankenstein mask because his actual face is also really horrendous. 407 00:33:48,193 --> 00:33:51,613 And the effects on his face are really memorable. You 408 00:33:51,613 --> 00:33:55,242 got like red eyes and fangs and this stringy white hair, 409 00:34:01,706 --> 00:34:06,294 Just this kind of hair lip fanged mouth with drool coming out of it. 410 00:34:09,214 --> 00:34:11,967 The sort of bastard son of the carnival guy, 411 00:34:12,008 --> 00:34:15,262 just the way he's treated and the way he's deformed, 412 00:34:15,262 --> 00:34:18,473 and you almost feel for him, but yet he's going around killing people. 413 00:34:22,769 --> 00:34:24,896 This has got to be the only movie where the 414 00:34:24,938 --> 00:34:27,357 inciting incident is a guy in a Frankenstein mask 415 00:34:27,399 --> 00:34:30,277 getting some happy service by a psychic. 416 00:34:30,277 --> 00:34:33,446 Nothing to be ashamed, it happens to the best of us. 417 00:34:36,324 --> 00:34:38,326 What's interesting about this movie is that it's a 418 00:34:38,368 --> 00:34:40,328 lot more graphic than "Texas Chainsaw Massacre", 419 00:34:40,328 --> 00:34:42,497 where all the gore is implied and you don't really see it. 420 00:34:45,875 --> 00:34:49,713 You get to see all the backstage parts of the Fun House in a carnival, 421 00:34:49,713 --> 00:34:53,425 all the - the worrying mechanics and the trap doors and the tracks. 422 00:34:53,425 --> 00:34:57,470 It's great to see that space explored. 423 00:34:59,347 --> 00:35:04,394 "Fun House" to me is a movie that was completely made by Fangoria, 424 00:35:04,394 --> 00:35:07,397 and talking about the influence of the magazines at that time. 425 00:35:07,397 --> 00:35:08,565 There was something about, 426 00:35:08,607 --> 00:35:11,526 number one - I saw that on the cover, like, that's disgusting. 427 00:35:11,526 --> 00:35:16,573 It's one of those things where when you're in a fun house ever since then, 428 00:35:16,573 --> 00:35:20,535 I always wonder what if this guy is an actual killer? 429 00:35:37,469 --> 00:35:40,513 “Omen lll“ was 1981. 430 00:35:40,513 --> 00:35:43,892 That picked up Damien as an adult. 431 00:35:43,933 --> 00:35:48,647 He's a 30-ish politician played by Sam Neill. 432 00:35:48,647 --> 00:35:51,566 I think that was the first time I had ever seen Sam 433 00:35:51,566 --> 00:35:54,653 Neill probably same for American audiences in general. 434 00:35:54,694 --> 00:35:56,613 Take him. 435 00:36:01,034 --> 00:36:04,496 As the movie begins, he has the post that his father 436 00:36:04,496 --> 00:36:08,708 Gregory Peck had a mere five years before him [laughing] in the, 437 00:36:08,708 --> 00:36:14,506 you know, twisted chronology of "The Omen“ series, where they would, you know, 438 00:36:14,506 --> 00:36:17,008 fast forward with soap opera speed, 439 00:36:17,008 --> 00:36:20,637 Omen ll Damian was 13, suddenly, he's 30 years old. 440 00:36:20,637 --> 00:36:25,517 Anyway, he is the ambassador of Great Britain at the beginning of the story, 441 00:36:25,558 --> 00:36:30,522 as is the want of all of the devil worshipers who surround Damien. 442 00:36:30,522 --> 00:36:33,692 And they're grooming him for his, you know, ultimate world power. 443 00:36:33,692 --> 00:36:41,574 Do you hear me? - We hear you. We hear you. 444 00:36:41,574 --> 00:36:44,786 One of the weird things about that movie is that it 445 00:36:44,786 --> 00:36:48,665 really is all structured around a series of murders of babies, 446 00:36:48,665 --> 00:36:54,546 [laughing] 'cause in the story, the rebirth of Christ has also happened. 447 00:36:54,546 --> 00:36:57,716 And now Damien feels threatened by this, 448 00:36:57,716 --> 00:37:03,680 so he dispatches all of his devil worshiping minions to kill all the babies. 449 00:37:03,680 --> 00:37:11,563 Slay the Nazarene, and you will know the violent rapture of my father's kingdom. 450 00:37:11,563 --> 00:37:13,064 Just kind of hilarious, 451 00:37:13,064 --> 00:37:17,569 because it's just - just like something you could not do in movies anymore, 452 00:37:17,569 --> 00:37:19,571 Liquidate the Nazarene. 453 00:37:19,571 --> 00:37:23,324 There's a woman who she just like somehow has 454 00:37:23,366 --> 00:37:27,579 this weird hallucination of her baby as a monster. 455 00:37:27,579 --> 00:37:31,332 And so she takes a hot [laughing] iron to the baby and goes 456 00:37:31,332 --> 00:37:35,587 [imitates ironing sound] -- it's - it's really kind of unspeakable. 457 00:37:48,141 --> 00:37:52,604 “Friday the 13th Part ll", I'd seen the end of that movie so many times 458 00:37:52,604 --> 00:37:55,523 because it was tacked on to the beginning of "Friday the 13th Part lll", 459 00:37:55,523 --> 00:37:56,816 which I rented a lot as a kid. 460 00:37:56,816 --> 00:38:00,779 There's something really charming about the characters in that film. 461 00:38:07,160 --> 00:38:14,709 The second one to me, is the only true definition of a sequel. Bigger story, 462 00:38:14,751 --> 00:38:17,712 bigger budget, bigger scares. 463 00:38:19,714 --> 00:38:21,800 Massive twist because now you're going, 464 00:38:21,841 --> 00:38:24,636 this is the first appearance of Jason as the killer. 465 00:38:26,638 --> 00:38:28,640 It was the first one that Steve Miner directed. 466 00:38:28,640 --> 00:38:34,687 The way he paced it was that you didn't know who was gonna die. 467 00:38:37,148 --> 00:38:40,693 Jason, he's the shark. You're gonna do something and Jason's gonna knock you off, 468 00:38:40,693 --> 00:38:41,861 you know. 469 00:38:45,740 --> 00:38:51,788 I loved Amy Steel as the lead heroine. 470 00:38:51,788 --> 00:38:54,624 She is just awesome and bad-ass. I love the way 471 00:38:54,624 --> 00:38:57,627 Jason and her interact with each other at the end. 472 00:38:57,627 --> 00:39:01,673 The Chase at the end, to me is one of my favorite final moments, 473 00:39:01,714 --> 00:39:03,633 you know the rat going under the bed and peeing 474 00:39:03,675 --> 00:39:05,802 underneath it and there's moments in there that are 475 00:39:05,802 --> 00:39:10,723 almost a little quirky that I don't feel happened in other films like that. 476 00:39:14,644 --> 00:39:17,814 She psychs out Jason, I love that scene, 477 00:39:17,814 --> 00:39:21,651 where they're in the what we call the chez Jason, 478 00:39:21,651 --> 00:39:25,780 with the head there and all the candles and stuff, and she puts on the sweater 479 00:39:25,780 --> 00:39:29,659 and Jason's like got the sack thing and freaking out. 480 00:39:36,666 --> 00:39:38,918 I wish they had never abandoned the burlap 481 00:39:38,918 --> 00:39:41,671 sack and that's what a lot of people don't realize, 482 00:39:41,671 --> 00:39:45,842 is that he doesn't get the hockey mask until number three. 483 00:39:45,842 --> 00:39:50,263 But it's just overall to me so much 484 00:39:50,263 --> 00:39:54,684 scarier than any of the other ones. 485 00:39:54,684 --> 00:39:56,853 I think that's probably why it's my favorite. 486 00:40:12,243 --> 00:40:15,872 "Graduation Day" is a movie that has a killer who is killing people 487 00:40:15,872 --> 00:40:19,792 specifically who were on the high school track team. 488 00:40:19,792 --> 00:40:22,837 It stars Linnea Quigley, but originally, it didn't have Linnea Quigley. 489 00:40:22,879 --> 00:40:26,841 They had another actress in the place who they filmed some scenes with her, 490 00:40:26,841 --> 00:40:30,803 but then she wouldn't do the nudity that was required with the role. 491 00:40:30,803 --> 00:40:35,850 So they fired her and brought in Linnea Quigley to play the same part. 492 00:40:35,850 --> 00:40:41,814 Now there's a blonde, but she's different. But she's playing the same character. 493 00:40:41,814 --> 00:40:47,737 Your ass is mine. - [mocking sounds] 494 00:40:47,779 --> 00:40:50,949 It was just like a fun film, it was like it's got all these great kills in it. 495 00:40:57,872 --> 00:41:01,668 Like my boyfriend, Billy Hufsey, who teaches acting classes 496 00:41:01,709 --> 00:41:05,755 now and I don't think wants to talk about it was like going to, 497 00:41:05,755 --> 00:41:07,423 of course, “I'll be right back", 498 00:41:07,423 --> 00:41:10,802 and goes and pees in the woods and gets his head chopped off. 499 00:41:15,765 --> 00:41:19,352 I remember doing the running, and I made a mistake, 500 00:41:19,352 --> 00:41:22,981 which I'll never do again, and I ate lunch - a lot! 501 00:41:22,981 --> 00:41:25,149 I remember having to throw up because I 502 00:41:25,149 --> 00:41:27,777 was running so much. I was just like [panting], 503 00:41:27,777 --> 00:41:30,738 and I'm like, oh my God, my stomach. Yeah, 504 00:41:30,738 --> 00:41:34,784 so that was a fun fact too, that I threw up after running. 505 00:41:34,784 --> 00:41:38,913 When they were doing the effects, they had cast the head of the original girl. 506 00:41:38,913 --> 00:41:41,708 So you see Linnea Quigley through most of the film, 507 00:41:41,708 --> 00:41:44,002 and then in the end, when she gets killed, 508 00:41:44,002 --> 00:41:47,964 they're using the head of the girl from the beginning of the movie. 509 00:41:49,799 --> 00:41:52,802 It's not my head, but it's supposed to be. 510 00:41:52,802 --> 00:41:54,679 which has confused a few people, 511 00:41:54,679 --> 00:41:58,808 Vanna White also appears in the movie, but she doesn't turn letters. 512 00:41:58,808 --> 00:42:01,811 Fuck. It's blood. 513 00:42:05,023 --> 00:42:09,277 It's another example of how popular horror films were, 514 00:42:09,277 --> 00:42:12,864 you had this movie that cost around $250,000, 515 00:42:12,864 --> 00:42:17,035 they put it out there, it made almost $24 million. 516 00:42:30,798 --> 00:42:34,927 Those old trailers from the '80s, they just had a certain magic to them, 517 00:42:34,927 --> 00:42:38,806 where you'd have the voice of something as silly as "The Boogens", 518 00:42:38,848 --> 00:42:40,892 but they deliver it in “The Boogens“. And 519 00:42:40,892 --> 00:42:43,019 that sets off something in your head where 520 00:42:43,019 --> 00:42:47,982 you need to see this movie to see what are The Boogens 521 00:42:54,822 --> 00:42:57,492 And the people involved with the production, 522 00:42:57,492 --> 00:43:00,953 they didn't know what The Boogens was going to look like. 523 00:43:00,953 --> 00:43:03,748 They hired a special effects guy and they said, 524 00:43:03,748 --> 00:43:06,042 “Okay, here's the ideas that we have". 525 00:43:06,084 --> 00:43:10,838 And he came back with this idea of a little monster with like crab claws. 526 00:43:10,880 --> 00:43:12,924 And they were like, "Well, that's really cool, 527 00:43:12,965 --> 00:43:14,842 but that's not what a Boogens looks like". 528 00:43:14,842 --> 00:43:16,761 And they're like, "Well, what is a Boogens look like?", 529 00:43:16,803 --> 00:43:17,845 They're like, "we don't know". 530 00:43:17,845 --> 00:43:24,352 And he went and eventually designed this monster. It was like a turtle, 531 00:43:24,352 --> 00:43:27,230 but the turtle shell was supposed to look like the 532 00:43:27,230 --> 00:43:30,066 brain of a sheep that he saw in a medical catalog. 533 00:43:30,066 --> 00:43:36,030 And it had tentacles, and its head could come out and retract, and it had teeth, 534 00:43:36,072 --> 00:43:39,909 and it was just the most ridiculous hodgepodge of ideas that 535 00:43:39,909 --> 00:43:44,080 could all come together and somehow be thrown into a horror film. 536 00:43:44,080 --> 00:43:49,085 [woman screaming in the background]. Strangest damn thing I ever saw. 537 00:44:04,100 --> 00:44:06,310 That's my second horror film. There's 538 00:44:06,352 --> 00:44:08,896 some great sequences and great images in it. 539 00:44:08,938 --> 00:44:10,773 And we were all up in this great little 540 00:44:10,773 --> 00:44:12,900 town in northern California called Mendocino. 541 00:44:12,900 --> 00:44:15,611 And it's like, you don't have to dress it. It's just there. It 542 00:44:15,653 --> 00:44:18,114 looks like Stephen King's gonna walk out of every door. 543 00:44:18,114 --> 00:44:21,075 It looks exactly like what you think Maine should look like. 544 00:44:21,075 --> 00:44:26,914 And it's James Farentino, the late great Jack Albertson and Lisa Blount, 545 00:44:26,914 --> 00:44:27,957 wonderful, 546 00:44:27,957 --> 00:44:31,085 extraordinary actress. Most people know her from "Officer and a Gentleman“. 547 00:44:31,127 --> 00:44:34,463 It's actually an effective little movie. 548 00:44:41,929 --> 00:44:45,516 It turns out that the mortician has been behind 549 00:44:45,516 --> 00:44:49,103 killing the town's people and reanimating them, 550 00:44:49,103 --> 00:44:52,982 basically creating an army of undead puppets. 551 00:44:52,982 --> 00:44:56,611 Stan Winston did the makeup on that film, and there was a lot of us, 552 00:44:56,652 --> 00:44:58,988 he had to make a lot of people, the undead. 553 00:44:58,988 --> 00:45:04,118 Stan, not yet the legend he would become, but a player. 554 00:45:04,160 --> 00:45:07,872 Stan was beginning to push more into puppetry 555 00:45:07,914 --> 00:45:12,043 with some of the effects he created for that film. 556 00:45:12,043 --> 00:45:15,296 There are two that stand out to me as being 557 00:45:15,296 --> 00:45:19,050 the most 'Oh that's cool'. One is the burn victim, 558 00:45:19,050 --> 00:45:23,971 he created this shoulders up puppet of this terribly burned character, 559 00:45:23,971 --> 00:45:27,058 where you're seeing the muscles and the ligaments. 560 00:45:27,058 --> 00:45:31,020 It was a hand puppet and it was highly effective. 561 00:45:31,020 --> 00:45:33,940 And I remember seeing that come together in his shop 562 00:45:33,940 --> 00:45:37,068 and thinking that was the grossest thing he'd ever made. 563 00:45:39,987 --> 00:45:43,199 Another sequence that really works is when the evil mortician is 564 00:45:43,199 --> 00:45:44,951 reconstructing this hitchhiker, 565 00:45:44,951 --> 00:45:49,121 played by Lisa Marie and she starts out horribly injured and disfigured, 566 00:45:49,121 --> 00:45:52,583 it's a dummy, a recreation of the actress. 567 00:45:52,583 --> 00:45:58,005 I will make you beautiful again, even more beautiful than before. 568 00:45:58,047 --> 00:46:02,134 Using a series of, you know, wipes and dissolves, you slowly see her being 569 00:46:02,134 --> 00:46:05,680 reconstructed by the mortician until she's finally back intact, 570 00:46:05,680 --> 00:46:07,974 and pretty, and sits up and there she is, 571 00:46:08,015 --> 00:46:11,018 and she's actually undead, but she looks pretty hot. 572 00:46:11,018 --> 00:46:14,689 And I also remember being freaked out by the burn 573 00:46:14,689 --> 00:46:18,567 victim character who's completely covered in gauze, 574 00:46:18,567 --> 00:46:22,280 All you see is one eye and his mouth. And this nurse just plunges a 575 00:46:22,321 --> 00:46:26,242 needle right in his eyeball. And that was just ahhhh, a cringe moment. 576 00:46:28,995 --> 00:46:35,126 For me, Lisa was the first sort of nurse angel of death, embodies that cold, 577 00:46:35,126 --> 00:46:39,005 hard, blonde sexuality that Hitchcock was so 578 00:46:39,005 --> 00:46:43,217 intrigued by. "We're dead but we're not buried!“ 579 00:46:59,608 --> 00:47:02,778 “Nightmare" is a movie told from the point of view of a serial 580 00:47:02,778 --> 00:47:06,032 killer who goes up and down the East Coast of the United States, 581 00:47:06,032 --> 00:47:10,036 And when I say told from his point of view, we told with a point of view camera 582 00:47:10,036 --> 00:47:12,955 "You are the killer“ [laughing] he wreaks mayhem 583 00:47:12,955 --> 00:47:16,125 all up and down the East Coast of the United States. 584 00:47:19,128 --> 00:47:20,796 People hated the film, 585 00:47:20,838 --> 00:47:26,052 people pelted the screen in Times Square with the objects [laughing]. 586 00:47:26,093 --> 00:47:29,096 People walked out, people demanded their money back. 587 00:47:31,098 --> 00:47:37,229 The eternal principles of a good cinematic story still must be observed, 588 00:47:37,229 --> 00:47:43,069 and there must be a sympathetic protagonist in your story. Otherwise, 589 00:47:43,069 --> 00:47:46,072 the audience will turn against you. 590 00:47:46,072 --> 00:47:47,823 There's a myth., 591 00:47:47,865 --> 00:47:53,245 and we should destroy this myth because sensors use it to censor movies. 592 00:47:53,287 --> 00:47:58,167 And the myth is that all we want to see is blood and gore. That's not true, 593 00:47:58,209 --> 00:48:01,253 if you look at the movies made in the '80s, 594 00:48:01,253 --> 00:48:04,090 made by clueless idiots who thought that 595 00:48:04,090 --> 00:48:06,926 that was the secret to making a great horror movie, 596 00:48:06,926 --> 00:48:09,095 you end up with films like "Nightmare“. 597 00:48:28,114 --> 00:48:31,784 Every time I think of "Saturday the 14th", 598 00:48:31,826 --> 00:48:37,248 I think of sitting at my mom's old apartment and watching HBO. 599 00:48:37,248 --> 00:48:44,255 There was like this handful of fairly risky movies with weird content, 600 00:48:44,255 --> 00:48:46,715 but they would just show them during the day for any 601 00:48:46,715 --> 00:48:49,385 eight to ten year old to kind of catch up on [laughing]. 602 00:48:49,385 --> 00:48:55,474 You've got Jeffrey Tambor as Dracula-ish, a Dracula type person. 603 00:48:55,516 --> 00:49:01,230 Well, if you don't trust me after 311 years of marriage... 604 00:49:01,272 --> 00:49:03,232 605 604 00:49:03,232 --> 00:49:07,153 You've got Richard Benjamin running around, basically tormenting his family. 606 00:49:07,153 --> 00:49:10,239 Take this coffee, I can't stand the sight of it. 607 00:49:10,239 --> 00:49:14,201 But I just remember how goofy that movie was. 608 00:49:18,164 --> 00:49:23,878 And then the guy who played like the Van Helsing type character was so sketch, 609 00:49:23,878 --> 00:49:27,173 and he scared me more than the monsters did. 610 00:49:27,173 --> 00:49:28,591 If someone should that book, 611 00:49:28,591 --> 00:49:32,219 his soul would be doomed with eternal hell fire and damnation! Yeah! 612 00:49:32,219 --> 00:49:39,226 So many weird things were okay back then, man. The bathtub moment to me, 613 00:49:39,226 --> 00:49:42,271 reminds me of the Freddy moment when the glove 614 00:49:42,271 --> 00:49:46,275 comes up. But this being before that was like the Jaws take. 615 00:49:46,275 --> 00:49:48,277 So who influenced Who? 616 00:49:54,200 --> 00:49:58,245 But then you see the teenage daughter running around being chased by, 617 00:49:58,245 --> 00:50:00,206 you know, the Fishman, you know? 618 00:50:00,206 --> 00:50:03,375 What's the Jesus Christ “#MeToo fish" you know? 619 00:50:03,375 --> 00:50:07,254 I mean, this is a kids movie, what the hell's going on? You're 620 00:50:07,254 --> 00:50:11,300 watching it as a kid, you don't realize the dark undertone of it. 621 00:50:13,969 --> 00:50:17,306 Will I show that to my kids? No, I will not be showing that [chuckles]. 622 00:50:17,348 --> 00:50:21,727 Do you see a monster in this room? I can't believe that I'm standing here, 623 00:50:21,769 --> 00:50:23,562 in the middle of the night arguing with a 10 624 00:50:23,562 --> 00:50:25,397 year old kid about the existence of monsters. 625 00:50:32,196 --> 00:50:36,116 As an actor, I get to bring a little joy into someone's life, 626 00:50:36,116 --> 00:50:39,203 every time I get -- no matter what the genre is, 627 00:50:39,203 --> 00:50:41,747 every time I have an opportunity to work, 628 00:50:41,789 --> 00:50:45,209 it's a great charge. To be, you know, do the best I can 629 00:50:45,209 --> 00:50:49,213 because, you know, somebody is going to enjoy this. 630 00:50:49,213 --> 00:50:51,215 They're killing everybody. - I gotta find her. 631 00:50:51,215 --> 00:50:53,217 Wait a minute man, are you crazy?! - I gotta see if she's alright. 632 00:50:53,217 --> 00:50:56,220 Just stand back! There's nothing you can do out there! 633 00:50:56,220 --> 00:50:58,556 I didn't think I was going to be an actress. Actually, 634 00:50:58,556 --> 00:51:00,349 I wanted to be an archaeologist, I always 635 00:51:00,349 --> 00:51:02,726 thought that was that would be an interesting thing 636 00:51:02,726 --> 00:51:05,271 to be. So I went to Carnegie Mellon, which is a really 637 00:51:05,271 --> 00:51:06,647 good theater school here in Pittsburgh. 638 00:51:06,647 --> 00:51:08,399 There's different techniques that we were trained, 639 00:51:08,399 --> 00:51:11,902 but one of them was the whole method movement of bringing, 640 00:51:11,944 --> 00:51:14,446 you know, your experiences to the moment. 641 00:51:14,446 --> 00:51:21,787 And I remember using that, especially after Sarah cuts off Miguel's arm, 642 00:51:21,787 --> 00:51:26,208 she has a moment where she just has had it. 643 00:51:26,250 --> 00:51:30,296 She actually breaks down, which, to me was like the art of the character. 644 00:51:30,296 --> 00:51:32,590 She was actually very strong in that moment, 645 00:51:32,590 --> 00:51:35,301 because she was able to be very real in that moment. 646 00:51:41,223 --> 00:51:45,227 Working that with myself and my thoughts, and my technique. 647 00:51:45,227 --> 00:51:47,980 Acting is the art of not acting, 648 00:51:47,980 --> 00:51:52,443 right? Acting is being - acting class 101, right? 649 00:51:52,443 --> 00:51:54,153 Before I made any movies, 650 00:51:54,153 --> 00:51:58,324 I was a stage actor. I was King Arthur, I was Ben Franklin. 651 00:51:58,365 --> 00:52:02,411 When I did the effects on the film, I always tried to play a part of it, 652 00:52:02,411 --> 00:52:06,248 you know, some little part and that just led to more and more parts. 653 00:52:06,248 --> 00:52:08,250 And then suddenly, with George Romero, just parts. 654 00:52:08,250 --> 00:52:13,464 Don't forget, some of us are wearing tinfoil. - That's your problem. 655 00:52:13,464 --> 00:52:15,382 I really wanted to be, you know, 656 00:52:15,424 --> 00:52:19,261 an actor. Makeup effects was kind of what got me in the door. 657 00:52:19,261 --> 00:52:23,599 You get in the door so you can prove yourself that people know who you are, 658 00:52:23,599 --> 00:52:26,310 you know, and who knows where that could lead. 659 00:52:33,275 --> 00:52:35,277 I used to want to be a minister. Well, 660 00:52:35,277 --> 00:52:38,280 the acting as my ministry. You know, that's how I get to, 661 00:52:38,322 --> 00:52:45,371 you know, how my soul gets to speak to your soul about our commonality, 662 00:52:45,371 --> 00:52:50,292 above the oneness that we share, as human beings. 663 00:52:50,292 --> 00:52:54,755 I really thought about it in the '80s, there was no really Asian 664 00:52:54,755 --> 00:53:00,302 representation. We were all kind of stereotypical, and it was a difficult time. 665 00:53:00,302 --> 00:53:04,431 It also made me feel like, 'hmm maybe I should do something else.' 666 00:53:04,431 --> 00:53:07,351 I kept at it only because of the theater, you know, 667 00:53:07,393 --> 00:53:10,396 something like Kelly Who in "Jason Takes Manhattan". 668 00:53:10,396 --> 00:53:13,399 I mean, that was pretty extraordinary, where she didn't have an accent. 669 00:53:13,399 --> 00:53:17,403 Look, I think I'll pass, okay. - what? - See you later. 670 00:53:17,403 --> 00:53:21,824 My first movie movie was "16 Candles“. 671 00:53:21,824 --> 00:53:25,369 [clashing cymbals sound] What's happening, hot stuff? 672 00:53:25,369 --> 00:53:31,333 The controversy was good. Because I also think that it started to change things, 673 00:53:31,333 --> 00:53:35,754 and make people aware. If anything, made the Asian community come out 674 00:53:35,754 --> 00:53:40,509 and try to express themselves about why they disagree with this character. 675 00:53:40,509 --> 00:53:44,805 And what they failed to do I thought was we weren't coalesce together to try 676 00:53:44,805 --> 00:53:49,309 to figure out what to do about it. Unlike today, it's - it's much better today. 677 00:53:49,309 --> 00:53:54,314 I've never been so happy my whole life [chuckling]. - You maniac. 678 00:53:54,314 --> 00:53:57,443 There was no ethnicity mentioned in “Vamp". So I 679 00:53:57,443 --> 00:54:01,488 thought that was kind of cool. I thought that was a good step. 680 00:54:01,488 --> 00:54:07,286 What time do you get off? - Two thirty. - Can I watch? [laughing] 681 00:54:07,327 --> 00:54:12,958 The better your actors are, the better shape you're in. Hire people 682 00:54:12,958 --> 00:54:19,339 that bring a certain kind of credibility and naturalness to the performance. 683 00:54:19,339 --> 00:54:21,550 And then at least you're a step ahead. 684 00:54:21,550 --> 00:54:25,012 Give me a script, let me break this character down, 685 00:54:25,012 --> 00:54:29,308 make some choices. And hopefully I buoy what you're doing here. 686 00:54:29,308 --> 00:54:33,312 Hopefully, I can put some wind and some sails here. 687 00:54:33,312 --> 00:54:37,399 He's dead? - No anymore. 688 00:54:37,441 --> 00:54:38,525 That's what I'm in control of. 689 00:54:38,567 --> 00:54:42,029 If somebody offered me a job, and I liked the script, 690 00:54:42,029 --> 00:54:45,449 and the story and the character, I'm in, I'm all in. 691 00:54:45,449 --> 00:54:49,328 And that's how I just started doing horror movies, 692 00:54:49,369 --> 00:54:53,332 John invited me to be in "The Fog“ and we were off. 693 00:54:53,332 --> 00:54:56,335 I don't believe in luck, good or bad. 694 00:54:56,335 --> 00:55:02,257 I hated acting class. It just was torture [chuckles] for me. But you know, 695 00:55:02,257 --> 00:55:04,510 you have to get some tools. 696 00:55:04,551 --> 00:55:08,597 A director told me once, “The best thing an actor can do is 697 00:55:08,639 --> 00:55:12,935 give me choices". Trusting my instincts when I read something, 698 00:55:12,935 --> 00:55:15,687 and trusting my instincts about a character, 699 00:55:15,687 --> 00:55:18,440 generally ends up being the right way to go. 700 00:55:18,482 --> 00:55:21,360 I've studied a lot of different styles, I've worked with different coaches. 701 00:55:21,360 --> 00:55:25,864 So I've used some stuff from the method, I've used the old "James Cagney, 702 00:55:25,864 --> 00:55:29,409 plant your feet in the ground and tell the truth" method. 703 00:55:29,409 --> 00:55:33,497 The funny thing about it is that if something is written well, 704 00:55:33,497 --> 00:55:36,333 you don't have to do a lot of work with it. 705 00:55:36,375 --> 00:55:38,794 That's why I always want to know, let me see the script. Let's 706 00:55:38,794 --> 00:55:41,421 see how it is. And if you have trouble getting lines out, it's like 707 00:55:41,463 --> 00:55:43,841 it's not written well. That's the problem 708 00:55:43,882 --> 00:55:46,301 [laughing]. And I used to think it was me. 709 00:55:46,343 --> 00:55:48,387 Come on, you little bastard! 710 00:55:48,387 --> 00:55:51,098 What we had back then was people who are learning their craft, 711 00:55:51,098 --> 00:55:52,516 but now we have people that are 712 00:55:52,516 --> 00:55:53,892 yes, learning their craft, 713 00:55:53,892 --> 00:55:57,563 but also passionate about the genre and purposefully going into it. 714 00:55:57,604 --> 00:55:58,689 I mean, you'll talk to people in the '80s and they'll say, 715 00:55:58,730 --> 00:55:59,398 you know, "That's just what I got". 716 00:55:59,398 --> 00:56:05,028 But now, these people are coming up very focused on doing 717 00:56:05,028 --> 00:56:11,535 horror because they love horror and that's what they intend to do. 718 00:56:11,535 --> 00:56:16,456 You have to be as honest as you can be with your character 719 00:56:16,498 --> 00:56:21,420 and your story and your - the truth of what you're saying. 720 00:56:21,461 --> 00:56:25,591 It's up to them to make it scary for the 721 00:56:25,591 --> 00:56:30,429 audience. And my job is just to tell the truth, 722 00:56:30,429 --> 00:56:32,431 The shit is getting old, real fast. You know, 723 00:56:32,431 --> 00:56:34,349 I was awakened out of a real pleasant dream 724 00:56:34,349 --> 00:56:36,435 to come down here, you're going to straighten it out, Raimi, 725 00:56:36,476 --> 00:56:38,353 or am I going to play poop patrol with your nightstick? 726 00:56:38,353 --> 00:56:43,609 I received a thoroughgoing acting for the camera education from Dennis Hopper, 727 00:56:43,609 --> 00:56:49,448 that was an experience not to be missed. And as time goes on, I cherish it more, 728 00:56:49,448 --> 00:56:50,449 I appreciate it more, 729 00:56:50,449 --> 00:56:53,452 and I apply it more. Dennis encouraged me to look through the lens. 730 00:56:53,452 --> 00:56:56,163 "This is what it looks like. This is where 731 00:56:56,163 --> 00:56:59,541 your light is. This is the side that's best for you.“ 732 00:56:59,541 --> 00:57:04,087 "When you deliver that line, do this, make that gesture", it's a visual medium. 733 00:57:04,087 --> 00:57:06,590 You said you were going to do this alone. 734 00:57:06,590 --> 00:57:10,385 [sighing] I need your help, Missy. 735 00:57:10,385 --> 00:57:15,390 That was a takeaway that continues to provide extraordinary benefits for me. 736 00:57:15,390 --> 00:57:20,062 When I hear "cut", I'm Doug. I'm Doug in a skirt and a very 737 00:57:20,103 --> 00:57:25,400 constricting leather jacket with my face covered in latex and pins. 738 00:57:25,400 --> 00:57:29,237 But I'm Doug. I don't carry the character through the clay, 739 00:57:29,237 --> 00:57:31,531 and I don't take him home with me. 740 00:57:31,531 --> 00:57:35,702 Before I ever started thinking about doing crazy stuff, 741 00:57:35,744 --> 00:57:38,497 I was very interested in map making. 742 00:57:38,497 --> 00:57:43,418 I've been playing the bad characters for so long, 743 00:57:43,460 --> 00:57:48,632 but always knew that I had other things I could do. 744 00:57:48,632 --> 00:57:52,427 So Charlie's farm, huh? Somebody's feeling great. 745 00:57:52,427 --> 00:57:56,515 It's important as an actor to show versatility, right? 746 00:58:00,435 --> 00:58:06,066 Not only have I clone some emotional stuff, 747 00:58:06,066 --> 00:58:08,652 but also recently, 748 00:58:08,694 --> 00:58:14,491 in the past couple years, done some comedy. 749 00:58:14,533 --> 00:58:18,578 I never thought somebody would be interested in me trying to be funny. 750 00:58:18,578 --> 00:58:25,419 As an actor, you have your facial expressions, 751 00:58:25,419 --> 00:58:31,675 and your voice to add to your performance. 752 00:58:31,675 --> 00:58:35,554 It's like way easier. When you have to look scary 753 00:58:35,554 --> 00:58:39,975 and intimidating without either one of those two things, 754 00:58:39,975 --> 00:58:45,522 with a hockey mask on - way harder. And that's why everybody over acts. 755 00:58:45,564 --> 00:58:46,815 People, they think, 756 00:58:46,815 --> 00:58:50,652 "l can do that. You don't even have to show your face or say anything". 757 00:58:50,652 --> 00:58:54,197 You know what? You can't do it. You think you can, 758 00:58:54,197 --> 00:58:57,451 but you try too hard and then it looks phony. 759 00:58:57,451 --> 00:59:00,537 I've worked pretty consistently in the '80s, 760 00:59:00,579 --> 00:59:04,666 I did a lot of soap opera work and a lot of horror movies. 761 00:59:04,666 --> 00:59:09,337 And at the time that I did “Castle Freak", which was in 1995, 762 00:59:09,337 --> 00:59:14,593 I felt like for the first time I really understood what I was doing. 763 00:59:14,593 --> 00:59:18,513 I got it, I know how to act on film, I know what I'm doing. 764 00:59:18,513 --> 00:59:22,517 So I was about 35. And then all of a sudden, 765 00:59:22,517 --> 00:59:26,480 people stopped calling me, I wasn't working. 766 00:59:26,521 --> 00:59:28,482 And at that time, 767 00:59:28,482 --> 00:59:34,488 I feel like I had aged out a little bit. I just wasn't getting any calls. 768 00:59:34,488 --> 00:59:37,115 And I was mad at the time. I thought well, 769 00:59:37,157 --> 00:59:41,453 I'll go back to school. I'll - I'll - I'll get a degree in gardening, 770 00:59:41,495 --> 00:59:46,500 I loved gardening. And then I met my husband, Bob. And he said, 771 00:59:46,541 --> 00:59:47,542 "Well, 772 00:59:47,542 --> 00:59:50,670 I have to move up to San Francisco for my job. Do you want to come with me?“ 773 00:59:50,712 --> 00:59:56,593 And I thought yeah, F Hollywood, I'm just gonna go and do something else. 774 00:59:56,635 --> 00:59:59,179 And then I became a mom and I was busy with 775 00:59:59,221 --> 01:00:02,641 that. I took a break because I aged out a little bit, but 776 01:00:02,641 --> 01:00:07,145 now, thank God, I'm playing these older women and 777 01:00:07,145 --> 01:00:11,650 moms and mentors and evil people, and caretakers. 778 01:00:11,650 --> 01:00:16,696 And I'm glad that the producers from "You're Next" took a chance on me and said, 779 01:00:16,738 --> 01:00:20,283 "Yeah, we want to - we want to see Barbara Crampton again, 780 01:00:20,283 --> 01:00:24,663 we want to see her“, and because I'm having a lot of fun working again. 781 01:00:45,058 --> 01:00:47,561 “The Beast Within" is another one of these low 782 01:00:47,602 --> 01:00:50,730 budget '80s movies that is super rapey at the crux of it. 783 01:00:50,730 --> 01:00:54,693 You've got character actors in there who have been in Oscar nominated films. 784 01:00:54,693 --> 01:00:57,612 You've got Ronnie Cox in there, you've got Bibi Besch in there. 785 01:00:57,612 --> 01:01:01,616 It's a pretty trashy movie for the caliber of actors that are in it. 786 01:01:01,658 --> 01:01:03,702 R.G. Armstrong - no slouch, really qualified character actor. 787 01:01:03,702 --> 01:01:10,500 Lord save us, he's been embalmed. 788 01:01:10,500 --> 01:01:12,377 bladder effects are front and center in the 789 01:01:12,419 --> 01:01:14,504 '80s horror movies in the transformation scenes. 790 01:01:14,504 --> 01:01:17,507 You see it in "The Howling“ and you see it in "An American Werewolf in London". 791 01:01:17,507 --> 01:01:20,010 Anytime something's changing, that's a bladder effect. And 792 01:01:20,010 --> 01:01:22,637 Beast Within is like a script written around a bladder effect. 793 01:01:24,514 --> 01:01:27,934 "Beast Within" Philippe Mora, whom I dearly love directed it, 794 01:01:27,934 --> 01:01:30,520 all they had at the time were bladder effects, 795 01:01:30,520 --> 01:01:31,646 so all you could do was blow up. 796 01:01:31,688 --> 01:01:36,067 You know, under the latex, the skin. 797 01:01:36,067 --> 01:01:38,320 “The Beast Within" is a very comical version of 798 01:01:38,320 --> 01:01:40,530 it. Tom Berman did the effects and I love Tom, 799 01:01:40,530 --> 01:01:42,616 he's got an excuse for that transformation scene. 800 01:01:44,534 --> 01:01:47,621 “The Beast Within" is the nadir of - of bladder 801 01:01:47,621 --> 01:01:50,665 effects in which the - the lead monster's head 802 01:01:50,665 --> 01:01:53,668 explodes to a point where he looks like Charlie Brown. 803 01:01:53,710 --> 01:01:55,921 And it just goes and goes, and goes, and goes, 804 01:01:55,962 --> 01:01:58,632 and goes, and goes, and goes, and it's so silly looking. 805 01:01:58,673 --> 01:02:01,676 Tom says in his own defense, that they had already 806 01:02:01,676 --> 01:02:05,513 gotten the scenes for the transformation that he felt were good, 807 01:02:05,555 --> 01:02:08,266 and then they said, "Let's just have fun. Let's just pop it, 808 01:02:08,266 --> 01:02:10,560 let's just film it until it will not go any more". 809 01:02:10,560 --> 01:02:11,686 And then the director used that. 810 01:02:11,686 --> 01:02:13,271 And a friend of mine who said, 811 01:02:13,271 --> 01:02:16,608 "Testing something's limits usually results in finding them". 812 01:02:16,608 --> 01:02:20,612 Bladder effects can be awesome, and sometimes they can be "The Beast Within". 813 01:02:20,612 --> 01:02:24,532 God. - [panting]. 814 01:02:24,532 --> 01:02:31,081 "Evilspeak" is a movie that's 815 01:02:31,081 --> 01:02:36,628 starring the outstanding 816 01:02:36,628 --> 01:02:39,631 Clint Howard, 817 01:02:39,631 --> 01:02:44,678 Ron Howard's brother, 818 01:02:44,678 --> 01:02:47,389 and he is a guy who's bullied at school 819 01:02:47,389 --> 01:02:50,684 and figures out the perfect way to get revenge. 820 01:02:50,684 --> 01:02:53,728 He uses his computer to summon the devil. 821 01:02:53,728 --> 01:02:57,565 I conjure in command the prince of darkness! 822 01:02:57,565 --> 01:03:01,569 This is one of those magical movies from the early '80s, 823 01:03:01,569 --> 01:03:06,574 where they were trying to capitalize on the explosion of computers. 824 01:03:06,574 --> 01:03:07,826 "Well, 825 01:03:07,826 --> 01:03:11,579 what can we do to put computers into movies and especially into horror movies? 826 01:03:11,579 --> 01:03:15,583 I got it! Let's have a kid who can summon the devil with the computer." 827 01:03:15,583 --> 01:03:18,586 Save me! 828 01:03:19,587 --> 01:03:24,676 Even though there are kids being 829 01:03:24,718 --> 01:03:29,764 killed, you side with the killer 830 01:03:29,806 --> 01:03:34,602 because he's a guy who has been bullied and he's really just out getting revenge 831 01:03:34,602 --> 01:03:36,688 for all the stuff that people have done to him. 832 01:03:42,694 --> 01:03:46,781 Makes you wish we all had a Commodore 64 for revenge, doesn't it? 833 01:04:05,633 --> 01:04:13,475 The story revolves around a slumber party and a driller killer, 834 01:04:13,475 --> 01:04:17,771 coming to kill said slumber party, 835 01:04:17,812 --> 01:04:21,649 hence the massacre in the title. 836 01:04:21,649 --> 01:04:26,780 The thing that people forget about this movie is how funny it is. 837 01:04:33,203 --> 01:04:38,792 It was originally written as a spoof lampooning the genre, 838 01:04:38,833 --> 01:04:41,252 but I don't think that people who bought 839 01:04:41,252 --> 01:04:43,713 the script really had any sense of irony, 840 01:04:43,713 --> 01:04:49,803 because they mainlined it and basically made it this fairly ingenious movie. 841 01:04:51,679 --> 01:04:53,890 I love the dynamic between the girls. 842 01:04:56,684 --> 01:05:00,230 Even in the beginning when like they don't realize anything things going on, 843 01:05:00,230 --> 01:05:07,946 but people around them are just dying [chuckles], it's just kind of this weird, 844 01:05:07,946 --> 01:05:13,535 standard J11 killer, you know, just running around with this 845 01:05:13,535 --> 01:05:19,749 incredibly impressive drill. Chock full of really benign monotony. 846 01:05:19,749 --> 01:05:22,710 What do you say we order a pizza? - No anchovies. 847 01:05:22,710 --> 01:05:28,591 Punctuated by savage masculine kills. 848 01:05:28,633 --> 01:05:35,807 It's really a dissertation on the fact that 849 01:05:35,807 --> 01:05:41,896 any male serial killer is just basically using his, you know. 850 01:05:41,896 --> 01:05:45,859 [gasping]. - How pretty. 851 01:05:45,900 --> 01:05:50,822 The symbolism in the movie when they basically chop that off and go after him, 852 01:05:50,822 --> 01:05:55,869 I mean, it makes Death Ride look like a cakewalk. It's pretty funny. 853 01:06:11,759 --> 01:06:13,803 I love "Alone in the Dark". It's a weird little 854 01:06:13,803 --> 01:06:15,930 'What if' movie; like if we didn't fall into this 855 01:06:15,930 --> 01:06:19,767 slasher summer camp thing in the '80s, then something like "Alone in the Dark" 856 01:06:19,767 --> 01:06:21,060 had a chance to shine, 857 01:06:21,060 --> 01:06:24,939 where you're using A-list actors and like a weird "Home lnvasion“ plot, 858 01:06:29,777 --> 01:06:30,820 Jack Palance is amazing in it, 859 01:06:30,862 --> 01:06:32,864 Martin Landau is amazing in it, so is Donald Pleasence. 860 01:06:36,784 --> 01:06:38,536 "Alone in the Dark“'s poster makes you 861 01:06:38,578 --> 01:06:40,788 think you're going to see another slasher movie, 862 01:06:40,788 --> 01:06:44,959 and not a bananas “Home lnvasion" movie by a group of escaped mental patients, 863 01:06:44,959 --> 01:06:47,629 that are all middle to late aged white men, 864 01:06:47,670 --> 01:06:51,049 played by some of the best actors of their generation. 865 01:06:51,049 --> 01:06:53,051 [laughing]. - What are you, some kind of asshole? 866 01:06:57,347 --> 01:06:59,891 That opening has no reason to be in the film. It's just 867 01:06:59,891 --> 01:07:01,935 a crazy Grab Me by the Lapel dream 868 01:07:01,935 --> 01:07:04,896 sequence that goes berserk right out of the gate. 869 01:07:07,899 --> 01:07:10,860 I think it's interesting that "Alone in the Dark“ is made by New Line 870 01:07:10,902 --> 01:07:13,988 and it's got a very "Elm Street" opening two years before "Elm Street" happened. 871 01:07:14,030 --> 01:07:17,825 And then Jack Sholder, who directed it, ended up doing "Elm Street“ too. 872 01:07:17,825 --> 01:07:20,787 I really wish that there was more of that flavor in the 873 01:07:20,787 --> 01:07:23,831 '80s Horror. “Alone in the Dark“ is a weird little movie 874 01:07:24,999 --> 01:07:25,833 that's kind of its own thing. 875 01:07:25,833 --> 01:07:33,007 Vengeance is mine sayeth the Lord [laughing]. 876 01:07:45,061 --> 01:07:47,522 "Night Beast" [chuckles]. Oh, boy, 877 01:07:47,564 --> 01:07:50,858 "Night Beast“ is a gem right here. I mean, it's 878 01:07:50,858 --> 01:07:55,863 a low budget film, but it did an incredible job on the effects. 879 01:08:00,868 --> 01:08:03,871 This alien is here for the body count. I mean, 880 01:08:03,913 --> 01:08:07,000 it just kills people in all kinds of gory ways. 881 01:08:12,422 --> 01:08:16,884 The alien has this very funny facial expression. I don't know what it is, 882 01:08:16,884 --> 01:08:20,138 but there's something very funny about that alien's 883 01:08:20,138 --> 01:08:23,975 face. You don't really understand what the alien's motive is. 884 01:08:24,017 --> 01:08:27,437 It kind of seems like a child that just got a new toy. Like, 885 01:08:27,437 --> 01:08:28,980 Oh, what's this button do? 886 01:08:28,980 --> 01:08:33,026 Oh, wow! And he's just killing people for fun the whole movie. 887 01:08:38,364 --> 01:08:40,992 Guess who did the music? JJ Abrams. 888 01:08:40,992 --> 01:08:47,040 JJ Abrams, who was credited as Jeffrey Abrams did the music in "Night Beast“. 889 01:08:47,040 --> 01:08:51,002 Like, if you want a body count, I mean, this movie has it. 890 01:08:57,925 --> 01:09:00,094 They gotta bring back the "Night Beast“ in some way. 891 01:09:08,478 --> 01:09:10,104 I do enjoy horror, 892 01:09:10,146 --> 01:09:15,109 but only if it's really good. I've tended to like darker films, 893 01:09:15,109 --> 01:09:20,073 even as a child, Film Noir, you know, for instance, I very like that genre. 894 01:09:20,073 --> 01:09:24,160 It just is my favorite form of escape. It's like, 895 01:09:24,202 --> 01:09:27,955 just take me away, I'm a willing participant. 896 01:09:27,955 --> 01:09:32,126 You know, I really want you to - to change my world right now. 897 01:09:32,168 --> 01:09:33,544 Today, I think of '80s movies, 898 01:09:33,586 --> 01:09:36,130 I think of really big hair, to start with [chuckles], 899 01:09:36,130 --> 01:09:41,386 that's pretty scary now. I love movies. I would always look at who directed it, 900 01:09:41,427 --> 01:09:43,137 who wrote it, who's in it, 901 01:09:43,179 --> 01:09:48,017 what's it about, all of the above really. You know, I started out to be a dancer. 902 01:09:48,017 --> 01:09:52,980 That was my first love. And film really found me, oddly enough. 903 01:09:53,022 --> 01:09:55,024 It wasn't like I was in search of, 904 01:09:55,066 --> 01:09:59,570 even the first time I walked on the sound stage, like, “Ah, it's like home". 905 01:09:59,570 --> 01:10:02,115 You know, it felt like I was in the right place. 906 01:10:02,115 --> 01:10:06,077 Before I did film in New York, I did a number of commercials. 907 01:10:06,077 --> 01:10:09,163 Pants! - Wow, a car with pants! 908 01:10:09,163 --> 01:10:16,045 And I was very shy, so it was at that point that I got into acting classes. 909 01:10:16,087 --> 01:10:18,005 And then when I started making movies in the '70s, 910 01:10:18,047 --> 01:10:22,135 and I found myself in a crowd of people like 911 01:10:22,135 --> 01:10:25,304 Brian De Palma, Steven Spielberg, Martin Scorsese, 912 01:10:25,304 --> 01:10:28,599 Francis Ford Coppola, George Lucas and Bob Zemeckis, 913 01:10:28,599 --> 01:10:30,601 who I met as well. You're sitting there, 914 01:10:30,643 --> 01:10:34,272 and you're hearing this conversation, they're deconstructing these films, 915 01:10:34,272 --> 01:10:37,150 and talking about filmmakers. And now all of a sudden, 916 01:10:37,191 --> 01:10:42,155 I'm looking at it from a different perspective. I really like good directors, 917 01:10:42,155 --> 01:10:47,118 they know what they're going to do, they have a plan, and they will collaborate. 918 01:10:47,118 --> 01:10:51,497 You know, they're interested in your perspective as well. Honestly, 919 01:10:51,497 --> 01:10:53,166 I spend much more time on 920 01:10:53,166 --> 01:10:59,046 enriching the characters in life and life and making it as real as possible. 921 01:10:59,088 --> 01:11:02,091 I really throw caution to the wind and leave it to 922 01:11:02,091 --> 01:11:05,219 the director to get the tone and the balance correct 923 01:11:05,261 --> 01:11:08,347 between all the performers, and you know, 924 01:11:08,389 --> 01:11:11,642 delivering a film that makes sense totally. 925 01:11:11,642 --> 01:11:14,937 But I've worked with great directors. Now you have a problem, 926 01:11:14,937 --> 01:11:16,230 which I've experienced, 927 01:11:16,230 --> 01:11:19,358 where you work with a director who you 928 01:11:19,400 --> 01:11:23,154 can't really trust. And that's very difficult. 929 01:11:23,196 --> 01:11:26,949 Unfortunately, with women, a lot of the roles that I 930 01:11:26,949 --> 01:11:31,120 played and a lot of the films that I was in, there wasn't 931 01:11:31,120 --> 01:11:33,539 a lot of background about who this character is, 932 01:11:33,581 --> 01:11:35,208 so I had to fill in those blanks. 933 01:11:35,208 --> 01:11:39,253 Starting with "Carrie“, I just literally I read a biography: 934 01:11:39,378 --> 01:11:42,131 Where they eat in the morning, what do they dress, what do they like to do. 935 01:11:42,131 --> 01:11:46,135 It just informs me it makes it fuller and richer for me, 936 01:11:46,177 --> 01:11:49,347 because there's often not a lot on the page. 937 01:11:49,347 --> 01:11:51,265 You'll get canned for this, you bitch! 938 01:11:51,307 --> 01:11:55,269 One more word from you and I'm gonna knock you down, do you understand me?! 939 01:11:55,269 --> 01:11:59,357 I did not see Chris Hargensen as a bitch, let's start with that. 940 01:11:59,357 --> 01:12:04,237 I thought that Chris Hargensen was a pretty cool girl. 941 01:12:04,278 --> 01:12:09,242 And this gal Carrie that I wouldn't even hang out with, 942 01:12:09,283 --> 01:12:14,455 has just screwed things up for me. So there. [laughing]. 943 01:12:14,497 --> 01:12:17,291 Look at her. - You eat shit. 944 01:12:17,291 --> 01:12:21,170 You have to find why you like a character and teenagers are so black and white. 945 01:12:21,170 --> 01:12:24,715 That's what's interesting about having people in their twenties play that role, 946 01:12:24,757 --> 01:12:27,260 you have a little distance on and a little perspective, 947 01:12:27,260 --> 01:12:31,138 what I had to wrap myself around was the, you know, what's driving 948 01:12:31,138 --> 01:12:35,309 her? Why is she doing this? Why she's so hurt? what's going on at home? 949 01:12:35,309 --> 01:12:40,231 And, you know, why does she feel so entitled to behave this way? 950 01:12:40,231 --> 01:12:42,650 And I would have to say that the crew really 951 01:12:42,650 --> 01:12:45,319 helped me because whenever John and I, Travolta, 952 01:12:45,319 --> 01:12:49,240 were on the set, everybody laughed, so I just thought we were really funny. 953 01:12:49,240 --> 01:12:53,202 I thought we were comic relief, but I didn't realize everyone's gonna despise me. 954 01:13:01,210 --> 01:13:03,546 I think "Dressed to Kill" is first of all, 955 01:13:03,546 --> 01:13:07,341 it's visually stunning. It's an emotional dance, it's a visual dance. 956 01:13:07,383 --> 01:13:11,220 The film worked on paper, it just did. It was, you could see it. 957 01:13:11,262 --> 01:13:16,225 And I personally wasn't a fan of the slasher aspect of it, 958 01:13:16,225 --> 01:13:21,272 and I always felt that the elevator scene, you didn't even have to see anything. 959 01:13:21,314 --> 01:13:24,275 my preference would have been to just see this 960 01:13:24,275 --> 01:13:28,237 character being backed into the co-- that was enough for me. 961 01:13:31,240 --> 01:13:34,201 I didn't need the blood, but I guess people like that. 962 01:13:38,331 --> 01:13:43,336 The psychological aspects of it rather than the thriller aspects of it 963 01:13:43,336 --> 01:13:47,214 are what I prefer. This character that I play, 964 01:13:47,256 --> 01:13:51,302 the Liz Blake character, is a very strong woman, 965 01:13:51,302 --> 01:13:53,804 you can say whatever you want about her. She 966 01:13:53,804 --> 01:13:56,474 knows what she wants. And that's what she gets. 967 01:13:56,474 --> 01:14:00,394 Well, what do you think? 968 01:14:00,394 --> 01:14:03,981 Shooting the last scene in “Dressed to Kill", first of all, 969 01:14:04,023 --> 01:14:07,360 you're in a sound stage, tiny little corner of a space. 970 01:14:07,401 --> 01:14:08,611 The water's running, 971 01:14:08,653 --> 01:14:12,365 trying to get it a little warmer so that I don't freeze to death. 972 01:14:12,406 --> 01:14:15,701 It's the dead of winter. I remember the cold, I remember the wet, 973 01:14:15,701 --> 01:14:18,496 I remember the naked [laughing] That's what I remember. 974 01:14:24,835 --> 01:14:28,506 There was a mirror, it opened up, that's when the the razor comes out. 975 01:14:33,302 --> 01:14:37,306 Even though someone's lying on the floor, they're pumping the blood, 976 01:14:37,306 --> 01:14:40,309 is it coming through with the razor on my throat, 977 01:14:40,309 --> 01:14:46,983 there is something - even though it's all make believe - that's traumatizing, 978 01:14:46,983 --> 01:14:50,319 when you see blood gushing out of you. 979 01:14:53,322 --> 01:14:56,867 It does end in a nightmare for her, so you wonder how 980 01:14:56,909 --> 01:15:01,330 much more she's going to be going on in her life with all of that. 981 01:15:01,372 --> 01:15:04,417 The big hullabaloo when the film came out, 982 01:15:04,417 --> 01:15:07,461 had nothing to do with transgender at all. 983 01:15:07,461 --> 01:15:11,424 It was all about the misogyny. That's what I remember. 984 01:15:11,424 --> 01:15:12,800 Let's face it, you're a whore, 985 01:15:12,800 --> 01:15:15,469 eh? You're a Park Avenue whore, but you're still a whore. 986 01:15:15,469 --> 01:15:19,348 Fuck you. - No, fuck you. 987 01:15:19,348 --> 01:15:23,477 That bothered me because I - I felt like Liz Blake was a pretty tough cookie. 988 01:15:23,477 --> 01:15:26,647 She was nobody's fool. And unlike Angie Dickinson character 989 01:15:26,647 --> 01:15:30,359 who had to be punished for her sexuality, she had real sexual energy. 990 01:15:30,359 --> 01:15:34,488 She was real comfortable with her sexuality. In fact, it was a business for her. 991 01:15:34,488 --> 01:15:38,367 Do you want to fuck me? - Oh, yes. 992 01:15:38,367 --> 01:15:42,496 I think it would be very hard to get that film made today with that script, 993 01:15:42,496 --> 01:15:47,418 with that transgender character being the killer, maybe impossible. 994 01:15:47,418 --> 01:15:50,629 What's important about that film is what we didn't 995 01:15:50,629 --> 01:15:53,591 know and how unconscious we were at that time. 996 01:15:53,591 --> 01:15:58,471 For better or for worse, we're more conscious now, or self conscious in a way, 997 01:15:58,471 --> 01:16:01,307 now everybody seems very self conscious to 998 01:16:01,307 --> 01:16:04,393 me about everything. We're still understanding 999 01:16:04,393 --> 01:16:08,147 and still trying to understand some of the complications 1000 01:16:08,189 --> 01:16:11,400 of a character like the Michael Caine character. 1001 01:16:14,403 --> 01:16:17,281 I do not gravitate to scary films, 1002 01:16:17,323 --> 01:16:21,619 but I'm not afraid of them either. I like suspense, 1003 01:16:21,660 --> 01:16:23,537 I like jeopardy in films, 1004 01:16:23,579 --> 01:16:29,418 I do. Sol guess I like feeling a little bit out of control or - or whatever, 1005 01:16:29,460 --> 01:16:33,506 but I don't like slasher films. Don't like just blood and guts, 1006 01:16:33,506 --> 01:16:36,509 I'd like to be a little bit smarter than that. 1007 01:16:54,443 --> 01:17:00,449 Barbara Hershey in “The Entity" is attacked by a sexual being of some sort, 1008 01:17:00,449 --> 01:17:02,618 and it's very realistic and very disturbing. 1009 01:17:10,584 --> 01:17:15,131 It was apparently based on a true story that had happened seven, 1010 01:17:15,172 --> 01:17:18,509 eight years previous to the making of the film, 1011 01:17:18,509 --> 01:17:21,095 about this woman who was terrorized, 1012 01:17:21,095 --> 01:17:24,598 and you know, raped sexually by this - this ghost. 1013 01:17:24,640 --> 01:17:28,686 Barbara Hershey gives an excellent performance in the lead role. 1014 01:17:28,686 --> 01:17:34,608 Ron Silver's in it. It's a small film, it's actually quite effective. 1015 01:17:34,608 --> 01:17:36,569 You think I'm insane. 1016 01:17:36,610 --> 01:17:42,533 Insane? That means different things to different people, Carla. 1017 01:17:42,533 --> 01:17:46,036 It was so realistic, because of all the things she was 1018 01:17:46,036 --> 01:17:49,623 doing and the bruises. That would have been a hard role. 1019 01:17:49,623 --> 01:17:51,458 - You'll wait 'till I'm alone, 1020 01:17:51,458 --> 01:17:55,629 won't you? Then you'll come forth to hurt me, to hurt my children! 1021 01:17:55,629 --> 01:17:59,675 Stan Winston was responsible for this moment 1022 01:17:59,717 --> 01:18:04,638 where you see Barbara Hershey's character nude in bed, 1023 01:18:04,638 --> 01:18:09,643 and you see the entity fondling her. It's an excellent effect, 1024 01:18:09,643 --> 01:18:13,606 he and his team created a fake body for Barbara 1025 01:18:13,647 --> 01:18:17,651 and she was underneath the bed on a slant board, 1026 01:18:17,693 --> 01:18:23,657 Stan was underneath her reaching up past her to manipulate the the breasts. 1027 01:18:23,699 --> 01:18:26,577 So he would had cups on the interior of the breast 1028 01:18:26,577 --> 01:18:29,580 and when he pulled his fingers in, from the outside, 1029 01:18:29,622 --> 01:18:34,168 it would look as if invisible fingers were pressing. And his other 1030 01:18:34,168 --> 01:18:38,756 crew were gently manipulating the fake arms and legs of this body. 1031 01:18:38,756 --> 01:18:44,678 Barbara Hershey was exhausted by doing “The Entity" because first of all, 1032 01:18:44,678 --> 01:18:49,558 she had to be naked. She had to act like somebody was having sex with her. 1033 01:18:49,558 --> 01:18:52,061 She's got all these people on set. With me, 1034 01:18:52,061 --> 01:18:55,689 when I'm acting like possessed or something, I feel ridiculous. 1035 01:18:55,689 --> 01:19:00,569 I'm sure all that was running through our head when she was doing it. 1036 01:19:00,569 --> 01:19:02,446 But when you see the final movie, 1037 01:19:02,446 --> 01:19:06,617 it's very realistic. And she did a great job. That had been so hard to do. 1038 01:19:06,617 --> 01:19:13,582 Welcome home. 1039 01:19:27,137 --> 01:19:29,807 The goriest nastiest thing that kind of stuck 1040 01:19:29,807 --> 01:19:32,810 with me growing up wasn't anything that Jason did, 1041 01:19:32,810 --> 01:19:35,604 or Freddy Krueger did or Michael Myers did. 1042 01:19:35,604 --> 01:19:38,691 It was Lucio Fulci‘s "City of the Living Dead". 1043 01:19:46,657 --> 01:19:49,618 The living dead part kind of throws you off. 1044 01:19:51,620 --> 01:19:54,623 It's a more supernatural movie. 1045 01:20:00,629 --> 01:20:04,842 Almost like it was tacked on to kind of ride the Romero train. 1046 01:20:08,178 --> 01:20:11,307 The original title was “City of the Living Dead“. But when they 1047 01:20:11,348 --> 01:20:14,685 brought it over to America, they changed it to "The Gates of Hell". 1048 01:20:14,685 --> 01:20:16,937 “The Gates of Hell" ad seemed like it 1049 01:20:16,979 --> 01:20:19,690 was just warning you to not watch this movie. 1050 01:20:19,690 --> 01:20:21,608 It had like a long explanation about why it 1051 01:20:21,608 --> 01:20:23,736 wasn't rated but you can't come see this movie. 1052 01:20:23,736 --> 01:20:26,697 I remember the image of “The Gates of Hell" thing, 1053 01:20:26,697 --> 01:20:30,784 thinking it was going to be the most terrifying thing I've ever seen. 1054 01:20:30,784 --> 01:20:34,705 Just a really effective marketing campaign. To a 12 year old. 1055 01:20:34,705 --> 01:20:40,878 I saw a priest who by hanging himself, opened the gates of hell. 1056 01:20:40,878 --> 01:20:45,632 It was almost like this gothic zombie tale surrounding 1057 01:20:45,632 --> 01:20:49,803 this priest trying to bring about the apocalypse 1058 01:20:49,845 --> 01:20:51,347 in this small town, 1059 01:20:51,347 --> 01:20:55,809 and the protagonists basically trying to shut the portal to hell. 1060 01:21:01,690 --> 01:21:06,320 A dude is sitting in his pickup truck with his lady, 1061 01:21:06,320 --> 01:21:12,910 and she turns and looks at him after seeing this priest flash before eyes, 1062 01:21:12,910 --> 01:21:17,206 and she just starts puking her own guts out. And it 1063 01:21:17,206 --> 01:21:21,794 goes on a lot longer than you would expect [laughing]. 1064 01:21:21,794 --> 01:21:24,922 It's super gnarly. And that always stuck with me. 1065 01:21:29,718 --> 01:21:31,720 And there's some kind of a kidney looking thing and then 1066 01:21:31,720 --> 01:21:34,515 here comes some sausage intestines and then there's 1067 01:21:34,515 --> 01:21:37,810 a heart like thing and it's just like, it just doesn't stop. 1068 01:21:45,275 --> 01:21:47,152 It has, to me, 1069 01:21:47,194 --> 01:21:52,866 the best kill. The father holding homeboy’s head down and the drill coming in, 1070 01:21:52,866 --> 01:21:58,747 and just giving him the full on Black & Decker lobotomy. 1071 01:22:03,752 --> 01:22:07,756 It's so sick. To this clay, it's one of my favorite Fulci movies. 1072 01:22:20,769 --> 01:22:25,774 “Pieces" is as the tagline says, "exactly what you think it is“. 1073 01:22:25,774 --> 01:22:29,903 This is a movie they were trying to capitalize on the "Texas Chainsaw Massacre". 1074 01:22:32,906 --> 01:22:38,787 A maniac killer going around a college, chopping up a bevvy of 1075 01:22:38,787 --> 01:22:45,002 beautiful women to basically create one perfect, beautiful woman. 1076 01:22:48,797 --> 01:22:52,759 And the fact that this is still such an 1077 01:22:52,801 --> 01:22:57,890 underground movie is criminal. The gore is insane. 1078 01:22:57,890 --> 01:23:04,897 There's so much blood everywhere, it's almost like you can just smell the guts. 1079 01:23:09,359 --> 01:23:13,030 I would have to turn in my horror card if I didn't say that the greatest scene 1080 01:23:13,030 --> 01:23:20,913 in almost any '80s horror film was not Linda George shouting, "Bastard!" 1081 01:23:20,954 --> 01:23:27,836 Bastard! Bastard! 1082 01:23:27,836 --> 01:23:31,840 There was a major red herring in the film. There's a guy who's the groundskeeper, 1083 01:23:31,840 --> 01:23:35,302 walking around with a chainsaw, played by Paul Smith, 1084 01:23:35,302 --> 01:23:38,931 who was Bluto in the "Popeye“ movie, and also in "Dune". 1085 01:23:38,972 --> 01:23:43,060 You think that he is going to be the killer. It's one 1086 01:23:43,060 --> 01:23:47,064 of the most blatantly obvious not red herrings ever. 1087 01:23:47,105 --> 01:23:50,108 He's walking around, he's got the chainsaw, 1088 01:23:50,108 --> 01:23:53,987 he loves his chainsaw, and people are dying by chainsaw. 1089 01:23:53,987 --> 01:24:01,954 If anything, you have to see it for the ending. You will not see this one coming. 1090 01:24:18,470 --> 01:24:23,433 Lucio Fulci‘s “The Beyond" is a fantastic movie that I think, one, 1091 01:24:23,433 --> 01:24:27,896 not only captures the essence of who he was as a filmmaker, 1092 01:24:27,896 --> 01:24:32,025 but I also think in a really great way it's really a fantastic sort of 1093 01:24:32,067 --> 01:24:36,947 celebration of the weirdness that is New Orleans, specifically in the early 1980s. 1094 01:24:36,989 --> 01:24:42,327 The movie is centered on a young woman who inherits mysteriously a hotel, and then 1095 01:24:42,327 --> 01:24:47,916 ultimately finds out that the hotel is centered over one of the gates of hell, darn. 1096 01:24:47,916 --> 01:24:51,044 This hotel is one of the seven gateways of hell. 1097 01:24:51,044 --> 01:24:54,256 And I think in the first 30 seconds, 1098 01:24:54,256 --> 01:24:59,928 we've already got flesh ripping, really ghastly gruesome effects. 1099 01:24:59,928 --> 01:25:01,680 Which for the vmrk of Glannetlao Do Raoul, 1100 01:25:01,722 --> 01:25:05,017 who is one of the greatest sort of Italian special effects artists over there, 1101 01:25:05,058 --> 01:25:11,023 and it just never stops from there. It's just a constant barrage of horribleness. 1102 01:25:13,525 --> 01:25:17,154 He also taps into my fear of big spiders as well, in Fulci's world 1103 01:25:17,154 --> 01:25:21,074 tarantulas are going to come for you and they're going to eat your face. 1104 01:25:21,074 --> 01:25:25,037 You have like these little munching spiders coming 1105 01:25:25,037 --> 01:25:29,041 through eating the guy's flesh and tearing it away. 1106 01:25:29,041 --> 01:25:33,128 Basically, it sounds, you know, like, there's like a bunch of people at a buffet. 1107 01:25:35,505 --> 01:25:38,634 There's a great set piece at the hospital. It's 1108 01:25:38,634 --> 01:25:42,012 just like a constant barrage of reanimated corpses. 1109 01:25:42,012 --> 01:25:48,060 They're trying to fight their way out and it just like it doesn't stop. Eyes were 1110 01:25:48,101 --> 01:25:54,066 definitely a motif in "The Beyond“ that we saw sort of utilized again and again, 1111 01:25:54,066 --> 01:25:56,652 we have Joe the handyman who basically finds 1112 01:25:56,652 --> 01:26:00,238 himself being blinded in both eyes from after being attacked. 1113 01:26:02,991 --> 01:26:05,661 And then you have a housekeeper who ends up getting 1114 01:26:05,661 --> 01:26:08,997 sort of pushed onto a large spike and her eye pops out as well. 1115 01:26:08,997 --> 01:26:13,669 And then you have characters in the movie who also go blind. It's a 1116 01:26:13,669 --> 01:26:19,091 really weird and wild movie, but you wouldn't expect anything less from Fulci. 1117 01:26:34,022 --> 01:26:36,066 I wanted to make a monster movie. 1118 01:26:39,611 --> 01:26:44,074 I wrote "The Being" when I was 23. I was fascinated by the idea of horror, 1119 01:26:44,074 --> 01:26:49,371 because I love eliciting a reaction. A nuclear waste dump produces a 1120 01:26:49,371 --> 01:26:55,085 monster that wreaks havoc on a small town while he's looking for his mom. 1121 01:26:55,085 --> 01:27:00,340 [laughing] okay? Alright? There's always a human element there, 1122 01:27:00,382 --> 01:27:03,093 my sort of weird sense of humor. 1123 01:27:03,093 --> 01:27:07,222 I think that is the thread you see in all my 1124 01:27:07,264 --> 01:27:12,102 films. I went over to Martin Landau's acting studio, 1125 01:27:12,144 --> 01:27:16,148 because I wanted Martin Landau on my film. And I said, “You know, 1126 01:27:16,148 --> 01:27:21,194 Mr. Landau, I really don't want to be in your acting class, no offense. [laughing] 1127 01:27:21,194 --> 01:27:25,157 I'm a director, and I want you to be in my film". 1128 01:27:25,198 --> 01:27:30,287 And he was so wonderful. I pulled the script out of my bag and gave it to him, 1129 01:27:30,287 --> 01:27:34,124 and he goes, "I'll read it." and he read it that night and he said he'd do it. 1130 01:27:34,166 --> 01:27:38,712 And he was instrumental in getting Jose Ferrer who was a friend of his, 1131 01:27:38,712 --> 01:27:40,213 and Dorothy Malone. 1132 01:27:40,213 --> 01:27:46,052 I had two Academy Award winning actors in my first horror 1133 01:27:46,094 --> 01:27:52,309 film. I even spent so much time trying to design the monster, 1134 01:27:52,350 --> 01:27:55,228 and finally everyone said, "Stop designing the monster, 1135 01:27:55,228 --> 01:27:57,147 start making the movie." [laughing] 1136 01:28:01,109 --> 01:28:04,029 I may have been heavy handed with it, 1137 01:28:04,029 --> 01:28:09,117 but it still works. Of this denial about environmental disasters. 1138 01:28:09,117 --> 01:28:13,038 I mean, Martin Landau says with dead seriousness that dumping 1139 01:28:13,038 --> 01:28:17,250 nuclear waste into the aquifer will not affect the drinking water. 1140 01:28:17,250 --> 01:28:20,504 He even does the demonstration: Pouring the water, 1141 01:28:20,545 --> 01:28:23,131 drinking the water, "Mmmmmm, delicious". 1142 01:28:23,131 --> 01:28:27,260 This goes on today. It was chilling, 1143 01:28:27,260 --> 01:28:32,140 unpredictable. And a slice of Americana. 1144 01:28:32,140 --> 01:28:39,147 I learned a lot making that movie [laughing]. It wasn't a perfect film, but I have to say, you 1145 01:28:39,189 --> 01:28:46,279 know, I have certain fans that come to me and tell me it's their favorite film that I've made. 1146 01:29:04,172 --> 01:29:06,049 Michael Mann directs "The Keep“, 1147 01:29:06,049 --> 01:29:10,303 which I think is one of his best movies. That's a Pandora's Box movie. 1148 01:29:10,303 --> 01:29:14,140 It's like "The Mummy", we don't want to let whatever‘s in the 1149 01:29:14,182 --> 01:29:18,353 keep out. The reason it's in the keep it supposed to stay in there. 1150 01:29:18,395 --> 01:29:24,192 Never touch the crosses. Never! 1151 01:29:24,192 --> 01:29:28,196 And the Nazis have to control this keep. And of course 1152 01:29:28,196 --> 01:29:32,325 they can't not open up the keep and find out what is in. 1153 01:29:37,205 --> 01:29:40,834 What we find out is inside is Scott Glenn. [chuckles] 1154 01:29:40,834 --> 01:29:44,337 You don't want to let Scott Glenn out on the world. 1155 01:29:44,337 --> 01:29:49,342 Don't touch that. 1156 01:29:51,303 --> 01:29:56,057 The reason why “The Keep" has a cult following is that it is both 1157 01:29:56,057 --> 01:30:01,229 very '80s and very unique. The sound design, the look of it, the music. 1158 01:30:01,271 --> 01:30:05,066 It's all very unlike what you would see in a 1159 01:30:05,066 --> 01:30:09,237 World War ll movie where a monster kills people. 1160 01:30:09,279 --> 01:30:14,367 Michael Mann, just like on his previous movie "Thief", he used "Tangerine 1161 01:30:14,367 --> 01:30:19,372 Dream" for the soundtrack and it's these moody synthesized soundscapes, 1162 01:30:19,372 --> 01:30:23,335 which is again something you don't normally hear in a World War ll movie. 1163 01:30:29,799 --> 01:30:33,929 The villain of the movie, Molasar, has a really interesting look. When he 1164 01:30:33,970 --> 01:30:38,391 first appears he's this giant mass of muscle and sinew with a skull for a head, 1165 01:30:38,433 --> 01:30:41,353 it almost looks like somebody's skinned the Incredible Hulk. 1166 01:30:41,353 --> 01:30:46,274 On the soldiers of black. - I will destroy them! 1167 01:30:46,274 --> 01:30:47,275 And then later, 1168 01:30:47,317 --> 01:30:50,362 he gets more complete and he takes on almost this Golem-like appearance, 1169 01:30:50,403 --> 01:30:53,907 which is pretty appropriate considering the Golem is a 1170 01:30:53,907 --> 01:30:57,410 creature from Jewish mythology and he's killing Nazis. 1171 01:31:04,292 --> 01:31:07,212 The movie had a very troubled production. Michael Mann's 1172 01:31:07,212 --> 01:31:10,340 original cut was supposed to be three and a half hours long, 1173 01:31:10,340 --> 01:31:12,342 but they forced him to cut it down to a little over 1174 01:31:12,384 --> 01:31:14,511 an hour and a half. So as a result in the final movie, 1175 01:31:14,511 --> 01:31:17,305 there's a lot of the elements that aren't really explained. 1176 01:31:17,305 --> 01:31:21,643 For example, Scott Glenn's character, you're not exactly sure what his 1177 01:31:21,643 --> 01:31:26,523 connection to the villain is or why he's got these - these supernatural powers. 1178 01:31:26,523 --> 01:31:30,276 Michael Mann was very disappointed in the movie and 1179 01:31:30,276 --> 01:31:34,531 has basically tried to bury it ever since it was released. 1180 01:31:38,326 --> 01:31:42,288 Michael, if you're watching this, I know you don't like this movie, but there are 1181 01:31:42,288 --> 01:31:46,376 people out there who do. So, you know, maybe consider giving it a high def release. 1182 01:31:59,347 --> 01:32:00,598 In the '80s, 1183 01:32:00,598 --> 01:32:04,394 having the kids be part of the story and an integral part of the story, 1184 01:32:04,394 --> 01:32:08,356 instead ofjust someone's offspring, became more popular. 1185 01:32:08,356 --> 01:32:12,402 And it became more part of the story engine than just on the side. 1186 01:32:12,402 --> 01:32:15,196 We progressed out of that as just a cutesy little kind of, 1187 01:32:15,196 --> 01:32:18,366 "I'm the kid with the freckles", on an episode of "The Love Boat" 1188 01:32:18,366 --> 01:32:22,078 into being chased by guys with axes and monsters with dynamite, 1189 01:32:22,078 --> 01:32:25,415 and cars that come alive. Stuff that can really get you. 1190 01:32:25,415 --> 01:32:31,379 Anytime you put a young kid in a - in a scary story, it really brings it home. 1191 01:32:36,926 --> 01:32:39,804 You put them in groups, you put kids in peril, you put them in adventures, 1192 01:32:39,804 --> 01:32:42,390 it becomes this whole thing, and you're just wrapped up in emotion 1193 01:32:42,390 --> 01:32:44,517 because these are kids, you want them to succeed. 1194 01:32:44,559 --> 01:32:48,271 So you go all the way back to the original kid in a - in a horror story, 1195 01:32:48,271 --> 01:32:49,522 is when Frankenstein's 1196 01:32:49,522 --> 01:32:53,860 monster kills a little girl by the pond. That had to have been absolutely 1197 01:32:53,860 --> 01:32:58,615 astonishing to people at that time, that really punches you right in the chest, 1198 01:32:58,615 --> 01:33:01,534 where it's like, wow, some harm came to this kid. 1199 01:33:01,534 --> 01:33:05,997 There was a rule for a while that you cannot kill off a kid. 1200 01:33:05,997 --> 01:33:10,418 And I don't think I do except for in "the Being". [laughing] 1201 01:33:10,418 --> 01:33:13,505 I think I cross the line on that one. But I love 1202 01:33:13,505 --> 01:33:16,508 working with kids. They love that role playing. 1203 01:33:16,508 --> 01:33:22,639 They know how to react to what's happening, and get totally immersed in the scene 1204 01:33:22,639 --> 01:33:25,558 without being self conscious. 1205 01:33:28,978 --> 01:33:32,690 I have always loved watching young performers anyway. 1206 01:33:32,690 --> 01:33:37,570 Because it's amazing to me that someone can have that kind of ability. 1207 01:33:37,570 --> 01:33:42,200 Sometimes they grow up to be tremendous actors because of that, 1208 01:33:42,200 --> 01:33:44,702 and other times they're fuck ups. 1209 01:33:44,702 --> 01:33:47,872 But working with kids is a whole other thing that a lot of people 1210 01:33:47,872 --> 01:33:51,459 don't understand if they've never been in production with younger actors, 1211 01:33:51,459 --> 01:33:54,212 because there's restraints on time. They can, you know, depending on 1212 01:33:54,212 --> 01:33:57,465 how old you are, there's different levels of how long you can actually be on set. 1213 01:33:57,465 --> 01:33:59,884 There's even minimums or maximums of how long you can be 1214 01:33:59,884 --> 01:34:02,720 in front of the camera which adds into how long you can be on set. 1215 01:34:02,720 --> 01:34:05,473 You have to go to school every day. There's a reason why they say they 1216 01:34:05,515 --> 01:34:08,601 don't want to work with kids, it really is a pain in the ass for a production. 1217 01:34:12,480 --> 01:34:16,401 "Halloween ll|“ and on Halloween night, 1218 01:34:16,401 --> 01:34:23,658 all these masks are going to eat the kids faces and brains and kill them. 1219 01:34:29,622 --> 01:34:34,460 It gives me chills thinking about it. I want everybody to be reassured, 1220 01:34:34,460 --> 01:34:37,714 when I'm standing there on the phone screaming, 1221 01:34:37,714 --> 01:34:41,009 Please stop it, stop it, turn it off, 1222 01:34:41,009 --> 01:34:45,722 stop it turn off the final channel. Stop it, Stop it! 1223 01:34:45,722 --> 01:34:50,560 All the children were saved. You can take that to the bank. 1224 01:34:50,560 --> 01:34:53,771 When you're a kid, other kids getting killed on screen is much more 1225 01:34:53,771 --> 01:34:57,650 affecting than if you see their, you know, somebody's grandfather getting killed. 1226 01:35:01,529 --> 01:35:04,991 It became very trendy to have at least one or two 1227 01:35:04,991 --> 01:35:08,745 kids or a group of kids going against the antagonist. 1228 01:35:08,786 --> 01:35:15,585 They would assemble this group of - of plucky kids to try and take down, 1229 01:35:15,627 --> 01:35:19,756 you know, this incredibly disturbing force. 1230 01:35:19,756 --> 01:35:22,342 As a kid growing up in the '80s, 1231 01:35:22,342 --> 01:35:27,639 it was cool to kind of be able to see myself reflected in that. 1232 01:35:27,680 --> 01:35:32,810 It was empowering to see that, especially as a poor kid. 1233 01:35:40,151 --> 01:35:44,239 I think a lot of it came from the writings of Stephen 1234 01:35:44,280 --> 01:35:48,785 King. I mean "Cujo" has the kid, "it" has a group of kids. 1235 01:35:48,785 --> 01:35:52,580 I mean, he was kind of the inventor of that sub genre, 1236 01:35:52,580 --> 01:35:54,624 if you want to call it that. 1237 01:35:54,624 --> 01:35:58,336 Stephen King certainly has exploited Children as - children as victims, 1238 01:35:58,336 --> 01:35:59,796 children as evil, you know, 1239 01:35:59,796 --> 01:36:04,968 ancl - and done it really quite well. I think it's an interesting tool, because I 1240 01:36:04,968 --> 01:36:10,598 think we become - as the audience - very conflicted, because right away, it's a child. 1241 01:36:10,598 --> 01:36:13,810 So you have all of these mixed mixed emotions, 1242 01:36:13,810 --> 01:36:16,771 about how you're supposed to feel about it. 1243 01:36:20,608 --> 01:36:23,736 One of Stephen's tricks is to put kids in jeopardy, 1244 01:36:23,736 --> 01:36:28,658 it's a little bit too effective, I think, because it gets mimicked all the time. 1245 01:36:28,658 --> 01:36:33,621 And it's one of those things that I resent, it becomes a trope. Now, the kid 1246 01:36:33,663 --> 01:36:38,626 is being victimized so our heroes are justified in doing anything they want. 1247 01:36:38,626 --> 01:36:39,752 They're morally excused, 1248 01:36:39,752 --> 01:36:42,839 ethically excused from anything because there's a child involved. 1249 01:36:45,216 --> 01:36:50,305 Gage in "Pet Cemetery" is interesting, because in the beginning, 1250 01:36:50,305 --> 01:36:55,727 he is just an innocent little kid, and he gets killed devastatingly. 1251 01:37:00,690 --> 01:37:02,233 After I became a father, 1252 01:37:02,233 --> 01:37:06,654 that scene had so much more weight than it did when I was younger. 1253 01:37:06,696 --> 01:37:09,073 But it's interesting because he is the 1254 01:37:09,073 --> 01:37:11,784 poster child for innocence in the beginning. 1255 01:37:11,826 --> 01:37:13,786 Hi daddy, I love you. 1256 01:37:13,828 --> 01:37:19,709 And then after he gets buried in the pet cemetery, he comes back as the villain. 1257 01:37:21,252 --> 01:37:25,840 'Gage 2.0' comes in and cuts Fred Gwynne's Achilles tendon. 1258 01:37:25,882 --> 01:37:26,883 It's such a simple move, 1259 01:37:26,924 --> 01:37:29,719 but it's so cruel and it's so effective and it's so horrifying. 1260 01:37:38,728 --> 01:37:44,567 I don't scare easily. The moment that is iconic for me out of the 1980s, 1261 01:37:44,609 --> 01:37:50,823 is the twins from “The Shining", they bothered me. And they stayed with me. 1262 01:37:50,823 --> 01:37:54,077 The twins at the end of the hallway, every time I'm in a hotel, 1263 01:37:54,118 --> 01:37:56,746 and I'm in a hallway alone, that comes back for me 1264 01:37:56,746 --> 01:37:57,914 and I have this moment of like, 1265 01:37:57,914 --> 01:37:59,916 please don't let the hallway feel longer than it is. 1266 01:37:59,916 --> 01:38:03,920 That is just a spooky ass thing. And the kid is wonderful in it. 1267 01:38:06,756 --> 01:38:12,512 There's such a sadness about that, that's a lot of responsibility, to have that awareness, 1268 01:38:12,512 --> 01:38:17,892 to have that knowing, to have that power. It's a lot of responsibility for a child. 1269 01:38:21,771 --> 01:38:24,023 That was the slow kill for me too, 1270 01:38:24,023 --> 01:38:27,860 was the kid 'cause he would sit there and you knew he knew. 1271 01:38:27,860 --> 01:38:34,867 There's nothing worse for a child to know. Adults it's okay. But when a child embraces 1272 01:38:34,867 --> 01:38:41,833 you know - I know something that they don't know, then it becomes really terrifying. 1273 01:38:46,796 --> 01:38:52,176 And as a child, of course, you tend to feel powerless. And the fantasy of 1274 01:38:52,176 --> 01:38:57,807 being able to telekinetically punish one's enemies, was really intoxicating. 1275 01:38:57,807 --> 01:39:00,435 It just appealed to my, you know, 1276 01:39:00,476 --> 01:39:06,816 frustrated powerlessness that I felt as a child, that I think most children feel. 1277 01:39:12,822 --> 01:39:18,035 Just for a moment in our lives when we felt that powerless the, 1278 01:39:18,077 --> 01:39:22,874 you know, the bully or the cruelty that we've experienced. 1279 01:39:22,874 --> 01:39:27,003 I'm wishing I had a little of the power myself right now in the world [laughing]. 1280 01:39:43,853 --> 01:39:45,897 "The Black Cat" by Lucio Fulci, 1281 01:39:45,897 --> 01:39:49,942 many times the Edgar Allan Poe story was adapted in the film. 1282 01:39:49,984 --> 01:39:55,907 There was a 1934 film with Karloff and Lugosi; there was the 1940s film with Lugosi 1283 01:39:55,907 --> 01:40:01,913 also; and then there was one in the '60s which had a Vincent Price and Peter Lorre, 1284 01:40:01,913 --> 01:40:06,959 all of them were very loose adaptations, and so is this one. 1285 01:40:09,420 --> 01:40:13,966 This one is nothing subtle at all, this is about a killer cat. 1286 01:40:21,474 --> 01:40:24,727 It doesn't just murder people, it murders the shit out of 1287 01:40:24,769 --> 01:40:28,064 them. This cat could take on Michael Myers, it's a beast. 1288 01:40:28,064 --> 01:40:34,987 There's horror movies where people burn to death. And then there's horror movies where 1289 01:40:34,987 --> 01:40:41,994 people get thrown out of windows. Well, in "Black Cat" you get both at the same time. 1290 01:40:49,460 --> 01:40:51,003 Holy shit. 1291 01:40:53,005 --> 01:40:55,800 Some of the other movies kind of use the black 1292 01:40:55,800 --> 01:40:59,011 cat as a symbol like a metaphor for evil or something, 1293 01:40:59,053 --> 01:41:02,598 but this one is just going right for the jugular. That cat is 1294 01:41:02,598 --> 01:41:06,102 going to leap out and tear your fucking face off [chuckles]. 1295 01:41:25,204 --> 01:41:28,207 "Suspiria" gets all the love, but "Tenebrae" is my favorite Argento. 1296 01:41:28,207 --> 01:41:30,376 There's something about the way Argento 1297 01:41:30,376 --> 01:41:33,045 paces a scene where you know something's coming, 1298 01:41:33,045 --> 01:41:35,381 because you're watching a horror movie and you've 1299 01:41:35,381 --> 01:41:38,009 seen horror movies. $0 you know that's- that's the deal, 1300 01:41:38,009 --> 01:41:41,262 but he waits just a little too long, so that when he finally delivers it, 1301 01:41:41,262 --> 01:41:44,223 it's a different kind of catharsis than your average slasher movie. 1302 01:41:52,023 --> 01:41:56,068 I love stories about writers. For me, that's just one of my sort 1303 01:41:56,068 --> 01:42:00,072 of cinematic catnips. Tony Franciosa, in this movie he's playing 1304 01:42:00,072 --> 01:42:02,575 an author who basically there's a killer out 1305 01:42:02,617 --> 01:42:05,036 there who's mimicking things from his book, 1306 01:42:05,077 --> 01:42:07,663 and then he's sort of dealing with the ramifications of that, 1307 01:42:07,705 --> 01:42:09,248 in Italy, while he's on a book tour. 1308 01:42:09,290 --> 01:42:14,420 And his manager in the movie is John Saxon who is a delight. It's such a complete 1309 01:42:14,420 --> 01:42:20,092 departure for him from being Lieutenant Thompson in the "Nightmare on Elm Street" movies. 1310 01:42:20,134 --> 01:42:22,011 Doesn't it drop off? - Drop off? 1311 01:42:22,011 --> 01:42:27,183 Yeah, I mean if you make a [clapping sound] quick movement, won't it slip off? - Look. 1312 01:42:27,183 --> 01:42:31,395 I really love Daria Nicolodi in it, who was a frequent collaborator with Dario Argento, 1313 01:42:31,395 --> 01:42:35,274 and I don't think she gets enough credit for the writing that she did with him. 1314 01:42:35,316 --> 01:42:38,486 Some of the camerawork in that movie is absolutely, 1315 01:42:38,486 --> 01:42:40,321 like just astonishingly great. 1316 01:42:48,079 --> 01:42:52,792 The way that that camera moves is so fluid, 1317 01:42:52,792 --> 01:43:00,341 and so wonderful. There is this huge switch that happens in the movie. 1318 01:43:00,341 --> 01:43:04,762 You think you know the game that's being played, and then ultimately, 1319 01:43:04,762 --> 01:43:09,183 halfway through the movie, it takes a completely different direction. 1320 01:43:15,147 --> 01:43:19,151 A woman is sitting in her house, and she's sitting there with a gun in her hand, 1321 01:43:19,151 --> 01:43:21,153 and the killer out of nowhere just kind of comes to 1322 01:43:21,153 --> 01:43:23,322 the window and chops her hand off with the gun in it. 1323 01:43:27,201 --> 01:43:32,164 And then she gets up and there's just this crimson spray of blood everywhere, 1324 01:43:32,164 --> 01:43:37,336 and of course, everything has white walls. So it looks amazing. It's beautiful. 1325 01:43:37,336 --> 01:43:40,715 Like it shouldn't be beautiful, this should be horrifying. But yet 1326 01:43:40,715 --> 01:43:44,301 there's something so stunning about the way that that blood would hit, 1327 01:43:44,301 --> 01:43:47,680 and especially Italian blood was always notoriously much more red 1328 01:43:47,680 --> 01:43:51,267 and much more vibrant than the blood we were using here in the States. 1329 01:43:51,308 --> 01:43:55,020 It's really captures everything that you love about Giallo movies, 1330 01:43:55,020 --> 01:43:59,191 but does it in a different way that we really hadn't seen from him before. 1331 01:43:59,233 --> 01:44:02,528 It's one of the standouts amongst Argento's filmography, 1332 01:44:02,528 --> 01:44:04,363 specifically during the 1980s. 1333 01:44:20,212 --> 01:44:23,382 “C.H.U.D" stars John Hurt and Daniel Stern. It's got early 1334 01:44:23,382 --> 01:44:27,386 appearances by Cohen Brothers main stays like Jon Polito as a newscaster, 1335 01:44:27,386 --> 01:44:31,432 and John Goodman, who alongside Jay Thomas are cops in a diner. 1336 01:44:38,230 --> 01:44:42,401 The concept of going underground and mutant homeless people 1337 01:44:42,401 --> 01:44:44,737 that are mutated through the nuclear waste 1338 01:44:44,779 --> 01:44:47,323 that was being stored underground in New York, 1339 01:44:47,364 --> 01:44:52,244 and it was great. So somebody had that Death Wish, dirty New York setting 1340 01:44:52,244 --> 01:44:57,333 with the isolation of the underground tunnels, and then the mutant monsters. 1341 01:45:04,256 --> 01:45:08,052 So it had a great mixture of elements. The idea of cannibalistic 1342 01:45:08,052 --> 01:45:11,347 humanoid underground dwellers is a brilliant one really. 1343 01:45:11,347 --> 01:45:13,474 And then obviously the bit at the start, 1344 01:45:13,474 --> 01:45:17,353 where the puppy and the woman get pulled out from the underground manhole. 1345 01:45:35,746 --> 01:45:39,792 "Terror in the Aisles" is a great compilation film and it really 1346 01:45:39,834 --> 01:45:44,296 does explore the thoughts, the feelings, the how and the why of it all. 1347 01:45:44,296 --> 01:45:51,428 Say, how they do that? - That's the trick, isn't it? Once the lights go down. 1348 01:45:51,428 --> 01:45:55,641 You're only watching clips of these movies, 1349 01:45:55,683 --> 01:46:02,398 but somehow all put together like that, it was absolutely terrifying. 1350 01:46:02,398 --> 01:46:08,320 And unfortunately, in these movies, the victim is almost always a woman. 1351 01:46:08,320 --> 01:46:10,865 And I watched it on a VHS and I remember 1352 01:46:10,865 --> 01:46:14,410 having to stop it because I was getting so rattled by it. 1353 01:46:14,410 --> 01:46:18,330 [screaming woman in background] Get him! 1354 01:46:18,372 --> 01:46:23,419 It certainly packs a very different punch. It's - it's pretty frightening. 1355 01:46:23,460 --> 01:46:29,508 Why make up horrible things when there is so much real terror. 1356 01:46:29,550 --> 01:46:33,554 We can enjoy the jeopardy, we can have a good scream, a good laugh, 1357 01:46:33,596 --> 01:46:37,349 and laugh at ourselves for having been tricked the way we have. 1358 01:46:37,391 --> 01:46:40,853 It's just fun. You know, it's just a fun thing. 1359 01:46:40,853 --> 01:46:45,357 And you're sitting in a theater, which is relatively safe. 1360 01:46:45,399 --> 01:46:47,776 There are two reasons that I wanted to do "Terror in the 1361 01:46:47,776 --> 01:46:50,362 Aisles". I love the idea of it, I love those movies, you know, 1362 01:46:50,404 --> 01:46:54,742 and I think those genres are really great and... But I also wanted to meet Donald 1363 01:46:54,783 --> 01:46:59,455 Pleasence, who I was a great fan of, and I didn't get to meet him so I was devastated. 1364 01:46:59,455 --> 01:47:02,541 That was something, wasn't it? 1365 01:47:15,554 --> 01:47:21,477 “Silent Night, Deadly Night" is about Catholic guilt, I think [laughing]. 1366 01:47:24,438 --> 01:47:27,858 I didn't really even know the controversy until years later, 1367 01:47:27,858 --> 01:47:32,446 when it came to pass that like this was the harsh black mark on Christmas of '84. 1368 01:47:32,488 --> 01:47:38,535 there was a big hue and cry about turning Santa Claus into a serial killer. 1369 01:47:42,039 --> 01:47:45,459 This scared people and made it want to be banned. 1370 01:47:45,501 --> 01:47:52,466 It is necessary, Pamela. It is -- - No! 1371 01:47:52,508 --> 01:47:57,054 "Silent Night, Deadly Night" tells the story of Billy, who as a child, 1372 01:47:57,096 --> 01:48:01,558 witnesses his family get murdered by someone dressed as Santa Claus. 1373 01:48:01,558 --> 01:48:06,105 Flash forward to when Billy becomes 18, 1374 01:48:06,105 --> 01:48:10,567 and he is now a strapping young lad. 1375 01:48:10,567 --> 01:48:16,573 Merry Christmas, everyone, ho ho ho! Merry Christmas. 1376 01:48:16,615 --> 01:48:20,160 One thing leads to another, and Billy is completely 1377 01:48:20,202 --> 01:48:24,623 triggered and goes on a massive killing spree dressed as Santa. 1378 01:48:32,089 --> 01:48:36,093 The trigger when that happens, you can totally understand it. 1379 01:48:36,135 --> 01:48:40,723 There's a death involving antlers on a wall which is - which is great. 1380 01:48:40,723 --> 01:48:42,766 Punish! - No! 1381 01:48:44,560 --> 01:48:48,731 He impales me on antlers, so never answer the door to strangers. 1382 01:48:48,731 --> 01:48:50,733 Punish! 1383 01:48:51,567 --> 01:48:55,571 I had a talk with the director, I said, "She wouldn't be topless, a woman would, 1384 01:48:55,571 --> 01:48:58,741 you know, put on her top, maybe not her bottoms to go upstairs. 1385 01:48:58,782 --> 01:49:01,869 That's just what a woman would do." And he's like, "Well, 1386 01:49:01,869 --> 01:49:05,748 we have to have you topless. Because the antlers are going to come out“. 1387 01:49:05,789 --> 01:49:09,001 I think there was another reason behind it. I had to be 1388 01:49:09,043 --> 01:49:12,755 lifted up a billion times to get on the antlers by a stunt man. 1389 01:49:12,755 --> 01:49:17,801 I don't know how he did it but he's like [grunting], again and again and 1390 01:49:17,801 --> 01:49:22,598 having blood capsules come out my mouth and doing it the right time. 1391 01:49:22,598 --> 01:49:25,601 It was - it was an ordeal. 1392 01:49:25,601 --> 01:49:29,813 It's crazy how two dimensional most of these movies are, 1393 01:49:29,813 --> 01:49:34,610 and that yet you have a movie like “Silent Night, Deadly Night", 1394 01:49:34,610 --> 01:49:38,113 that gives character development and depth and 1395 01:49:38,113 --> 01:49:41,867 reasons why this guy is wreaking havoc on people. 1396 01:49:41,867 --> 01:49:47,706 And yet people wanted to shut this down. I was like, are you kidding? 1397 01:49:47,706 --> 01:49:50,709 I'm so glad that the mothers wanted it banned, 1398 01:49:50,709 --> 01:49:55,631 because it made a lot of money and it got a lot of attention because of that. 1399 01:50:06,642 --> 01:50:14,566 "Razorback" is a beautiful film, and I don't throw that 1400 01:50:14,608 --> 01:50:18,737 term around lightly. I mean, 1401 01:50:18,737 --> 01:50:23,742 it is an absolutely gorgeous film. 1402 01:50:23,742 --> 01:50:26,453 It's directed by Russell Mulcahy, who is an Australian 1403 01:50:26,495 --> 01:50:29,915 director who shortly after this would go off to direct "Highlander". 1404 01:50:29,915 --> 01:50:36,672 It's one of the best of the nature run amok sub genre horror, it's a movie about a giant 1405 01:50:36,672 --> 01:50:43,887 boar, a boar that is three times larger than any of the boar that anyone there has ever seen. 1406 01:50:43,929 --> 01:50:45,848 As you know, 1407 01:50:45,848 --> 01:50:51,728 everything in Australia wants to kill you. So this is a perfect setting for that. 1408 01:50:51,728 --> 01:50:56,608 It starts off with this giant boar that rips through a house and kills a child, 1409 01:50:56,608 --> 01:50:58,902 while his grandfather's watching it. 1410 01:50:58,944 --> 01:51:06,743 Oh, God, Scotty! [screaming] 1411 01:51:06,743 --> 01:51:11,707 Everyone in the town thinks that the grandfather has killed this 1412 01:51:11,707 --> 01:51:16,879 kid. So he's spending the rest of his life hunting this razorback. 1413 01:51:24,887 --> 01:51:26,263 The movie shifts because you initially 1414 01:51:26,263 --> 01:51:27,931 think it's going to be about the grandfather, 1415 01:51:27,931 --> 01:51:31,310 then you think it's going to be about the woman who is 1416 01:51:31,310 --> 01:51:34,897 the reporter who's going to Australia to investigate this. 1417 01:51:34,938 --> 01:51:41,236 But then she ends up getting killed by the razorback. And then her 1418 01:51:41,236 --> 01:51:47,826 husband flies out to Australia to find out what happened to his wife. 1419 01:51:47,826 --> 01:51:50,495 So the movie then shifts again, 1420 01:51:50,537 --> 01:51:55,792 to be about the husband. The giant razorback is incredible. 1421 01:51:55,834 --> 01:51:59,004 You don't see it very much, but you see it enough and it's terrifying. 1422 01:51:59,046 --> 01:52:02,966 It is still legitimately scary. 1423 01:52:07,804 --> 01:52:11,642 The color palette that they use is just gorgeous. It is not 1424 01:52:11,642 --> 01:52:15,812 something you would expect to see in a movie called "Razorback". 1425 01:52:15,812 --> 01:52:18,273 You're expecting blood and guts and violence, 1426 01:52:18,273 --> 01:52:21,818 you wouldn't really expect to see this stunningly beautiful film. 1427 01:52:21,818 --> 01:52:26,031 It's okay, it's okay. 1428 01:52:33,038 --> 01:52:35,374 Well, the big rock star in terms of makeup 1429 01:52:35,374 --> 01:52:37,918 effects in the '80s was undeniably Tom Savini. 1430 01:52:37,918 --> 01:52:41,129 He kind of cornered the market in in gore for the early '80s, 1431 01:52:41,171 --> 01:52:43,090 and did it better than anybody else. 1432 01:52:43,090 --> 01:52:47,010 The '80s was the splatter decade. That was my decade, 1433 01:52:47,052 --> 01:52:51,974 you know, I was called the Sultan of Splatter, The Wizard of Gore. 1434 01:52:51,974 --> 01:52:56,395 And it was the one-two punch of "Dawn of the Dead" and then "Friday the 13th", 1435 01:52:56,436 --> 01:52:57,896 it catapulted my career. 1436 01:52:57,938 --> 01:53:01,525 In fact, “Friday the 13th" wouldn't exist if George 1437 01:53:01,566 --> 01:53:04,903 hadn't done and hired me for “Dawn of the Dead“. 1438 01:53:04,945 --> 01:53:09,366 One movie after another got me work with other directors who saw those 1439 01:53:09,408 --> 01:53:13,912 movies. So Sean Cunningham saw Dawn and said, "We got to get this guy". 1440 01:53:13,954 --> 01:53:18,041 Tom Savini came to us and said, "You know what I want to do?“, I said, 1441 01:53:18,083 --> 01:53:22,879 "what do you want to do?", he said, "I want to cut somebody's head off. On screen. 1442 01:53:22,921 --> 01:53:25,924 It's never been done." I said. "Really?", he said, 1443 01:53:25,966 --> 01:53:29,011 "no, it's never been done, and it could be great." 1444 01:53:29,011 --> 01:53:31,930 "So how are we going to do it?" He says, "Well, we have to figure it out.“ 1445 01:53:40,439 --> 01:53:45,027 I always feel that Tom Savini is the godfather of all of this, 1446 01:53:45,027 --> 01:53:50,949 and in a lot of ways of sheer invention. You know, the script says this happens, 1447 01:53:50,949 --> 01:53:55,954 how the fuck does that happen? 1448 01:53:55,954 --> 01:53:58,040 When I was growing up trying to learn makeup, 1449 01:53:58,040 --> 01:54:01,084 there was no place to learn. Nobody wanted to share their secrets. 1450 01:54:01,126 --> 01:54:05,464 The limitations make you more creative. Limitations: Not enough time, 1451 01:54:05,505 --> 01:54:09,176 not enough people, not enough materials, not enough money. 1452 01:54:09,176 --> 01:54:11,511 Now, Robo Chimp could, you know, 1453 01:54:11,511 --> 01:54:16,183 he could open his mouth and make his head move left and right. 1454 01:54:16,183 --> 01:54:21,646 And then “Martin“, and there was a stake that goes through a guy's neck, you know? So George said, 1455 01:54:21,688 --> 01:54:27,110 "We're gonna go to a slaughterhouse and maybe get a lamb neck and stick a stick in a lamb neck.“ 1456 01:54:27,110 --> 01:54:31,073 I said, “No, no, you need to see the guy's face when that happens." “Well, 1457 01:54:31,114 --> 01:54:34,993 how are you going to do that?" "| don't know. I'll figure it out, okay?" 1458 01:54:34,993 --> 01:54:41,625 And it wound up being exactly how I killed Kevin Bacon in "Friday the 13th“. In “Martin“ 1459 01:54:41,625 --> 01:54:48,131 the stake went in the front, and in "Friday the 13th“ I brought the arrow from behind 1460 01:54:48,131 --> 01:54:54,221 the fake neck appliance. But it's the same kind of an appliance 1461 01:54:54,221 --> 01:55:00,227 that Kevin Bacon stuck his head into, that the guy in “Martin" 1462 01:55:00,227 --> 01:55:04,481 stuck his head into that Ned Eisenberg in "The Burning", 1463 01:55:04,523 --> 01:55:09,027 stuck his head into. I did that effect over and over again. 1464 01:55:09,027 --> 01:55:15,200 Usually if there's a rubber weapon involved, we try to establish the real weapon, taking a chunk out of the wall 1465 01:55:15,200 --> 01:55:21,289 or in "Friday the 13th" the hatchet taken out the light bulb before the rubber axe goes into the girl's head. 1466 01:55:25,585 --> 01:55:30,966 So in your mind, there's no separation. My books are called “Grand ll|usions", my books 1467 01:55:30,966 --> 01:55:36,096 about special makeup effects, because that's how I think of them, as magic tricks. 1468 01:55:36,096 --> 01:55:41,810 Because it may surprise you to hear from me that I believe the less you show, 1469 01:55:41,810 --> 01:55:47,315 the more effective stuff is, you know, I'm the guy that showed everything. 1470 01:55:47,315 --> 01:55:52,612 But on "Creepshow“ I had never done anything like Fluffy before, 1471 01:55:52,612 --> 01:55:55,282 an animatronic creature monster. 1472 01:55:55,323 --> 01:55:59,327 So I called Rob Bottin and he taught me how 1473 01:55:59,369 --> 01:56:03,373 to do it over the phone. "Creepshow" was five 1474 01:56:03,373 --> 01:56:05,584 movies, you know, 1475 01:56:05,584 --> 01:56:12,174 with monsters and Nate's corpse which to me was - was an exciting thing to do. 1476 01:56:12,174 --> 01:56:18,180 [screaming] 1477 01:56:18,180 --> 01:56:22,726 The first thing you see is Raul, the thing in the window, you know, 1478 01:56:22,726 --> 01:56:27,272 so it was a real skeleton that I animated with all these, you know, 1479 01:56:27,272 --> 01:56:31,485 he could smile, his fingers could do this. He did a 1480 01:56:31,485 --> 01:56:36,323 bunch of stuff. I did not turn Stephen King into the plant. 1481 01:56:36,364 --> 01:56:41,411 But I did blow the top of his head off. I was up in the ceiling pulling stuff 1482 01:56:41,411 --> 01:56:46,333 out of him while hitting blood explosions. It was pretty complicated stuff. 1483 01:56:46,333 --> 01:56:50,086 And the cockroaches oh my god the cockroaches, 1484 01:56:50,086 --> 01:56:54,299 I was never in the same room with those cockroaches. 1485 01:56:54,299 --> 01:56:58,803 I would be outside a sealed room, looking through glass. "Okay, 1486 01:56:58,803 --> 01:57:02,182 cue the blood. No. All right, pump the roaches“ 1487 01:57:02,182 --> 01:57:09,814 because they were two entomologists with huge syringes filled with roaches. We pump blood on them so they would 1488 01:57:09,814 --> 01:57:17,280 leave little bloody footprints. “Creepshow" was my opportunity to create monsters and characters, you know, 1489 01:57:17,280 --> 01:57:21,743 not just cutting throats and blowing heads off. “Texas Chainsaw 1490 01:57:21,743 --> 01:57:26,206 Massacre“ too was another - an opportunity like that, you know, 1491 01:57:26,206 --> 01:57:28,250 creating the old age makeup. 1492 01:57:33,213 --> 01:57:36,174 "Xiao Sheng Pa Pa" is a horror movie I did in Hong Kong, 1493 01:57:36,174 --> 01:57:38,426 a horror comedy movie, I did in Hong Kong. 1494 01:57:38,426 --> 01:57:42,764 And all I did was use stuff from, well, some stuff from "Creepshow". Raul, 1495 01:57:42,764 --> 01:57:46,393 he's in the movie. He's just a ghost apparition at the window. 1496 01:57:50,397 --> 01:57:54,859 But I had to build lots of monsters and things. And the two leads, 1497 01:57:54,859 --> 01:57:58,405 they were like the Abbott and Costello of Hong Kong. 1498 01:57:58,446 --> 01:58:02,867 I didn't understand a word of what was going on. But you know, but I built some 1499 01:58:02,867 --> 01:58:07,247 elaborate effects for that movie. Listen, don't talk to me about interpreters, 1500 01:58:07,247 --> 01:58:12,419 we sent him out for superglue and he came back with a case of condoms, 1501 01:58:12,419 --> 01:58:16,298 you know. And he's the interpreter, okay? [chuckles] 1502 01:58:16,298 --> 01:58:22,387 I met Tom, he opened up the dictionary of forensic pathology. And I saw 1503 01:58:22,387 --> 01:58:29,394 genuine photos of murder victims, drowning victims, accident victims, you name it, 1504 01:58:29,436 --> 01:58:34,691 every variety of death that the human body can endure, was in those pages. And then I went 1505 01:58:34,691 --> 01:58:40,280 through his lab and I looked at what people were creating. The reality of it was extraordinary. 1506 01:58:40,280 --> 01:58:44,326 I'm the only makeup artist that has seen the real stuff. I was 1507 01:58:44,367 --> 01:58:48,330 a combat photographer in Vietnam, I saw horrible stuff, okay? 1508 01:58:48,371 --> 01:58:51,625 You know, if you see a movie, a guy's wearing a white shirt, 1509 01:58:51,666 --> 01:58:55,503 and there's blood on it, and the blood looks like strawberry Kool-Aid, 1510 01:58:55,503 --> 01:58:57,714 the makeup artist didn't add green to the blood 1511 01:58:57,756 --> 01:59:00,550 because it's going on something white, you have to do that. 1512 01:59:00,550 --> 01:59:06,389 In fact, here's the formula, a gallon of blood, 32 drops of green, and that blood can go 1513 01:59:06,389 --> 01:59:12,479 on something light and still look deep red like blood, a little helpful hint for you here. 1514 01:59:12,479 --> 01:59:19,069 Everything that we do today, as special makeup effect artists, was invented by Dick Smith. We enhance 1515 01:59:19,110 --> 01:59:25,450 it, elaborate, make it better, you know, but he invented all the stuff that we that we do today. 1516 01:59:25,450 --> 01:59:32,082 If you've seen "Dawn of the Dead", the blood is atrocious. The blood looks like melted crayons. 1517 01:59:32,082 --> 01:59:38,421 So on the way to "Friday the 13th", driving to Connecticut, we went to Dick Smith's house. 1518 01:59:38,421 --> 01:59:43,510 And he gave us the blood formula, his blood formula, which is THE blood formula. 1519 01:59:43,551 --> 01:59:48,431 The blood in "Friday the 13th" is the first time the blood looked real to me. 1520 01:59:48,431 --> 01:59:54,854 I wish I had my school growing up, where you could go and learn all this stuff, 1521 01:59:54,896 --> 02:00:00,527 you know. It's important for film students, let's say, to study films 1522 02:00:00,527 --> 02:00:06,074 from the past. If you're surrounded by people, like I am with students 1523 02:00:06,074 --> 02:00:12,539 coming into my school, and they don't know who Boris Karloff is, you're deprived. 1524 02:00:12,539 --> 02:00:16,000 I mean, if you're going to be a makeup artist, you know, do some research on some 1525 02:00:16,000 --> 02:00:19,546 of the greatest monsters or creatures or makeups that were ever created, you know. 1526 02:00:19,546 --> 02:00:23,425 The first sentence in my book on makeup effects is, 1527 02:00:23,466 --> 02:00:26,678 "The more you do, the more you get to do". 1528 02:00:26,678 --> 02:00:32,559 That's the thrill of creativity, that idea of taking a blob of clay or taking a blank 1529 02:00:32,600 --> 02:00:38,565 Page, you're giving life to something that never existed and that - that's thrilling. 1530 02:00:57,584 --> 02:01:02,422 "Ghoulies". Well, first there was "Gremlins", then there was “Ghoulies". 1531 02:01:02,422 --> 02:01:06,634 And then there was "Munchies“, and then there was “Hobgoblins". 1532 02:01:06,634 --> 02:01:09,137 When you have a picture that’s successful, 1533 02:01:09,137 --> 02:01:11,848 people will immediately rush out an imitation. 1534 02:01:11,848 --> 02:01:16,186 The fact that the ad has the ghoulie coming out of a toilet, 1535 02:01:16,186 --> 02:01:20,690 I think probably expresses my feelings about the whole series. 1536 02:01:20,690 --> 02:01:23,193 I did enjoy the "Ghoulies" movies. In fact, 1537 02:01:23,193 --> 02:01:25,779 I did one of them, "Ghoulies Go to College". 1538 02:01:28,823 --> 02:01:33,244 I was stunt coordinator on it and played the character falling in a mop bucket, 1539 02:01:33,286 --> 02:01:34,788 ass first. 1540 02:01:41,711 --> 02:01:44,339 The greatest thing about "Ghoulies“ is something that 1541 02:01:44,339 --> 02:01:47,717 almost didn't make it into the movie that they watched it and said, 1542 02:01:47,717 --> 02:01:50,345 "Where's the scene with the Ghoulie coming out of the toilet?" And said, 1543 02:01:50,345 --> 02:01:51,846 "Well, we just did that for the poster". 1544 02:01:51,846 --> 02:01:56,768 "No, you need to put this scene in the movie." So they went back and reshot the scene, the 1545 02:01:56,810 --> 02:02:01,898 Ghoulie coming out of the toilet. And whenever somebody says Ghoulies they always love that. 1546 02:02:03,775 --> 02:02:06,778 And of course that ties in with the tagline. 1547 02:02:06,778 --> 02:02:10,782 "Ghoulies". They'll get you in the end! Literally. 1548 02:02:10,782 --> 02:02:13,952 So if I had to give my blessing to any of the ripoffs, 1549 02:02:13,993 --> 02:02:16,830 I would definitely choose the "Critters" series. 1550 02:02:16,830 --> 02:02:19,666 However, I feel remiss in criticizing anybody's rip offs 1551 02:02:19,666 --> 02:02:22,919 when my first picture was "Piranha“, which is a ripoff of “Jaws". 1552 02:02:22,961 --> 02:02:25,922 You know, [laughing] so I'm not -just, you know, 1553 02:02:25,922 --> 02:02:29,884 walk around and tinkle a bell and yell "unclean" and all of that. 1554 02:02:42,856 --> 02:02:46,442 During the heyday of the video boom, early '80s, 1555 02:02:46,484 --> 02:02:49,863 there were so many videos on the shelves that 1556 02:02:49,863 --> 02:02:52,407 you had to do something to grab people's attention. 1557 02:02:52,407 --> 02:02:54,868 I used to love all those painted covers, you know, 1558 02:02:54,909 --> 02:02:58,955 like "Cannibal Holocaust", “Cannibal Ferox". As the years went on, 1559 02:02:58,955 --> 02:03:00,915 they became more and more lurid 1560 02:03:00,915 --> 02:03:04,043 because they had to compete and threw was so much in there. 1561 02:03:04,043 --> 02:03:08,464 "Cannibal Holocaust" is interesting because it is the first in a whole kind 1562 02:03:08,464 --> 02:03:12,927 of wave of found footage movies where you didn't know if it was real or not. 1563 02:03:12,927 --> 02:03:18,224 Of course, by the time I saw it, you knew that it wasn't real. Much 1564 02:03:18,224 --> 02:03:24,105 like "The Blair Witch Project" when it first came out people weren't sure. 1565 02:03:24,105 --> 02:03:30,028 Deodato even was brought up in criminal charges or filming actual murders. 1566 02:03:30,069 --> 02:03:36,159 And there's phases that take place in - in horror movies, the found footage, 1567 02:03:36,159 --> 02:03:40,538 footage, Amazon jungle, torture porn, "Cannibal Holocaust" and "Cannibal 1568 02:03:40,580 --> 02:03:45,168 Ferox“ for a time I thought they were the same movie with different titles. 1569 02:03:45,168 --> 02:03:50,548 One would kind of look like the other which would look like the other. "Cannibal Holocaust“ 1570 02:03:50,548 --> 02:03:56,054 has a couple scenes in it, that you just can't forget, the guy getting his cock chopped off. 1571 02:03:59,015 --> 02:04:02,101 Don't ever go to the Amazon jungle and that way you won't get 1572 02:04:02,101 --> 02:04:05,271 your cock chopped off by a bunch of Cannibal Holocaust feroxes. 1573 02:04:05,271 --> 02:04:10,610 The real issue that everybody talks about though with "Cannibal Holocaust" is 1574 02:04:10,610 --> 02:04:16,157 not the apparent deaths of the people. It's the deaths of the animals on screen, 1575 02:04:16,199 --> 02:04:20,036 and that's hard to watch because that's real. Big 1576 02:04:20,078 --> 02:04:24,165 sea turtle getting cut up for dinner. Fuck, really?! 1577 02:04:27,251 --> 02:04:31,381 So that I think is why some people thought that it could be real 1578 02:04:31,422 --> 02:04:36,219 because the animal deaths are you're watching literal, animal snuff films. 1579 02:04:36,219 --> 02:04:43,726 The most popular nasty of them all is a piece of trash called "Faces of Death", which purports to be a professor's investigation 1580 02:04:43,768 --> 02:04:51,192 of death worldwide. And his effort, he says, is to gain knowledge about the fragility of man. Sure, and I'm the Easter Bunny. 1581 02:04:51,192 --> 02:04:58,533 "Faces of Death“ somebody's brother's sisters brother had it on some kind of fifth sixth edition 1582 02:04:58,533 --> 02:05:05,373 VHS, and what it was was apparent real life snuff films put together on this documentary, 1583 02:05:05,415 --> 02:05:11,004 And there was like “Faces of Death" one through you know, 27 or something along those lines, 1584 02:05:11,004 --> 02:05:16,426 and you could never really find it, which made the legend of it so much more mysterious. 1585 02:05:16,426 --> 02:05:19,429 I find this to be a particularly unusual face of death. 1586 02:05:19,429 --> 02:05:22,890 And that's why you thought 'maybe this is real', until you actually 1587 02:05:22,932 --> 02:05:26,436 saw one and then you realize this might not be as real as you think. 1588 02:05:26,477 --> 02:05:33,067 The Satanic cult, you know, sacrificing somebody. Who's taping this? Where's this from? What's - What is this? 1589 02:05:33,067 --> 02:05:39,490 Why is no one getting arrested from this? But What a strange phase to go through, a fake snuff film phase. 1590 02:05:39,490 --> 02:05:42,952 His mutilated body represented a violent retaliation from a 1591 02:05:42,952 --> 02:05:46,289 creature which has suffered continual abuse from mankind. 1592 02:05:46,289 --> 02:05:51,294 We were fucking weird as teenagers, man. Who would ever want to watch that? 1593 02:06:02,513 --> 02:06:07,810 It was a love story about two people that were literally made for each other, 1594 02:06:07,810 --> 02:06:09,520 but that were separated. 1595 02:06:09,562 --> 02:06:13,566 You fool! imbecile! 1596 02:06:13,608 --> 02:06:16,486 It was a lyrical, beautiful script. 1597 02:06:16,486 --> 02:06:21,365 You're safe now. - Safe? 1598 02:06:21,365 --> 02:06:25,953 Frankenstein says that he wants to create a woman who is his equal, and of course doing 1599 02:06:25,953 --> 02:06:30,541 exactly the opposite. He's trying to make her into the image of a woman that he wants. 1600 02:06:30,541 --> 02:06:37,715 And Jennifer Beals she was the big get because she had just come off a "Flashdance". Jennifer, I think is 1601 02:06:37,715 --> 02:06:45,515 sublimely good. I don't think anybody gives her enough credit for the work that she did in that movie [chuckles]. 1602 02:06:50,978 --> 02:06:57,276 She's looks magnificent in the costumes and on the sets. I thought she was terrific. I thought 1603 02:06:57,318 --> 02:07:03,491 Sting was terrific too. There was me and Rappaport, David, we got to be quite good friends. 1604 02:07:03,491 --> 02:07:07,620 Friend? - Yes, good health. - Good health. 1605 02:07:07,662 --> 02:07:14,502 Boy, playing the creature. It's so rich. Of course, the creature in Shelley's book is 1606 02:07:14,544 --> 02:07:21,717 articulate and sophisticated, and is the truth seeker and the truth teller in the movie. 1607 02:07:21,759 --> 02:07:27,098 The popular iteration of it of Karloff and the subsequent 1608 02:07:27,098 --> 02:07:32,353 Karloff-esque versions of that Universal creature just 1609 02:07:32,353 --> 02:07:37,567 make him a brute. This was clearly a romantic version 1610 02:07:37,567 --> 02:07:42,780 of it. He gets more and more handsome as the [chuckles] 1611 02:07:42,780 --> 02:07:47,160 movie goes on. Which just meant that the prosthetics got more and more handsome, 1612 02:07:47,160 --> 02:07:48,619 they did - you know. 1613 02:07:48,619 --> 02:07:54,333 If the script had a flaw, it's that the two main stars had to 1614 02:07:54,333 --> 02:08:00,590 carry the portion of the film that was the darkest and the coldest. 1615 02:08:00,631 --> 02:08:05,178 Where have you been all day? - Riding. 1616 02:08:05,178 --> 02:08:08,264 The job that Sting and Jennifer had to do was to show how 1617 02:08:08,264 --> 02:08:11,642 things fall apart. They weren't supposed to have any chemistry. 1618 02:08:11,684 --> 02:08:14,395 Off screen they actually did have chemistry. I mean, 1619 02:08:14,437 --> 02:08:17,732 we're all kind of liked each other. On screen they had to miss. 1620 02:08:17,732 --> 02:08:21,152 I made you out of ashes. I can always reduce you to ashes again. 1621 02:08:21,194 --> 02:08:22,653 You can do what you like! 1622 02:08:22,653 --> 02:08:27,617 I think people miss the point of that, yeah. It's a hopeful message of how we can, 1623 02:08:27,617 --> 02:08:32,663 you know, we can all get better from our - from even the most miserable beginnings. 1624 02:08:32,663 --> 02:08:36,250 And we can all find true love. That's not really the 1625 02:08:36,250 --> 02:08:39,921 story. It's not Mary Shelley's story, but that's okay. 1626 02:08:50,014 --> 02:08:55,269 "Nightmare 1" was a huge, huge off the charts hit, they couldn't believe 1627 02:08:55,311 --> 02:09:00,816 it. "Nightmare 2" it has some of the most classic moments of the franchise. 1628 02:09:00,816 --> 02:09:08,658 "Nightmare on Elm Street 2" is about relationships, perspectives, and stereotypes 1629 02:09:08,658 --> 02:09:15,957 that all get smashed once Freddy Krueger gets his claws in them [laughing]. 1630 02:09:21,295 --> 02:09:26,467 What we did is utilize the truth between Mark Patton, 1631 02:09:26,509 --> 02:09:30,930 Jesse Walsh, and I, Robert Rusler, Ron Grady, 1632 02:09:30,930 --> 02:09:35,685 and we utilized our own truths. And we put it in the 1633 02:09:35,685 --> 02:09:41,941 circumstances of the film. I didn't have a judgment about sexuality. 1634 02:09:41,941 --> 02:09:45,528 And that's what I loved about Grady and Jesse, 1635 02:09:45,528 --> 02:09:51,409 there was no ulterior motive there. There was a sexual tension between them. 1636 02:09:51,409 --> 02:09:54,412 I don't know why you're wasting your time with this guy, he's a basket case. 1637 02:09:54,412 --> 02:09:55,413 Shut up, Grady. 1638 02:09:55,454 --> 02:09:56,956 But it depends who's looking. 1639 02:09:56,998 --> 02:09:59,041 See you around, buddy. 1640 02:09:59,041 --> 02:10:03,921 We were playing with this idea that Freddy was exploiting the 1641 02:10:03,921 --> 02:10:10,094 subconscious of Mark's character Jessie and was maybe opening the closet door. 1642 02:10:15,474 --> 02:10:18,936 And we had beaucoup hints of Freddy, 1643 02:10:18,978 --> 02:10:23,733 manipulating the boy's sexuality, prompted both 1644 02:10:23,774 --> 02:10:27,862 by the original screenplay, the staging, 1645 02:10:27,903 --> 02:10:32,033 the casting, and by sets, whole sequences. 1646 02:10:32,033 --> 02:10:36,329 No one said we're making a gay horror film, but we were 1647 02:10:36,329 --> 02:10:42,126 toying with that. Not nailing it down rigidly, but certainly exploring it. 1648 02:10:46,464 --> 02:10:51,385 And I loved what was going on with Freddie being in the middle of it. Divisive, 1649 02:10:51,385 --> 02:10:56,057 calculating, darker than any of the other "Nightmare on Elm Street" movies. 1650 02:11:02,938 --> 02:11:10,279 That scene comes up, Krueger comes out of Jesse's body, 1651 02:11:10,279 --> 02:11:13,991 and I'm yelling for my dad. 1652 02:11:18,079 --> 02:11:21,040 [screaming]- 1653 02:11:21,040 --> 02:11:25,503 When I saw the movie with my dad at the screening, my dad was crying, 1654 02:11:25,503 --> 02:11:29,965 you know. And I looked back in the audience, and people were affected. 1655 02:11:37,890 --> 02:11:41,143 They did break a one rule, they took Freddy out of the dream. 1656 02:11:46,899 --> 02:11:51,028 His dad is burned alive. He doesn't even show up at the pool party. Yet, 1657 02:11:51,070 --> 02:11:55,199 there's some great stuff at the pool party, “You're all my children now." 1658 02:11:55,199 --> 02:11:57,952 You're all my children now. 1659 02:11:57,952 --> 02:11:59,995 You know, "Help yourself fucker". 1660 02:11:59,995 --> 02:12:01,997 Help yourself, fucker! 1661 02:12:06,877 --> 02:12:09,338 And I love the idea that it's the rich girls 1662 02:12:09,338 --> 02:12:12,049 party and Freddy ruins it for all the rich kids. 1663 02:12:15,469 --> 02:12:20,683 All they have to do is just get a pickup shot of Jesse or Jesse and Kim asleep 1664 02:12:20,683 --> 02:12:26,021 in the pool house taking a nap, and then that whole party crash by Freddy works. 1665 02:12:26,063 --> 02:12:28,065 Daddy can't help you now! 1666 02:12:28,107 --> 02:12:32,236 I mean, I remember asking Mark in a sequence with Freddie and Jesse, 1667 02:12:32,236 --> 02:12:35,114 if I could touch him like I was gonna kiss him, 1668 02:12:35,114 --> 02:12:39,285 "Can I put a blade in your mouth? Or Could I just circle your 1669 02:12:39,285 --> 02:12:43,873 mouth? Can I caress your eyes?" That's a real scary, strange moment. 1670 02:12:43,914 --> 02:12:47,084 I said, "Maybe do you think it should be sexual or maybe the kiss of death?” 1671 02:12:47,084 --> 02:12:51,297 So I thought there might be a great male on male kiss 1672 02:12:51,338 --> 02:12:56,010 there. That could be erotic and then - and then death kiss. 1673 02:13:02,433 --> 02:13:07,354 There is a lot of people that watch that movie, and it made them uncomfortable. 1674 02:13:07,354 --> 02:13:11,901 There were a lot of people that watched that movie and an empowered them. 1675 02:13:11,901 --> 02:13:15,070 There were a lot of people that watched that movie, 1676 02:13:15,112 --> 02:13:20,075 and they made fun of orjudged or poked. most of the people that judge and poke, 1677 02:13:20,075 --> 02:13:24,413 What are you hiding, you know what I mean? 1678 02:13:24,455 --> 02:13:29,210 People were talking about this from the get go and there was an increased and 1679 02:13:29,210 --> 02:13:33,923 an enhanced fan base within the gay community, because of this, immediately. 1680 02:13:33,923 --> 02:13:41,180 A lot of young gay men were heavily heavily influenced by that movie, to be truthful and 1681 02:13:41,180 --> 02:13:48,854 honest with themselves and - and really flourish into who they wanted to be from the inside. 1682 02:13:48,896 --> 02:13:54,276 I think that's fantastic. As far as Freddie goes, and as far as the depth of truth 1683 02:13:54,276 --> 02:13:59,907 between characters, nobody else touches “Nightmare 2". I'm very proud of that movie. 1684 02:13:59,907 --> 02:14:02,576 And when people go, "Hey, what's it like to be in the gayest 1685 02:14:02,576 --> 02:14:05,079 horror movie ever made?" I go, "it was fucking awesome". 1686 02:14:05,079 --> 02:14:08,082 It's okay, it's all over [screaming]. 1687 02:14:21,971 --> 02:14:24,181 While I was a big West Craven fan, 1688 02:14:24,181 --> 02:14:28,978 I was also a huge fan of "The Hills Have Eyes“. That movie was freaky, man. 1689 02:14:29,019 --> 02:14:32,022 [girl screaming] I'll come here for you later, girlie. 1690 02:14:32,064 --> 02:14:39,154 Another example of a situation that you could relate to as this can really happen 1691 02:14:39,154 --> 02:14:46,036 to me, was sort of like I take the wrong turn, and I wind up in you know, hell. 1692 02:14:46,036 --> 02:14:52,626 "Hills Have Eyes ll“ is a weird one because it comes on the heels of 1693 02:14:52,626 --> 02:15:00,384 Craven having maybe the biggest hit of his career with "Nightmare on Elm Street". 1694 02:15:00,426 --> 02:15:04,305 And suddenly he's kind of going back to the bottom of the 1695 02:15:04,305 --> 02:15:08,934 barrel and delivering a sequel to a movie some eight years earlier. 1696 02:15:08,934 --> 02:15:16,734 There's a lot of flashbacks. If you ever want to see a dog have a flashback in a movie, 1697 02:15:16,775 --> 02:15:22,823 I can name one and it's in “Hills Have Eyes ll". Then the first film, 1698 02:15:22,865 --> 02:15:24,867 this civilized soft 1699 02:15:24,867 --> 02:15:27,369 suburban family finds itself in the wilderness, 1700 02:15:27,369 --> 02:15:30,914 facing off against the sort of feral mutants I guess you would say. 1701 02:15:30,914 --> 02:15:36,086 And in the second one, it's kind of the the mutants bringing the fight to 1702 02:15:36,128 --> 02:15:41,967 civilization a little bit because one of their own has dared to try to cross over. 1703 02:15:42,009 --> 02:15:48,057 I love Michael Berryman, you know, working with him in "Weird Science", 1704 02:15:48,098 --> 02:15:51,352 he was such the antithesis of what he 1705 02:15:51,393 --> 02:15:54,188 comes off as on screen, you know, 1706 02:15:54,188 --> 02:16:00,861 because he's always playing these really freaky creepy like super sadistic, 1707 02:16:00,861 --> 02:16:07,826 like scary roles. And in person he's a super pleasant, super educated sweet man. 1708 02:16:07,826 --> 02:16:13,832 Can we keep this between us? I'd hate to lose my teaching job. 1709 02:16:13,832 --> 02:16:19,546 What resonates with me about "Hills Have Eyes ll" compared 1710 02:16:19,546 --> 02:16:25,969 to "Hills Have Eyes l" was more the clarity on what the fear was. 1711 02:16:25,969 --> 02:16:30,140 I want you to stay together and stay alert. This place might look deserted, 1712 02:16:30,140 --> 02:16:33,894 but it's been used for something right up to the time we got here. 1713 02:16:33,894 --> 02:16:39,483 They got to expound upon the characters, the situation. What's at stake, you know, 1714 02:16:39,483 --> 02:16:45,030 my life. And what are the odds of me making out of here, you know, slim and none. 1715 02:16:45,030 --> 02:16:48,992 I think Wes Craven was very good about capturing a 1716 02:16:48,992 --> 02:16:53,747 perspective really taking you to that world in the desert. 1717 02:16:53,789 --> 02:16:57,835 That's one of those movies like "Dawn of the Dead", 1718 02:16:57,876 --> 02:17:02,965 where you come out hitting each other being super mischievous. 1719 02:17:03,006 --> 02:17:06,927 For some reason, that's how some of those horror movies affect me. 1720 02:17:10,806 --> 02:17:13,058 I want to get into trouble after I see him [laughing]. 1721 02:17:13,058 --> 02:17:17,438 Miss me, miss me, na 1722 02:17:17,479 --> 02:17:21,817 na na na. [grunting] 1723 02:17:21,859 --> 02:17:25,112 Horror movies are essentially absurd, 1724 02:17:25,154 --> 02:17:32,161 and the comedy just it's already in there. And if you don't find it, someone 1725 02:17:32,161 --> 02:17:37,207 else is going to find it because some of - the sometimes 1726 02:17:37,207 --> 02:17:42,838 some of the things that are happening are just preposterous. 1727 02:17:42,838 --> 02:17:48,844 Many of the pictures in the '80s like "Return of the Living Dead" and "The Stuff" are not afraid to embrace the fact 1728 02:17:48,886 --> 02:17:54,933 that they're silly. I mean in fact, I would almost think that silly is kind of the - the byword for horror comedies. 1729 02:17:54,933 --> 02:17:59,480 Beginning with "Abbott and Costello Meet Frankenstein", which is everybody's favorite because of the fact that 1730 02:17:59,480 --> 02:18:03,942 the horror movie stuff is played straight. It just all meshes together so perfectly, and it looks terrific. 1731 02:18:03,984 --> 02:18:07,821 And it's, you know, practically the best movie that Abbott and Costello 1732 02:18:07,863 --> 02:18:11,909 ever made. And it's also the best of the later, universal horror pictures. 1733 02:18:14,369 --> 02:18:17,623 In black and white, the comedy was funnier. in black and white, 1734 02:18:17,664 --> 02:18:18,874 the horror was scarier. 1735 02:18:25,798 --> 02:18:33,180 It's almost like horror of the absurd. Like this is not even in the realm of probable. 1736 02:18:33,180 --> 02:18:40,813 And so there's a great sort of communal delight, there's something endearing about that. 1737 02:18:40,813 --> 02:18:47,820 "Re-Animator" is - is a very funny movie. It's also pretty gruesome. It's in the mind 1738 02:18:47,820 --> 02:18:54,827 of the filmmaker, you can't all be Takashi Miike, and have it be unrelentingly grim. 1739 02:18:59,373 --> 02:19:04,837 There's got to be some moments where the graph goes up and down instead ofjust all the way 1740 02:19:04,878 --> 02:19:10,801 across. In my movies, I've always approached the horror aspects along with a sense of the absurd. 1741 02:19:13,804 --> 02:19:18,308 My mechanism of dealing with fear is - is - is laughter, especially in the movies, 1742 02:19:18,308 --> 02:19:21,895 you know, because then you realize that you're not in the movie. 1743 02:19:24,314 --> 02:19:28,151 They call it comic relief, a little space to stand still for a second and 1744 02:19:28,151 --> 02:19:31,864 catch your breath before you kick - before you get chased around again, 1745 02:19:31,864 --> 02:19:36,702 or whatever it is, you have to have that otherwise, it's just relentless, 1746 02:19:36,743 --> 02:19:41,832 and it becomes unintentionally funny, which you really don't want [laughing]. 1747 02:19:41,874 --> 02:19:45,878 I couldn't think of a more horrible job if I wanted to. 1748 02:19:45,878 --> 02:19:52,843 "The Texas Chainsaw Massacre“ has many comic elements in it, but people don't think of it as a comedy until much later. And 1749 02:19:52,843 --> 02:19:59,892 then they have to invent fancy terms like Grand Guignol [chuckles] to describe what's going on in Texas Chainsaw Massacre. 1750 02:19:59,892 --> 02:20:05,564 "The Howling" is a really powerful horror movie, but it's funny as hell, 1751 02:20:05,564 --> 02:20:11,778 and "An American Werewolf in London", Both of them take their horror seriously. 1752 02:20:11,778 --> 02:20:15,908 And they take the comedy seriously. And both of them are made by filmmakers 1753 02:20:15,908 --> 02:20:19,870 who've embraced both and have made comedies and have made horror movies. 1754 02:20:19,870 --> 02:20:23,540 They have such glee and relish a good horror movie makes you feel 1755 02:20:23,540 --> 02:20:28,003 really excited and like you're having a good time, and certainly a good comedy. 1756 02:20:28,003 --> 02:20:31,381 You ride that wave of laughter and when you can melt 1757 02:20:31,381 --> 02:20:34,801 them together like John Landis and Joe Dante can do. 1758 02:20:34,801 --> 02:20:37,846 Excuse me. 1759 02:20:37,846 --> 02:20:41,683 When it works it's really great, and that's what I was hoping for doing 1760 02:20:41,725 --> 02:20:45,938 "Critters 2" was that the comedy would be funny and the horror would be scary. 1761 02:20:45,938 --> 02:20:50,943 I love that, when you have a humorous movie that also has scares, 1762 02:20:50,943 --> 02:20:54,821 because what it does for me is takes the edge of, 1763 02:20:54,863 --> 02:20:59,159 it's even more of a roller coaster ride than just scary, 1764 02:20:59,201 --> 02:21:03,956 scary, scary, scary, ah, scary, scary, ah, scary [chuckles]. 1765 02:21:03,997 --> 02:21:06,708 It's more like, I'm totally relaxed because I was 1766 02:21:06,708 --> 02:21:09,920 laughing. Oh my god! Now this big thing happens. You know? 1767 02:21:09,920 --> 02:21:13,840 [woman screaming in background] Holy shit! 1768 02:21:13,840 --> 02:21:20,347 Some of the things I kind of gravitate towards in horror are the comedy horror. 1769 02:21:20,347 --> 02:21:23,934 Garbage day! - No! [screaming] 1770 02:21:23,934 --> 02:21:27,896 I do love the wink of the eye. Maybe because I hate to be scared, 1771 02:21:27,896 --> 02:21:31,984 [laughing] actually I like to get a little bit of a step backwards. 1772 02:21:31,984 --> 02:21:37,280 Can I have a piece of toast? 1773 02:21:37,322 --> 02:21:41,118 There are a lot of really successful horror films with comedic 1774 02:21:41,118 --> 02:21:45,831 elements in the '80s. But there are a lot of movies that didn't get it right. 1775 02:21:45,831 --> 02:21:50,127 There is a short trend of movies that were overall comedies but dealt with 1776 02:21:50,127 --> 02:21:54,840 horror subjects. You had "Teen Wolf" and "Transylvania 6-5000" and "Once Bitten", 1777 02:21:57,718 --> 02:22:01,722 It's a tough balance to pull off, but you really have to get the tone just 1778 02:22:01,722 --> 02:22:05,892 right so that the comedy doesn't really infringe on the horror and vice versa. 1779 02:22:09,730 --> 02:22:15,402 Horror and comedy can go hand in hand or they can be each other's worst enemy. Most horror 1780 02:22:15,444 --> 02:22:21,742 comedies are neither scary nor funny. But when it works together, they both aim for the same thing. 1781 02:22:21,742 --> 02:22:27,122 Horror and comedy both go for a physical reaction, a scream, a jump, 1782 02:22:27,122 --> 02:22:31,960 tension gripping the arms of your seat for horror, and comedy 1783 02:22:31,960 --> 02:22:34,796 the laughter. If you go into a horror movie, 1784 02:22:34,796 --> 02:22:38,925 or a comedy and it's quiet all the way through, it ain't working. 1785 02:22:38,967 --> 02:22:43,680 A laugh is very difficult to get, how do you get the laugh? You get the 1786 02:22:43,680 --> 02:22:48,935 laugh by surprising people. If they can see the punch line coming, you're sunk. 1787 02:22:54,733 --> 02:22:59,154 The key to making a great horror comedy is it's got to be 80% 1788 02:22:59,154 --> 02:23:03,950 horror and 20% comedy. If you try to do 80% comedy and 20% horror, 1789 02:23:03,950 --> 02:23:07,162 then what you're doing is you're attempting to make a cult 1790 02:23:07,204 --> 02:23:10,874 film in advance and that never works. It always falls on its face. 1791 02:23:10,874 --> 02:23:13,960 Horror obviously crosses genres anyway. But I 1792 02:23:14,002 --> 02:23:17,714 would argue that '80s horror does that more than most. 1793 02:23:17,714 --> 02:23:21,760 It's like, you've got “Reese's Peanut Butter Cups" is gonna work great. 1794 02:23:21,760 --> 02:23:24,012 Hey, you've got your chocolate in my peanut butter. 1795 02:23:24,012 --> 02:23:26,723 You've got peanut butter on my chocolate. [together: what?] 1796 02:23:26,723 --> 02:23:31,019 So the '80s, I would argue, actually defined the - the 1797 02:23:31,061 --> 02:23:35,774 and created this idea of kind of multi genre horror, that 1798 02:23:35,774 --> 02:23:40,320 absolutely gets away with high art and low art. Make you 1799 02:23:40,362 --> 02:23:44,908 laugh and- and have visceral drama, and gross you out. 1800 02:23:44,908 --> 02:23:48,745 I said shut up, butthole! 1801 02:23:48,745 --> 02:23:53,208 That's the definition of '80s Horror in a way, is - is the people who 1802 02:23:53,208 --> 02:23:57,796 grew out of those errors and are slamming all of these genres together. 1803 02:24:02,759 --> 02:24:07,681 I never thought in a million years when I was growing up in Davenport, Iowa that I 1804 02:24:07,722 --> 02:24:12,769 would be acting, because I was probably the shyest person on the face of the earth. 1805 02:24:12,811 --> 02:24:20,110 I remember my first role that I got that was a speaking role, even though it wasn't a lot of speaking, was 1806 02:24:20,110 --> 02:24:27,909 "Fairy Tales". And that was with Charlie Band. I was so proud, I remember writing in my diary, 'I'm a big star'. 1807 02:24:27,909 --> 02:24:33,331 I think I found my niche in doing the ones that were more independent, 1808 02:24:33,331 --> 02:24:35,333 I hate to say low budget. 1809 02:24:35,333 --> 02:24:40,755 What is this, midnight went bowling league? - What are you, the bride of Dracula? 1810 02:24:40,797 --> 02:24:46,761 I think there was a lot more freedom in doing things then, and I just liked it. It was 1811 02:24:46,761 --> 02:24:52,934 a lot more fun. The first time I had to take off my clothes which was in “Fairy Tales", 1812 02:24:52,976 --> 02:24:57,939 I was terrified. I was so scared I actually 1813 02:24:57,981 --> 02:25:02,694 did push ups to get my adrenaline going 1814 02:25:02,736 --> 02:25:06,198 so I wouldn't think about it, 1815 02:25:06,239 --> 02:25:12,829 it was a formula. Shower scene, getting killed topless. 1816 02:25:12,829 --> 02:25:18,877 It became redundant. I knew the formula, I know they needed it to sell the film. 1817 02:25:18,877 --> 02:25:22,964 I think if you feel comfortable doing nudity, it's no big deal. I made 1818 02:25:22,964 --> 02:25:26,968 up in my mind, if I have to show my breast, I'm gonna get more money. 1819 02:25:27,010 --> 02:25:31,806 So I was the go to girl. The more you draw attention to being naked, 1820 02:25:31,806 --> 02:25:37,020 the worse it is, if you just take it very casually, people don't notice. 1821 02:25:37,062 --> 02:25:42,067 It's like when it's the person that's like going, “Oh, don't look, oh, 1822 02:25:42,108 --> 02:25:46,988 you can't see me. Oh I'm so embarrassed" that you want to look at. 1823 02:25:46,988 --> 02:25:50,533 So I would just be like very casual about it and people 1824 02:25:50,533 --> 02:25:54,955 didn't make a big deal. You know, so it's like, it's not a big thing. 1825 02:25:54,996 --> 02:26:02,837 "Savage Streets" is about this badass Linda Blair going and getting these guys who raped me, which 1826 02:26:02,837 --> 02:26:06,841 was a hard scene to do. The director wanted mucus 1827 02:26:06,841 --> 02:26:10,845 coming out my nose and blood running down my leg. 1828 02:26:10,845 --> 02:26:17,727 I said, “l don't think that's necessary. I think it's pretty creepy the way it is going to be 1829 02:26:17,727 --> 02:26:25,026 depicted." I was so happy at that point to be playing opposite Linda Blair and playing her sister. 1830 02:26:25,068 --> 02:26:29,906 And it was a different role for me because I was just so innocent. 1831 02:26:29,906 --> 02:26:33,868 You're real pretty, you know that? 1832 02:26:33,868 --> 02:26:39,291 From “Savage Streets", I got both negative and positive comments, like the negative ones 1833 02:26:39,291 --> 02:26:44,921 were, "Oh, you didn't have to remember any lines. You didn't have any lines in the movie." 1834 02:26:44,921 --> 02:26:50,677 But then I got the others that are more into film that would say, “Wow, that must 1835 02:26:50,677 --> 02:26:56,891 have been hard not to say things and do things and pretend that you can't understand". 1836 02:26:56,891 --> 02:27:01,271 I remember on "Return of the Living Dead", I don't usually say no, but there were things like 1837 02:27:01,271 --> 02:27:05,900 shave my eyebrows off. Well, everybody was like, "Don't do it because they might not grow back ". 1838 02:27:05,900 --> 02:27:13,450 And I thought, I don't want to go without eyebrows. And then they wanted me to cut my hair. I didn't do that so 1839 02:27:13,450 --> 02:27:21,041 they had to get a wig. But I did agree to dance nude on a tombstone. And talk about nude - it was really nude. 1840 02:27:21,041 --> 02:27:24,919 Getting away from zombies, I was terrified because the 1841 02:27:24,961 --> 02:27:29,591 zombies were extras. And extras get very zealous and they want 1842 02:27:29,591 --> 02:27:33,136 to be seen in the camera and I'm like, oh my god, 1843 02:27:33,178 --> 02:27:38,141 they're gonna really attack me. I was - I was actually very, like, 1844 02:27:38,141 --> 02:27:42,062 Oh, no, what's gonna happen when they yell action. 1845 02:27:46,900 --> 02:27:51,821 And I'm like, surrounded by the zombies and that's the end of 1846 02:27:51,863 --> 02:27:57,077 me. Being buried in mud, there is an art to holding your breath. 1847 02:27:57,077 --> 02:28:03,124 They dug a hole, then they're covering me up and I'm like, Oh my god, I can't tell. 1848 02:28:03,124 --> 02:28:09,005 I can't hear when they call action. I can't tell when the rain machine's going. 1849 02:28:09,005 --> 02:28:13,802 So I had to kind of like time it and it was like kind of creepy to be 1850 02:28:13,843 --> 02:28:19,099 under there. So I did it on the first take, thank goodness, I was so happy. 1851 02:28:19,099 --> 02:28:23,937 That's kind of dangerous because you can inhale the mud. So I didn't know if 1852 02:28:23,937 --> 02:28:29,150 anybody really knew what they were doing or if I was just like a guinea pig on it. 1853 02:28:29,150 --> 02:28:32,737 When I turned into a zombie, I'm nude, 1854 02:28:32,737 --> 02:28:37,700 cold and nude. It was horrible to have the special 1855 02:28:37,700 --> 02:28:44,040 effects makeup done. I didn't know I was getting into but it was like, 1856 02:28:44,040 --> 02:28:46,126 all glued on me, 1857 02:28:46,167 --> 02:28:51,423 and they had the mouth at one point down here. And I couldn't 1858 02:28:51,423 --> 02:28:57,053 drink anything or really eat anything because it was like so low. 1859 02:28:58,972 --> 02:29:01,057 It was pretty miserable. 1860 02:29:05,979 --> 02:29:09,732 I decided to do this workout, “The Linnea Quigley Horror 1861 02:29:09,774 --> 02:29:14,028 Workout". Everybody was doing it. So we decided to do a campy 1862 02:29:14,028 --> 02:29:18,700 version with zombies and with girls at a slumber party and you know, 1863 02:29:18,700 --> 02:29:22,120 just throwing everything, throw it into the mix. 1864 02:29:22,120 --> 02:29:25,331 I know what you're doing when you're watching my 1865 02:29:25,331 --> 02:29:29,127 movies. Just how many calories Do you think that's burns? 1866 02:29:29,169 --> 02:29:36,468 We had a really fun time doing it because it was so tongue in cheek. Supposed 1867 02:29:36,468 --> 02:29:44,142 to be taking place on the mountain with gravestones and this whole dramatic thing. 1868 02:29:44,184 --> 02:29:51,399 Well, the fire marshals decided to do like a fire test up there. So we got kicked out of there and 1869 02:29:51,441 --> 02:29:59,032 went to my parents house, and decided to film by the pool, and then have the zombies jump in the pool. 1870 02:29:59,073 --> 02:30:01,075 Okay! Everybody into the pool! 1871 02:30:04,120 --> 02:30:10,084 Cynthia Garris, Mick Garris‘s wife, choreographed the whole thing so she was across 1872 02:30:10,084 --> 02:30:16,090 the pool, because I'm not a great, you know, dancer. I wasn't aerobically trained. 1873 02:30:16,090 --> 02:30:22,138 So she was helping me out with that. And she was actually one of the slumber party girls too. 1874 02:30:22,138 --> 02:30:28,186 I think when they label you scream queen, to me, it's an honor, it's taken like a flip flop. 1875 02:30:28,228 --> 02:30:33,650 So I don't think it's limiting now, but it was limiting then. I would 1876 02:30:33,650 --> 02:30:39,155 say advice for screaming on camera would be just go all out and do it. 1877 02:30:44,160 --> 02:30:46,246 Also, know that you're going to get a headache 1878 02:30:46,246 --> 02:30:48,248 after doing it a lot. So bring some aspirin. 1879 02:30:54,170 --> 02:30:57,549 I think horror changed a lot when we were in people's 1880 02:30:57,549 --> 02:31:01,177 living rooms. I think that people got to know you better, 1881 02:31:01,219 --> 02:31:07,559 they could go seek you out in a video store and say, "Oh, you know, I really liked that person. 1882 02:31:07,559 --> 02:31:14,232 Do you have another movie by her or him?" Or, you know, "is there another part two or part three?“ 1883 02:31:14,232 --> 02:31:18,194 It's a way to really get into someone's heart. 1884 02:31:35,295 --> 02:31:38,923 After "Friday the 13th" and then a couple of more sequels, 1885 02:31:38,965 --> 02:31:43,052 and then "Nightmare on Elm Street" we knew the genre was changing. 1886 02:31:43,094 --> 02:31:46,639 And one of the pitfalls in horror films in general, 1887 02:31:46,639 --> 02:31:52,228 is that you think it's a compounding of grim scenes and suspense and desperation. 1888 02:31:52,270 --> 02:31:57,275 But it isn't that way. It has to have hills and valleys, 1889 02:31:57,275 --> 02:32:03,072 and lots of times some kind of comic relief really, really helps. 1890 02:32:03,114 --> 02:32:09,078 Sandy. 1891 02:32:09,078 --> 02:32:14,959 You have a man who's writing and who's isolated from his family, dealing with sort of 1892 02:32:15,001 --> 02:32:21,090 these Vietnam flashbacks. You're dealing with like the death of a kid at certain points. 1893 02:32:21,132 --> 02:32:23,509 And there's definitely some trauma issues 1894 02:32:23,509 --> 02:32:26,262 that you're -- they're exploring in that movie. 1895 02:32:26,262 --> 02:32:31,517 Bill Katt was just terrific casting. And then Steve Miner is the one who really 1896 02:32:31,517 --> 02:32:37,273 believed in that and really thought that he could bring it off and he did a great job. 1897 02:32:37,315 --> 02:32:41,402 You've been in Vietnam, lost your only child, your wife divorced you. I mean, 1898 02:32:41,402 --> 02:32:45,114 you've got a few marbles running around, but right now you seem fine. 1899 02:32:45,114 --> 02:32:51,371 You have crazy characters popping in, you have Richard Moll as Big Ben. 1900 02:32:51,371 --> 02:32:54,332 Big Ben? - No, it's your fairy godmother [laughing]. 1901 02:32:54,332 --> 02:33:02,256 Our hope initially was that Big Ben was going to become iconic, but he didn't. 1902 02:33:04,300 --> 02:33:07,136 You're pissing me off, Roger. 1903 02:33:07,136 --> 02:33:12,934 This notion of of a zombie GI rotting off the bone, 1904 02:33:12,934 --> 02:33:18,147 that he would come back and really raise hell. 1905 02:33:18,147 --> 02:33:19,399 Roger, you hit like a little girl! 1906 02:33:19,399 --> 02:33:24,112 For some magical reason, people didn't buy into him as being a 1907 02:33:24,112 --> 02:33:29,283 super villain the way they bought into other characters at the time. 1908 02:33:29,283 --> 02:33:35,206 You can't get rid of me, Roger. You can't and you never will! 1909 02:33:35,248 --> 02:33:40,503 A good poster will tell the audience what it's going to see, "House" had a 1910 02:33:40,503 --> 02:33:46,342 great line and an image of like a zombie finger it goes, "Ding Dong, you're dead.“ 1911 02:33:46,384 --> 02:33:54,183 [laughing] Like I just thought that was delightful because it suggested that we weren't taking it completely 1912 02:33:54,183 --> 02:34:01,441 seriously. But that it was a haunted house and that people were at risk, that was kind of inspired. 1913 02:34:09,198 --> 02:34:14,746 Our original twist love affair started with the unmasking of who a killer 1914 02:34:14,746 --> 02:34:20,293 was or who the bad guy was. And that goes all the way back to Scooby Doo. 1915 02:34:20,293 --> 02:34:26,007 Scooby D00 is just a horror movie in animated segments of a killer or a bad guy, and that sort of that 1916 02:34:26,007 --> 02:34:32,221 gateway into watching the real movies where you want the unmasking of who the killer is or who the bad guy is. 1917 02:34:32,221 --> 02:34:38,436 Everybody always references ooh Freddy or Jason. And they go, “What's 1918 02:34:38,478 --> 02:34:45,234 your favorite movie?" and I go, "April Fool's Day" and it blows their mind. 1919 02:34:45,234 --> 02:34:49,238 They're like, "why?" And I was like, "Well, if you actually watch "April 1920 02:34:49,280 --> 02:34:53,242 Fool's Day", it's a great slasher movie with a fantastic performance", 1921 02:34:53,242 --> 02:34:57,789 because if you actually watch her there, Foreman, she's creepy. 1922 02:34:57,789 --> 02:35:03,044 Criminally under-looked. It tells the story of a bunch of friends who were invited 1923 02:35:03,044 --> 02:35:08,299 to their friend's house for a weekend and they all just start dropping like flies. 1924 02:35:13,805 --> 02:35:16,682 My favorite kill is probably the first one where the 1925 02:35:16,682 --> 02:35:19,393 guy has his face chopped up with the boat motor. 1926 02:35:19,393 --> 02:35:27,026 You talk about roast beef, it is just a shredder. The kills 1927 02:35:27,026 --> 02:35:33,241 are great. The comedy is off the charts. It's smart, 1928 02:35:33,282 --> 02:35:35,326 it's funny. 1929 02:35:42,291 --> 02:35:45,753 I think it's probably my all time favorite horror movie just because of the twist, 1930 02:35:45,795 --> 02:35:47,380 blew my mind at the end of the movie. 1931 02:35:53,302 --> 02:35:56,639 It's not just about, 'I thought the killer was somebody else', 1932 02:35:56,639 --> 02:35:59,308 because you always try to figure out the mystery. 1933 02:36:03,271 --> 02:36:06,983 Yeah, having twists in - especially in '80s horror movies, whether 1934 02:36:06,983 --> 02:36:11,362 they're the big movies or the obscure ones, those always get you a little bit. 1935 02:36:11,404 --> 02:36:13,406 April fools. 1936 02:36:24,292 --> 02:36:30,256 The construct of the story for "Demons" is a group of people are watching a movie, 1937 02:36:30,256 --> 02:36:35,428 we're watching the people watch the movie, as they're watching a movie. 1938 02:36:35,428 --> 02:36:40,933 So I am a working girl on a day off with my best friend and the fellow who, 1939 02:36:40,933 --> 02:36:45,479 let's say collects the money for us. And we get a free ticket. 1940 02:36:45,479 --> 02:36:53,154 I pick up the mask and something inside the mask scratches my face. There's three levels 1941 02:36:53,154 --> 02:37:00,578 of demons, and by the way it's “demone", that's how we say it in Italy, it's demone. 1942 02:37:00,578 --> 02:37:04,707 So there's three different levels and the first level is infection. That's 1943 02:37:04,707 --> 02:37:08,544 when hell will open because the demons are going to come onto Earth, 1944 02:37:08,544 --> 02:37:13,591 and try to take over the dominion of Earth. Dario Argento and 1945 02:37:13,633 --> 02:37:19,597 Sacchetti and Ferrini and Lamberto Bava, the four authors of the script, 1946 02:37:19,597 --> 02:37:23,392 they knew the story, "Yeah, we're gonna do this. It's gonna be a film and 1947 02:37:23,392 --> 02:37:27,480 a film of some kids in a film“. But it took them two years to make the rules. 1948 02:37:27,480 --> 02:37:31,317 What were the rules of hell? What were the rules of 1949 02:37:31,359 --> 02:37:36,030 demons? And what is a demon? It can come through the screen, 1950 02:37:36,072 --> 02:37:40,201 it can come around you and it can get into your blood 1951 02:37:40,242 --> 02:37:44,372 system. My face exploding was my first clay on the set. 1952 02:37:44,413 --> 02:37:48,334 In the ladies room, I look in the mirror and the audience 1953 02:37:48,376 --> 02:37:52,546 sees the pulse get bigger and bigger and bigger and explode. 1954 02:37:55,383 --> 02:37:58,594 And from that moment on [claps], we're running, 1955 02:37:58,594 --> 02:38:03,391 the movie never slows down again. Then you can't get out. Isn't that 1956 02:38:03,432 --> 02:38:07,436 everyone's fear? You're in a box or in a group you're with 1957 02:38:07,478 --> 02:38:11,524 a gang you don't know anybody. And now you can't get out. 1958 02:38:11,565 --> 02:38:18,948 There's not any "You're bad, you had sex so you must die“. It really is the larger concept of 1959 02:38:18,990 --> 02:38:26,414 how much can you stay human, your humanity within a bad situation that you can't get out of. 1960 02:38:26,414 --> 02:38:32,837 That's the real message. And it's a movie with this amazing soundtrack. I mean, 1961 02:38:32,837 --> 02:38:39,427 Billy Idol, Go West and then you have Claudio Simonetti, and you have The Goblin. 1962 02:38:39,468 --> 02:38:42,263 There's something about metal, 1963 02:38:42,263 --> 02:38:47,435 that to them it's the standout loner against society, 1964 02:38:49,437 --> 02:38:54,942 and there's so many great effects and demone - demons - the eyeball gauche, 1965 02:38:54,942 --> 02:38:58,404 it's a real man. And they put padding on there. 1966 02:38:58,446 --> 02:39:04,076 So they had a system that when I put my hands in the pad, there was gel, 1967 02:39:04,076 --> 02:39:09,457 and I knew don't go past the gel because his real eyes are in there. 1968 02:39:09,457 --> 02:39:14,920 And the birth of the demon that comes out of Paula's back, 1969 02:39:14,920 --> 02:39:20,509 that was a mechanical thing that Sergio Stivaletti created. 1970 02:39:20,509 --> 02:39:26,432 Just look at that doll. Look at that creature that comes out, 1971 02:39:26,432 --> 02:39:32,521 excellently done. They love that! They love the the guts of it. 1972 02:39:32,563 --> 02:39:37,443 The helicopter. It was a technical way of 1973 02:39:37,443 --> 02:39:43,532 how the helicopter got through the roof. It's not 1974 02:39:43,532 --> 02:39:49,497 magic. It's the mechanics of movie making. So as 1975 02:39:49,497 --> 02:39:55,461 everyone's running toward the camera, I'm hiding. 1976 02:39:55,461 --> 02:40:01,092 I'm hiding - I'm hiding behind pillars, I'm hiding behind things because I want to be sure I don't 1977 02:40:01,092 --> 02:40:06,472 get killed on scene. I want to be sure my head doesn't go flying with that helicopter plane. 1978 02:40:10,476 --> 02:40:14,939 The humanity of it is the secret of the movie. Watch all these people doing 1979 02:40:14,939 --> 02:40:19,610 the best they can in the worst circumstances. And not everyone's going to win. 1980 02:40:37,503 --> 02:40:42,049 "Vamp" is the story of three kids who go downtown to 1981 02:40:42,049 --> 02:40:46,720 a strip club to procure some unappareled refreshment, 1982 02:40:46,720 --> 02:40:52,601 I guess is what you want to call it, and end up running into a nest of vampires. 1983 02:40:54,520 --> 02:40:58,983 Richard Wenk, the writer director had a terrific vision of what 1984 02:40:58,983 --> 02:41:03,529 he wanted. He wanted to make a horror movie that utilized humor. 1985 02:41:07,533 --> 02:41:09,076 "Vamp" for me was trying to fit in. 1986 02:41:09,076 --> 02:41:13,080 Take me with you and just pretend to be my friends for a week. 1987 02:41:13,122 --> 02:41:15,541 Hey guys, I'm psyched. Let's party. 1988 02:41:15,541 --> 02:41:16,709 At what cost? [chuckles[ 1989 02:41:19,545 --> 02:41:26,719 I was so stoked to meet Grace Jones. She was perfectly cast to play Katrina. 1990 02:41:26,760 --> 02:41:31,307 We were all worried if Grace Jones was going to show up on 1991 02:41:31,307 --> 02:41:36,604 the set or not [laughing]. She surprised us in a lot a lot of ways, 1992 02:41:36,604 --> 02:41:42,067 I have to say. I think all of us were kind of like vamping [laughing] so you know, 1993 02:41:42,109 --> 02:41:46,655 in some way. When Grace Jones came on the set, the air would change. 1994 02:41:46,655 --> 02:41:52,995 I do remember one incident where I had opened the door, and there was Grace Jones and she 1995 02:41:52,995 --> 02:41:59,668 was stark naked. And underneath her this man was painting her, turned out to be Keith Haring. 1996 02:41:59,668 --> 02:42:04,256 Keith was just slowly drawing white lines on her 1997 02:42:04,298 --> 02:42:09,637 beautiful ebony body. It was just unbelievable to watch. 1998 02:42:09,637 --> 02:42:13,557 I give you Katrina. 1999 02:42:13,599 --> 02:42:18,896 The dance, that was pretty cool. None of us knew what to expect. The red 2000 02:42:18,896 --> 02:42:24,568 wig that she had on, at first I kept thinking it looked like Ronald McDonald. 2001 02:42:24,610 --> 02:42:29,114 I said, "How in the hell is this gonna work?“ But it worked! I sat there and went, 2002 02:42:29,114 --> 02:42:30,741 "Oh my god, she looks great". 2003 02:42:38,624 --> 02:42:42,002 Grace Jones is so charismatic and her character was 2004 02:42:42,002 --> 02:42:45,881 so strong that she didn't need to talk. She was all action. 2005 02:42:45,881 --> 02:42:52,680 You like to play rough, huh? 2006 02:42:52,721 --> 02:42:57,476 When we were filming the death scene, Grace was just so wild. You know, 2007 02:42:57,518 --> 02:43:02,731 she came onto set nine hours late one night, howling saying, “Where's my man?" 2008 02:43:02,773 --> 02:43:05,776 and the whole crew just went [laughing]. 2009 02:43:09,780 --> 02:43:15,202 She had attacked my neck like a pitbull, like a shark on a fish and didn't 2010 02:43:15,244 --> 02:43:20,958 realize that the teeth actually penetrated the latex and went into my jugular. 2011 02:43:20,958 --> 02:43:27,756 And I was writhing in pain, screaming in agony and she didn't realize how 2012 02:43:27,756 --> 02:43:34,888 badly I was hurt, and it could have been a lot worse than how it turned out. 2013 02:43:34,930 --> 02:43:39,935 How you're doing back there, Duncan? - I'm hungry. - He's okay. 2014 02:43:39,935 --> 02:43:44,565 It was the first time I've ever was transformed into a vampire, 2015 02:43:44,565 --> 02:43:47,067 so it was pretty exciting for me. 2016 02:43:47,067 --> 02:43:53,615 They started to proceed to put on the prosthetics on my face. I watched myself turn into my 2017 02:43:53,657 --> 02:44:01,081 grandfather, and it was a little scary. There's a certain kind of empowerment that you feel [chuckles] 2018 02:44:01,123 --> 02:44:06,503 when you're put into a costume, and this one was kind of like okay, I got 2019 02:44:06,503 --> 02:44:12,259 the teeth, I got power which really surprised me, because I think my character 2020 02:44:12,259 --> 02:44:18,265 was - was empowered now all of a sudden he had this power even though he eventually was going 2021 02:44:18,307 --> 02:44:24,313 to die, but still, you know, why not go out in a flame if you have to. Literally [laughing]. 2022 02:44:42,247 --> 02:44:46,251 “The Seventh Curse" came out in 1986, it's a hidden gem I would say. 2023 02:44:46,251 --> 02:44:51,590 Hong Kong cinema was very much like two fold - you had action and comedy. 2024 02:44:51,590 --> 02:44:57,304 Then the other side we were incorporating a lot of fantasy and horror as well. 2025 02:45:02,351 --> 02:45:05,145 Directed by Simon Nam. He went on to direct "The Story of Ricky" 2026 02:45:05,145 --> 02:45:08,565 which is kind of a very over the top action movie with lots of blood and gore. 2027 02:45:08,565 --> 02:45:15,280 The plot revolves around Dr. Yuen played by Chin Siu-ho, who's a fantastic martial 2028 02:45:15,280 --> 02:45:21,537 artist. Dr. Yuen is warned of a curse after being attacked in his apartment. 2029 02:45:25,457 --> 02:45:28,877 The film flashes back, where we see him saving a girl 2030 02:45:28,919 --> 02:45:32,506 called Betsy from an evil tribe called The Worm Tribe. 2031 02:45:35,467 --> 02:45:38,679 After saving her from being sacrificed, he is cursed. 2032 02:45:38,720 --> 02:45:43,600 He decides to head back to Thailand to get rid of this tribe, so he can live forever 2033 02:45:43,642 --> 02:45:48,689 without having to look over his shoulder thinking he's going to die in a year's time. 2034 02:45:52,568 --> 02:45:56,613 He gets the advice by Wisely played by Chow Yun-fat, who is barely in the movie, 2035 02:45:56,613 --> 02:46:00,784 he's - he pops up in the beginning, he's a little bit near the sort of middle act. 2036 02:46:00,784 --> 02:46:03,537 And he pops up at the end with a rocket launcher, 2037 02:46:03,537 --> 02:46:05,664 which is a great sequence [chuckles]. 2038 02:46:10,669 --> 02:46:12,671 When it comes to the action, the film completely delivers. 2039 02:46:19,678 --> 02:46:25,267 They try and push the gore as much as possible. They actually quite- it's quite sprinkled 2040 02:46:25,309 --> 02:46:30,814 throughout. You see someone's stomach get ripped apart, all these worms fall out of it. 2041 02:46:30,814 --> 02:46:37,362 A guy's head gets ripped off, blood gets drained from him. They give it a go and 2042 02:46:37,362 --> 02:46:43,911 it does work to a certain degree, but it does provide some unintentional laughs. 2043 02:46:43,911 --> 02:46:47,915 Watching this movie, I had a huge smile on my face. If you love your Hong Kong action, if 2044 02:46:47,956 --> 02:46:52,085 you love your fantasy and you love horror thrown into that with elements of Indiana Jones, 2045 02:46:52,085 --> 02:46:56,048 it's a movie you've got to watch because it's so bonkers and silly. 2046 02:47:12,981 --> 02:47:17,027 The original "Little Shop of Horrors" by Roger Corman is about a florist, 2047 02:47:17,069 --> 02:47:18,987 Seymour, whose shop is struggling, 2048 02:47:18,987 --> 02:47:23,116 until he grows this amazing Venus fly trap but 2049 02:47:23,116 --> 02:47:27,704 the problem is it only eats human flesh. The 1982 2050 02:47:27,704 --> 02:47:32,376 musical stage production was adapted into the 1986 2051 02:47:32,417 --> 02:47:37,089 film directed by Frank Oz and starring Rick Moranis. 2052 02:47:37,130 --> 02:47:41,218 It seems like the whole world is going crazy. At least we got each other ,right? 2053 02:47:41,218 --> 02:47:45,013 Audrey too is incredible. These practical 2054 02:47:45,055 --> 02:47:49,142 effects were outstanding. They look so good. 2055 02:47:49,184 --> 02:47:55,148 Does it have to be human?- Feed me! Does it have to be mine? - Feed me! 2056 02:47:55,190 --> 02:47:57,568 In order to get the lip sync perfect, 2057 02:47:57,568 --> 02:48:02,281 they had to slow down the frame rate of the plant. But it works fantastic. 2058 02:48:02,281 --> 02:48:07,202 You sure do drive a hard market. 2059 02:48:07,244 --> 02:48:12,249 Ellen Greene is great. I mean, she has this funny squeaky voice. 2060 02:48:12,249 --> 02:48:16,295 I call it an Audrey ll. - After me? - I hope you don't mind [squeaky shriek]. 2061 02:48:16,336 --> 02:48:18,505 But then when she sings, it's - it's gorgeous. 2062 02:48:27,306 --> 02:48:31,560 The songs are wonderful. Also, you have this great cameo by Steve 2063 02:48:31,560 --> 02:48:36,440 Martin who plays this deranged dentist who likes to inflict pain on people. 2064 02:48:42,404 --> 02:48:45,157 But then he meets his match with Bill Murray, 2065 02:48:45,157 --> 02:48:48,952 who's this patient who doesn't want any Novocaine or anything. 2066 02:48:48,994 --> 02:48:50,579 Say "Ah". - "Ahhhhh!" 2067 02:48:50,579 --> 02:48:52,914 And Bill Murray is actually filling in the 2068 02:48:52,914 --> 02:48:55,626 role that Jack Nicholson played in the original. 2069 02:48:55,626 --> 02:48:58,503 I know Novocaine, it dulls the senses [laughing]. 2070 02:48:58,503 --> 02:49:05,469 The original ending was not a happy one. In fact, it's relentlessly dark and morbid, Seymour's 2071 02:49:05,469 --> 02:49:12,643 girlfriend Audrey is fatally wounded by the plan and then he sacrifices her corpse to the plant. 2072 02:49:12,684 --> 02:49:18,440 He slowly carries her up, like it's some kind of ceremony. It's tragic, 2073 02:49:18,482 --> 02:49:21,693 yet somehow beautiful at the same time. 2074 02:49:28,617 --> 02:49:35,666 He confronts the original plant, only to be eaten himself. 2075 02:49:36,667 --> 02:49:42,756 The plants attack the city. And it's a full on destruction sequence, where the plants 2076 02:49:42,756 --> 02:49:48,720 destroy everything. And it's some of the best miniature model work I've ever seen. 2077 02:49:48,720 --> 02:49:54,685 Everybody in the whole world dies. It's so insanely depressing, 2078 02:49:54,685 --> 02:49:57,771 that it's no wonder they cut it. 2079 02:50:02,776 --> 02:50:04,027 I mean, that was pretty crazy. 2080 02:50:12,828 --> 02:50:17,833 The allure of horror isn't just watching other people in terror, 2081 02:50:17,874 --> 02:50:21,878 it's identifying with the people who are in terror. 2082 02:50:21,878 --> 02:50:28,009 People in life naturally walk away from fear. But in watching a horror movie, it allows 2083 02:50:28,051 --> 02:50:34,057 you to confront that while someone else is going through it, doesn't have to be you. 2084 02:50:34,057 --> 02:50:38,520 And usually there's somebody in the film that is victorious, 2085 02:50:38,520 --> 02:50:42,149 and by osmosis it makes you feel more confident. 2086 02:50:45,986 --> 02:50:49,489 The whole idea behind living our lives is having enough ordinary care to see 2087 02:50:49,489 --> 02:50:53,201 whatever threats may materialize over the horizon. That's what's basic to horror. 2088 02:50:53,201 --> 02:50:59,624 If I am that person, how do I get out of that situation? How do I live through this 2089 02:50:59,666 --> 02:51:06,173 moment? We can experience that horror and that terror through somebody else's eyes. 2090 02:51:06,173 --> 02:51:11,052 And there's also a giant sense of catharsis and kind of a projection of, 2091 02:51:11,094 --> 02:51:16,183 what if that was me? Are they making the right decisions that I would make? 2092 02:51:21,146 --> 02:51:25,692 Sometimes you end up rooting more for the monster than for the kids. 2093 02:51:25,692 --> 02:51:31,364 Now, in the traditional horror movie, we often saw things from the victim's point of view, but that's no longer. Now we look through 2094 02:51:31,364 --> 02:51:37,245 the killer's eyes. It's almost as if the audience is being asked to identify the attackers in these movies. And that really bothers me. 2095 02:51:37,245 --> 02:51:41,875 Jason was meant to be kind of a shark. And he made this 2096 02:51:41,917 --> 02:51:47,297 transition from being a shark to being somehow or other, a hero. 2097 02:51:47,339 --> 02:51:53,470 There's this tiny little backstory about Jason being picked on as a kid, 2098 02:51:53,470 --> 02:51:56,348 tormented and then finally drown. 2099 02:51:59,434 --> 02:52:01,770 And ever since he came back, 2100 02:52:01,812 --> 02:52:08,485 he's been kicking ass. And it's sort of like Revenge of the Nerds on steroids. 2101 02:52:15,408 --> 02:52:18,954 There's a certain kind of identification with 2102 02:52:18,954 --> 02:52:22,624 Jason being the super ego of the depressed kid. 2103 02:52:22,624 --> 02:52:26,962 You get to have your fantasy that you're the killer. You're ripping out hearts, 2104 02:52:27,003 --> 02:52:31,508 you're ripping out throats, "You know what boss? I'll tell you what I like to do“. 2105 02:52:31,508 --> 02:52:36,513 You could be the little person that finally got to beat up the meanies. You 2106 02:52:36,513 --> 02:52:41,643 could be the girl that nobody liked, and you're going to get them in the end. 2107 02:52:46,565 --> 02:52:54,072 I think it's more like vicariousness. I don't think it's catharsis. I think people maybe are curious about how 2108 02:52:54,072 --> 02:53:01,788 it would feel to be in a power position, or curious about the rush that you would get out of executing somebody. 2109 02:53:05,667 --> 02:53:09,254 Watch people how much they love video games too. Like, 2110 02:53:09,254 --> 02:53:12,924 it's not catharsis. I think it's - it's more than that. 2111 02:53:12,924 --> 02:53:17,846 It depends on what world you want to escape into. And I think if you watch the, hey, I'm watching the 2112 02:53:17,888 --> 02:53:22,893 kids run through the woods to get their heads cut off, you feel good, because you're not in the woods. 2113 02:53:22,893 --> 02:53:27,272 You - you live in a world that you know doesn't - that doesn't 2114 02:53:27,314 --> 02:53:31,902 actually hopefully happen to you. And then in that fantasy world, 2115 02:53:31,902 --> 02:53:34,696 or that spy adventure movie world, you want to be one of 2116 02:53:34,696 --> 02:53:37,824 those characters. So there are two completely different things. 2117 02:53:37,824 --> 02:53:43,330 The categorical difference between a horror movie and a - a - a violent 2118 02:53:43,330 --> 02:53:49,085 action movie, has to do with the experience. On “Death Wish“ you are Paul, 2119 02:53:49,085 --> 02:53:54,007 you get the gun, you go out and you shoot these sort of faceless victims. In 2120 02:53:54,007 --> 02:53:59,054 a horror movie, you're the victim, the whole experience is completely flipped. 2121 02:53:59,054 --> 02:54:03,350 That is a significant difference on a cinematic level, 2122 02:54:03,391 --> 02:54:07,979 on a political level, on what it has to say about society, 2123 02:54:08,021 --> 02:54:13,151 but it's also a difference critically in terms of how it's getting at your subconscious. An action movie 2124 02:54:13,151 --> 02:54:18,239 of that type, it has a kind of wish fulfillment aspect to it every time he goes out and shoots one of 2125 02:54:18,239 --> 02:54:22,994 these like hoodlums, you get a dopamine hit. It's like a video game like, Oh, 2126 02:54:22,994 --> 02:54:28,083 I got another one. In a horror movie, you know, it's - it's more like a nightmare. 2127 02:54:28,083 --> 02:54:32,253 You're put in this position of kind of existential dread or threat 2128 02:54:32,295 --> 02:54:36,091 that is pursuing you in some way, which gets into much, much 2129 02:54:36,132 --> 02:54:42,055 deeper aspects of human nature. Horror movies have a much 2130 02:54:42,055 --> 02:54:49,312 more complicated and I would say deeper level that they're getting at. 2131 02:54:55,193 --> 02:54:58,196 I was never really a video game guy. I was more of a 2132 02:54:58,196 --> 02:55:01,408 pinball guy. Nowadays there's an Elvira pinball machine. 2133 02:55:01,449 --> 02:55:06,246 There's a Rob Zombie pinball machine. I'm pinball, man. 2134 02:55:06,246 --> 02:55:08,415 Today you have a lot of great horror games, 2135 02:55:08,415 --> 02:55:12,460 especially with the - the VR. I mean, there's all kinds of things they can do now. 2136 02:55:17,298 --> 02:55:21,970 Even now, you have some that are based on '80s horror films like The the recent "Friday the 13th video" 2137 02:55:21,970 --> 02:55:26,558 game, which is connected with Tom Savini and Kane Hodder, but we didn't always have that. Back then, 2138 02:55:26,558 --> 02:55:32,355 video game technology wasn't as advanced. Wizard Video was releasing these games like 2139 02:55:32,355 --> 02:55:38,611 “Texas Chainsaw Massacre" and "Halloween“. In "Texas Chainsaw Massacre" you're the bad guy. 2140 02:55:38,653 --> 02:55:45,035 You are Leatherface and you're killing people. Like there's no morals in this game, it's sort of like one of the 2141 02:55:45,076 --> 02:55:51,708 first real sadistic games where you control the killer, you basically get points for chopping people up [chuckles]. 2142 02:55:51,708 --> 02:55:56,838 One thing that's funny about the chainsaw is that it's the same color as the body, 2143 02:55:56,838 --> 02:56:01,593 it's sort of like an extension of his body, and you get stuck on everything. 2144 02:56:01,593 --> 02:56:06,598 And then there was "Halloween", also on Atari. You're running from Michael Myers, 2145 02:56:06,598 --> 02:56:10,518 you have to get the kids and move them to a corner of the house. 2146 02:56:10,560 --> 02:56:15,607 And every time you do that, you get 675 points. Very specific. It 2147 02:56:15,648 --> 02:56:20,862 also has what might be the first head decapitation in a video game. 2148 02:56:20,862 --> 02:56:25,033 I mean, I can't think of any games before that where a head gets cut off, 2149 02:56:25,075 --> 02:56:29,746 and you see blood spurting out. And it also has the "Halloween" theme song in it. 2150 02:56:33,666 --> 02:56:39,839 They were super, super cheesy, just little pixels, so bad [laughing]. 2151 02:56:39,881 --> 02:56:45,970 So the Atari version of "Alien", basically took Pac-Man and 2152 02:56:45,970 --> 02:56:52,769 then just turned it into “Alien". Frankenstein's monster on Atari, 2153 02:56:52,769 --> 02:56:58,024 it had this great moment where the Frankenstein monster would approach the 2154 02:56:58,024 --> 02:57:03,863 screen. If you played in the dark at night, the whole room would just flash green. 2155 02:57:10,870 --> 02:57:17,919 I did a few games, one was "Elvira: Mistress of the Dark". 2156 02:57:18,878 --> 02:57:23,049 One was "The Jaws of Cerberus“. I don't know what I have to do with that. 2157 02:57:30,974 --> 02:57:36,187 And one was “Elvira The Arcade Game". That kind of got better as time went on. 2158 02:57:40,984 --> 02:57:44,195 Everybody was grabbing theirjoystick and having a really good time. 2159 02:57:48,032 --> 02:57:52,453 There was this one game called "Monster Party" for the NES. And I can remember 2160 02:57:52,495 --> 02:57:57,083 renting it as a kid and being really excited because the box art was great on it, 2161 02:57:57,083 --> 02:58:00,044 it had all these different monsters on it, and I popped the game in 2162 02:58:00,044 --> 02:58:03,131 and was kind of disappointed because it wasn't as good as the box art. 2163 02:58:03,173 --> 02:58:10,847 It was an important lesson I learned about 'neverjudge a game by its cover'. The interesting thing about horror 2164 02:58:10,847 --> 02:58:18,188 video games is that I've watched the graphics progress to a point where they are able to get more graphic, 2165 02:58:18,188 --> 02:58:22,525 and as a result, the games became more controversial. I remember hearing controversies about 2166 02:58:22,525 --> 02:58:27,238 "Doom", about “Resident Evil“, even something like “Mortal Kombat" was a big deal when I was a kid. 2167 02:58:27,280 --> 02:58:32,785 And it was all because the graphics had progressed to a point where you could show all these sort of graphic 2168 02:58:32,827 --> 02:58:38,458 things that you previously would have only been able to see in movies, that you could now see in these games. 2169 02:58:38,458 --> 02:58:43,379 And a lot of parents groups and politicians did not like that. 2170 02:58:43,379 --> 02:58:46,674 You're engaged now as the aggressor, you're engaged as the person 2171 02:58:46,674 --> 02:58:50,386 who commits the violence, and not just someone who watches the violence. 2172 02:58:50,428 --> 02:58:55,767 “The Ghostbusters" game for the Commodore 64, you are the Ghostbusters and you 2173 02:58:55,767 --> 02:59:01,606 start off a lot like the movie, you have to go and buy all your different equipment, 2174 02:59:01,606 --> 02:59:06,277 you put it together and then you go out and you hunt ghosts in 2175 02:59:06,319 --> 02:59:11,616 order to get enough money to be able to get to the finale of the game. 2176 02:59:14,452 --> 02:59:18,915 You would get in the Ecto-1, you would drive to the location and 2177 02:59:18,915 --> 02:59:23,670 there would be a ghost that looked like Slimer that's flying around. 2178 02:59:23,670 --> 02:59:31,010 And you have to position your two Ghostbusters together to trap the ghosts in between 2179 02:59:31,010 --> 02:59:38,726 the streams. And then you can suck them up in the trap. Not really challenging, but fun. 2180 02:59:38,726 --> 02:59:45,275 "Nightmare on Elm Street" was one of the few NES games where you could 2181 02:59:45,316 --> 02:59:52,532 play four players using the NES Four score. You're running around Elm Street, 2182 02:59:52,532 --> 03:00:00,164 which happens to be the longest street in the world in this game, but the idea is to collect all of Freddie's bones. 2183 03:00:00,206 --> 03:00:07,588 You have all these stock villains like lollipop ghosts with stick arms, bats, skeletons, Frankenstein monsters, 2184 03:00:07,588 --> 03:00:12,510 it's so generic. Every once in a while Freddy would appear, and it would 2185 03:00:12,510 --> 03:00:17,640 say 'Freddy's coming', but it would be a 'Freddy's '- trademark - 'coming'. 2186 03:00:17,682 --> 03:00:23,438 “Friday the 13th" on NES might have been one of the first horror games I've ever 2187 03:00:23,438 --> 03:00:29,527 played. And there's a bunch of items you have to collect but you'll never have time 2188 03:00:29,527 --> 03:00:32,280 because this Jason alarm keeps going off and you have 2189 03:00:32,322 --> 03:00:35,491 to keep on top of he's out there killing the camp counselors. 2190 03:00:35,491 --> 03:00:39,454 Then you go inside the house and it switches to 3D which was kind of cool at that 2191 03:00:39,495 --> 03:00:43,416 time. It was one of the first horror games that really made an impression on me. 2192 03:00:43,416 --> 03:00:50,256 "You and your friends are dead. Game over.“ That's kind of rough, you know? A 2193 03:00:50,256 --> 03:00:57,472 lot of these games don't really hold up, but back then you used your imagination. 2194 03:00:57,472 --> 03:01:01,267 and you made the best of it, because that's all we had. But we 2195 03:01:01,267 --> 03:01:05,355 would have never imagined that, you know, all these decades later, 2196 03:01:05,355 --> 03:01:09,108 you get a real "Friday the 13th" game that definitely feels more official than, 2197 03:01:09,150 --> 03:01:12,362 you know, the type of games they would usually put out in the '80s. 2198 03:01:17,325 --> 03:01:22,538 The "Friday the 13th“ game. As a player, you can play as Jason, which is fun, 2199 03:01:22,538 --> 03:01:27,460 or as any of the victims, trying to get away from Jason or defeat Jason. 2200 03:01:27,460 --> 03:01:32,340 So I thought that was an ingenious way of building a video game. In 2201 03:01:32,340 --> 03:01:37,387 this video game, you can play as several different versions of Jason, 2202 03:01:37,387 --> 03:01:44,644 I was honored that they wanted me to be a part of it, because this is animation, basically, so they could have 2203 03:01:44,685 --> 03:01:52,276 used anyone. But it was in their minds I was the person to do it, because they liked how I moved as the character. 2204 03:01:55,405 --> 03:02:00,910 "Friday the 13th" video game, I essentially did what I did on the movie, 2205 03:02:00,952 --> 03:02:06,332 except not physically, right. My job was to sit down and create kills. 2206 03:02:12,130 --> 03:02:16,926 On paper, they didn't seem so horrible and grisly, 2207 03:02:16,968 --> 03:02:24,142 but then seeing him in a game I was like “Oh, God, you know, I wrote that”. 2208 03:02:24,142 --> 03:02:26,102 I created them on paper, 2209 03:02:26,144 --> 03:02:32,108 and then Kane Hodder donned the suit and did the motion capture for all the kills. 2210 03:02:32,108 --> 03:02:36,654 You're wearing spandex, which is scary to think of me in spandex anyway, 2211 03:02:36,696 --> 03:02:38,239 with sensors everywhere. 2212 03:02:38,239 --> 03:02:41,909 So I look at the monitor, I see Jason. Whenever I would move I 2213 03:02:41,951 --> 03:02:46,205 would see exactly what the character is going to look like in the game. 2214 03:02:46,205 --> 03:02:49,333 By the way, Kane Hodder plays the game, 2215 03:02:49,333 --> 03:02:54,255 but he plays it as a camp counselor, trying to outwit himself. 2216 03:02:54,297 --> 03:03:00,636 is it's not as easy as you would think. And I played as a counselor, trying to 2217 03:03:00,636 --> 03:03:07,226 defeat Jason, and I just got my ass whooped. Eh, it's more fun to be the bad guy. 2218 03:03:25,953 --> 03:03:28,873 "Angel Heart" was another one of those Exorcist, 2219 03:03:28,873 --> 03:03:32,919 Rosemary's Baby kind of movies. I think it's completely underrated. 2220 03:03:32,919 --> 03:03:37,965 I think it's one of Alan Parker's, who directed, I think it's one of his best 2221 03:03:38,007 --> 03:03:42,887 ever. A guy making a deal with the devil not really knowing it's the devil. 2222 03:03:42,887 --> 03:03:45,348 It's funny I have a feeling I've met you before. 2223 03:03:45,389 --> 03:03:47,058 - I don't know, I don't think so. 2224 03:03:47,058 --> 03:03:49,101 Mickey Rourke is terrific in it, 2225 03:03:49,101 --> 03:03:53,856 De Niro is terrific in it. And it's great to see them operating together. 2226 03:03:53,898 --> 03:03:56,984 How terrible is wisdom when it brings no profit to the wise, Johnny. 2227 03:03:56,984 --> 03:04:02,240 That was one of the attractions of it ,was we get to see Lisa Bonet, 2228 03:04:02,240 --> 03:04:04,825 the Cosby kid as a little sexpot. 2229 03:04:04,867 --> 03:04:09,372 So the gods got you pregnant? - Yeah. - I understand that. [woman laughing] Sorry. 2230 03:04:09,413 --> 03:04:11,832 I'm not, it was the best fuck I ever had. 2231 03:04:11,832 --> 03:04:16,212 Very much about the '80s, very much about behaving yourself and 2232 03:04:16,212 --> 03:04:20,925 not being as decadent and horrible and cruel and awful to people as- 2233 03:04:20,967 --> 03:04:26,639 as the '80s allowed you to be, seemed to be in fashion then. De Niro has this 2234 03:04:26,639 --> 03:04:32,937 spectacular moment he's talking about the an egg as sort of a metaphor for the soul. 2235 03:04:32,937 --> 03:04:37,275 You know, some religions think that the egg is the symbol of the soul, 2236 03:04:37,275 --> 03:04:38,734 did you know that? 2237 03:04:38,734 --> 03:04:44,490 And at the end of this beautiful speech takes a big honkin‘ bite at the egg, 2238 03:04:44,532 --> 03:04:47,868 just big teeth and everything right into it. 2239 03:04:53,708 --> 03:04:59,547 It's De Niro as you've never seen him, or seen him before since. He's going down 2240 03:04:59,589 --> 03:05:05,803 the elevator at the end and descending into hell and not having any choice about it. 2241 03:05:05,803 --> 03:05:10,808 It's a great horrible cautionary tale as well. But boy, oh boy. 2242 03:05:10,808 --> 03:05:16,856 The soul is immortal. Yours belongs to me. 2243 03:05:31,746 --> 03:05:37,335 "Creepshow 1" was such a success that they of course had to put out a sequel, “Creepshow 2244 03:05:37,335 --> 03:05:42,590 2" was not as memorable as the first but it did have some very memorable segments. 2245 03:05:42,590 --> 03:05:46,427 So here we were, you know, in Arizona, you know, 2246 03:05:46,469 --> 03:05:50,640 doing another “Creepshow". Mike Gornick directed it. 2247 03:05:50,640 --> 03:05:55,645 I love being with Mike Gornick. I might have been a little miffed that I wasn't asked 2248 03:05:55,686 --> 03:06:00,691 to do the effects on it, and I think their intention was to save money or something, 2249 03:06:00,691 --> 03:06:05,112 then they offered me the role of the creep. Okay, great, you know, so. And I, 2250 03:06:05,154 --> 03:06:09,033 you know, I just mimed that whole thing, the dialogue was recorded. 2251 03:06:09,033 --> 03:06:11,661 I never seen anyone so impatient, Billy. 2252 03:06:11,661 --> 03:06:18,334 In fact, when I played the creep, I insisted that when my scene was over, I must immediately 2253 03:06:18,334 --> 03:06:24,465 have the makeup removed and walk into a shower. My nightmares involve being sticky. 2254 03:06:24,465 --> 03:06:29,387 I can't be sticky. So wearing that makeup is the stickiest feel, I hate wearing it, but it's 2255 03:06:29,387 --> 03:06:34,433 good that I have worn it because I know what I'm doing to people when I put it on them, okay. 2256 03:06:34,433 --> 03:06:37,603 I never seen anyone so impatient, Billy. 2257 03:06:37,603 --> 03:06:42,608 Anthologies are hard. They're a hard sell. Because if you had a story 2258 03:06:42,608 --> 03:06:47,530 that was good enough for a movie, you'd make a whole movie about it. 2259 03:06:47,530 --> 03:06:53,953 Starts off with of course, the wooden Indian, the old trope of the kind store owners that 2260 03:06:53,953 --> 03:07:00,418 are elderly get, you know, beat up and killed by these creeps that are robbing the store. 2261 03:07:00,459 --> 03:07:02,420 And then of course, 2262 03:07:02,420 --> 03:07:08,342 the wooden Indian outside turns real and murders these three kids. 2263 03:07:09,343 --> 03:07:16,267 Then we get to “The Raft,” which is great. They did a great job of it. It's a creepy story about four friends who swim 2264 03:07:16,267 --> 03:07:23,441 out to a raft and then this giant oil slick that's living and has magical powers that can mesmerize you, kills them all. 2265 03:07:27,820 --> 03:07:31,031 it's one of my wife's favorite movies but when I say to her, "you know that was just 2266 03:07:31,031 --> 03:07:34,285 a big garbage" but no, no, no, no, she doesn't want to hear about the effects, okay. 2267 03:07:37,246 --> 03:07:42,084 The creature in the lake, using ultra slime and tinted metacil and all this 2268 03:07:42,084 --> 03:07:47,214 kind of stuff. This sequence where Page Hannah is - is attacked by the creature. 2269 03:07:47,214 --> 03:07:53,179 We had a bunch of different gags we had an arm prosthetic that I sculpted with bladders underneath it, 2270 03:07:53,179 --> 03:07:59,268 and then we built these different versions of her sort of melted as the blob is kind of enveloping her. 2271 03:08:03,189 --> 03:08:08,819 One of the funniest moments of that was we were prepping for Chief Wooden Head, and Howard Berger 2272 03:08:08,861 --> 03:08:14,200 had called and said, "We need slime. We were shooting another shot and we're out of slime.“ 2273 03:08:14,241 --> 03:08:19,246 I was like driving like 50 miles an hour, 60 miles an hour on these side streets. 2274 03:08:19,288 --> 03:08:24,126 And I turned a corner and one of the buckets in the backseat spilled [claps]. 2275 03:08:24,168 --> 03:08:30,257 And I looked at down at my feet and this black sludge went up underneath the seat, my foot's now stuck 2276 03:08:30,299 --> 03:08:36,263 to the gas pedal and the brake. So we were literally scooping it out and running to dress the set. 2277 03:08:36,263 --> 03:08:37,264 I beat you! 2278 03:08:37,264 --> 03:08:42,853 It's always tough to do a sequel I think, and particularly an anthological 2279 03:08:42,895 --> 03:08:48,108 sequel because the expectations are already high, because of how well 2280 03:08:48,108 --> 03:08:53,906 the first "Creepshow" did, and how much it connected with fans. It was missing that 2281 03:08:53,906 --> 03:09:00,120 spark. It tries, but I don't think it nearly reaches the heights that "Creepshow 1" did. 2282 03:09:19,974 --> 03:09:22,601 And what's great about horror is you can make social 2283 03:09:22,643 --> 03:09:25,938 commentary while entertaining people on this roller coaster ride. 2284 03:09:25,938 --> 03:09:32,945 You're not going to sit there passively in a Jackie Kong movie, for sure. What's the story of "Blood Diner“? Blood 2285 03:09:32,945 --> 03:09:40,077 Diner is family loyalty gone wrong, they love their uncle. The problem is the uncle is a psychopath serial killer. 2286 03:09:44,915 --> 03:09:49,879 The script was serious as a heart attack. From what I understood, it was a scene by scene ripoff of 2287 03:09:49,879 --> 03:09:54,925 "Blood Feast". Herschel Gordon Lewis's execution is a completely different execution of what I did. 2288 03:09:54,967 --> 03:09:58,971 "Blood Diner" transcends the genre. 2289 03:10:03,851 --> 03:10:08,772 I had the killers being extremely likable guys. It was not scripted that way, it was scripted they 2290 03:10:08,814 --> 03:10:13,819 were supposed to be these ghoulish brothers that go around, you could see them a mile away coming, 2291 03:10:13,819 --> 03:10:21,201 and they kill people and stitch together this female Frankenstein in the back of their popular 2292 03:10:21,201 --> 03:10:29,001 restaurant [laughing]. The idea of reanimating family members brain and having that brain tell you 2293 03:10:29,001 --> 03:10:34,298 to commit mass homicide, was so out there. 2294 03:10:34,298 --> 03:10:35,466 You, my nephews, 2295 03:10:35,466 --> 03:10:38,886 must construct Sheetar from the body parts of many immoral girls. 2296 03:10:38,886 --> 03:10:44,767 It's really misguided fast loyalty at its extreme, I wanted to shock people. 2297 03:10:44,767 --> 03:10:47,937 [saw sound] Am I doing this right, Uncle Anwar? 2298 03:10:47,937 --> 03:10:55,402 I was just having fun. It doesn't bother me to have a naked woman doing nude aerobics because I'm a woman 2299 03:10:55,402 --> 03:11:02,701 [laughing]. A nude kung fu scene? No one had ever done that. I had to do that. And why did I do that? 2300 03:11:02,701 --> 03:11:07,539 She's completely nude, full bush [laughing]. I wanted 2301 03:11:07,539 --> 03:11:12,670 her to be naked because I wanted her to look vulnerable. 2302 03:11:12,670 --> 03:11:14,254 You think it's an easy kill for sure, 2303 03:11:14,296 --> 03:11:16,799 and that's when the - that's where the surprise comes in. 2304 03:11:16,799 --> 03:11:22,763 And my job as the director is to throw them off in the head another direction. 2305 03:11:22,763 --> 03:11:27,685 The people that I work with my actors and my crew don't have a problem at all working with 2306 03:11:27,726 --> 03:11:32,648 a woman. Where you run into the problems are with the executives, there was a disconnect. 2307 03:11:32,648 --> 03:11:39,863 How could this little Asian young woman direct this outrageous off the hook, 2308 03:11:39,863 --> 03:11:42,282 violent movie, 2309 03:11:42,282 --> 03:11:44,868 right? [chuckles] Funny, 2310 03:11:44,910 --> 03:11:51,583 ridiculous absurdest piece. Things haven't changed that much. 2311 03:11:51,583 --> 03:11:58,382 It's not a contest. It's really isn't, it just is who's qualified to do it, 2312 03:11:58,382 --> 03:12:05,472 and I bring attention to that. My sets look like the United Nations [laughing]. 2313 03:12:05,514 --> 03:12:08,809 You've got every possible nationality working, 2314 03:12:08,809 --> 03:12:12,479 and you've got half of the crew if not more - women. 2315 03:12:12,521 --> 03:12:16,316 And that's why you see a big representation of different ethnicities, 2316 03:12:16,316 --> 03:12:18,444 because that's the way I saw the world. 2317 03:12:18,485 --> 03:12:20,487 Jesus fucking Christ, what am I paying you two for? 2318 03:12:20,487 --> 03:12:27,661 The way I saw that finale was like a war scene. It was an insane undertaking, 2319 03:12:27,661 --> 03:12:34,418 but she bites that head off of a virgin with her giant vagina [laughing]. 2320 03:12:34,460 --> 03:12:40,841 With teeth in a ritual that brings her to life, how absurd. Censors were 2321 03:12:40,841 --> 03:12:47,514 shutting it down. They said it had no socially redeeming values whatsoever. 2322 03:12:47,514 --> 03:12:51,518 It just was misunderstood, the film, 2323 03:12:51,518 --> 03:12:59,234 and it was way ahead of its time. Yet I found my followers [laughing]. 2324 03:12:59,234 --> 03:13:09,411 Right before I stick my big sausage in you, what do they call 'ya? 2325 03:13:09,453 --> 03:13:14,792 They call me Sheetar [growling]. 2326 03:13:14,792 --> 03:13:18,504 "Hello Mary Lou: Prom 2327 03:13:18,545 --> 03:13:23,884 Night ll" is about this really 2328 03:13:23,884 --> 03:13:28,680 awesome chick living in the 2329 03:13:28,680 --> 03:13:34,019 '50s who is ahead of her time. 2330 03:13:34,019 --> 03:13:40,025 She loves to party and have sex with many, many boys and finds herself murdered 2331 03:13:40,067 --> 03:13:46,031 as she's supposed to be coordinated by one of those boys that she had scorned. 2332 03:13:51,787 --> 03:13:55,749 And she comes back to wreak havoc and take her revenge and get her crown back. 2333 03:13:58,627 --> 03:14:02,422 She's presented as this sort of slutty character. In the '80s, we would 2334 03:14:02,422 --> 03:14:06,593 say slutty, but really what that means is that she sort of owns her sexuality. 2335 03:14:06,593 --> 03:14:11,598 It's not who you come with, it's who takes you home. Scram. 2336 03:14:11,598 --> 03:14:16,019 Mary Lou Maloney is my favorite, I literally have the poster hanging over 2337 03:14:16,019 --> 03:14:20,482 my bed. She just was definitely somebody I looked up to when I was little, 2338 03:14:20,482 --> 03:14:25,112 like she's just sexually open and not apologizing for it. And I don't know, 2339 03:14:25,154 --> 03:14:27,406 and then her kills were really cool. 2340 03:14:35,289 --> 03:14:38,792 It was a Canadian film that has nothing to do with the original “Prom Night.” 2341 03:14:38,792 --> 03:14:42,254 The queer audience has gotten really, really excited about "Hello Mary Lou". 2342 03:14:42,254 --> 03:14:46,216 It resonates for them in a way that a lot of other '80s Films don't. 2343 03:14:46,216 --> 03:14:50,095 It's got a sort of a coding that they have embraced and mapped to. 2344 03:14:50,095 --> 03:14:53,348 We've come a very long way in how we think about that 2345 03:14:53,348 --> 03:14:57,019 kind of agency and about how we judge that kind of behavior. 2346 03:14:57,019 --> 03:15:00,063 I think her whole situation is absorbed by a contemporary 2347 03:15:00,105 --> 03:15:03,859 audience in a way that '80s audiences weren't ready to do, or willing. 2348 03:15:03,859 --> 03:15:09,740 See you later alligator. 2349 03:15:21,543 --> 03:15:25,505 "Prince of Darkness" is a movie that shows what happens 2350 03:15:25,547 --> 03:15:29,968 when John Carpenter gets experimental. It goes straight for 2351 03:15:29,968 --> 03:15:34,223 the cerebral but then it goes for a lot of the traditional 2352 03:15:34,264 --> 03:15:38,518 blood and guts that you would expect in a Carpenter film. 2353 03:15:43,273 --> 03:15:46,568 I decided I wanted to make some low budget movies again after 2354 03:15:46,568 --> 03:15:50,197 “Big Trouble Little China". "Prince of Darkness“ was the first one. 2355 03:15:50,197 --> 03:15:55,494 It was inspired by Dario Argento's "lnferno“, because he just did 2356 03:15:55,535 --> 03:16:02,042 things crazy - these crazy batshit things and I thought, let's go. Let's try it. 2357 03:16:02,084 --> 03:16:08,257 The cast in this is one of the most diverse casts of the '80s. But Carpenter has said he 2358 03:16:08,257 --> 03:16:14,930 didn't cast them to be diverse. He cast them because they were the best choices for the roles. 2359 03:16:20,727 --> 03:16:25,148 I wanted to work with Victor Wong and Dennis Dun again, 2360 03:16:25,148 --> 03:16:30,737 and I cast Donald Pleasance, I thought what a really interesting cast. 2361 03:16:30,737 --> 03:16:36,743 What is it? - A secret that can no longer be kept. 2362 03:16:36,743 --> 03:16:42,082 “Prince of Darkness" features Alice Cooper as one of the controlled homeless people, and Alice 2363 03:16:42,082 --> 03:16:47,421 was a nice guy, he brought along the gag where he stabs the guy, it was from his stage show. 2364 03:16:47,462 --> 03:16:55,012 He just kind of wanders up on him, very unassuming. And then all of a sudden [screams]. 2365 03:16:55,012 --> 03:17:02,769 He is a member of the homeless community. He has been possessed by the devil's particle, 2366 03:17:02,769 --> 03:17:06,982 whatever you want to call it, the evil. And he is now the goalie. 2367 03:17:06,982 --> 03:17:11,320 He's keeping people in [chuckles] or killing them as they come out. 2368 03:17:17,034 --> 03:17:23,123 Carpenter, as he does, masterfully balanced two things in this, it was the war of science 2369 03:17:23,165 --> 03:17:29,087 and religion. You have science where they're talking about black holes and particles, 2370 03:17:29,087 --> 03:17:32,674 and you have religion where the son of the 2371 03:17:32,674 --> 03:17:36,762 anti God is being held in a chamber in a church. 2372 03:17:36,762 --> 03:17:44,644 Every particle has an anti particle, its mirror image. Maybe he's anti God. 2373 03:17:44,644 --> 03:17:51,568 The fact that they never really come out and say it's the devil, is genius. 2374 03:17:51,568 --> 03:17:56,823 They found the God Particle. Where's the devil's particle? And that I think is 2375 03:17:56,823 --> 03:18:02,537 where Prince of Darkness comes in. That tells you how relevant that movie is today. 2376 03:18:02,579 --> 03:18:06,375 No person can hold him now. 2377 03:18:12,297 --> 03:18:18,220 I am eternal. 2378 03:18:18,220 --> 03:18:24,935 Freddie's personality was being quoted by Johnny Carson. It was in Mad Magazine, it was in the funny 2379 03:18:24,976 --> 03:18:32,025 papers, it was being merchandised. When you become that part of the culture, you follow it a little bit. 2380 03:18:32,025 --> 03:18:37,948 So the franchise exploited Freddie's sense of humor, 2381 03:18:37,948 --> 03:18:40,075 [woman screaming] This isn't helping. 2382 03:18:40,075 --> 03:18:45,872 And a kind of almost surreal, subconscious, dreamlike sense of fun and 2383 03:18:45,872 --> 03:18:51,837 revenge that Freddy was going through with the culture at the same time, 2384 03:18:51,878 --> 03:18:59,553 the Freddy merchandising now it - there's something new every week. Literally. It's just amazing, 2385 03:18:59,553 --> 03:19:01,596 the amount of stuff, 2386 03:19:01,596 --> 03:19:07,686 from pencil sharpeners to squirt guns. There's silly stuff, there's corny stuff. 2387 03:19:07,686 --> 03:19:13,358 I love finding old, like board games from Europe, you know, and things like that are 2388 03:19:13,358 --> 03:19:19,406 fun for me to see them. I love the foreign posters, like the one over my shoulder here, 2389 03:19:19,406 --> 03:19:26,204 that's from Thailand. Because they're more lurid. I didn't suffer the curse of typecasting or and - and - 2390 03:19:26,204 --> 03:19:33,211 and when I did, I was prepared for it. I wasn't going to be surprised by it. And I'd already proved myself. 2391 03:19:33,211 --> 03:19:39,384 Let me go! [woman screaming]. - Hey, hands on the counter, asshole! 2392 03:19:39,384 --> 03:19:45,182 It was a big deal to decide to be an actor or a musician back when I was a kid. It was like a big 2393 03:19:45,182 --> 03:19:51,104 deal. In my generation, God, you know, you can be an engineer, or you can be a doctor or a lawyer. 2394 03:19:51,146 --> 03:19:57,486 But that was it. That's what you're supposed to be. I did Shakespeare, was paid for 2395 03:19:57,486 --> 03:20:03,867 it professionally, union. Moliere. I did George Bernard Shaw. I did Arthur Miller. 2396 03:20:03,867 --> 03:20:09,289 I just love doing it. I was trained to do that. And I was getting good parts and I was 2397 03:20:09,289 --> 03:20:14,753 predominantly doing comedy. So most of my memory of theaters about getting that laugh. 2398 03:20:14,753 --> 03:20:21,593 1973 till 1983 I was not only an established Hollywood character actor, 2399 03:20:21,593 --> 03:20:23,845 sidekick, 2400 03:20:23,887 --> 03:20:26,014 co star, 2401 03:20:26,056 --> 03:20:32,562 I side kicked all of the big stars and then I moved into television. 2402 03:20:32,562 --> 03:20:37,526 And I played bad guys, and I played - I've been playing a lot of southerners I don't know 2403 03:20:37,526 --> 03:20:42,822 why. I guess I'd learned something doing "Tennessee Williams" but that's how Hollywood saw me. 2404 03:20:42,864 --> 03:20:44,407 Hey, quit stalling, 2405 03:20:44,449 --> 03:20:49,204 will 'ya! Just because you know you've got a great hand. [punching sound]. 2406 03:20:49,204 --> 03:20:53,917 was on "Manimal". I do know that for the fan boys it did become, 2407 03:20:53,917 --> 03:20:57,337 like a kind of suspension bridge of obsession. 2408 03:20:57,337 --> 03:21:03,552 You know, with werewolf effects. A show like "Manimal" is a link in that genre. 2409 03:21:03,552 --> 03:21:10,016 And it deserves its asterisk you know, and I deserve my residual check [chuckles]. 2410 03:21:15,021 --> 03:21:16,856 And then luv". 2411 03:21:16,856 --> 03:21:23,905 I am just. - Just what? - Yes. - Oh, get out of the way, damn stupid alien! 2412 03:21:23,905 --> 03:21:29,286 I do "V" and I've tapped into the great science fiction Zeitgeist of the world, 2413 03:21:29,286 --> 03:21:33,748 not just America, then our movie became a big hit. And I was off. 2414 03:21:33,790 --> 03:21:37,627 This is God. 2415 03:21:39,546 --> 03:21:44,342 Our budgets are getting a little bit bigger for each movie, 2416 03:21:44,384 --> 03:21:48,221 but time got precious. Not shooting. We never 2417 03:21:48,221 --> 03:21:53,059 were rush shooting. But post. We would be shooting a movie, 2418 03:21:53,101 --> 03:21:57,314 and they would rely too much on the Freddy jokes. 2419 03:21:57,314 --> 03:22:01,151 I could - I would have an option sometimes, a scene would end with 2420 03:22:01,151 --> 03:22:05,363 me doing a joke or a wisecrack or a kind of Dirty Harry make my day line. 2421 03:22:05,405 --> 03:22:12,162 Sorry, kid. I don't believe in fairy tales. [child crying] 2422 03:22:13,246 --> 03:22:17,042 And sometimes I would just do it without the line. 2423 03:22:20,003 --> 03:22:25,675 And sometimes I do it and just do it a little darker. But when you're editing, that line 2424 03:22:25,675 --> 03:22:31,848 becomes your punctuation point, it becomes your button that can, you know, button up the scene. 2425 03:22:31,848 --> 03:22:36,811 And give it a little percussive rimshot so they erred in that direction a bit. 2426 03:22:36,811 --> 03:22:39,856 Krueger! - Well it ain't Dr. Seuss. 2427 03:22:39,856 --> 03:22:43,443 “Wes Craven's New Nightmare" is a great film. And the most 2428 03:22:43,443 --> 03:22:47,697 popular of all the nightmare films in the franchise is "Nightmare 3". 2429 03:22:47,697 --> 03:22:52,577 [screaming] 2430 03:22:52,619 --> 03:22:58,208 Gaston Leroux, "Phantom of the Opera" was the Stephen King cheap thrill story of its 2431 03:22:58,208 --> 03:23:03,672 time. A Penny Dreadful. "Give me a penny mate. I'll give you something dreadful." 2432 03:23:03,672 --> 03:23:06,591 Still hungry for an introduction? 2433 03:23:06,591 --> 03:23:12,097 We delivered the goods on our "Phantom of the Opera“. The director Dwight Little 2434 03:23:12,097 --> 03:23:17,435 and I were kind of simultaneously inspiring each other to be on the same page, 2435 03:23:17,477 --> 03:23:25,235 with this sort of homage, to the Hammer film, which is why we transported our "Phantom of 2436 03:23:25,276 --> 03:23:29,155 the Opera" from the Paris Opera of the 1890s 2437 03:23:29,197 --> 03:23:33,159 to the 1890s of London of “Jack the Ripper”, 2438 03:23:33,159 --> 03:23:40,333 and the sets are scrumptious and romantic and Stephanie Lawrence, 2439 03:23:40,333 --> 03:23:45,380 from Evita on the West End playing our diva. 2440 03:23:45,380 --> 03:23:51,261 Bill Nighy, “A bit of blood and guts here“. But we're 2441 03:23:51,302 --> 03:23:57,726 also doing the romantics sumptuous on location richness. 2442 03:23:57,767 --> 03:24:01,396 So it was great fun. But the other real 2443 03:24:01,438 --> 03:24:05,984 selling point for me on "Phantom of the Opera" 2444 03:24:05,984 --> 03:24:09,904 was there was two scripts. There was this 2445 03:24:09,904 --> 03:24:14,701 second script called "The Phantom of Manhattan". 2446 03:24:14,701 --> 03:24:18,913 And it's ultra romantic. And of course that attracted me 2447 03:24:18,955 --> 03:24:23,126 to play the romance of it. The fans of not only "Phantom 2448 03:24:23,168 --> 03:24:25,754 of Opera“, but my fans from Freddy, 2449 03:24:25,754 --> 03:24:31,384 there's a huge kind of strange goth, romantic contingent. There are girls 2450 03:24:31,384 --> 03:24:37,223 that have a kind of "Beauty and the Beast“ attraction with Freddy. I mean, to this day, I'm 2451 03:24:37,223 --> 03:24:43,104 so disappointed that we never got to do that second film, you know, "Phantom of Manhattan". 2452 03:24:43,146 --> 03:24:47,400 Well, here's the thing with "976-Evil ",nobody 2453 03:24:47,400 --> 03:24:51,488 held a gun to my head. They made me a nice 2454 03:24:51,488 --> 03:24:54,449 offer. I was allowed to direct, 2455 03:24:54,449 --> 03:24:59,913 but I love the idea of “976-Evil". It seems gimmicky now, 2456 03:24:59,913 --> 03:25:03,124 in hindsight, but the body of it I liked, 2457 03:25:03,124 --> 03:25:08,463 and I had this great cast assembled. I got Stephen Geoffreys fresh 2458 03:25:08,505 --> 03:25:10,673 off "Fright Night". Steven, 2459 03:25:10,673 --> 03:25:16,888 his look and his haircut and his sense - fashion sense, he embodied the '80s. 2460 03:25:16,888 --> 03:25:23,228 Kevin Yagher, you know, did me a big favor and designed this strange, wonderful makeup. 2461 03:25:23,228 --> 03:25:29,484 It's a great makeup. As he transforms into evil as the devil gets his hooks into him. 2462 03:25:29,484 --> 03:25:34,447 Bye Bye. 2463 03:25:34,447 --> 03:25:39,786 I had great scenes with Robert Picardo is the devil. The devil who runs the 2464 03:25:39,786 --> 03:25:45,500 976-Evil phone call site because that's how he recruits people to the dark side. 2465 03:25:45,500 --> 03:25:49,170 I used to live in Radio Shack when I was in 2466 03:25:49,170 --> 03:25:53,174 high school [sniffing]. But it didn't work out. 2467 03:25:53,174 --> 03:25:59,097 And he had some great comedy and I had to cut that stuff out. 2468 03:25:59,097 --> 03:26:00,181 A guy can't make a buck anymore. 2469 03:26:00,181 --> 03:26:03,560 And one over my - my female producer Lisa Hansen, 2470 03:26:03,560 --> 03:26:08,189 she was seeing the movie through my eyes. She saw where I was going. 2471 03:26:08,231 --> 03:26:13,486 She got ill in post production, and the other producer came in and he 2472 03:26:13,528 --> 03:26:18,908 was just - he had read some how to make a horror movie book, you know, 2473 03:26:18,908 --> 03:26:23,413 sold at Larry Edmunds for $1.99 remaindered in a paperback with a cigarette burn 2474 03:26:23,454 --> 03:26:27,876 on it. And he thought all horror movies have to be 90 minutes and I was going, 2475 03:26:27,876 --> 03:26:32,338 "No, no, no action movies have to be 90 minutes. Not horror 2476 03:26:32,338 --> 03:26:37,844 movies." There's still sequences that are all mine in the boys bathroom. 2477 03:26:37,844 --> 03:26:44,017 You know, with the skateboards, all the stuff with the mirror and him getting sliced by hoax. 2478 03:26:44,058 --> 03:26:50,773 That's pure, unadulterated Robert Englund, you know, it would have been a third again, better movie, 2479 03:26:50,773 --> 03:26:57,739 had they left and trusted me with what it was. I mean, I should get over it but it's your baby. 2480 03:26:57,780 --> 03:27:04,913 The reason I don't direct film as much is not because I'm intimidated by film, but I am desired. 2481 03:27:04,913 --> 03:27:12,795 Because of my name and because of the seats I fill. And because of my baggage that I bring. I am desired to always do effects 2482 03:27:12,795 --> 03:27:16,591 labeled movies. And it's rough enough directing film because 2483 03:27:16,591 --> 03:27:20,803 once you say “action“, [ticking sound] you're against the clock. 2484 03:27:20,803 --> 03:27:25,725 That's all you hear. Pre production is fun, post production is ecstatic. But 2485 03:27:25,725 --> 03:27:30,730 the actual shooting of a movie is not pleasant. You're not sleeping at night, 2486 03:27:30,730 --> 03:27:33,775 you're worried about getting your day, it's not fun, 2487 03:27:33,816 --> 03:27:37,862 even when your actors and your cameraman are bringing you great stuff. 2488 03:27:37,904 --> 03:27:43,743 The reason Robert Englund doesn't direct more film is because people aren't asking me to direct the 2489 03:27:43,743 --> 03:27:49,916 films that I'm right for. Left to my own devices I'm the guy that should be directing “Tender Mercies.” 2490 03:27:49,958 --> 03:27:52,794 That's the kind of film I would do the best. 2491 03:28:10,728 --> 03:28:12,730 Beetlejuice, Beetlejuice, Beetlejuice. 2492 03:28:12,730 --> 03:28:14,941 It's show time [thunder sound]. 2493 03:28:14,941 --> 03:28:21,739 Beetlejuice is for me one of the movies where it shows Tim Burton firing on all cylinders. 2494 03:28:21,739 --> 03:28:28,871 He was just absolutely in his element. It made him one of the premiere directors of the '80s. 2495 03:28:32,750 --> 03:28:34,919 It's hilarious, it's weird, 2496 03:28:34,961 --> 03:28:40,842 it's funny. The cast is terrific. The practical effects are great. Geena 2497 03:28:40,842 --> 03:28:44,220 Davis and Alec Baldwin die. They go to the 2498 03:28:44,220 --> 03:28:48,933 afterlife and they find out that they don't want to die. 2499 03:28:48,933 --> 03:28:54,605 The couple go back to their house. But unfortunately, the worst family 2500 03:28:54,605 --> 03:29:00,737 ever moves in and wants to change everything that they love about the house. 2501 03:29:00,737 --> 03:29:08,286 So they enlist the help of Beetlejuice, who is the human Exorcist. He's there 2502 03:29:08,286 --> 03:29:15,835 to scare them out of the house. Problem is Beetlejuice is a little eccentric. 2503 03:29:15,835 --> 03:29:19,756 What do we got here tonight, kids? 2504 03:29:19,756 --> 03:29:24,052 Michael Keaton surprises you all the time. To see him play Beetlejuice. It 2505 03:29:24,052 --> 03:29:28,765 was such a great character and really outrageous and wild and all over the place. 2506 03:29:28,765 --> 03:29:31,726 Scram! 2507 03:29:31,768 --> 03:29:33,811 That was neat to see that. 2508 03:29:38,733 --> 03:29:41,736 The “Day-O” scene was glorious to me. 2509 03:29:48,743 --> 03:29:52,747 I reenact that almost, you know, once a month [laughing]. 2510 03:29:52,747 --> 03:29:57,043 I think Beetlejuice is the film that really put Winona Ryder on the map. I mean, 2511 03:29:57,043 --> 03:29:58,753 she had such a great character. 2512 03:29:58,753 --> 03:30:02,715 It's kind of the updated Wednesday Addams just this creepy little girl who 2513 03:30:02,715 --> 03:30:06,803 had to live in this creepy house with her sort of creepy parents [laughing]. 2514 03:30:06,803 --> 03:30:13,726 I am utterly alone [opera music playing in the background] [sniffs]. 2515 03:30:13,768 --> 03:30:19,148 I think that's really one of the first times that you saw what - what goth was all about, in comedy like 2516 03:30:19,148 --> 03:30:24,946 that. So that was exciting to see her and to realize that she was such an outcast and you really felt for her, 2517 03:30:24,946 --> 03:30:27,782 which made me really happy. I liked that. 2518 03:30:30,284 --> 03:30:35,957 The waiting room is a prime example of Tim Burton's creativity in the '80s, because you had all 2519 03:30:35,957 --> 03:30:41,838 these people who were waiting to go to the afterlife and each one of them died in a different way. 2520 03:30:41,879 --> 03:30:48,594 So you had the circus performer who had been sawed in half for real. You had the witch doctor 2521 03:30:48,636 --> 03:30:55,810 with the shrunken head. It's just brimming with that wonderful Tim Burton stuff that we all miss. 2522 03:30:55,810 --> 03:31:02,817 You want a cigarette? - No, thank you. - Trying to cut down myself. 2523 03:31:02,817 --> 03:31:09,198 Well, Tim Burton, he's gonna surprise you and do some beautiful, wonderful artwork and set designs, 2524 03:31:09,198 --> 03:31:15,872 he brings you into another world, which I really adore. And his stories are fun. They just engage you. 2525 03:31:15,872 --> 03:31:20,751 You look great. 2526 03:31:20,751 --> 03:31:23,754 I wish I could have done one of his movies [laughing]. 2527 03:31:23,754 --> 03:31:26,007 Can you be scary? 2528 03:31:26,007 --> 03:31:32,763 - Oh! Don't ask me if I can be scary. What do you think of this? 2529 03:31:43,774 --> 03:31:48,821 You may not have heard of the term video nasties or gross out films. These terms refer 2530 03:31:48,821 --> 03:31:53,743 to a whole group of pictures from a blood and guts, sometimes real, sometimes fake. 2531 03:31:53,784 --> 03:32:00,249 In the UK, we had the video nasties which was [chuckles] a reaction by the Conservative government to sort 2532 03:32:00,291 --> 03:32:06,881 of clamp down on horror movies, because a lot of them were getting through without being rated by the BBFC. 2533 03:32:06,923 --> 03:32:11,761 So kids could rent these movies and watch them at home. So they wrote up a list 2534 03:32:11,761 --> 03:32:16,766 of movies that had - that were essentially had to be banned. The funny thing was, 2535 03:32:16,766 --> 03:32:22,897 was that there's a lot of people criticizing these movies without actually seeing them. It's often the case with with 2536 03:32:22,939 --> 03:32:28,986 government. They also had these local MPs as well who like to comment and get sort of political points with their- 2537 03:32:28,986 --> 03:32:34,784 with their constituency by saying, "Oh, this movie is really bad, it should be banned." and someone goes "Oh, have you 2538 03:32:34,784 --> 03:32:40,915 seen this movie?" “Oh, no, no, I don't need to see it", you think, well, you need to see something before you criticize it. 2539 03:32:40,915 --> 03:32:47,213 If anyone can stand up and defend the sort of horrific scenes that I have had to see, and other members 2540 03:32:47,213 --> 03:32:53,719 of parliament have had to see, I believe they're living in a different world to that world that I live in. 2541 03:32:53,761 --> 03:32:57,890 The video nasties didn't stick around for that long, but there were a number of movies 2542 03:32:57,932 --> 03:33:01,936 that were on the BBFC kind of hit list for a number of years that remained banned. 2543 03:33:01,936 --> 03:33:07,566 And it was kind of years later that these movies did eventually come out. And people got to see them properly 2544 03:33:07,566 --> 03:33:12,905 for the first time and not some kind of wonky VHS bootleg from 1982 or something like that [chuckles]. 2545 03:33:12,947 --> 03:33:19,704 Video nasties they don't like violence or blood and all that stuff. You can have all 2546 03:33:19,704 --> 03:33:26,752 the sex you want. But if you use the word 'chainsaw' in your title, that's too violent. 2547 03:33:26,794 --> 03:33:32,758 And "Hollywood Hooker" sounds worse than "Hollywood Chainsaw Hookers". 2548 03:33:32,758 --> 03:33:40,558 That was a great line. They charge an arm and a leg because the movies about this prostitution ring 2549 03:33:40,558 --> 03:33:44,020 that my sister has fallen into and having to 2550 03:33:44,061 --> 03:33:48,774 investigate it and go under cover with this chainsaw cult. 2551 03:33:48,774 --> 03:33:51,277 I'm gonna burn that temple over those fuckers heads. 2552 03:33:51,277 --> 03:33:53,946 You know, you've got a lot of guts for a little girl. 2553 03:33:53,946 --> 03:34:01,787 It's a very silly romp. A film noir, but it's in color. 2554 03:34:01,787 --> 03:34:07,251 I'll check the photo to make sure. It was her alright. 2555 03:34:07,293 --> 03:34:11,589 I got involved with “Hollywood Chainsaw Hookers" when Fred Olen Ray gave me a call. 2556 03:34:11,589 --> 03:34:15,926 It was Memorial Day weekend. And he said, "I'm gonna do a movie in three days now“. 2557 03:34:15,926 --> 03:34:23,768 And it was just so tongue in cheek and so fun. And I got to meet leather face from 2558 03:34:23,768 --> 03:34:27,063 “Texas Chainsaw Massacre". That was 2559 03:34:27,104 --> 03:34:31,859 like a big deal to me. Because I love that film. 2560 03:34:31,901 --> 03:34:34,236 [man screaming] Please, Mr. Chandler, 2561 03:34:34,278 --> 03:34:37,782 for the sake of the neighbors, they're trying to sleep. 2562 03:34:37,782 --> 03:34:41,118 Gunnar Hansen was like the nicest guy who 2563 03:34:41,118 --> 03:34:44,789 had no clue that he was admired by thousands. 2564 03:34:44,789 --> 03:34:47,917 I think it's time somebody cut you down to size, Jack. 2565 03:34:47,917 --> 03:34:55,674 Fred Olen Ray is very - like he's got that dry sense of humor. He said, "Okay, dance sexy with these 2566 03:34:55,674 --> 03:34:59,804 chainsaws". And I'm like, “they're heavy. And like, 2567 03:34:59,845 --> 03:35:03,933 I'm trying my best to dance sexy with the chainsaws". 2568 03:35:03,933 --> 03:35:11,857 And I'm like struggling and I am being en-fixated when I'm in the sarcophagus with the chainsaws running and all the 2569 03:35:11,899 --> 03:35:15,611 smokes going. If you watch I like kind of like stumble 2570 03:35:15,611 --> 03:35:19,949 when I get out because I'm like high from the smoke in there. 2571 03:35:23,786 --> 03:35:31,669 Then I was like dancing with them and I felt something on my leg and I thought, 'oh my god, hot oil 2572 03:35:31,710 --> 03:35:36,966 is burning my skin', but I didn't stop. I kept going. It was like, 2573 03:35:37,007 --> 03:35:39,885 “Action. Here's your chainsaw. Go." 2574 03:35:39,885 --> 03:35:43,722 They just said, "Well this a great idea, 2575 03:35:43,764 --> 03:35:47,852 let's use real chainsaws. They're cheaper." 2576 03:35:51,772 --> 03:35:56,986 I think they probably got them at Kmart, and then returned them the next day. 2577 03:36:14,920 --> 03:36:20,301 "Dead Heat“ is a buddy cop film with zombies. You got Joe Piscopo and Treat Williams, who 2578 03:36:20,301 --> 03:36:25,931 discovered that there's this company that has found a way to bring people back from the dead. 2579 03:36:25,973 --> 03:36:31,353 The only problem is, you don't come back for very long, you start to fall apart. And 2580 03:36:31,353 --> 03:36:36,901 they've been using it bringing people back from the dead to go do things like heists. 2581 03:36:36,901 --> 03:36:40,946 You wanna be dead? 2582 03:36:40,946 --> 03:36:46,410 Part of the humor of it is that they called it "Dead Heat". It's such a generic title, 2583 03:36:46,410 --> 03:36:51,957 but I think they were kind of aping off of the fact that it was a goof on action films. 2584 03:36:53,959 --> 03:36:58,339 I loved working on "Dead Heat“. Mark Goldblatt was really cool. I mean, 2585 03:36:58,339 --> 03:37:01,884 I had Carte Blanche and I got to work with Vincent Price. 2586 03:37:01,926 --> 03:37:05,804 Death doesn't discriminate. At least not till now. 2587 03:37:05,804 --> 03:37:09,058 We really did a lot of close up quality zombie makeups on that. 2588 03:37:09,058 --> 03:37:12,895 They cut out a lot of our effects because they were just too over the top. 2589 03:37:16,774 --> 03:37:22,863 I was cut out of "Dead Heat" because they didn't use that footage. But I practiced at Steve's 2590 03:37:22,905 --> 03:37:28,994 shop with this heavy skeleton doing puppeteering, you know, dancing and dancing and dancing. 2591 03:37:28,994 --> 03:37:33,290 I danced to "Burning Up" with this heavy skeleton for so long, 2592 03:37:33,332 --> 03:37:35,000 so I would get it right. 2593 03:37:38,796 --> 03:37:41,715 She was the sexy dancer puppeteer for the sexy skeleton, but they cut that 2594 03:37:41,715 --> 03:37:44,927 scene. Again why they cut all that workout? It would only make that movie better. 2595 03:37:44,969 --> 03:37:47,930 The shitty movie could have only been better with a bunch of over the top effects, 2596 03:37:47,930 --> 03:37:48,931 right? 2597 03:37:48,931 --> 03:37:55,312 Joe Piscopo when he was on Saturday Night Live was kind of this skinny kind of Wiener-ish comedian. He had started 2598 03:37:55,354 --> 03:38:01,860 lifting weights and this was one of the first times where it really came out, "Oh, look at this dude, he's jacked." 2599 03:38:01,902 --> 03:38:04,405 And I think that going forward, 2600 03:38:04,405 --> 03:38:08,867 more people will remember him as the big muscle dude. 2601 03:38:08,867 --> 03:38:12,288 I think my favorite part of the work that we did in “Dead Heat" is the butcher shop 2602 03:38:12,288 --> 03:38:15,958 that comes alive, because I have always thought in zombie movies, why is it just people? 2603 03:38:15,958 --> 03:38:22,339 And so this whole butcher shop when it comes to life, I mean, there's even a liver, that was a really cool effect, we 2604 03:38:22,339 --> 03:38:28,804 built an inverted table and inverted the background and inverted the camera the same way and just let the liver roll. 2605 03:38:28,804 --> 03:38:31,932 But then it looks like it's moving until it leaps on Treat's face. 2606 03:38:34,810 --> 03:38:36,979 Ducks, chickens, fish, you name it, they all came to life. 2607 03:38:42,818 --> 03:38:46,822 Part of the way through the film Treat Williams dies, they bring him 2608 03:38:46,822 --> 03:38:50,951 back from the dead so that he can solve the crime of who murdered him. 2609 03:38:50,993 --> 03:38:54,788 Hi guys. 2610 03:38:54,830 --> 03:38:58,334 the longer he's been dead, the more alive he comes and that's reflected in the 2611 03:38:58,334 --> 03:39:01,795 makeup. When he's handcuffed to the back of the van, car rolls down explodes, 2612 03:39:01,837 --> 03:39:09,553 he comes out and he's suddenly cool because his hair is all punked out and it's black. He's got a piece of shrapnel 2613 03:39:09,595 --> 03:39:16,852 for a long earring. And his blue ridiculous Hawaiian shirt is all black and he looks hip and he looks cool. 2614 03:39:16,894 --> 03:39:19,813 Detective Mortis, homicide. 2615 03:39:19,813 --> 03:39:23,776 At the end of the film, Treat Williams and Joe Piscopo 2616 03:39:23,817 --> 03:39:27,946 are both back from the dead, sinew is flying everywhere. 2617 03:39:27,946 --> 03:39:31,116 It's a spectacle that you need to see. 2618 03:39:49,259 --> 03:39:55,224 Next to maniac, "Maniac Cop“ is Bill Lustig's magnum opus. How can you not love 2619 03:39:55,224 --> 03:40:01,105 a movie about a killer cop written by Larry Cohen and directed by Bill Lustig? 2620 03:40:01,146 --> 03:40:06,151 Bill Lustig went out and found the money for "Maniac Cop", and was the understanding that 2621 03:40:06,151 --> 03:40:11,281 he would direct the picture. I didn't want to direct it anyway, so it all worked out okay. 2622 03:40:17,329 --> 03:40:24,837 There's a killer on the streets and he's killing indiscriminately. And a lot of people believe that 2623 03:40:24,837 --> 03:40:32,177 it is Matt Cordell, a good police officer that was killed in prison but is now back for revenge. 2624 03:40:32,177 --> 03:40:37,516 Tom Atkins plays the cop, who's on the trail of Matt Cordell, 2625 03:40:37,516 --> 03:40:43,188 trying to undo If it's really this killer cop back from the dead. 2626 03:40:43,230 --> 03:40:47,651 it's called "Maniac Cop" because it's got a 2627 03:40:47,693 --> 03:40:52,114 maniac cop in it. And it was my job to find 2628 03:40:52,156 --> 03:40:57,035 him and to kill him. But I didn't, he killed me, 2629 03:40:57,077 --> 03:41:01,248 threw me out of window on top of a cab. 2630 03:41:02,207 --> 03:41:04,334 Died, ignominiously. 2631 03:41:09,214 --> 03:41:14,803 The maniac cop Matt Cordell is played by Robert Z'Dar, who is quite possibly the only actor 2632 03:41:14,803 --> 03:41:20,309 in history, who has a more impressive chin than Bruce Campbell, who is also in the movie. 2633 03:41:20,309 --> 03:41:26,106 He has a rare medical condition called cherubism. And they use that to great 2634 03:41:26,106 --> 03:41:32,362 effect in this movie, and it actually ended up benefiting him in his movie career. 2635 03:41:32,362 --> 03:41:36,366 The climax of the film starts with a car chase and 2636 03:41:36,408 --> 03:41:41,413 culminates in one of the best villain deaths in the '80s. It 2637 03:41:41,413 --> 03:41:45,918 ends with a cliffhanger that leads into "Maniac Cop 2", 2638 03:41:45,918 --> 03:41:50,464 which is in my humble opinion, the best of the series. 2639 03:41:50,464 --> 03:41:57,471 My one question is, what the hell is the matter with William Lustig? Bruce Campbell and I, we run into each 2640 03:41:57,471 --> 03:42:04,520 other every once in a while and he said the same thing [chuckles], "What the hell is up with Bill Lustig"? 2641 03:42:04,561 --> 03:42:10,108 "You're the star the first one" he says to me, and 25 minutes into the movie, you're dead 2642 03:42:10,150 --> 03:42:15,531 and out the window on top of a cab at the hands of the maniac cop. In the second one, 2643 03:42:15,572 --> 03:42:21,286 I'm the star [chuckles] and I go to a newsstand to buy a magazine, somebody 2644 03:42:21,328 --> 03:42:27,334 stabs me to death. It has nothing to do with anything and I'm dead [laughing]. 2645 03:42:34,341 --> 03:42:37,594 There you are. William Lustig, nuts. 2646 03:42:50,524 --> 03:42:54,528 I had thought, well, it's "Poltergeist", you know, it's this, it is a sequel. 2647 03:42:54,528 --> 03:42:58,407 It's a popular franchise, I thought this could be a lot of fun to do this. 2648 03:42:58,407 --> 03:43:02,995 Gary Sherman had this thick book and he had everything - he was like a scientist, 2649 03:43:03,036 --> 03:43:06,540 he had everything laid out and how this was going to be done. 2650 03:43:06,582 --> 03:43:11,587 and the special effects were going to be real and challenging. And I thought, well, that's 2651 03:43:11,587 --> 03:43:16,425 sort of right up my alley. With my dance background. I can - I can do this, you know? 2652 03:43:16,425 --> 03:43:23,432 But it was brutal to shoot, it really was difficult. 2653 03:43:23,432 --> 03:43:25,434 We're back. 2654 03:43:25,434 --> 03:43:31,440 The use of the double and the mirrors and all of that. And when you had the long hallway of mirrors, and you 2655 03:43:31,440 --> 03:43:37,571 had different characters, I think at one point, there were maybe five different characters that were involved. 2656 03:43:37,571 --> 03:43:42,451 It was extremely difficult and frustrating, and it all had to be timed and perfect. 2657 03:43:42,492 --> 03:43:47,539 And even with the queues, one thing could go off and you had to start all over again. 2658 03:43:47,539 --> 03:43:52,920 Because everything took two three times as long as it would have the way we shot it. The payoff, of course is it's 2659 03:43:52,961 --> 03:43:58,634 like oh, that was worth it. You see it. And I think the hallway scene is a great case of, oh, look, that really worked. 2660 03:43:58,634 --> 03:44:02,679 It was great. And there's something magical in the moment, you know. 2661 03:44:02,721 --> 03:44:06,558 Hello? - Hello? - Hello? 2662 03:44:06,600 --> 03:44:10,729 Zelda Rubinstein [chuckles]. Oh, my God, she was so much fun. We 2663 03:44:10,771 --> 03:44:15,692 really had a blast. And she had a lot of boyfriends, I know that [laughing]. 2664 03:44:15,692 --> 03:44:20,656 Zelda attracted very handsome young boys. 2665 03:44:20,656 --> 03:44:28,538 I can lead you into the light! I have the knowledge and the power! 2666 03:44:28,538 --> 03:44:35,003 What I honestly remember most about that film, other than being wet for a very long time [chuckles], 2667 03:44:35,003 --> 03:44:41,677 when we were running around, was Heather O'Rourke. She was just a real little girl, she liked Barbies, 2668 03:44:41,677 --> 03:44:46,139 and she loved her mother. She wasn't a child actress. I mean, she had none of that 2669 03:44:46,139 --> 03:44:50,602 going on. And there was so much chaos on that set, because it was so challenging. 2670 03:44:50,602 --> 03:44:56,608 But whenever Heather was on the set, it was like, she was like a grounding force. 2671 03:44:56,608 --> 03:45:00,779 A woman's entitled to change her mind. 2672 03:45:00,779 --> 03:45:06,243 And I always feel like I can relax. Heather is here. It's kind of funny when you think about it. 2673 03:45:06,243 --> 03:45:11,707 And I always think about, you know, the tragedy of her loss and all and how unnecessary it was. 2674 03:45:11,707 --> 03:45:15,627 But the fact that she had this old soul, you know, and that's the 2675 03:45:15,669 --> 03:45:19,756 only way that I can look at it that I don't feel so desperately sad. 2676 03:45:35,647 --> 03:45:39,818 "Waxwork" is somewhat inspired by other wax movies, 2677 03:45:39,818 --> 03:45:43,655 like the 1924 silent film “Waxworks“, and the 2678 03:45:43,697 --> 03:45:47,492 1933 and 1953 versions of "House of Wax". This 2679 03:45:47,492 --> 03:45:51,705 one is more about the wax figures coming to life. 2680 03:45:55,709 --> 03:45:58,754 You have a familiar face, Zach Galligan from "Gremlins". 2681 03:45:58,795 --> 03:46:03,675 Welcome to the Waxwork! 2682 03:46:03,675 --> 03:46:07,763 He and his fellow students go to a wax museum that's full of classic car 2683 03:46:07,763 --> 03:46:11,767 scenes. And when they wander into the display, they become part of it. 2684 03:46:11,767 --> 03:46:16,897 One of the girls goes into this area, and it's a vampire. 2685 03:46:22,694 --> 03:46:30,243 Or you have one person goes into a an area, and it's a werewolf. A lot of them are based on the old horror tropes. 2686 03:46:30,243 --> 03:46:37,751 It's very clever because the way that they do it is after the person dies, then they become part of the exhibit. 2687 03:46:37,751 --> 03:46:42,798 They become wax models like in "House of Wax". 2688 03:46:42,798 --> 03:46:49,054 They had the marquee de sade, they had zombies, they had a wide variety of different exhibits. The 2689 03:46:49,054 --> 03:46:55,769 effects are better than you probably would be expecting with a movie like this. Sadly, the original cut 2690 03:46:55,769 --> 03:46:58,563 of the film got rated X and they had to cut out 2691 03:46:58,563 --> 03:47:01,942 some of the gore in order to get it down to an R rating. 2692 03:47:04,778 --> 03:47:09,866 The ending is crazy, because everything in the museum attacks. I mean, 2693 03:47:09,908 --> 03:47:15,038 this is '80s excess and it reminds you what you love about the decade. 2694 03:47:15,038 --> 03:47:20,001 Take me! - Take this. 2695 03:47:32,973 --> 03:47:37,435 "Cellar Dweller“ [laughing], really? Well, this is what I remember 2696 03:47:37,435 --> 03:47:41,857 about "Cellar Dweller". Stuart was shooting "Robot Jox" in Italy, 2697 03:47:41,898 --> 03:47:44,901 And he said, "You know, I want you to do a cameo in this." 2698 03:47:44,901 --> 03:47:49,865 Damn right he's got a chance, he's gotta kill that convict! 2699 03:47:49,865 --> 03:47:56,955 And then Charlie, I believe, called me and said, "Listen, while you're over there, do you think that 2700 03:47:56,955 --> 03:48:04,045 you could also do a day on this other movie kind of a half day of reacting and carrying a hatchet?" 2701 03:48:05,964 --> 03:48:11,344 We had Jeffrey Combs appears as the comic book artist from the past in this 2702 03:48:11,344 --> 03:48:17,017 sort of pre title sequence to “Cellar Dweller", just to set up the whole story. 2703 03:48:17,017 --> 03:48:23,148 And he's drawing on the inspiration of the dark arts as embodied in this book, 2704 03:48:23,148 --> 03:48:29,946 clearly ripped off from "The Evil Dead" [laughing] and he pays the price and he dies. 2705 03:48:29,946 --> 03:48:34,951 I certainly felt like I'm going to write the best 2706 03:48:34,993 --> 03:48:39,998 version of a movie called "Cellar Dweller“ starring 2707 03:48:39,998 --> 03:48:47,297 this John Buechler designed monster that all takes place in one building, 2708 03:48:47,339 --> 03:48:49,966 that is humanly possible. 2709 03:48:49,966 --> 03:48:53,595 Are you trying to say to me that a monster you drew just 2710 03:48:53,595 --> 03:48:56,932 stepped of the page and devoured Amanda and Norman? 2711 03:48:56,973 --> 03:49:02,145 That's how I got into the "Cellar Dweller. It's like, “Here's the monster, write a 2712 03:49:02,187 --> 03:49:07,067 movie called 'Cellar Dweller' with this monster" that was Charles Band's way. 2713 03:49:10,987 --> 03:49:16,868 But there's a lot to be said for having set parameters. And you know, I mean, my god 2714 03:49:16,868 --> 03:49:22,999 Michelangelo just, he only had that ceiling. I still think the monster is really cool. 2715 03:49:28,004 --> 03:49:32,884 More and more as time goes on, I do meet "Cellar Dweller" fans, which at first kind of 2716 03:49:32,926 --> 03:49:38,014 surprised me, but now we kind of. you know, is heartwarming [chuckles]. You know, it's - 2717 03:49:38,014 --> 03:49:42,894 it's nice that like you write something and then you might just sort of shrug it off and not 2718 03:49:42,936 --> 03:49:48,191 think about it for a few decades and you find out that actually had a positive effect on somebody. 2719 03:50:05,041 --> 03:50:09,129 People love that movie! And I find it to be so campy. 2720 03:50:09,129 --> 03:50:13,091 Hey grandpa, look at the mirror! [people laughing] - You stupid bastards! 2721 03:50:13,383 --> 03:50:15,552 I really wanted to prove myself on that, 2722 03:50:15,552 --> 03:50:19,264 even though it was a very low budget movie, we did the best we could. 2723 03:50:24,060 --> 03:50:29,232 “Night of the Demons“ is about these girls that have a party, and everybody's excited 2724 03:50:29,274 --> 03:50:34,321 to go and they're all dressed up in different costumes, and they call out a demon. 2725 03:50:40,327 --> 03:50:44,497 I get possessed and I just go crazy. 2726 03:50:44,497 --> 03:50:48,710 I am writing on my face with lipstick, 2727 03:50:48,710 --> 03:50:56,134 I'm making lipstick disappear in my breasts, which nobody expects. 2728 03:50:56,134 --> 03:51:02,057 It's like it's supposed to be kind of titillating. Hahaha. But 2729 03:51:02,057 --> 03:51:07,687 it becomes weird. When they do the effect on camera, they 2730 03:51:07,729 --> 03:51:12,901 show my breasts, then they cut away and then there's a 2731 03:51:12,942 --> 03:51:19,199 mold of me. From here to there, they had cut out a little slit. 2732 03:51:19,199 --> 03:51:26,331 So when I'm doing my lipstick trick, that lipstick just goes right through there. 2733 03:51:26,331 --> 03:51:31,586 When I first met Steve Johnson, who did the effects, I went to his shop 2734 03:51:31,586 --> 03:51:37,300 and they had to do a live cast of my breast. I had a crush on him right away. 2735 03:51:37,300 --> 03:51:43,473 And then I guess he kind of had a crush on me too. So it was very awkward because 2736 03:51:43,515 --> 03:51:49,312 he's putting alginate which is like a plaster type thing that hardens on me. 2737 03:51:49,312 --> 03:51:53,942 And then they're wrapping me like a mummy with bandages and having to 2738 03:51:53,983 --> 03:51:59,406 touch my breasts, and it was just very awkward. So it was interesting how we met. 2739 03:51:59,406 --> 03:52:03,159 I enjoyed that effect, because it wasn't on my face and I 2740 03:52:03,159 --> 03:52:07,288 didn't feel like I was like covered in all this horrible stuff. 2741 03:52:07,330 --> 03:52:11,000 But I'm like a very vain girl in this movie. 2742 03:52:11,042 --> 03:52:14,254 And I have to ask if my makeup’s okay. 2743 03:52:14,254 --> 03:52:15,255 ls my makeup okay? 2744 03:52:15,255 --> 03:52:17,257 I put my head back, you know, they cut away and then I'm possessed. 2745 03:52:17,257 --> 03:52:24,806 Stop looking at me! - Ah! 2746 03:52:24,806 --> 03:52:31,896 I had contacts and teeth and all this makeup that was glued to me, and then I surprised him by 2747 03:52:31,896 --> 03:52:39,320 poking his eyes out and in fact it's not my hands that are doing it because I didn't do it right. 2748 03:52:39,362 --> 03:52:42,240 They had to like put my bracelet on this guy's 2749 03:52:42,240 --> 03:52:45,452 hands and have him poke my eyes out professionally. 2750 03:52:45,493 --> 03:52:50,415 I could look at it and see how it would scare the shit at certain scenes. You see Angela gliding 2751 03:52:50,415 --> 03:52:55,545 down the hall and going through the shadows and light with that face. It's pretty - pretty creepy. 2752 03:53:00,467 --> 03:53:03,303 Most of the cast thought the house was haunted. They 2753 03:53:03,344 --> 03:53:06,556 thought there was really hauntings. I think it scared them. 2754 03:53:18,902 --> 03:53:24,240 As a horror fan, you were kind of learning that the business - the movie business was very fickle. 2755 03:53:24,240 --> 03:53:29,454 So any number of your horror icon directors can be jumping to any project at any given minute. 2756 03:53:29,454 --> 03:53:34,042 Every month in Fangoria, there's a section called Monster Invasion, and that's news of upcoming 2757 03:53:34,042 --> 03:53:38,379 releases. And there would always be a paragraph at the bottom called The Terror Teletype. 2758 03:53:38,421 --> 03:53:42,634 "Director X is making film Y with actor Z" and you'd be like, 2759 03:53:42,634 --> 03:53:44,511 "Wow, I want to see that." 2760 03:53:44,511 --> 03:53:47,555 And then that movie would never happen. And that happened a lot. 2761 03:53:53,394 --> 03:53:57,482 "The Fly" is one of my favorite films of all time. And 2762 03:53:57,482 --> 03:54:01,569 given the opportunity to write the sequel was incredibly 2763 03:54:01,569 --> 03:54:05,782 exciting to me. And what I came up with bears very little 2764 03:54:05,782 --> 03:54:10,411 resemblance [chuckles] to the movie that was eventually made. 2765 03:54:10,411 --> 03:54:15,083 The original "Fly 2" that I came up with had a lot to do with something that 2766 03:54:15,083 --> 03:54:19,504 was going on at the time, there was a couple named Tony and Susan Alamo, 2767 03:54:19,504 --> 03:54:25,552 and they would try to find mothers talk them out of the abortions and talk them into 2768 03:54:25,552 --> 03:54:31,599 raising good Christian, God fearing children. So I took it a step further and said, 2769 03:54:31,599 --> 03:54:38,022 well, let's find an organization that not only wants them not to abort, they are 2770 03:54:38,022 --> 03:54:44,571 also training them, as the Soviet Union did decades ago, creating super children. 2771 03:54:44,571 --> 03:54:52,453 If Veronica Quaife and Seth Brundle had had that baby, and Veronica wanted to abort because of the 2772 03:54:52,453 --> 03:54:55,039 monster she knew it would become, 2773 03:54:55,081 --> 03:55:00,503 but was talked into giving up her baby for adoption by this group. 2774 03:55:00,503 --> 03:55:06,217 They suddenly are in possession of this super powerful creature that looked human, 2775 03:55:06,259 --> 03:55:08,511 but was much more than that. It 2776 03:55:08,511 --> 03:55:12,599 would become the first line of defense in a new Christian 2777 03:55:12,640 --> 03:55:16,728 army. Then along came a new studio head, Leonard Goldberg. 2778 03:55:16,728 --> 03:55:23,151 He had a very short life as a feature studio at 20th Century Fox. He 2779 03:55:23,192 --> 03:55:29,616 wanted a teenage monster movie, that's what was popular in the '80s. 2780 03:55:29,616 --> 03:55:31,659 So suddenly, 2781 03:55:31,701 --> 03:55:37,832 what I thought could be a good companion piece to the Cronenberg 2782 03:55:37,874 --> 03:55:41,336 movie became something much more 2783 03:55:41,336 --> 03:55:45,590 mundane. I did write a version of that. 2784 03:55:45,590 --> 03:55:50,345 But I left to direct my first movie "Critters 2" at that time, and Frank Darabont 2785 03:55:50,386 --> 03:55:54,682 came on board as the second writer on "Fly 2" and then Jim and Ken Wheat. 2786 03:55:54,682 --> 03:55:58,853 So in the resulting movie, I was sitting in my seat, 2787 03:55:58,853 --> 03:56:01,731 and I was watching it unspool, 2788 03:56:01,731 --> 03:56:08,696 and I'm sinking lower and lower [chuckles]. It's so far removed from what the intent was. 2789 03:56:08,696 --> 03:56:13,701 And I thought Chris Wallace did a great job as a director, good cast and everything but - but 2790 03:56:13,743 --> 03:56:18,790 it was so far afield from what I had intended. That it I haven't watched it since [chuckles]. 2791 03:56:18,831 --> 03:56:21,834 "Pumpkinhead", it's a morality tale, 2792 03:56:21,834 --> 03:56:26,839 which always make for the best movies. I have been trying 2793 03:56:26,881 --> 03:56:34,639 to get back into the world of “Pumpkinhead" and get the rights back to do a prequel that - 2794 03:56:34,639 --> 03:56:38,935 that sort of sets up the story and tells it in a linear fashion, 2795 03:56:38,976 --> 03:56:42,855 so that it leads and ends up with the Stan Winston movie 2796 03:56:42,855 --> 03:56:50,822 from the '80s. But - but while that could be a long, long, long process with - with yielding very little [chuckles]. 2797 03:56:58,663 --> 03:57:00,456 After "Chainsaw 2", 2798 03:57:00,456 --> 03:57:05,795 I wrote a treatment for "Chainsaw 3" and Sawyers have now moved to New York City, 2799 03:57:05,795 --> 03:57:12,093 Leatherface and Stretch are married. They have a little baby in a bone 2800 03:57:12,135 --> 03:57:18,808 crib with like a little leather mask on. Chop Top is a DJ in a disco club. 2801 03:57:18,808 --> 03:57:26,482 Leather Face by day works for Parks and Recreation, sewing off limbs in Central 2802 03:57:26,524 --> 03:57:33,823 Park. And Jim Siedow, the cook, has a famous chili restaurant down in Soho, 2803 03:57:33,823 --> 03:57:39,746 and at night Leather Face goes into the steam tunnels under Grand Central and chops 2804 03:57:39,787 --> 03:57:45,710 up some of the homeless, and that's the meat for Jim Siedow‘s award-winning chili. 2805 03:57:45,710 --> 03:57:48,129 Tobe didn't really want to go to that place. So 2806 03:57:48,171 --> 03:57:50,840 that was you know that - that was kind of stillborn. 2807 03:57:56,721 --> 03:58:03,728 We thought that the follow up to "Re-animator" wouldn't be "Re-animator 2". 2808 03:58:03,728 --> 03:58:06,105 The idea of doing a series of movies based on 2809 03:58:06,105 --> 03:58:08,775 Lovecraft was something that really appealed to us. 2810 03:58:08,775 --> 03:58:14,405 And so the next project was going to be "Shadow over lnnsmouth", which is a story about 2811 03:58:14,405 --> 03:58:19,869 people turning into fish. Lovecraft is taking evolution and turning it upside down. 2812 03:58:19,869 --> 03:58:25,500 Instead of, you know - you know the idea of us coming out of the sea, 2813 03:58:25,500 --> 03:58:31,798 we're going back into the sea. People are changing into underwater creatures. 2814 03:58:31,798 --> 03:58:37,261 And Dennis actually wrote the script of that while we were in post production for "Re-animator". That to 2815 03:58:37,303 --> 03:58:42,850 me seemed like the sequel, just like the sequel to the "House of Usher" was “The Pit and the Pendulum". 2816 03:58:42,850 --> 03:58:47,605 We'd get Jeffrey and Barbara do it more like a 2817 03:58:47,605 --> 03:58:53,277 William Castle series of movies or a Corman Poe series. 2818 03:58:53,319 --> 03:58:55,905 Everybody, including Charlie Band, who owned the studio 2819 03:58:55,947 --> 03:58:58,908 that were making the films thought this concept was ridiculous. 2820 03:58:58,908 --> 03:59:02,286 And no one's gonna want to see a movie like this. Brian Yuzna and 2821 03:59:02,286 --> 03:59:05,915 I took that concept and pitched it to just about every studio in town. 2822 03:59:05,915 --> 03:59:09,752 The closest we ever got to getting it made was one guy who said, "Well, 2823 03:59:09,794 --> 03:59:13,756 if you make them werewolves, we'll do it. Turning into fish is not scary.” 2824 03:59:13,798 --> 03:59:18,845 And I wanted to say to that guy, you know, how about if I just bring a big fish in and put it on your 2825 03:59:18,845 --> 03:59:23,808 desk right now, you know, or shark or something? I think you might find that a little disturbing. 2826 03:59:23,808 --> 03:59:29,105 Shadow had a ton of really cool production concepts that 2827 03:59:29,146 --> 03:59:34,902 were developed by the masterful illustrator Bernie Wrightson. 2828 03:59:34,944 --> 03:59:39,907 Stuart Gordon never got to make “Shadow over lnnsmouth". 2829 03:59:39,907 --> 03:59:44,871 But he did get to use some of those elements in "Dagon". 2830 03:59:44,871 --> 03:59:51,210 The thing about "Shadow over lnnsmouth" is it's one of the 2831 03:59:51,210 --> 03:59:57,800 most action packed Lovecraft stories ever that he ever wrote. 2832 03:59:57,800 --> 03:59:59,552 And "Shadow Over |nnsmouth," 2833 03:59:59,552 --> 04:00:02,930 it really is like the closest he ever got to a novel. 2834 04:00:02,930 --> 04:00:06,475 You know, I read somewhere that Fritz Lang wanted to make it way back in the day, 2835 04:00:06,475 --> 04:00:07,935 which would have been wonderful. 2836 04:00:26,829 --> 04:00:33,377 "Bad Taste" was my personal introduction to Peter Jackson. And I've been in love with his work ever since. 2837 04:00:33,377 --> 04:00:39,800 He was a New Zealand filmmaker who wanted to move on to bigger and better things and he certainly did. 2838 04:00:39,842 --> 04:00:43,846 He was getting a lot of attention for "Meet the Feebles" but that one still didn't go 2839 04:00:43,846 --> 04:00:47,892 over quite as well. This was the movie that kind of broke him to American audiences. 2840 04:00:47,892 --> 04:00:55,232 And then of course, this led into "Dead Alive", which made people stand up and take notice. "Bad 2841 04:00:55,274 --> 04:01:02,823 Taste“, it's about aliens that come down and find the new taste sensation on earth is human flesh. 2842 04:01:02,865 --> 04:01:07,828 Tomorrow we're having you for lunch [screaming] 2843 04:01:07,828 --> 04:01:12,416 It is a film that only could have come from the mind of 2844 04:01:12,416 --> 04:01:17,546 Peter Jackson. The aliens are these big, dumb monsters that 2845 04:01:17,546 --> 04:01:23,844 have asses that stick out really far [chuckles]. They're not scary at all, 2846 04:01:23,844 --> 04:01:27,014 they're completely meant to be dumb. 2847 04:01:32,853 --> 04:01:35,940 Peter Jackson is starring in the film as well. He plays 2848 04:01:35,940 --> 04:01:38,859 a guy named Derek. And as we know, Dereks don't run. 2849 04:01:38,859 --> 04:01:42,905 I'm a Derek, Dunks don't run. 2850 04:01:42,905 --> 04:01:49,954 He falls off a cliff and his skull breaks open so part of his brain falls out. Throughout 2851 04:01:49,996 --> 04:01:57,003 the film, his back of his head keeps falling open, and his brain keeps getting exposed. 2852 04:01:57,003 --> 04:02:03,926 He starts picking up brains along the way and shoving them back into his head. And he takes his belt off and 2853 04:02:03,926 --> 04:02:10,891 puts it around his head to keep his skull closed to stop his brain from falling out all the time [chuckles]. 2854 04:02:10,891 --> 04:02:16,272 The effects in the movie are outstanding. You can actually look at 2855 04:02:16,272 --> 04:02:21,986 this and if you look at Peter Jackson's work with "Lord of the Rings", 2856 04:02:21,986 --> 04:02:26,240 You had the foundations of Weta who goes 2857 04:02:26,282 --> 04:02:31,120 on to be this in-demand Oscar award winning 2858 04:02:31,120 --> 04:02:33,330 effects company, 2859 04:02:33,330 --> 04:02:39,962 that was making this really goofy weird stuff back in the '80s. 2860 04:08:10,250 --> 04:08:13,045 "Halloween 5" is the revenge of Michael Myers. And it's 2861 04:08:13,045 --> 04:08:16,298 when the series starts to introduce some of the weirder aspects. 2862 04:08:16,298 --> 04:08:20,677 There's apparently now a psychic connection between Michael and Jamie Lloyd and 2863 04:08:20,677 --> 04:08:25,224 he's sporting a tattoo that would come to be part of the curse of the Thorne cult, 2864 04:08:25,265 --> 04:08:29,311 but you don't get that weird green blood that Michael Myers has in the next one. 2865 04:08:32,106 --> 04:08:38,862 I rewatched 5, and it's actually really, really good, maybe even better 2866 04:08:38,904 --> 04:08:46,286 than 2. And it really is the return of this horrific mad man to his hometown. 2867 04:08:52,126 --> 04:08:57,423 Fundamentally, what is scary about Michael Myers is that mask, that rubber mask, 2868 04:08:57,464 --> 04:09:03,095 that white face, that unknowable entity that is consistent throughout the franchise, 2869 04:09:03,137 --> 04:09:09,059 even though the mask changed, I think not usually for the better over the sequels, 2870 04:09:09,059 --> 04:09:13,230 people saw that original mask, and went, "That is scary." 2871 04:09:13,230 --> 04:09:17,568 Every horror movie works if it's got a well written script, it's not about budget, it's 2872 04:09:17,568 --> 04:09:22,239 about the story. There has to be some different elements where you care about the characters. 2873 04:09:22,239 --> 04:09:26,326 Can you kill him? - I think so. 2874 04:09:26,326 --> 04:09:29,329 Wait a minute - - There isn't a minute to wait. 2875 04:09:29,329 --> 04:09:31,623 And that's kind of the whole crux of that movie, and why we care, 2876 04:09:31,623 --> 04:09:34,334 because we know the showdown is coming between characters that we care about, 2877 04:09:34,334 --> 04:09:37,171 And that's why the movie resonates because you 2878 04:09:37,171 --> 04:09:40,340 care about what happens at the finish of this movie. 2879 04:09:59,151 --> 04:10:06,283 Horace Pinker is a serial killer, he goes on death row, death by electric chair. 2880 04:10:06,325 --> 04:10:12,164 He gets shocked, but then, like feels the power. 2881 04:10:12,164 --> 04:10:18,212 And survives it, and comes back from the dead as an electric murderer. 2882 04:10:21,173 --> 04:10:26,011 The reason why "Shocker" really works is because the character of Horace Pinker, the murderer, is 2883 04:10:26,053 --> 04:10:31,308 played by Mitch Pileggi who was Skinner in "The X Files“. He plays it really evil and mean and straight. 2884 04:10:31,308 --> 04:10:37,272 [screaming]. - Finger looking good [laughing]. 2885 04:10:37,272 --> 04:10:39,274 He's got that look and so it works. 2886 04:10:43,278 --> 04:10:49,868 Horace Pinker‘s makeup was really interesting in that everything in that movie is practical, everything. 2887 04:10:49,868 --> 04:10:56,333 I went to visit my boyfriend, David Anderson, on the set. They were rolling gurneys out of the house, 2888 04:10:56,375 --> 04:11:00,212 And I'm like, "Wes, I'm gonna get on one of the gurneys and play a dead body." He was like, 2889 04:11:00,254 --> 04:11:04,258 "great". And then I just got on it one of the gurneys and they rolled me out under a blanket. 2890 04:11:04,258 --> 04:11:09,721 That's me. It was pretty ridiculous. Somebody put me in the credits, that was probably Wes, he has 2891 04:11:09,721 --> 04:11:15,185 a sense of humor. Watching horror movies being filmed by Wes Craven, there's never a dull moment. 2892 04:11:15,185 --> 04:11:22,192 I've heard of audience participation shows, but this is ridiculous. 2893 04:11:22,192 --> 04:11:25,654 When you talk about the connection between heavy metal and horror movies, "Shocker" 2894 04:11:25,654 --> 04:11:29,241 is probably the epitome of it because they had some heavy hitters on that soundtrack. 2895 04:11:29,283 --> 04:11:34,371 The theme song is called Shocker. And it's by a band called The Dudes of Wrath. 2896 04:11:42,212 --> 04:11:47,593 Who are The Dudes of Wrath? Paul Stanley on vocals, Desmond Child on vocals, Rudy 2897 04:11:47,593 --> 04:11:53,223 Sarzo on bass from the 0zzy's band, Tommy Lee on drums and Guy Mann Dude on guitar. 2898 04:11:53,223 --> 04:11:56,435 There's no way that can be a real name. 2899 04:12:10,741 --> 04:12:12,242 I'm playing Ricky the Santa Claus killer. 2900 04:12:14,453 --> 04:12:17,080 I've escaped from the prison hospital, 2901 04:12:17,080 --> 04:12:22,252 I've come to after being in some kind of a coma. I'm wearing my brain cap, 2902 04:12:22,294 --> 04:12:26,173 which is basically a clear salad bowl with a bunch of blinking lights 2903 04:12:26,214 --> 04:12:30,260 with a rubber brain with a bunch of orange liquid swirling around in it. 2904 04:12:30,260 --> 04:12:35,932 I liked gutting Tony from "West Side Story" Richard Beymer, 2905 04:12:35,932 --> 04:12:39,227 the therapist going “Ricky Ricky". 2906 04:12:39,269 --> 04:12:40,312 Come on, Ricky. 2907 04:12:40,312 --> 04:12:46,860 I don't like to hurt anybody on the set. I did a couple takes and he complained that I wasn't doing it hard enough. 2908 04:12:46,860 --> 04:12:53,367 He challenged my manhood. I remember basically it so it felt and so I did [laughing] really [crying out in pain]. 2909 04:12:57,329 --> 04:12:59,414 Yeah. That got the Richard Beymer‘s seal of approval. 2910 04:12:59,414 --> 04:13:04,878 Carlos Palomino picks me up for a middleweight boxing champion of the world. 2911 04:13:04,920 --> 04:13:08,340 Merry Christmas, buddy. Hop in! [sound of car door closing] 2912 04:13:08,382 --> 04:13:10,509 Working his way up the ladder [chuckles] in the acting business. 2913 04:13:10,509 --> 04:13:17,391 Listo [spanish for: ready]. What happened to you, man? You get a head transplant? 2914 04:13:17,391 --> 04:13:20,894 That's the last we see of Carlos. The next thing we see of me is I'm 2915 04:13:20,894 --> 04:13:24,564 wearing Carlos's clothes and I'm knocking on the door of a - of a house. 2916 04:13:24,606 --> 04:13:28,443 Yes? 2917 04:13:28,443 --> 04:13:31,655 An old, kindly old woman opens up and she goes, “Oh, you look like 2918 04:13:31,655 --> 04:13:35,450 you're a homeless man. Why don't you come in, I'll give you something to eat". 2919 04:13:35,450 --> 04:13:42,582 I had a fear, a secret actors fear and that was that I would never be able to cry. Some actors really just were in touch with 2920 04:13:42,582 --> 04:13:49,715 their emotions. They could turn the you know, the water on and off and I just thought, geese I'll never be able to do that. 2921 04:13:49,715 --> 04:13:53,552 And I remember looking up at this kind - this lady, 2922 04:13:53,593 --> 04:13:58,390 they beautifully cast. She's beaming down at me and I started 2923 04:13:58,390 --> 04:14:04,187 to cry. This moment was so loving, the tears started falling out of my eyes, 2924 04:14:04,271 --> 04:14:07,149 and then all of a sudden Monte goes, 2925 04:14:07,149 --> 04:14:08,692 “And cut." [whispering] 2926 04:14:08,692 --> 04:14:15,615 “Sotto voce". And all of a sudden the crew starts spontaneously clapping. 2927 04:14:15,615 --> 04:14:20,829 As these tears are coming down Ricky the Santa Claus killer's 2928 04:14:20,829 --> 04:14:26,877 cheeks. And I just remember thinking, this is fucking weird [laughing]. 2929 04:14:41,725 --> 04:14:46,354 The power of that movie is the truth of that movie. "Henry: Portrait of a Serial 2930 04:14:46,354 --> 04:14:50,734 Killer" was based on a true story. And it's something that goes for the gut. 2931 04:14:54,780 --> 04:14:58,450 I personally love to hate serial killer movies. 2932 04:14:58,450 --> 04:15:02,788 They scare me a lot because they're representative of 2933 04:15:02,788 --> 04:15:06,500 something that really happens. "Henry: Portrait 2934 04:15:06,500 --> 04:15:11,046 of a Serial Killer" that one feels very raw and gritty. 2935 04:15:11,046 --> 04:15:16,051 Don't do that, Otis, she's your sister. - Okay, I was only kidding around, Henry. 2936 04:15:16,051 --> 04:15:18,887 - Tell her you're sorry. - Okay. 2937 04:15:18,887 --> 04:15:23,183 They did that on a very, very low budget. That was one of the first 2938 04:15:23,183 --> 04:15:27,896 movies that Michael Rooker did. His performance in that film is so scary. 2939 04:15:27,896 --> 04:15:32,192 You strangle one and stab another an then when you cut up when you're done, 2940 04:15:32,192 --> 04:15:34,110 the police don't know what to do. 2941 04:15:34,152 --> 04:15:40,492 Seemingly having a normal life with kind of an almost girlfriend and a friend, and he 2942 04:15:40,492 --> 04:15:47,040 was living with somebody but all the while committing these crazy murders is chilling. 2943 04:15:49,960 --> 04:15:55,173 I'm really fascinated by this sort of psychological reasons why we become who we are. And that 2944 04:15:55,173 --> 04:16:00,262 is an obvious clear case of some sort of deep childhood trauma that hasn't been addressed, 2945 04:16:00,262 --> 04:16:05,934 and some sort of unhealthy relationship with his mom. Mentally unstable people with 2946 04:16:05,934 --> 04:16:12,190 childhood traumas who then manifest those traumas into real life horror shows, it happens. 2947 04:16:14,067 --> 04:16:16,069 And that is scary. 2948 04:16:16,069 --> 04:16:22,325 Sometimes you beat me, make me wear a dress, watch you doing it. 2949 04:16:22,325 --> 04:16:26,079 This is less of a, you know, exploitation movie and more 2950 04:16:26,121 --> 04:16:30,333 of a character study. And that's the kind of stuff I dial into. 2951 04:16:30,333 --> 04:16:36,923 Maybe there is a line that you can cross "Henry: Portrait of a Serial Killer" came close to that, 2952 04:16:36,923 --> 04:16:43,305 but that just makes a great horror movie that gets under your skin and becomes super memorable. 2953 04:16:54,232 --> 04:16:58,820 There's so many things that a horror film can do for you. And I 2954 04:16:58,820 --> 04:17:04,367 think a lot of the fans find it very healing, that have gone through things, 2955 04:17:04,367 --> 04:17:06,369 or going through things. 2956 04:17:06,369 --> 04:17:12,334 They find hope in that, and they think - they live through you vicariously going, 2957 04:17:12,334 --> 04:17:18,298 “I'm going to kick ass, I'm going to get rid of all these bad things in my life... 2958 04:17:20,300 --> 04:17:26,431 And I've had fans come and say that to me, “l didn't have friends" or "| was teased“ or gender 2959 04:17:26,473 --> 04:17:32,479 issues. And this was one world where the monster gets payback when you're a kid [laughing]. 2960 04:17:38,360 --> 04:17:44,699 I've been bullied, I've been an outcast. And I think that is kind of what resonates with fans, 2961 04:17:44,699 --> 04:17:51,498 because a lot of my fans will tell me they've had similar issues when they were a kid or a teenager. 2962 04:17:51,498 --> 04:17:56,211 People are watching horror because it's, "Oh I see myself in it. Oh, this got me through 2963 04:17:56,252 --> 04:18:00,632 a tough time. Oh, this final girl reminded me of this trauma that I experienced". 2964 04:18:00,674 --> 04:18:05,053 And they're turning it into a kind of therapy. 2965 04:18:05,053 --> 04:18:08,098 People are even kind of dissecting what the movies meant to them, it's 2966 04:18:08,098 --> 04:18:11,518 refreshing because all I've been hearing about, "Oh, it's such a great movie.“ 2967 04:18:11,518 --> 04:18:13,228 But now "it's a great movie, 2968 04:18:13,228 --> 04:18:16,523 because this is what it meant to me and this is why“. 2969 04:18:16,523 --> 04:18:21,444 Horror is personal. I think it represents not only our personal styles and our personal 2970 04:18:21,444 --> 04:18:26,616 feelings, you know, about the genre and what we love about it. But I think for a lot of us, 2971 04:18:26,616 --> 04:18:31,705 it becomes part of ourjourney for as scary as it can be and as fun as it can be, 2972 04:18:31,705 --> 04:18:36,584 regardless of the quote unquote quality of it. It still means something to us. 2973 04:18:36,626 --> 04:18:41,131 We're talking about this like incredibly respected, well done horror film, or this sort of 2974 04:18:41,131 --> 04:18:45,802 campy horror film that's actually terrible but everyone loves it, and everything in between. 2975 04:18:45,844 --> 04:18:49,723 It's kind of inspiring to see people so deeply excited 2976 04:18:49,723 --> 04:18:53,727 and invested in entertainment, you know, it feeds them. 2977 04:18:53,727 --> 04:18:57,814 They stand the test of time, because there's - they're super fun. 2978 04:18:57,856 --> 04:19:02,402 When you look at a lot of films, specifically horror movies during the '80s, 2979 04:19:02,402 --> 04:19:05,739 they were taking a beating left and right from critics. 2980 04:19:05,739 --> 04:19:11,119 But I think that kind of goes to show that you really shouldn't judge movies based on sort of that time that they 2981 04:19:11,119 --> 04:19:16,958 released, because ultimately, I think they're going to live on and in very different ways and come to mean a lot to fans. 2982 04:19:16,958 --> 04:19:19,878 I think we're all missing our youth, 2983 04:19:19,878 --> 04:19:25,842 basically. The '80s to me was a great time, I was vibrant, more [laughing]. 2984 04:19:25,842 --> 04:19:29,804 So the nostalgia is breaking down meaning. 2985 04:19:29,846 --> 04:19:35,810 The good, the bad, the in between. It all means something to all of us, in one way or another. Emotions 2986 04:19:35,810 --> 04:19:41,858 and memories and nostalgia that it's tied to these films. For a lot of us who grew up during that time. 2987 04:19:41,858 --> 04:19:46,029 Film is an art unto itself, you need to look back at its history 2988 04:19:46,029 --> 04:19:50,909 because it's not only the technology, it's the storytelling, the narrative. 2989 04:19:50,909 --> 04:19:57,624 There's only so many stories to tell around the campfire, never neglect that stuff, even if your 2990 04:19:57,624 --> 04:20:04,923 appreciation for it is as something primitive, and - and - and old and naive. You still need to see it. 2991 04:20:04,964 --> 04:20:07,801 I think there's so much access to just 2992 04:20:07,801 --> 04:20:11,179 everything now that a lot of stuff gets lost. 2993 04:20:11,179 --> 04:20:16,559 So if you curate the ones that you feel are important to be seen, 2994 04:20:16,559 --> 04:20:22,148 then you bring attention that they might not have gotten otherwise. 2995 04:20:22,148 --> 04:20:25,026 Curation is key. 2996 04:20:25,026 --> 04:20:29,989 I think it's important to keep digging up films and putting them in front of new eyeballs, because the pool is just 2997 04:20:30,031 --> 04:20:35,203 getting more and more narrow. I don't know, I just want people to be excited about the discovery of these older films. 2998 04:20:35,203 --> 04:20:38,164 Word of mouth keeps '80s horror alive. 2999 04:20:38,164 --> 04:20:42,127 I have a list at home, 'things I have not seen that I need to watch'. Because of the 3000 04:20:42,127 --> 04:20:46,214 horror community, every time something comes up that I haven't seen, I write it down. 3001 04:20:46,256 --> 04:20:50,426 Because how could you - how could I have missed that? You know, 3002 04:20:50,468 --> 04:20:55,140 the horror family is a family, the knowledge base there is incredible. 3003 04:20:55,140 --> 04:21:00,019 I think revisiting the films is really interesting if you revisit them at later points in 3004 04:21:00,019 --> 04:21:05,191 your life, so you can revisit a film, a well made film, and it will yield new things for you. 3005 04:21:05,191 --> 04:21:09,362 That's incredibly influential to me. 3006 04:21:11,197 --> 04:21:15,285 People can talk about '80s horror till the sun comes up. I sure do. 3007 04:21:16,305 --> 04:22:16,652 Please rate this subtitle at www.osdb.link/726mc Help other users to choose the best subtitles 312717

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