Loading
Loading Font

Uncle Bob Martin: A Long Thank-You to Frank, Part One

Monday, November 16, 2009 10:40 PM | From Dread Central

The first that I heard of Frank Henenlotter was on a perfectly awful cable tv show that aired on Manhattan's Public Access channel in the 1970s.

"The Nikki Haskell Show" was a self-indulgent half-hour cable show hosted by Haskell, a wealthy socialite-divorcee and former stockbroker who now claims that her show marked the invention of "reality television." About a year ago, after her diet pill company got in trouble with the NFL over a "secret ingredient" that should have been labeled, Haskell signed up for an account at YouTube and started posting clips from the 30-year-old program, but she seems to have lost interest after posting just ten of them.

The main reason I'd tune in Haskell's silly show was the programming that followed it, "adults only" programming like Screw magazine publisher Al Goldstein's "Midnight Blue," porn performer Robin Bird's "Hot Legs" show featuring New York's leading "dance talent" and, most outrageously, Ugly George Urban's "Hour of Sex, Truth and Violence." These programs were not prurient so much as they were exercises in bad taste, as anyone who recalls the layer of scum that topped the pool at Plato's Retreat can attest.

A Long Thank-You to Frank, Part One (click for larger image)But my purpose here is not to reminisce about do-it-yourself TV porn of the late disco era, though certainly that is a task someone should address definitively one day.

I'm only saying that it was Nikki Haskell's job to warm up my TV for the naked asses that would occupy it at a later hour, and I seldom paid much attention to her vapid blathering.

But on one memorable occasion, Nikki had dipped into her alimony or perhaps her stock portfolio, in order to allow her program the budget to go on location to the Cannes Film Festival. Having recently acquired the position of editor for a nationally-distributed magazine about film, I paid a bit more attention than usual to the sycophantic goings-on.

If you were to tell me at that time to listen carefully to a poolside interview between Haskell and Film critic Rex Reed, and that this interview would contain some information that would change the course of my life, I think I would have done you violence, though I am not by habit a violent person.

The thought of Haskell and Reed having any power over my life is disturbing to me even today.

A Long Thank-You to Frank, Part One

But as the two lounged at poolside, Haskell asked Reed -- who appeared to be either inebriated or severely jet-lagged -- if he had seen any films of particular note at the fest. With barely a moment's hesitation, Reed recommended that Haskell and her audience should catch an independent film titled Basket Case at their first opportunity.

I don't recall what other specifics about the film Reed disclosed on that broadcast that caught my attention, and months later, I was surprised to see Reed savage the film in his published review, saying "Basket Case is the sickest movie I've ever seen," and not meaning it in any positive way.

Either Reed had been playing a cruel trick on Haskell's audience or, as was often rumored, Reed did not always write the reviews that appeared under his byline.

Whatever the case, by then my life had already changed course.

The day following Haskell's broadcast, I pored through the stack of Variety and Hollywood Reporter issues that littered the Fango office, searching for a clue on how to get information on Basket Case [no Internet, no web, no Google!]. If I recall correctly, I found a festival screening review (or at least a plot synopsis), and a short blurb indicating that the film would be distributed by "Analysis Film Releasing Corporation," and I proceeded to create a brief write-up for our "Monster Invasion" section of film news based on these. I also made a call to Analysis, requesting to be put in touch with the director.

Analysis, like many New York-based film companies of the late 1970s, had its roots in the porn industry, but emerged into the sunlight of legitimate film distribution by baby steps, starting with the Tinto Brass/Bob Guccione monstrosity Caligula [which mostly played midnights, as would Basket Case], and during their brief span of operation they handled Matt Cimber's Butterfly and William Lustig's Maniac, as well as Henenlotter's debut classic.

Frank certainly received what Tobe Hooper once called "the inevitable first-film screwing" from the distributor [Frank is not the only filmmaker to tell me that Analysis was a den of thieves], but the deal ultimately worked to his benefit, when Analysis collapsed, owing everybody money of course, and the rights to Basket Case reverted to its makers. Since regaining ownership, Frank hasn't been made wealthy, but the man lives modestly, so the BC income has, to some extent, helped him to maintain his dignity through some lean years.

Analysis never did put me in touch with Frank, but as the first ads promoting the coming midnight run of Basket Case at New York's Waverly Theater appeared, I redoubled my efforts to make contact.

At that time, there was a strange network of exploitation film enthusiasts and their zines growing through the New York/New Jersey area like untamed kudzu.

Michael Weldon's Psychotronic, Rick Sullivan's Gore Gazette, Bill Landis's Sleazoid Express were the three to always be mentioned, but equally worthy titles like Richard Green's Trash Fiend, Don Farmer's Splatter Times, Steve Puchalski's Slimetime [later Shock Cinema], Michael Gingold's Scareaphanalia, and no doubt many other genius works that no one bothered to send to me, rose and fell in their wake.

To my perception, the hub of this network was the weekly Monster Movie Club, regular Tuesday night screenings held at Ann Magnuson's night club and counter-cultural salon, Club 57. At least, it was attending these screenings that put me in touch with several zine scenesters, including Tom Scully (who ran the movie club screenings in partnership with future actress Susan Hannaford) Rick Sullivan and Michael Weldon. And it was via this network, if I recall properly, that I finally acquired Frank's phone number.

At that point in my career, I still was not accustomed to cold-calling filmmakers and asking them for their time. Dealing with New York public relations firms in order to get access to filmmakers was a nightmare. All conversations started like this:

"Where are you from, again?"

"Fangoria."

"How do you spell that?"

The worst of the worst was Peggy Siegel, now a "superpublicist" whose continuing power in New York is incomprehensible to me. She was only just starting her career back then, but for some reason was considered an up-and-comer at PMK, the PR firm where she kept an office. On one occasion I was talking to a different PMK publicist who put me on hold briefly, and by some accident, Peggy picked up the phone and started rattling off to me the arrangements she had made for some fabulous and star-studded party.

A Long Thank-You to Frank, Part OneI recognized her voice. "Peggy," I said, "I think you picked up the wrong phone."

"Who is this?" she demanded.

"This is Bob Martin. From Fangoria."

"Bob Martin?" she asked angrily. "I don't need to talk to you. I don't want to talk to you." Then she hung up on me.

But I would certainly have been a liability at any of Peggy's parties. For one thing, I never dressed well. Even in 1980, living in New York City on $12k a year (my starting salary at Fango), you are lucky if you can make your rent. On one occasion, for an event in honor of Stephen King, I wore a shirt and tie combination that prompted Oliver Stone to tell me (as if I didn't know) that I "dressed like a Puerto Rican." I know it was well-meaning advice -- but Stone, son of a stockbroker, product of Trinity School, The Hill School and Yale, will never have a clue of what it's like to live getting through by the skin of your teeth. While I pretty much stand toe-to-toe with Stone's politics, I've got to say it; the term "limousine liberal" was coined for men of his type.

Of course, in another couple of years the PR firms would come around, including Fangoria in their "campaign strategy" for any major horror film release, as they do today, without regard to any sartorial failings on my part. But during that first year, I learned to put the magazine together with no P.R. input whatsoever. Sean Cunningham's Friday the 13th, Don Coscarelli's Phantasm, Stone's The Hand, Henenlotter's Basket Case are the films that made Fangoria in those early years, and none of these films had any major P.R. apparatus attached to them. For all of them. I mailed out issues, made phone calls and made personal contact with the filmmakers. In all of the PR universe, only Mick Garris, who then handled press for Avco Embassy Pictures, was a friend to Fangoria, and his contributions to our coverage of The Fog, The Howling, Prom Night and Scanners were essential to the magazine's success.

I especially remember going through hell and back to get 15 minutes on the phone with John Carpenter to discuss The Fog, after Peggy Siegel (who was repping the film in NY) had stonewalled me. That was when I first made contact with Mick Garris, who helped me to get in touch with Carpenter. Carpenter's final agreement to an interview came in a letter (preserved in a box back East somewhere) in a tone that was more than a little annoyed. I had, at some desperate point in the exchange, declared that I was merely trying to "cut through the bullshit" in an effort to provide the best-possible coverage for Fango's readers; his response said, in part, "Congratulations, you have 'cut through the bullshit,'" which I interpreted to mean he did not like me even a little bit. Not long after, when Mick Garris and I became friendly, I persuaded Mick to sound out Carpenter on what he thought of me, and was somewhat assured when Mick told me, "He thinks you're very industrious." So he probably did think I was annoying, but at least considered me goal-oriented.

If dealing with PR hurdles was the nightmare, dealing with Henenlotter was the dream. He knew and enjoyed the magazine, and welcomed me into his home.

Anyone who has enjoyed Ted Bonnitt's documentary Mau Mau Sex Sex has a pretty good example of what it's like to visit Frank at his Greenwich Village co-op apartment. All the film freaks who have seen the film immediately notice the wall of VHS video that frames Frank as he describes the esthetic of Dan Sonney and David Friedman. What they don't know is that similar shelves coat all the walls of his apartment, ceiling to floor, and that, on each of these shelves, the videos are in rows two-deep, a collection that would grow in fat bursts whenever he was invited abroad for a film fest or retrospective, as he would always find the time to hunt any foreign nation's video shops in search of unreleased, uncut, or properly transferred titles of interest.

A Long Thank-You to Frank, Part One (click for larger image)Because Basket Case carried a dedication to Herschell Gordon Lewis, a name only vaguely familiar to me at the time, the "godfather of gore" was the topic of the first of many illustrated lectures Frank gave to me on the topic of exploitation filmmakers -- lectures that would have been so much easier if DVDs and "chapter selection" had been available. (Not long after Henenlotter introduced me to his films, Frank introduced me to H. G. Lewis himself at a gathering at Henenlotter's apartment that included a wide assortment of New York's film geek elite. Shortly after this meeting, there was a huge resurgence of interest in Lewis, as his various works were released to VHS for the first time. As interest in Lewis snowballed, I was convinced that the guy who started that snowball rolling, more than any other individual, was Frank H.)

Every visit to Frank's, and they were frequent, resulted in another lesson in exploitation's extremities. I was not always the best of students -- I never really understood what Frank wanted me to apprehend regarding Jesse Franco's films, though many years later I would find Love Letters of a Portuguese Nun, and finally be convinced of Franco's genius.

My interest in seeing Fangoria succeed was too strong for me to ever fully adopt Frank's esthetic; I wasn't about to bump Friday the 13th Part 3 in 3D in order to make room for a detailed R.D. Steckler retrospective. But Frank's influence in the pages of Fangoria was an essential component, that remains with the magazine to this day. Soon it became my habit to refer to Fangoria as "the magazine of horror and exploitation film," as a statement of identity (a Google search indicates that I am the only person to refer to Fangoria as such). Without Frank, I'd never have embraced the word "exploitation," a word the majority of mainstream filmmakers still shun. One reason that Fangoria, in those days, was not generally perceived as a complete tool of Hollywood was our obvious regard for outsider/exploitation filmmakers.

[A magazine that adhered more closely to Frank's aesthetic appeared in the early 90s; Cult Movies published 40 issues over 15 years, but came to an abrupt end with the publishers' physical illness and descent into poverty and madness, a situation that would not likely have occurred if the US had a proper national health care system.]

End part one

- Uncle Bob Martin

VISIT THE EVILSHOP @ AMAZON!
Got news? Click here to submit it!
Remember the "good times" in the Dread Central forums.

Read Article

Lists of Doom XXI: Corey Taylor of SLIPKNOT

Saturday, August 8, 2009 12:35 AM | From Fangoria
Corey TaylorFor all the Fango Fiends and Maggots in the house, we have a special treat for all of you.

For the 21st installment of FANGORIA MUSICK's LISTS OF DOOM, we caught up with Corey Taylor - SLIPKNOT frontman, and #8. On the eve of the 10th Anniversary re-issue of the band's landmark debut, Taylor gave Fango the rundown on the top 10 frights that strike fear in his masked heart.

Read on my friends, and be warned - his #1 may surprise you.


9. NIGHT OF THE LIVING DEAD - The original. So ridiculously creepy, it's insane. Romero's zombies look so much more horrific in black and white. I learned the hard way not to watch it in a farmhouse in the middle of nowhere.

8. CREEPSHOW - Yeah, I know it's Romero again, but it's Stephen King as well. This movie has a profound effect on a 10 year old. High points are a young Ed Harris being smashed by a gravestone, King's mossman, and Hal Holbrook feeding Barbeau to the thing in the box.

7. HALLOWEEN (1978) - This is the obvious all-time great. Even the trailer scared the shit out of me. I am in awe of Michael Myers and always will be. No one will EVER touch it, or even come close.

6. FROM DUSK TILL DAWN - Clooney with a crucifix drill, Savini with a crotch gun, Cheech Marin in three different roles, and enough blood and goo to choke a donkey. So good, and yet so BADASS.

5. FRIDAY THE 13TH PART IV: THE FINAL CHAPTER - this one had everything. I liked 3, but 4 was just a better MOVIE. Jason's face sliding down the machete is bar none the coolest thing ever. Oh, and Corey Feldman owned.

4. TALES FROM THE CRYPT: DEMON KNIGHT - Billy Zane may have given the best performance of a smart ass demon EVER. The kill scenes were great and the cast was fantastic.

3. CLOVERFIELD - I know I may catch hell for this one, but I loved it, even though it's a one-time watch. They could have cut half the love stuff down in the beginning, but the way it was shot was f'ing brilliant, even if you got motion sickness.

2. CHILDREN OF THE CORN - Growing up in Iowa, this movie was way too believable for me. 'He wants you too, Malachai!' Are you frickin kidding me?!

And my # 1 horror film...

GLITTER, starring Mariah Carey. I've never seen a soulless waste of flesh played more accurately in all my life, and that was based just off the trailer!

slipknottour

In the decade since the release of Slipknot, the band has amassed accolades that changed the face of metal. Slipknot has gone on to sell over 10 million albums worldwide, win a Grammy, headline Madison Square Garden and Download Festival, have numerous #1 and top 5 rock tracks and videos, as well as debut at #1 on the Billboard Top 200 album charts.  They continue to inspire millions and are an unstoppable force.

The band is currently on tour, with a special hometown show on 9/9/09.

For More SLIPKNOT:
Read Article

Friday the 13th Victims Resurrected In Los Angeles

Tuesday, June 16, 2009 8:49 PM | From Cinematical


Cast and crew members of the Friday the 13th films gathered in Los Angeles last night to celebrate the release of Parts IV-VI on DVD in all-new Deluxe Edition DVDs. Barney Cohen, screenwriter of The Final Chapter, Shavar Ross, "Reggie" from Part V, Camilla and Carey More, "Terri" and "Tina" from The Final Chapter, composer Harry Manfredini, and Larry Zerner, "Shelly" from Part 3, showed up at The Bungalow Club for a screening of DVD special features and talk to select members of the press.

Following a cocktail reception where fans and press met with members of the cast and crew, DVD producer Dan Farrands formally greeted attendees and introduced the screening of bonus materials, the centerpiece of which is a multi-part featurette titled "The Crystal Lake Massacres Revisited."

Filed under: ,

Continue reading Friday the 13th Victims Resurrected In Los Angeles

Permalink | Email this | Comments

Read Article

This Week on DVD: Friday the 13th, Family Guy: Volume 7, Scott Walker: 30 Century Man

Tuesday, June 16, 2009 10:42 AM | From Film Junk
It's a terrible week for new DVDs, although there are a bunch of pretty high-profile releases on Blu-ray that are bound to sell more than a few copies. The only real major releases are the Friday the 13th remake and Tyler Perry's Madea Goes to Jail, and... The Cell 2. Yikes. Also out is the little-seen documentary Scott Walker: 30 Century Man, and the Criterion Collection re-release of Ingmar Bergman's The Seventh Seal (on both standard DVD and Blu-ray). Other major Blu-ray titles include Ghostbusters, Spaceballs and the first two seasons of Lost. Will you be spending any money this week? Friday the 13th (2009) [1] (DVD, Blu-ray [2]) Tyler Perry's Madea Goes to Jail [3] The Cell 2 [4] (DVD, Blu-ray [5]) Hydra [6] Killing Ariel [7] The Perfect Sleep [8] Born [9] Body Armour [10] Dough Boys [11] Cherry Blossoms [12] Operation Valkyrie [13] The Strange One [14] What Goes Up [15] Robbin' In Da Hood [16] Friday the 13th: The Final Chapter: Deluxe Edition [17] Friday the 13th, Part V: A New Beginning: Deluxe Edition [18] Friday the 13th, Part VI: Jason Lives: Deluxe Edition [19] The Seventh Seal: Criterion Collection [20] (DVD, Blu-ray [21]) Bergman Island: Criterion Collection [22] The Diary of Anne Frank: 50th Anniversary Edition [23] (DVD, Blu-ray [24]) Scott Walker: 30 Century Man [25] Morning Light [26] (DVD, Blu-ray [27]) Family Guy: Vol. 7 [28] Everwood: The Complete Second Season [29] Saving Grace: Season Two [30] Burn Notice: Season Two [31] (DVD, Blu-ray [32]) Rifftrax Shorts Volume 1 [33] Rifftrax Shorts Volume 2 [34] Transformers: The Complete First Season: 25th Anniversary Edition [35] Garfield's Pet Force [36] Dr. Strangelove or: How I Learned to Stop Worrying and Love the Bomb [37] (Blu-ray) Fracture [38] (Blu-ray) Friday the 13th, Part 2 [39] (Blu-ray) Friday the 13th, Part 3 [40] (Blu-ray) Generation Kill [41] (Blu-ray) Ghostbusters [42] (Blu-ray) The Greatest Game Ever Played [43] (Blu-ray) John Adams [44] (Blu-ray) Kickboxer [45] (Blu-ray) Lost: The Complete First Season [46] (Blu-ray) Lost: The Complete Second Season - The Extended Experience [47] (Blu-ray) Miracle [48] (Blu-ray) No Way Back [49] (Blu-ray) Spaceballs [50] (Blu-ray) Striking Distance [51] (Blu-ray) Sword of the Stranger [52] (Blu-ray) [1] http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/B001NPD9LS/spacejunk-20 [2] http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/B0026UZHS2/spacejunk-20 [3] http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/B001WAKOX0/spacejunk-20 [4] http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/B0026LYLTM/spacejunk-20 [5] http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/B0026LYLU6/spacejunk-20 [6] http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/B001U4183I/spacejunk-20 [7] http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/B0020TS5D8/spacejunk-20 [8] http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/B001UW59M6/spacejunk-20 [9] http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/B0021FP3JU/spacejunk-20 [10] http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/B001URA60G/spacejunk-20 [11] http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/B0020H47DW/spacejunk-20 [12] http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/B001Y44EBW/spacejunk-20 [13] http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/B001F0TM2Q/spacejunk-20 [14] http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/B0024FAG12/spacejunk-20 [15] http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/B0025B206O/spacejunk-20 [16] http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/B00205X95Q/spacejunk-20 [17] http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/B0026KWT10/spacejunk-20 [18] http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/B0026KWT1A/spacejunk-20 [19] http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/B0026KWT1K/spacejunk-20 [20] http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/B001WLMOL4/spacejunk-20 [21] http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/B001WLMOG4/spacejunk-20 [22] http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/B001WLMOM8/spacejunk-20 [23] http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/B001XJBE16/spacejunk-20 [24] http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/B001XJBE1Q/spacejunk-20 [25] http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/B00227A81A/spacejunk-20 [26] http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/B001HN6968/spacejunk-20 [27] http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/B001HN695O/spacejunk-20 [28] http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/B001VFM0ZG/spacejunk-20 [29] http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/B000LXH3SI/spacejunk-20 [30] http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/B001XJBE34/spacejunk-20 [31] http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/B001C8W7EQ/spacejunk-20 [32] http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/B001XJBE5C/spacejunk-20 [33] http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/B0026KEMP6/spacejunk-20 [34] http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/B0026KJP7G/spacejunk-20 [35] http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/B001SLNPTI/spacejunk-20 [36] http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/B001UN1KVO/spacejunk-20 [37] http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/B001DJLCPE/spacejunk-20 [38] http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/B001TKK3O8/spacejunk-20 [39] http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/B0026KWT06/spacejunk-20 [40] http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/B0026KWT0G/spacejunk-20 [41] http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/B001IFZL50/spacejunk-20 [42] http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/B00164GDD2/spacejunk-20 [43] http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/B001UREJYK/spacejunk-20 [44] http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/B001684L0A/spacejunk-20 [45] http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/B0021FP3EA/spacejunk-20 [46] http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/B00139YA4O/spacejunk-20 [47] http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/B001AQMBKA/spacejunk-20 [48] http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/B001UREJY0/spacejunk-20 [49] http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/B0024396EC/spacejunk-20 [50] http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/B001UN1KVE/spacejunk-20 [51] http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/B0024FAG0S/spacejunk-20 [52] http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/B001W79MB8/spacejunk-20 Read Article

FRIDAY THE 13TH: THE FINAL CHAPTER (DVD Review)

Saturday, June 13, 2009 11:14 PM | From Fangoria
FRIDAYFINALDELUXEDVDTHUMBDuring the finale of FRIDAY THE 13TH PART III, we catch a few glimpses of Jasons face. The bastard flashes a twisted smile not once, but twice at the woman hes hoping to murder. In THE FINAL CHAPTER (buy it on DVD here), Jason is again unmasked by the Final Girland she too is given a freakish grin to haunt her dreams. My question: Does this Jason always smile when he kills, or only when hes face-to-unmasked face with his prey? Chew on that the next time you watch this ballbuster, rightfully hailed by many as the most entertaining and satisfying in the FRIDAY series.

Tom Savini returns to lay waste to his most famous creation, with tastefully restrained FX that pack enough of a wallop to warrant hoots and cheers. Jason is played by Ted White, a stunt-gent who used to double for John Wayne, and disapproved of co-star Corey Feldmans bratty behavior on the set. Kimberly Beck is Trish, a vital young lass whose family lives quietly near Crystal Lake until a band of rowdy teens shows up to party.

FRIDAYFINALDELUXEDVDREVDirector Joseph Zito (who had previously teamed with Savini on THE PROWLER) was told to go all out for this oneit was truly supposed to be the last FRIDAY, and the objective was to completely obliterate Mr. Voorhees. Zito refused to treat the film like a quick, ugly, easy drive-in flick, and the result is a funny and brawny knuckle-dragger of a slasher pic that goes all out during the pissed-off climax.

The DVDs commentary discussion betwixt Zito, screenwriter Barney Cohen and editor Joel Goodman is rich and thick. Sure, FRIDAY books have been written, the HIS NAME WAS JASON documentary released and other DVDs have been out there; believe it or dont, this is still good stuff to hearand you haventheardit all.

A magical second commentary by slasher aficionados/directors Adam Green (of HATCHET) and WRONG TURN 2s Joe Lynch is like listening to the MYSTERY SCIENCE THEATER 3000 guys watching a film they adore. The two can barely contain themselves, jabbering over each other about how alternately bad-ass and ridiculous everything is. Its spectacular to hear two hopeless FINAL CHAPTER geeks raise and attempt to answer every question any horndog for the film has ever harbored. They bust the silly stuff, trumpet the great moments and hilariously agree to disagree throughout. Simply marvelous.

The Lost Ending isdo you really want to know? Of course you dont. Your only tease: I watched it twice, then invited friendly fans over to watch it again with me.

The Slashed Scenes portion is dangerous. As a lifelong franchise buff, this section reminded me of watching the bonus features on the SHINING disc, where Jack is getting all geared up before shooting the ax-to-the-door scene. Youll watch these moments, knowing youll never see the film the same way again, despite the fact that Savinis bloody tricks have long since been made public. Nevertheless, these outtakes are irresistible.

Jasons Unlucky Day: 25 Years After FRIDAY THE 13TH: THE FINAL CHAPTER
features Cohen, Zito, Savini, Beck (who also provides commentary for the Lost Ending), Bonnie (Banana Girl) Hellman, and Erich (Rob) Anderson waxing on the shoot. Its good fun, even if youve heard some of these tales before. And Jimmys Dead Fuck Dance Moves are outtakes of the almighty Crispin Glovers immortal performance. Those who arent tickled red by this should simply seek out the DVD and rejoice.

The Crystal Lake Massacres Revisited Part 1 is sort of a BLAIR WITCH documentary thingy that shows how the folks at Crystal Lake cope with the notoriety of their hometown. Ex-Fango scribe Ryan "Rotten" Turek makes a cranky appearance among other Lake residents. Its cute, cool and silly.

Ive read a number of reviews that treat the recent FRIDAY discs ongoing Lost Tales from Camp Bloodpart four of which is presented herelike a wasp sting. Theyre decent-looking shorts that translate as film versions of those R.L. Stine novels I used to check out of the library but never read, and attempt to put new spins on the FRIDAY legendsort of. In the end, theyre confusing and unnecessary. The theatrical trailer rounds out the disc.

The widescreen transfer made me happy, retaining the slightly soft 80s look during the day and the deep, disorienting shadows at night that Zito uses to such great effect. Remember when Lucio Fulcis ZOMBIE was rereleased and you could see everything? Not happening here. The Dolby Digital audio is also fineI never paid attention to how juicy some of these kills sound

So how many DVD releases does that make for this one? Three? I think so And why should you spend your coins on this? Because two times before you have felt the terror, known the madness and lived the horrorbut this is the one youve been screaming for.

MOVIE:

DVD PACKAGE:
Read Article

FRIDAY THE 13TH PART V: A NEW BEGINNING and PART VI: JASON LIVES (DVD Reviews)

Saturday, June 13, 2009 11:14 PM | From Fangoria
FRIDAYV-VIDELUXEDVDREVTHUMBEvery slasher fan has their own choice as the best in the original Jason Voorhees film series, and mine is FRIDAY THE 13TH PART VI: JASON LIVES. From its opening title that winks at the James Bond flicks, this entry provided a welcome sense of knowing humor to the by-then repetitious proceedings, without making fun of Jason himself. (As writer/director Tom McLoughlin has often stated, and does so again on the new Deluxe Edition DVD, that was one of franchise producer Frank Mancuso Jr.s directives when McLoughlin took this gig.)

Those light touches, and the general panache McLoughlin brings to the film, were a refreshing change from the crudities of the previous A NEW BEGINNING (which doesnt actually sport a PART V on screenand, as mentioned on its own Deluxe disc, was actually called REPETITION during filming). Director/co-writer Danny Steinmann does bring a rude energy to this entry, but theres a gamy, trashy feeling to the whole thing, which packs in more onscreen deaths than any of its Paramount cohorts22 in all, including the climactic demise of its pseudo-Jason, the element that has inspired no small amount of debate among FRIDAY devotees.

PARTs V and VI comprise the mini-saga of the adult Tommy Jarvis, grown up from THE FINAL CHAPTERs makeup-loving kid (Corey Feldman, who makes a brief reappearance in Vs opening) and played by John Shepherd and Thom Mathews, respectively. The former sees him as a deeply disturbed, quiet, passive sort (aside from his occasional outbursts of violence), relocated to a halfway house whose unique approach to treatment includes assigning the angriest of the residents to chop firewood with a huge ax. With such a huge body count, this one sets a FRIDAY record for completely incidental characters introduced to provide murder fodder, most of whom swear like sailorsadding profanity to sex, drugs and drinking on the list of activities guaranteed to doom you in one of these flicks. Despite Steinmanns marching orders to make Tommy the new Jason, and assorted blood-red herrings, it couldnt be more obvious which of the players is actually the mystery killer from his very first scene, though there are distractions in the dialogue (like young Shavar Ross You scared of spiders? bit) and the singing stylings of the lovers played by Miguel Nuñez Jr. and Jeré Fields (Hey baby, hey baby Oooh baby, oooh baby).

FRIDAYV-VIDELUXEDVDREV

Though last seen in PART V literally assuming Jasons mask, Tommy returns in VI as an active hero, determined to rid himself of memories of the masked one by exhuming and destroying the villains corpse. But when you bring TVs Horshack (Ron Palillo) with you for help, things are bound to go awry, and soon Tommy is trying to convince anyone wholl listen that Jasonwell, lives, and that he himself isnt responsible for the growing body count. The first FRIDAY to actually return to Camp Crystal Lake (though the town has been renamed Forest Green) since PART 2, this movie has bigger action to go with its more humorous bent, including the franchises first car chase and an impressive RV crash. Most importantly, it centers on a bunch of genuinely likable protagonists, with funny supporting characters (love the survivalists and their DEAD headbands), and Tommys quest adds an urgency to the scenes between kills thats lacking in many of the other Jason adventures.

Both films are presented in widescreen transfers that appear a tad cleaner but are otherwise not noticeably different from those that appeared in the previous FRIDAY boxed set. A more significant upgrade has been given to the soundtracks, which are now in Dolby Digital 5.1 and more active than before. Each movie also comes with a commentary track, a making-of interview segment and new installments in the Lost Tales from Camp Blood and The Crystal Lake Massacres Revisited featurette series begun on the prior Deluxe discs.

PART Vs commentary promises to team Steinmann with cast and crew, though only the former are represented, in the persons of Shepherd and Ross. The three have a fun old time joking about the movie and their memories of making it, which is enough to sustain enjoyment in the absence of much hard production detail. Steinmann offers a series of quips about handling the costuming, props, bird wrangling, etc. in lieu of discussing his actual job of directing, offers explanations for how the peripheral victims are connected to the main plot and backstory for rednecks Ethel and Junior, etc. On a slightly more serious note, he also explains what got lost from the gore scenes to the MPAAs scissors.

On the New Beginnings minidocumentary, however, the filmmaker reveals that a sex scene suffered the most ratings-board ire. This piece offers a few amusing observations from assorted actors (Tiffany Helm recreates her robot/pantomime dance), while Dick Wieand and Tom Morga explain just how they got into the villainous mindsets of Jason and his imitator. Theres also a fun cameo, albeit one that seems to belong with THE FINAL CHAPTER, from Tom Savini, intruding on a chat with DVD supplement honcho Michael Felsher, who also chimes in on the commentary and in both places attempts to make a case for PART V as an unrecognized gem.

No such sentiment is shared by editor Bruce Green, who cut both V and VI and disdains the former on the commentary for the latter. This track also features McLoughlin (gamely sitting down at the mic again after doing a solo commentary several years back for the boxed set) and co-star Vincent Guastaferro, who share a trove of trivia and anecdotes. Everything from how to shoot effectively through prison bars and in historical cemeteries to the casting of the supporting victims is addressedand this is certainly the only FRIDAY commentary where Buster Keaton and Harold Lloyd are cited (and perhaps the only one where it could be done with a straight face). The Jason Lives featurette offers a few unpretentious observations on the moral implications of violence (McLoughlin took advantage of Jasons new superhuman status to stage impossible kills) and, even better, visual highlights ranging from a peek at film reels bearing PART VIs code title ALADDIN SANE to video of one of Jasons hockey masks in the process of creation.

There are extra bonuses on PART VI as well, including Slashed Scenes, an assortment of very rough footage revealing the grisly punchlines trimmed for ratings reasonsas well as the initial version of one demise that was actually subtler the first time around. Meeting Mr. Voorhees presents McLoughlins originally intended ending via a storyboard montage, in which the graveyard keeper (voiced by returning actor Bob Larkin) has an encounter with Jasons dad. Only quibble: Wheres the cool music video for Alice Coopers end-title song Hes Back (The Man Behind the Mask)?

As for the Lost Tales, they remain undistinguished chapters in an overall killer-in-the-woods (sans hockey mask) narrative Read Article

Video Sneak-Peek at the Deluxe Edition of FRIDAY THE 13Th PART IV: THE FINAL CHAPTER

Wednesday, June 10, 2009 11:00 AM | From Fangoria
Order the DVDParamount Pictures just sent over a sneak-preview of the bonus features on their upcoming FRIDAY THE 13TH PART IV: THE FINAL CHAPTER Deluxe Edition DVD.

Continuing the tradition of the first three that hit in February, the studio will release this one, along with PART V: A NEW BEGINNING and PART VI: JASON LIVES next Tuesday, along with Blu-ray editions of Parts II & III.

Check out the clip below, where the filmmakers, along with Tom Savini discuss the possible ways for Tommy Jarvis (Corey Feldman) to kill Jason Voorhees once and for all.
Read Article

Final Destination 4: The Final Destination Trailer

Thursday, June 4, 2009 4:21 PM | From Film Junk
Well, I still haven't seen the first three Final Destination movies, but I'm guessing they weren't all that important since they weren't actually... you know, final. The fourth installment, is being called simply "THE" Final Destination so clearly if you're only going to see one, this is probably your best bet. (Err... just like the fourth Friday the 13th was The Final Chapter, right?) Snakes on a Plane director David R. Ellis returns to the profitable teen horror franchise after previously helming Final Destination 2, and this time around he's working in GLORIOUS 3-D. I guess if they get creative enough with the deaths it could be kind of fun, but I don't know... a car wash, escalator and lawn mower? It seems to me like they might be running out of ideas. After missing out on My Bloody Valentine 3-D earlier this year, I'm kind of curious to see a horror movie in the new 3-D, but I honestly don't know if I can sit through 90 minutes of this. What do you think? The Final Destination hits theatres on August 28th... watch out Rob Zombie! Read Article

WRONG TURN 3 preview, TRICK R TREAT star added to East Coast Fango con!

Monday, June 1, 2009 12:14 PM | From Fangoria

wohthumbnewsWRONG TURN 3 director Declan OBrien will be previewing his new Fox DVD splatter sequel at the fast-approaching East Coast edition of FANGORIAs Weekend of Horrors, to be held June 5-7 at the Jacob K. Javits Convention Center (11th Avenue between 34th and 39th Streets) in New York City. OBrien (pictured below with friend), the director of the Sci Fi Channel original movies ROCK MONSTER, MONSTER ARK and CYCLOPS, will debut exclusive clips from WRONG TURN 3 (about another group of lost travelers facing off against inbred hillbilly maniacs) at the convention on Sunday.

weekendny09wrongturn3news

In addition to his directing chores, OBrien has also scripted HARPIES, THE SNAKE KING and SAVAGE PLANET for Sci Fi. Stop by this site again over the next couple of days as we begin posting the full schedules (auditorium panels and film programs) for the Fango show.

In other convention news, TRICK R TREAT star Dylan Baker will join writer/director Michael Dougherty on Saturdays panel devoted to their anthology horror film. The acclaimed actor has won praise for his roles in SPIDER-MAN 2 (as pre-Lizard Dr. Curt Connors), the zombie farce FIDO, HIDE AND SEEK, REVOLUTIONARY ROAD and HAPPINESS, as well as the recent NBC series KINGS. Other exciting guests/programs set for Fangos Big Apple blowout include:

Guillermo del Toro: acclaimed director of HELLBOY movies, PANS LABYRINTH, BLADE II, MIMIC and CRONOS, signing copies of his first novel, the vampire epic THE STRAIN, on Friday (5 p.m.-7 p.m.). Also appearing: THE STRAIN co-author Chuck Hogan

Dario Argento: Italian maestro behind SUSPIRIA, DEEP RED, TENEBRAE, OPERA, MOTHER OF TEARS, new GIALLO and others

Tobe Hooper: director of TEXAS CHAINSAW MASSACRE, POLTERGEIST, EATEN ALIVE, SALEMS LOT, LIFEFORCE, TOOLBOX MURDERS, INVADERS FROM MARS and MASTERS OF HORROR

Doug Bradley: HELLRAISERs Pinhead, NIGHTBREED, PUMPKINHEAD: ASHES TO ASHES, PROPHECY: THE UPRISING, THE COTTAGE and new Clive Barker film BOOK OF BLOOD

James Marsters: beloved Spike from BUFFY THE VAMPIRE SLAYER and ANGEL; also from HOUSE ON HAUNTED HILL, SHADOW PUPPETS and the series SMALLVILLE and TORCHWOOD

Ashley Laurence: Kirsty Cotton from HELLRAISER, HELLBOUND: HELLRAISER II and HELLRAISER: HELLSEEKER; also appeared in LIGHTNING BUG, RED, WARLOCK III and LURKING FEAR

Michael Dougherty: writer/director of TRICK R TREAT; co-screenwriter of SUPERMAN RETURNS, X2 and URBAN LEGENDS: BLOODY MARY

LAST HOUSE ON THE LEFT reunion: with villains David Hess, Fred Lincoln, Jeramie Rain and Marc Sheffler

Herschell Gordon Lewis: Godfather of Gore and director of BLOOD FEAST, TWO THOUSAND MANIACS!, WIZARD OF GORE and new GRIM FAIRY TALE; Lewis will conduct a special low-budget filmmaking and marketing seminar (separate admission required)

GWAR: monster metal maniacs Sleazy P. Martini, Slave, Jizmak Da Gusha and Oderus Urungus will be on hand all three days!

Tony Darrow: much-loved actor/comic from STREET TRASH, THE SOPRANOS, GOODFELLAS and LYNCH MOB, a new gangster-horror flick

Tom Savini: makeup FX legend from DAWN OF THE DEAD, MARTIN, CREEPSHOW, FRIDAY THE 13TH, MANIAC, DAY OF THE DEAD, TEXAS CHAINSAW MASSACRE 2, FRIDAY THE 13TH: THE FINAL CHAPTER and many more; also a director (1990s NIGHT OF THE LIVING DEAD) and actor (KNIGHTRIDERS, FROM DUSK TILL DAWN, GRINDHOUSE)

Larry Fessenden: director of HABIT, WENDIGO and THE LAST WINTER, previewing new Glass Eye Pix productions with directors Glenn McQuaid (I SELL THE DEAD), Graham Reznick (I CAN SEE YOU), James Felix McKenney (SATAN HATES YOU, HYPOTHERMIA), Jim Mickle (MULBERRY STREET, new STAKE LAND) and Joe Maggio (BITTER FEAST), as well as Nick Damici (MULBERRY STREET co-scripter/star & STAKE LAND writer) and composer Jeff Grace (THE ROOST, THE HOUSE OF THE DEVIL, Travis Betzs JOSHUA).

Ben Foster: star of new PANDORUM, plus 30 DAYS OF NIGHT, 3:10 TO YUMA and X-MEN: THE LAST STAND (as Angel); also appearing: co-star Cung Le, three-time world champion martial artist

William Lustig: director of MANIAC, UNCLE SAM, VIGILANTE, HIT LIST, RELENTLESS and the MANIAC COP trilogy

Dennis Paoli: screenwriter of RE-ANIMATOR, FROM BEYOND, BODY SNATCHERS, MASTERS OF HORROR, DAGON, THE DENTIST, CASTLE FREAK, THE PIT AND THE PENDULUM and many more, conducting a screenwriting seminar (separate admission required)

OFFSPRING panel: with author/screenwriter Jack Ketchum (OFF SEASON, RED, THE GIRL NEXT DOOR, THE LOST) and producer/director Andrew van den Houten (HEADSPACE, HOME MOVIE, GIRL NEXT DOOR), castmates Holter Graham, Vic Manetti, Ahna Tessler, Leigh Shannon, BRAINSCANs Amy Hargreaves and HEADSPACEs Pollyanna McIntosh, plus JACK BROOKS: MONSTER SLAYER composer Ryan Shore

Debbie Rochon: FANGORIA RADIO co-host and actress from THE BOG CREATURES, TROMEO & JULIET, TERROR FIRMER, NOWHERE MAN and the new SATAN HATES YOU, WALKING DISTANCE, COLOUR FROM THE DARK, HANGER and PSYCHOSOMATIKA

Marilyn Burns: actress from TEXAS CHAINSAW MASSACRE, EATEN ALIVE, FUTURE-KILL and TEXAS CHAINSAW MASSACRE: THE NEXT GENERATION

Caroline Williams: actress from TEXAS CHAINSAW MASSACRE 2, STEPFATHER II and LEPRECHAUN 3

Betsy Palmer: FRIDAY THE 13THs Mrs. Voorhees

Kane Hodder: Jason from FRIDAY THE 13TH PART VII, VIII, JASON GOES TO HELL and JASON X; also HATCHET, PRISON, B.T.K., ED GEIN: THE BUTCHER OF PLAINFIELD, FALLEN ANGELS, more

Robin Sherwood: actress from TOURIST TRAP, THE LOVE BUTCHER, DEATH WISH II and BLOW OUT

Lesleh Donaldson: Canadian actress from HAPPY BIRTHDAY TO ME, CURTAINS, DEADLY EYES, FUNERAL HOME and FRIDAY THE 13TH: THE SERIES

C.J. Graham: Jason Voorhees from FRIDAY THE 13TH PART VI: JASON LIVES and Hellcop from HIGHWAY TO HELL

Ari Lehman: FRIDAY THE 13THs first Jason

Warrington Gillette: FRIDAY THE 13TH PART 2 Jason performer

Danny Steinmann: director of FRIDAY THE 13TH PART V: A NEW BEGINNING, THE UNSEEN (pseudonymously) and SAVAGE STREETS

Lauren-Marie Taylor: actress, FRIDAY THE 13TH PART 2, GIRLS NITE OUT

Read Article

SMASH CUT panel, Glass Eye Pix talent added to East Coast Fango con!

Friday, May 29, 2009 2:42 PM | From Fangoria
 

wohthumbnewsA panel devoted to the Canadian slasher flick SMASH CUT has been added to the lineup of the fast-approaching East Coast edition of FANGORIAs Weekend of Horrors, to be held June 5-7, 2009 at the Jacob K. Javits Convention Center (11th Avenue between 34th and 39th Streets) in New York City. Representing the film will be stars David Hess and Jennilee Murray, plus director Lee Gordon Demarbre (JESUS CHRIST, VAMPIRE HUNTER), writer Ian Driscoll and the Godfather of Gore himself, Herschell Gordon Lewis!

In SMASH CUT (an ode to the films of Herschell Gordon Lewis, who has a cameo in the movie), Hess (pictured below) plays Able Whitman, a troubled filmmaker losing his mind in an extraordinary way. After accidentally killing an exotic dancer, he decides to use her body parts in his newest horror picture. But when her sister (played by porn star Sasha Grey) begins investigating, Able must murder again and again to cover the crime and finish his film.

weekendny09smashcutnews

In other convention news, FRIDAY THE 13TH PART 2s Lauren-Marie Taylor has joined the 80s actress panel (hosted by filmmaker Bryan Norton), and talent for Saturdays Glass Eye Pix panel has been announced. Sharing the stage with Glass Eye producer/director Larry Fessenden will be directors Glenn McQuaid (I SELL THE DEAD), Graham Reznick (I CAN SEE YOU), James Felix McKenney (SATAN HATES YOU, HYPOTHERMIA), Jim Mickle (MULBERRY STREET, upcoming STAKE LAND) and Joe Maggio (BITTER FEAST), as well as Nick Damici (MULBERRY STREET co-scripter/star and STAKE LAND writer) and composer Jeff Grace (THE ROOST, THE HOUSE OF THE DEVIL, Travis Betzs JOSHUA). Finally, the gang behind the gory slasher flick BLOOD NIGHT: THE LEGEND OF MARY HATCHET will be setting up a major display table at the show.

Other exciting guests/programs set for Fangos Big Apple blowout include:

Guillermo del Toro: acclaimed director of HELLBOY movies, PANS LABYRINTH, BLADE II, MIMIC and CRONOS, signing copies of his first novel, the vampire epic THE STRAIN, on Friday (5 p.m.-7 p.m.). Also appearing: THE STRAIN co-author Chuck Hogan

Dario Argento: Italian maestro behind SUSPIRIA, DEEP RED, TENEBRAE, OPERA, MOTHER OF TEARS, new GIALLO and others

Tobe Hooper: director of TEXAS CHAINSAW MASSACRE, POLTERGEIST, EATEN ALIVE, SALEMS LOT, LIFEFORCE, TOOLBOX MURDERS, INVADERS FROM MARS and MASTERS OF HORROR

Doug Bradley: HELLRAISERs Pinhead, NIGHTBREED, PUMPKINHEAD: ASHES TO ASHES, PROPHECY: THE UPRISING, THE COTTAGE and new Clive Barker film BOOK OF BLOOD

James Marsters: beloved Spike from BUFFY THE VAMPIRE SLAYER and ANGEL; also from HOUSE ON HAUNTED HILL, SHADOW PUPPETS and the series SMALLVILLE and TORCHWOOD

Ashley Laurence: Kirsty Cotton from HELLRAISER, HELLBOUND: HELLRAISER II and HELLRAISER: HELLSEEKER; also appeared in LIGHTNING BUG, RED, WARLOCK III and LURKING FEAR

Michael Dougherty: writer/director of TRICK R TREAT; co-screenwriter of SUPERMAN RETURNS, X2 and URBAN LEGENDS: BLOODY MARY

LAST HOUSE ON THE LEFT reunion: with villains David Hess, Fred Lincoln, Jeramie Rain and Marc Sheffler

Herschell Gordon Lewis: Godfather of Gore and director of BLOOD FEAST, TWO THOUSAND MANIACS!, WIZARD OF GORE and many others; Lewis will conduct a special low-budget filmmaking and marketing seminar (separate admission required)

GWAR: monster metal maniacs Sleazy P. Martini, Slave, Jizmak Da Gusha and Oderus Urungus will be on hand all three days!

Tony Darrow: much-loved actor/comic from STREET TRASH, THE SOPRANOS, GOODFELLAS and LYNCH MOB, a new gangster-horror flick

Tom Savini: makeup FX legend from DAWN OF THE DEAD, MARTIN, CREEPSHOW, FRIDAY THE 13TH, MANIAC, DAY OF THE DEAD, TEXAS CHAINSAW MASSACRE 2, FRIDAY THE 13TH: THE FINAL CHAPTER and many more; also a director (1990s NIGHT OF THE LIVING DEAD) and actor (KNIGHTRIDERS, FROM DUSK TILL DAWN, GRINDHOUSE)

Larry Fessenden: director of HABIT, WENDIGO and THE LAST WINTER, previewing new Glass Eye Pix productions STAKE LAND, HYPOTHERMIA, SATAN HATES YOU, I SELL THE DEAD and THE HOUSE OF THE DEVIL

Ben Foster: star of new PANDORUM, plus 30 DAYS OF NIGHT, 3:10 TO YUMA and X-MEN: THE LAST STAND (as Angel); also appearing: co-star Cung Le, three-time world-champion martial artist

William Lustig: director of MANIAC, UNCLE SAM, VIGILANTE, HIT LIST, RELENTLESS and the MANIAC COP trilogy

Dennis Paoli: screenwriter of RE-ANIMATOR, FROM BEYOND, BODY SNATCHERS, MASTERS OF HORROR, DAGON, THE DENTIST, CASTLE FREAK, THE PIT AND THE PENDULUM and many more, conducting a screenwriting seminar (separate admission required)

OFFSPRING panel: with author/screenwriter Jack Ketchum (OFF SEASON, RED, THE GIRL NEXT DOOR, THE LOST), producer/director Andrew van den Houten (HEADSPACE, HOME MOVIE, THE GIRL NEXT DOOR), castmates Holter Graham, Vic Manetti, Ahna Tessler, Leigh Shannon, BRAINSCANs Amy Hargreaves and HEADSPACEs Pollyanna McIntosh, plus JACK BROOKS: MONSTER SLAYER composer Ryan Shore

Debbie Rochon: FANGORIA RADIO co-host and actress from THE BOG CREATURES, TROMEO & JULIET, TERROR FIRMER, NOWHERE MAN and the new SATAN HATES YOU, WALKING DISTANCE, COLOUR FROM THE DARK, HANGER and PSYCHOSOMATIKA

Marilyn Burns: actress from TEXAS CHAINSAW MASSACRE, EATEN ALIVE, FUTURE-KILL and TEXAS CHAINSAW MASSACRE: THE NEXT GENERATION

Caroline Williams: actress from TEXAS CHAINSAW MASSACRE 2, STEPFATHER II and LEPRECHAUN 3

Betsy Palmer: FRIDAY THE 13THs Mrs. Voorhees

Kane Hodder: Jason from FRIDAY THE 13TH PART VII, VIII, JASON GOES TO HELL and JASON X; also HATCHET, PRISON, B.T.K., ED GEIN: THE BUTCHER OF PLAINFIELD, FALLEN ANGELS, more

Robin Sherwood: actress from TOURIST TRAP, THE LOVE BUTCHER, DEATH WISH II and BLOW OUT

Lesleh Donaldson: Canadian actress from HAPPY BIRTHDAY TO ME, CURTAINS, DEADLY EYES, FUNERAL HOME and FRIDAY THE 13TH: THE SERIES

C.J. Graham: Jason Voorhees from FRIDAY THE 13TH PART VI: JASON LIVES and Hellcop from HIGHWAY TO HELL

Ari Lehman: FRIDAY THE 13THs first Jason

Warrington Gillette: FRIDAY THE 13TH PART 2 Jason performer

Read Article

Page (1/2) 1 2
More News