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We
got the chance to catch up with him and talk a little about
his past, present and future projects.
Read on for juicy tidbits about the upcoming Black Christmas
remake (being handled by Glen Morgan and James Wong of 'Final
Destination' fame) and the remake of 'Children Shouldn't Play
With Dead Things' that Bob is writing and directing himself!-
by Jsyn. 5/05
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Can you tell us a little bit about you earliest recollections of
movies? What made you want to become a filmmaker?
Oh, you started with a tough one there {laughs}
| I grew up in Fort
Lauderdale, moved there when I was seven years old, and I used
to go to the theaters down on Las Olas Boulevard. I did like horror
movies, but I liked all movies. I always wanted to be writer from
the earliest time I could remember. It wasn't until I got into
college that I started to think about films seriously. I was a
film buff, but not an addict if you know what I mean...I wasn't
crazy about films but I liked 'em. So I'd say it was probably
at college, at the University of Miami where I started thinking
about making films. It's a long, long story but I got into films
when I was an actor in the local Miami film industry of the mid
sixties. |
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Kay Gordon Murray and other famous
people started with that... So I was in a film and this crazy man
said to me, "We're gonna make a film over in Lehigh Acres"
and Lehigh Acres was a jungle community in effect, a community built
on the edge of the Everglades. Charlie Brune, the man who owned a
funeral parlor there also had a movie studio. It was an amazing place,
you had to drive across the Everglades to get there. Anyway, I did
my first film for him and nobody knew what they were doing, me included
{laughs}. The film never got out and the next one I did was 'The Emporers
New Clothes' which wasn't too bad, it was just with local people.
Charlie was a cross-dresser, his wife was a very butch lady and they
had three kids, it was a strange situation and I said, "I gotta
make a movie out of this whole thing" {laughs}
Wasn't John Carradine in that movie?
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Yes, John Carradine
was in the movie. Of course, the movie was about a son of a senator
who got out of the Korean war by cross-dressing as a woman. John
was in it and Lila Lee, the silent film star, and it was an education.
My editors name was Hack... get it? {laughs} He was a local editor
out of Fort Meyers. Nobody knew anything about filmmaking. My
cinematographer was an ex-newsreel cameraman, nice guy. Nobody
knew anything... I had The Five C's of Cinematography in my hands
the whole time I was doing it. |
So you pretty much just learned it by doing it?
Totally. Completely. So I figured at that point what I would do was
become an AD. That's a nice position to be in to learn how everything
works... it was interesting. But it was another four years when I
started thinking with my friend Alan Ormsby that the next thing we
were gonna do was a horror film first. That was just short of pornography
to get a break in.
It seems like
a lot of people say that... it's either pornography or horror
movies to break into the film business.
Independently in Florida, that's for sure! {laughs} That was part
of devising 'Children Shouldn't Play With Dead Things'. We got
the script together and my brothers and Gary Gotch and Ken Gotch,
along with their uncles put up a total of $40,000 and we shot
it over eleven nights in a park in Miami. That's how my career
started. There were two other horror films before I moved on and
finally got my big break. Well, 'Black Christmas' was picked up
by Warner Brothers but it was 'Murder By Decree' that... |
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That's a personal favorite of mine actually.
Thank you. It was like another world. I was a 29-year-old guy, I go
to England, I meet John Geilguld, Tony Quayle, Frank Finlay, I already
had Chris Plummer... I had to get (James) Mason, he didn't want to do
it, so I drove to where he was shooting another film to talk him into
it, and he did it. I had some of the greatest British actors in a 4
million dollar movie and something like fifty shooting days.
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Were you a
Sherlock Holmes fan? Is that what interested you in the project?
I had just read in the newspaper this theory about the possible
source of Jack the Ripper and thought what a good idea to put
Holmes into it. Actually I did watch all the Basil Rathbone
and Nigel Bruce movies ...I was a fan. I thought they were very
well done.
Murder By Decree is considered by many fans to be one of
the best Sherlock Holmes movies ever made.
I felt quite honored. It was a phenomenal cast. For a
4 million dollar movie that's extremely fancy. Shooting all
over London made it look unique... It had a nice opening in
New York and good reviews.
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Let's talk about Black Christmas. The movie was pretty much created
the "slasher" genre. This was long before 'Friday the 13th',
'Halloween', and even 'When A Stranger Calls'....
Oh yeah way before THAT movie. They really did rip us off directly!
{laughs}
What influences did you draw from if there was really nothing else
like it before it?
| A script came to
me. ..I often rewrite and work on scripts, and I did a tremendous
amount of work on 'Black Christmas'...I just drew on the imagery
that I had. I had this idea from the beginning that I would obscure
the killer and make him all the more frightening and ominous.
My obvious influence for say, 'Children Shouldn't Play With Dead
Things' was of course 'Night of the Living Dead' but with a more
comic sort of turn... Other than that, all the other classic horror
films from 'Psycho' & on were in my consciousness I suppose
but I can't say I took any ideas from any particular film. I just
took the story and my ideas of what I thought would be frightening. |
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Black Christmas
came out in 1974 and the Steadicam wasn't introduced until 1976...so
how did you film those scenes from the killer's point of view,
especially the beginning scene where he is climbing up the trellis
and entering the attic window, with both his arms and legs in
frame?
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If you get William
Alexander's DVD, the Canadian DVD, of 'Black Christmas' they go
into it in some detail. Basically Bert Dunk, the camera operator,
designed a camera rig that attached to his head! No one had ever
done that before... those are his hands climbing with the small
camera. The moving shots when we were on the ground we just standard
handheld shots. But the climbing ones were the unique style camera,
when he looked up the camera looked up. Critical Mass is the company
that released the 25th anniversary edition of Black Christmas
on DVD, and it's got some wonderful extras. It takes you through
the old house! Art Hindle walked through the house and showed
where what scenes were filmed where.
It was something he created specifically for the movie?
Yes, exactly. |
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Were there ever plans for a sequel to Black Christmas?
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No, I never intended
ever to do a sequel. I did a film about three years later, started
a film with John Carpenter, it was his first film for Warner
Bros. (which picked up 'Black Christmas'), he asked me if I
was ever gonna do a sequel and I said no. I was through with
horror, I didn't come into the business to do just horror. He
said, "Well what would you do if you did do a sequel?"
I said it would be the next year and the guy would have actually
been caught, escape from a mental institution, go back to the
house and they would start all over again. And I would call
it 'Halloween'. {laughs}
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Sooo, was 'Black
Christmas' directly responsible for 'Halloween'?
No, that's not really true. The truth is John didn't copy 'Black
Christmas', he wrote a script, directed the script, did the casting.
'Halloween' is his movie and besides the script came to him already
titled anyway. He liked 'Black Christmas' and may have been influenced
by it, but in no way did John Carpenter copy the idea. Fifteen
other people at that time had thought to do a movie called 'Halloween'
but the script came to John with that title on it. |
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When you were
working on the script for Black Christmas, it was your intention
all along to never reveal the killers identity or backstory?
That's correct. It was bold and some people didn't appreciate
it. When Warner Bros. bought the movie they tried to talk me out
of it & into making more of a concluding finish.
As you probably know 2929 has bought the rights to Black Christmas... |
Which brings us to the remake.
They are remaking it with Glen Morgan and James Wong. Glen has finished
his script and did a sensational job of creating the backstory, I don't
want to give too much away but, pursuing what was being implied in those
phone calls... quite horrible things that happened back then. They should
be shooting in the fall.
What would you
like to personally see them do with the movie as far as a direction
or...
I don't want to get into that because I KNOW what they are going
to do! {Laughs}
Taking it back to the backstory is a brilliant stroke though,
at the same time still keeping it in the sorority house but learning
more about what happened then...but that's as much as I can say. |
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And aren't you remaking 'Children Shouldn't Play With Dead Things'
yourself?
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I am indeed!
I've written a new script for it. I did it for $40,000 with
my college buddies twenty-something years ago and it's the only
movie that I wanted to do more with. 'Deathdream' had a modest
budget but I'm very proud of it. Oliver Hudson and company,
they bought it last year. A lot of my movies are being remade!
{Laughs} They want to do 'Murder By Decree' but I won't let
them...{laughs}
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| Anyway I've added
a new dimension to it, a new character. There's a ghoul that murdered
fifteen people, forty years before and that's what changed the
island from a resort, a mansion island, to a horror island and
he's brought into the story now. I thought, there's more fun to
be had with this. It's going to be very funny but quite horrifying
too. We'll probably start shooting in September, maybe earlier,
and are putting money together for it now. |
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Do you have
a favorite genre to work in or a favorite project?
Like Altman said, asking what's my favorite film is like asking
who's my favorite child {laughs}
That being said, I certainly have an enormous affection for
'Porky's'. It had a tremendous history. It was odd because it
actually has strong varied supporters... it was despised on
one hand but it had supporters like David Mamet, Arthur Miller,
Normal Mailer... all admired the movie. So it had it's strong
core of supporters but it also was so despised...
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People also have
many kind words for 'A Christmas Story', which I also have a lot
of affection for many reasons, mainly because I tried for ten
years to get it done. Someone actually bought the actual house
where we shot and turned it into a museum. It had that many people
come by just to see it.
But those two certainly, and I have enormous affection for getting
to work with Arthur Miller on 'American Clock'. THE Arthur Miller.
I grew up in theater and he's the playwright of America. So those
three certainly, but there was no film I didn't have fun doing
and enjoy working on. |
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Is there something you haven't done but would like to do? A pet project
you haven't gotten to yet but hope to?
I have two, yeah. I have a science fiction film from an original screenplay
I've written called "Lost in the Stars". It's not Star Wars-type
fantasy, it's more reality/fantasy. It's about a ship that was marooned
on another planet where the denizens are quite horrible creatures. They
captured this ship and get into all their tapes and computers and learn
our history and turn themselves into the Roman Circus. When our rescue
ship crash lands, the creatures have a Roman coliseum and they become
the gladiators.
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The other one
is a western. Akira Kurosawa was a big fan of mine, of 'Black
Christmas' and 'Murder By Decree'. In the early Eighties he
tried to do a film together with me, produced for him over there
and it was called "RAN". Kurosawa wrote the short
version of it and I'm writing the longer version and I'm putting
that together right now.
It's an adventure story starting with Thomas Jefferson and his
illegitimate children with his black mistress. She has children
again herself, and they have the grandchildren... A blonde god
who goes to Montana to the Montana war. It's really the whole
early American history, not done as a Japanese film but somewhat
in that style.
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I think science fiction and westerns are the only two genres you
haven't dabbled in.
That's correct. I almost did science fiction but not quite. I started
a western but I left the film.
Well, thank you sir for taking the time to talk with us. I'm
personally a big fan and this was a quite a thrill for me.
Thank you, it was a pleasure talking to you!
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Bob
Clark 101:
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Did
You Like?...
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...Then
Check Out
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From Hell
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Murder By
Decree
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Halloween
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Black Christmas
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American
Pie
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Porky's
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Jacob's Ladder
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Deathdream
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Return Of
The Living Dead
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Children Shouldn't
Play With Dead Things
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