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| writer = [[Rob Zombie]]
| writer = [[Rob Zombie]]
| narrator =
| narrator =
| starring = [[Sid Haig]]<br />[[Bill Moseley]]<br />[[Erin Daniels]]
| starring = [[Sid Haig]]<br />[[Bill Moseley]]<br />[[Erin Daniels]]<br/>[[Sheri Moon Zombie]]
| music = [[Rob Zombie]]
| music = [[Rob Zombie]]
| cinematography = Alex Poppas<br />Tom Richmond
| cinematography = Alex Poppas<br />Tom Richmond

Revision as of 18:53, 15 September 2007

For the song of the same name, see House of 1000 Corpses (song)
House of 1000 Corpses
Directed byRob Zombie
Written byRob Zombie
Produced byAndy Gould
StarringSid Haig
Bill Moseley
Erin Daniels
Sheri Moon Zombie
CinematographyAlex Poppas
Tom Richmond
Edited byKathryn Himoff
Robert K. Lambert
Sean K. Lambert
Sean K. Lambert
Robert W. Hedland (uncredited)
Music byRob Zombie
Distributed byLions Gate Films
Release dates
United States April 11, 2003
Running time
88 min.
Country United States
LanguageEnglish
Budget$7,000,000
Box office$16,829,545

House of 1000 Corpses is a 2003 horror film written and directed by musician Rob Zombie, in his directoral debut as a filmmaker. It was released in the United States on April 11, 2003 by Lions Gate Films.

Following the standard horror movie structure, the film focuses on four college students traveling throughout rural America who become intrigued by a local legend regarding the mad scientist Dr. Satan. While looking for his site of hanging, they experience car trouble and are taken in by the Fireflies, a large and complicated family that is revealed to be made up of sadistic serial killers.

The film, which was unable to find a distributor for over three years, ultimately opened to considerable controversy and fared quite poorly with critics. Nevertheless, the film was commercially successful and has found a cult following over the internet. It was followed by a sequel, The Devil's Rejects, which was released in 2005 and fared considerably better both financially and critically than its predecesor.

News of what would eventually become "House of 1000 Corpses" originally aired on MTV news on March 29th 1999.

MTV stated that Rob was in negotiations to write and direct a film called "The Legend of the 13 Graves" with Singer/Musician Madonna Co-producing and Maverick Records President Guy Oseary possibly releasing the movie for Madguy films in conjunction with New Line Cinema.

Plot

The setting is deep rural Texas, the date is October 30th, 1977, and four twenty year-olds (Bill, his girlfriend Mary, Jerry, and his girlfriend Denise) are driving through the countryside to write a book based on their experiences. They make a brief stop at Captain Spaulding's Museum of Monsters and Madmen, a gas station that also serves as a side show, detailing the histories of past serial killers. The youths are particularly interested in Dr. Satan, a mad scientist who began performing bizarre and horrible surgeries in hopes of creating a breed of super-humans.

Spaulding gives the kids directions to the Deadwood Tree, the site of Dr. Satan's execution. While driving, they give hitchhiker Baby Firefly a ride until their tire is shot by Rufus. Baby and Bill take a short walk to her house and meet the rest of the Firefly family: Mother Firefly; brothers Otis, Tiny, and Rufus; and grandfather Hugo. The rest of the kids arrive at the house and are treated to a series of bizarre Halloween rituals.

When Baby attempts to flirt with Bill, Mary is disgusted and fights with Baby, prompting them to leave the house; however, they are attacked and held hostage in the process. Meanwhile, Denise's father Don is worried when she never arrives at his house and calls the police. Lt. George Wydell and Deputy Steve Nash question Captain Spaulding, who gives them directions to the hanging site. Meanwhile, Otis kills Bill and combines his organs with a large fish tail, while Jerry is scalped and Denise is violently beaten. As Don and Nash go and check out the Firefly's garage, Wydell arrives at the Firefly house and questions Mother Firefly before all three of them are killed.

Mary, Jerry and Denise are then humiliated in a number of different ways, including Denise being forced to kiss her father's skinned remains. They are then taken to the family graveyard, where Jerry and Denise are tied up, tossed into a coffin and lowered into the well below; Mary tries to escape but she is stabbed to death by Baby, while Jerry and Denise are attacked by the disfigured victims living in the well. Denise escapes and finds an underground tomb, lined with corpses and ultimately leading to the torture chamber of Dr. Satan, where Jerry is being subjected to a horrible, grisly experiment.

Dr. Satan's disfigured assistant Earl chases Denise throughout the lair with an ax but is knocked unconscious when the tomb collapses. Denise escapes to the surface and is rescued by Captain Spaulding, only to find that Otis is waiting in the backseat of the car. Denise then reawakens in Dr. Satan's lair, with her own experiment about to begin.

Cast

Actor Role
Sid Haig Captain Spaulding
Bill Moseley Otis B. Driftwood
Sheri Moon Zombie Baby Firefly
Karen Black Mother Firefly
Erin Daniels Denise Willis
Chris Hardwick Jerry Goldsmith
Jennifer Jostyn Mary Knowles
Rainn Wilson Bill Hudley
Walton Goggins Deputy Steve Naish
Tom Towles Lieutenant George Wydell
Matthew McGrory Tiny Firefly
Robert Allen Mukes Rufus "R.J." Firefly, Jr.
Dennis Fimple Grandpa Hugo
Walter Phelan Dr. Satan
Michael J. Pollard Stucky

Reception

The film was completed in 2000 but was unable to find a distributor after Universal Pictures rejected the initial cut, believing the film would receive an NC-17 rating (which was ultimately the result). As the film was edited to secure an R rating, it spent several years trying to find a distributor before Lions Gate Films, which was beginning to specialize in releasing horror films, accepted the film.

The film opened on April 11, 2003 without being pre-screened for critics. Those who reviewed it after it opened mostly slammed the film with terrible notices. Frank Schrek of The Hollywood Reporter wrote that the film "lives up to the spirit but not the quality of its inspirations" and is ultimately a "cheesy and ultragory exploitation horror flick" and "strangely devoid of thrills, shocks or horror."[1] Clint Morris of Film Threat slammed the film as "an hour and a half of undecipherable plot" and found the film to be "sickening" overall.[2] James Brundage of popular website Filmcritic wrote that the film was simply "hick after hick, cheap scary image after cheap scary image, lots of southern accents and psychotic murders," and was "too highbrow to be a good cheap horror movie, too lowbrow to be satire, and too boring to bear the value of the ticket."[3]

The film opened in 595 theaters, technically qualifying for limited release, and grossed $3.4 million. The film saw some expansion in later weeks and ultimately grossed $16.8 million worldwide, which was successful based on its $7 million production budget. It was followed in 2005 sequel, The Devil's Rejects, which was received much better by critics and viewers alike and fared better commercially as well.

Trivia

  • In its American opening weekend the film had a strange occurrence of the number 666 when its opening weekend gross was $3,460,666. [4]
  • The names of the villains were taken from the names of Groucho Marx characters. (Animal Crackers' "Captain Spaulding", A Night at the Opera's "Otis B. Driftwood", Duck Soup's "Rufus T. Firefly" and A Day at the Races' "Hugo Z. Hackenbush", among others.) While this was left as a subtle allusion in the first movie, the sequel The Devil's Rejects brought it out into the open, with the names becoming integral to the plot.
  • Director Rob Zombie composed the film score with Scott Humphrey. It is isolated on the DVD as a separate audio track.

See also

References

  1. ^ http://www.hollywoodreporter.com/hr/search/article_display.jsp?vnu_content_id=1865184
  2. ^ http://www.filmthreat.com/Reviews.asp?Id=4247
  3. ^ http://www.filmcritic.com/misc/emporium.nsf/2a460f93626cd4678625624c007f2b46/5da244ef271690fb88256d0900187b41?OpenDocument
  4. ^ "The Numbers". Retrieved 2007-02-23. {{cite news}}: Cite has empty unknown parameter: |1= (help)