Post by Dachan-da (shiznit) on Oct 3, 2009 1:27:06 GMT -6
I love em, all 8 of the films (granted the last two wernt fantastic but still good). Do you like em? Hate em?
For those of you that have never seen them here is an artical from Wikipedia
For those of you that have never seen them here is an artical from Wikipedia
Hellraiser is a 1987 horror film exploring the themes of pain as a source of pleasure and morality under duress and fear. It is based on the critically acclaimed novella The Hellbound Heart by Clive Barker, who also wrote the screenplay and directed the film. In the UK, the film is titled Clive Barker's Hellraiser. It is the first film in the Hellraiser series. Seven sequels followed with a remake of the first announced in 2007.[1] Hellraiser was number 19 on the cable channel Bravo's list of the 100 Scariest Movie Moments.[2] Plot Somewhere in Morocco, an impulsive and violent man named Frank Cotton (Sean Chapman) purchases an antique puzzle box from a dealer. Back at his house Frank solves the puzzle box and hooked chains immediately fly out of it, tearing into his flesh. Demons from another realm called Cenobites appear to inspect Frank's remains. Their leader, "Pinhead" (Doug Bradley), picks up the box and twists it back into its original state, and the room also returns to normal. Frank's brother Larry (Andrew Robinson) soon moves into Frank's abandoned house with his second wife, Julia (Clare Higgins), who previously had an affair with Frank. They assume that Frank is off on one of his nefarious adventures. Julia is seen exploring the house, finding pictures of Frank with many different women, and reliving the day she was seduced by Frank. Larry's teenage daughter, Kirsty Cotton (Ashley Laurence), chooses not to live with her stepmother and moves into her own place. After cutting his hand on a nail (while moving a mattress), Larry goes upstairs to the room where Frank was killed and his blood falls on the floor. It mysteriously disappears through the floorboards, and Frank's soul uses this blood as nourishment to partially regenerate his body. Later, Frank (now portrayed by Oliver Smith) convinces Julia to help restore him to his full physical form. Julia succumbs to Frank's entreaties and agrees to help him by seducing men and luring them up to the empty attic where Frank hides. After having Julia incapacitate them, Frank drains them of their blood, which allows him to further regenerate his body. Frank tells Julia about the puzzle box (which he still possesses) and explains that by reclaiming his body he has broken his deal with the Cenobites. He wants to restore himself and then leave with Julia before the Cenobites find him. Kirsty eventually catches Julia bringing a strange man home and sneaks into the house to investigate. In the attic Julia bludgeons the man, allowing Frank to feast on his body. Kirsty approaches the attic unaware of what's happening within. Suddenly, the bloody man stumbles out of the attic, soon followed by the skinless Frank who confronts Kirsty. Before Frank can grab her, Kirsty seizes the puzzle box. When she realizes it holds value for Frank, she throws it out the window and escapes from the house, picking up the box off the ground as she flees. A disoriented Kirsty collapses in the street and awakens in the hospital. She tells herself it all was a terrible dream, until the doctors hand her the puzzle box. Kirsty begins to play with the puzzle box and it tricks her into solving it. The walls of her hospital room open a dimensional door and Kirsty encounters the Cenobites. Pinhead tells Kirsty that she has summoned them, and therefore they must take her to Hell. She begs them to spare her, offering to lead them to Frank in exchange for her freedom. The Cenobites warn her against attempting deception, with Pinhead uttering his famous line "we'll tear your soul apart." Kirsty escapes the hospital and races to her father's home to warn him about Frank. Larry informs Kirsty that Frank has been taken care of, and Julia shows Kirsty a skinless body in the attic. The Cenobites reappear, demanding the man responsible for this death. Kirsty believes they want her father and she runs to warn him. However, she soon realizes that the body in the attic is her father, and Frank is now wearing his skin as a disguise. Frank (now as Andrew Robinson) attacks Kirsty, stabbing Julia in the process. Frank then drains Julia of her blood, further nourishing himself. He goes to the attic where Kirsty is hiding. Kirsty weeps and accuses Frank of murdering her father. Frank is unrepentant, telling Kirsty her father was already dead inside, and besides it was inevitable anyway. Having heard Frank's confession, the Cenobites appear. Frank tries to kill Kirsty for setting him up, but a hooked chain flies through the air and snares his hand, pulling him back into the room. Dozens of these chains fly through the air and hook themselves into his flesh as he screams in agony, and hold him transfixed like a fly in a spider's web. His screams subside, and looking at Kirsty, says "Jesus wept" before the chains tear him apart. Kirsty runs through the house, eager to escape, but the Cenobites want her as well. Kirsty finds the puzzle box clutched in the hands of Julia's corpse. One by one she banishes the Cenobites back to their realm by reversing the solution to the puzzle box. Afterwards, Kirsty tries to burn the box in a fire outdoors, but a strange man appears and picks it out of the flames. As the man is consumed by the flames he transforms into a winged, skeletal creature that flies away into the night. In the final scene, the box is shown in the hands of the merchant who originally sold it to Frank, asking another prospective customer, "What's your pleasure, sir?" [edit] Differences between film and novella * In the novella, Larry Cotton is instead named Rory Cotton. * In the novella, Kirsty is instead a neighbor of the Cotton family, and harbors a small crush on Rory. * In the film, Larry really cares emotionally for Julia, but in the novella it is noted that he cares for her on a deeper level. * In the novella, Julia's weapon of choice is a knife, instead of a hammer which she uses to kill her victims in the film. * In the novella, Rory (Larry, in the film) slices his hand with a chisel instead of a nail. * The Cenobites are described differently in the novella than seen in the film. However, there is still a "Pinhead" Cenobite. * It seems likely that Pinhead is not the 'leader' of the cenobites in the Novella. * The novella goes more in-depth with Frank's fascination with the box, and his time in hell. * Frank was not ripped apart by hooks and chains in the beginning of the novella, but taken by a female cenobite. * In the novella, Frank is hidden behind a wall in the room where he emerges in the film, stuck in hell. He was only strong enough to say a few words to Julia - it was Julia that came up with the idea and desire to bring him back. * The Engineer, who (in the novella) is the maker of all torture devices the Cenobites use, and who also gives Kirsty the puzzle box at the end is completely different visually. In the film, he is (allegedly) the wall-crawling beast that Kirsty battles with outside of the house near the end of the film; whereas in the original book he is a featureless being composed of light. * Julia's demise in the novella is different than in the film. While she is still stabbed by Frank, she is beheaded by The Engineer in the novella, rather than ending up on the mattress with the box. [edit] Soundtrack Clive Barker originally commissioned a soundtrack for Hellraiser from the industrial band Coil. The music they supplied was rejected, and Christopher Young provided a more traditional orchestral score for the finished movie. Coil's score, which was apparently described by Barker in a complimentary manner as being "bowel churning",[3] has been released in isolation as The Unreleased Themes For Hellraiser and as part of the compilation Unnatural History II (CD) (1995). Coil's original theme was later covered by the Italian black metal band Aborym on their debut album Kali Yuga Bizarre. Christopher Young went on to contribute the soundtrack to the first sequel, Hellbound: Hellraiser II, for which he won a Saturn Award for Best Music. Subsequent movies in the series used music by different composers. The Swedish death metal band Entombed recorded a cover version of Young's score (along with sample quotes from the film) and released it on their EP Hollowman. UK black metal band Anaal Nathrakh sampled Frank Cotton's final words and used in the track Tractatus Alogico Misanthropicus. Canadian band Skinny Puppy also sampled "Jesus Wept" in the track Fascist Jock Itch, as did Belgian Industrial act Suicide Commando for their track "Jesus Wept" on their "Mindstrip" album. Hellraiser Soundtrack (1987)[4] 1. Hellraiser 1:43 2. Resurrection 2:32 3. Hellbound Heart 5:05 4. The Lament Configuration 3:31 5. Reunion 3:11 6. A Quick Death 1:16 7. Seduction And Pursuit 3:01 8. In Love's Name 2:56 9. The Cenobites 4:13 10. The Rat Race Slice Quartet 3:15 11. Re-Resurrection 2:34 12. Uncle Frank 2:59 13. Brought On By Night 2:18 14. Another Puzzle 4:06 Total Album Time: 42:40 [edit] DVD releases In North America, Hellraiser has been released by Anchor Bay three times, all of which are the original 93 minute version of the film (this is the only version to ever be released on DVD). The original DVD release was a "bare-bones" release and is now out of print. It was re-issued in 2000 with a new 5.1 mix mastered in THX. Finally, it was packaged along with Hellbound: Hellraiser II in a Limited Edition tin case which included a 48 page colour booklet and a reproduction theatrical poster for both films.[5][6] A 20th Anniversary DVD of the film was released on October 23, 2007. [edit] Sequels 1988 - Hellbound: Hellraiser II 1992 - Hellraiser III: Hell on Earth 1996 - Hellraiser: Bloodline 2000 - Hellraiser: Inferno 2002 - Hellraiser: Hellseeker 2005 - Hellraiser: Deader 2005 - Hellraiser: Hellworld (filmed back to back with Hellraiser: Deader) [edit] Remake A remake of Hellraiser was announced in 2007, with Alexandre Bustillo and Julien Maury set to direct.[7] Production was moved back for a 2009 release, and Patrick Melton and Marcus Dunstan (Feast trilogy, Saw IV, Saw V) were hired to write the screenplay.[8] Bustillo and Maury later left the project, and Pascal Laugier was recently reported as being in the running to take the helm.[9] However, as of June 4th, 2009, Pascal Laugier has officially dropped out of the project, leaving the remake's future unknown.[10] |