House of 1000 Corpses Best Rob Zombie Movie
House of chiliad Corpses | |
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Directed by | Rob Zombie |
Written by | Rob Zombie |
Produced by | Andy Gould |
Starring |
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Cinematography |
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Edited by |
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Music by |
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Product | Goodrights[1] |
Distributed by | Lions Gate Films[1] |
Release date |
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Running time | 89 minutes[2] |
State | U.s.a.[ane] |
Language | English language |
Budget | $7 1000000 |
Box office | $sixteen.8 meg[3] |
House of 1000 Corpses is a 2003 American black comedy horror film[4] [five] written, co-scored, and directed past Rob Zombie in his directorial debut, and the first moving picture in the Firefly film series. It stars Sid Haig, Bill Moseley, Sheri Moon, Karen Black, Rainn Wilson, Chris Hardwick, Tom Towles, and Dennis Fimple in his final function. The plot centers on a group of teenagers who are kidnapped and tortured past a psychotic family, during Halloween, after traveling across the country to write a book.
Inspired by 1970s horror films such as The Texas Chain Saw Massacre (1974) and The Hills Take Optics (1977),[half dozen] Zombie conceived the film while designing a haunted firm attraction for Universal Studios Hollywood, where filming took place in 2000 on the backlots and Valencia, California. When the studio shelved the film fearing that information technology would receive an NC-17 rating,[vii] Zombie re-acquired the rights. They were eventually sold to Lions Gate Entertainment, who released the film in April 2003. Despite receiving an unfavorable response from critics it went on to gross $16 million worldwide. Since its release, the film has achieved a cult following, was developed into a haunted house attraction by Zombie for Universal Studios, and was followed by ii sequels, The Devil's Rejects (2005) and iii from Hell (2019).
Plot [edit]
On October thirty, 1977, amateur criminals Killer Karl and Richard Wick attempt an armed robbery at a gas station/horror museum, but are killed by the owner, Captain Spaulding, and his banana, Ravelli. Later that night, Jerry Goldsmith, Nib Hudley, Mary Knowles, and Denise Willis are on the road in hopes of writing a book on offbeat roadside attractions. When the four meet Spaulding, who is too the owner of "The Museum of Monsters & Madmen", they learn of the local legend of Dr. Satan. Every bit they accept off in search of the tree from which Dr. Satan was hanged, they pick up a young gratuitous-spirited hitchhiker named Baby, who claims to live only a few miles away. Shortly after, a mysterious figure appears subconscious in some overgrowth and shoots out their vehicle's tire with a shotgun. The group thinks information technology is only a diddled out tire and then Baby takes Bill to her family'south house to become a tow truck. Moments afterwards, Baby's half-brother, Rufus, picks upwardly the stranded passengers and takes them to the family dwelling house.
There they meet Babe's family: her adopted blood brother Otis Driftwood, her plain-featured giant half-brother Tiny, Mother Firefly, and Gramps Hugo. While being treated to dinner, Mother Firefly explains that her ex-husband, Earl, had previously tried to burn Tiny alive, along with the Firefly house, after he suffered a psychotic breakdown. After dinner, the family puts on a Halloween show for their guests and Baby offends Mary by flirting with Bill. After Mary threatens Baby, Rufus tells them their car is repaired. As the couples go out, Otis and Tiny, disguised as scarecrows, assault them in the driveway and take them prisoner. The next twenty-four hour period, Otis kills Bill and mutilates his body for art. Mary is tied up in a befouled, Denise is tied to a bed while dressed up for Halloween, and Jerry is partially scalped for failing to guess Baby's favorite motion picture star.
When Denise doesn't come home, her father Don calls the constabulary to written report her missing. 2 deputies, George Wydell and Steve Naish, notice the couples' abandoned car in a field with a dead, mutilated cheerleader in the trunk (one of five cheerleaders who went missing over a week ago, as explained in a news broadcast; an before scene established that the cheerleaders were being tortured, raped and killed past the Firefly family unit). Don, a sometime policeman, is called to the scene to help the deputies search. They arrive at the Firefly firm and Wydell questions Mother Firefly well-nigh the missing teens. Mother Firefly shoots Wydell in the head and kills him; Don and Steve are then killed by Otis when they observe more bodies of missing cheerleaders in the barn, along with a barely conscious Mary.
Later on that night, the iii remaining teenagers are dressed equally rabbits and taken out to an abandoned well. Otis torments Denise using the skin of her dead father's face as a mask. Mary attempts to run away, but is tracked down and stabbed to death past Babe moments afterwards. Otis and the family burn the bodies on a pyre.
Meanwhile, Jerry and Denise are placed in a coffin and lowered into a well, where a group of Dr. Satan'south failed experiments break open the coffin and pull Jerry away, leaving Denise to find her manner through an hugger-mugger lair. As she wanders through tunnels filled with mutilated corpses, she encounters Dr. Satan and a number of mental patients; Jerry is on Dr. Satan's operating table being vivisected, and dies as Denise screams. Dr. Satan orders his mutated gargantuan assistant, who turns out to be Mother Firefly's ex-husband Earl, to capture Denise, but Denise outwits him and escapes by itch to the surface as Earl is crushed by falling debris in the collapsing tunnel.
She makes her style to the main road, where she encounters Captain Spaulding, who gives her a ride in his auto. She passes out from exhaustion in the front seat, and Otis of a sudden appears in the back seat with a knife. Denise later wakes upwardly to detect herself strapped to an operating table, surrounded by Dr. Satan and Earl, who survived the cave-in. The picture ends with Denise screaming in horror and the words "The End?" displayed before the terminate credits.
Cast [edit]
- Sid Haig as Captain Spaulding
- Nib Moseley as Otis
- Sheri Moon Zombie every bit Baby
- Karen Black as Mother Firefly
- Chris Hardwick as Jerry Goldsmith
- Erin Daniels equally Denise Willis
- Jennifer Jostyn as Mary Knowles
- Rainn Wilson as Bill Hudley
- Walton Goggins as Steve Naish
- Tom Towles as Deputy George Wydell
- Matthew McGrory every bit Tiny
- Robert Allen Mukes as Rufus
- Dennis Fimple as Grandfather Hugo
- Harrison Immature equally Don Willis
- William Bassett as Sheriff Frank Huston
- Irwin Keyes as Ravelli
- Michael J. Pollard every bit Stucky
Chad Bannon and David Reynolds also appear every bit apprentice robbers Killer Karl and Richard Wick. Walter Phelan portrays Dr. Satan. Earl Firefly, referred to in the credits as "The Professor", is portrayed past Jake McKinnon.
Product [edit]
Development [edit]
Rob Zombie rose to fame as a member of the band White Zombie before commencement a solo career.[8] Zombie's debut album, Hellbilly Deluxe (1998), was influenced by classic horror films, as were its music videos for "Living Dead Girl" (1999) and "Superbeast" (1999).[nine] [10] [11] The album was a commercial success, selling over iii meg copies in the United states.[12] Prior to working on Business firm of thou Corpses, Zombie had worked on blitheness for Beavis and Butt-Head Practise America (1996), directed music videos, and unsuccessfully attempted to write a script for The Crow: Salvation.[13] In 1999, Zombie designed a haunted maze allure at Universal Studios that was instrumental in reviving the studio's annual Halloween Horror Nights and for which Neb Moseley presented Zombie an honour.[7] The studio afterward began working on an animated Frankenstein film which Zombie hoped to be a part of, though plans for the film were ultimately scrapped by the studio.[fourteen]
The thought for House of 1000 Corpses came to Zombie while designing a haunted house attraction with that championship for the studio,[14] and Universal responded positively to his pitch.[fourteen] Zombie later on stated "I was in the office of the caput of production or something and he asked me if I had whatsoever movie ideas and I pitched him Corpses, which was very crude at the fourth dimension, because I wasn't ready and I made it up on the spot. He liked it, I went domicile, wrote a 12-page treatment and met up with them. Two months later, we were shooting."[15] Production on the film began in May 2000[7] and was finished by Halloween of 2000.[14] The house was launched the following year, although the title was changed to "American Nightmare" due to the movie's shelving.[14] Despite the name change, the business firm still featured numerous references to the film, and the theatrical trailer played while customers waited.[14]
The moving-picture show's starting budget was $3–4 one thousand thousand, though its final budget is debatable.[7] Zombie first claimed that the movie was made solely with the initial $4 million only later described a budget between $seven million and $14 one thousand thousand.[xvi] Zombie later admitted that he initially knew he did not have the funding for a good ending just gambled that if he shot what he could on what remained of his upkeep, the studio would kick in more funds to make a ameliorate ending. "I knew the ending sucked, and so I let it suck and they said, 'The movie'southward cracking but the ending sucks' and I know. So they gave me more than money and we shot a more elaborate catastrophe, bigger sets, the whole razzamatazz."[14] The original moving-picture show featured more characters, including a skunk ape, and featured footage of the four teenagers on their road trip.[17] Universal hoped that the film would focus more on the group of kids, only Zombie knew "nobody gives a shit about the kids".[17] Zombie claimed the film was not initially meant to feature elements of black humor, saying it "turned out a little wackier and campier than I originally intended. But every bit we were shooting, that'southward the tone that it was turning out to exist. Movies sometimes dictate their own course, so I just sort of went with it."[18]
The film was shot on a 25-day shooting schedule. Two weeks were spent filming on the Universal Studios Hollywood backlots—the house featured in the picture show is the same business firm used in The Best Little Whorehouse in Texas (1982), and it tin be seen on Universal Studios' tram tours.[7] [19] Zombie stated that filming on the lot was at times difficult, every bit the amusement park was often open and ruined takes.[fourteen] The remaining eleven days of the shoot were spent on a ranch in Valencia, California.[7] The scene involving Bill being transformed into "Fishboy" was initially much longer, featuring gory details of the creation of the monster.[17] Zombie stated the scene was created after Universal passed on the moving-picture show.[17] Scenes featuring Infant masturbating with a skeleton, along with other cutaway scenes, were filmed in Zombie's basement after initial filming for the project had concluded. Zombie later cited home recordings from the Manson family every bit inspiration for the Firefly family'southward "bizarre" rants. Zombie ofttimes filmed ii versions of scenes, one of them less gory, in an attempt to delight Universal.[ citation needed ]
Jake McKinnon could not see well when dressed as The Professor, and nigh hit actress Erin Daniels with a real ax during the film's climax. Zombie later said he had but hoped Daniels would motility out of the way in time. When Denise calls her father from a telephone booth, a sign for a missing dog head can be seen hanging in the booth; this was in fact a real item establish by Zombie and used for the moving picture. In the early on stages of the picture, Gramps Hugo was to have been revealed as the murderous Dr. Satan, who at the time was only referred to as the mad medico. The fable of the mad physician was to be a ploy by the Firefly family unit to lure victims in, though this idea was later scrapped. This led to Grandpa Hugo receiving much less screen time. The character of Dr. Satan was inspired past a 1950s billboard-sized poster advertisement a "live spook evidence starring a magician called Dr. Satan" that Zombie has in his house.[20]
Casting [edit]
The flick'southward principal bandage consisted of the murderous Firefly family, the four teenagers and various police officers attempting to detect the group, among others.[21] Sid Haig was cast as Captain Spaulding, a man who dresses as a clown and owns a gas station and museum of curiosities.[21] Haig claimed he had to "go far impact with [his] own insanity" for the role.[22] His relation to the Firefly family is not revealed in the pic, though he is working with them to some extent; however, the sequel establishes that he is the father of Baby. Bill Moseley starred as Otis B. Driftwood, who was adopted into the Firefly family. Sheri Moon Zombie portrayed Baby Firefly, who became known for her high pitched laugh and sexual nature.[17] Karen Black was cast as Mother Firefly, the protective female parent to the family.[23] Matthew McGrory portrayed Tiny Firefly, a tall man who was left plain-featured after a house burn started by his father.[24] Robert Allen Mukes portrayed Rufus "RJ" Firefly. Jr. Dennis Fimple was selected to play Grampa Hugo Firefly. He died following filming, and the finished production was defended to him.[21]
The names of members of the Firefly family were taken from the names of Groucho Marx characters. Captain Spaulding was a character in Animal Crackers (1930), Otis B. Driftwood was a graphic symbol in A Dark at the Opera (1935), Rufus T. Firefly was taken from Duck Soup (1933), and lastly Hugo Z. Hackenbush derived from A Twenty-four hours at the Races (1937). Despite just allusions to this existence made in House of thousand Corpses, information technology is more prevalent in the film'due south sequel, with the names becoming integral to the plot.[25] Zombie acknowledged that viewers were meant to "root for" the Firefly family unit equally opposed to the group of teens, though claims it wasn't intentional: "Yeah, I wanted the audience to cheer 'em. I didn't consciously think of information technology at the time, because I was trying to make Neb and Jerry likeable. But information technology's like when you saw Beetlejuice and you could tell all Tim Burton cared about was Beetlejuice."[17]
Erin Daniels portrayed Denise Willis. Chris Hardwick was cast as Jerry Goldsmith, a young human being who was seen as "hyper" and "wise-swell".[25] The character Neb Hudley was portrayed by Rainn Wilson. House of g Corpses served equally one of Wilson's first films, though he constitute mainstream success following the film's release.[26] Mary Knowles, Bill's girlfriend, was played past Jennifer Jostyn. Mary was seen as the most confrontational of the group, ofttimes ambivalent with Baby due to her flirtatious relationship with Bill. Harrison Young was selected to play Don Willis, the father of Denise who later goes looking for her and her group of friends. Tom Towles and Walton Goggins portrayed Lieutenant George Wydell and Deputy Steve Naish, respectively; the pair work with Don to observe the missing group.[21]
Irwin Keyes was cast equally Ravelli, the assistant to Helm Spaulding who helps run the tourist attraction.[ citation needed ] Michael J. Pollard portrayed Stucky, a friend of Helm Spaulding and Ravelli'southward.[ commendation needed ] Republic of chad Bannon and David Reynolds played Killer Karl and Richard "Little Dick" Wick, two men who try to rob Captain Spaulding'southward shop and are murdered.[ commendation needed ] William H. Basset had a small role in the film equally Sheriff Frank Huston.[ citation needed ] Joe Dobbs Three played Gerry Ober, a man who works at the liquor shop; he is later given the nickname "Goober" by Baby. Gregg Gibbs appeared equally Dr. Wolfenstein during the "murder ride".[ commendation needed ] Zombie made a cameo advent as Dr. Wolfenstein's banana. Despite initially planning to appear as Dr. Wolfenstein, Zombie opted to be his assistant instead, assertive he would look "normal" in costume. Walter Phelan was cast as Dr. Satan, whose real name was Due south. Quintin Quale.[ citation needed ]
Music [edit]
The score for the film was composed by Zombie, aslope Canadian producer Scott Humphrey. Much of the production work for the soundtrack to the moving-picture show was washed in Humphrey's studio, The Chop Store.[27] [28] The flick's score featured similar musical themes to Zombie'due south releases, consisting of heavy metal influences. MTV said the music mixed "snippets of ominous hillbilly dialogue with grim horror pic stone."[29] While making the movie, Zombie joked with his director that he should do a comprehend of "Brick Business firm" (1977), originally performed past Commodores. His manager after got both Lionel Richie and rapper Trina to appear on a embrace of the song with Zombie, under the championship "Brick House 2003".[29] Aside from making audio clips and snippets for the film, Zombie recorded a multifariousness of new songs for the film's soundtrack. The vocal "Firm of 1000 Corpses", taken from Zombie'due south album The Sinister Urge (2001), is also present.[thirty] The soundtrack, released on March 25, 2003, made an appearance on the Billboard 200 chart in the United states. The soundtrack to the moving-picture show is isolated on home video releases of the film every bit a separate audio track.[ commendation needed ] Subsequently in 2019, Rob Zombie announced that the soundtrack would exist released on vinyl past the label Waxwork Records. The record included an essay past Zombie and a 12x12" photo booklet of behind the scenes photos.[31]
Release [edit]
Prior to like-minded to release the picture show through Universal, Zombie reportedly told the studio of the picture show'due south nature, stating "I was really blatant when I talked to them. I didn't desire to become into a situation where they idea I was making something mainstream. And I told them that I wanted to make a drive-in movie, something very gritty and nasty and weird."[xviii] Production of the film was completed in 2000, and was set for release through Universal. The studio completed a theatrical trailer for the moving picture, which was shown in theaters and prior to the Universal ride created past Zombie.[18] Zombie subsequently received a call for a meeting with Stacey Snider, caput of Universal, requesting a coming together. Zombie recalled fearing that the studio would need a re-shoot, though he later learned that Snider'southward fears of the motion-picture show receiving an NC-17 rating had led to the company's refusal to release the film.[32] The motion-picture show remained shelved for several months, with Zombie eventually purchasing the rights to the film from Universal. Zombie claimed that many urged him to scrap the film following the fallout with Universal, though he connected to search for a new distributor.
Zombie later made a bargain with MGM to release the motion picture, with MGM slating an October 2002 release for the moving picture.[33] Despite this, MGM later refused to release the motion-picture show following a controversial remark from Zombie claiming that the company had no morals for releasing the film.[34] Zombie later announced plans to release the picture himself, without the backing of a production company.[35] Despite this, Zombie eventually defenseless the centre of Lions Gate Entertainment, the final studio to sign on for the project.[34] Lions Gate, attempting to venture into new types of films, hoped releasing a horror moving-picture show would provide more opportunities.[34] The pic was cutting and edited in an endeavor to attain an R-rating, with Zombie claiming that most of the cutting footage featured Sherri Moon Zombie's graphic symbol.[36]
The first public screening of the film occurred in Argentina on March 13, 2003.[ citation needed ] House of g Corpses received its theatrical release on April xi, 2003. The film made its debut in the United kingdom of great britain and northern ireland at Fright Fest, and was the fastest selling effect of the night.[15] Firm of chiliad Corpses grossed $3,460,666 on a limited opening weekend, while boasting $ii,522,026 on its official opening. The film opened in second at the box office, behind the comedy film Acrimony Direction (2003).[15] It went on to gross $12,634,962 in the Us lonely, with an additional $4,194,583 accumulated worldwide. The film's reported gross is $sixteen,829,545. Co-ordinate to Zombie, Lions Gate Amusement made back their investment on the film on the first day, and shortly after approached Zombie about a sequel to the film.[xv] Having already begun developing ideas for a sequel, Zombie quickly began work on a follow-up.[ commendation needed ]
Critical response [edit]
Firm of 1000 Corpses received a more often than not negative critical reception upon its release. Frank Scheck of The Hollywood Reporter wrote that the film "lives upwardly to the spirit merely not the quality of its inspirations" and is ultimately a "cheesy and ultragory exploitation horror motion picture" and "strangely devoid of thrills, shocks or horror."[37] Clint Morris of Film Threat slammed the film as "an 60 minutes and a half of undecipherable plot" and found the film to be "sickening" overall.[38] James Brundage of Filmcritic.com wrote that the moving picture was simply "hick later on hick, cheap scary image after cheap scary epitome, lots of southern accents and psychotic murders," and was "too highbrow to be a good cheap horror picture show, too lowbrow to be satire, and likewise slow to deport the value of the ticket."[39] Slant Magazine gave the pic ii out of four stars, stating "If not for the glimmer-and-miss sideshow attractions and stockpile of memorable quotes, [House of] thousand Corpses would have been easier to shrug off. This vintage curio is proudly and humorously derivative but that familiar aftertaste is that of wasted opportunities."[twoscore] The New York Times too had a negative review of the flick, writing "Equally much as picture buffs might enjoy recognizing references to Motel Hell and other bulldoze-in classics, Mr. Zombie'due south encyclopedic arroyo to the genre results in a crowded, frenzied movie in which no single idea is developed to a satisfying payoff."[41] The review also criticized the cutaway scenes and home footage used throughout the film, adding "Mr. Zombie is both likewise much of a stylist, e'er cut abroad to oddball inserts, black-and-white flashbacks, negative images and much else, and too picayune: he is non in plenty control of his means to let a mood abound and fester. And festering is what this kind of film is all virtually."[41]
JoBlo.com had a more positive view of the film, claiming it "slaps together just the right amount of creepy temper, nervous laughter, cheap scares, fun rides and claret and guts to satisfy any major fan of the macabre."[42] Horror Limited gave the flick a by and large positive review, claiming "He has succeeded for the near role, but really this is only a film Rob Zombie could practice. Beyond the harkening back to the onetime days, in that location are instances where Zombie'due south signature fashion comes through. It's a style he has honed over the years through his videos, animations and music. Grotesque imagery is shown through skewed camera angles as smiling faces watch on. A use of bright fluorescents near creates a deceptive atmosphere of childlike innocence as the devils perfect their craft on screen."[43] Entertainment Weekly gave it a C+, saying "House of 1000 Corpses "isn't coherent, exactly, merely what dripping-ghoul horror movie is these days? The new rule is, It'due south not hip to make sense when you're raising hell."[44] Maitland McDonagh of Tv Guide gave the film 2 out of four stars, stating " It is ugly—in the distinctively done out, grainy, slightly burned mode of low-budget '70s films—gory and unmarried-mindedly hateful, none of which is a criticism since that'southward exactly what information technology wants to exist."[45] The project was well received past the LA Times, who wrote "Let's requite the devil his due. Zombie, who displays a natural flair for the cinematic, has a existent appreciation and knowledge of horror pictures and a Diane Arbus-like affinity for sleazy, bizarre Americana and schlock culture. Throughout his fast-moving movie he inserts vintage clips in a witty, telling manner, and as to be expected, Zombie, with Scott Humphries, has come up through with a rip-roaring score for his motion-picture show."[46]
The motion picture has a 20% "rotten" rating on motion picture review website Rotten Tomatoes, based on 85 reviews, with a weighted average of 3.43/x. The site's consensus reads: "There'south an abundance of gore in this derivative horror pic, but fiddling sense or wit."[47] It has a Metacritic score of 31 based on fifteen critics, signifying "generally unfavorable reviews".[48]
Since its initial release, the motion picture has gone on to gain a cult following.[49] [50] [51] [52] In his 2007 review of the Blu-ray release, Christopher Monfette of IGN chosen the moving-picture show "fun every bit hell", writing "House of one thousand Corpses is a messy pic—veering this mode and that across the genre map with no discernible destination. But viewed less a movie and more than as an experience, the film offers a sure caste of inspired insanity and a healthy dose of carnival-similar madness".[53] Zombie has acknowledged the film'south cult status, stating "Now, a decade later, information technology'due south become a pretty loved flick amongst people. It'south great that nosotros have this large celebration. I love seeing Sid Haig and the other actors get such nifty attention from it. The funny affair is, 10 years becomes a long time. I'll come across someone who's 18 years old, and that's always been a film that they've loved. Information technology's funny that the film's been around that long to be like that for some people."[54] CinemaBlend also wrote of the flick'southward cult status, stating "While his Halloween films were a mess, Zombie did bring something new with his original films Firm of 1000 Corpses and The Devil's Rejects, developing a cult following for his movies on top of the one he earned for his music. Say what you will about him as a director, simply there's no denying that he has a unique vision."[55] Zombie has gone on to dismiss the picture post-obit its release, maxim "The first motion picture [I directed], which people seems to dear, is but a baleful mess. Well, when it came out it seemed similar everyone hated information technology. Now everyone acts similar it'due south beloved in some mode. All I see is flaw, upon flaw, upon flaw... upon flaw."[56] The success of the pic led to two sequels, released in 2005 and 2022 respectively, and later a seasonal haunted firm allure at Universal Studios Hollywood.[57]
Dwelling house media [edit]
It received a domicile video release on August 12, 2003. For the main menu of the film, Zombie had Sid Haig perform in character as an added bonus.[58] The Blu-ray edition of the film was released on September 18, 2007.[59] The Blu-ray edition of the film features the added menu content with Haig, as well as the bonus features found on its initial release. The film was released aslope The Devil's Rejects (2005) in a combo-pack on Jan iv, 2011.[60] Zombie spoke in 2003 of releasing a "super-duper deluxe" edition of the moving-picture show on DVD, which he hoped would include the footage of the scrapped characters, besides every bit deleted footage from the picture show's decease scenes; Zombie besides claimed the "fishboy" scene was initially much gorier, and he hoped to include added footage for that scene.[17] Years later, Zombie elaborated on the subject area, stating:
I don't call back it ever volition [be released], because I don't think anyone knows where any of it is, truthfully. Even when they put together the DVD, which was 13 years ago, we couldn't find anything considering they had shot two hundred interviews in the time since the shoot. We had behind-the-scenes stuff, brand-upward tests, all these different things, and nobody could find information technology. Information technology was all lost. That's why I think whatever exists is all that's going to ever be.[61]
Awards and nominations [edit]
Yr | Award | Category | Recipient(s) | Consequence | Ref. |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
2003 | Rondo Hatton Classic Horror Awards | All-time Genre Picture show | Rob Zombie | Nominated | [62] [63] |
Teen Choice Awards | Option Movie—Horror/Thriller | — | Nominated | [64] | |
2004 | Fantasporto—International Fantasy Movie Awards | Best Special Effects | Wayne Toth, Michael O'Brien | Won | [65] [66] |
Best Motion picture | Rob Zombie | Nominated | [66] | ||
Fangoria Chainsaw Awards | Best Supporting Player | Sid Haig | Won | [67] [68] | |
Best Supporting Actress | Karen Black | Won | [68] | ||
Best Wide-Release Flick | — | Nominated | [69] | ||
Best Makeup/Creature FX | Wayne Toth | Nominated | [69] |
References [edit]
- ^ a b c "House of 1000 Corpses (2003)". AFI Catalog of Feature Films . Retrieved May 20, 2019.
- ^ "Business firm OF 1000 CORPSES (18)". British Lath of Film Classification. July 8, 2003. Retrieved July six, 2013.
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- ^ https://screenrant.com/house-1000-corpses-rob-zombie-best-picture show-firefly-trilogy-reason/
- ^ https://www.dreadcentral.com/news/345280/netflix-unleashes-business firm-of-1000-corpses-this-halloween/
- ^ "House of k Corpses". IFC (The Contained Movie Aqueduct). Archived from the original on Oct 12, 2013. Retrieved July 8, 2012.
- ^ a b c d due east f Szulkin, David. "Death to False Horror". Fangoria (199): 20–25.
- ^ Lecaro, Lina (Nov xvi, 2010). "Interview: White Zombie's Sean Yseult Awakens Sleeping Corpses With New Volume". LA Weekly. Archived from the original on June 24, 2012. Retrieved November 22, 2012.
- ^ "Hellbilly Deluxe – Rob Zombie – Listen and discover music at". Last.fm. Retrieved Nov 24, 2012.
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- ^ "Heavy Metal and Horror – IFC". Ifc.com. August fourteen, 2012. Retrieved Nov 25, 2012.
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- ^ a b c d e f thou h "Rob Zombie - Christian Divine". Christiandivine.com. Retrieved January 31, 2015.
- ^ a b c d "Interview: Rob Zombie". theguardian.com. September xix, 2003. Retrieved January 31, 2015.
- ^ Rob Zombie explains why Firm of k Corpses cost so much to brand. YouTube. February 28, 2014. Archived from the original on Nov 18, 2021.
- ^ a b c d due east f g "Slasherama Interviews Rob Zombie". slasherama.com. Retrieved January 31, 2015.
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- ^ "The Chicken Ranch". The Studio Bout: Universal Studios Hollywood . Retrieved July 8, 2012.
- ^ Ulmer, Gary (Summer 2003), "Interview with the Zombie", Nighttime Realms Magazine, vol. outcome xi, pp. 14–16
- ^ a b c d Newell, Eric (2012), "House of 1000 Corpses", Horror Hound, 1 (36): 26–33
- ^ "Devil'due south Rejects - Bandage Interviews". Archived from the original on Baronial seven, 2007. Retrieved Jan 31, 2015.
- ^ "Rob Zombie Rallies Fans to Aid 'House of chiliad Corpses' Extra Karen Black's Cancer Battle". Loudwire.
- ^ "Matthew McGrory Obit". Retrieved March 9, 2015.
- ^ a b "V Fun Facts About Rob Zombie's Firm of 1000 Corpses". www.ifc.com.
- ^ Winters Keegan, Rebecca (March eight, 2007). "Rainn Wilson". Time Magazine. Archived from the original on March 16, 2007. Retrieved August 24, 2008.
Did being of the Baha'i faith help you sympathize the spirituality? As a Baha'i, I believe in all the spiritual beliefs: Buddhism, Hinduism, Christianity.
- ^ "The Chop Store". The Chop Shop. Retrieved Oct 28, 2012.
- ^ "The Chop Store". The Chop Shop. Archived from the original on Apr 26, 2012. Retrieved October 28, 2012.
- ^ a b "Rob Zombie Prepping New LP, Movie; Builds 'Brick House' With Lionel Richie". MTV. Feb 7, 2003.
- ^ "House of 1000 Corpses - Original Soundtrack". Allmusic.
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External links [edit]
- Firm of 1000 Corpses at IMDb
- Business firm of 1000 Corpses at Box Office Mojo
- House of thou Corpses at Rotten Tomatoes
- Business firm of 1000 Corpses at Metacritic
Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/House_of_1000_Corpses
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