Re-Animator
Cast & Crew
Read More
Stuart Gordon
Director
Jeffrey Combs
Herbert West
Bruce Abbott
Dan Cain
Barbara Crampton
Megan Halsey
Robert Sampson
Dean Halsey
David Gale
Dr Carl Hill
Film Details
Also Known As
Reanimator
MPAA Rating
Genre
Horror
Release Date
1985
Production Company
Glen Glenn Sound Company; Movie Magic
Distribution Company
Empire Pictures; Entertainment Film Distributors, Ltd.; Vestron Video
Technical Specs
Duration
1h 24m
Synopsis
Director
Stuart Gordon
Director
Cast
Jeffrey Combs
Herbert West
Bruce Abbott
Dan Cain
Barbara Crampton
Megan Halsey
Robert Sampson
Dean Halsey
David Gale
Dr Carl Hill
Gerry Black
Mace
Carolyn-purdy Gordon
Dr Harrod
Peter Kent
Melvin The Re-Animated
Barbara Pieters
Nurse
Ian Patrick Williams
Swiss Professor
Bunny Summers
Swiss Woman Doctor
Al Berry
Dr Gruber
Derek Pendleton
1st Swiss Policeman
Gene Scherer
2nd Swiss Policeman
James Ellis
1st Psycho Wardrobe Guard
James Earl Cathay
2nd Psycho Wardrobe Guard
Hans Jonnason
Dr Hill'S Body Double
Greg Rose
Dr Hill'S Body Double
Annyce Holzman
E-R Patient Corpse
Velvet Debois
Slit Wrist Girl Corpse
Lawrence Lowe
Failed Operation Corpse
Robert Holcomb
Motorcycle Accident Corpse
Mike Filloon
Bullet Wound To The Face Corpse
Greg Reid
One-Arm Man Corpse
Jack Draheim
Tall Skinny Guy Corpse
Robert Pitzele
Bald O-R Corpse
Kim Deitch
Hospital Extra
Stephen Kienzle
Hospital Extra
Lillian Avery
Hospital Extra
Grace Keller
Hospital Extra
Ed Brummett
Hospital Extra
Peter Martin
Hospital Extra
Jerry Thomas
Hospital Extra
Steve Frakes
Hospital Extra
Michael Muscal
Hospital Extra
Tom Reeves
Hospital Extra
Bruce Curtis
Hospital Extra
Bob Johnnen
Hospital Extra
Greg Robbins
Hospital Extra
Robert Veilleuz
Hospital Extra
Timothy White
Hospital Extra
Linda Adams
Donna Wilkie
Walter Sims
Donna Matson
Alana Anderson
Carol Thomas
Janice Sims
Donald Olsen
Eric Gartner
Frederic Gartner
Lavonda Lawson
Kevin Indio Copeland
Ed Haggarty
Jeffrey Comstock
Carrie Shear
Ricky Woodard
Cathy Yuzna
Marta Goodfellow
Darryl Dick
Anna Coates
Lisa S Girolami
Terri Lynn
Steve Knudsen
Stuart Dennis
Sara Curtis
Crew
Mac Ahlberg
Director Of Photography
Brad Arensman
Post-Production Executive
Brian Armstrong
Camera Assistant
Michael Avery
Executive Producer
Richard Band
Music
Barrie Bergman
Production Associate
Rick Berman
Production Assistant
Dr. Ronald Berman
Medical Consultant
Martin Bernholz
Production Associate
Rob Bloch
Animal Handler
Becky Block
Set Decorator
David Boyd
Camera Assistant
Dan Bradley
Stunt Coordinator
John Buechler
Additional Makeup Effects
Robert A Burns
Art Direction
Ronini Burton
Costumer
Misty Carey
Production Coordinator
Steve Cassling
Production Assistant
Melonie Cleric
Special Effects Assistant
James Cook
Sound Rerecording
Scott Cook
Stunts
John Criswell
Special Effects Assistant
Bruce Cohn Curtis
Executive Producer
Richard Davison
Special Effects Assistant
Robert Dawson
Title Design
Gordon Day
Sound Rerecording
Anthony Doublin
Special Makeup Effects
Anthony Doublin
Special Effects
Robert Frederic Ebinger
Additional Photography
John Paul Fasal
Special Sound Effects
Mike Filloon
Stunts
Dana Ginsberg
Special Effects Assistant
Lisa S Girolami
Set Manager
R. Michael Givens
Camera Assistant
Stuart Gordon
Screenwriter
Bob Greenberg
Associate Producer
Cleve Hall
Special Makeup Effects
Deborah Hebert
Assistant Director
James D Herrick
Unit Manager
Gregory Jacobs
Dialogue Editor
John Jaulin
Special Effects
Kerry L Jennings
Medical Consultant
John Kwiatkowski
Sound Effects Editor
Jefrey Littman
Key Production Assistant
Sharon A Long
Key Makeup
H. P. Lovecraft
Source Material (From Novel)
Ray Lykins
Stunts
Paul Madoff
Production Assistant
Betty Martin Mallin
Post-Production Controller
Julie Maugers
Special Effects Assistant
Richard N. Mcguire
Special Effects Assistant
Eve Moss
Location Manager
Dennis Stuart Murphy
Executive In Charge Of Production
Dennis Murphy
Executive In Charge Of Production
Michael Muscal
Production Manager
Kenny Myers
Special Effects Assistant
John Naulin
Special Makeup Effects
Charles Nixon
Art Direction Associate
William J Norris
Screenwriter
Lorenzo O'brien
Production Assistant
Dean Okrand
Sound Rerecording
David Ordaz
Production Assistant
Dennis Paoli
Screenwriter
Steve Patino
Special Effects Assistant
Lee Percy
Editor
Gerald Quist
Special Makeup Effects Assistant
Robert Roda
Assistant Director
David Schmier
Director Of Photography 2nd Unit (2nd Unit)
Stephen Sealy
Camera Operator (Exteriors)
Jeffery Segal Segal
Special Effects Assistant
Therese Harding Shirley
Special Effects Assistant
Bonnie Sills
Production Assistant
Desiree Soto-vaughn
Special Makeup Effects
Charles Donald Storey
Associate Producer
Don Summer
Sound Recording
Tom Villano
Music Editor
George Wilbur
Stunts
Chris Witherspoon
Special Makeup Effects
Brian Yuzna
Producer
Cathy Yuzna
Production Associate
Film Details
Also Known As
Reanimator
MPAA Rating
Genre
Horror
Release Date
1985
Production Company
Glen Glenn Sound Company; Movie Magic
Distribution Company
Empire Pictures; Entertainment Film Distributors, Ltd.; Vestron Video
Technical Specs
Duration
1h 24m
Articles
Re-Animator - RE-ANIMATOR - A Double Disc Edition of the Cult 1985 Horror Fave Based on a Tale by H.P. Lovecraft
Re-Animator tells the story of Dan Cain (Bruce Abbott), a medical student in love with the Dean's daughter, Barbara Crampton (Megan Halsey). Dan has a hard time seeing people die; we first meet him as he tries, and fails, to revive a patient. It is this important detail that helps explain some of the actions that follow and what make him, in Gordon's own words, the "unsung hero" of the film. Why would the director refer to the lead actor as the "unsung hero"? Because between Herbert West (played with manic zeal by Jeffrey Combs) and Dr. Carl Hill (as performed by David Gale with enough tongue-lolling lechery to estrange him from his actual wife), it's easy to forget who the hero is as we, instead, become entranced by the bloody fight that ensues between these two corpse-controlling egomaniacs. The whole affair has fun putting its own spin on the Frankenstein mythos, as well as updating the spectacle and theatrics of Grand Guignol.
Script-writer Dennis Paoli was originally asked by Gordon to use the six serialized Lovecraft pulp-fiction stories for Herbert West: Reanimator that were in the public domain with several half-hour television episodes in mind. But then television formats seemed to switch over from favoring half-hour episodes to preferring stand-alone hour-long episodes, and Paoli began combining concepts from these stories into one bigger project to fill out the hour. It is at this point that Yuzna hopped aboard, and he wanted to make a feature-length film. So the extrapolations continued with the help of William J. Morris and Gordon and the end result was a two-and-a-half-hour long beast that was all shot between Thanksgiving and Christmas of 1983. Both Gordon and Yuzna credit editor Lee Percy for his work in pairing Re-Animator down to an economical 86 minutes in length, which sacrificed a dream sequence and a bit about hypnosis, among other things, but which helped push the film forward at an unflagging rate. Ironically, a rated version would later be released that cut out the especially gory bits and used many of the original extended sequences for a version that was actually longer than the unrated cut.
I'll resist the great temptation to make a re-animation pun on how often Re-Animator has enjoyed being re-released in various formats. I still have my 1995 10th anniversary Elite Entertainment "letterboxed edition" laser disc, which was then tweaked again by Elite as a "Millennium Edition" dvd, and which is now, again, being re-released by Anchor Bay with a comprehensive double-dvd set that includes everything that ever preceded it along with a new featurette called Re-Animator Resurrectus. The Anchor Bay also includes, if you get it new with packaging intact, a syringe-shaped, green-fluid-filled highlighter (presumably to use in your studies instead of a pencil, which snaps easily as we see in the film).
To recap the extras: the aforementioned featurette (70-mins), an interview with Gordon and Yuzna (48 mins), an interview with writer Dennis Paoli (11 mins), an interview with composer Richard Band (14 mins), a music discussion with Richard Band (15 mins), an interview with Fangoria editor Tony Timpone (4 mins), deleted scenes (3 mins), extended scenes (24 mins), trailer, tv spots, production stills gallery, behind-the-scenes still gallery, "fun on the set" still gallery, posters and advertising gallery, storyboard gallery, Stuart Gordon bio, and two DVD-ROM features: the film screenplay and the original Lovecraft story for Herbert West, Reanimator. The Anchor Bay dvd release presents the film in its original aspect ratio of 1.85:1, with three different audio formats (DTS 5.1, Dolby Digital 5.1, Dolby Digital 2.0), and the feature also has two different audio commentaries available, one with Stuart Gordon, and one with Brian Yuzna, Bruce Abbot, Jeffrey Combs, Barbara Crampton, and Robert Sampson.
It's a lot to digest, but just think: the other script competing for Yuzna's feature-debut attention was a story about a guy on death row who escapes by being reincarnated as a potato, while Gordon's other competing project of that time surrounded the idea of a jealous dog trying to kill his owner's newborn baby and embroiling the both in a battle of wits. I'm glad they both found Herbert West instead.
For more information about Re-Animator, visit Anchor Bay To order Re-Animator, go to TCM Shopping.
by Pablo Kjolseth
Re-Animator - RE-ANIMATOR - A Double Disc Edition of the Cult 1985 Horror Fave Based on a Tale by H.P. Lovecraft
Writer H.P. Lovecraft may have been critically derided during his short
lifetime (he died in 1937 at the age of 47), but his works have gone on to
enjoy a far-reaching conceptual influence in the realm of music, computer
games, television, and films with over fifty loose adaptations in the latter
two fields alone. In 1985 Lovecraft's cinematic cache got one of its bigger
bumps when Stuart Gordon, an artistic director in theater in Chicago, joined
forces with aspiring producer Brian Yuzna and they placed H.P. Lovecraft's
name prominently above the title of their feature debut,
Re-Animator, a gory film that purposefully tried to out-do all the
horror films released in the previous five years. The filmmakers
accomplished their mission with an unrated film that shows popping
eyeballs, flying intestines, gallons of blood, and an outrageous sexual
transgression committed by a decapitated zombie head. Had they waited
just two more years they would have had to contend with the release of
Sam Raimi's Evil Dead II (1987), another unrated horror film that
gleefully upped the ante for splatstick and also tapped into Lovecraftian
ideas. But even now, over twenty years after it's original release,
Re-Animator's moist stew of animated body parts manages to
retain most of the vitality that garnered it an enthusiastic roar of applause
and foot-stomping from an appreciative audience at the Cannes Film
Festival, where it premiered, and where it was also praised by various
critics.
Re-Animator tells the story of Dan Cain (Bruce Abbott), a medical
student in love with the Dean's daughter, Barbara Crampton (Megan
Halsey). Dan has a hard time seeing people die; we first meet him as he
tries, and fails, to revive a patient. It is this important detail that helps
explain some of the actions that follow and what make him, in Gordon's
own words, the "unsung hero" of the film. Why would the director refer to the
lead actor as the "unsung hero"? Because between Herbert West (played
with manic zeal by Jeffrey Combs) and Dr. Carl Hill (as performed by David
Gale with enough tongue-lolling lechery to estrange him from his actual
wife), it's easy to forget who the hero is as we, instead, become entranced
by the bloody fight that ensues between these two corpse-controlling
egomaniacs. The whole affair has fun putting its own spin on the
Frankenstein mythos, as well as updating the spectacle and theatrics of
Grand Guignol.
Script-writer Dennis Paoli was originally asked by Gordon to use the six
serialized Lovecraft pulp-fiction stories for Herbert West: Reanimator
that were in the public domain with several half-hour television episodes in
mind. But then television formats seemed to switch over from favoring
half-hour episodes to preferring stand-alone hour-long episodes, and Paoli
began combining concepts from these stories into one bigger project to fill
out the hour. It is at this point that Yuzna hopped aboard, and he wanted to
make a feature-length film. So the extrapolations continued with the help of
William J. Morris and Gordon and the end result was a two-and-a-half-hour
long beast that was all shot between Thanksgiving and Christmas of 1983.
Both Gordon and Yuzna credit editor Lee Percy for his work in pairing
Re-Animator down to an economical 86 minutes in length, which
sacrificed a dream sequence and a bit about hypnosis, among other things,
but which helped push the film forward at an unflagging rate. Ironically, a
rated version would later be released that cut out the especially gory bits
and used many of the original extended sequences for a version that was
actually longer than the unrated cut.
I'll resist the great temptation to make a re-animation pun on how often
Re-Animator has enjoyed being re-released in various formats. I
still have my 1995 10th anniversary Elite Entertainment "letterboxed
edition" laser disc, which was then tweaked again by Elite as a "Millennium
Edition" dvd, and which is now, again, being re-released by Anchor Bay with
a comprehensive double-dvd set that includes everything that ever preceded
it along with a new featurette called Re-Animator Resurrectus. The
Anchor Bay also includes, if you get it new with packaging intact, a
syringe-shaped, green-fluid-filled highlighter (presumably to use in your
studies instead of a pencil, which snaps easily as we see in the film).
To recap the extras: the aforementioned featurette (70-mins), an interview
with Gordon and Yuzna (48 mins), an interview with writer Dennis Paoli (11
mins), an interview with composer Richard Band (14 mins), a music
discussion with Richard Band (15 mins), an interview with Fangoria editor
Tony Timpone (4 mins), deleted scenes (3 mins), extended scenes (24
mins), trailer, tv spots, production stills gallery, behind-the-scenes still
gallery, "fun on the set" still gallery, posters and advertising gallery,
storyboard gallery, Stuart Gordon bio, and two DVD-ROM features: the film
screenplay and the original Lovecraft story for Herbert West,
Reanimator. The Anchor Bay dvd release presents the film in its original
aspect ratio of 1.85:1, with three different audio formats (DTS 5.1, Dolby
Digital 5.1, Dolby Digital 2.0), and the feature also has two different audio
commentaries available, one with Stuart Gordon, and one with Brian Yuzna,
Bruce Abbot, Jeffrey Combs, Barbara Crampton, and Robert Sampson.
It's a lot to digest, but just think: the other script competing for Yuzna's
feature-debut attention was a story about a guy on death row who escapes
by being reincarnated as a potato, while Gordon's other competing project
of that time surrounded the idea of a jealous dog trying to kill his owner's
newborn baby and embroiling the both in a battle of wits. I'm glad they both
found Herbert West instead.
For more information about Re-Animator, visit Anchor Bay To order
Re-Animator, go to
TCM
Shopping.
by Pablo Kjolseth
Quotes
Trivia
Miscellaneous Notes
Released in United States Summer December 13, 1985
Released in United States on Video June 1988
Released in United States Summer December 13, 1985
Released in United States on Video June 1988