SHOCK TILL YOU DROP
Anchor Bay has displayed promo art for Silent Night and Chained at Comic-Con. The former being a remake of Silent Night, Deadly Night that is being directed by Steven C. Miller (due in theaters this holiday season). The latter is the latest film from Jennifer Lynch (Surveillance, Boxing Helena).
DREAD CENTRAL
!—continous>
Thursday, July 12, 2012
'CHAINED' WORLD PREMIERE AUGUST 5TH FANTASIA INT'L FILM FESTIVAL
August 5 •
At the end of a fun afternoon excursion, Sarah Fiddler and her young son step into a taxi to head home. They never get there. Fate can be cruel and today, fate has seen to it that the cab they picked belongs to Bob (Vincent D’Onofrio), a taxi driving serial killer who has long ago realized the grisly benefits of a job that delivers victims unto him on a silver platter. Re-christening the boy “Rabbit”, Bob forcibly adopts him as his own son. And keeps him. For years. Life with Bob is not easy for Rabbit. He’s mercurial, demanding (“You will serve me breakfast every day for the rest of your life”), violent and cold. Worse, Bob forces the boy to clean up after his crimes. At the same time, in his own distorted way, he wants to be a good father, to raise a son who is well-prepared to succeed in the world. What Bob considers to be success and the kind of world in which he lives is where the real problems lay. Rabbit (Eamon Farren), now in his teens, has been shown in no uncertain terms that Bob fully expects him to become a mass murderer.
From the day she exploded onto the scene with the largely misunderstood and still-controversial BOXING HELENA 19 years ago, Jennifer Lynch has been a spellbinding iconoclast on the American indie landscape, her provocative approach to filmmaking seeing her alternately championed and demonized. She is a fascinating filmmaker who’s made but several works across her two-decade career. Each have been standouts, their connective tissues threaded in baroque aesthetics, unconventional performance styles, darkly eccentric streaks of humour and, of course subversively compelling gazes into our capacities for cruelty, obsession and sexual deviancy. CHAINED is no exception. In Lynch’s hands, what could have been a simple “how to make a monster” serial killer film turns into an upsetting discourse on parenthood and instinct. At its core, D’Onofrio is a lumbering, volcanic nightmare. Everything from his body language to the uncomfortable syntax of his dialogue delivery has been altered and sculpted to make for a freakishly individualistic performance. Watch for a brief but impactful appearance by Julia Ormond, reteaming with Lynch following 2008’s phenomenal SURVEILLANCE. — Mitch Davis
Tuesday, July 10, 2012
New 'Chained' stills have emerged!
BLOODY DISGUSTING
PHOTOS ARE COPYRIGHT OF Allan Feildel
A BOATLOAD OF PHOTOS...55 IN ALL...TAKE A LOOK VIA THE LINK ABOVE!
PHOTOS ARE COPYRIGHT OF Allan Feildel
A BOATLOAD OF PHOTOS...55 IN ALL...TAKE A LOOK VIA THE LINK ABOVE!
'Chained' picture of the day...
I was going through the trailer again and captured this shot...does anyone else think that it looks like some kind of yearbook and revenge type anger?
Monday, July 9, 2012
Elizabeth D'Onofrio finalist in 'The Power To Change' contest...VOTE!
StriVectin "The Power To Change" Contest Finalists Announced; Public Voting Now Open For $30,000 Grand Prize Winner
NEW YORK, July 9, 2012 /PRNewswire/ -- Leading anti-aging skin care company, StriVectin, announced today the fifteen finalists of "The Power to Change" contest, where StriVectin called on the public to submit entries in response to the question "What would you change with $30,000?" Finalist video submissions are available for viewing and public voting onwww.StriVectinPowerToChange.com. The public voting period is open from July 9 - July 25, 2012. The finalist video submission that garners the most votes will become the $30,000 Grand Prize Winner (after verification). The Grand Prize Winner will be announced on or about August 1, 2012.
StriVectin introduced "The Power to Change" contest to help and inspire people to bring powerful, positive change to their skin and to their lives. StriVectin encouraged the public to share the powerful change they wanted to make for themselves and for others by entering "The Power to Change" contest at www.StriVectinPowerToChange.com. Upon submission and review, all eligible entries were made available on the contest website for public voting. Fifteen finalists, determined by public voting and judging, were then asked to submit a video further illustrating what they would change with the $30,000 Grand Prize. StriVectin will help one lucky winner achieve that powerful change with one $30,000 Grand Prize and 14 runner up prizes of $500 worth of StriVectin products.
Finalists have been encouraged to reach out to the public and media in their local area to rally as much public support and votes behind their entries as possible. The fifteen finalists of the StriVectin "The Power to Change" contest are:
Wanda F. (Breinigsville, PA)
Belinda S. (Houston, TX)
Ayesha R. (Apison, TN)
Treva W. (Kettering, OH)
Elizabeth D. (West Jordan, UT)
Hilary G. (Stephens City, VA)
Anjanet R. (Holmes, NY)
Brandon B. (San Diego, CA)
Wendy S.(Port Charlotte, FL)
Riki F. (Tulsa, OK)
LaTrina S. (Mt. Juliet, TN)
Elizabeth H. (Fort Myers Beach, FL)
Nicole R. (Cardiff, CA)
Dena A. (Wheeling, WV)
Rhonda M. (Gary, IN)
For more information on the StriVectin "The Power to Change" contest, please visitwww.StriVectinPowerToChange.com. For more information on StriVectin, visitwww.StriVectin.com.
VOTE HERE AND LOOK FOR THE VIDEO OF THE PICTURE SHOW BELOW AND HIT 'VOTE FOR THIS' BUTTON. THANK YOU!
NEW YORK, July 9, 2012 /PRNewswire/ -- Leading anti-aging skin care company, StriVectin, announced today the fifteen finalists of "The Power to Change" contest, where StriVectin called on the public to submit entries in response to the question "What would you change with $30,000?" Finalist video submissions are available for viewing and public voting onwww.StriVectinPowerToChange.com. The public voting period is open from July 9 - July 25, 2012. The finalist video submission that garners the most votes will become the $30,000 Grand Prize Winner (after verification). The Grand Prize Winner will be announced on or about August 1, 2012.
StriVectin introduced "The Power to Change" contest to help and inspire people to bring powerful, positive change to their skin and to their lives. StriVectin encouraged the public to share the powerful change they wanted to make for themselves and for others by entering "The Power to Change" contest at www.StriVectinPowerToChange.com. Upon submission and review, all eligible entries were made available on the contest website for public voting. Fifteen finalists, determined by public voting and judging, were then asked to submit a video further illustrating what they would change with the $30,000 Grand Prize. StriVectin will help one lucky winner achieve that powerful change with one $30,000 Grand Prize and 14 runner up prizes of $500 worth of StriVectin products.
Finalists have been encouraged to reach out to the public and media in their local area to rally as much public support and votes behind their entries as possible. The fifteen finalists of the StriVectin "The Power to Change" contest are:
Wanda F. (Breinigsville, PA)
Belinda S. (Houston, TX)
Ayesha R. (Apison, TN)
Treva W. (Kettering, OH)
Elizabeth D. (West Jordan, UT)
Hilary G. (Stephens City, VA)
Anjanet R. (Holmes, NY)
Brandon B. (San Diego, CA)
Wendy S.(Port Charlotte, FL)
Riki F. (Tulsa, OK)
LaTrina S. (Mt. Juliet, TN)
Elizabeth H. (Fort Myers Beach, FL)
Nicole R. (Cardiff, CA)
Dena A. (Wheeling, WV)
Rhonda M. (Gary, IN)
For more information on the StriVectin "The Power to Change" contest, please visitwww.StriVectinPowerToChange.com. For more information on StriVectin, visitwww.StriVectin.com.
VOTE HERE AND LOOK FOR THE VIDEO OF THE PICTURE SHOW BELOW AND HIT 'VOTE FOR THIS' BUTTON. THANK YOU!
UK Frightfest anticipates 'Chained'
'Frightfest 2012: 5 Most Anticipated Movies'
July 2, 2012
By Billy Langsworthy
HEY U GUYS, CO.UK!
The line-up for this year’s Film4 Frightfest festival has been announced and it looks set to be another screamer of a year.
(excerpted)
2. Chained
Each year, Alan, Paul and Ian seem to deliver a film that gets everyone talking. 2008 had Martyrs. 2009 had The Human Centipede. 2010 had A Serbian Film snatched away from them at the last minute by Westminster Council and last year had the brilliant The Woman. So as no stranger to controversial titles, this years talking-point could well be the new film by Jennifer Lynch (daughter of David), Chained. The film has already kicked up a stink in the US by achieving the rare feat of achieving an NC-17 certificate due to violence alone. She has since gone to the cutting room for an R rating and it remains what version we will see at the festival but regardless, Lynch’s tale of a serial killer who captures and keeps the son of one of his victims remains a must-see.
July 2, 2012
By Billy Langsworthy
HEY U GUYS, CO.UK!
The line-up for this year’s Film4 Frightfest festival has been announced and it looks set to be another screamer of a year.
(excerpted)
2. Chained
Each year, Alan, Paul and Ian seem to deliver a film that gets everyone talking. 2008 had Martyrs. 2009 had The Human Centipede. 2010 had A Serbian Film snatched away from them at the last minute by Westminster Council and last year had the brilliant The Woman. So as no stranger to controversial titles, this years talking-point could well be the new film by Jennifer Lynch (daughter of David), Chained. The film has already kicked up a stink in the US by achieving the rare feat of achieving an NC-17 certificate due to violence alone. She has since gone to the cutting room for an R rating and it remains what version we will see at the festival but regardless, Lynch’s tale of a serial killer who captures and keeps the son of one of his victims remains a must-see.
Thursday, July 5, 2012
Wednesday, July 4, 2012
Tuesday, July 3, 2012
''Six Degrees of Vincent D'Onofrio''...Andy Griffith...
WIKIPEDIA
Andrew Samuel Griffith was born on June 1, 1926 in Mount Airy, North Carolina and was an only child. It was the same day as movie icon Marilyn Monroe. He had an early introduction into music and humor; a shy boy he came out of his shell when he saw he could make his peers laugh. In high school, Andy developed a love for the arts and participated in the school's drama program. He studied to be a preacher in college but changed his major to music. Andy went on to act in films in bit parts and also in early television. He is best known for his 'Sheriff Andy Taylor' character on the long-running series 'The Andy Griffith Show'. Also notable is 'Matlock' who was a country lawyer in Atlanta, GA. I have abbreviated this post because I have already done a 'Six Degrees' with Andy Griffith yet it does bear repeating for such a well-known celebrity. This morning, Andy Griffith passed away at the age of 86 and was buried right away with no autopsy or embalming. Find the connection!
'Fire With Fire' update...
JOBLO
According to the JoBlo website, 'Fire With Fire' will have a US national release at the end of August. When and if I find out specific theatres; I will let you know.
According to the JoBlo website, 'Fire With Fire' will have a US national release at the end of August. When and if I find out specific theatres; I will let you know.
Monday, July 2, 2012
'Men In Black' released this day 15 years ago...
Uploaded by BillieJean0902 on Oct 5, 2011
Vincent talks about his preparation for the role of Edgar the Bug in MIB and how he created Edgar's unique walk and voice.
Vincent talks about his preparation for the role of Edgar the Bug in MIB and how he created Edgar's unique walk and voice.
NLEOMF'S 2012 Candlelight Vigil DVD
For those who missed the live streaming podcast for the candlelight vigil, a DVD will be available later this month. Vincent did attend, if you'll recall my screen caps I posted at the time it originally aired, but he did not speak from what I saw. It was a moving ceremony and proceeds go towards the museum fund.
Experience the power and emotion of this 24th annual tribute to America’s fallen law enforcement officers. Includes moving musical tributes, a stunning blue laser light show, keynote address by Attorney General Eric Holder and the reading of the 362 newly-engraved names on the Memorial.
Pre order now for shipment in late July
Experience the power and emotion of this 24th annual tribute to America’s fallen law enforcement officers. Includes moving musical tributes, a stunning blue laser light show, keynote address by Attorney General Eric Holder and the reading of the 362 newly-engraved names on the Memorial.
Pre order now for shipment in late July
Sunday, July 1, 2012
Saturday, June 30, 2012
Thank you...
Three years ago today, I started this site. Above is my first banner; I kept it because I'm sentimental. There have been many since but those I delete. Funny thing about the first one is that I had no idea what I was doing and how I achieved the effect of the 'double image'. To this day, I still don't know and I chalk it up to one of those neat accidents.
Some people might be wondering how it has been three years when the archive says otherwise and the reason for that is the 'original' site got accidentally deleted in what I now refer to as the 'Friday the 13TH fire'. It was unfortunate, it was not deliberate and it's pointless to cry over spilt milk. Over 3,000 posts are gone...it's done.
I heard from a lot of people that urged me to start again and bring back 'Vinnie Vidi Vici'. Your support meant a lot to me...a lot. It wasn't hard; like slipping on a pair of comfortable slippers. I thank the friends who have been there all along for hanging in there and to the new followers that have been kind enough to join the ride.
An exciting year is unfolding in Vincent's career and the best is yet to come. And now Leila has begun her journey by moving to New York and furthering her studies. I can't wait for what the future holds for both of them. I invite you to check in and follow what's going on.
Thank you, everyone!
Friday, June 29, 2012
Be an extra for 'Pawn Shop Chronicles' fair scene tonight!

By Pawn Shop Chronicles
For those of you who are interested in being an EXTRA (UNPAID) during our Fair Scene this Friday Night, June 29th, please contact pawnshopchronicles@gmail.com with:
1.) Your Name
2.) Your Contact Information (Phone & Email)
3.) Names and Contact Info for any family, friends, etc. who can also come out and be extras!
Hope to see you all out there!
1.) Your Name
2.) Your Contact Information (Phone & Email)
3.) Names and Contact Info for any family, friends, etc. who can also come out and be extras!
Hope to see you all out there!
'Chained' and 'Sinister' UK Premieres at Film4 FrightFest
CINEMART
SUNDAY AUG 26
SINISTER (UK Premiere)
True crime writer Ellison Oswald has made a career out of exposing police mistakes and now he’s investigating a shocking small-town death by moving into the house where it took place. But strange occurrences start happening and Ellison becomes convinced the figure he sees lurking in some old home movies he discovers is the ancient occult ‘eater of children’ demon. The scares are not just intense but unyielding in this compelling horror yarn from THE EXORCISM OF EMILY ROSE director Scott Derrickson. And Ethan Hawke shines as the agonized writer whose deteriorating state of his mind shatters everything he holds dear.
Director: Scott Derrickson USA 2012
Ethan Hawke – Ellison
Vincent D’Onofrio – Professor Jonas
Juliet Rylance – Tracey
Fred Dalton Thomspon – Sheriff
James Ransone – Deputy
MONDAY AUG 27
CHAINED (UK Premiere)
A trip to the movies becomes a nightmare for Sarah and her young son Tim. For they are kidnapped by Bob, a deranged taxi driver, and taken to his remote home. There the nine-year-old sees his mother murdered – but it isn’t the last slaughter he witnesses. For Bob enslaves Tim, chains him up and forces him to bury his victims’ bodies. As years go by, Tim is allowed some freedom only if he turns killer himself. Now the reluctant protégé must make a choice between following in Bob’s bloody footsteps or breaking free. Jennifer Chambers Lynch’s uncompromising and dark chiller is one of the best films of the year, 98 mins
Director: Jennifer Chambers Lynch USA 2012
Vincent D’Onofrio – Bob
Eamon Farren – Rabbit
Julia Ormond – Sarah Fittler
Jake Weber – Brad Fittler
Conor Leslie – Angie
SUNDAY AUG 26
SINISTER (UK Premiere)
True crime writer Ellison Oswald has made a career out of exposing police mistakes and now he’s investigating a shocking small-town death by moving into the house where it took place. But strange occurrences start happening and Ellison becomes convinced the figure he sees lurking in some old home movies he discovers is the ancient occult ‘eater of children’ demon. The scares are not just intense but unyielding in this compelling horror yarn from THE EXORCISM OF EMILY ROSE director Scott Derrickson. And Ethan Hawke shines as the agonized writer whose deteriorating state of his mind shatters everything he holds dear.
Director: Scott Derrickson USA 2012
Ethan Hawke – Ellison
Vincent D’Onofrio – Professor Jonas
Juliet Rylance – Tracey
Fred Dalton Thomspon – Sheriff
James Ransone – Deputy
MONDAY AUG 27
CHAINED (UK Premiere)
A trip to the movies becomes a nightmare for Sarah and her young son Tim. For they are kidnapped by Bob, a deranged taxi driver, and taken to his remote home. There the nine-year-old sees his mother murdered – but it isn’t the last slaughter he witnesses. For Bob enslaves Tim, chains him up and forces him to bury his victims’ bodies. As years go by, Tim is allowed some freedom only if he turns killer himself. Now the reluctant protégé must make a choice between following in Bob’s bloody footsteps or breaking free. Jennifer Chambers Lynch’s uncompromising and dark chiller is one of the best films of the year, 98 mins
Director: Jennifer Chambers Lynch USA 2012
Vincent D’Onofrio – Bob
Eamon Farren – Rabbit
Julia Ormond – Sarah Fittler
Jake Weber – Brad Fittler
Conor Leslie – Angie
Thursday, June 28, 2012
Looking deeper...
A while back I posted some screen caps from the 'Chained' trailer and now a few more photos have been released via festival sites where the movie will be screened. In the first photo below, 'Bob' has slashed the throat of his victim...
In a just released photo, here is another angle of the same shot...
Here I have zoomed the shot to show that this is most likely the scene that caused concern about violence and the subsequent ruling of NC-17. What else I noticed, since I am all about continuity, is that the wound is correct in being executed by a left-handed person ie Vincent.
Here I've zoomed up on the photo of 'Rabbit' watching TV and on the wall is a picture of...rabbits.
In a just released photo, here is another angle of the same shot...
Here I have zoomed the shot to show that this is most likely the scene that caused concern about violence and the subsequent ruling of NC-17. What else I noticed, since I am all about continuity, is that the wound is correct in being executed by a left-handed person ie Vincent.
Here I've zoomed up on the photo of 'Rabbit' watching TV and on the wall is a picture of...rabbits.
''Full Metal Jacket': 25 Things You Didn't Know About Stanley Kubrick's War Classic'
MOVIEFONE
This was emailed to me by Mary who thought it was interesting and so do I...thank you, Mary!
(excerpted)
1. Kubrick developed the idea to do a Vietnam War movie out of his desire to collaborate with war correspondent Michael Herr, author of the celebrated Vietnam War memoir "Dispatches." At first, Kubrick wanted to make a movie about the Holocaust, but the pair soon settled on a novel about Vietnam that they both admired, Gustav Hasford's bestseller "The Short-Timers."
2. Like his protagonist, Private Joker, Hasford was a Marine who had also served as a combat correspondent during the war. Kubrick and Herr eventually enlisted him as a co-scripter of the screenplay. The collaboration was carried out over the phone; Hasford didn't even meet Kubrick in person until an ill-fated dinner party well into the writing process.
3. Kubrick changed the title to "Full Metal Jacket," inspired by the name of a kind of bullet commonly used by Marines in Vietnam.
4. Initially, Kubrick envisioned Anthony Michael Hall as Joker. According to Hall, negotiations between the director and the "Breakfast Club" Brat Packer went on for eight months before ultimately falling through. Instead, "Vision Quest" star Matthew Modine landed the role.
5. R. Lee Ermey had been a real-life Parris Island Marine drill sergeant during the war. He'd acted in other Vietnam films, including "The Boys in Company C" (where he played his first drill sergeant role) and "Apocalypse Now." Kubrick had hired him as a technical adviser, but Ermey wanted to play Hartman, the Parris Island drill sergeant who dominates the first half of the movie. So he made an audition reel in which he generated a sponataneous stream of foul-mouthed insults directed at a group of extras -- all while having oranges and tennis balls thrown at him -- that ran for 15 minutes. That got him the job.
6. Kubrick was notorious for his meticulous oversight of every last detail of his productions, but for the sake of authenticity, he allowed Ermey to write his own lines. Ermey ended up generating 150 pages of insults, many of which found their way into the movie. About half his dialogue in the finished film is self-penned.
7. What's the R. in R. Lee Ermey stand for? Ronald.
8. Tim Colceri had been Kubrick's choice to play Hartman before Ermey seized the role from him. But Colceri got a nice consolation prize: a role as the helicopter door gunner and an unforgettable scene where he talks remorselessly about how many women and children he's killed. His dialogue comes straight from Herr's "Dispatches."
9. A New York theater actor named Vincent D'Onofrio landed his first major film role in "Full Metal Jacket." To play the doughy Private Gomer Pyle, he packed 70 pounds onto his muscular frame, ballooning up to 280 pounds. That Method-acting stunt is believed to be the record-holder, exceeding the 60 pounds Robert De Niro gained to play Jake LaMotta in "Raging Bull." The extra weight caused torn ligaments in D'Onofrio's legs that had to be surgically repaired. After filming, it took nine months for him to return to his usual 210-pound physique.
10. Bruce Willis was offered a role in the film, but he had to turn it down, as the production would have cut into his contractual commitment to his TV series, "Moonlighting."
11. The New York City-born Kubrick had famously moved to England and shot all his movies there since 1962's "Lolita," in part to avoid the interference of Hollywood executives in his productions. So it was with "Full Metal Jacket," which recreated a Marine boot camp and a Vietnamese city in the English countryside. The Parris Island sequences were shot at the Bassingbourn Barracks army base. The abandoned and condemned Beckton Gas Works became the ruined city of Hue.
12. To create the rubble-strewn city, Kubrick said he spent two months carefully destroying the gas works, blowing up buildings and strategically punching holes in others with a wrecking ball, all with photographs of Hue circa 1969 as his guide.
13. To make England look more like tropical Vietnam, Kubrick said he flew in 200 palm trees from Spain and 100,000 plastic jungle plants from Hong Kong.
14. Modine, who documented the year-long shoot in photographs and published them in a book called "Full Metal Jacket Diary" in 2005, claimed that the gas works was an environmental disaster area, strewn with asbestos and other toxins, that made cast and crew ill.
15. Modine also wrote that he and the other actors playing Marines underwent realistic boot camp training, which included being yelled at by Ermey for up to 10 hours a day. They also had to have their heads shaved once a week.
16. After years of hours-long phone conversations with the director, Hasford came to England to meet him in person. They met only once, Hasford later noted, at a dinner. In "Kubrick," his own memoir about the production, Herr recalls that, during the meal, the director passed Herr a note that read, "I can't deal with this man." A bitter dispute over the writing credits followed (Hasford wanted a full credit, not an "additional dialogue by" credit), and Hasford was barred from the production. Contemplating legal action, Hasford said he wanted to make sure the movie was actually filming, so he and two friends snuck onto the set at Beckton. They were wearing camouflage, disguised as extras. Hasford was spotted, but he was mistaken for Herr.
17. One reason filming took so long is that Ermey was in a car crash in which he broke all the ribs on one side of his body. He was sidelined for four-and-a-half months.
18. The "Abigail Mead" credited with composing the score is actually the director's daughter, Vivian Kubrick.
19. According to Box Office Mojo, the film cost an estimated $30 million to make. It earned back $46.4 million in North America.
20. "Full Metal Jacket" earned just one Oscar nomination, for its adapted screenplay.
21. Hasford shared that nomination, having won his credit battle. Still, his career never reached similar highs. He wrote two more novels, including a "Short-Timers" sequel called "The Phantom Blooper," before he died in 1993 at age 45.
22. A few days after the movie's release, D'Onofrio was seen again in "Adventures in Babysitting," this time as the muscular, blond-tressed, Thor-lookalike mechanic. His complete transformation between the two films gave him a reputation for both intense preparation and chamelionlike acting skills. It's a rep he's maintained ever since, moving from indie comedies ("Mystic Pizza," "The Player") to big-budget spectacle ("Men in Black") to a long run as the brilliant and eccentric Det. Goren on TV's "Law & Order: Criminal Intent."
23. The melodically named model/actress Papillon Soo Soo, who played the Vietnamese hooker, also had a big pop-cultural footprint -- but it wasn't from her movie roles. (She'd been in just one other film, the James Bond movie "A View to a Kill," before "Full Metal Jacket," and she made only one more afterward, action drama "Split Second," with Rutger Hauer.)
24. Rather, it was her memorable delivery of such phrases as "Me so horny" and "Me love you long time" that found their way into audiences' brainpans, thanks to endless uses as samples in rap songs. Most notoriously, there was 2 Live Crew's "Me So Horny" (which made the group the center of a landmark censorship battle in 1990) and Sir Mix-a-Lot's "Baby Got Back."
25. Ermey, too, found his dialogue sampled in numerous rap and hard rock tunes. Now 68, he's spent the last quarter century capitalizing on his "Full Metal Jacket" fame by playing similar characters (usually Southern, authoritarian types) in dozens of movies (from "Fletch Lives" to "Dead Man Walking"), TV shows, video games, and commercials. He's been a pitchman for several products, including Glock weapons, SOG knives, Coors Light beer, and pistachio nuts. Alamo Drafthouse Cinema patrons know him as the voice warning them to be quiet during the movies. And when R. Lee Ermey tells you to shut up, you'd better listen, maggots.
Thanks, Marian for sending the link for this...
This was emailed to me by Mary who thought it was interesting and so do I...thank you, Mary!
(excerpted)
1. Kubrick developed the idea to do a Vietnam War movie out of his desire to collaborate with war correspondent Michael Herr, author of the celebrated Vietnam War memoir "Dispatches." At first, Kubrick wanted to make a movie about the Holocaust, but the pair soon settled on a novel about Vietnam that they both admired, Gustav Hasford's bestseller "The Short-Timers."
2. Like his protagonist, Private Joker, Hasford was a Marine who had also served as a combat correspondent during the war. Kubrick and Herr eventually enlisted him as a co-scripter of the screenplay. The collaboration was carried out over the phone; Hasford didn't even meet Kubrick in person until an ill-fated dinner party well into the writing process.
3. Kubrick changed the title to "Full Metal Jacket," inspired by the name of a kind of bullet commonly used by Marines in Vietnam.
4. Initially, Kubrick envisioned Anthony Michael Hall as Joker. According to Hall, negotiations between the director and the "Breakfast Club" Brat Packer went on for eight months before ultimately falling through. Instead, "Vision Quest" star Matthew Modine landed the role.
5. R. Lee Ermey had been a real-life Parris Island Marine drill sergeant during the war. He'd acted in other Vietnam films, including "The Boys in Company C" (where he played his first drill sergeant role) and "Apocalypse Now." Kubrick had hired him as a technical adviser, but Ermey wanted to play Hartman, the Parris Island drill sergeant who dominates the first half of the movie. So he made an audition reel in which he generated a sponataneous stream of foul-mouthed insults directed at a group of extras -- all while having oranges and tennis balls thrown at him -- that ran for 15 minutes. That got him the job.
6. Kubrick was notorious for his meticulous oversight of every last detail of his productions, but for the sake of authenticity, he allowed Ermey to write his own lines. Ermey ended up generating 150 pages of insults, many of which found their way into the movie. About half his dialogue in the finished film is self-penned.
7. What's the R. in R. Lee Ermey stand for? Ronald.
8. Tim Colceri had been Kubrick's choice to play Hartman before Ermey seized the role from him. But Colceri got a nice consolation prize: a role as the helicopter door gunner and an unforgettable scene where he talks remorselessly about how many women and children he's killed. His dialogue comes straight from Herr's "Dispatches."
9. A New York theater actor named Vincent D'Onofrio landed his first major film role in "Full Metal Jacket." To play the doughy Private Gomer Pyle, he packed 70 pounds onto his muscular frame, ballooning up to 280 pounds. That Method-acting stunt is believed to be the record-holder, exceeding the 60 pounds Robert De Niro gained to play Jake LaMotta in "Raging Bull." The extra weight caused torn ligaments in D'Onofrio's legs that had to be surgically repaired. After filming, it took nine months for him to return to his usual 210-pound physique.
10. Bruce Willis was offered a role in the film, but he had to turn it down, as the production would have cut into his contractual commitment to his TV series, "Moonlighting."
11. The New York City-born Kubrick had famously moved to England and shot all his movies there since 1962's "Lolita," in part to avoid the interference of Hollywood executives in his productions. So it was with "Full Metal Jacket," which recreated a Marine boot camp and a Vietnamese city in the English countryside. The Parris Island sequences were shot at the Bassingbourn Barracks army base. The abandoned and condemned Beckton Gas Works became the ruined city of Hue.
12. To create the rubble-strewn city, Kubrick said he spent two months carefully destroying the gas works, blowing up buildings and strategically punching holes in others with a wrecking ball, all with photographs of Hue circa 1969 as his guide.
13. To make England look more like tropical Vietnam, Kubrick said he flew in 200 palm trees from Spain and 100,000 plastic jungle plants from Hong Kong.
14. Modine, who documented the year-long shoot in photographs and published them in a book called "Full Metal Jacket Diary" in 2005, claimed that the gas works was an environmental disaster area, strewn with asbestos and other toxins, that made cast and crew ill.
15. Modine also wrote that he and the other actors playing Marines underwent realistic boot camp training, which included being yelled at by Ermey for up to 10 hours a day. They also had to have their heads shaved once a week.
16. After years of hours-long phone conversations with the director, Hasford came to England to meet him in person. They met only once, Hasford later noted, at a dinner. In "Kubrick," his own memoir about the production, Herr recalls that, during the meal, the director passed Herr a note that read, "I can't deal with this man." A bitter dispute over the writing credits followed (Hasford wanted a full credit, not an "additional dialogue by" credit), and Hasford was barred from the production. Contemplating legal action, Hasford said he wanted to make sure the movie was actually filming, so he and two friends snuck onto the set at Beckton. They were wearing camouflage, disguised as extras. Hasford was spotted, but he was mistaken for Herr.
17. One reason filming took so long is that Ermey was in a car crash in which he broke all the ribs on one side of his body. He was sidelined for four-and-a-half months.
18. The "Abigail Mead" credited with composing the score is actually the director's daughter, Vivian Kubrick.
19. According to Box Office Mojo, the film cost an estimated $30 million to make. It earned back $46.4 million in North America.
20. "Full Metal Jacket" earned just one Oscar nomination, for its adapted screenplay.
21. Hasford shared that nomination, having won his credit battle. Still, his career never reached similar highs. He wrote two more novels, including a "Short-Timers" sequel called "The Phantom Blooper," before he died in 1993 at age 45.
22. A few days after the movie's release, D'Onofrio was seen again in "Adventures in Babysitting," this time as the muscular, blond-tressed, Thor-lookalike mechanic. His complete transformation between the two films gave him a reputation for both intense preparation and chamelionlike acting skills. It's a rep he's maintained ever since, moving from indie comedies ("Mystic Pizza," "The Player") to big-budget spectacle ("Men in Black") to a long run as the brilliant and eccentric Det. Goren on TV's "Law & Order: Criminal Intent."
23. The melodically named model/actress Papillon Soo Soo, who played the Vietnamese hooker, also had a big pop-cultural footprint -- but it wasn't from her movie roles. (She'd been in just one other film, the James Bond movie "A View to a Kill," before "Full Metal Jacket," and she made only one more afterward, action drama "Split Second," with Rutger Hauer.)
24. Rather, it was her memorable delivery of such phrases as "Me so horny" and "Me love you long time" that found their way into audiences' brainpans, thanks to endless uses as samples in rap songs. Most notoriously, there was 2 Live Crew's "Me So Horny" (which made the group the center of a landmark censorship battle in 1990) and Sir Mix-a-Lot's "Baby Got Back."
25. Ermey, too, found his dialogue sampled in numerous rap and hard rock tunes. Now 68, he's spent the last quarter century capitalizing on his "Full Metal Jacket" fame by playing similar characters (usually Southern, authoritarian types) in dozens of movies (from "Fletch Lives" to "Dead Man Walking"), TV shows, video games, and commercials. He's been a pitchman for several products, including Glock weapons, SOG knives, Coors Light beer, and pistachio nuts. Alamo Drafthouse Cinema patrons know him as the voice warning them to be quiet during the movies. And when R. Lee Ermey tells you to shut up, you'd better listen, maggots.
Thanks, Marian for sending the link for this...
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)







































