剧情介绍
The Lost Skeleton of Cadavra won over B-movie fans with its spot-on parody of ’50s creature features.
Now the 2001 indie comedy has spawned a sequel, The Lost Skeleton Returns Again, that once again turns an affectionate eye on early sci-fi and horror flicks, those low-budget gems that continue to charm audiences that have a taste for their unique mix of nostalgia and bizarre humor.
The Lost Skeleton Returns Again, which screens for the first time Nov. 9 in Los Angeles, was shot in 12 days with a bigger cast than Cadavra’s and more than 10 times the original’s meager $40,000 budget.
Cadavra writer, director and star Larry Blamire reprises those duties for the movie’s more-ambitious sequel, once again playing disillusioned, skeleton-battling scientist Dr. Paul Armstrong.
The story picks up two years after where its predecessor left off, "as old friends and new enemies schlep into the dreaded Valley of the Monsters in search of yet another rare element," according to the movie’s press materials.
Boston native Blamire said the original Lost Skeleton emerged out of a simple question: Could you make a movie for $40,000?
"My wife (Jennifer Blaire, Animala from Lost Skeleton, photo below) and I moved to Los Angeles to work for an internet company," Blamire told Wired.com. "But we arrived just in time for the internet bubble to burst. So, we’re living in L.A. and wondering what to do next. What do we do? We had no safety net."
Blamire was discovering digital video and wondering if he could make a movie on the cheap. Scraping together $40,000 from internet work and turning to a collection of friends he’d made in Los Angeles, he settled in to write, direct and edit The Lost Skeleton of Cadavra.
The end result was a bargain-basement cult classic. At a time when "independent film" is often code for arty, modest-budget, studio movies, Cadavra was genuinely independent — made on an extremely low budget and shopped at film festivals until it landed a well-earned distribution deal. After the movie’s surprise success, Blamire and his crew put in place a system that mimics the one employed by makers of the early Disney movies, pouring money made from one production into the next until there’s a flowing pipeline of flicks.
Their starter movie was something of an unlikely foundation upon which to build a Hollywood empire. In Cadavra, a complete set of ’50s cinematic cliches collide — with cheap effects to match.
"We used a med school skeleton during the production, and it slowly deteriorated over the course of the shoot," Blamire said. "We were running around Bronson Cave [better known as the 1960s Bat Cave entrance] on the sly, carrying bones and trying to reassemble the body."
Cadavra tells the story of a scientist, Armstrong, who heads out to the woods with his wife, Betty, to "do science" with the rarest of all elements, Atmospherium. The pile of bones referenced in the title needs the same mineral to return to life, and two aliens from the planet Marva (yes, they’re called "Marvins") also need Atmospherium, to fuel their spaceship.
Now the 2001 indie comedy has spawned a sequel, The Lost Skeleton Returns Again, that once again turns an affectionate eye on early sci-fi and horror flicks, those low-budget gems that continue to charm audiences that have a taste for their unique mix of nostalgia and bizarre humor.
The Lost Skeleton Returns Again, which screens for the first time Nov. 9 in Los Angeles, was shot in 12 days with a bigger cast than Cadavra’s and more than 10 times the original’s meager $40,000 budget.
Cadavra writer, director and star Larry Blamire reprises those duties for the movie’s more-ambitious sequel, once again playing disillusioned, skeleton-battling scientist Dr. Paul Armstrong.
The story picks up two years after where its predecessor left off, "as old friends and new enemies schlep into the dreaded Valley of the Monsters in search of yet another rare element," according to the movie’s press materials.
Boston native Blamire said the original Lost Skeleton emerged out of a simple question: Could you make a movie for $40,000?
"My wife (Jennifer Blaire, Animala from Lost Skeleton, photo below) and I moved to Los Angeles to work for an internet company," Blamire told Wired.com. "But we arrived just in time for the internet bubble to burst. So, we’re living in L.A. and wondering what to do next. What do we do? We had no safety net."
Blamire was discovering digital video and wondering if he could make a movie on the cheap. Scraping together $40,000 from internet work and turning to a collection of friends he’d made in Los Angeles, he settled in to write, direct and edit The Lost Skeleton of Cadavra.
The end result was a bargain-basement cult classic. At a time when "independent film" is often code for arty, modest-budget, studio movies, Cadavra was genuinely independent — made on an extremely low budget and shopped at film festivals until it landed a well-earned distribution deal. After the movie’s surprise success, Blamire and his crew put in place a system that mimics the one employed by makers of the early Disney movies, pouring money made from one production into the next until there’s a flowing pipeline of flicks.
Their starter movie was something of an unlikely foundation upon which to build a Hollywood empire. In Cadavra, a complete set of ’50s cinematic cliches collide — with cheap effects to match.
"We used a med school skeleton during the production, and it slowly deteriorated over the course of the shoot," Blamire said. "We were running around Bronson Cave [better known as the 1960s Bat Cave entrance] on the sly, carrying bones and trying to reassemble the body."
Cadavra tells the story of a scientist, Armstrong, who heads out to the woods with his wife, Betty, to "do science" with the rarest of all elements, Atmospherium. The pile of bones referenced in the title needs the same mineral to return to life, and two aliens from the planet Marva (yes, they’re called "Marvins") also need Atmospherium, to fuel their spaceship.
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toni
没第一部好
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2020年12月27日
EVA_征服天堂
典型的小成本百老汇舞台剧~
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2020年12月27日