The Hellraiser Films and Their Legacy

Read The Hellraiser Films and Their Legacy Online

Authors: Paul Kane

Tags: #General Fiction

BOOK: The Hellraiser Films and Their Legacy
8.81Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

Table of Contents

Acknowledgments
Foreword
Preface
1.THE ROAD TO HELL
2. OPENING THE BOX
3. DEMONS TO SOME
4. SUCH SIGHTS TO SHOW YOU
5. NO LIMITS
6. TO HELL AND BACK
7. OPENING DOORS
8. THE DOCTOR IS IN
9. THE DEVIL YOU KNOW?
10. THE SWEET SUFFERING
11. EARTHBOUND
12. COMPLETING THE PATTERN, SOLVING THE PUZZLE, TURNING THE KEY
13. PINHEAD UNBOUND
14. WHAT STARTED IN HELL
15. PRODUCTION HELL
16. OPEN THE GATES, LAY LOW THE RAMPARTS
17. A DISTINCT SENSE OF DÉJÀ VU
18. A BLOODLINE CURSED TO THE END OF TIME
19. DANTE’S FOOTSTEPS
20. A WORLD FULL OF RIDDLES
21. WELCOME TO HELL
22. HIDE AND SEEK
23. ALL PROBLEMS SOLVED
24. HELLBOUND HEARTS
25. SOUGHT AFTER?
26. DEADER CERTAINTY
27. FEAR IS WHERE WE GO TO LEARN
28. DEADER, LIKE ME?
29. HELL OF A WORLD
30. WELCOME TO THE PARTY
31. WORLD IN ACTION
32. NO MORE SOULS
33. COMICS FROM HELL
34. FURTHER EXPLORATIONS
Notes
Bibliography
Index of Terms

The
Hellraiser
Films and Their Legacy

Paul Kane

 

 

 

 

 

McFarland & Company, Inc., Publishers
Jefferson, North Carolina, and London

All the photographs and images used in this book are from private collections and picture libraries and are used solely for the advertising, promotion, publicity and review of the specific motion pictures they illustrate. They have not been reproduced for advertising or poster purposes, nor to create the appearance of a specially licensed or authorized publication. Grateful acknowledgment is made to the following for the use of their material. All rights reserved. While every effort has been made to trace and acknowledge all creators and copyright holders, the author apologizes for any errors or omissions and, if informed, will be glad to make corrections in any subsequent editions.

Clive Barker, Gary J. Tunnicliffe, Doug Bradley, Randy Falk (NECA), Stephen Lane (The Prop Store of London), Les Edwards, Phil and Sarah Stokes (Revelations), Marc Calma and Kacey Rodriguez, David A. Magitis, Eric Gross, Shelly Berggren, David Robinson, Eric Horton, Mark Thompson (Checker Books), Gabrielle White (Random House), Dan Cope, Nathan Green, David Stoner (Silva Screen), Rita Eisenstein (Starlog Group), Ian Frost and Dan Forbes.

LIBRARY OF CONGRESS CATALOGUING-IN-PUBLICATION DATA

Kane, Paul, 1973–

The Hellraiser films and their legacy / Paul Kane ; foreword by Doug Bradley.

p.     cm.

Includes bibliographical references and index.

ISBN-13: 978-0-7864-2752-9

(illustrated case : 50# alkaline paper)

1. Hellraiser films—History and criticism. I. Title.

PN1995.9.H42K36     2006
791.43'67—dc22     2006029845

British Library cataloguing data are available

©2006 Paul Kane. All rights reserved

No part of this book may be reproduced or transmitted in any form
or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopying
or recording, or by any information storage and retrieval system,
without permission in writing from the publisher.

On the cover: Doug Bradley as the Lead Cenobite (Pinhead) in
Hellraiser
(New World Pictures/Photofest)

 

McFarland & Company, Inc., Publishers
Box 611, Jefferson, North Carolina 28640
www.mcfarlandpub.com

For Eric Popplewell and Shelley Baker:
tutors and friends.
You pulled back the magician’s curtain
and allowed me to look behind.
With huge respect and thanks.

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

This book couldn’t have been written without the help and support of so many people: My mum and dad, and the rest of my family, Clive Barker, Kurt Adam, Doug Bradley, Stephen Jones, Michael Marshall Smith, Kim Newman, Peter Atkins, Gary J. Tunnicliffe, David Robinson, Randy Falk, Les & Val Edwards, Frazer Lee, Shelly Berggren, John B. Ford, Simon Clark, Russell Blackwood, Shannon Larratt, Alec Worley, Joseph O’Regan, Bob Keen, Mark Thompson, Eric Gross, Yoram Allon, Max Lichtor, Allan Bryce, Constance Taylor, Nathan Green, Dan Cope, Peter E. Keighrey, Rita Eisenstein, Ken Patterson, Eric Horton, Christopher Fowler, Martin Roberts and Helen Hopley, Marc Calma, Lee Glasby and Claire Wood-Glasby, David Stoner, Peggy J. Shumate, Gabrielle White, Kevin Knott, Judith A. and Scott Richard, Ken Snyder, Phil and Sarah Stokes, David Bamford, Dan Forbes, Caroline Noonan at HarperCollins UK, Peter London at HarperCollins US, Ian Frost, Neil Gaiman, Ed Martinez, Tim Lawes, Stephen Lane, David A. Magitis, and, of course, Marie O’Regan, who has been my anchor while writing this book and who persuaded me to do it in the first place. A big thank you to everyone.

FOREWORD

by Doug Bradley

It is, as I write this, exactly nineteen years to the month since the cameras were rolling at Cricklewood Production Village in North London on a largely unheralded, British-made, American-produced horror film whose darkly enigmatic subject matter provides the inspiration for this book. In the intervening time, I have been pretty thoroughly cross-examined about that same subject matter—in print, on radio and TV, in person at conventions and, latterly, increasingly via email—and in particular, of course, about the role of those mysterious leather-clad theologians of the Order of The Gash and their unceasing explorations in the higher reaches of pleasure.

In a question and answer session more than ten years ago, I recall being asked, “Do you think the ending of
Hellbound
suggests that there is no possibility of Heaven, only the certainty of Hell?” I didn’t have an answer then, and I’m not sure I do now. More than likely I turned the proposition back on the questioner to buy thinking time: “Wow, that’s a great question. I’m not sure. What do you think?” Or I may have fled to The Last Resort, what might be called, with thanks to the United States Constitution, the Actor’s Fifth. “Hey, come on, guys. It’s just a movie, you know.”

More recently, I’ve found myself approached on film sets with the query, “What do you think, Doug? Are we allowed to do this?” “What do you mean, allowed to do it?” “Well, is it right? Does it fit the mythology?” In those situations, I feel like some kind of representative for the Union of Cenobites and Assorted Soul Tearers. “Hold on, I’ll just consult my manual. Now look: page 42, clause 3, paragraph E, section (i) clearly states....” In fact, my answer tends to be: if it feels right, do it. It’s more a question of ideas being good or bad, exciting or dull, original or hackneyed, rather than right or wrong. Besides, if something is going to have the temerity to claim the name of mythology for itself, it cannot be finished or immutable: it must be fluid, constantly changing and modifying, and have the ability to be one thing today and something quite different tomorrow.

I have good reason for taking this approach. Towards the end of filming
Hell on Earth
I sat in the bar of the Howard Johnson hotel in High Point, North Carolina, listening to a fellow cast member outline his idea for the fourth film. I don’t remember the details, but it somehow involved the Lament Configuration and, by extension, Pinhead being fired into outer space to rid the earth of its power. It would somehow find its way onto a space station and.... Well, I think I nodded politely while feeling that he should possibly spend less time in the bar. Pinhead in space? Don’t be ridiculous. And look what happened next. I don’t
think
, by the way, that I ever recounted that story to Clive Barker.

 

Hellraiser III: Hell on Earth
still (photograph credit Keith Payne).

I think I know Clive well enough to assert that if you give him a rule book, his first instinct will be to torch it: tell him what he can’t do and he’ll gleefully roll up his sleeves and dive right in. Catch him in a mischievous mood, and he’ll be the first to say, “Look, this is an entertainment I dreamed up to enliven a drab Tuesday afternoon in February. It’s not that big of a deal.” Or, as he once said to an audience when sharing a stage with me at a Fangoria convention, “It’s just a guy with a bunch of nails banged into his head. Get over it.”

But this is Clive Barker, so it’s not quite that easy, is it? As with all his work, the ideas in his
divertissement
of a dysfunctional family and the nasty secret in its attic, his
sonata
for puzzle box, hooks and chains, linger in the mind long after the film has finished: fascinating and frightening, delighting and disturbing. And it has continued to do that for millions of people around the planet across nearly two decades, eight (to date) films and numerous comic strips, graphic novels and who knows what other manifestations.

 

Other books

A Certain Age by Lynne Truss
The Devil's Plague by Mark Beynon
Grave Girl by Amy Cross
Brother/Sister by Sean Olin
Bought for Revenge by Sarah Mallory