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Cinematical Seven: H.P. Lovecraft Films

Filed under: Horror », Cinematical Seven »



Howard Phillips Lovecraft (1890-1947) was an early twentieth century horror writer with a dark and unique vision. In his stories humanity was usually treated at best like a pawn in the cosmic game and a dust speck at worst, with a race of elder gods called The Old Ones threatening to return and possess the earth once again. Try to imagine repo men who are several stories tall with lots of tentacles and working on a cosmic scale. Much of his work was published in Weird Tales and other fiction magazines of the period, but his readership was limited during his relatively short lifetime. Posthumous reprints of Lovecraft's fiction eventually garnered him a larger audience, but his work has been notoriously difficult to capture on film. That hasn't stopped filmmakers from trying, though.

Re-Animator (1985)
When Fangoria magazine first printed a feature article about Re-animator prior to the film's release, they described it as a "moist zombie film." With all the blood and internal organs flying around, to say nothing of that pan full of blood in which Herbert West was keeping Dr. Hill's severed head alive, I find it hard to argue with the accuracy of the statement. This was the first of several Lovecraft adaptations from director Stuart Gordon, and probably his best. Everybody's got a roommate from hell story, but you'd be hard pressed to top Dan Cain's (Bruce Abbott) after he lets Herbert West (Jeffrey Combs) move in with him. Both are med students at Miskatonic University, an institution that pops up many times in Lovecraft's work. West has just returned from Austria where he was working on a process of reanimating the dead. West and Miskatonic's Dr. Hill (David Gale) take an immediate dislike to one another, resulting in the good Doctor quite literally losing his head. The scenes of a reanimated Hill toting around his own severed noggin are not always convincing, but they're hard to forget. The film strays pretty far from the source material in both the details and the use of humor (if Lovecraft himself had a sense of humor, I don't recall ever seeing it on display in his fiction), but this remains one of the greatest horror films of all time.

Stuart Gordon Aims to Get Stuck

Filed under: Horror », Independent », Thrillers », Cinematical Indie »

It only takes one true-blue classic for the horror fans to embrace a filmmaker -- just ask Sean Cunningham -- but in the case of Mr. Stuart Gordon, we have a solid handful of goodies to choose from. Yep, 1985's Re-Animator is the guy's big hitter, obviously, but over the years Mr. G has turned out some fairly entertaining pieces of genre, most notably From Beyond (1986), Fortress (1993) and Dagon (2001). The Chicago-bred filmmaker recently gave William H. Macy some great opportunities in a big-screen adaptation of David Mamet's Edmond -- and now it looks like it's back to the horror scene for Stu.

Gordon's next film will be a thriller called Stuck, and it's about the terror that pursues a woman after she stupidly bails from the scene of a nasty hit & run accident. The director will be co-writing Stuck, which is reportedly based on actual events, with a guy named John Strysik, who once wrote a truly awful horror flick called Deathbed ... for producer Stuart Gordon.

Stuck begins production in New Brunswick next week. We'll let you know if any cool casting news hits the 'net. And there's been no new word on Gordon's apparent involvement in House of Re-Animator, but I have my fingers crossed.

Stuart Gordon is Back From Beyond

Filed under: Horror », Sci-Fi & Fantasy », Fandom », Home Entertainment »

Like any young movie geek who was madly in love with Stuart Gordon's Re-Animator, I was eagerly anticipating his follow-up, From Beyond, when it first debuted on VHS. And the result ... let's just say that I loved the gore, but I didn't "get" the plot. (Hey, I was 14.) And since the flick has yet to be released on DVD, I haven't been able to give it the second chance it obviously deserves. But get this: On June 10th, a network (I don't have) called Monsters HD will be presenting a fully-remastered and extra-splattery Director's Cut of From Beyond. Cool! That means a DVD can't be far behind!

This news has been percolating at the horror sites for quite some time, but hey, June 10th is next week, right? Go check your cable or satellite listings to see if you get Monsters HD. (Then be sure to record the flick and send me a copy!) In the meantime, here's a trailer for the Director's Cut presentation, and if your cubicle resides next to someone who can't stand goopy monsters with forehead tentacles, then it's probably not work-safe.

Based on the short story by H.P. Lovecraft, and starring the likes of Jeffrey Combs, Ken Foree, and Barbara Crampton, From Beyond was not the smash-success follow-up that Re-Animator could have yielded, but there's a large legion of gorehounds who dig it all the same.

New On DVD - Delicatessen, The Family Stone, Last Holiday

Filed under: New Releases », DVD Reviews », New on DVD », Home Entertainment », Columns »



  • The Call Of Cthulhu - The H.P. Lovecraft Preservation Society, a group of dauntless fans that created the brilliant, Cthulhu-themed musical, A Shoggoth On The Roof, have created the ultimate fan film, an incredible tribute to the writer whose work seeded modern horror favorites like Re-Animator and From Beyond. Shot like a 1920's era silent film, the 47-minute feature is technically amazing, shot (in black-and-white), lit and performed like an authentic film of the period would have been (although it would have horrified people of the time right into Arkham Sanitarium.) Considered Lovecraft's most famous story, the story of a man who inherits a collection of documents detailing the ghastly Cthulhu Cult, it is very faithfully adapted, not to mention super-efficient. The title cards are in the viewer's choice of an astonishing 24 different languages, and the lush, symphonic score can be played in hi-fi and the kitschy-fun, lo-fi "Mythoscope". A skillful build and an extremely satisfying payoff (think creature design King Kong '33 style) add up to one of the smartest horror films of recent memory.

Cinematical Seven: '80s Horror Flicks STILL Not on DVD

Filed under: Horror », Sci-Fi & Fantasy », Cinematical Seven »


Did you guys know that Jack Arnold's The Incredible Shrinking Man (1957) has never been released on DVD? That's right: One of the most imaginative, intelligent, and thought-provoking science fiction films of all time (yes, I said all time) is still sitting in some vault collecting dust, while genre contemporaries like Invasion of the Body Snatchers, War of the Worlds, and The Day the Earth Stood Still have all hit DVD sporting all sorts of well-deserved bells & whistles. Directed by Black Lagoon's Jack Arnold and penned by certified ultra-genius Richard Matheson, The Incredible Shrinking Man stands as one of the most influential movies in the history of Weinberg. Plus all that stuff with the cat, the spider, and the dollhouse ... awesome.

So this got me to thinking about other movies that I loved as a kid, most of which (stuff like 1941 and Jaws 2 and The Goonies) already have a home on a special little DVD shelf all their own -- but SOME of which have never seen life as a shiny digital disc! For example, how is it that we can get 11 different versions of (the truly awesome) Evil Dead 2 -- yet The Incredible freakin' Shrinking Man remains DVD MIA?? I actually have a theory on this one: Universal owns the rights to Shrinking Man, and that studio has spent several years trying to cobble together a remake with Keenen Ivory Wayans as the director. One can only assume that Uni is waiting for that retread to bear box office fruit before releasing the original film on DVD as a "tie-in," which (obviously) annoys me to no end.

So listed below in this most recent edition of Cinematical Seven are a bunch of semi-obscure 1980s horror movies that I'd really like to see on DVD. Why switch over from The Incredible Shrinking Man to the generally unpleasant topic of "forgotten 1980s horror movies?" Because a wise man once said "write what you know," and I know very, very little outside the realm of 1980s horror movies. (OK, and Futurama and Halo ... and The Phillies. I know a lot about those things, too.)
 
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