Friday, November 6, 2015

Beefcake Clip From New Erotic Sci-Fi Horror Film OTHER HALVES

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Beefcake Clip From New Erotic Sci-Fi Horror Film OTHER HALVES

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New indie film blends erotic horror and evil apps.

Lauren Lakis and Mercedes Manning (who appears in REQUIEM FOR A DREAM director Darren Aronofsky’s new flick ZIPPER) star in the paranoid new indie psycho-sexual horror film OTHER HALVES, an erotic, satirical and techno-savvy film laced with more than just a drizzle of Sci-Fi.

And while the film is currently uncoiling its festival run, SHOCK got our sweaty paws on a new clip from the, er, body of the film.

Have a look:

The film is co-written (with Kelly Morr) and directed by Matthew T. Price. Here is the official synopsis:

“Synopsis: A team of programmers develop a revolutionary new dating app called Other Halves. On the night before the app is set to launch, they discover it causes strange side effects: users lose all self-control, becoming amoral, lascivious, violent, evil. They consider shutting the app down, but… evil is profitable.”

Evil apps. I do believe that is something new…take that for what it is…

For a full list of OTHER HALVES festival run and for more about the film visit the official site.

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Steve McGinnis Premieres DRACULA A.D. 1972 Art For New Hammer Doc

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Steve McGinnis Premieres DRACULA A.D. 1972 Art For New Hammer Doc

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Monster artist Steve McGinnis presents new painting for Hammer doc campaign.

Two weeks ago, SHOCK announced that the fine folks at DIABOLIQUE Magazine had Kickstarted a killer campaign to mount the mother of all Hammer documentaries, one that will chart the rarely explored history of Hammer’s longstanding production partnership with Warner Bros. Films.

Among the many perks guaranteed for those who donate, are a series of gorgeous film posters by artist Mark Spears.

Now, SHOCK is excited to reveal another poster, that of the latter period Hammer Dracula classic DRACULA AD 1972 painted by one of our favorite artists, Toronto-basedSteve McGinnis (McGinnis created the header for our SHOCK TREATMENT and THE DISC THAT WOULDN’T DIE headers).

Says McGinnis about his involvement in the project:

“As a kid of the 70’s I grew up on Hammer Horror films and Christopher Lee was my Dracula. Being asked to create this poster was a dream gig. I took a few days of sketching out the way I wanted to lay it out.  I had to include the fight on top of the runaway coach at the beginning, so I made them ghost like coming out of the mist and clouds above. The center image of Dracula impaled on the wheel is an iconic image and I had to make that one the main visual. The rest just fell together around it. I hope Hammer fans enjoy this  as much as I liked creating it.”

So feast your eyeballs on McGinnis’ poster below and get over to the HAMMER HORROR: THE WARNER BROS. YEARS page to donate!

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Chris Alexander’s SHOCK TREATMENT: In Praise of 1978’s THE SHOUT

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Chris Alexander’s SHOCK TREATMENT: In Praise of 1978’s THE SHOUT

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In this ongoing SHOCK column, editor Chris Alexander muses on classic and contemporary films worthy of a deeper discussion.This round…it’s 1978’s THE SHOUT.

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Whether it be a low, wet, growl coming from deep within in the dark, a disembodied whisper from behind a long locked door, or the skin-tightening timbre of a terrified woman’s pre-knife stuck scream, the use of sound has been manipulated since the dawn of horror cinema as a highly effective tool to terrify those lucky enough to be blessed with relatively good hearing. Sound fills in the blanks, giving audible life to seemingly benign tableaux; people, objects and events are transformed. Sometimes sound is used to create tension, to provide the aural punch line to an unbearable set up and sometimes sound is even used to lull the viewer into a false sense of calm before unleashing whatever beast the filmmaker has heretofore kept under wraps. But in Polanski pal and DEEP END director Jerzy Skolimowski’s little discussed 1978 tone poem THE SHOUT, sound is used for even more aggressive purposes: to maim, to harm, to inflict agony and eventually, to kill every living thing in its path.

What’s that SHOCK reader? Never heard of THE SHOUT? You certainly aren’t alone. This dark, abstract sliver of arthouse weirdness has never before been available legitimately on Blu-ray or DVD on these shores (a UK DVD was released a decade ago, poorly transferred and with an altered, inferior sound design and an excellent, feature-filled British Blu-ray was released quietly last year) and the ancient, Columbia Pictures US VHS release is a highly sought after collectible.

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I first encountered THE SHOUT the same way I first encountered many of my favorite films: alone, on late night television. This strange, dark and slowly paced film marked me the deepest and not a day went by that I didn’t think about it in some way shape or form. My fixation on it later amplified when I realized that basically no one I knew had ever seen it, let alone were aware of (or cared about) its existence and it felt as though it were mine, a secret slice of cinema whose fan club sported one member: me.

Imagine my delight one day, while sifting through the delete rack at Toronto’s Queen Video in The Bloor street Annex, I found that very same aforementioned discontinued Columbia videocassette, lying there, faded, moldy and battered at the bottom of the shelf, being sold off for a lousy dollar. Money immediately changed hands and within seconds THE SHOUT was mine.

But, per usual, I get ahead of myself. Let me tell you a bit about the film itself…

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Church organist and erstwhile experimental music composer Anthony (the great John Hurt, he of David Lynch’s THE ELEPHANT MAN, Ridley Scott’s ALIEN, Jim Jarmusch’s ONLY LOVERS LEFT ALIVE and so many other wonderfully eccentric turns) and his comely wife Rachel (the dearly departed Susannah York) live a quiet, idyllic yet sexually vacant life in the English countryside. Into their pleasant but unremarkable home comes a brooding, ruggedly handsome, hirsute wanderer named Crossley (the late, notoriously self destructive British actor/boozer Alan Bates) seeking refuge and a hot meal, which the young couple skeptically oblige. It’s not long before this belligerent, sneering animal of a man begins slowly, methodically manipulating and controlling Anthony and Rachel’s lives, both physically and mentally. Turns out Crossley isn’t just your run of the mill raving psychotic narcissist, but rather is a kind of an aboriginal warlock, a dangerous outback -dwelling monster who claims to have murdered his children in order to learn the ancient art of psychic vampirism and the ever useful skill of killing by shouting. Taking the disbelieving Anthony onto the moors one night, Crossley crassly proves his case by simply opening his mouth, drawing in air and letting loose a lethal primal shriek from the very chasms of Hell. Things get very nasty and, needless to say, do not end particularly well…

Told as an extended flashback to ROCKY HORROR PICTURE SHOW vet Tim Curry, THE SHOUT is the kind of lyrical, intelligent, enigmatic and frustrating work of psychological horror that the Brits were once so very fond of producing in the 1970’s and that are simply, and sadly, not being made at all anymore. Filled with deranged, politically incorrect sex (fans of the lovely York take note), haunting nightmare imagery and an aura of icy, inevitable doom, the picture plays like the bastard offspring of THE WICKER MAN, Nick Roeg’s DON’T LOOK NOW and vintage Luis Bunuel; a movie of surreal, shocking, confusing, terrifying and occasionally blackly humorous power and the kind of eyeball spinning head scratcher that stays with you for weeks (in my case, a lifetime), requires multiple viewings and asks far more questions than it provides answers to. Driven by a powerful score by GENESIS alumni Mike Rutherford and Tony Banks, this is truly a living, breathing nightmare committed to celluloid and I beg, nay command you to seek out a copy, like, yesterday. Do it, or I’ll scream.

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Thursday, November 5, 2015

Sound SHOCK: The History of BLUE OYSTER CULT’s ‘(Don’t Fear) the Reaper’ in Horror

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Sound SHOCK: The History of BLUE OYSTER CULT’s ‘(Don’t Fear) the Reaper’ in Horror

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SHOCK takes a look at BOC’s hard rock hit ‘Don’t Fear the Reaper’ and its use in horror films.

Mention the name of seventies rock juggernaut Blue Oyster Cult, and several notions likely pop instantly to mind: The thudding intro to their hit ‘Godzilla’, stomped out by a shaggy quintet clad in bellbottom jeans while a stadium audience trips out on the psychedelic lasers flaring around them. BOC were originally hyped by their manager as the American answer to Black Sabbath, but the band evolved into something spacier and more progressive, stamped with their trademark mysticism and dense sci-fi lyrics. Less apparent to casual B.O.C. fans is the band’s long association with horror cinema—while B.O.C. dove in to the genre directly by writing the music to Charles Band and Ted Nicolau’s hilariously dated alien D.J. flick BAD CHANNELS (1992), the band is perhaps better remembered by some of horror’s biggest names adopting the band’s biggest chart hit, 1976’s ‘Don’t Fear The Reaper’, for their films.

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First appearing on Blue Oyster Cult’s fourth full-length album AGENTS OF FORTUNE and released as a single that peaked at number twelve on the Billboard charts, ‘(Don’t Fear)The Reaper’ was penned by lead singer and guitarist Donald Roeser (a.k.a. Buck Dharma) as a hopeful declaration that love can endure past the natural closure of death—not as a romanticizing of suicide pacts, as how the song is frequently misinterpreted. From the picked riff that drives the song, the lilting Byrds-like quality and the soft layered vocals, ‘Reaper’ doesn’t exactly transmit feelings of terror or dread. That didn’t stop John Carpenter from briefly featuring the tune in his stone classic HALLOWEEN (1978). Most of HALLOWEEN’s standout musical moments are derived from Carpenter’s own lean synth score. However, “Reaper’ is placed in as a source cue when Laurie Strode (Jamie Lee Curtis) cruises in her friend Annie’s car and indulges in a little herbal relaxation. The song’s appearance is brief and played under dialogue (and Laurie’s coughing fits), but the subtext is obvious as Carpenter presages the murderous return of Michael Myers to Haddonfield. It’s a subtle, almost throwaway use of a tune that was still somewhat current in 1978, its presence in the film belying HALLOWEEN’s notoriously skimpy budget—though this was the era before music publishers saw the licensing of songs for films as a one big distended udder filled with cash, just begging to be milked. Lucky for us, Carpenter’s team secured the rights on the cheap and ‘Reaper’ became forever entrenched in horror film lore.

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Apart from HALLOWEEN, Stephen King cites ‘Reaper’ as part of the inspiration behind the writing of his first mammoth novel THE STAND, with an excerpt of the lyrics used as an epigraph to kick off the book. When director Mick Garris assumed the titanic task of adapting King’s swollen tome into a T.V. miniseries in 1994, he honored the source material by having an edited cut of the song play over the first episode’s opening credit sequence, which was an eerie swoop through the underground laboratory from which the ‘Captain Trips’ flu bug escaped—its hallways and chambers now littered with heaps of white-coated corpses.

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SCREAM would see director Wes Craven and writer Kevin Williamson lovingly crib a number of elements from Carpenter’s HALLOWEEN for their 1996 slasher revival, but none are slipped in as slyly as ‘Reaper’. Played while Billy Loomis (Skeet Ulrich) makes his bedroom plea to Sidney (Neve Campbell), SCREAM’s version of the tune is an acoustic cover by singer-songwriter Gus Black (billed in the credits as simply ‘Gus’), and adds cello and female vocals to accentuate a mournful flavor that isn’t much present in the original version. It’s a wink to SCREAM’s forebears and an understated telegraphing of the danger that Billy will eventually present to Sidney, not to mention that Black’s cover sounds fantastic.

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The same year would see ‘Reaper’ once again revived in a cover version. Peter Jackson closes out his underloved ghost-caper THE FRIGHTENERS with a version by fellow Kiwis The Mutton Birds, and the song continues to play over the end credit crawl. Unlike the distinctive film that houses it, the Mutton Birds cover is blandly straightforward and sounds much too close to the original to be at all memorable.

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Speaking again of elements taken from HALLOWEEN, those that Rob Zombie transposed from the original to his 2007 remake are still a matter of heavy fan debate. ‘Reaper’ was thankfully carried over to the update, but bumped back and also forward in the proceedings—Zombie now uses the song to underscore the post-coital doom faced by both Judith Myers (Hanna Hall) in the film’s prologue, and Lynda (Kristina Klebe) in the moments before Myers redecorates the walls with her unfortunate paramour Bob. In this more obvious context, the appearance of the song is clumsy (as is the use of The Misfits’ HALLOWEEN II moments prior), but credit to Zombie for acknowledging ‘Reaper’ as integral to the legacy of the HALLOWEEN films.

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‘Reaper’ would surface again in 2009 when a quick snippet is played in the comedy hit ZOMBIELAND, as the traveling zombie killers puff away on a hookah (shades of Laurie Strode?) alongside their host Bill Murray. And, while not in the genre realm, any discussion of ‘Reaper’ would be remiss to omit the song’s retrofitting as comedy fodder—mocked for its copious clicking cowbell in a famous SATURDAY NIGHT LIVE sketch with Will Farrell and Christopher Walken. No matter, as the laughs can’t dull ‘Don’t Fear the Reaper’s’ status as a classic track, and be sure to inform any young comedy fans that that horror got to it first.

The post Sound SHOCK: The History of BLUE OYSTER CULT’s ‘(Don’t Fear) the Reaper’ in Horror appeared first on Shock Till You Drop.

Empire Pictures Double Bill Comes to Blu-ray

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Empire Pictures Double Bill Comes to Blu-ray

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EmpirePics2 Two classics from the Empire Pictures vaults come roaring onto Blu-ray.

Hot on the heels of our recent announcement about filmmaker Daniel Griffith’s epic new documentary about Albert and Charles Band’s beloved Empire Pictures imprint, comes the news that Scream Factory will release two of Empire’s craziest flicks.

On December 15th, Scream Factory will roll out the Blu-ray debuts of Charles Band’s insane omnibus THE DUNGEONMASTER (aka RAGE WAR) coupled with his even wilder Andrew Prine actioner ELIMINATORS. Of special note is that the version of THE DUNGEONMASTER will indeed be the same unrated version Shout! Factory previously released on DVD, complete with extra boobies for those who demand extra boobies in their B-movies.

Special Features on this disc will include:

• NEW Interview with ELIMINATORS director Peter Manoogian
• New High Definition Transfer (ELIMINATORS)
• Theatrical Trailer (THE DUNGEONMASTER)

Check out the trailers for this pair of Empire classics below:

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Interview: Joe Dante Reflects on His ’80’s TWILIGHT ZONE Episode, ‘The Shadow Man’

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Interview: Joe Dante Reflects on His ’80’s TWILIGHT ZONE Episode, ‘The Shadow Man’

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Shadowman1 Horror legend Joe Dante remembers his chilling ’80’s TWILIGHT ZONE episode “The Shadow Man”.

Even considering how poorly Warner’s 1983 theatrical attempt to revitalize the house that Rod Serling built fared at the box office (not to mention the tragedy that unfolded behind the scenes), CBS nevertheless dipped back into THE TWILIGHT ZONE well and green-lit a prime time return of the series, this time to be filmed in full color and to be creatively propelled by some of the biggest names in dark fantasy entertainment.

The first season of the revamped THE TWILIGHT ZONE premiered on September 27th, 1985 and, from the opening credits on in, it was clear that this TZ was going to be a serious immersion into thoughtful – and terrifying – science fiction and horror. The theme music was an experimental wash of dread, only gently referencing the classic theme by Marius Constant, that was composed and performed by 60’s cult band THE GRATEFUL DEAD; key episodes were written by heavy-hitters like Harlan Ellison (“Shatterday”) and Stephen King (“Gramma”) and were directed by genre icons like Wes Craven (“A Little Peace and Quiet”, “Wordplay”), William Friedkin (“Nightcrawlers”) and, of course…Joe Dante.

Dante’s sole contribution to the 1985 TZ came in the shape of “The Shadow Man”, a tender tale of pre-teen angst and supernatural revenge. In it, a kid (Jonathan Ward) who is bullied and put-upon, discovers one night that an inky, humanoid phantom lives under his bed; a faceless, fedora wearing boogeyman who drifts into the room and, in a deep, sinister voice says, “I am the Shadow Man and I will never harm the person under whose bed I live.”

More fascinated than terrified, the boy watches the spectral intruder slink out his window and into the night, only to learn the next day that a fiend matching The Shadow Man’s description had assaulted some of his classmates after dark. Night after night, the ghoul returns and the attacks continue, but our hero is nonplussed. In fact, as he is the lone child in the school unafraid of the nocturnal spook, he becomes empowered, is seen as brave and, in turn, goes from zero to hero.

But, this being THE TWILIGHT ZONE, all does not end well; there is a dynamite twist in the tail end of Rockne S. O’Bannon’s script that is beyond chilling and one that many now-grown children of my generation still shudder over.

Dante’s installment of the aforementioned TWILIGHT ZONE: THE MOVIE, a riff on the classic TZ episode “It’s a Good Life” called “Anthony”, was one of the highlights of a middling film, though in it, the director seemed more interested in indulging his ever-present obsession with vintage Warner Bros. cartoons than in going after anything resembling stark terror. Here, however, Dante does indeed get dark; less Serling and more EC comics. “The Shadow Man” has a dose or two of typical Dante mirth, but by and large, the episode is the stuff of nightmares, with the central villain being, in essence, an omnipresent predator, one whose focus on children is singular and sinister.

After rediscovering “The Shadow Man” recently and exposing my own children to its chilly charms, I knocked on Joe’s door to jog his memory about the now 30 year old short film he made for a series that doesn’t get nearly enough respect.

SHOCK: Was “The Shadow Man” shot before or after EXPLORERS?

JOE DANTE: After. That’s why EXPLORERS’ wrong-side-of-the-tracks kid, Jason Presson, plays the bully…

SHOCK: You were riding a commercial high after GREMLINS so was there any trepidation about diving into TV, however briefly?

DANTE: None, because I’d already done two episodes of POLICE SQUAD!, which was my first DGA (Directors Guild of America) job. And I’d already done an episode of AMAZING STORIES too, which made the new THE TWILIGHT ZONE look like poverty row.

SHOCK: You’re obviously a fan of THE TWILIGHT ZONE. But unlike in TWILIGHT ZONE: THE MOVIE, you weren’t shackled by the expectations of remaking any existing episode. Was there any conscious attempt to lock the spirit of Serling or were you simply making a Joe Dante short film?

DANTE: The 80s ZONE revamp was a different animal entirely from the Serling original, which was economically produced but benefited from the availability of the MGM backlot and studio gloss. The new series was shot very quickly at the former Republic Studios lot in Studio City, which only had a tiny backlot. Producer Phil DeGuerre was notorious for post-production tampering and this was one of the first TV series edited on videotape. This allowed for much editorial mischief, as evidenced by director Gil Cates’ complaint that his “Paladin of the Lost Hour” episode was botched by DeGuerre in cocaine-fueled editing and when televised, was officially credited to the fictitious DGA nom de plum “Allen Smithee”.

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SHOCK: The Shadow Man himself is terrifying and obviously a visual nod to the character of The Shadow, yes?

DANTE: Certainly in his costume, which was quite difficult to photograph by the way, as a black shadow against the sets.

SHOCK: There is mention in the story of The Shadow Man harming the children, but never killing. The ending of episode (SPOILER ALERT) sees Jonathan Ward dangling in a choke-hold…do you think the boy dies?

DANTE: You bet he does!

SHOCK: Did you have your pick of scripts when you came on board or were you assigned “The Shadow Man”?

DANTE: As I recall, Rockne’s existing script was pretty much a take it or leave it proposition. I don’t recall much effort to enlist the directors in choosing material, although I can’t believe that Friedkin just happened to end up with “Nightcrawlers”, which may be the best episode of the series…

SHOCK: Your Director of Photography on “The Shadow Man” was Bradford May, a TV guy through and through. The short is very atmospheric and cinematic. Do you have any memories of the man?

DANTE: This episode was made in record time, just a few days and I do remember Brad as accomplished and confident. He ended up directing, which I think is where his heart was.

SHOCK: The music for “The Shadow Man” is effective. It was composed by Merl Saunders, who played with Jerry Garcia (of THE GRATEFUL DEAD) often. Did you work with Saunders closely?

DANTE: No. Once you hand in a TV episode, your involvement is pretty much over. I never met any of the music guys, who were hired long before I was.

SHOCK: The series really hold up…I had forgotten how many incredibly strong episodes there were in that first season…

DANTE: There were some very nice episodes. I only regret that because they were shot on film but edited on tape, no film record exists. Don’t look for any HD or Blu-ray releases, because this technology only degrades when copied. It’s quite likely that eventually, the ‘80s series will not exist in 20 years, since it can’t be upgraded. Luckily, the Serling series exists on film and can be preserved pretty much forever.

SHOCK: Speaking of that, which is your favorite classic Serling episode?

DANTE: “Walking Distance”. 1959. Season one. Pure Serling. Pure sentiment. Pure Bernard Herrmann…

And for those of you with 20 minutes to spare, please feel free to indulge in THE SHADOW MAN, running in its entirety below, thanks to our good friends at YouTube…

The post Interview: Joe Dante Reflects on His ’80’s TWILIGHT ZONE Episode, ‘The Shadow Man’ appeared first on Shock Till You Drop.

Interview: Director Steve De Jarnatt Looks Back on Cult Classic MIRACLE MILE

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Interview: Director Steve De Jarnatt Looks Back on Cult Classic MIRACLE MILE

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SHOCK’s David Bertrand does the distance with writer/director Steve De Jarnatt about his apocalyptic cult film MIRACLE MILE.

After ten years in gestation, MIRACLE MILE finally nuked theatres in 1989. The ultimate apocalyptic romance, as Anthony Edwards races in desperation to find his new beau in and around Los Angeles’ Miracle Mile with nuclear war looming, this project consumed writer/director Steve De Jarnatt’s life for the entire 1980s decade. With the vibrant colour scheme and Tangerine Dream score and haircuts marking the era, MIRACLE MILE embodies the fatalism of the meaty 1970s. It’s a perfect mixture of urgent hope and shocking tragedy and one of the best films of the decade.

Anthony Edwards (hot from TOP GUN) plays Harry Washello, a visiting trombonist performing in Los Angeles at a charity rally for the Pan-Pacific Auditorium (in what was to be the iconic building’s final film appearance, as it burned down soon after the shoot). While killing time at the nearby La Brea Tar Pits & Museum, he meets Julie (Mare Winningham) and falls madly in love over the course of one carefree afternoon. Planning to meet her after her nightshift at Johnie’s Coffee Shop, a power outage zaps Harry’s alarm clock and he shows up four hours too late. Dejected, the phone booth outside Johnie’s rings and Harry decides to pick it up, the only person privy to a conversation he should never have heard: nuclear war is imminent. America is launching nukes on the Soviet Union and the counterstrike – which will hit in approximately one hour and ten minutes – will flatten Los Angeles. From here on the film plays out in nearly real time, as Harry attempts to rally the diner patrons, find Julie, and escape Los Angeles before the coming Armageddon.

With a Blu-ray release of MIRACLE MILE now available from Kino Lorber who have also put out De Jarnatt’s other feature directorial effort, CHERRY 2000 (1987) – a bizarre sci-fi desert actioner starring Melanie Griffith as a gun-for-hire helping David Andrews retrieve his fave living sex doll from deserted Las Vegas – the time has never been better to enjoy Steve De Jarnatt’s films the way they should be seen. Graciously going above and beyond to make himself available, De Jarnatt is flying up to Toronto this coming November 12th for a rare 35mm print screening of MIRACLE MILE at the fabulous Royal Cinema as part of the ongoing Neon Dreams film series (recently knocking it out of the park with screenings of STREETS OF FIRE and PHANTOM OF THE PARADISE). The 35mm print is courtesy of Rui Pereira of the Kingsway Theatre.

It’s also a bit of a homecoming, as MIRACLE MILE premiered at the Toronto International Film Festival back in 1988. De Jarnatt also got his major industry break in the Great White North as the screenwriter – and for a time, attached as director! – of STRANGE BREW (1983), starring SCTV’s consummate Canadian hosers Bob & Doug McKenzie (Rick Moranis and Dave Thomas).

De Jarnatt was born in Colorado but grew up in the small town of Longview, Washington (where the father of Brian Thompson, who plays the helicopter pilot in MIRACLE MILE, was Steve’s oceanography teacher), before moving to Los Angeles where he made his home for some 40 years. MIRACLE MILE ended up being De Jarnatt’s second and last feature film as director, though he wrote, directed or produced 70-80 episodes of television starting in the 1990s. Currently, Steve is a Visiting Assistant Professor of Film in the MFA film program at Ohio University in Athens, largely retired from the film & television business to write award-winning fiction and has been happily making the rounds doing interviews and hosting screenings of MIRACLE MILE since it’s Blu-Ray release. Pick it up, enjoy the restored image supervised by cinematographer Theo van de Sande, and check out the cast reunion of character actors (O-Lan Jones, Earl Boen, Kurt Fuller, Denise Crosby, Brian Thompson, Danny De La Paz, Jenette Goldstein and more) at the iconic Johnie’s Coffee Shop where Anthony Edwards’ Harry receives a phone call heralding the end of the world as we know it.

SHOCK: MIRACLE MILE is special, in no small part because it’s one person’s singular vision – you made a studio picture the way you wanted, without anybody stamping over your vision. How did you know that the concept for MIRACLE MILE was the one to hold so tightly to your chest for so long?

SDJ: I think probably because of the subject matter. When I started doing it, the Cold War was still on, and I just wanted to shake the world up. By the time it was actually in a theater it was maybe almost ten years from the time I pitched it to the time it was done. And now it’s 25 years later. I’m glad I stuck to my guns, or you wouldn’t be talking to me. MIRACLE MILE was in the first “10 Best Unproduced Scripts in Hollywood” list. So, it was a script that a lot of people wanted to do.

SHOCK: The “10 Best” is a major Hollywood tradition – you were in the very first list?

SDJ: Yup, the very first time, with TOTAL RECALL and JACOB’S LADDER, and some other stuff that got made. And I don’t know if I want to make another movie, but I made the second list with HAIR OF THE DOG, a really dark sort of ACE IN THE HOLE, MIDNIGHT COWBOY western set in Nashville in 1965. HAIR OF THE DOG made the second list. I don’t know if I want to direct it or get somebody else to direct it, but the town that I’m in is really old and it could maybe pass for Nashville in 1965. We’ll see. I don’t know if I’m personally into it anymore. I don’t listen to any new country music, only way in the past. But it’s got good roles.

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SHOCK: How did the ball get rolling on MIRACLE MILE?

SDJ: I went in and I pitched the idea of MIRACLE MILE to Mark Rosenberg who was the head of production at Warner Brothers (Mark’s brother Alan is part of the ensemble of diner actors in MIRACLE MILE – this meeting is discussed in the Johnie’s cast reunion on the Blu-Ray). I pitched him the idea: “What would you do if that phone rang?” They liked the script, they wanted to make it. They wanted to probably change the ending, and they wanted to put more writers on it, to have me work with some big time writers. And then it was going to be expensive to ever get it back. So they let me have it back for a year, for free, and then I optioned it a couple years to control it. And then it was either I could buy it, or somebody else could buy it. And I had been on STRANGE BREW, I wrote the first draft in like ten days. They actually hired me to direct STRANGE BREW, I had a contract to direct it. They (stars Rick Moranis and Dave Thomas) were going to direct it anyways, but I got paid $50,000 to not direct the movie. And I gave every cent, after agent fees and taxes, to Warner Brothers and bought my MIRACLE MILE back just before somebody else was going to buy it. So I thank STRANGE BREW and all of Canada for that.

SHOCK: I’m happy to take credit! Can you tell us first about the films you made leading up to MIRACLE MILE, starting with the black and white TARZANA (1978), that really looks like a film noir from the 1940s or 50s?

SDJ: That was sort of the idea, to make something that looked like it was shot in 1958. We used old cameras and lenses, and it does come close to that. It’s sad and weird that it’s so long in the past. When I made it, in 1978, it was looking twenty years in the past. Now it’s 37 years or something since I made TARZANA! I also made a film – it’s probably more the other guy’s movie, Jim Cox – we made a “fake documentary”, EAT THE SUN (1975), which won awards as a documentary! We made up our own religion and shot it in Evergreen College in Olympia, Washington.

SHOCK: Your movie about “The Temple of Self-Amplification” won awards as a true fact documentary?

SDJ: Yeah. PBS bought it, and ran it once, and people called up and wanted more information on the church. They wanted to join the church. So they never ran it again. And I guess we wanted to put that out there too, as if this is a real documentary. Some journalists were going to write articles and sort of plant Internet stuff as if there really was a Temple of Self-Amplification if you move to Iowa or Brazil or something. I mean, there’s enough jokes in it that you should be able to get that it’s not real, but…

SHOCK: It almost benefits from what looks like a transfer from 16mm to VHS to YouTube, the dirty found footage look adds to its conviction that it might be real.

SDJ: Exactly. I get co-credit as a writer & director but it’s really Jim Cox’s movie. He stuck with it and edited it, while I went back to L.A. He worked with Terry Malick on DAYS OF HEAVEN, and actually I did too, I was the projectionist. Jim was sort of Terry’s right hand protégé. He’s gone on to do a lot of Disney animation and stuff like that (including writing the screenplay for FERNGULLY: THE LAST RAINFOREST, which inspired James Cameron’s AVATAR). After that I went to the AFI as a screenwriter. People liked TARZANA, but it was a genre movie and that wasn’t cool, so I dropped out. I spent two and a half years making that. Four complete different shoots, with three different cameramen.

SHOCK: And this all went into the final product?

SDJ: Yeah. It was the same gaffer, Chris Tuffy and he was also the last credited DP. But you know, you go raise money, and you shoot it. Martin Brest (later famous for BEVERLY HILLS COP, SCENT OF A WOMAN) had made an AFI film called HOT TOMORROWS – 70 minutes, 35mm, black and white, a lot of the same crew worked on TARZANA – with Oingo Boingo and Ray Sharkey. Everybody in Hollywood came to see that and I was the “opening band”. So then I had all these agents who wanted to sign me, and I turned down movies for about four or five years. Until I did CHERRY 2000 which probably wasn’t… it wasn’t good for my career.

SHOCK: What movies did you turn down?

SDJ: The first Pee-Wee Herman movie. Some guy named Tim Burton did it, I don’t know whatever happened to him? POLICE ACADEMY, I dunno. I was always attached to movies, but I was always trying to get MIRACLE MILE made. I turned down all kinds of stuff.

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SHOCK: What made you settle on CHERRY 2000? It’s really an… odd choice.

SDJ: That was a weird deal where I was getting ready to make MIRACLE MILE for two million with Nic Cage. They were actually doing the banking, and the head of Orion, Mike Medavoy, sent over the script of CHERRY 2000 and said, “You’ve got to do this movie.” I think Irvin Kershner (THE EMPIRE STRIKES BACK) had just fallen out. And you know, they were desperate to get a director. They were already into production design, already kind of rolling. And I said no, forget it, I’m doing MIRACLE MILE with Nic. And then about an hour later Nic’s attorney – who was Francis Ford Coppola’s attorney – called up and said, “We’re pulling Nic out of MIRACLE MILE, he’ll do that in about a year and a half. He’s going to do PEGGY SUE GOT MARRIED and a couple other movies, and then we’ll slot you in.” And I couldn’t get a hold of Nic. They said he’s out in Catalina Island without a phone – that’s the way it is, kid! So I called up Mike Medavoy and said send the script over. I read about twenty pages and thought, “This is… weird.” And I jumped on a moving train, and never caught up. I mean, we got some great character actors, and there’s a lot of talent on the movie, but it’s a weird movie. I’m glad it has a cult following.

SHOCK: The cinematography and design is excellent. It’s a batshit crazy action movie. And it has some great performances – Melanie Griffith is great. And Ben Johnson is so cool as the old tracker guru Six Fingered Jake.

SDJ: Ben Johnson, yes. Character actors, the costumes, and the music. Basil Poledouris was really great. It’s a really weird movie but it has its charms. I’ve been quoted before as saying “It’s PLANET OF THE APES but without the apes.” Now it’s championed as a feminist manifesto because it was about giving up your sex doll for a real complicated woman. But I don’t know if I quite get that. Speaking of CHERRY 2000, there’s a guy, Ant Timpson who just came out with a movie, TURBO KID, that I heard is really good. He showed it at a theater in New Zealand. He ran CHERRY 2000 for five months! It never even played in Los Angeles. He ran it in a theater for five months! It shocks me that anyone from New Zealand – which is not Australia, as I well know, but this applies to Australians too – compared to ROAD WARRIOR, CHERRY is nothing! I’m a pimple on the face of the Earth. But people like it.

SHOCK: I think Melanie Griffith really makes it work. You want to watch her every moment she’s on the screen. CHERRY 2000 is a lot of fun.

SDJ: I’m glad people like it. It sort of ruined my career, and it resurrected with MIRACLE MILE. I had done that Hitchcock thing with Melanie before.

(Steve wrote and directed an excellent episode of the 1980s revival of ALFRED HITCHCOCK PRESENTS, remaking the classic episode “Man From the South” starring John Houston, Melanie Griffith, Steven Bauer, Tippi Hedren and Kim Novak!)

SHOCK: Did that lead to Griffith being in CHERRY 2000?

SDJ: Yeah, pretty much, because we’d worked together. “Man From the South” was my first professional job. Between TARZANA in 1978 and the Hitchcock thing in 1985, I just turned stuff down or got ready to film MIRACLE MILE. So that’s like seven years of not doing anything. And MIRACLE MILE’s production is still another four years after that.

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SHOCK: Was MIRACLE MILE always in some form of development?

SDJ: Yeah. There was one incarnation with Mike Medavoy where we were going to make MIRACLE MILE with Kurt Russell and a bigger budget. Didn’t work out. John Daly, the head of Hemdale (the film production and music management company founded by Daly and actor/director David Hemmings, who genre fans will know as the lead in Dario Argento’s DEEP RED) actually financed the movie. He’s gone now (John Daly died in 2008), but he’s a fascinating figure. You look at Hemdale’s library, they made THE TERMINATOR, HOOSIERS, RIVER’S EDGE, PLATOON, SALVADOR. He won the Oscar for Best Picture two years in a row for PLATOON and THE LAST EMPEROR. And he’s pretty notorious for taking your film away from you and chopping it up. And even more notorious for never giving you a penny of what you’re entitled to. But I kept spending my own money, and shooting, and retooling and tweaking the film. And he’d give me some money back and I’d spend it. There was a lot of pressure to do the film on the budget we had, which was not very much, $3.7 million below the line. So I just kept working on the movie until I couldn’t borrow another dime. But John Daly did end up really supporting it. I was probably the only person who made a movie with John Daly that would talk to him in later years. James Cameron and Oliver Stone, he probably owed them millions, tons of money. I was owed like $300,000-$400,000. MIRACLE MILE, even though it didn’t do much box office, on video it did very well. So there were deferred payments or residuals and stuff like that. I never got them. They went bankrupt.

SHOCK: The location is so crucial. Did you always have it set in that same geographic radius of the Miracle Mile in Los Angeles?

SDJ: It always started at the Tar Pits, ended at the Tar Pits, and it was always going to be in that area. Miracle Mile is a central part of L.A., and now there are a lot of museums there. In the 1930s it was like Beverly Hills, it was a ritzy shopping area. But then in the 1980s, it was pretty run down, and now it’s coming back into being trendy again. Actually, I can send you some artwork that Paul Chadwick did. He actually storyboarded it too. He does CONCRETE now, a graphic novel. There’s nine of these paintings, and some of them are very close [to the finished film]. These were in the script for nine years.

SHOCK: Was MIRACLE MILE really the last film to feature the landmark Pan-Pacific Auditorium (famous on film as the roller rink in XANADU)?

SDJ: Yeah, it burned down soon after that. I watched it burn down. It was very sad. It was a homeless guy with a Sterno. It was closed down and there was squatters living in there. They started a fire and it burned down.

I think in an early version, when they went to get Julie she wasn’t living in Park La Brea, which is the sort of weird apartment buildings that look like they’re in New York. She was up in the Hollywood Hills, ‘cause I do remember a scene where they were coming down La Cienega, which is a really steep hill, and there was an apartment building being towed by – right in the middle of the night, which can happen in L.A. – and Harry kept stepping on the break and there was a cat under the break pedal. We didn’t shoot that. (LAUGHS) This was in an early version.

SHOCK: Cat under the break pedal!

SDJ: It went (MAKES A CAT’S HOWL)! Trying to not hit a building that’s being towed down the street.

SHOCK: A building? Like a whole house?

SDJ: Yeah. Actually, I had footage that I shot of the Brown Derby Restaurant being towed down the street in the middle of the night, just for a cut away at the gas station for Harry, when he’s on the phone, to look over and see a Derby being towed down the street. But it was 16mm, it wasn’t lit, and it didn’t cut very well. If you’re doing that a lot – changing film stocks – it works, but not for one cut.

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SHOCK: How did Anthony Edwards come aboard?

SDJ: I was going to make it with Nic Cage or Kurt Russell, a couple of those came close. But after TOP GUN Anthony had heat, because he played Goose. And Mare Winningham was sort of the queen of TV movies. I actually rewrote it, the original script. Originally it was an older guy, like Gene Hackman, or some 45-year-old guy going back to get his ex. So the reconciliation story that’s played out with Julie’s grandparents was the main story. He was a trombone player, he was in town, he hadn’t been in town in 15 years, and he’s… not exactly stalking his ex, but he’s kind of like observing her. So he drinks himself to sleep and he sobers up. It ends up being that sort of Rube Goldberg thing of “why are you there at that moment to answer that phone”? And his choice was, I have to go barge in on my ex after 15 years and try to save her. And there’s something powerful about that, that I think if somebody were to redo the film today – and I hope they don’t – they should go with that version. That’s what I would recommend.

SHOCK: I like that it’s one day in the life of these two, and also the day in the life of their entire relationship from start to finish.

SDJ: Pretty much, yeah. I still wish I could tweak the opening somehow. All of that was shot after the principle photography. [The dreamy, romantic tone] gave some people an out that it’s all a dream or something.

SHOCK: Can you tell me about gathering together that vast ensemble cast at Johnnie’s one more time for the MIRACLE MILE Blu-Ray.

SDJ: I’m still paying it off, but at the beginning of the year Kino Lorber was going to put this thing out, so I checked with the supporting cast, and it turned out everybody wanted to come show up for it. We were trying to get into Johnie’s, but we couldn’t get a phone call to them. Johnie’s is a movie set now. It’s closed down, it’s not a restaurant, and they usually don’t open the doors for less than $30,000 a day. And then somehow, it was like, if I can get a cashier’s check for $2500 across town today, we’ll let you in there for six hours. So everybody showed up, and it was magical. It’s exactly the way we left it. We art directed it.

SHOCK: Did you give it the name of “Johnie’s”?

DJ: No, no, it had been Johnie’s for a long time. I think you can hear Earl Boen (THE TERMINATOR and sequels), and Danny De La Paz, who plays the transvestite, talking about that it was originally called Romeo’s Times Square. But it had been Johnnie’s Coffee Shop for many years. And that’s still what’s there. The big sign was actually a prop: we rebuilt an existing sign because the wind destroyed it. I own that, and I have it in a rockabilly hat store in Culver City. But I have to move it soon. I think they’re going out of business or something.

SHOCK: Everything that happens in the diner is so fantastic. It’s a perfect mix of personalities. It has the beginnings of what you often see in other disaster films: you get to know one character, and then a rag tag group gets thrown together, and it plays out as an ensemble piece for the remainder of the runtime. But in this film everything is leading that way, and then Harry abruptly jumps out of a moving van onto the highway to go find Julie.

SDJ: Yeah, there actually is a separate movie – I guess there’s sort of two movies! I’m teaching screenwriting now, and it’s like, I can’t teach those rules because I rebelled against them. (LAUGHS) But yeah, you have a sappy love story, a 1980s love story, corny almost. And then it gets dark, and you introduce all these people, and then he jumps off. That’s a movie that’s going to happen in an alternate reality, and then he jumps off that movie and follows his own thing. And of course people went, “We’ve got to cut away to Landa (Denise Crosby’s character, trying to secure a private plane to Antarctica) and see if she made it.” No. It’s a one-person struggle. It’s Harry Washello’s (Anthony Edwards) struggle, with what he knows and doesn’t know. And he’s bouncing, resonating off of other people’s opinions, trying to believe this is happening and acting on it. But – even thought he wasn’t in the diner – the helicopter pilot did come back. Even then you think, oh, we’re going to get away. I guess I wanted to say: don’t start a nuclear war because there is no place to go. So, we’re back into the tar pits, being dug up with the love of your life.

SHOCK: I think it’s a safe presumption that a studio would want to change the ending of MIRACLE MILE, because even though it’s honest and the right choice, it’s a colossal bummer. But the studio supported you?

SDJ: We had a diamond effect. [An alternate ending] that is on the Blu-Ray, but John Daly said that was too upbeat when the light turns into two diamonds. And I thought that the response would be like 50/50, but nope, nobody really wants that ending. They want to go out with a fading light.

SHOCK: Reviewers often mention, when discussing MIRACLE MILE’s low box office returns, that by the time the movie came out the fear of nuclear Armageddon had been diffused a little bit and the end of the Cold War was around the corner.

SDJ: I think if I would have made it in 1980 or ’81, if I could have made it with the same ending, it would have really shocked you. Then TESTAMENT (1983) and THE DAY AFTER (1983) came out, and the Cold War cooled off, or warmed up, or thawed out. So it seemed a little archaic.

SHOCK: But I think it works – the film starts off on such a completely different note, and then it shifts gears hard. At the time there just weren’t a lot of movies out there with that kind of heavy gut punch.

SDJ: Yeah, it was really sort of a 1970s movie. I mean, I wrote it just before the end of the 1970s. There are all these great 1970s movies that are much darker. So I think by the time it got made at the end of the 1980s, it’s a different time.

SHOCK: What about the violence and brutality in the gas station scene, when Mykelti Williamson (Bubba from FORREST GUMP!), a stereo thief carjacked at gunpoint by Anthony Edwards, sprays gasoline on the police who then light themselves on fire? MIRACLE MILE kicks into new territory more than a few times, but this feels like we’ve entered a horror movie.

SDJ: Well, symbolically, you’re blind and you’re shooting off your gun: you’re going to blow yourself up. I talk about it in the Blu-Ray commentary – the guy was cast because he looked like a cop. That’s one of the scenes where the script had more emotion. The cops really had a relationship. It didn’t play. They weren’t good enough actors to make it play. But it still works. You know you’re in trouble.

SHOCK: It just escalates so horribly and so quickly, in a way that seems out of tune with the movie you thought you were watching.

SDJ: Yeah, it gets darker and darker. But there’s still weird funny stuff in it, I guess, because when I see it with an audience – and we’ll see how the Toronto screening goes – people are laughing all the way until almost the very end. I put stuff in there that’s funny. Like when Harry is crossing the street and the guy is shooting at him for no reason, because he dented his car, and there’s a guy crushed, holding Variety. I know Joe Dante has his own print of the movie. That’s like a Joe Dante GREMLINS moment.

SHOCK: Totally. Rising insanity. The camera is on the ground and there are four planes of action – under the gutter, in the gutter, on the street, on top of the cars. We have frantic action happening on every plane. And for some reason this guy has decided there’s nothing more important than shooting Harry.

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SDJ: There’s nothing else to live for, other than killing the guy that dented your roof. But that plays. I like that. And actually those sewers were right at Pan-Pacific Park, too. And they had diseases in them. The crew wouldn’t go down there, and Tony (Edwards) got a rash. We were down there already shooting when the guy said, “Y’all had your shots, right?” and listed off all the diseases that they had down there.

Here’s an interesting thing too – so Tony and Mare, they’re wonderful actors.

They had been friends forever. By far the best thing about the Blu-Ray coming out is that and they got together to do an interview. I’ve been emailing both of them, trying to get them together for this thing. After they did the interview, I guess my phone it has live chat, my phone rang and they’re on there, and they’re in the back of a cab and they’re telling me that they are a couple now. They are in love, in real life, Tony and Mare. I didn’t believe them. And I started crying. And they said we’re inseparable, we’re in love. We’re going to be together forever.

SHOCK: Is that for real? Like, diamonds? That’s so beautiful. It is the story you’re hoping for, when you watch MIRACLE MILE, even if you know it’s impossible. You guys made your movie, and it’s a damn good one.

SDJ: It’s going to be out there for a while. We are going to try to have a MIRACLE MILE website at some point and we’ll sell posters by Paul Chadwick, and there’s a whole bunch of extras I got. I have one 35mm print, I keep it at the Academy (of Motion Picture Arts & Sciences) so that it will exist in 100 years. Hopefully, if the world survives… Secretly – I just kid about this of course – but oh great, Russians in Syria, maybe we’ll get back into a Cold War and it will really help the box office for MIRACLE MILE? No, I don’t want that to happen! I do tell people that it’s more likely to happen tonight then it was back then. Because the missiles are still there. They never went away. There’s fewer of them, but they’re still there.

For more in-depth information on Steve De Jarnatt’s fascinating life and career, check out Robert Cass’ interview at Popdose or the MIRACLE MILE episode of Mike White’s Projection Booth podcast. Both were useful resources for this interview. If you’re in the Toronto area, do yourself one better and come to The Royal Cinema on Saturday, November 12th for the Neon Dreams presentation of MIRACLE MILE in 35mm with Steve De Jarnatt in person, co-presented by Shock Till You Drop.

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