Showing posts with label Pennsylvania. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Pennsylvania. Show all posts

Thursday, October 31, 2013

The Dead Next Door on the Radio


Happy Halloween! We'll be live on Pittsburgh NPR station WESA today talking about Pennsylvania horror films with "Essential Pittsburgh" host Paul Guggenheimer. Special effects artist/actor/director Tom Savini will be on from Noon to about 12:30; I'll step in at that point to explain why you should run out and watch Toxic Zombies as soon as possible.


Monday, February 13, 2012

Tuesday, February 7, 2012

RIP: Zombie #1


We were sad to learn of the passing of Bill Hinzman, the "cemetery zombie" from George Romero's Night of the Living Dead. As the first zombie to appear in the very first modern, flesh-eating zombie film, Hinzman could be considered the spiritual grandfather of the current zombie hordes shambling across the big and small screens. The 75-year-old actor directed two regional horror films in Pennsylvania, Flesheater (1988) and John Russo's The Majorettes (1987).

A couple of years ago he scored his own action figure.



He also appeared in this commercial for Goodfellas Brick Oven Pizza.

Monday, February 6, 2012

Trailer of the Week: Flesheater (1988)


In honor of the late Bill Hinzman, here's the trailer for the zombie film he directed and appeared in, Flesheater.

Tuesday, December 20, 2011

Regional Horror Hit Parade Track 4

Among Burt Bacharach's many accomplishments, perhaps this is his most culturally significant? The Five Blobs vocalize over the opening credits for The Blob.

Monday, December 19, 2011

Friday, March 4, 2011

Night of the ... What's That Again?


I love it when people send me stuff, particularly when they send me interesting new research material, and especially when the source is another regional horror film enthusiast.

I recently received an e-mail from Julia Hedstroem, a PhD student in sociology of communication and media at the University of Fribourg in Switzerland, who is writing her dissertation on American newspaper reception of Night of the Living Dead.

Julia is currently poring through a mound of NOTLD-related news clippings, and graciously shared some interesting items, which we've posted below. Note the evolution of the title in these articles from Night of the Flesh Eaters to Night of the Anubis and, finally, to the more familiar title.

So thank you, Julia, and good luck! We need more zombie-obsessed PhDs.



Monday, October 25, 2010

Trailer of the Week: Midnight (1982)



John Russo's Midnight (1982), co-produced by our friend Samuel M. Sherman for Independent-International Pictures.

Monday, October 18, 2010

Trailer of the Week: Blood Eaters (1980)


From the late Charles McCrann comes this tale of Pennsylvania pot farmers transformed into hideous flesh eaters by a chemical spray. We first saw it on TV as Toxic Zombies!

Tuesday, September 28, 2010

Bonus Trailer of the Week: Girls School Screamers (1986)


We decided to end September with a bonus trailer, this one for John P. Finegan's Girls School Screamers (1986) from Pennsylvania.

Sunday, July 25, 2010

Night of the Living Dead Merch Attack

I'm a sucker for a great horror movie soundtrack, so I was thrilled to find out that Zero Day Releasing had unleashed a complete mono release of the library music and cues used in George Romero's Night of the Living Dead. The music, purchased by the Pittsburgh filmmakers from the Capitol Hi-Q library, includes cues that were previously used in Teenagers From Outer Space and The Hideous Sun Demon. By all accounts the new CD is a vast improvement over the old Varese Sarabande LP.


Even better, I just learned that New York Daily News columnist and VideoScope editor Joe Kane (a.k.a. The Phantom of the Movies) has published a new book on the making of Romero's zombie opus through Citadel. The book, which includes interviews with most of the principals, will be available on Aug. 31.

Ken has also included interviews and remembrances from Frank Henenlotter, Allan Arkush, and Lloyd Kaufman.

Thursday, July 1, 2010

Lawyers, Gore and Money


The tax shelter laws that existed in the U.S. prior to 1986 encouraged a lot of professionals to invest in low-budget film projects, in hopes that they could shelter potentially significant amounts of their income from the IRS. Attorneys frequently pumped cash into these productions; however, these legal eagles occasionally took a more active role, producing and even directing low-budget horror films of their own.

Exhibits A, B, and C:

Toxic Zombies (a.k.a. Bloodeaters, 1980)
After the success of Night of the Living Dead, Pennsylvanians produced a lot of zombie movies, but for viewers of a certain age, writer/director/star and Yale Law School graduate Charles McCrann's Toxic Zombies/Bloodeaters is held in particularly high regard --- and not just because the film opens, incongruously, with a scene of a woman giving herself a sponge bath in the middle of the forest. Toss in some zombified hippie pot farmers, shady government agents (including real-life Romero vet John Amplas), and some corny jokes, and you've got yourself a kooky kilo of stoner zombie comedy.

This was the only film for McCrann, an exec at financial services company Marsh & McLennan. Decades later, he was killed on Sept. 11, 2001, in the World Trade Center attacks. If you check out the preceding link to his tribute page, you'll note that he was not shy about sharing his singular zombie opus with his law school buds or co-workers.






Girls Nite Out (The Scaremaker, 1984)
We meant to cover this peppy slasher flick when we were doing our tribute to Ohio, but we ran out of time. Plus, although it was set in Ohio, and produced by two Ohio attorneys, and starred former Ohioan Hal Holbrooke, Girls Nite Out was actually made in ... New Jersey.

Set on the campus of a fictional Ohio college during an annual scavenger hunt, Girls Nite Out features a crazy killer decked out in a bear suit (the school's mascot) outfitted with steak-knife claws who picks off co-eds while an obnoxious DJ spins a surprisingly good selecton of oldies (how much of the budget went to music licensing?).

Producers Anthony Gurvis and Kevin Kurgis are both well-known attorneys in central Ohio, but Kurgis has definitely made the bigger name for himself with a series of ominous commercials in which he emerges from behind a door and charges the camera like a brahma bull while touting the value of hiring a good personal injury lawyer. These commercials are so infamous around Columbus, that they have inspired several YouTube parodies, and this Facebook page.






The Mutilator (1985)
Finally, we have this North Carolina classic written and directed by Atlantic Beach attorney Buddy Cooper, which positively drips with blood and confusing Freudian subtext as a deranged killer stalks his own son and junior's college buddies in order to exact revenge for his wife's accidental death years earlier. With cast members from Two Thousand Maniacs! and Deadtime Stories, early work from special effects artist Mark Shostrom, and an extremely nasty death-by-gaffe-hook-in-an-especially-uncomfortable-place.

Here's Cooper himself talking to some dude in sunglasses about his one and only film credit:




We rest our case.

Monday, June 28, 2010

Trailer of the Week: The Blob (1958)

From the wilds of Pennsylvania -- it crawls, creeps, and eats you alive! Plus, the snappy theme song written by Burt Bacharach.


Saturday, March 20, 2010

Still Crazy After All These Years

THE CRAZIES (1973)
Pittsburgh, Pa.

With the remake now in theaters, I figured it was time for a post on George Romero's The Crazies (1973).

While Night of the Living Dead was still in the process of building its cult audience, Romero directed two commercially disappointing films, the drama There's Always Vanilla (The Affair, 1971) and the supernaturally-themed Season of the Witch (Hungry Wives, 1972).

The Crazies was a return to form, although sandwiched as it was between Romero's zombie classic and his artistic tour-de-force Martin (1977), it's always seemed like something of an ugly stepchild in the Romero oeuvre.

In the film, the government attempts to cover up the accidental release of a bioweapon (code named Trixie) into the water supply near Evans City, Pa. The military swoops in, declares martial law and quarantines the community, but the hazmat-suited soldiers soon find themselves confronted by the now infected citizens, who have been turned into homicidal maniacs by the chemical.

The Crazies initially had a very abbreviated theatrical release in 1973, and according to a 1978 clip in the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, it never even played a theater in Romero's home town. It was re-released under the title Code Name: Trixie and under its original title by the newly formed Laurel Entertainment in 1976. The film nevertheless had a clear influence (along with David Cronenberg's Rabid) on many of the infection-themed zombie films of the past decade -- notably 28 Days Later and Zack Snyder's 2004 remake of Romero's Dawn of the Dead.

You can read TIME magazine's take on The Crazies from the April 2, 1973 issue here, where the unnamed reviewer describes Romero's scripts as hovering "dangerously close to illiteracy."

And just for fun, you can compare trailers below:






Tuesday, January 19, 2010

No Love for Night of the Living Dead; or, Welcome to My Blog. Again.


After many, many months of piddling around, I'm finally getting back to this blog project, and I'm now in a position to officially announce that I'm in the final stages of completing my book about regional horror films, tentatively titled -- ahem -- The Dead Next Door.

The book itself will include interviews with a number of regional horror film directors and producers, as well as what is becoming an unexpectedly voluminous compendium of all the regional horror films I could find documentation on, listed by state, from 1957 to 1990. (For more on exactly what all this means, I'll refer you to my very first posting here.)

As for the blog you see before you, I plan to use this space to post some of the newspaper clippings, reviews, photos, advertisements and video clips I uncovered while researching the book, along with information on new regional horror film DVD releases, any new information that comes along

In that spirit, I'd like to kick things off (again) with some of the original reviews of what I think is arguably the single most important regional horror film of all time (and one of the most important horror films of the last 50 years), Night of the Living Dead. While George Romero's debut feature now stands as the horror flick that launched a thousand inferior zombie movies, during its 1968 debut the film was largely lambasted by critics.

Most famously, Rogert Ebert raked the film over the coals in the Chicago Sun Times -- you can read his review here. Note that Ebert has since amended the review with a preface explaining that rather than critiquing the film, he was actually criticizing the distributor's (or exhibitor's) admittedly idiotic decision to screen the film as a kiddie matinee. I generally side with Ebert on that one; his description of the impressionable young audience's reaction to the most nihilistic film of the decade is both horrifying and surreal.

Other critics, who evidently saw the film with adults, were even less enthusiastic about NOTLD, and could barely contain their contempt for what I'm sure they thought were a bunch of rubes from Pennsylvania. Within a year or two, a few critics (notably Pauline Kael) would give the film better notices as it became an underground hit on the Midnight movie circuit, but I find these early reviews fascinating. I especially like the apocalyptic tone of the Variety review, and Vincent Canby's sneering reference to the film being made by "some people from Pittsburgh."

From The New York Times (Vincent Canby, 12/5/1968):

"Night of the Living Dead" is a grainy little movie acted by what appear to be non-professional actors, who are besieged in a farm house by some other non-professional actors who stagger around, stiff-legged, pretending to be flesh-eating ghouls.

The dialogue and background music sound hollow, as if they had been recorded in an empty swimming pool, and the wobbly camera seems to have a fetishist's interest in hands, clutched, wrung, scratched, severed and finally -- in the ultimate assumption -- eaten like pizza.

The movie, which was made by some people in Pittsburgh, opened yesterday at the New Amsterdam Theater on 42nd Street and at other theaters around town.

And from Variety (Lee Beaupre, 10/16/1968):

Made-in-Pittsburgh horror film sets a new low in box office opportunism. Casts doubt on all concerned, including exhibs who decide to play it.

Until the Supreme Court establishes clearcut guidelines for the pornography of violence, "Night of the Living Dead" will serve nicely as an outer-limit definition by example. In a mere 90 minutes, this horror film (pun intended) casts serious aspersions on the integrity and social responsibility of its Pittsburgh-based makers, distrib Walter Reade, the film industry as a whole and exhibs who book the pic, as well as raising doubts about the future of the regional cinema movement and about the moral health of filmgoers who cheerfully opt for this unrelieved orgy of sadism.

Although pic's basic premise is repellent -- recently dead bodies are resurrected, via that old fright-film debbil radiation, and begin killing human beings in order to eat their flesh -- it is in execution that the film distastefully excels. No brutalizing stone is left unturned: crowbars gash holes in the heads of the "living dead," people are shot in the head or through the body (blood gushing from their back), bodies are burned, monsters are shown eating entrails, and -- in a climax of unparalleled nausea -- a little girl kills her mother by stabbing her a dozen times in the chest with a trowel and the remainder of the cast (living living, that is) suffer similarly disgusting fates.

While all these set-pieces are staged with zestful realism, the rest of the pic is amateurism of the first order. Director George A. Romero appears incapable of contriving a single graceful set-up, and his cast is uniformly poor. Both Judith O'Dea and Duane Jones are sufficiently talented to warrant supporting roles in a backwoods community theatre, but Russell Streiner (rollercoaster inflections), Karl Hardman (eyeballrolling and clenched fists pumping the air for emphasis), Keith Wayne (eyeblinking every other word) and Judith Ridley (pretty but catatonic) do not suggest that Pittsburgh is a haven for undiscovered thespians.

Apart from all those gory special effects and makeup, the production is even worse. Romero's photography is abysmally lit and the processing appears to have been done on 20-year-old Army stock. The music (uncredited and almost certainly canned) ludicrously hypes every gratuitous shock effect and reminds one of a late-'30s serial with its moaning and droning. Even the lip-synch was off for about 15 minutes at screening caught, and sound throughout has the echo-in-an-empty-room quality of most unprofessional low-budget (under $200,000) efforts.

John A. Russo's screenplay is a model of verbal banality and suggests a total antipathy for his characters (particularly the women, all blithering idiots), if not for all humanity. On no level is the unrelieved grossness of "Night of the Living Dead" disguised by a feeble attempt at art or significance. Pic apparently cleaned up in its first multiple break in Pittsburgh and quite possibly a sufficient market exists elsewhere.

Distrib may end up crying all the way to the bank, but what a way to make a (fast) buck!