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Sunday, February 15, 2009

Clive Barker Praises New Hellraiser Director, Trashes New Pinhead Design

Ryan Rotten over at ShockTillYouDrop has an exclusive up with Clive Barker that is pretty interesting. Kudos to Ryan for getting the notorious opinionated Barker on the horn.

The writer/director had much to say about the upcoming remake of his most famous work, Hellraiser. Firstly, he commented on the addition of another writer/director, Pascal Laugier (nominated for a Cyber Horror Award for his work on Martyrs), who replaced Alexandre Bustillo & Julien Maury of Inside fame:

"I fuckin' love Martyrs... it's a movie that has courage and commitment. [Pascal] is someone who really, really cares about horror movies. I'm supposed to be seeing a treatment soon. I'm not certain, but I believe he is going to back to the first movie, but not with an obsessed loyalty. He's taking the first movie as a launching board, a rock model, but there are things you can obviously do now both visually and sexually... It's a different time, so I'm excited."

Conversely, when the topic switched to the controversial redesign of lead cenobite Pinhead that surfaced on the web a few days ago, Barker was a little less enthusiastic/complimentary:

"The whole point about Pinhead is that he is geometrically severe. Very measured, and the energy of the character comes out of the fact that you have surgical precision which is part of a much larger, sadistic, maybe masochistic, design. Turning the bloodless cuts or scarifications into bloody, irregular gashes removes the point of what made the character interesting in the first place."

Ironically, the new design was created by Gary Tunnicliffe, makeup artist for the sequels to the original Hellraiser.

10 comments:

  1. Hey B-Sol--It's worth noting in your post that that redesign isn't in any way official--it was just Fango asking this guy what he would do if the redesign were up to him, but it isn't. That's why even a big Barker fan like me refrained from posting about it--it's kinda neat, but it confuses the issue.

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  2. Ahhh... Thanks for the clarification, Sean!

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  3. I wasn't big on that new look for Pinhead myself but seeing as how it was just one persons idea as to how it could be done I held out hope that they'd stick with the original design.
    Pinhead is badass, I don't see the need to change the look.

    Damn, I really need to see Martyrs though. I think the writers of Inside would've done a great job as well since I really enjoyed that film as well.

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  4. I saw this on BD.com and at first thought the same thing, that they're looking to redesign Pinhead. I found out that the original designer did it on his own. I pray they don't do it! Barker is correct in the importance of Pinhead's original design. I will be F'ing pissed if it happens... I just don't think it will. Good post Brian!

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  5. Hey B-Sol. Glad the new design isn't certain. I don't like it. But I don't like the idea of a remake either.

    By the way, Carpenter's The Thing was on Sc-Fi this weekend, and as per usual, I had to watch it, had to. I so dig the tension between the characters, the interplay of trust, distrust, anger, and fear.

    I so mourn the idea of a remake.

    Dammit!

    Peace,
    A

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  6. I'm still mad at you for the I Spit on Your Grave remake ;-)

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  7. I have to agree with Barker - this new Pinhead looks a bit weak.

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  8. I have to agree with Barker - this new Pinhead looks a bit weak.

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  10. B-Sol. I know. I'll never forgive myself. The original was released into a perfect social and cultural climate. As in, begging for a rape revenge movie. The original was scary, gritty, uncomfortable, disturbing, satisfying. What can the remake say now, in our current cultural climate, that will be as profound? I'm not sure.

    Peace,
    A!

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