Showing posts with label wes craven. Show all posts
Showing posts with label wes craven. Show all posts


Image Entertainment recently announced the upcoming Blu-Ray release of "Never Sleep Again: The Elm Street Legacy". The film features exclusive interviews with over 100 key cast and crew from every Nightmare, including creator Wes Craven and Robert Englund (“Freddy Krueger”).

Special Features on the Blu-Ray includes, Extended Interviews, First Look: Heather Langenkamp's "I Am Nancy", For the Love of the Glove, Fred Heads: The Ultimate Freddy Fans, Horror's Hallowed Grounds: Return to Elm Street, Freddy vs. The Angry Video Game Nerd, Expanding the Video Game Universe: Freddy in Comic Books and Novels, The Music of the Nightmare: Conversations with Composers and Songwriters, Elm Street's Poster Boy: The Art of Matthew Joseph Peak, A Nightmare on Elm Street in 10 Minutes and Never Sleep Again: The Elm Street Legacy Teaser Trailer. "Nightmare on Elm Street" "Never Sleep Again: The Elm Street Legacy" hits blu-ray on 1/21/2014.

Press Release:

Image Entertainment, an RLJ Entertainment (NASDAQ: RLJE) brand, announces Never Sleep Again: The Elm Street Legacy,a “shockumentary” highlighting the horrifying history of Freddy Krueger, on Blu-ray for the very first time.

Featuring exclusive interviews with over 100 key cast and crew from every Nightmare, including creator Wes Craven and Robert Englund (“Freddy Krueger”), Never Sleep Again: The Elm Street Legacy will be available as a 2-Disc Collector’s Edition Blu-ray January 21, 2014 for an SRP of $29.98.

Murderer. Dream Demon. The bastard son of a hundred maniacs. Any way you slice it, there can only be one man – one monster – who epitomizes those words: Freddy Krueger. For decades, he has slashed his way through the dreams of countless youngsters and shows no signs of ever resting in peace. A Nightmare on Elm Street star Heather Langenkamp is your dream guide in this thrilling “shockumentary” that takes you deeper into Freddy’s realm than ever before, featuring exciting clips, never-before-seen photos, behind-the-scenes footage, conceptual art, publicity materials and exclusive interviews with over 100 key cast and crew from every Nightmare, including Wes Craven, Robert Englund, Heather Langenkamp, Jack Sholder, Mark Patton, Kim Myers, Chuck Russell, Jennifer Rubin, Renny Harlin, Lisa Wilcox, Tuesday Knight, Stephen Hopkins, Kelly Jo Minter, Rachel Talalay, Lisa Zane, Alice Cooper, Patrick Lussier, Miko Hughes, Monica Keena, Brendan Fletcher, Ronny Yu and many more. So get ready for Freddy in the definitive account of modern cinema’s eternal bogeyman and what has been called the most frightening and imaginative horror franchise in motion picture history!

Numerous Special Features Also Included

· Extended Interviews

· First Look: Heather Langenkamp's "I Am Nancy"

· For the Love of the Glove

· Fred Heads: The Ultimate Freddy Fans

· Horror's Hallowed Grounds: Return to Elm Street

· Freddy vs. The Angry Video Game Nerd

· Expanding the Video Game Universe: Freddy in Comic Books and Novels

· The Music of the Nightmare: Conversations with Composers and Songwriters

· Elm Street's Poster Boy: The Art of Matthew Joseph Peak

· A Nightmare on Elm Street in 10 Minutes

· Never Sleep Again: The Elm Street Legacy Teaser Trailer

Honestly, we needed another “Scream” movie. Since the original was released back in 1996 (OMG!), we have had dozens upon dozens of horror movies thrust at us. Many of them had clear skinned teenage stars and were given PG-13 ratings which after awhile indicated that the horror was of a much defanged quality. This is not to mention “Saw” and all its endless barrage of sequels, each one more logistically impossible than the last. Horror went at times from being laughingly lame to hardcore bloody, but they could never top what Asian or Japanese movies achieved. However you look at it, we needed Wes Craven and Kevin Williamson more than ever to give us their take on the evolving rules of a horror movie.


But how much has really changed? In the 80’s, we had “Friday The 13th” and its endless number of sequels, and there are other series that deal with this same dilemma out of greed. Each generation has its ongoing horror franchise along with the occasional “remake” or “reboot.” When you look at movies from decade to decade, you begin to realize that the more things change, the more they stay the same. That’s even the case with “Scream 4” which while having a strong level of suspense, also has a weariness about it. In the process of dealing with a new generation of horror and its rabid fans, it feels more and more like the ones that came before it.



So the whole gang is back along with Wes Craven, and that includes screenwriter Kevin Williamson (sorely missed on “Scream 3”) and composer Marco Beltrami. Neve Campbell returns as Sidney Prescott who arrives back in her hometown of Woodsboro to promote her new self-help book, and she is reunited with her friends Dewey (David Arquette) who is now the Sheriff in this town, and Gayle (Courtney Cox) who has long since gotten married to him and retired from tabloid journalism. And then of course, the Ghostface killings start up again. You’d think the killer might be more imaginative and use another mask, but horror sequels are not heavy on originality, are they?



This time though, the focus of the killer’s rage appears to be on Sidney’s cousin Jill (Emma Roberts), and it also puts her best friends Kirby (Hayden Panettiere) and Olivia (Marielle Jaffe) in the crossfire. Ghostface’s priority killings involve teenagers, but after awhile he (or she) proves to be indiscriminate as adults are easy targets as well. Oh yeah, Jill has an ex-boyfriend named Trevor (Nico Tortorella) who still wants to be a part of her life regardless of the fact she wants nothing to do with him. Any of this sounds familiar?



With “Scream 4,” the chief thing to expect is to expect the unexpected, just like with any Peter Gabriel album that comes out. I do have to hand it to Wes Craven and Kevin Williamson though because even after a decade, they still leave us guessing throughout who’s the real culprit (or if there is more than one) and of what will happen next. The movie moves along fairly swiftly to where you really have no time to examine the logistics of all that is going on. I imagine you could punch a few holes in the plot, but only after you have seen it. I also got a huge kick out of the beginning which plays on the reality of what we are seeing on top of the monotony of a franchise that like Michael Meyers just won’t die.



But it’s also the inescapable problem with this sequel; we have gotten so used to expecting the unexpected to where while there is tension, the whole thing is not as scary as it used to be. I kept waiting for “Scream 4” to get seriously scary, but it never really happened. Even the moments designed to make us jump up out of our seats aren’t as effective as they were previously. The first “Scream” was more than just a simple satire of the horror genre, but a movie going experience that was more intense than we expected it to be at the time. This one could have been more so in retrospect.



It is nice to see Neve Campbell, David Arquette, and Courtney Cox back as the infamous characters they portrayed in the preceding trilogy. I kind of expected Neve to be this Ellen Ripley/Paul Kersey character by now, so used to seeing people and those closest to her get killed off in brutal fashion that she now desires to bring her own brand of vigilante justice to whatever nemesis chooses to cross the Prescott path. Perhaps her character could have used a bit more of that as Neve does look a bit worn out from all those sharp pointed knives that always get pointed in her direction. Running from a demented killer is nothing new for her.



Of all the veterans, Courtney Cox shines the most as we watch her character emerge from another desperate housewife to someone who is desperate overcome an unwelcome writer’s block. Seeing Gayle Weathers get back to her bitchy self is fun to watch. In the other movies you hated her for it, but knowing Gayle for this long makes you long for its inevitable return. As a result, it gives this sequel much of its bite.



In regards to the newcomers, they are more or less designed to be types, and part of me wished they existed a bit beyond that. Emma Roberts is fun to watch as Jill Roberts, but she gets the show stolen from her by “Heroes” star Hayden Panettiere whose character of Kirby is part tease, part sharp retort, and part movie geek more than she would openly admit. She’s got a lot of sass about her that reminds me of some of the girls I couldn’t stand from high school, and of the heart underneath them which I never noticed as much as I should have.



It’s also nice to see Rory Culkin here, having made a strong impression in movies like “You Can Count On Me,” “Mean Creek,” and “Signs.” As Charlie Walker, he represents the chief movie geek that Jamie Kennedy was in the first two “Scream” movies. Charlie is not exactly a geek nor is he exactly one of the cool guys. In the end, he’s kind of in between that like most people I know. Rory is truly one of the perfect actors to play someone very knowledgeable about movies in general, and he gives this film some of its more satirical moments.



When all is said and done though, I still came out of “Scream 4” feeling a little weary. I didn’t dislike it, and it did keep me interested throughout to where I wasn’t looking at my watch to see how much time was left before the movie was over. Really, it could have been a lot worse than it was. But in the process of creating a new formula for horror movies, it ends up getting caught in the clichés of them all. Also, I felt it could have gotten much more satirical in examining the endless films that came out in the wake of its success. This franchise was incredibly influential, and we continue to realize this with the passing years.



After all this talk, I still am open to seeing a “Scream 5.” Whatever problems this particular sequel has, I believe and hope they can be compensated for in the future. And like I said, we always need movies like “Scream” because the horror genre will constantly be its own worst enemy even with its unending successes. As it was described before, the more things change, the more they stay the same.



* * ½ out of * * * *

Welcome to Trailer Friday. In this edition, it's all Horror. With october upon us, this edition has three trailers for films that all come out in October. In addition to that, I'm adding a retro trailer to this column to give some nostalgic feel to it. I'll explain more when we get there. Enjoy.


"Let Me In": Official Trailer


Trailer Courtesy of Overture Films

Chloe Moretz (Hit Girl from Kick-Ass) stars as Abby, a mysterious 12-year old girl, who moves next door to Owen (Kodi Smit-McPhee, The Road). Owen is a social outcast who is viciously bullied at school and in his loneliness, forms a profound bond with his new neighbor. Owen can't help noticing that Abby is like no one he has ever met before. As a string of grisly murders occupy the town, Owen has to confront the reality that this seemingly innocent girl is really a savage vampire.

Let Me In, a haunting and provocative thriller written and directed by filmmaker Matt Reeves (Cloverfield) and produced by legendary British horror brand Hammer Films, is based on the best-selling Swedish novel Lat den Ratte Komma (Let The Right One In) by John Ajvide Lindqvist, and the highly-acclaimed film of the same name.

"Let Me In" hits theaters on October 1st.

"My Soul to Take": Official Trailer


Trailer Courtesy of Universal Pictures

The first 3D movie from horror legend, Wes Craven. A serial killer returns to his hometown to stalk seven children who share the same birthday as the date he was allegedly put to rest.

"My Soul to Take" hits theaters on October 8th

"Saw 3D": Official Trailer


Trailer Courtesy of Lionsgate

This October, one of the biggest, most successful horror franchises in movie history arrives in theaters in vivid, chilling 3-D with the release of Lionsgate's SAW 3D.

As a deadly battle rages over Jigsaw's brutal legacy, a group of Jigsaw survivors gathers to seek the support of self-help guru and fellow survivor Bobby Dagen, a man whose own dark secrets unleash a new wave of terror...

'Saw 3D" hits theaters on October 29th.

This is a new segment called "Retro Trailer". It can deal with certain themes pertaining to a movie in this column, or it can be used as a tribute to a passed away star or I can just randomly pick I trailer for a film, which I think is underrated. Now on to our Retro Trailer.

"Let the Right One In"


Trailer courtesy of Magnet Releasing

With the american version, known as "Let Me In" coming out on October 1st, I came across the official trailer for the original known as "Let the Right One In". It was released by Magnet Releasing as part of it's Six Shooter series in 2008 and manage to make to 2.1 million dollars in limited release in the USA. Enjoy.

Famed horror director Wes Craven made a special appearance last Sunday (March 29, 2009) at the Aero Theater in Santa Monica for a special showing of the original “A Nightmare on Elm Street.” This horror classic is now at its 25th anniversary, having been released back in 1984 by then fledging distributor New Line Cinema. Still, this particular showing brought a sell out crowd to the small theater which has previously done Q&A sessions with filmmakers like John Carpenter and Savage Steve Holland. This showing was different though. Wes ended up doing a live commentary of the film as it showed on the screen, and it was moderated by Mick Garris, another horror film director who did many of the Stephen King miniseries including “The Stand,” and who later created “Masters of Horror” (which has since morphed into “Fear Itself”).



Mick started off the live commentary by saying what everyone says these days:



“I hate those people who talk through the movie!”



Even though many of us have gotten so used to watching a movie on DVD with the commentary on, this was rather disorienting an experience at first because we had a hard time dividing our attention between what Wes and Mick were saying, and of the movie itself. Further compounding this problem was the fact that the print of the movie was in astonishingly pristine condition. Even Wes and Mick were blown away at the quality of the print and of the fact that there was not a single scratch on it. Their compliments to the house for getting this spectacular print were echoed by the applause of the sold out audience.



Mick started off with the question that Wes must get every other day when he is shopping for groceries:



“Where did you get the idea for this movie?”



Laughingly, Mr. Craven said that the idea for “A Nightmare on Elm Street” came about when he was watching late night television, and a story came on regarding a young man who had recently died after experiencing some horrible nightmares. This led to a series of articles in the Los Angeles Times regarding the case, and of how the boy told everyone that there was a man inside of his dream who was trying to kill him. His father, also a doctor, kept giving him sleeping pills to help him rest more easily. When police found the boy’s lifeless body, they found underneath his bed all the sleeping pills his father had given him. He never took a single one.



Wes said that it was also inspired by a dream sequence he did in the original “Last House On The Left.” The character of Weasel has this nightmare where he is strapped down on an operating table with the parents of one of the victims hovering right above him in hospital gowns. The husband ends up taking a hammer and a chisel, and he places the chisel right on Weasel’s front teeth. The hammer comes down with a thrashing blow, and Weasel suddenly wakes up and realizes it was all a dream. Craven said that when people talk to him about this movie, it is always that scene they bring up which astonishes him. Turns out it stayed with him to the point where someone suggested he make a movie out of a dream. Guess what happened next?



Wes also made it clear to an audience member that his movie was not at all inspired by any specific episode of “The Twilight Zone.”



With “A Nightmare on Elm Street,” Wes said that he was trying to establish the world of dreams as he finds them (as we all do) endlessly fascinating. Throughout the movie, he discussed the subject of dreams at length and talked about how they had no rules to them. Dreams seem to revolve around the violence and darkness we experience in the world either through the news or firsthand, and Wes talked about how they seep into our subconscious all the time. Wes soon remarked:



“If we were ever fully conscious of all the bad things that were happening to us, it would be too painful for us to handle.”



Wes said that when he took his script for the movie to every studio in Hollywood, they all rejected it because they sounded ridiculous. But even as he got more and more broke, Wes kept shopping it around until he met Robert Shaye, the head of New Line Cinema, at a party in New York. Back then, New Line Cinema basically existed as a storefront in downtown New York, and it would have gone bankrupt had this movie not been so successful. Indeed, New Line Cinema was forever known as the house Freddy built.



Craven later talked about how he didn’t know much about signing contracts at the time when he signed with Bob Shaye to make the movie with New Line Cinema. Since he was already so broke and filled with doubt of what he could do, he felt he had no choice but to sign the contract given to him. What he thought would be a 50-50 situation turned out to not be the case, and from that point on, New Line Cinema owned the movie and Freddy Krueger. I had read somewhere in the paper once that while the “Nightmare on Elm Street” movies had made over $200 million dollars, Wes Craven himself had only made about $200,000 off of the whole thing. The realization of this brought forth many hisses from the audience, and it now seems that Shaye and his partners at New Line got some karmic justice when their studio went belly up and was absorbed by its owner, Warner Brothers.



However, Wes did point out that when he was asked to make another “Nightmare” movie (which turned out to be “Wes Craven’s New Nightmare”), he asked that he be allowed some profit participation in the franchise that he did not previously have. Robert Shaye later told Wes that he agreed that he was not treated fairly, and the deal between him and New Line was eventually restructured to where Bob finally did right by him. Justice did indeed finally prevail for Mr. Craven!



Mick Garris said that this movie had an “amazing cast for a genre film,” and he asked Wes how he went about casting the film. With “A Nightmare on Elm Street,” Wes said he went about looking for actors who didn’t have a lot of acting credits to their name in the hope of getting people who acted more naturally. This was actually Johnny Depp’s very first movie, and Craven recalled how exceedingly nervous Depp was throughout the shoot. At one point during the making of the film, Depp managed to get his friend at the time to help him out, and his friend eventually got cast as one of the coroners who are brought in to recover the corpse of Depp’s character, Glynn.



Of all the young actors in this film, the most experienced of the bunch was Amanda Wyss who played Tina. Amanda also starred in “Better Off Dead” as the girlfriend who thoughtlessly breaks John Cusack’s heart.



In casting Heather Langenkamp as Nancy, the one teenager who fights back at Freddy, Wes said that he chose her because she was basically “solid peasant stock” (the audience was shocked at this description), and that she looked like an “every woman.” This was what Wes wanted for this part, and Heather turned in an excellent performance playing a character that everyone could relate to. Nancy Thompson was also the first of many examples of strong female types Wes would utilize in his movies. Not many films of the time had this kind of heroic female character. This changed significantly after Sigourney Weaver’s Oscar nominated performance in “Aliens” which came out two years later.



Mick Garris later asked how Wes came about creating Fred Krueger, and of where this character came from. Wes said the character came about when he came across this homeless guy with a bowler hat, shuffling his way slowly down the sidewalk, his face a mask of nasty scars. It creeped Craven out a lot, and this stayed with him long after this man had vanished. The name Fred came from a kid who Wes said used to beat him up at school. However, Wes said he later got his revenge on Fred with the help of a bayonet. Krueger was at one time going to based on a janitor Craven remembered from school which frightened him and his classmates. Wes was also adamant that Freddy not have a mask since that had already been done to death in the “Halloween” and “Friday The 13th” movies.



Krueger was originally envisioned as an older man, but that changed when Robert Englund came in to read for the part. Unlike many other actors who were reluctant to portray such a dark and evil character, Robert was not intimidated by it, and he was willing to be serious with the material. Wes said that Robert took a delight in playing Freddy Krueger, and that Robert soon convinced him that Fred did not have to be an old man in order for the character to work. When an audience member asked if there was some sort of sound device or technique used to make Freddy’s voice sound deeper, Wes replied:



“Robert’s voice was all Robert’s.”



Of course, much was also said about the making of “A Nightmare on Elm Street,” and this involved a lot of stuff that was previously mentioned in the DVD commentaries. The budget for the movie was around $1.8 million, but a big chunk of the financing fell through two weeks into the shoot, putting the cast and crew in a position to where they would not get paid. But once Bob Shaye explained the situation to them all, not one crew member left the set. When “A Nightmare on Elm Street” did finally open, it earned back its entire $1.8 million budget in one weekend.



Craven also described how \ the special effects were created and what inspired them. During the scene where Nancy falls asleep in her high school English class and sees Tina in her body bag calling out to her, the trail Tina leaves behind her as she is dragged down the hall was inspired by the slime trails left by snails. This brought a rather hilariously disgusted reaction from the audience, but this made sense the more we thought about it.



When Nancy gets stuck on the stairs while trying to escape Freddy, the goo she steps in was actually oatmeal. You could also see the spots on the stairs where her feet were supposed to go. Still, I remembered it being a very terrifying effect when I saw it for the first time while hiding behind the door to the family room while my brother and his friends were watching.



In the scene where that centipede comes out of Tina’s mouth, it apparently got lost on the set and the bug wranglers couldn’t find it. When the crew broke for lunch, none of them came back. Can you blame them?



When Nancy cornered Freddy in the downstairs basement and set him on fire, the man doing the immolated stunt was Craven’s racquetball partner. How Wes got this guy to do the most dangerous of stunts is beyond me. This man must have lost a bet or something, or maybe it was Craven’s revenge for beating him once too often.



Before Nancy fights Krueger for the last time, and we get the montage of her setting up all the traps to take him down, the book she uses to construct these devices was actually a World War II manual on booby trapping.



Wes also brought up the constant fights he had with the conservative vultures that make up the Motion Picture Association of America (the MPAA). When Tina’s bloody body after being dragged over the ceiling is dropped on the bed, the splash of blood when she landed was quite enormous. This did not please the MPAA who asked him to cut down the scene some in order to avoid an X (now NC-17) rating. Wes recalled these experiences to be both very painful and never ending for him in just about every film he made (“Music Of The Heart” might have been an exception).



This fight with the MPAA continued on when he directed “Scream,” and he was baffled that none of them realized that it was a satire. They suggested that the third act of the movie be completely cut, and this illustrates one of the many horrendously suggestions the MPAA comes up with when they judiciously give ratings. Keep in mind; this is the same body of people who decided to reduce the rating for “Norbit” from an R to PG-13.



One audience member asked Wes why he used teenagers instead of adults in the movie. Wes answered the question very simply:



“Adults would never have watched it.”



Even in this day and age, horror movies generally appeal to teenagers for the most part, and they represented one of the things for kids to embrace that their parents cannot stand.



One of the funniest moments of the evening was during the scene where Freddy attacks Nancy’s mother, and how her burnt corpse ends up descending into the mattress beneath her. Wes didn’t even try to hide the fact that this was “one of the least successful special effects in the movie.” Regarding John Saxon’s expression in the scene, Wes said:



“John’s not upset that his wife just died, it was the special effects of the scene that tore him up!”



Charles Bernstein, the movie’s composer, was also talked about, and Wes praised the work he did on the score. Bernstein did indeed manage to create one of the most memorable horror film scores with very little money. Wes said that he himself wrote the “1, 2, Freddy’s coming for you” poem made famous by the movie, and Charles put music to the poem and took it from there.



As the evening went on, we got to know Wes Craven more as a person as well as a filmmaker. In regards to his career as a horror film director, Wes told Mick Garris that it was all “a roll of the dice.” When Sean S. Cunningham, who he is good friends with, asked Wes to make “Last House On The Left,” Wes told him:



“I don’t know anything about making a scary movie.”



It turns out that Wes was not actually allowed to see movies when he was very young, and it was not until much later in life that he finally got the nerve to sneak out of his parents’ home to check one out. He credits the movie version of “To Kill A Mockingbird” as the movie that changed his life, and stated that the original “Texas Chainsaw Massacre” frightened him to death and left him in an unnerved state for months after. But even after he had kids of his own, Wes said that he never really changed as a director or in the kind of films he directed. Even his later movies like “The Serpent and the Rainbow” and “Shocker” among others have an extreme violence in them that makes them more visceral than many other genre movies released at the time.



Also, he said that when a movie his opens up in theaters, he always gets out of town as soon as possible. Life can get very miserable if your movie turns out to really suck, he said. When Mick asked Wes if he ever had a chance to see this movie when it opened with an audience and of how they reacted, Wes made it clear that he HATES watching his movies in a theater because he is usually driven mad by the problems with sound and projection in whatever movie he sees them in.



Throughout the evening, there was never any doubt that Wes Craven came across as an extremely intelligent filmmaker and human being. To hear him talk about the themes embedded in “A Nightmare on Elm Street” as well as the importance of horror movies in today’s society made this live commentary all the more fascinating. Freddy Krueger became so popular with audiences because the bad guys are always more interesting than the good guys. Another way of looking at this is of how the devil is much more interesting than god because he is not bound by any moral obligations, and there is no rule that he is not willing to break.



The way Wes Craven sees it, horror is good for you in that it forces you to deal with the chaotic. While other filmmakers are busy making “torture porn” movies (of which Craven said he is not a fan of), Wes said that he never tries to make horror look cool. Eventually, we all have to deal with the chaos of life, and we cannot spend the rest of our lives hiding away from reality. If you watch the local or national news on television, violence surrounds us all in our everyday lives, and it gets deeply rooted in our subconscious mind. Horror films are affected by current events of the time they were filmed. “Texas Chainsaw Massacre” was a reflection of sorts on the Vietnam war, and “Night of the Living Dead” took on a bigger meaning when Martin Luther King, Jr. was assassinated.



One of the best points that Wes made that evening was that if you don’t know what darkness is inside of you and you turn a blind eye to it, then you are in deep trouble. You cannot hide away from your dark side, and you need to be fully aware of what extremes people will go to in order to survive.



In the end, that’s what makes Heather Langenkamp’s character of Nancy Thompson so brave; she is the only in the film dealing with reality. This is in direct contrast to Nancy’s mother, Marge (Ronee Blakley), an alcoholic who hides vodka bottles in various parts of the house. She also becomes overly protective of her daughter by gets metal bars put up on the doors and windows to their house. Her way of dealing with reality is not healthy to say the least, and it is endemic of the other characters as well because that they are all trying to avoid reality except for Nancy. But in the end, the kids need to know that they have allies in their parents, and Nancy manages to find one in her father, even if it is much later in the film when this happens.



“A Nightmare on Elm Street” holds up very well despite the dated styles and special effects. Mick Garris said that he loves how everything continually builds up in the movie, and of how there is an increasing sense of dread in the air throughout. It taps into the terrifying dreams we all had when we were young and scared to death of the monsters we thought were hiding under our beds. This is one of the reasons why this particular horror movie remains strong to this day; it deals with the never ending fascination we have with dreams, and the movie creates a world for them to exist where anything can happen.



Many of Wes Craven’s movies have been inspired by dreams of his (“The People Under The Stairs” was inspired by one of them), but none of them will be able to outdo this one, the mother of all nightmares. While Platinum Dunes production company headed by Michael Bay (the ones behind the bland reboot of “Friday the 13th”) is getting ready to shoot their unnecessary remake of this movie, “A Nightmare on Elm Street” will remain one of the best of its kind no matter what happens. Made back in a time where genre films were allowed to be imaginative, it continues to put current slate of horror movies to shame.



“To avoid fainting, keep repeating:
It’s only a movie…
Only a movie…
Only a movie…
Only a movie…”
-from the trailer to the movie

Exploitation movies, or “video nasties” as they are called in some countries, have a power that most movies do not have (certainly not in today’s film market). They shock even the most jaded and seasoned of movie fanatics, and they burn into your subconscious in a way that cannot be undone. I have read a lot on Wes Craven’s “Last House On Left” and of the impact it had when it was first came out. I never bothered watching it for the longest time, but I guess it was inevitable that I would watch it years later. Like Gaspar Noe’s “Irreversible,” it’s a movie that I was bound to see at some point. Many would prefer to stay far away from movies like this, but I don’t want to be like everyone else. I don’t want to be put off from watching a movie just because it shocks more than half of the world. Who am I to talk or criticize a particular movie if I have not seen it for myself?

“The Last House On The Left” is Wes Craven’s debut as a director, and he made it with future “Friday The 13th” director Sean S. Cunningham on an extremely low budget. While many of Craven’s later movies deal with horror on a fantasy level like “A Nightmare On Elm Street” among other films of his, the horror of “Last House On The Left” is all too real. It deals with real people and real situations that could happen to anyone of us. It was made back in 1972, and it still has the power to completely unnerve anyone who witnesses it. Even though I knew that I has a pretty good idea of what was going to happen, it is still shocked me more than I thought it would. And like many horror movies of the past, it is going to be remade and released in theaters in 2009 dammit.

To dismiss “The Last House On The Left” as pure exploitation is much too easy. There is violence, naked bodies, and a lot of blood and gore, but there is more going on here than that. What most people fail to see in many of Wes Craven’s movies are the thoughts behind the stories and characters. Throughout his long career, he has made movies that work on an intellectual level as well as a visceral one, and this one is no exception. Wes has said that he made this movie in response to the Vietnam War which was going on at the time. I can certainly see that, but I think it also deals with the death of the 1960’s as well as the total loss and destruction of innocence.

Around this time, the Manson family had committed those heinous murders in Hollywood, and whose victims included Sharon Tate, then Roman Polanski’s wife. The film deals with humanity at its most depraved and animalistic, and how no one can ever go back to who they once were. Everything is changed when the movie is over, and so are we having watched it.

Those familiar with the movie knows that the basic story is somewhat inspired by Ingmar Bergman’s film “Virgin Spring,” and it follows two teenage girls, Mari and Phyllis, as they head into the city to go to a concert. While in town, they decide to score some grass and go to a total stranger (most people would know better) who ends up leading him back to his place. It turns out that at his place are a couple of escaped convicts and their girlfriend who then proceed to torture the two girls to their last dying breath. You can see why the tagline of the movie fit this movie brilliantly. You have to keep reminding yourself that is only a movie, but that becomes challenging because what happens is all too real.

As this twisted family of psychos proceeds to rape and torture the two girls in the woods right near one of them lives, it is intercut with scenes of one of the girl’s parents preparing a birthday party for her and baking her cake. There is an innocence with the scenes with the parents that makes the scenes of sheer brutality all the more uncomfortably raw to sit through. You don’t watch a movie like “The Last House On The Left” as much as you experience it. It’s not a jump out of your seat horror film, although there are a few moments that qualify. Movies don’t get more bleak or brutal than this one does.

Once the group has finished their dirty work, their car breaks down and they end up staying as guests of the husband and wife of one of the girls they just murdered. The two of them just welcome these people in, not knowing who they are mind you, so that they don’t have to walk all the way into town. They even take the time to make dinner for these psychotic bastards and give them wine to drink. You would never ever see that happening today, ever. I guess it was the custom of people in the 60’s to be hospitable to total strangers. You know how that famous song from that decade goes:

“C’mon people now, smile on your brother, everybody get together, try and love one another right now.”

“My parents are always telling me how cool the 60’s were. Well, look at where the 60’s got them!”
-Christian Slater in “Pump Up The Volume”

During the course of that evening, the wife discovers a necklace and of their guest’s necks, and it is the same one she and her husband gave their daughter Mari before she went off with her friend Phyllis. This soon leads her to her discovering bloody clothes in one of their suitcases, and soon she and her husband are rushing off to the lake where they find their daughter dead. From thereon out, they both plot their bloody revenge against their guests, and the movie then heads straight into its viciously ultra violent conclusion.

To watch a movie like “The Last House On The Left” is to witness how thoughtlessly brutal human nature can be. You have to wonder what could make something do something so utterly evil like forever rob a young girl of her virtue and innocence. What brings someone to sink so low into the realm of all that is evil? The more I think about this movie after having watched it, I can see how Craven was illustrating his emotional response to the war in Vietnam. We had basically gone into that country and raped it without too much thought of what would happen to us, and that conflict bled deeply into our country and on our own soil. This has been covered in many movies dealing with Vietnam and other wars we fought. Brian DePalma dealt with the destruction of a country from afar by illustrating it through the rape of a foreigner in movies like “Casualties Of War” and last year’s “Redacted.”

You have to give the actors a lot of credit here. They don’t so much act their parts as much as they inhabit to the point where they must have been completely traumatized by their experience just making this movie. Medals of valor should be given out to both Sandra Cassell who plays Mari, and Lucy Grantham who plays Phyllis as they are forced to suffer indignities than none of us would wish on another human being. They are beaten, humiliated, stripped naked and violated in the worst ways imaginable. What happens to Mari is the toughest part of the movie to endure. We see her all innocent and sexy at the start of the movie, and when she is violated by one of the psychotic bastards, we feel violated as well. When she walks into the river as if in a trance, we see the death and destruction of innocence personified through her.

But it’s not just the girls who die, the killers (at the moment they shoot Mari dead) also die inside. There is a perverse ecstasy they take in degrading their hostages, but killing them off leaves them with nothing inside. All feeling dies within these people, and they never come back to who they were. They don’t really deserve to anyway. In retrospect, that stood out as one of the most interesting moments of “The Last House On The Left,” seeing these reaction this group has after they have killed off the two girls. The blank looks on their faces is a haunting image, and one you won’t be able to get out of your head.

I have to tell you, David Hess gives one of the most evil mofos the movie world has ever seen with his performance as Krug Stillo. There is no single redeeming feature to this man, and he sinks even deeper into a moral black hole when you realize he controls his son by hooking him on heroin. Hess also did the music score for this movie, and to put it mildly, it is utterly bizarre. It would seem almost totally out of place in a movie like this if it did not help illustrate the feeling the 60’s had for people before it is laid waste by the movie’s brutal conclusion.

One other important thing to note about “The Last House On The Left” is that this is not your cheer on the good guys as they get back at the bad guys movie. When the parents get their revenge, there is no joy to be taken in it. The violence in the movie feels so real that at the end, you are as emotionally drained as this married couple is. Many people complain about the unspeakable violence in this movie, but then they go out to see the big action movie playing at theaters like “Rambo” which featured dozens of exploding limbs and other body parts. Not that there’s anything wrong with that, heck I like those movies as well. But it is hypocritical to get furious at one violent movie while excusing another equally violent movie. The only real difference is the level of realism, and “The Last House On The Left” has it in spades. You can tell “Rambo” is a movie, but you have to remind yourself that this one is.

It’s amazing that Wes Craven and Sean Cunningham managed to make such an infamous with such a bare bones budget. You can bitch and moan about the production values of this movie, but c’mon! These guys weren’t being bankrolled by a major studio, and there’s no way they could have been with this movie. Granted, there are problems with the movie. There is a subplot dealing with a two stupid cops trying to get the scene of the crime, and it is completely unnecessary as if some comic relief could make this movie anymore bearable.

I should also add that one of those cops is played by Martin Kove, and he later went on to play the evil Sensai Kreese in “The Karate Kid” movies. He seems to have been the only actor to come out of this with a long lasting acting career. Kove must have been happy that he didn’t have to play one of the bad guys in this film.

With all the unpleasantness surrounding “The Last House On The Left,” why would I give it a positive review? Because it stands out from the average exploitation fare of the time, and it is a very strong example of its genre. There is a good deal of thought that was put into the movie, and to an extent it represents some of the deep seated emotions that were everywhere when the movie was first released. No, it is not an enjoyable movie, but not all movies are meant to be enjoyed. Besides, it’s a horror movie, and horror movies are supposed to be disturbing. It did its job for me, and it is one heck of a thriller that stands on top of a mountain of crap that it could have easily drowned in.

It is also a daring movie for those brave enough to experience it. It doesn’t hold anything back, and it deals with the real world and not some made up fantasy world so far removed from our own. Craven gets to the heart of the matter and never backs away from the ugliness of it. No wonder this remains a big favorite of horror fans after so many years.

It says a lot about a movie that it can still retain its power to shock and unnerve its audience 30 years after its release. “The Last House On The Left” belongs in the same company as the original “Texas Chainsaw Massacre” for remaining a sucker punch of movie for so damn long. It is an uncompromising film that you would never see made today, and no remake will ever match the raw power this movie has.

You have been warned. You don’t like unpleasant movies? Stay miles away from this one! Just remember, it’s only a movie… Only a movie… Only a movie… Only a movie… With an utterly bizarre music score!

***1/2 out of ****


“Sleep.
Those little slices of Death.
How I loathe them.”

-Edgar Allan Poe

As soon as you see this quote that opens up “A Nightmare on Elm Street 3: Dream Warriors,” you know that Wes Craven is back on board. After directing the original, one of the all time horror classics, he bailed out of the sequel which he felt betrayed the logic of Freddy Krueger’s character and how he exists in the realm of dreams. While the second Nightmare had the same dark and edgy look of the first one, it easily paled in comparison. This third entry in the never ending series (Michael Bay just had to remake this one, damn it) ended up defining the look of the rest of the Freddy Krueger’s until “Wes Craven’s New Nightmare.” This one brought forth a Freddy that, while still a bit scary, was more of a stand up comic with all these one-liners that flying out of his charred face. This would prove to be both a good and bad thing. For this movie, it makes it all the more fun. But soon, the law of diminishing returns would hit this series hard. But this is definitely one of the best entries in the series and one of the most entertaining.

I saw this one on the big screen for the first time at the New Beverly Cinema in Los Angeles. Before that, my first exposure was on regular television where they took out all the good parts. This was playing as part of the Mondo Diablo film festival at this theater which was put together by “Juno” writer Diablo Cody. I was curious why she picked this one out of all the others. I’m assuming that when she was a teenager, this was one of the movies that everyone just had to see when it came out. I remember when I first saw the trailer for it when me and my brother finally got our parents to see “Star Trek IV: The Voyage Home.” This was back when the thought of Freddy was frightening enough to unnerve me. I remember when I picked up a vinyl record of the soundtrack to the original. The images on the back of it made the hairs on my arms stand up straight and tall. Even before I saw the movie, the world of “A Nightmare on Elm Street” scared me. Ironically, all these years later, I now own a copy of that same soundtrack. How things as you get older!

“A Nightmare on Elm Street 3” starts off with the character of Kristen Parker (Patricia Arquette in her film debut) having the first of many nightmares in the movie. Freddy’s attack on her is made to look like she slit her wrists, and she is thrown into a psychiatric hospital with others suffering the same predicament. Of course, when doctors try to give her a sedative to make her sleep, she naturally freaks out and grabs a knife to fight off those who are trying to help her. This is where she meets up with Nancy Thompson, played once again by Heather Langenkamp. When she appeared onscreen, the small but enthusiastic crowd at the New Beverly applauded. Heather was at the heart of these movies, and seeing her again was proof of that.

We learn that Nancy has since gone to graduate school, and that she has been studying about the nature of dreams. She is assigned to a psychiatric ward where young teenagers have been put after they try to commit suicide. They are being cared by Dr. Neil Gordon (Craig Wasson) who cares about them deeply, but does not know how to help him. Nancy sees right away that it has to do with Freddy, and when she shares this information with the kids, they all stand at attention as they are shocked to see that they have all been dreaming about the same person.

I have to say that with a budget of $5 million dollars (it would be more today in adjusted dollars), the effects in this movie are actually pretty impressive. It’s always a gas to see what people can do with very little money. There’s one great effect with Freddy coming about as a marionette, and he immediately returns the favor to its creator by pulling his strings in the form of his veins. Ouch! The sets never do reek of cheapness, and the imagination put behind this movie is also on display as we see the dreams of the different characters and what forms they take. No one person’s dream is the same, except of course for the unwelcome presence of Freddy Krueger.

Bringing back Wes Craven to help write the screenplay for this was a smart move, and he changes the formula to keep it from being another single kid being chased by Freddy. Also, these kids fight back to stay alive and they prepare themselves a little bit quicker than the others did in the previous films. One of the screenwriters on this film is Frank Darabont who later went on to make one of the greatest movies ever, “The Shawshank Redemption.” There is a good amount of work done with the characters here so that they are not your typical one-dimensional horny teenagers that make up your typical “Friday The 13th” movie. No one dies here because they happened to lose their virginity.

The movie also digs deeper into the character of Freddy to make us see how he came to be. Before this film, we knew that he was a child murderer who was brought to court but got off on a technicality, and was later burned by the parents of the town. Craig Wasson plays Dr. Neil Gordon who works with suicidal kids in the psychiatric ward, and he is visited by a mysterious nun who informs him that Freddy’s mother Amanda was accidentally locked in an insane asylum with some of the most unstable people one could ever find on the face of the earth. Amanda was raped over and over, and this led to the conception of Freddy who, as the nun puts it, is:

“The bastard son of a hundred maniacs!”

Shit! That is a cool line! That would also make a great title for a movie!

Unlike a lot of other horror movies I have seen, I cared about the characters here and what happened to them. Most of these slasher movies have these stock characters that you usually hate and root for to die. In all fairness, it makes watching those movies a little more fun to watch in a movie theater. But here, the characters (while dealing with obvious stereotypes) are all interesting in their own way. Some are more geeky than others (don’t get me started on the “Wizard Master”), but they are more real than your average teenager dealing with an unstable case of hormones.

This movie is also proof that wet dreams never end the way we want them to. One of the characters has an understandable crush on one of the nurses in the ward, and at one point is seduced by the nurse. Some people get so lucky, but not this mute kid. What happens to him in this dream gives new meaning to the term “tongue-tied.”

Also in the cast is Laurence Fishburne who did this movie before “Boyz N The Hood.” He plays the male nurse Max who is one of the more down to earth characters that you could ever hope to find in a movie like this. Laurence’s character of Max is also one of the few people who you can ever ask for a favor and ever actually convince of it being a good thing. The great John Saxon also returns as Nancy’s father Lt. Donald Thompson. His character figures prominently in the film’s climax as they find that the way to defeat Freddy is by burying his remains in “consecrated” grounds.

It’s hard to believe that this was Patricia Arquette’s first film as an actor. She has gone on to a successful career and has appeared in great movies like “True Romance” and David Lynch’s “Lost Highway.” All this happened before she went to do “Medium” on NBC. She creates one of the more sympathetic heroines in this kind of movie who has a mother who of course who does not understand what her daughter is actually going through. No one does initially, but if they did, then there wouldn’t be a gosh darn movie!

And of course, you have Robert Englund back as the invincible Freddy Krueger. In many ways, this was really the last “Nightmare” movie where Freddy was a truly threatening presence. Just the thought of him was scary, and you didn’t need to show a lot of him to prove that point. After this movie, he was more of a standup comedian than anything else. For this and the next “Nightmare” movie, it was not that big a deal, but sooner or later, many had to realize that Freddy was no longer terrifying to us as he was in the first movie. We all had to wait till “Wes Craven’s New Nightmare” for Freddy to come across as a viciously scary presence once again. Still, Robert embodies this character in a way that no one else ever could. Of course, the original film will soon be remade like all the other classics that Michael Bay can’t leave well enough alone. But the question is, can the filmmakers even dare to hope to find another actor to play Krueger better or as good as Robert Englund? Probably not.

I’m glad that I had the opportunity to check out this particularly “Nightmare” movie at the New Beverly Cinema. Some movies you never get to see on the big screen when they come out, and I was glad that Diablo Cody took the time to add this one to her “Mondo Diablo” film festival. While Freddy ended up having an artistic downslide from here, this Nightmare is still one of the best ones of the series.

***1/2 out of ****