Michael Myers Gets Hit By Car (Video Fixed)

superbeastoCheck out this hilarious clip, and for all the snark it musters, remember it’s actually from Rob Zombie’s own HAUNTED WORLD OF EL SUPERBEASTO. Is Rob poking fun at himself, or revealing his true feelings about Michael Myers?

Posted in Features | Tagged , | 9 Comments

Video Gallery: Vintage Delights

Courtesy Richard Mogg

Posted in Features | Tagged | 11 Comments

Inside Graduation Day: The James Winburn Interview

feature_gradday

winburnJames Winburn has worked on probably half of your favorite horror or action films in a stuntman capacity – even donning the Michael Myers mechanics outfit and mask in the first HALLOWEEN – and also directing the retro horror video staple EVIL ALTER! But you can get his exhaustive list at IMDB. We’re here to talk retro slashers – and here, Jim kindly talks GRADUATION DAY (1981) with us.

Retro Slashers: What was the director Herb Freed like?

James Winburn: I did numerous films with Herb Freed. I think four films. He was a very sensitive, low speaking man that wanted respect on and off the set. He was well liked in the film community. Herb was studying to become a Rabbi in Israel, when he met a wonderful young lady that he fell in love with. But she told him she wouldn’t marry him if he was going to be Rabbi. Herb decided to be with her in America and they started their motion picture adventure together. His wife was the strength behind Herb. The crew members were hard working non-union film people. Herman Grigsby the production manager knew all the non-union people to bring on the film production at the prices IFI Scope III was paying. It wasn’t a large budget horror film. It was close to John Carpenter Halloween budget.

One critic review stated. “The crude, cheap, amateurish slasher is just about worthless.” They gave Christopher George a thumbs up for trying to save the film. But Herb Freed just smiled and cashed the checks from distribution.

Retro Slashers: What stunts in the film were you mostly involved in?

Winburn: On Graduation Day, I was the stunt coordinator. Herb Freed was going through a bad time in his life, due to his wife having just passed away.

Retro Slashers: Was the shoot fast/rushed or slow/relaxed?

Winburn: The shooting schedule of the film was four weeks. Due to IFI Scope III – a partnership of David Baughn and Herb Freed – the production scheduling was pushing hard to get all the shots that Herb wanted. The company worked six days a week, and long hours.

The first assistant director/second unit director Jan Gunderson was always trying to take over the directing for Herb. See now, Herb was not himself due to his wife’s passing and Jan Gunderson the assistant director was always trying to take over. The crew really didn’t work that good with him as a 1st assistant director. On the day that we shot the killing of the football player, Herb fell into deep depression over his wife and collapsed. He ask me to shoot that scene for him. I was setting it up and getting the actors in place with rigging of the football, when Jan Gunderson started [mouthing off over the decision]. I won out for that scene and shot it the way Herb wanted it. Needless to say, from that day on the assistant director had a dislike of the stunt coordinator. Anyway, that’s Hollywood show business…

Retro Slashers: Do you remember how the Pole-Voulter impaled on bed of spikes hidden under landing mat scene was achieved?

Winburn: The pole vaulter scene was easy, because I was a high school pole vaulter and took third place in the California C.I.F. Relays in my Junior year. Everything you saw was various camera angles from the cameraman Daniel Yarussi. Film editor Martin Jay Sadoff cut the scene great, because of the camera angles that were given to him. Good camera work helped the editor out to be a good cutter.

Retro Slashers: Who was playing the killer under the costume & fencing mask, was it the same actor (E. Danny Murphy) that turns out to be the killer?

Winburn: The actor that played the student and the killer, played student and the killer throughout the film. Herb and the actor both agreed to develop the character so he could feel the dual personality throughout the film. It really didn’t work…

Retro Slashers: What was it like working with Christopher George?

Winburn: Christopher George. What a nice guy, that was having bad luck in getting good rolls in the movies and in television. I worked with George on many films and television shows over the years. But, George’s drinking problems were knocking him out of getting better films. This film was easy and not a lot of work for a good actor. It was a walkthrough and a cheque, for a few days work. George and I would sit talk about all the various films and television shows we worked on together and on John Wayne films. We would laugh about some of the situations that occurred and how we completed those scenes laughing, which would piss off the director.

Retro Slashers: Seeing as how there were alot of athletics in film were there many accidents on set?

Winburn: I don’t remember anyone getting hurt on any of the scenes of the killing. That’s why I was there. Good prep and working with each actor through their scenes – showing them how to fall, take the impact of the rigging without getting hurt, etc. I was involved with all the action/stunt scenes in the film. Herb Freed wanted me there every day of principle photography. The second reason was that Herman Grigsby – the production manager – wanted me there to protect the company.

Retro Slashers: Where there any general problems, then?

Winburn: Yes, like many low budget films, problems are always popping up. So there are always people coming and going. Sometime it’s not the crew’s or actor’s fault when they leave. So that’s part of making these type of films and having these kind of production problems with this type of budget. Anyway, that what I remember. I had a good time with Herb, no matter what kind of problems occurred on the production. But did the check clear at the bank? Hmmmmmm…

Posted in Interviews | Tagged | 7 Comments

Halloween 3D: Michael Myers Comin’ At Ya!

myers3dYes, I’m glad they’re going in a different direction. No, we won’t be covering this movie on any regular basis. Yes, I love answering my own questions. Continue reading

Posted in Features | Tagged | 26 Comments

Killer Sites: Dr Gore’s Funhouse

drgoresfunhouse

Because reciprocal links are so 1998. Regular visitors will no doubt notice the absence of staff writer Christian Sellers from this website. Christian was only with us for a short period but that was an incredibly prolific period, and the resulting content was a great boon for the website. Retro Slashers is notoriously (some would say snobbily so) picky in which writers it brings on board, so it’s never a surprise to see them eventually go up onto larger endeavors or responsibilities. A notable graduate of Retro Slashers University was Lance Vaughan, who moved onto his own website Kindertrauma which now occupies a frighteningly vital niche on the web. And so, as the wheel turns, Christian has seeked an avenue to better develop his creative voice and the result is Dr Gore’s Funhouse – a celebration of the bizarre and the macabre. There you’ll find all manner of in-depth articles such as Christian is known for, now spanning such varied topics like Video Nasties and Zombies. Our fair graduates are never too far away – so do join me in thanking Christian for his terrific work with us and be sure to bookmark his new haunt for daily goodness.

Posted in Features | Tagged | 6 Comments

Joyride (1983) Book Review

joyridestephencryeHorror fiction writers were slow to take up the slasher mantle back in the early 80’s even though celluloid stalkers were carving up hefty profits at the box-office. Anyone scanning paperback racks at the corner market were more likely to find novels about demon possessed houses, Stephen King rip-offs featuring evil little kids with psychic powers, or past-life-ghostly-romance crap. Slasher fans could get a quick fix from the occasional Halloween or Friday the 13th novelization but the market was painfully barren when it came to new slasher material. Finally, in 1983, slasher fans received a gore drenched gift when Pinnacle Books published Stephen Crye’s Joyride.

Nine teenagers venture into All Saints Hill Cemetery one evening in search of a quiet place to get drunk, stoned, and naked. Watching from a tool shed is Cleats, the hideously scarred caretaker who thinks the cars contain his tormentors from six years ago. Cleats locks the gates, gathers his tools, and goes hunting. Any poor soul straying too far from the party runs into the wrong end of a sickle, chainsaw, pick-axe, or ice pick. A subplot set in 1974 follows the life of Robert Atchison as he fights with his abusive father, falls in love with the most beautiful girl in school, and suffers a terrible tragedy that changes him from a dreamer into a monster.

Stephen Crye writes like a man who knows the rules of a slasher and then tweaks a few things to keep the reader off balance. Crye sets up one of the female characters as a very obvious Final Girl then turns her into the first victim. After that first kill the reader knows anyone could be next. While most of the characters are written as rather generic slasher victims, Crye’s monster has much more back story and depth than the average mad slasher. Cleats could have easily been written as a Jason clone but reading about his life before his face was blown off during a prank gone wrong makes him much more sympathetic.

The real highlights of Joyride are the extremely gory murders. Crye handles the deaths with ghoulish glee and never backs away from the descriptions. Severed limbs twitch, decapitated heads roll and fly through the air, and arterial spray stains anything in its path crimson. The most stunning image, which was also used for the front cover of the novel, is a gore splattered statue of Mary holding baby Jesus in one arm and nestling a decapitated head in the other.

At 248 pages, Joyride is a fast, thrilling read and captures the feel of the slasher genre during its golden age. As for the author, Stephen Crye remains an enigma. Joyride appears to be his only novel and no other information could be found about Crye while researching the book for this review. One can guess Crye is a fan or at least watched a few slasher films back in the day as subtle elements from Hell Night, The Burning, and The Prowler can be found in Joyride. Next time you’re in a used book store or walking through a flea market check around for a copy. Joyride is a grizzly goodtime for folks who enjoy moist slashers.

Posted in Library | Tagged | 13 Comments

Celebrate this weekend with a Retro Slashers Trifecta

feature_h2fd

Right this moment a major debate is taking place in the United States. Will you see Halloween II or The Final Destination this weekend? I say to hell with the debate, go see both films. Here’s how the Retro Slashers Trifecta weekend works. Go see Halloween II and The Final Destination. After you’ve seen both films leave your thoughts and comments here at Retro Slashers. Do they both suck? Do they kick major ass? How was the crowd reaction? Let us know what you enjoyed or hated.

This is a big weekend for genre fans, I don’t think two major horror fans have been released on the same Friday since the early 1980s. Both films will be facing strong competition from holdovers so horror fans need to turn out in a big way. I’m a Halloween fan, so I’ll be seeing that first. But I expect The Final Destination to have the bigger box-office due to the ad blitz during prime time hours on every major network. Halloween II ads only appear during commercials on wrestling shows, UFC bouts, and the Sy Fy channel.

So get out there this weekend and enjoy large quantities of murder, mayhem, and mass destruction.

Posted in Features | Tagged , , | 14 Comments

How To Survive A Horror Movie (2007) Book Review

howtosurviveTalk about finding a diamond among a bunch of worthless rocks. I first saw Seth Grahame-Smith’s excellent book on a new release table sandwiched between mountains of Oprah’s latest Book of the Month and literary dreck that folks buy but never read. The cover, featuring a bloody gash through the title, is definitely an eye-catcher. I had no intention of buying the book when I first picked it up and started scanning pages at random. When I read the title of chapter 2, Slasher Survival School, I knew it was time to reach for my wallet and head towards the registers.

Grahame-Smith’s narrator has seen all of the evils lurking in the night and lived long enough to write a survival guide to help other poor souls who suddenly find themselves trapped in a horror film. The book is broken up into six chapters: Welcome to the Terrorverse, Slasher Survival School, Inanimate Evil, Crypt-ography, Fangs of Fury, and The Satanic Verses. With each chapter, the narrator breaks down a different element of the horror genre. He provides helpful hints as to which people, places, and animals one should avoid depending on the situation. Thinking of having a seance in a house with a murderous reputation or visiting any town with Amity in the title? Read this book first and you’ll know why that’s a bad idea.

All of the chapters are written with a sharp, sardonic wit but it’s Chapter 2 that will draw in RetroSlasher fans. The five main groups of slashers to watch out for are the strong, silent types, gamesman, half-retarded hillbillies, wisecrackers, and mamma’s boy. Other sections in the chapter offer advice on selecting only the best weapons found in a tool shed and ways to convince the cops that a crazy slasher really is taking out the teen population. The biggest gut-busting laughs are found in the sections dealing with the horrors of camp and misadventures in babysitting.

The book ends with an appendix that lists and briefly describes a number of horror films that are required viewing for anyone trying to survive until the final credits. Grahame-Smith gets bonus points for including Black Christmas, The Burning, Last House on the Left, Silent Night, Deadly Night, Sleepaway Camp, and Slumber Party Massacre on the list. Seeing those movies listed lets the reader know the author is a real slasher fan, not just some turkey grabbing random titles off the shelf at Blockbuster. It’s nice to see these lesser known titles (lesser known to the general public, that is) getting some positive press alongside Halloween, Friday the 13th, A Nightmare on Elm Street, and The Texas Chainsaw Massacre.

How to Survive a Horror Movie is a damn funny book but it also serves as a damn fine example of horror film criticism done right. Seth Grahame-Smith explores all of the horror cliches that we know and love but in a way that doesn’t insult the films. The writing never disparages the reader for loving characters that always find themselves on the wrong side of a bloodbath because, as a fan, Grahame-Smith also loves these elements in horror movies. The $14.95 cover price won’t completely drain your bank account like some other horror movie books (yes, I’m talking about you Crystal Lake Memories and Going to Pieces). Wes Craven provides a forward and Nathan Fox supplies plenty of gory artwork. Best of all, Graham-Smith’s survival tips can prove valuable in everyday life. The “empty a clip through the door” if there’s an unexpected knock has saved my life several times. True, I have taken out two Mormons, three postal workers, and a whole cub scout troop collecting canned food for the homeless. But, hey, better to be safe than sorry.

Posted in Library | Tagged | 1 Comment

A Tribute to Michelle Bauer

***WARNING***NOT WORK FRIENDLY***

Michelle Bauer is my favorite scream queen. When Bauer retired in 1995 several publications marked the event with special issues and goodies for die hard fans. These images are from an autographed card set released by Scream Queens Illustrated.

Posted in Features | Tagged | 9 Comments

The Girl at Smith’s Grove: An Interview with Chenell Cowan of Rob Zombie’s Halloween

smithsgrove

By Paul Talbot: Among the more disturbing images created by Rob Zombie for his controversial Halloween remake is the brutal scene where a young female inmate is raped by two sleazy orderlies in Michael Myers’s dark cell at Smith’s Grove Sanitarium. Chenell Cowan played the disturbed girl in this unsettling set piece which was cut from the theatrical version (after negative test audience reactions) and can only be seen on the “Unrated Directors Cut” DVD.

logo_ss

The petite, dark-blonde, blue-eyed actress first got involved with Zombie’s camp in early 2007, when she was cast in the director’s Werewolf Women of the SS, a fake exploitation trailer featured in Grindhouse. Cowan explains, “I was a huge fan of Rob Zombie’s first two films prior to working on Werewolf Women of the SS and was totally thrilled to have the opportunity to work with him. I worked on Werewolf Women for one day in the second week of January. I did not receive a script. Each time I shot a scene, I didn’t know what I would be doing until they brought me on set and told me what was going to happen.”

In the finished “trailer,” Cowan can be seen screaming on an operating table as a crazed Nazi (Bill Moseley) conducts a fiendish experiment. She says, “I filmed two additional scenes that didn’t make it to the version that was seen in theaters. The makeup was minimal. They made me look haggard and beaten down, like someone who has been kept prisoner and experimented on. I also had special makeup applied to my body to add wounds and slash marks. All of those details were amazing. I thought those sets were incredible.”

“Bill Moseley was a really nice man and really talented. I did another scene with Sheri [Moon Zombie] and Sybil [Danning], and both of them were great. Sheri is a real sweetheart and it was really exciting for me to get to meet her after being such a fan of [her] ‘Baby Firefly’ [character] in Rob’s first two films.”

logo_rz

Most of the actors from Zombie’s Grindhouse trailer ended up in his Halloween remake including Cowan, who was cast as Karen Mercy, a mentally-unbalanced resident of the Smith’s Grove asylum. “I didn’t audition for Halloween,” she explains. “Shortly after the shoot for Werewolf Women of the SS, the casting director for Halloween called me and said that [Zombie] had asked her to offer me the role of Karen Mercy. Grindhouse and Halloween are the first two studio films that I worked on, and they both happened really quickly. I got both jobs within around two weeks. Prior to shooting those films, I had worked on two short films that were both comedies, so it was a lot of fun to dive into something completely different.”

“I watched the original Halloween before shooting. I knew that the part I was playing was not in the original film. I did research to prepare for the role. This character is a mental patient, who is also overly-medicated, and she has this incredibly violent and traumatic experience in the film. She is very helpless in many ways but she is still going to put up a fight. I really worked on my strength and endurance so that I’d be able to handle it.”

“I shot Halloween in mid-March. I worked for two days. The hallway scene was shot in a real hospital. The scene in Michael Myers’ room was shot at the same hospital, but his room was built by the crew. The first time I walked into his room, I was blown away. It felt so real and just perfect [with] all the masks covering the walls. The room had such a dirty and dark feel to it. You really felt like someone had been in there in isolation for years. I only met [Tyler Mane] briefly. I think he gives an awesome performance in the film.” (Mane played Michael Myers.)

The effectiveness of Cowan’s Halloween scene was helped immensely by the creepy performances by cult actors/convention regulars Lew Temple (The Devil’s Rejects) and Courtney Gaines (Children of the Corn) as the rapists. “It was a closed set when we shot my scene,” Cowan says. “Both Lew and Courtney are really nice guys and great actors, and I think they were both so pitch-perfect in the scene. They really turned your stomach. When I arrived on set the first day and met them, we knew that because of what went on in the scene that it was going to be tough to shoot. We spent some time talking about it and getting to know each other a bit before we shot so we had a comfort level with each other. I honestly couldn’t have asked for two better guys to have done that scene with. They made me feel so completely comfortable every step of the way. I thought they had a tougher job than me, given what they had to do to me in that scene. I mean, that is really disturbing stuff. We had a really open dialogue about everything, and I wanted to make sure that they knew they didn’t have to hold back or anything. I wanted it to feel really gritty and I think and hope that we managed to achieve that.”

“No stunt woman or double was used for me in Halloween. There was a stunt coordinator who helped me learn how to brace myself against the walls and the bed frame and make sure I didn’t really get hurt. It was tricky because the scene needed to feel gritty and sloppy in a way because you have these two really drunk guys taking advantage of this helpless girl in tight quarters in front of this dangerous killer. But at the same time, for technical reasons, it needed to have structure to it. We couldn’t just be flying all over the place without a plan. We needed to make sure we stayed in frame. It certainly felt like we shot a ton of takes for the scene, but it is hard to remember how many we did. I lost count! I think the best word to define how that scene felt is ‘draining,’ both emotionally and physically. I definitely went home feeling drained but also really excited and invigorated because I was just so thrilled to be a part of Halloween.”

“The makeup I wore was pretty minimal; mostly it was used to make me look pale, tired and worn-down. I was not brought in during post to add screams. Any screams I did were recorded as we filmed the scene.”

Cowan speaks highly of her Grindhouse and Halloween director: “What was really wonderful was that he was such a great guy in person, and such a talented director, that he actually exceeded my expectations. The scenes I did in both films had difficult material and, right off the bat, I completely trusted him and he made me feel totally at home and comfortable. As a director, he has a really clear vision of what he wants. Yet at the same time, he is really open to input from the actors and different ideas that are discovered in the filming process. The crew on both films worked so well together. You could certainly tell that there was a comfort level and camaraderie.”

Although her role took up only a few pages of the screenplay, Cowan explains: “I was given the entire script for Halloween. The script was labeled as ‘Confidential’ and I knew that the plot details were a secret, so I made sure to honor that before the film’s release.”

After a June 2007 test screening of Halloween in New York City, comment cards and website reports revealed that the vicious rape scene had alienated most of the audience. Rumor had it that the explicit sexual attack could get the film an unwanted NC-17 rating. Later that month, Zombie and company shot several additional scenes including one set in Smith’s Grove that replaced the rape with a different vignette that leads to Michael Myers’ escape. All footage of Cowan and Courtney Gaines was completely deleted from the final cut. (Lew Temple still appeared, briefly.)

Cowan says: “I definitely think [the scene] is unsettling and disturbing. I really like how they put it together and added the music it really has a sense of dread to it. I can definitely understand how people would find it hard to watch. A couple of friends of mine were really disturbed by it, especially because they know me. It’s kind of weird for me to watch it, because my perspective is so different after having shot so many different takes. When we were filming it, I purposefully didn’t watch any of the playback. Plus, a lot of what goes on was not in my line of sight, or was going on behind me, so I had no idea how the final product would look when I was shooting it. I do think it has the gritty, visceral, unsettling feeling that we were going for when we shot it so I am happy about that.”

Cowan saw the final theatrical version of Halloween at the August 23, 2007 private screening in Hollywood. “Before I saw the film at the premiere, they told me that my scene had been cut. While it would have been great to have seen my scene on the big screen, I also think that the new escape sequence works incredibly well. There are so many factors that go into these types of decisions. It would be selfish of me to be upset about my scene not making it to the final version. This kind of stuff happens all the time, so you just roll with it. I love the final version. I thought it was such a cool take on the original. Rob Zombie really made it his own. Honestly, working on the film was such an amazing experience for me and I feel so privileged to have been a part of the film and I didn’t worry that the scene ended up being cut.”

But Cowan’s performance didn’t disappear into Halloween oblivion. A few days before the final version opened nationwide on August 31 (to huge grosses and mixed fan reactions), a high-quality copy of the early test screening version became available as an illegal download on numerous torrenting sites. Labeled by fans as the “Work Print Version,” this early cut is considered by some to be superior to the theatrical version and, like the Halloween 6 “Producer’s Cut,” became a popular bootleg.

When Zombie put together his “Unrated Director’s Cut” for the late 2007 DVD release, he decided to restore the scene with Cowan. On the commentary track, Zombie explained why he cast the actress in Halloween after working with her on Grindhouse: “I knew that she was game for anything. Sometimes people complain a lot and I knew that she wouldn’t complain, so she’d be perfect.”

The “Unrated Director’s Cut” far outsold DVDs of the “Theatrical Cut” and the former is now the only version that is readily-available. Chenell Cowan’s minor Halloween role has insured her a place in Michael Myers history. (One rabid fan of the series even purchased, off eBay, the soiled nightgown that she wore for her role.) She says, “I know some people who are fans of the series and they were really excited that I was a part of this film. I would really love to do another horror film.”

Posted in Interviews | Tagged | 4 Comments