Creepshow III

Creepshow III
Directed by Ana Clavell
James Dudelson
Produced by Ana Clavell
James Dudelson
Stanley E. Dudelson
Robert F. Dudelson
Written by Ana Clavell
(Alice)
James Dudelson
(The Professor's Wife)
Scott Frazelle
(Haunted Dog)
Pablo C. Pappano
(Call Girl)
Alex Ugelow
(The Radio)
Starring Roy Abramsohn
Kris Allen
Magi Avila
A. J. Bowen
Elwood Carlisle
Ed Dyer
Bunny Gibson
Bo Kresic
Camille Lacey
Elina Madison
Emmett McGuire
Stephanie Pettee
Music by Chris Anderson
Cinematography James M. Legoy
Edited by Ana Clavell
Production
company
Taurus Entertainment Company
Creepy Film Productions
Distributed by Taurus Entertainment Company
HBO Home Video
Running time
110 minutes
Country United States
Language English
Budget $3.5 million (est)

Creepshow III (stylized as Creepshow 3) is a 2007 American horror film, and a sequel to Stephen King and George A. Romero's 1982 and 1987 horror anthology classics Creepshow and Creepshow 2. The film, like its predecessors, is a collection of tales of light-hearted horror: "Alice", "The Radio", "Call Girl", "The Professor's Wife" and "Haunted Dog", although there is no EC Comics angle this time around.

The film was made in 2006 and was released in early 2007. No one from the production of either Creepshow or Creepshow 2 (namely King and Romero) was involved in the production of this film.

Plot

Wraparound story

Unlike the first two Creepshow installments, in which the wraparound element linking the stories was a horror comic, Creepshow III takes an approach similar to Quentin Tarantino's Pulp Fiction, in which characters from each story collide with each other during the film. There is also a hot dog stand as a common element in the movie. Brochures, ads and other things from the hot dog stand are peppered throughout.

Alice

Alice (Stephanie Pettee) is a stuck-up, snotty teenager who comes home to find her father meddling with some kind of universal remote. Whenever he presses one of the buttons on the device, the whole family except for Alice changes ethnicity (i.e., the "Color and Hue Settings" button makes her family turn African-American, and the "Subtitles" button makes her family turn Hispanic). During this, Alice gradually mutates into what is supposedly her "true form".

Just when Alice thinks everything is back to normal, her father presses another button, revealing Alice's true form. Her family is absolutely horrified at the sight of Alice. The story ends with Professor Dayton, the mad scientist from down the street, using another remote control to turn Alice into a white rabbit. Notable in this story is the link to Lewis Carroll's Alice in Wonderland. Victor, the vampire, makes an appearance in this story.

The Radio

Jerry (A. J. Bowen) is a part-time security guard who buys a radio from a homeless street vendor to replace his old one which has stopped working; however, this mysterious new radio is far from ordinary as it can have a conversation with Jerry. Very soon Jerry is stealing money and murdering people, all at the whim of his new radio. After escaping with a hooker who lives in his building, Jerry is told by the radio to kill the hooker or she will kill him. He refuses and destroys the radio. Right after, the hooker finds his gun in the car and shoots Jerry, killing him. Moments after she kills him and wipes the gun clean, she is shot in the head. The shooter is revealed to be the pimp living in the same building as Jerry. When the pimp returns to his car, another radio tells him to go and start a new life.

Alice's father (Detective Jacobs) also appears in this story, investigating the various murders and strange goings-on taking place. The killer call girl, Rachael, also makes an appearance in this story, as well as the pimp and the two boys from "The Professor's Wife".

Call Girl

Rachel, a murderous call girl, receives a request from a shy man named Victor, her newest client. Rachel thinks he will be just another easy victim. When Rachel gets there, scenes of a murdered family with their necks ripped out are flashed on-screen, and there is no evidence of Victor living in the house. Rachel then chains him to the bed and proceeds to stab him in the chest, suffocate him by a pillow over his face, and then has a quick shower. She then keeps hearing Victor's voice saying, "You killed me." Rachel removes the pillow and reveals a gruesome creature with a large, toothy mouth. It is then revealed that Victor is an actual vampire. He kills Rachel and hangs her in the room with the house owners whom he's already killed. The two young men from Professor's wife and the pimp from The Radio appear in this segment.

The Professor's Wife

Two former students come to visit Professor Dayton and meet his fiancee, Kathy. Having been victims of his practical jokes in the past, they suspect that Kathy is actually a robot, which the professor has supposedly spent the last 20 years working on in his laboratory. She also behaves like a robot and does not eat or drink, which further indicates that she is probably mechanical. When the professor is out of the house, they decide to dismantle Kathy to see what she looks like on the inside. To their utter horror, they learn that Kathy really was a human being after all. The professor later buys an 'advanced' voodoo kit from the homeless street vendor to put Kathy back together in time for the wedding.

Rachael, the killer call girl, makes a brief appearance in this story.

Haunted Dog

A cruel, miserly doctor, Dr. Farwell, is working a 30-day court-ordered sentence at a free clinic, where he is very insolent and rude towards his patients. He even goes as far as to show no sympathy towards a young girl with a brain tumor and mocks an elderly woman who is going blind. One day he buys a hot dog.

Dr. Farwell accidentally drops it on the ground. He sadistically decides to give the dirty hot dog to a homeless man who has been bothering him for some spare change. The homeless man dies after taking one bite, and he returns to haunt the cruel doctor. The story ends with the doctor having a heart attack from having had too many encounters with his ghostly stalker.

Victor from "Call Girl" also appears in this segment, and he seems to be in cahoots with Dr. Farwell. The homeless man can be heard muttering, "Thanks for the good dog" to Dr. Farwell throughout the segment, which is no doubt a reference to the somewhat similar "Thanks for the ride, lady!" line from Creepshow 2's final story, "The Hitch-Hiker". The Hispanic woman from "Alice" also makes an appearance in this story. Also, it is revealed that the street vendor/homeless man got the two radios from the professor in "The Professor's Wife". After this tale ends, it then shows The Professor at his wedding with his resurrected wife (who is bandaged up from being murdered in "The Professor's Wife") with a huge crowd around them. It shows the professor and his wife drive off, then it zooms in on the back of the hot dog guy's head. He turns around, and he looks kinda creepy, revealing that he was the Creep all along.

Release

The film was released May 15, 2007, in the United States by HBO through their parent company Warner Home Video. The film was released in the United Kingdom on October 20, 2008, by Anchor Bay UK.

Creepshow III was panned by critics with a 0% waiting on Rotten Tomatoes, which is considered quite rare.

Creepshow III was backed by the Taurus Entertainment Company and directed by James Glenn Dudelson and Ana Clavell. The film's special make-up effects were created by Greg McDougall, who has also worked on Steven Spielberg's War of the Worlds in the special effects department.

The film was later dubbed as unofficial and Tales from the Darkside: The Movie, released in 1990, was referred to by Tom Savini as "the real Creepshow 3". The film received generally negative reviews from critics.[1]

References

  1. "Creepshow III". Rotten Tomatoes. Retrieved 2012-08-25.

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Monday, February 29, 2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.