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  • 11 Questions With Adrienne Barbeau

    11 Questions With Adrienne Barbeau

    Here we have it folks, the long discussed interview with the brilliantly talented, and supremely gorgeous actress, Adrienne Barbeau!

    I will say in advance that this interview is my favorite so far. When I first got the responses back each one made me smile.

    As always, for those who may not be in the know, here’s a brief rundown on Ms. Barbeau (2nd piece in a row where that has kind of rhymed.)

    Adrienne Barbeau is an extremely talented thespian best known for bringing her above average acting talents to a genre not often known for it’s high caliber performances, that of the world of horror. She has been a queen of the scream in such genre classics as The Fog, Creepshow, Escape from New York, and Swamp Thing. Adrienne is also a world renowned singer and theater performer. And, she also had a major role on the ground breaking 1970’s television show Maude, along side Bea Arthur. AND, she was, is and always shall be one of the most gorgeous women ever to grace a movie screen. I could go on all day, so, for more info than I can dish here, hit up http://www.abarbeau.com/ and get to know her better.

    No frills.

    Some fluff.

    Little functionality.

    11 Questions, and 11 Questions Only.

    This interview took place via email between myself and Ms. Barbeau’s manager.

    As per the format of ’11 Questions’ I submitted my questions cold and let the interviewee do the answering. Any “conversational awkwardness” is because of this and is unintentional.

    (The interview has not been edited in any way (for grammar, spelling or otherwise) to make either of us look better.)

    Enjoy!

    DS– Despite having an extensive career in theater, television and voice work you are most well known (to my audience at least) for your appearances in numerous classic horror films (The Fog, Creepshow, Swamp Thing, etc.) and as a major sex symbol of the 70’s and 80’s. Do your roles as a ‘scream queen’ and ‘pin up girl’ bother you after all this time, or is it something you get a kick out of and embrace; and, do you think they go hand in hand (what with misogyny being famously rampant in a lot of horror works)?

    AB– The thing I love about being identified with The Fog, Creepshow, Swamp Thing, Escape From New York et al. is that they continue to be honored by horror film buffs all these many years later.  When I made my first appearance at an autograph convention, I was stunned to discover that their popularity hasn’t waned in the least, and that horror fans are rabid in their appreciation of the genre in general and those films in particular.  How fantastic to be a part of that culture!  I just love it.

    DS– You’re a talented singer and have headlined a lot of musicals on stage in your time, notably you played the first Rizzo in the original Broadway incarnation of “Grease.” How was it that you weren’t cast in some of the better musicals of the 70’s and 80’s, once again, notably Grease?

    AB– By the time Grease came to be filmed, I was doing Maude.  It never crossed my mind to inquire about the casting of the film; I think I must have thought I was too old to play a teen-ager.  And in the 70s, if you were on a television series, no one was willing to cast you in a film.  The prevailing thought in those days was that the audience wouldn’t pay to see someone in a movie theatre if they were seeing them for free at home.  John Travolta turned that around, but it wasn’t until decades later that television stars began crossing over as a matter of course.

    DS– In 1978 you played Lauren Hutton’s lesbian best friend Sophie in (then future, now former, husband) John Carpenter’s exceptionally well done, made for TV thriller “Someone’s Watching Me.” It’s one of the first movies that I as a gay man remember seeing when I was younger that featured a strong gay character, and seeing as you are you, star of a lot of my favorite films of the time, it was quite inspiring. As an actress who has been in a lot of controversial works and played a lot of “tough gal” roles was it a natural extension to play a lesbian on TV in a time when that sort of thing DEFINITELY wasn’t the norm and did you intend on such roles being as inspiring as they were?

    AB– You know, I never really thought about it.  It didn’t seem unusual to me.  I was just playing a woman who happened to be in love with another woman.  The operative word to me being “love”, which I assumed everyone could relate to.  I think John cast me because he saw something in my portrayal of Carole, Maude’s daughter, that he responded to — strength, humor, whatever…the Howard Hawks woman that he loved to write — that he wanted for the role in “Someone’s Watching Me”.  I was happy to provide it.  If any of my roles became an inspiration to other women, that was after the fact, and in the main due to the great words I was lucky enough to get to say. I never thought of what I was doing as inspirational, I just undertook roles I was attracted to and I was probably attracted to them because they were the kind of woman I wanted to be and hoped I was.

    DS– 1980 saw you teaming up with John Carpenter again for “The Fog.” Aside from a couple of scenes here and there most of your sequences in the film were solo. What was it like for you coming from the packed cast of “Maude,” large theatrical productions and films, to act and essentially carry all of your scenes entirely alone (on screen at least)?

    AB– I don’t remember being aware of much difference.  I think the location where we shot “The Fog” is as much of a character in the film as the actors were and so I certainly had an incredible locale to work off of.  I’ve always been very affected by my surroundings — we ended up loving Inverness, California so much we bought a home there.  The only quirky thing about my filming in “The Fog” was the scene on top of the lighthouse where the fog rolls in and the leper ghost chases me and then something happens in the inter-cut church scene which causes the ghost to disappear and leaves me no longer in jeopardy or in fog.  Because this was the early 80s, long before CGI, the only way they could control the ‘fog’ (some godawful chemical concoction) was to blow it in with fans.  They couldn’t suck it out.  So I had to film the scene in reverse sequence, acting from the end of the scene to the beginning, and then they flipped the negative or something (obviously more technical than I can explain) and it all made sense.  Not to me, maybe, but to the audience.

    DS– “Escape from New York” came in 1981, in it you play another tough as nails, bad ass chick. I’d have loved to seen you play a Snake Plissken-esque character yourself. Aside from the whacked out horror film “The Convent” in 2000 you never really got to approach anything like that. Were you ever offered any lead roles as the hard boiled anti-hero back in that time period, or was cinema just not accepting of that sort of thing then?

    AB– I’m glad you see Snake in my “Convent” character.  That’s definitely how I saw her.  I don’t think there were many female bad-ass heroines back in the 80s.  The only role of that ilk I can remember doing was on stage at The Roxy in Hollywood when I did Women Behind Bars.  I love those type of roles.  Give me an M-16 and a moral code and I’m in heaven.

    DS– 1982 saw the release of two of your most famous films, first “Swamp Thing,” directed by another Master of Horror, Wes Craven. Both John Carpenter and Craven stand in fairly much the same regard as maestros of the macabre, but, aside from technical and stylist differences on screen, how do they truly differ as directors behind the scenes?

    AB– I don’t know if they do.  I loved working for both of them.  They both keep a serene set — as serene as possible when making a movie.  By that I mean, they were both low key, no yelling or screaming, no diva demonstrations.  They know what they want and how to get it.  They inspire trust in their actors.  They’re absolutely a pleasure to work for.

    DS– Next came Stephen King and George A. Romero’s loving cinematic homage to EC Comics, the deliriously wicked horror-comedy-anthology “Creepshow.” In the film’s most famous segment ‘The Crate‘ you play the scenery chewing uber-bitch Wilma Northrup. I once read somewhere that you consider Wilma the most favorite of the characters you’ve played. If this is so, did you ever expect someone like Wilma to tickle you so much as an actress, and why did she?

    AB– Well, she tickles me because she’s so absolutely outrageous.  Because George encouraged me to go over the top with her.  And because, secretly, I like to think she’s so far afield from me that I’m just delighted to know I could come up with her.  I don’t drink, never have, so I really didn’t have any idea if I could pull her off, but she just makes me laugh and I had such a good time with her.  George and Hal and Fritz and Pittsburgh made filming a joy I’ll never forget.  And I bought some great antiques on my days off!

    DS– In 1989 you starred in a film which I consider to have one of, if not THE, greatest titles ever, “Cannibal Women in the Avocado Jungle of Death” with Shannon Tweed and Bill Maher. What drew you to the project (besides the title and whacked out concept) and what was your experience like working on the film?

    AB– The fact that it was union approved work during the writers’ strike when no one was working is what drew me to the project.  That and I thought it was an hysterical script (you know, I’m sure, that it’s a re-telling of Apocalypse Now/Heart of Darkness, with me playing Marlon Brando’s role.  I mean, come on, how could I turn that down?).  If I remember correctly, I shot my entire role in 17 hours.  There were swords fights with Shannon that I filmed entirely alone — just my side of the battle because they couldn’t afford to pay us both to shoot at the same time.  It was a hoot.

    DS– You had a son with John Carpenter, John Cody, and twin boys Walker and William with your husband Billy Van Zandt. Do any of your boys have the entertainer bug that their parents share, or are they entirely out of that world for the most part?

    AB– Cody is a brilliant composer and musician.  He scored both the episodes of Masters of Horror that John directed, and scenes in several of John’s films and several other short films, but he’s not interested in making music a career.  He is a yoga teacher and a Japanese tutor and the great love of his life is Japan.  William plays guitar and Walker plays drums, but their primary love is soccer.  They’re on a team that’s ranked 21st in the nation and they’re only 15, so who knows what the future holds.  Definitely not acting, that’s for sure.

    DS– In recent years you have released several novels; your wonderful and humorous autobiography “There Are Worse Things I Could Do” and two acclaimed fiction works “Vampyres of Hollywood” and “Love Bites.” Do you plan on focusing more on writing now, and will your next novels still stick within the horror genre or do you wish to branch out more there as well?

    AB– I truly fell into the writing; it wasn’t something I ever anticipated doing.  I love it, but I still see it as an adjunct to my acting career; something I can do when I’m not performing.  I just submitted a proposal for another non-fiction book, not the horror genre unless  dealing with life in your fifties seems terrifying to you, so we’ll see what happens.

    DS– Coming some time this year you’re starring alongside a dream cast of “B-Movie” icons (including Tim Thomerson, Lance Henriksen, John Saxon and Martin Kove) in another wonderfully titled, deliriously meta sounding film that I cannot wait to review (maybe you could hook me up with a personal copy, haha) “Bring Me the Head of Lance Henriksen.” What’s it been like working on this project, have any secrets from the set you can share and what drew you to it in the first place?

    AB– I’ve done two films for the director, Michael Worth, and he’s such a great guy to work for that when he called and asked me to do his “mockumentary” (is that how it’s spelled?) with my old pal Tim Thomerson (we worked together for the first time on a Fantasy Island episode where I played a 200 lb woman out to get Tim by ripping off his toupee), I said I’d be there in a flash.  I haven’t seen any of the footage, but I suspect it’s hysterical.

    The other film I’m really excited about and was thrilled to be cast in is “Argo“, starring and directed by Ben Affleck.  It’s a great script, based on the true story of a hostage rescue that took place in Iran in the late 70s, and I think it’s going to be Academy Award calibre.  Look for that to premier September 14th.

    See, what’d I tell you?

    Wonderful, yes?

    Love it, love everything about it. If I could do a back and forth with Ms. Barbeau every week I would! Also, “Give me an M-16 and a moral code and I’m in heaven.”  is a new favorite phrase and life motto for me.

    Hope you all enjoyed it as much as I did and stay tuned for the next installment of 11 Questions, coming soon!

  • Status – Short Film

    Status – Short Film

    Facebook. A few years ago that compound word had little meaning; today it is a ubiquitous social media tool that has rapidly redefined how many people interact. Status, a short film by Josh Bedford, is a smart segment focussing on Clare Bosworth whose recent ‘in a relationship’ to ‘single’ status update has left her jaded to the world of Facebook. This is a clever and humorous commentary on the invasion of Facebook into our lives and the inescapable web it weaves around us. Breaking the fourth wall and speaking directly to the viewer Clare narrates her tale of Facebook woes. Well shot and produced Status is a tightly written, self-aware, short from a young new film maker featuring up and coming actress Emily Spetch in the lead role and playing on a subject that most people can relate to in modern society.

    Read the official synopsis and check out the film HERE, or in the embed below.

    “Status tells the story of Clare, a girl in her early twenties who has suffered from a broken relationship. Everything is going perfectly, until her boyfriend goes to a party arranged on facebook and ends up meeting another girl there and falling for her…never speaking to Clare again. Clare therefore holds a hate towards the website, but at the same time is still drawn to it, and finds it hard to escape. The film tells of her feelings towards facebook and towards Tom (her ex), and comes to a conclusion when she decides upon a drastic way to give up her ‘addiction’ and be rid of the memories of Tom.

    This short film is a metaphor for the struggles of addiction and of relationships, and to an extent, is also a relevant exposé of how dependent our society has become on facebook and social networking as a whole.”


    You can also check out Hear No Evil, another Josh Bedford short following a day in the life of deaf/mute student James HERE, and more info about Josh HERE.

  • Instant Swamp – Review

    Instant Swamp – Review

    Haname Jinchoge is a woman who has a bad day, a really bad day. In fact Haname has notoriously bad luck. When her fashion magazine is shut down due to poor sales she flips out and concusses herself with a set of nunchucks. Deciding to start her life anew Haname clears out her flat, after being ridiculed by the removal men, and takes her lonely pet rabbit Gonzaburo to find a girlfriend, where she promptly loses him in among the look-alike bunnies of the rabbit-breeding farm. Sad and low Haname makes her way home, but before she can reach it she receives a call from the police telling her of her mother’s accident. She has fallen into a lake, and then a coma.

    It looks as if things can’t get any worse for Haname, as the police try to solve the strange circumstances of her mother’s accident; apparently she was fishing for water spirits, using a long pole and a cucumber, when suddenly they discover something even stranger. From the lake they dredge a post box, stolen years ago and full of slimy, semi-legible letters. In it they discover a letter, written by Haname’s mother to a mystery man, as it turns out, her real father.

    From a slightly odd beginning, the opening sequence in particular, which is a strange montage of Haname’s restlessness in her mediocre life, Instant Swamp takes a bold move. It morphs into a film about a young woman getting to know her father, learning who she is and taking direction from that knowledge. Haname is forced to question the cynicism she has harboured since childhood, refusing to believe in luck, fate or spirits. She begins to embrace a more magical view of the world and her story really grips you and leads you along on her journey of discovery. Finding friends in unexpected places and adding colour to her life in simple ways Haname embarks with her father and his friend Gas on some strange and pointless adventures. Haname has to come to terms with the fact that the fortuitous events taking place in her life are not the ones she had hoped for and her new found father Light Bulb is not as earnest as he may seem.

    Overall this film is a very entertaining watch. It is a quirky, believable jaunt into the world of the supernatural and yet it keeps it’s feet firmly grounded in the more serious subjects of difficult child-parent relationships and the fight against stagnation in a life gone astray. Instant Swamp is comic and diverting without becoming so surreal it loses all sense of narrative, as more independent films are often want to do.

    Haname herself can be a little grating at times, with far too much high-pitched shrieking and highs and lows so extreme they’re almost caricatured. The film also has some jarring oddities, for example: a tendency to hop relentlessly from shot to shot with little breath in between and the use of some particularly poor mythical creature puppets. Also the conclusion of the film takes a massive swerve away from the fairly realist narrative that bobs along so nicely for one hundred minutes. I started, exclaimed, rewound and starred again in disbelief, and yet the slightly absurd ending doesn’t take anything away from the films overall message. Like Adrift in Tokyo, Instant Swamp comes with a touching life lesson, seize the day, get back on you feet and try something different.

  • Adrift In Tokyo – Review

    Adrift In Tokyo – Review

    Adrift in Tokyo follows the touching tale of a disillusioned young man, steeped in debt, who dwells incessantly on the abandonment of his parents. Wallowing in self pity Fumiya’s life quickly worsens when a debt collector arrives to give him a quick beating and a reminder that he needs to pay up astronomical sums in a matter of days.

    Desperate and despondent Fumiya wanders listlessly around Tokyo trying to think up ways of making money when the debt collector returns and makes him a proposition; he will cancel the debt and give Fumiya one million yen if he walks with him across Tokyo, for as long as he chooses.

    As they wind across Tokyo visiting places of importance and nostalgia the pair slowly form a bond and the tone of the film moves from the tense set-up to a meandering and heart felt tale of friendship. Mr Fukuhara quickly confides his terrible guilt in Fumiya, explaining to him that he wishes to cross Toyko to the police station, where he will turn himself in for accidentally killing his wife. Despite this early confession the two become closer and closer en route, with the older, wiser Mr Fukuhara becoming like a surrogate father for the wayward student, guiding him back to the correct path and helping him to come to terms with who he is.

    Along the way the pair see some of the stranger sights of the city and the film becomes like a modern-day Japanese odyssey as they stick together through thick and thin and catch glimpses into the peculiar lives of the urbanites. Warring families, old school friends, random guitar players and cantankerous old watch shop owners are some of the many hilarious characters of dipped into scenes, which make this film varied, entertaining and comically brilliant. These clever injections of insanity balanced with the serious tones of loss and abandonment keep the film both lively and grounded.

    It is easy to grow to love Mr Fukuhara, despite the things he’s done and his guidance of the younger man is truly moving. On top of this the film’s side story of the discovery of Mrs Fukuhara’s body has some fantastic scenes and three characters who are comically brilliant as they are continually distracted from finding the corpse. Meanwhile the hints and indications of the role of luck, chance and fate are a masterstroke; keeping you interested until the very last.

    Adrift in Tokyo is a great film and it was a genuine surprise, far and away above my expectations when I sat down to watch. The beauty of Satoshi Miki’s films is that they seem to be completely unpredictable each time without ever becoming too absurd. Beautiful cinematography and clever filming are a real homage to the beauty and diversity of Tokyo, the perfect setting for a very human, urban film.

  • The Tunnel

    The Tunnel

    The Tunnel is the brand new Australian found-footage thriller where a terrifying fear is about to be unleashed.

    When heading into a tunnel you know you will see daylight on the other side, but the government abandoned train tunnels under Sydney are a dark, twisted maze, where the shadows move and something is watching…

    The Tunnel has been recognised by Variety as “Taking a chapter from “The Blair Witch Project” and a page from 1973 cult item “Raw Meat,”; while HorrorAsylum described The Tunnel as “Terrifying and effective”.

    In 2007 the New South Wales government suddenly and inexplicably abandoned a project to recycle water found in the disused train tunnels beneath Sydney, despite being in the midst of serious drought.

    In 2008 investigativejournalist Natasha (Bel Deliá) is convinced of a government cover-up and isdetermined to prove her theory right by any means possible. Natasha and herteam Peter Ferguson (Andy Rodoreda), Steve Miller (Steve Davies) and Jim Williams (Luke Arnaldo) descend into the subterranean labyrinth of the city – but as they hunt for their story, a much bigger story is hunting them.

    Watch their harrowingordeal, with unprecedented access to the recently declassified tapes shot in the claustrophobic subway tunnels, as well as a series of candid interviewswith the survivors and CCTV. Step by step we come face to face with the terrifying truth.

    The never before seenfootage takes us deep inside the tunnels, bringing the darkness to life andcapturing the raw fear that threatens to tear the crew apart, leaving each one of them fighting for their lives against an unknown predator.

    Directed by Carlo Ledesma (The Last One, Food Matters, Locked, The Haircut), and produced by Enzo Tedeschi and Julian Harvey, The Tunnel is part of the 135k Project, a crowd-funding initiative that invites film fans to buy individual digital frames from films in pre-production to fund the costs of production. The aim of 135k Films is to make movies unencumbered by box office constraints.

    To find out more about what is in The Tunnel go to www.whatisthetunnel.co.uk and https://twitter.com/whatisthetunnel