splash 1984

Splash is a 1984 fantasy romantic comedy film directed by Ron Howard and written by Lowell Ganz and Babaloo Mandel. The film was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Original Screenplay. The original music score was composed by Lee Holdridge. It was the very first film released by Disney’s Touchstone Films (now known as Touchstone Pictures).

Trivia:

  • The first film released under Disney’s Touchstone Pictures label, which was created so the studio could release more adult-oriented fare.
  • Daryl Hannah a vegetarian, refused to eat real lobster for the restaurant scene. The crew scooped out the insides of real, cooked lobsters and filled them with a thick, tofu-like paste. In an interview for ‘Biography (1990)’, Director Ron Howard said Hannah cried after each take over the deaths of the lobsters for their shells.
  • Before Tom Hanks accepted the role of Allen Bauer, it had already been turned down by John Travolta and Michael Keaton.
  • At the time of filming, Daryl Hannah was extremely shy about her body. According to director Ron Howard, she wore both band-aids and makeup over her nipples to conceal them.
  • David Morse was considered for the lead role.
  • Credited with introducing the girl’s name Madison, which has since become one of the most popular names for newborn girls in the early 21st century.
  • When Madison watches television at the department store, the little boy in the toothpaste commercial is Emmanuel Lewis.
  • The fountain from the movie is now on display at Disney’s MGM Studios at Walt Disney World. The mermaid fin Daryl Hannah wore is behind the bar at Planet Hollywood in Downtown Disney.
  • The mold used to make the mermaid fountain had also been used to make the ice sculpture in Herbie Goes Bananas (1980).
  • The scene at the racquetball court, where John Candy serves and the ball hits him in the head, was done in one take.
  • The map from the shipwreck that Madison uses to find Allen’s home is an old map of the Province of New York. It bears the name ‘His Excellency William Tryon Esq.’ Tyron was the colonial governor of the Province of New York from 1771 to 1780.
  • The “Crazy Eddie” commercial that surprises Madison was for a real electronics store. Eddie and Sam M. Antar opened Crazy Eddie in Brooklyn, NY in 1971. Their spokesman was WPIX-FM disc jockey Jerry “Dr. Jerry” Carroll, whose frenetic nonstop sales pitch was based on used car salesman Earl “Madman” Muntz. The pitch always ended with “Crazy Eddie, his prices are IN-SA-A-A-A-A-A-ANE!” The chain grew to 43 stores in 4 states. It closed in 1989 after charges of fraud and security violations.
  • Jodie Foster auditioned for the role of Madison, but turned it down in order to play a character in The Hotel New Hampshire (1984).
  • Rosanna Arquette auditioned for the role of Madison, but had to back out.
  • Brooke Shields reportedly turned down an offer to play Madison so she could study French Literature at Princeton.
  • Before Daryl Hannah accepted the role of Madison, it had already been turned down by Tatum O’Neal, Michelle Pfeiffer, Julia Louis-Dreyfus, Melanie Griffith,, Diane Lane, Kathleen Turner and Sharon Stone.
  • Debra Winger reportedly wanted the role of Madison, but Ron Howard turned her down.
  • While Allen is offering girls names to the mermaid before she settled on Madison, the last two he suggests are Elizabeth and Samantha. Elizabeth Hanks is Tom Hanks’s daughter and Samantha Lewes was his then-wife.
  • According to Biography Channel, Bill Murray and P.J. Soles were considered for the roles of Allen and Madison, but Murray turned it down.

 dracula_1931_movie_poster

Dracula is a 1931 United States horror film directed by Tod Browning and starring Béla Lugosi as the title character. The film was produced by Universal and is based on the stage play of the same name by Hamilton Deane and John L. Balderston, which in turn is based on the novel Dracula by Bram Stoker.

Trivia:

• Universal Studios commissioned a new musical score from composer Philip Glass. It premiered at The Brooklyn Academy of Music on 26 October 1999.
• When Universal purchased the rights to the 1927 Broadway play, Lon Chaney was considered for the title role. However, Chaney died on August 26, 1930, and the role went to Bela Lugosi.
• A Spanish-language version, Drácula (1931), was filmed at night on the same set at the same time, with Spanish-speaking actors.
• Cinematographer Karl Freund achieved the effect of Dracula’s hypnotic stare by aiming two pencil-spot-lights into actor Bela Lugosi’s eyes.
• The Royal Albert Hall sequence of the movie was filmed on the same stage where The Phantom of the Opera (1925) starring Lon Chaney had been filmed.
• The large, expansive sets built for the Transylvania castle and Carfax Abbey sequences remained standing after filming was completed, and were used by Universal Pictures for many other movies for over a decade.
• Among the other actors mentioned as possible candidates for the role of Count Dracula were John Wray, Paul Muni, Conrad Veidt, Chester Morris, and William Courtenay.
• Bela Lugosi was so desperate to repeat his stage success and play the Count Dracula role for the film version, that he agreed to a contract paying him $500 per week for a seven week shooting schedule, an insultingly small amount even during the days of the Depression.
• The spider webs in Dracula’s castle were created by shooting rubber cement from a rotary gun.
• Bela Lugosi played the role of Dracula on Broadway in 1927 before touring the country with the show. The American performance of the British stage actor Hamilton Deane’s adaptation of the book was a smashing success. Soon after the play began touring Universal started to express interest in the script.
• Due to studio demands to cut costs, the film was shot in sequence.
• Similar to the prologue in Frankenstein (1931), the original release featured an epilogue with Edward Van Sloan talking to the audience about what they have just seen. This was removed for the 1936 re-release and is now assumed to be lost.
• After the death of Lon Chaney, one of the first actors considered for the title role was Ian Keith.
• While it is rumored that Bela Lugosi, could not speak English very well, and had to learn his lines phonetically, this is not true. Lugosi was speaking English as well as he ever would by the time this was filmed.
• There was no real musical soundtrack in the film because it was believed that, with sound being such a recent innovation in films, the audience would not accept hearing music in a scene if there was no explanation for it being there (e.g., the orchestra playing off camera when Dracula meets Mina at the theatre).
• Several famous elements often associated with Dracula are not visible in this film. At no point does Dracula display fangs. Also, the famous vampire bite mark on the neck is never shown either (though it is visible in the Spanish version).
• Although it was his most famous role, Bela Lugosi played Dracula only once more on screen, in the comedy Bud Abbott Lou Costello Meet Frankenstein (1948). However, he played Dracula-like characters in movies such as The Return of the Vampire (1944) and Plan 9 from Outer Space (1959).
• This Universal production became the most famous and successful film to pair David Manners with Helen Chandler. The pair had made two films at Warner Brothers/First National and one at Fox.
• The peasants inside the inn are praying The Lord’s Prayer in Hungarian.
• Bette Davis (who had a contract at Universal at the time) was considered to play the part of Mina Harker. However, Universal head Carl Laemmle Jr. didn’t think too highly of her sex appeal.
• The opening music to this film is from Act 2 of Swan Lake.
• In the scene where Dracula and Renfield are traveling to London by boat, the footage shown is borrowed from a Universal silent film called The Storm Breaker (1925). Silent films were projected at a different frames-per-second speed from that later adopted for sound films, accounting for the jerky movements and quicker-than-normal action of these shots.
• In the first scene, the young woman reading from the tourist book was played by Carla Laemmle, niece of Carl Laemmle, founder and head of Universal Pictures.
• When Carl Laemmle moved Universal to California in 1914, a version of “Dracula” was one of the first projects being considered. It was over fifteen years before this version was produced.
• The movie’s line “Listen to them. Children of the night. What music they make.” was voted as the #83 movie quote by the American Film Institute (out of 100).
• When Bela Lugosi died in 1956, he was buried wearing the black silk cape he wore for this film.
• Universal’s original plan was to make a big-budget adaptation of “Dracula” that would strictly adhere to the Bram Stoker novel. However, after the stock market crash of 1929 and the beginning of the Great Depression, Universal chose not to risk an investment on such a sprawling film. Instead, it adapted the much less expensive Hamilton Deane stage play.
• Universal acquired the film rights to “Dracula” from Bram Stoker’s widow and the play’s writer Hamilton Deane for $40,000.
• Before he was cast as Count Dracula, Bela Lugosi acted as an unpaid intermediary for Universal Pictures in negotiating with the widow of author Bram Stoker in an attempt to persuade her to lower her asking price for the filming rights to the Dracula property. After two months of negotiations, Mrs. Stoker reportedly lowered her price from $200,000 to $60,000. This, however, further demonstrated to Universal how desperate Lugosi was to repeat his stage success as Count Dracula and secure the film role for himself.
• Apparently morose over the loss of friend and collaborator Lon Chaney and in the midst of severe alcoholism, the normally meticulous Tod Browning was said to have been sullen and unprofessional during the shoot. Among his actions were to leave set, leaving cinematographer Karl Freund to direct scenes. He would also recklessly tear pages out of the script if he felt them to be redundant.
• The original Broadway production of “Dracula” starring Bela Lugosi opened at the Fulton Theater on October 5, 1927 and ran for 261 performances. Also in the original cast was Edward Van Sloan as Van Helsing. These were the only two actors from the original 1927 Broadway production to repeat their roles in the film.
• Although he lived for 67 years after the film was released, David Manners (John Harker) claimed he never watched it.
• Edward Van Sloan and Dwight Frye also appeared in the horror classic Frankenstein (1931). They are the only 2 actors to have appeared in both films.
• Bela Lugosi never blinks even once throughout the film.

la strage dei vampiri 1962

La Strage dei Vampiri (a.k.a Curse of the Blood-Ghouls) is a 1962 Italian horror film, starring Walter Brandi, Graziella Granata, Luigi Batzella, and Dieter Eppler.  Written and directed by, Roberto Mauri.

Plot: On their wedding night, a newlywed couple find themselves menaced by a bloodthirsty vampirer.

Heather_Graham

Heather Graham

 

Heather Joan Graham (born January 29, 1970) is an American actress and fashion model. She became known for her performance in Gus Van Sant’s 1989 Drugstore Cowboy and her role as Rollergirl in the 1997 film Boogie Nights directed by Paul Thomas Anderson. She has been part of two ensemble casts that have earned Screen Actors Guild Awards nominations for Outstanding Performance by a Cast (Boogie Nights and Bobby).

Trivia:

Was voted “Most Talented” by her Agoura High School class. 

Modeling contract with Emanuel Ungaro Liberte 

Had to turn down the female lead in the film Rounders (1998) because of scheduling conflicts. 

Older sister of actress Aimee Graham. 

Was fired from Scorchers (1991). 

Graduated 1988 Agoura High School, Agoura Hills, California. Dropped out of UCLA her freshman year to pursue acting 

Worked at Toys R’Us when she was a teenager 

Was forced to turn down the lead role in Heathers (1988), because her parents thought the language was too risque. 

Her father is an FBI agent. Her mother is a schoolteacher/author. 

She once worked as an usher at The Hollywood Bowl 

Enjoys yoga and cooking and playing poker 

Has not spoken to her parents in two years because they disapprove of the movies she stars in. 

Was named one of the 50 Most Beautiful People by People Magazine in 2001. 

She is of Irish Catholic extraction 

Was the subject of the power pop song “Heather Graham” by the Washington, D.C.-based acappella quartet, Da Vinci’s Notebook. The song appears on the group’s 2002 CD, “Brontosaurus.” 

Ranked #4 in Stuff magazine’s “102 Sexiest Women in the World” (2002). 

Went to the same high school as Mike Shinoda and Brad Delson of Linkin Park as well as Adrianna Costa. 

She attended Augora High school with Shane Stanley, Beverly Peele and James Robb and Mike Shinoda. 

Played a porn actress twice: in The Guru (2002) and Boogie Nights (1997) 

Practises Transcendental Meditation. Appeared meditating on the cover of the August 4, 2003 issue of Time Magazine. 

Ranked as #74 in FHM’s “100 Sexiest Women in the World 2005″ special supplement. (2005) 

Named #98 in FHM magazine’s “100 Sexiest Women in the World 2006″ supplement. (2006). 

Chosen by Femme Fatales magazine as one of the “50 sexiest women on the planet”. [February 2006] 

Was a contestant on “Scrabble” in 1986 for the Teen Tournament. 

In 2003, for a photo shoot by photographer Sam Jones, she was levitated several feet in the air by a magician. Later in the same photo shoot, the magician also sawed her in half. 

Had her ears pierced in her teens, but has now let them heal up again and can no longer wear pierced earrings. 

Has a cat named Mittens. 

Originally auditioned to play “Amber Waves” in Boogie Nights (1997) but ultimately ended up playing the Roller Girl.

little_girl_who_lives_down_the_lane

The Little Girl Who Lives Down the Lane is a 1976 film starring Jodie Foster and Martin Sheen, directed by Nicolas Gessner and written by Laird Koenig, based on Koenig’s 1974 novel of the same title. The film fits mostly in the genre of psychological thriller drama with elements of romance and horror.

Trivia:

  • Jodie Foster was fourteen at the time of filming and refused to appear nude. Thus, her older sister, Connie Foster, was used as her double in the film’s brief nude sequence.
  • In interviews, Jodie Foster usually refrains from saying which of her films are her least favorites, but she has let it slip that this movie isn’t one she is fond of, explaining, “When people are there to simply do a job they don’t have any passion for, those are nearly always bad films.”
  • Scott Jacoby told Seventeen Magazine in 1977 that the hamster they used in the cigarette scene was already dead, but that the shot gave Jodie Foster the fits anyway. Foster went on record as saying one of the producers on this film was “nuts”, explaining that he wanted her to show more skin and she refused. Foster had a terrible time with the sexual scene upstairs with Mario. Although her older sister did the shot, Foster was very upset that viewers would think this was her and fought and cried with the producers, to no avail.

Baby Blood aka The Evil Within 1990

Baby Blood (aka The Evil Within) is a 1990 French horror film directed by Alain Robak.

A glutton extraterrestrial parasite has spent several decades in the past to culminate its only dearest wish: To be born of a human (it is very interested in human nature and behavior). In order to kindle the evil plan, the wicked being deliberately bends on chasing a plump human body just for fulfilling the insatiable thirst of – human blood. Here-to-fore, the story incidentally takes an uncouth turn.

A voluptuous circus acrobat named Yanka (Emmanuelle Escourrou) has been tormented and abused by her husband for years who is an owner of the circus where she works and there is no love lost between the two. But one day when a leopard is demanded and caged in the circus zoo, its life inexplicably comes to an end soon. However, in the mean time, the surviving extraterrestrial parasite casts the body off the carcass, raids Yanka’s original fetus, and stealthily slips into her womb unseen. The aftermath goads a reluctant and helpless Yanka into the hideous act of endless carnage just only on to pamper the evil fetus with gallons of blood and the ultimate mother’s milk is Baby Blood.

Trivia:

  • There is a sign for “Baby Blood 2″ outside one of the buildings in the movie.
  • The titular canine star of the hit French comedy Baxter (1989) makes a cameo appearance in the film.
  • Jennifer Lien’s voice-over debut.
  •  

    tremors 1990

    Tremors is a 1990 dark comedy monster film about a group of people from a small Nevada town fighting subterranean worm-creatures dubbed “Graboids”. It was directed by Ron Underwood, and stars Kevin Bacon, Fred Ward, Finn Carter, Michael Gross and Reba McEntire. The film’s exterior scenes were shot near Lone Pine, California, an area which has long been used as a movie location.

    It was followed by two sequels Tremors 2: Aftershocks, Tremors 3: Back to Perfection, one prequel Tremors 4: The Legend Begins and the television show Tremors: The Series.

    Trivia:

  • Michael Gross began filming one day after shooting the last episode of “Family Ties” (1982).
  • The “graboids” are very reminiscent of the giant worms in Dune (1984). Both are giant worms, live underground, live in the desert, have large mouths on the end, and respond to vibrations on the surface. Also, both films have the characters escaping the worms by retreating to rocks where they can’t get attacked.
  • The license plate for Burt and Heather Gummer’s vehicle reads, UZI 4U. The bumper sticker on their vehicle’s right front bumper reads “Free Afghanistan”.
  • Valentine’s belt buckle is in the shape of a heart.
  • Originally, the monsters were supposed to be completely dry, not slimy. This was changed when it was remarked that the gloss paint effect made them look like they were covered in nail varnish.
  • The original ending of the film was much different. Val and Earl head out to Bixbie and Val doesn’t hook up with Rhonda. But it is implied. The two are looking for their lighter and realize that Rhonda still has it, they turn around and head back. This ending was shot, and tested for one audience, and was not well received. It is available in the documentary on the DVD.
  • S.S. Wilson said that he got the idea for the film while he was working for the US Navy in the California desert. While resting on a rock, he imagined what it might be like if something underground kept him from getting off the rock.
  • The “elephant gun” used by Burt to kill the Graboid in his basement is a Belgian-made William Moore & Co. 8-gauge shotgun.
  • First film as an actress of country music singer Reba McEntire.
  • The town set was built in about two months.
  • Burt’s SUV is a GMC Jimmy.
  • According to promotional material from the Sci-Fi Channel, the official scientific name of the Graboid is “Caederus mexicana”.
  • Was originally given an “R” rating by the MPAA not for violence but for language. As an appeal, producers removed all utterances of the “f” word, with the exception of one – when Kevin Bacon says “Fuck you” to the dead graboid.
  • Composer Robert Folk was brought in at the very last minute to re-score the film. This was due to the original score composed by credited composer Ernest Troost was lacking the punch that it needed for the film musically. Approximately thirty minutes or more was written by Folk and strangely goes uncredited in the film’s credits.
  • In the scene where Val and Earl stall the truck due to the graboid grabbing the rear axle, Val pulls the truck into four wheel drive and pulls away without exiting the vehicle to lock the differential in. That model of truck did come with automatic differential locking but the truck used in the movie had the locking mechanisms visible on the front tires of the truck in several scenes
  • The ‘golden oldie’ playing in the Doctor’s buried station wagon is a song by Bobby Bare, “Drop Kick me Jesus” – partial lyrics: “Drop kick me Jesus through the goal posts of life / End over end neither left nor to right / Straight through the heart of them righteous uprights / Drop kick me Jesus through the goal posts of life
  • venom 1982

    Venom is a 1981 horror film about a kidnapping gone wrong, when a boy’s deadly Black Mamba turns the tables and terrorizes the terrorists who have invaded the boy’s townhouse. Directed by Piers Haggard, it stars Klaus Kinski, Oliver Reed, Nicol Williamson and Sarah Miles. Tobe Hooper was originally attached to direct but quit because of “creative differences”.

    Trivia:

  • Klaus Kinski took his role in this movie over an offer to appear in Raiders of the Lost Ark (1981) because he was offered more money.
  • Tobe Hooper quit because of “creative differences”. The DOP also quit for the same reason after ten days of shooting.
  • Replacement director Piers Haggard thought the Black Mamba was the nicest person on the set
  • Sterling Hayden’s final acting role in a theatrical film.
  • Final film of Rita Webb.
  • Michael Gough’s character, David Ball, is based on a real London Zoo Keeper who still lives in the UK (2006).
  • Watch the credits. The snake leaves a little present for all who do so.
  • At a party at Elaine’s Restaurant in Manhattan celebrating the film’s release, Klaus Kinski boasted how he and other members of the cast & crew had ganged up on Tobe Hooper a couple of weeks into the shoot to get him replaced; Piers Haggard took over.
  • The first poster advertisements printed up for the film had Tobe Hooper credited as director, even though he would leave the film early in production.
  • In the DVD commentary director Piers Haggard states that stars Oliver Reed and Klaus Kinski hated each other during production. Reed would constantly provoke Kinski until he would lose his temper.
  • Director Piers Haggard says that none of the original footage Tobe Hooper shot is still in the film.
  • Final cinema feature of Arnold Diamond.
  • At least three cast members Tobe Hooper hired for this film he would finally get to work with on Lifeforce. John Forbes-Robertson, Peter Porteous and Nicholas Donnelly.
  • troll 1986

    Troll is a 1986 horror film directed by John Carl Buechler. Its plot has no relation to the movies Troll 2 and Troll 3.

    Trivia:

  • On Wendy’s wall is a poster for John Carl Buechler’s previous film, Ragewar (1984).
  • The picture of Galwyn in his human form (before being turned into a mushroom) that Eunice St. Clair shows to Harry Potter Jr. is in reality a caricature of the film’s director, John Carl Buechler.
  • The hero of this film is a boy named Harry Potter and he is surrounded by a fantasy world of witches, wizards and magic – eleven years before J.K. Rowling’s Harry Potter novels swept the publishing world.
  • This is Julia Louis-Dreyfus’ film debut.
  • The green and white hat that Harry Potter Sr. wears at the beginning of the film is from the Real Betis Balompie, a soccer team from Sevilla, Spain.
  • lust_for_a_vampire 1971

    Lust For a Vampire (also known as Love for a Vampire or To Love a Vampire) is a 1971 British Hammer Horror film directed by Jimmy Sangster, starring Yutte Stensgaard, Michael Johnston and Barbara Jefford. It is the second film in the so-called Karnstein Trilogy loosely based on the J. Sheridan Le Fanu novella Carmilla. It was preceded by The Vampire Lovers and followed by Twins of Evil (1971). The three films do not form a chronological development, but use the Karnstein family as the source of the vampiric threat. The three films were somewhat daring for the time in explicitly depicting lesbian themes. It was given an R rating for some violence, gore, strong adult content, and nudity.

    Production of Lust For a Vampire began not long after the release of The Vampire Lovers.

    The film has a cult following although some Hammer Horror fans have accused it of being overly camp and silly. Its most noted scene shows Yutte Stensgaard chest drenched in blood and partially covered by blood-soaked rags.

    Other notable actors in the film are Ralph Bates, Harvey Hall (who has a different role in each film of this series), David Healy and popular radio DJ Mike Raven.

    Trivia:

     

    • Jimmy Sangster replaced Terence Fisher at very short notice.
    • Ralph Bates was cast at very short notice.
    • Ingrid Pitt turned down the lead because she thought the script was terrible.
    • Peter Cushing was originally intended to play the lead but asked to bow out so that he could continue to look after his ailing wife
    • Despite Mike Raven being a well-known radio presenter, his voice was dubbed by Valentine Dyall.
    • Yutte Stensgaard receives an “introducing” credit in the film’s theatrical trailer but not in the actual film’s credits. She had appeared in several films beforehand and this was in fact one of her very last roles before leaving the acting profession.

     

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