WHAT WENT WRONG - A Nightmare on Elm Street

Episode Date: October 13, 2025

This week Chris and Lizzie dive into Wes Craven's nightmares, bask in Johnny Depp's nauseatingly green performance, and marvel at Freddy Krueger's culinary inspired makeup. Plus, how Bob Shaye's leap ...of faith on Elm Street gave us Peter Jackson's "The Lord of the Rings", Wes Craven's failed attempts to make a nice movie, and the unexpected benefits of setting yourself on fire, literally and otherwise. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

Transcript
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Starting point is 00:00:00 Hello, dear listeners. Before we get into our regularly scheduled programming, we wanted to extend our deep gratitude to anybody who made it out to our very first live show this last week. Thank you also to anybody who watched the live stream via Patreon. It was truly a blast seeing so many of you on there and in person, and we are excited to make this a more regular occurrence. If you missed the first live show but still want to see it, fret not.
Starting point is 00:00:27 We are going to be releasing the full cut of the live show, this coming Friday, October 17th, on our Patreon. If you're interested in watching, go to www. patreon.com and sign up for the $5 tier or above, and this Friday, 1017, you will get access to the full cut of our first live show. All right, that's enough housekeeping. Without further ado, let's dive into A Nightmare on Elm Street. Hello, and welcome back to What Went Wrong, your favorite podcast, Full Stop, that just so happens to be about movies and how it is nearly impossible to make them, let alone a good one, let alone the stuff of nightmares, sort of, arguably not scary at all, but very fun.
Starting point is 00:01:30 I am one of your hosts, Lizzie Bassett here, as always, with Chris Winnerbauer. And Chris, what does Freddie have for us today? The most annoying sound effect. That's just nails on the chalkboard. Came from one of the actors, as we will learn. We are discussing the 1980s. Slasher Classic, A Nightmare on Elm Street,
Starting point is 00:01:56 a film that violates one of the last places we believed to be safe, our dreams, or our nightmares, which was a very inventive conceit, and I would argue, a quantum leap forward for the genre. But Lizzie, before we get into all of that,
Starting point is 00:02:13 I have to ask, had you seen a nightmare on Elm Street before, and what were your thoughts upon watching or re-watching it for the podcast? So this is one of the one where I'm very familiar with all of the imagery, very familiar with Johnny Depp being eaten by the bed. You know, I'd seen all of these scenes and pieces. I had never... Spoilers! Sorry, spoilers for a...
Starting point is 00:02:32 If it came out more than 30 or 40 years ago, then it's fine. But I had not seen the whole thing in Toto. And you know what? Really enjoyed it. It's not, at least by today's standards, it's not at all scary. It is very, very, fun and the practical effects are just great. And I can't wait to hear how they did a lot of this stuff. I was really, really impressed, particularly by the first sort of time we see one of the nightmare attacks happening to Tina, 45-year-old high school student Tina, when she's sort of flipping around and what they did with, you know, I'm imagining reversing some of the sets. It's very, very cool. It's very inventive. It looks great. I mean, the blood looks
Starting point is 00:03:22 the blood looks like house pain, but it does overall look really good. I have one other hot take from this. Johnny Depp is not who I would have expected to be a breakout star out of this. Well, yeah, we will get into his involvement and his relative experience as an actor. Is it none? Because that's what it looks like. Yeah, no. We'll get there.
Starting point is 00:03:47 Who would you have picked as the breakout star of this film? Just in terms of whose performance did you feel was strongest of all of the young actors? I think the lead Nancy is... Heather Langenkamp. Yes, I think she's pretty great. And then, not going to lie, I'm sort of surprised that Rod didn't have a stronger turn after this. Yeah, it's interesting. I think, for my money, 24-year-old Tina, Amanda Wiss.
Starting point is 00:04:15 Very rude, Lizzie. 50-year-old high schooler. I think she is the strongest performance. She's also in the shortest amount of, you know, she has the least screen time of all the actors, so it's condensed. But before we get there, I had seen this film growing up. You and I are more children of the scream iteration of meta-slashers. Scream, I know what you did last summer, Urban Legend, Final Destination. I love Final Destination.
Starting point is 00:04:48 It's great. Every time I see a semi-truck carrying logs, I am forever scarred. So the slashes of the 70s and 80s always, to me, felt a little bit stale by comparison. And by the time you and I were going to the video store, we were on to Halloween 6 and A Nightmare on Elm Street 4 and Dream Warriors. And although some of them are really fun and campy, we had already explored the frame around the movies by the time we were kids. But I will say, Freddie, of all of those villains, right? You have Jason Voorhees eventually, Michael Myers, Leatherface. Freddie scared me the most of those villains growing up.
Starting point is 00:05:31 I don't know why, but my theory is that it's because you can see his eyes. Whereas with all of these other villains, you can't see their eyes. There's a deadness there. Whereas with Freddy, there's some personality to it. And we'll get to the decision that led to that. But for me, it was always Freddy and the facehugger from Alien. They very much scared me. And I agree, Lizzie, this movie is very campy.
Starting point is 00:05:53 It's very hokey. The dialogue is clunky, to say the least, in many instances. But I would argue that it has some, well, you did mention this, some really inventive set pieces. Very. And some surprisingly horrifying imagery. And for my money, I do think Tina's death at the end of the first reel is both very unexpected, because they kind of set her up as the protagonist. Yes.
Starting point is 00:06:20 Right? She has the most screen time in the first 15 minutes. You think, oh, perhaps this is going to be the final girl. And Heather Langenkamps, Nancy is going to be the supporting character. And then Tina is killed in a really shocking big set piece moment as she's thrown through the room. Yeah, Scream is definitely ripping from this with, you know, Drew Barrymore, 100%, which I didn't realize. Scream rips in so many interesting ways from this movie. And Skeet-Ollick's character is such a riff on it.
Starting point is 00:06:51 It's like a combination of Rod and Glenn, I feel like, in so many ways. And even the way he climbs the trestle to get into her bedroom and all those things. Two other things. One is the fact that Johnny Depp as Glenn is supposed to be a jock that got the biggest surprise from me in the entire movie was when... His little football uniforms? His little crop top? No, it's because all of a sudden she's like, well, you're the jock. And I was like, he's very slim.
Starting point is 00:07:17 And also, just the number of moms in this who were just drunk on the couch, the subtitle of this movie should really just be Nightmare on Elm Street. Moms Need Some Sleep. Like, that's all this was is drunk moms being like, how do you have a nap, sweetheart? It's very much a latchkey kid generation film. And there was more thought than you might expect to put behind those decisions. to make the parents' drunks that we'll get into in terms of the lore. One other thing I have to mention, because I believe that they share an actor.
Starting point is 00:07:51 You know, when you mentioned, like, and I've mentioned, these movies, some of these slasters don't necessarily hold up as much for people of our generation. There's one that does, and it's one of the earliest ones, and I think Black Christmas does. And there's a different quality to it that's not, that I don't think you see in something like this, maybe because the genre actually, I could be wrong, but I think was relatively established prior to this movie coming out.
Starting point is 00:08:16 So that's the one thing I would say is, like, this doesn't necessarily feel as inventive as some of the earlier slasher's, nor does it feel as scary as some of the ones that we grew up with. So it's in, like, a bit of a weird middle place. I think for me, that may be true, but I think that the hook is really strong. Yeah. And that is that Freddie can invade your dreams.
Starting point is 00:08:39 Now, does the logic as played out on screen fully make sense in many of these scenes? I have no idea. I could not follow at least two or three of the kills, and we will get to the ending, which is wonky by admission, by all involved. But one other thing I really love about this movie is, like you said, you can see so many elements here that are more fully realized in West Craven's later works. And you mentioned Scream. Scream is a big one.
Starting point is 00:09:08 And obviously, Kevin Williamson is playing within the genre. But I think in a lot of ways, Craven is starting to learn how to color outside the lines, and he wants to find ways to work more humor into the story. And he's still figuring that out. And I think that he very much comes into his own by the early 90s, and this is very much a forerunner to that. Okay, let's talk details because this story is fascinating. And this was a nightmare of a shoot.
Starting point is 00:09:37 A Nightmare on Elm Street is a 1984 horror film written and directed by West Craven. It was produced by Robert Shea or Bob Shea, who was going to be our co-protagonist alongside West Craven, along with Sarah Risher, John H. Burroughs, and more. It was distributed, importantly, by New Line Cinema. Quick disclosure, I did make a movie with New Line Cinema a few years ago. None of the people that worked on this movie were at New Line Cinema when I worked with them. I had a lovely time. The folks at New Line Cinema are fantastic.
Starting point is 00:10:08 If you get the opportunity to work with them, you should. It stars Heather Langenkamp as Nancy Thompson, Robert England as Freddie Kruger, John Saxon as absent father, Lieutenant Donald Thompson, Ronnie Blakely as Drunk Mother March Thompson, Johnny Depp in his first on-screen appearance as Glenn Lance and Amanda Wiss as Tina Gray and Jay Sue Garcia as Rod.
Starting point is 00:10:35 As always, the IMDB logline reads, Teenager Nancy Thompson must uncover the dark truth concealed by her parents after she and her friends become targets of the spirit of a serial killer with a bladed glove in their dreams, in which if they die, it kills them in real life. Sorry, that's my other favorite part about this movie, was that it starts with a little arts and crafts. It does.
Starting point is 00:10:59 He's on Etsy. He's making his own products. Good for Freddie. I do think that what this movie may have been missing is the Dr. Loomis expository character who is helping explore the mystery behind why Freddie exists as opposed to the just complete exposition dump at the end of Act 2 by Nancy's mother that comes completely out of nowhere. He's like, hey, come here, come look in this boiler room downstairs, come look at the ashes. I burned him alive. And you're like, whoa, what?
Starting point is 00:11:34 He killed 20 kids. And she's never heard of this. I know. I guess no internet. No internet. Sources for today's episode, which were found largely on the internet, include but are not limited to. Freddie lives, an oral history of a nightmare on Elm Street by Vulture.
Starting point is 00:11:50 Don't Fall Asleep, the Oral History of a Nightmare on Elm Street by The Ringer. Screams and Nightmares, the films of West Craven by Brian Robb. Welcome to Primetime, the documentary, Never Sleep Again, the making of A Nightmare on Elm Street, the documentary, and Never Sleep Again, the Elm Street Legacy by Tommy Hudson, and many, many more articles, retrospectives, and interviews with those involved in the film. Now, Lizzie, the story of a nightmare on Elm Street
Starting point is 00:12:16 is really a story of dreams, and how sometimes the only way to realize our dreams is to embrace our nightmares. Now, let's talk a little bit about sleep. You're a new parent. You're probably pretty short, on sleep, I would imagine. Recently, you said that you came across a photo of me shortly after my daughter was born,
Starting point is 00:12:39 and it actually was inspiring to you because I believe you said I looked so bad in that picture that the fact that I looked, even average now, is a miracle and inspirational. Aspirational. There we go. Well, for some people, the problem is he isn't falling asleep. It's waking up. Are you familiar with sleep? paralysis. Yes, I am. A well-documented phenomenon, not one I've personally experienced,
Starting point is 00:13:08 the inability to move or speak while being fully aware of one's surroundings. There are documentaries about this phenomenon. It has spawned, often terrifying myths in many cultures, a couple of examples. The Caribbean myth of the Kokma, the souls of unbaptized babies smother slumberers, or the Karabasan in Turkey, in which sufferers are visited by a wicked supernatural entity wearing a wide-brimmed hat and strangled. The Babadook, anybody?
Starting point is 00:13:39 Oh, gay icon Babadook? Yeah. Also, Freddie. In 1981, the CDC started tracking a disturbing trend. Seemingly healthy and relatively young men were failing to wake up at all. They were literally dying in their sleep.
Starting point is 00:13:54 Most were under 45 years old. The mean age was 33, and all were among immigrants from Southeast Asia, displaced by the Vietnam War. Now, many of their families reported that they heard these victims choke, gurgle, gasp for error, and then they suddenly passed away. The first reported case occurred in 1977, but 81 was the peak. Lizzie, in 1981, a total of 26 of these young men died in their sleep,
Starting point is 00:14:20 almost all between the time of 10 p.m. and 8 a.m. And nobody knew what was killing them. There were a lot of theories, stress, maybe exposure to nerve agents, during the Vietnam War, or even terror-inducing nightmares. They were linked to a certain heart issue, but they are still not entirely understood, hence the name, sudden, unexplained, nocturnal death. So the L.A. Times ran several stories about these night deaths,
Starting point is 00:14:46 and one of them caught the eye of an up-and-coming director, West Craven. We were unable to find the specific article that Craven saw, but we do have his recollection of the details, which I'll read. I happened across a newspaper story of a young man in Los Angeles who had suffered from nightmares in which he was pursued by a monstrous man intent on killing him. So real were the dreams that this kid decided to stop sleeping. He stayed awake a day, two days, three, four, until his family worried for his very sanity. His father, a physician, gave him sleeping pills, and finally one evening, while watching TV with his family, he at last fell asleep. His father carried him to his bedroom
Starting point is 00:15:25 and tucked him in. The family went to bed thinking the crisis was finally over. Then, in the middle of the night, they heard him screaming. They rushed to his room to see him thrashing on his bed. Before they got to him, he fell still and was dead. An autopsy found no physical harm. His father discovered unindested sleeping pills. His mother found a long extension cord that led to a coffee maker in the boy's closet full of hot black coffee. This story haunted West Craven because he had suffered nightmares as a child. And when he asked his mother to protect him,
Starting point is 00:16:03 she put him back to bed and told him, sleep is the one place where everyone has to go alone. What is the scariest nightmare you've ever had? Ooh, that's a good question. I don't know about scariest. when I saw aliens for the first time, the scene where Newt and Ripley are in the Med Bay and the facehugger is loose,
Starting point is 00:16:27 I had nightmares about the facehugger, and I had nightmares about the idea of aliens getting to Earth. That concept, once it clicked for me, I thought, oh, the world would just end, and that's terrifying that we would do something like that. So that freaked me out quite a bit. I don't know. How about you? I vividly remember the one that scared me the most. It was a lucid dream. So I woke up in my dream. I was in my bedroom. I was maybe 10 years old. And I looked down my hallway and the way my bedroom was situated was you could see straight down the long, dark hallway that led towards the other end of the house. And in the hallway, in sort of the shadows underneath a window, there was like something that was crouching in the corner. And I thought it was my dog, Lulu.
Starting point is 00:17:18 And so I called out and said Lulu, come here. And she came around the corner and walked past the thing that was in the corner. And then I realized it wasn't her. And I remember not being able to move and just staring as this thing sort of slowly started to move closer towards the end of my bed. And then I woke up. And it was the Babadook. Well, if it was, Babadook's kind of friendly.
Starting point is 00:17:41 That's true. And that's where you got your sense of style. Well, West Craven, given his name and the parenting style he grew up under, perhaps it's unsurprising that he found himself working in the horror genre. But it was surprising to him. So Wesley Earl Craven was born in Cleveland, Ohio in 1939. He was raised in a strict Baptist household.
Starting point is 00:18:06 No smoking, no drinking, no dancing, no comic books, no movies, with the exception of a few Disney films. So as a result, he spent a lot of time and energy and study on things other than the physical or material reality of this world. It was a very fundamentalist upbringing. He was very concerned with good and evil. His father was terrifying, short-tempered, largely absent, and despite the strict rules of his house,
Starting point is 00:18:32 his childhood was rocky. His parents divorced when he was four. His dad died of a heart attack two years later. And failure didn't just surround him. It sprouted from inside of him. So as part of his faith, it was up to him to find Jesus and welcome Jesus into his heart, literally, and he failed to do that. And so he said that he
Starting point is 00:18:53 had this very dark view of himself, that he felt he had not accomplished, you know, the thing that he needed to achieve in his community. He attended a Christian college, Wheaton in Chicago. He studied English and psychology, and this is where he finally gets exposed to the world of film. But specifically art house film, Bunell, Fulini, Bergman, surreal, fantastical movies, and Craven specifically finds refuge in dreams. He starts to practice remembering and documenting his dreams. He gets a master's in writing and philosophy at Johns Hopkins. And then he falls into academia. He becomes a teacher. He gets married. This is what his parents wanted him to do. But deep down, he had this dream that nagged at him, a dream to make movies, a dream to make a very specific genre of movie. Any guesses, Lizzie?
Starting point is 00:19:42 Romantic comedies. Pretty close. Comedy, man. Okay. So in 1968, he's 29 years old. He is a teacher, and he acted as a director of photography for a student film, a 45-minute spoof of Mission Impossible. But there wasn't really room for his dreams in his professional life. The chairman of his department sits him down and says, Wes, it's time to get serious. You either need to get your PhD or your ass is grass. We're putting you on the street.
Starting point is 00:20:11 So Wes Craven quit. He moved to New York. He was four years married at this point. I did read that he tried to move to New York twice the first time he failed to land a job. He ended up teaching high school for another year, then tried again. But the point is, his first big break comes by way of future folk superstar Harry Chapin. You might remember Cats in the Cradle, Lizzie, probably his most famous song.
Starting point is 00:20:36 Sure. Yeah. A great father-son song just makes you cry when you hold your boy as you're listening to it. It doesn't really work in the era of working from home. When you're coming home, Dad, I've been here the whole time. Okay, so Craven was actually friends with Harry's brother, Stephen. And Harry Shapen was working as a film editor at the time. He had actually written and directed 1968's Legendary Champions, an Oscar-nominated documentary about boxers.
Starting point is 00:21:06 So West Craven gets a job as his new messenger. West Craven's also sweeping floors, he's driving a cab, but most importantly, by hanging around Shapen, he's learning how to edit. So he racks up. contacts in the industry, starts to find more and more work. He's managing post-production. He's sinking dailies, and he's closer to his dreams than ever before. He's also maybe getting into psychedelic drugs, but he is broke. He lost 30 pounds. He was apparently six foot two and hovered around 135 pounds. Wow. And for reference, I'm six one and pretty gangly, and I weigh
Starting point is 00:21:37 165 pounds. So I can't imagine just dropping 30. It's like Christian Bail and the machinist is a little lighter than that for point of reference. He didn't just lose weight. He lost his relationship. By 1970, he and his first wife, Bonnie, divorce. She was really worried about the insecurity of his creative pursuit, something that West Craven said she was absolutely justified to be concerned about. But his big break was just around the corner. So around 1970, he took a job sinking dailies for director Sean Cunningham, who would go on to direct Friday the 13th. So Craven pitches in with editing, he's coordinating shooting, he even directs a few scenes, and the company that had financed this feature offers Sean Cunningham $90,000 to make a, quote, drive-in fodder, no-holds-barred horror film. Basically an exploitation film.
Starting point is 00:22:39 So Cunningham turns to Craven and goes, hey, I'll produce, why don't you write, direct, and edit it? Craven thinks this is an enormous opportunity. The only problem, he doesn't know anything about horror. He'd never written a horror script. And in fact, in one interview, he claims he'd never even seen a horror movie before. I don't know if I believe that. But it is what he said. Cunningham was a very smart producer.
Starting point is 00:23:02 He goes, you were raised as a fundamentalist. Pull that stuff out of your closet. Translation, forget the dreams of comedy. Tap into your nightmares. So one weekend, West Craven sits down. and he comes up with something truly horrific. It's the story of two teenage girls who are raped and murdered by a sadistic gang of prison escapees.
Starting point is 00:23:24 These killers then unwittingly wind up at the family home of one of their victims. The victim's parents put two and two together an exact revenge on the men murdering them in heinous ways. There's a bit enough penis, chainsaws. It's grindhouse exploitation at best, borderline snuff film at worst. But Craven had actually been. been inspired by the Arthouse European cinema he'd first seen at Wheaton because the storyline was very much pulled from Ingmar Bergman's 1960 film, The Virgin Spring. Have you ever seen
Starting point is 00:23:53 The Virgin Spring, Lizzie? No. It's a tough watch, but it's an important film. It was set in medieval Sweden, and it follows a father who realizes that the herders that he's taken in to give shelter for the night are responsible for the rape and murder of his daughter, and then he kills them one by one. So the structure of the story is very much the same. Craven, called his film Sex Crimes of the Century, but it would eventually be released under a different name, and I don't know if you've seen this film, Lizzie, but I'm sure you'll recognize the name, The Last House on the Left. Oh, yeah.
Starting point is 00:24:24 So it is a shocking film, although it feels a little dated, you know, if you were to watch it now, and it was remade later with Tony Goldwyn. But when it was released in 1972, it really shocked and disgusted audiences, but it also entertained. And it got surprisingly good critical reviews. Roger Ebert wrote that The Last House of It, on the left is a tough, bitter little sleeper of a movie that's about four times as good as you'd expect. So all of a sudden, Wes Craven is a bit of an insider in the film business, but this movie made him
Starting point is 00:24:54 an outsider in his personal life. As he later said, people literally wouldn't leave their children alone with me. They would get up and walk away from the table when I went out to have dinner. He was frustrated. He hadn't set out to be a horror director. He just wanted to direct. So he tried to make nice movies. He tried to make comedies and dramas. But no, wanted his beauty contest spoof script, which was called American Beauty. Wow. Or Mustang, his war thriller following Colonel Anthony Herbert, who'd claimed he witnessed Vietnam war crimes only to be silenced by his commanding officer.
Starting point is 00:25:29 And now, it's possible that the transition I'm about to describe occurred earlier and that this timeline is more porous than I'm presenting. West Craven ventured, it seems, by necessity, into adult films. So, produced by Peter Locke, who Craven had met while cutting Peter Locks, You've Got to Walk It Like You Talk It, or You'll Lose That Beat, which featured Richard Pryor and Robert Downey, Sr. West Craven worked on a number of pornographic films in the early 70s. He's credited as an editor, assistant director, and an actor on the X-rated It Happened in Hollywood. He cut the R-rated sex comedy, Kitty Can't Help It, and he directed, under a pseudonym Abe Snake,
Starting point is 00:26:09 The Fireworks Woman, amongst others. What's the plot of that one? I hope everyone gets to keep their appendages. You can find it online. I will say that, but I don't know if you're going to watch it for the plot. Locke and Craven's work in the adult industry was more necessity, I think, than desire. Locke would later go on to produce the brave little toaster of all things, a movie I really love, as well as, but I'm a cheerleader, a movie I also really like. And he kept asking Wes Craven to make another horror movie.
Starting point is 00:26:41 Wes, you know, forget the dreams of comedy. You're good at horror. Follow the nightmares. So Craven finally does. 1970s, The Hills Have Eyes? Lizzie, have you seen everybody's favorite Desert Mutant Family movie The Hills Have Eyes? Naturally. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:26:57 Also remade. I kind of like the remake, too. It's considered Craven's breakout film. So by 1981, there's no question. He is a horror director. He had just come off co-writing and directing Deadly Blessing, which was his first, quote, big budget horror film. It was big for Craven. It cost two and a half million dollars more than his first three films combined.
Starting point is 00:27:16 So he takes six months off to write about dreams and how sometimes they can be fatal. So these were inspired by the articles he read in the New York Times. And he started two scripts, one about a dream lover and another about a dream killer. Now, Lizzie, the dream killer script, had two tentative titles. One was a nightmare on Elm Street, and the other one was dream skill. not dreams kill, but actually dream skill. Like they talk about learning skills. It doesn't work.
Starting point is 00:27:45 It's a bit of a Shershank Redemption situation where there's just too much to think through. The Scrimshank Reduction. Now, Freddie Kruger was inspired both by that L.A. Times article and Craven's personal life. So, Freddy was the name of one of his childhood bullies. And Kruger was an extension of Kroog, one of the villains from the last house on the left.
Starting point is 00:28:05 By making it Kruger, he made it sound, according to Craven, more like a Nazi. which would get us clearly on the side opposite of Kruger. It was also a bit darker. So in the early version of the script, Krueger was not just the child murderer. He was also a pedophile or a child molester. And Craven envisioned him as an older man in his 60s or 70s who wore the top hat.
Starting point is 00:28:29 He does. I mean, he seems old in this. I know he's like burned to a crisp, but, you know, he gives off creepy old man vibes. He does, although he's played by relatively. young actor. So, Kruger was very much pulled from West Craven's childhood. When he was seven years old, he woke to the sound of shuffling outside of his window. Out on the sidewalk was a man who looked like what we would eventually get with Freddy. The man looks and turns to look directly at Craven. Craven's terrified, so he steps back into the shadows, steps back to the window. Sure,
Starting point is 00:29:04 the man must be gone by now. The man's still standing there, staring at him. The man then walks to the corner, looking back over his shoulder at this seven-year-old boy, kind of leering at him, and then quickly cuts around the corner, which is toward the entrance of the building. No. And Wes thinks, oh, God, this guy's going to come in here and murder me, so he wakes up his whole family, blah, blah, blah. Nobody finds, the man had walked off and was clearly just messing with this boy, but this image stayed with him forever.
Starting point is 00:29:34 So the material is very personal. Oh, and there is a funny story that I should mention. And he would apparently go, he would write it in a bathrobe and a helmet with the little pike on top. And he just typed the pages in his back house all day. And then he'd go into his house and he would read the pages with his second wife, Mimi, who ends up playing the nurse in the sleep clinic in the final film. Nice. And so she said she knew every single line to that script because he would just come inside and they'd read and read and read and then he'd rewrite. So Sean Conningham was skeptical that an audience would buy into the idea that dream.
Starting point is 00:30:08 dreams are dangerous, but West Craven was confident. This script is a slam dunk. I am a successful horror director. I've got three films under my belt. So he sends it around town and everybody passes. Nobody wants it. Now, it doesn't help that Swamp Thing, which he released in 1982, bombed. Now, I will say Swamp Thing became a cult classic. I loved that movie growing up, did really well in home video and cable. I did read that according to some sources Disney was interested in making a nightmare on Elm Street into a kid-friendly movie, which on the one hand, I can't fully understand.
Starting point is 00:30:45 But on the other hand, something like Time Bandits is actually kind of freaky, and that was a little bit marketed at kids and maybe like an Are You Afraid of the Dark sort of vibe. By the way, that gave me nightmares. I had to stop watching Are You Afraid of the Dark. That episode with the Alien Eggs and the swimming pool, that was dark for kids.
Starting point is 00:31:02 This is a good show. Or the one with the magical soup. That's the one I remember. So, nobody wanted, by the way, West Craven says he has no recollection of Disney wanting to make this into a children movie. Nobody wanted West Craven's nightmare, except for a man named Robert Shea. Now, we have talked about Robert Shea on this podcast. Lizzie, you may remember him as the man who took maybe the greatest leap of faith in the history of modern cinema by green lighting, Peter Jackson's, the Lord of the Lord of the Lord of the Lord of the Lord of. the rings. Wow. But at this time, Bob Shea was a scrappy upstart trying to find footing in Hollywood.
Starting point is 00:31:45 Now, like West Craven, he had been an academic eager to please his parents. He had dreams of working in entertainment, but they seemed impossibly far away. He was born in 39, the same year as Craven. They were born within five months of each other, I believe. But he was born in Detroit, Michigan. And as we learned from Sam Ramey, what could be further away from Hollywood than Detroit, Michigan. So Shea follows the more practical path, the one that actually Ramey kind of eschews. He studies business at the University of Michigan. He then attends the Sorbonne in Paris. He then goes to Columbia Law School, he specializes in copyright law, and then he became a full bright scholar and went on to study at the University of Stockholm, Sweden, a little tie-in to
Starting point is 00:32:29 Virgin Spring. Damn. He is obviously very, very smart, very shrewd. But the only courses he did well in were entertainment law related. He dabbled in writing, directing, and producing, and he was talented. While he was at Columbia, he made a short film called Image. You can find it on YouTube, and it tied for first place in the Rosenthal competition. Lizzie, the other winner, it was a movie called What is a Nice Girl Like You Doing in a Place Like This? And it was directed by a young Martin Scorsese.
Starting point is 00:33:03 Wow. So by 1967, Bob Shea is done with school. He's back in New York. He gets a job at the Museum of Modern Art as the head of the film stills archive. He meets a man at a party who tells him that distributing films on college campuses is a big business. This is the era of distribution is not centralized at this point in time. It's very regional. Isn't this also how Sam Ramey was getting Evil Dead off the ground, too?
Starting point is 00:33:28 It is. You could sell the rights, not just international domestic, but region by region within the United States, campus by campus. Bob Shea suddenly felt like film wasn't so abstract because his dad had been in the wholesale grocery business. And you realized, maybe I wasn't meant to make movies. Maybe I was meant to distribute them. So roughly a year before Craven arrives in New York,
Starting point is 00:33:55 Bob Shea takes his first leap of faith, and he founds New Line Cinema. Wow. In his words, it began in a... a five-story walk-up in a rent-controlled apartment on 2nd Avenue and 15th Street. It was $109 a month for the office, the bedroom, and my kids' rooms. Oh, my God. I hope he held on to it. Yeah, seriously. Well, far from the flush Hollywood studios, New Line Cinema was run lean.
Starting point is 00:34:21 Money was tight, and their niche was very narrow. They started with foreign films. Werner Herzogs, Fatimorgana, even dwarfs started small, which we discussed on our episode on Fitzcaraldo. and then they expanded into U.S. independent film, including a lot of early John Waters works, for example. But Bob Shea was really shrewd, and he drew on his background in copyright law and started picking up films that had entered the public domain.
Starting point is 00:34:46 He then also took a really generous approach with filmmakers. He would offer structuring deals for distributions as 50-50 profit-sharing pacts. So New Line Cinema might not have the marketing muscle or distribution might of a larger competitor, but they could offer better terms. I do want to be clear, though, Throughout the research, I don't get the sense that Bob Shea was doing this out of the goodness of his heart,
Starting point is 00:35:06 but rather because it was a way for him to stay competitive in a really competitive marketplace where he didn't have a lot of money. One article that we found described to him as a volatile figure at the best of times who frequently clashed with his directors. So early successes included Pink Flamingos, the Street Fighter, they did a re-release of 1938's Reefer Madness. Ten years in, they expand into film production. They release 1977 stunts. This is like an action-packed murder mystery about stunts. and it grosses $2 million against a $200,000 budget. But just because New Line's having some success
Starting point is 00:35:38 doesn't mean that Hollywood's going to let them in. In 1978, they distributed a French-Belgian co-production starring Girard de Bardue called Get Out Your Hankerships that won the Oscar for Best Foreign Film. Bob Shea got drunk, went around and told everybody, we won the Academy Award, and then got denied entrance to a big after-party. So New Line always had to chase the money, and there was a lot of money in horror. So they started re-releasing horror films from the early 60s and 70s,
Starting point is 00:36:05 and then producing their own. And Lizzie, as you mentioned, they famously distributed Sam Ramey's The Evil Dead. So in the early 80s, Shea is visiting L.A. to take general meetings with up-and-coming horror directors, including Toby Hooper, I read, was one of the people that he met with. So he gets on the phone with West Craven. And they're talking, talking, talking, and the way Shea describes it is that nobody's really interested in giving him their script because their New Line is so bottom of the barrel
Starting point is 00:36:34 that the only way they're going to go with them is if they've gotten passes from everywhere else. And so at the end of the phone call, Wes Craven kind of reveals, well, I do have this one thing that could be kind of interesting. You know, it's about kids getting murdered in their nightmares. And Bob Shea thinks,
Starting point is 00:36:47 this is great. Everybody has nightmares. This is universal. Send me the script. According to one source, Craven did not send him the script and wouldn't send him the script because New Line,
Starting point is 00:36:57 he doesn't think, has the money to actually make this move. As he later put it, they would distribute to army bases, prisons, and colleges. Those were the three venues, so I figured this guy is never going to raise the money. But he underestimated Bob Shea. So Craven's chasing the studios, and Shea is chasing Craven. And so finally, the studios have said, no, and Craven relents, and New Line Cinema Options, A Nightmare on Elm Street for basically $5,000.
Starting point is 00:37:21 And Bob Shea and West Craven are in business. So Wes flies out to New York, summer of 1983, and they start writing together. rewriting the script, polishing the script, and meanwhile, Bob Shea's taking a crack at raising money. Because even though a nightmare on Elm Street is going to be cheap for Hollywood, it's going to be expensive for New Line Cinema. So, Lizzie, initial budget, Bob Shea asserts was $700,000. One quarter of what West Craven had on his last film. Yeah, that's not very much. Especially considering the amount of practical effects and stunts that you're doing in this movie.
Starting point is 00:37:58 Yeah. According to Shea, it then went up to $1.1.1 million. And as he said, all the investors at one time or another backed out during pre-production. Half the funding came from a Yugoslavian guy who had a girlfriend he wanted in the movies. Another source notes that Shea put up some of his own money, and he did strike a deal with Smart Egg Productions, who advanced a million dollars to start the film. In the end, Craven says that Shea only really managed to pull together half of what he felt
Starting point is 00:38:27 he needed to make the movie, but with Swamp Thing bombing, this was really all he had going. It's now or never. So they start casting the movie. And Lizzie, a big benefit of having no money is you can't afford any stars. True, don't have to deal with them.
Starting point is 00:38:43 So you don't even waste any time going after it. In fact, the original plan was to hire a stuntman to play Freddy Kruger. That makes sense. Yeah, this was common practice. Bud Davis is the Phantom in the town that dreaded sundown. Dick Warlock is Michael Myers in Halloween 2.
Starting point is 00:38:58 Steve Dash is Jason in Friday the 13th, Part 2, while Jason is masked. Richard Brooker in Friday the 13th, part 3. So, like, masked roles require precision actions and heavy suits and makeup. These are perfect for stunt performers with extreme body control. And also, they're going to light Freddy on fire
Starting point is 00:39:16 in this movie, for example. But Freddie was different. Craven realized early on he wanted a Shakespearean actor for this part. And I wonder if part of it is that even though Freddie technically wears a mask and that he's wearing this burned skin, you can see his eyes.
Starting point is 00:39:33 And so you need a performer that can really convey Freddy's depravity through their expressiveness. He said he wanted Freddie to convey more depth and personality than the standard wordless villains of slasher films.
Starting point is 00:39:48 And that's another departure. Freddie talks a lot in this movie. He is verbose. At times, I wanted to say, Shut your mouth, Freddy. Shut up. Get on, start slashing. Tell me.
Starting point is 00:40:01 Camry. Freddy's going to get you. I love when he first starts chasing her and he's running just like a little, he looks like he's a gorilla, like just learning how to run. Now, Craven realized he also needed to age the character down from the Septuagenarian that he'd originally envisioned because older actors Lizzie didn't have that pizzazz or energy or zest that he was looking for. He does have a lust for life.
Starting point is 00:40:29 He does. And these older actors were also, according to Craven, too sweet. There was something about them having seen so much of life that there was a certain tenderness to them. They couldn't really be evil. So West Craven started looking at actors in their 40s, and there's a rumor that English actor David Warner, who you guys would recognize now from Titanic or Coneheads,
Starting point is 00:40:48 my sister's favorite movie. He'd most recently been in Time Bandits, Tron, The Omen. there's a rumor that he was not only very seriously considered, but makeup artist David B. Miller said he actually did a makeup test on him. Now, this is debated, and Shay Craven, and Warner himself have all denied that he was considered. But casting director Annette Benson did say that Craven wanted a David Warner type, meaning a really big monster type. Remember, Warner's roughly 6 foot 2.
Starting point is 00:41:16 They seriously considered actor Richard Mull, who was 6'8. Benson says she's pretty sure that they offered him the role, but he turned it down. couldn't find confirmation. The point is, by the time they bring in character actor Robert England, he couldn't have been further from the really big monster type. Now, Lizzie, have you seen Robert England outside of his Freddie makeup around the time that Nightmare on Amstreet was released? No, I'm really only familiar with him as he appears much older, I think. Let me show you a photo of the very cute Robert Anglin. Very cute.
Starting point is 00:41:57 So he is Cherubic. I think he looks, if anything, more suited to playing a Hobbit. Very hobbity. He was 5'9. He had auditioned for Benson when she was casting National Ampoon's class reunion. He had mostly done television. He was a character actor. And he just started to get noticed for his role as a sweet and socially awkward alien in the sci-fi miniseries V.
Starting point is 00:42:19 Oh, which they remade. Mm-hmm. But he was a classically trained theater actor. He had performed Shakespeare, and Benson knew he had the depth that Craven was looking for. And he was also available. His show had gotten greenlit as a series, and during the hiatus, the only job he auditioned for that fit his schedule was a nightmare on Elm Street. So he goes into the audition, and right before he does, he licks his finger, dips it in
Starting point is 00:42:45 the ashtray in his car, he rubs the ash under his eyes, he greases his hair back, he channeled Klaus Kinski from Herzog's Nusferatu, and he makes a point to just stare at Craven as long as he can without blinking. And Craven's sitting there like, this guy is really young. He's really cheerful looking. He's kind of got some baby fat on his face,
Starting point is 00:43:05 and he's too short. And Anglin's looking at Craven thinking, this guy doesn't look like the master of darkness. Now, he had actually seen some clips from the last house on the left in the hills have eyes at these goth bars that he hung around, and he was expecting a goth director. And have you seen Wes Craven?
Starting point is 00:43:22 It's just like a normal-looking, normal-looking dude. Yeah, a normal man. Dresses a bit like a dad. Yeah. England described him as a young Don Quixote and Ralph Lauren. So neither of the men had the look that they expected from the other, but they both had the drive to make something dark. So Craven was won over by England's willingness to go to the dark places in his own mind.
Starting point is 00:43:44 Here's the full quote. I had found that where actors fail playing evil is that, Certain people simply are unwilling to admit that it's in them. In my theory, it's in all of us, and you can tap into it. And it doesn't mean that that is what you are, but you simply acknowledge that part of you. So Anglin was very willing to acknowledge there was something dark inside of him, and a new type of monster was born. Now, Lizzie, you mentioned Heather Langenkamp, Nancy in this film. She was a newcomer, especially a newcomer to the horror scene.
Starting point is 00:44:24 She looks pretty young. She is. She was from Oklahoma. She'd actually gotten her sag card. This is a funny story. She got her sag card because she got a job as an extra on Francis Ford Coppola's Rumblefish. She'd also been on an extra on the outsiders. And they randomly threw her a line. And the line ended up getting cut from the film, but that got her her sag card. And so that's how she got into film. She actually got into Stanford. And then she was taking time off from attending Stanford in order to audition for parts. She'd lost out on a part in 1984's Night of the Comet, which had been cast by Benson. She gets brought in to read for Nancy and immediately thinks, oh my God, why did I leave Stanford for
Starting point is 00:45:05 this? She goes into this casting office. There wasn't any furniture. She thought this is so much worse than I thought. But then the audition went great. And they called her back. And she read a scene with Amanda Wiss. Wiss had also auditioned for Nancy, but was being considered for Tina. And Wiss's agents were saying, don't do this. It'll ruin your career. Nobody does horror. Now, she was the more experienced of the two. She'd done some TV stuff. She'd had a small roll on Fast Times at Ridgemont High. And so they performed the scene where Nancy tells Tina about her nightmare. And Lizzie, this is where you get your nails on a chalkboard because that's when Langencamp nervously made the decision to make the claw gesture and the nail screeching sound that you see and hear in the
Starting point is 00:45:44 movie. Wow. Craven loved it and they had the job. Wait. So did he not always have his little arts and crafts hand? He had the arts and crafts hand, but the decision to pantomime that motion and sound was laying in camps. That's amazing. Yeah, that's such a, you know, vivid image throughout the movie. I especially love one of the first really cool practical effects is when she's laying in the bed in Tina's house and the wall behind her. He sort of presses through the wall behind her and then recedes. Very clever. Yeah, you can see a lot of how they make those special effects on YouTube or if you watch the documentary that I mentioned. I'm going to skip over some of those
Starting point is 00:46:22 details because, again, they're more suited for a visual medium, but there's a lot of interesting stuff there. Also, I do want to mention, did you interpret this? When, I believe it's when Tina wakes up and her gown has been sliced. And the way her mom reacts, did you interpret that is her mom suggesting that she was having a sex dream? Her mom said basically like... I didn't. Her mom said you have to cut your nails. You have to cut your nails or stop having dreams like those. I interpreted that as like a weird masturbation joke or comment. I thought it was more like, wow, her mom must be real drunk a lot of the time if Tina's been waking up with shredded clothes. And she's like, you just have a stuff having those dreams that kind of nails me that.
Starting point is 00:47:07 Yeah, I could not figure out a way to square that circle. Audience members, let us know what you think. It was like on her chest. I don't think, I don't know. I could be totally wrong. I don't know either. What I do know is that Johnny Depp was not cast for his acting chops. So, Let's talk about the most famous member of this cast. Johnny Depp as Nancy's boyfriend, Glenn Lance, noted athlete. Craven offered the part. He is just so not affected by anything happening in this horror movie the entire take. Hey, Nance, you'd probably calm down just the whole time.
Starting point is 00:47:41 Also, he's the worst at literally everything. And this is not Johnny Depp's fault. But his only job in this entire movie is don't fall asleep. And he falls asleep over and over and over again. In terms of homagees to the love interest who lives across the street and it follows is such an homage to Glenn's character in this film. So Craven offered the part to a much better known actor, Charlie Sheen. Oh. Wes Craven claims that Sheen passed because he and his agent wanted double scale.
Starting point is 00:48:10 All the actors were getting paid scale. And even though that wasn't very much money, it would have been the difference between about $1,000 a week versus $2,000 a week. That's a lot, especially back then. Right. Well, New Line said no way. That's just out of our budget. Now, Sheen has disputed this, and he said that he just didn't understand the script. He actually claims that he met with Craven and told him he didn't see a guy wearing a funny hat with a rotted face and a striped sweater and a bunch of clickety-clackety fingers catching on.
Starting point is 00:48:35 He also said, I didn't want to be eaten by a bed. And I believe that that she just didn't. I mean, I don't know why he would admit that he didn't get it, you know what I mean, instead of the money thing. But, but again, two different accounts. So Craven goes with an actor who couldn't afford to be so picky. Johnny Depp is 20 years old. He's an L.A. transplant, less than a year into his new life in Tinsletown. Fresh out of Kentucky, right?
Starting point is 00:48:59 Yeah, playing in a band called The Kids, and he's selling pens over the phone in a very Jordan Belfort sort of turn. He befriended Nicholas Cage, then Coppola, who suggested, hey, man, you should get into acting, and introduced him to his agent, because that's apparently how everything got done back then. and Benson says that said agent called and pitched Depp, but West Craven claims that Depp's bandmate, Jeff Levine, who played the coroner in the film, came to him directly and gave him Depp's headshot. Either way, Depp comes in and auditions,
Starting point is 00:49:31 and lucky for Depp, West Craven's 14-year-old daughter and her friend just so happened to be visiting that day. They took turns reading the part of Nancy during Depp's audition, and after the read, Depp sets out the headshots of everybody he's considering, and they goes, you know, who would you pick? And they both say, him, Johnny Depp, and he says, why? And they go, he's beautiful. And then that was it.
Starting point is 00:49:52 He's just bored enough to make them wonder, why doesn't he like me more? Yeah, Craven said he thought he looked like he needed a bath and didn't understand why his daughters were going to him. Now, Jay-Zoo Garcia, aka Nick Corey, landed the final part as Rod Lane, very much a forerunner to Billy Loomis in Scream. But unlike Depp, Lizzie, he'd moved to L.A. specifically to to act when he was 13 years old. He was the son of Cuban immigrants. He had some success, and then the work dried up for two years. He also looks like a very tall Latin Michael Jackson
Starting point is 00:50:26 of that era. He's very handsome. He's got a gold-blue-esque silhouette that he cuts, but he's got a prettier face than although Goldblum's also a handsome guy. Now, as I fantasize about Jeff Goldblum, let's get back to Chesu Garcia. He was at a low point in his career and his life when he got this job. He was 19. He was homeless. He was dabbling with drugs. And he landed nightmare. So this cast of complete unknowns were, as I mentioned, all paid scale, $1,142 per week, according to Bob Shea. But they needed a couple of semi-recognizable names. This was a condition of their deal with Smart Egg Productions. So Nancy's parents were played by two accomplished performers. I don't know if you recognize John Saxon from anything. I think that is who I
Starting point is 00:51:14 recognize. He's in Black Christmas, isn't he? Yes, I believe so. And he'd also been across Bruce Lee and Enter the Dragon. He'd earned a Golden Globe for his role in the Appalusa opposite Marlon Brando, and he had been a mainstay in a number of westerns. And then Ronnie Blakely, I don't know if you remember her from Robert Altman's Nashville. She plays Barbara Jean. She'd been Oscar nominated for that turn a few years prior. She was an established musician and recording artist. So these were definitely both much heavier hitters than any of the kids who had been brought in for this film. Now, you mentioned the practical effects in this movie, Lizzie, and I think they're as important as the cast as important as the story. Freddy's makeup and his powers are really what define
Starting point is 00:52:02 a nightmare on Elm Street. So his mask, his burned skin, was inspired by, any guesses, a piece of food. Cheese. A pepperoni pizza. Oh, delicious. Special effects makeup artist David B. Miller was toying with the cheese on his pizza at a pizza parlor. And he thought, this looks good.
Starting point is 00:52:25 It looks nasty. So he took the pizza home and that became his North Star and creating Freddy's face. And I just love this idea that it's just sitting there and rotting. Yeah, he's still there to be. Developing this. Still there. He brings England out into his studio, which was in his garage. He sits him in an old.
Starting point is 00:52:41 old barber's chair, shuts the door, they're completely sealed in, cranks the air conditioning, and Robert Anglin is not focused on the itchy glue or the crusty makeup brushes because Miller has given him a medical book that he's checked out from the UCLA library full of photographs of burn victims, that he's just got sitting on Anglin's lap as he's flipping through and making his makeup for hours on hours. Oh, God. Bob Shea and West Craven visit the garage, this out in the San Fernando Valley, and none of them really understand Miller's vision, but Miller assures them, get on set, through the camera,
Starting point is 00:53:16 this is going to look great. So Freddie's face would be iconic, but it was upstaged, more or less, by one of the most startling kills in Slashor history at this point. And this is Tina's death, as we've discussed Lizzie at Nancy's house. It's pretty great. Would you like to describe more or less what happens? Yeah. So she obviously is, you know, she's being chased and attacked by Freddie in her dream. I think that maybe this is where we get the very fun Freddie ripping his own face off moment early on. Then they get into her bedroom and he starts literally slashing at her with his razor hand. And you see from Rod's perspective, you know, awake that she's being attacked by something invisible, essentially.
Starting point is 00:53:57 So you're seeing invisible claw marks ripped across her, you know, belly and chest. She's just gushing blood everywhere. And it's that bright red jaws blood. She's spinning around. She's spinning around on the ceiling. and in the same shot as Rod. It's very clever. It's done extremely well.
Starting point is 00:54:15 And yeah, she just kind of gets ripped to shreds right in front of him and just is covered in blood by the end of it. And then she's dead and Rod escapes through the window. Yeah, especially given the size of the film, this anti-gravity effect that they pull off. And obviously, it's... It's really impressive. It is.
Starting point is 00:54:32 And really quickly, I do want to mention Smile very much references Freddie pulling his own face off. And obviously this rotatable room becomes a mainstay in many films and is perhaps most famously done in a hallway in inception with Joseph Gordon Levitt later on. So Jim Doyle is credited for the mechanical effects on the film and this scene is one of his major contributions.
Starting point is 00:54:59 So this set is a massive, rotatable room. And according to Doyle, Craven wanted to scare people so badly at the end of the first reel that they couldn't leave. So Doyle's idea was, what if she was in her bedroom and the whole bedroom goes loony tunes and it goes upside down? And Craven asks, you can do that? And Doyle says, yeah, I can do it. I just don't know if you can afford it. So Doyle makes a deal with the production.
Starting point is 00:55:24 He'll build the room and pay for it, but he gets to keep it after the production's complete and use it and rent it out to other movies. Where are you going to put it? Well, in a warehouse, I'm sure. So he hires the crew, builds the room and, quote, basically, everything up to installing the set was his responsibility. It would only pay off if the kill was so good that he could use it for other projects
Starting point is 00:55:47 and make some money on it. It's a bold bet. And it works. Tina's death would go down as one of the all-time horror film deaths. Now, Doyle also designed Freddy's glove, including the hero version, which we see made at the beginning of the film, and that hero version
Starting point is 00:56:03 was incredibly sharp. Those knives are real Echo Steak knives. And according to Doyle, every time someone put it on, they hurt themselves because if you closed your fist, the blades cut your forearms. Oh, no. But Doyle wasn't the only one drawing blood
Starting point is 00:56:18 because Bob Shea was picking his fingernails until they bled, because Bob Shea had a secret. Smart Egg Productions dropped out. Oh, no. Two weeks before production began, they lost their biggest backer, a million dollars, gone.
Starting point is 00:56:39 Co-producer Sarah Risher said that Bob Shea called her, and he told her, the guy who had the home video rights backed out, and that's like a third of our budget, I'm going to stay in New York and try to raise the money. Keep going. In a poetic turn, as Elm Street is falling apart, he gives a speech at an investment conference called How to Finance Independent Productions. Back in L.A., Sarah Risher is giving her own speech to the 100-person crew begging them to stay. The bad news is we just don't have any money to pay you this week. But the good news is we're going to be able to.
Starting point is 00:57:13 We know that we will. You just have to trust me. We just don't know when. She told them how wonderful they are. She looked like she was going to cry. She's six months pregnant. She believes that everybody stayed because they couldn't say no to a pregnant woman and they trusted her. It would end up being two weeks before New Line could pay the crew, but miraculously nobody left.
Starting point is 00:57:33 production manager John Burroughs' credit card statement would suggest that's because they did get paid in the interim. Apparently, people were starting to pack up, and he put payroll on his credit card. Oh, man. Somewhere in the range of $9,000. That's a lot of money back then. Would be a lot of money.
Starting point is 00:57:53 Pre-production staggers on. The cast comes together for a read-through, but one person's missing. Director West Craven. Oh. West Craven's agent said that attending a read-through when the company didn't have funds to pay the cast and crew
Starting point is 00:58:07 was against the rules of the Directors Guild of America. Is that true? I believe it is one interpretation. I don't think he would have gotten nailed necessarily. This is a very small independent film, but yes. So Craven bought a bicycle and peddled from Santa Monica to Long Beach in a state of sadness. He'd lost his savings.
Starting point is 00:58:27 He'd lost another film. He thought this was over. Like, this movie's done. We're out of money. I'm like, Wes, they're all in the room. This movie's over. We're broke. I'm broke.
Starting point is 00:58:37 Nobody likes Swamp Thing. I'm not going to get to make nightmare. Bob Shea can't even get it made. And Bob Shea says, not so fucking fast. At the 11th hour, he makes a deal with Joe Wolf's Media Home Entertainment. Lizzie, this deal is a literal nightmare. Media home entertainment would buy the home video rights for the amount needed to keep the production on track. But if New Line Cinema failed to hit certain specific line items like buying additional prints, opening in a certain number of theaters, et cetera, media home entertainment would take control of the film and New Line would get nothing.
Starting point is 00:59:15 This is an all-or-nothing deal. New Line is all in. The company is basically being bet on this movie at this point in time. That's wild because on the paper, well, like on the page, I don't know that this would stand out to me like that. He's obviously a very smart man. Oh, I think this is just more necessity than anything else. At this point, they're just so sunk into this. They have to keep going.
Starting point is 00:59:37 She's not getting the top-not scripts getting sent to him at this point in time. Got it, got it. So we're climbing into the crevasse. We are. Cinematographers Jacques Hakein said that Bob told him, meaning Bob Shea and West Craven, that the future of the company was riding on a nightmare on Elm Street. Principal photography began on June 11, 1984.
Starting point is 01:00:07 Craven said he needed 36 days. Bob said, you can have 30. They landed at 32. The shoot spans L.A., the Desalus Studios in Culver City. Venice. You recognize the Venice Canals, I'm sure. Yeah. Is this supposed to be like Middle America?
Starting point is 01:00:22 Because it is so clearly Los Angeles. There are so many palm trees. Palm tree in every shot of this movie. I viewed it as, oh, maybe it's somewhere in Orange County or somewhere, right, like Southern California generally. But then, turns out, no. No, it's Springwood, Ohio. So, you know, suspension of disbelief.
Starting point is 01:00:43 So all of the boiler room scenes are shot in the Lincoln Heights Jail. Nancy's house is a real home in West Hollywood. You guys can go drive by. In fact, a lot of the neighbors were upset, but then they got really curious when they saw England dressed up as Freddie and crowds began to form at night. Johnny Depp was as nervous as anybody, but for different reasons.
Starting point is 01:01:02 As we mentioned, Lizzie, he had never acted before. Now, everybody said he was really polite and invisibly terrible. He would sweat on camera. His hands would shake. He looks nervous. In fact, in the scene where Nancy and Glenn are hanging out with Tina and he's using the boombox to fool his mom. Yes. Their laughter is real because he was getting overwhelmed and flustered by the sound cues and working the boom box and the phone, and they were just cracking up. You can tell, and it works in the scene, but yeah.
Starting point is 01:01:27 That scene works really well. It really feels natural. Now, Depp says that when he watched his first dailies, his performance literally made him want to vomit. That's how bad he thought. he was. Now, equally nauseating was Robert England's Freddie Krueger mask, which took three hours to apply every day. It involved 11 separate elements, all glued to his face. At first, England was terrified that he was going to hurt the mask by being too expressive.
Starting point is 01:01:54 And then across the production, his skin is rubbed raw. And by the end, he wouldn't even wait for Miller to carefully remove it with solvents. He would just rip it off at the end of the day. But he channeled the pain into his performance. Here's the quote. Johnny and Heather were sitting there getting makeup on as if they needed it. These two beautiful young kids.
Starting point is 01:02:16 And here I am. I'm getting basted with a turkey baster full of K-Y jelly. I envied them. I envied their use. I envied their beauty. A light bulb went off. I could use this as Freddy. It was a shorthand for me to get angry.
Starting point is 01:02:30 Which is great because he's supposed to hate the kids in the movie. Yeah. Blakely has said for her part, it was really hard to eat lunch around England with the mask. Johnny Depp did not seem to have that problem. He and England went out to a Thai restaurant and England just kept the mask on the whole time. One of the waiters caught sight of England
Starting point is 01:02:48 drops his tray of food and runs back into the kitchen. Yeah. Doesn't know what's going on. Now, we should mention Amanda Wiss had it arguably the worst. This is Tina. She has arguably the least amount of screen time of the four teenagers, I guess debatable between her
Starting point is 01:03:05 and Rod, but she gets run through the ringer. She's sealed in a body bag, which was terrifying, that is filled with blood. The snakes at her feet in the mud were real during that one dream sequence. The rubber centipede that actually
Starting point is 01:03:21 comes out of her mouth is fake, but they did make a cast of her head where a live one crawls out. And actually she had to blow air behind it to get to crawl out. And then, of course, there's the scene where Doyle is rotating the room, and she's flying around inside. of it. Wiss said that this felt really dangerous. Yeah, there's a lot of furniture in that room.
Starting point is 01:03:42 It's all bolted down. By the way, J. Sue Garcia was strapped to the floor, which was in effect the ceiling, and Wes Craven and the cinematographer were locked into airplane chairs that were bolted to the set just behind him. And so that's how you get the camera, you know, looking over his shoulder as he's reaching up at a floating or stuck on the ceiling, Amanda Wiss, in that scene. Here's what she said. I was pretty scared going into that. I was afraid for my own physical safety because I kept thinking things were going to follow me. I thought I was going to fall out.
Starting point is 01:04:18 And I believe she thought the furniture would fall on her. Now, Langenkamp, for her part, who was on set but was not in this scene, has said it's the only scene she's been a part of that was scarier in real life than on screen. The upside-down set made Wiss dizzy and nauseous. Before takes, Craven would pop his head up through the floor, aka the ceiling, and help her reorient herself. And, of course, that same bedroom set was used for Glenn's bedroom scenes, where they shoot the blood out of the geyser,
Starting point is 01:04:47 which was, as everybody, I'm sure, has put together, inspired by the shining when the blood burst through the elevator. They poured out 220 gallons of water mixed with food coloring and poster paint in order to achieve that shot. Yeah. It's very red. Now, thankfully the most dangerous stunt was performed by a stunt performer. Freddie's burn, he is set on fire by Nancy, was executed by Anthony Saseer, who had performed a burn in West Craven's Swamp Thing.
Starting point is 01:05:16 Fun fact, he's self-taught, Lizzie. He said he taught himself how to do controlled burns by dousing himself in different chemicals and setting himself on fire near his family's swimming pool. Chris, we all got to have a passion, you know? And sometimes that passion can become your career. Everybody on set was terrified. And they were like, should we put this guy out? What do we do? What do we do? And he's like, I got it, guys.
Starting point is 01:05:41 I've been doing this by my pool for years. It's not a problem. I would be doing this for fun, even if you weren't paying me. Honestly, don't pay me. Now, it wasn't just the stunt performers who were getting set on fire or getting heated. Sean Cunningham later said that West Craven was constantly calling him to tell him that they were out of time and out of money. Sean Cunningham was his director friend. In fact, Cunningham eventually offered to come in and shoot second unit pickup shots to help them catch up
Starting point is 01:06:06 because even with 15, 16 hour days, they were not able to accomplish everything on their shot list. Lang and Camp cut her foot during one scene and needed stitches. And Bob Shea said, do you really need to go to the hospital? Not because he didn't want to get her medical attention, but because they didn't have a lot of time. Quick question, could we film the sleep clinic scene while you're in the hospital getting stitches? I mean, this guy over here setting himself on fire, so I'm just saying, maybe we take one for the team. Lang & Camp got the sense that the extra people that she started to notice on set were money people and that they were nervous that they weren't done yet. This was a little bit perhaps of subterfuge performed by Bob Shea because one of these people was producer Sarah Risher, and she asked Shea how she could help.
Starting point is 01:06:50 And Bob said, pace back and forth, look at your watch and sigh. Yeah. The crew was nervous. The cast was nervous. the producers were nervous. And to make matters worse, Lizzie, Bob Shea and West Craven cannot agree on how to end this movie.
Starting point is 01:07:04 So let's talk about the ending. West Craven wants a happy ending. He wants Freddie to be banished. He wants Nancy to say bye to her mother after she's woken up. And he wants her to drive off to school with her friends. Bob Shea says, no! It's a slasher.
Starting point is 01:07:23 The killer has to come back one more time. As Jamie Kennedy says and scream, careful. This is the most of the moment. moment when the supposedly dead killer comes back to life for one last scare. It's an essential beats. And he says, Freddie should be driving the car. Also, you can't kill your franchise.
Starting point is 01:07:38 That's the point. The compromise is the ending we get. Freddie isn't driving the car, but the car kind of is Freddie because it has his red and green stripes on the top of it. And then his arm pops through the porthole and yanks a dummy through that window so fast. The dummies in this movie are so funny. The dummy of the mother after Freddie has, like, burned her is so funny. It is, it's like a decrepit mannequin.
Starting point is 01:08:09 They've ripped off of some, you know, Spirit Halloween store. It looks like they used, like, wire and then glued chicken bones to it and painted them black. It looks pretty bad. It's really 80s. I love that scene so much because the mother, like, you know. The mother's dead and the dad's just kind of like, you can see. tell he's thinking, this is going to make custody a lot easier. Yeah. He just recedes to the bed and he's like,
Starting point is 01:08:33 watching the mother of his child disappear. He's like, well, you know, she was kind of a drunk. And then he continues on. So funny thing, though, is even though West Craven wanted the happy ending, the jump scare of Freddie yanking mom through the porthole was apparently his idea. So I guess Craven just felt like Freddie driving the car was a bridge too far, but I'm willing to do the, you know, the porthole scare. I don't know. But. The point is they did not come to this conclusion in advance, Lizzie. Yeah. Well, that adds up because I don't, it doesn't make any sense.
Starting point is 01:09:07 They filmed every possible version of the sending. They filmed every version of the sending. I don't need it to make sense. I want to be clear. But if we're going with the logic of the movie, which does fall apart quite a bit towards the end when she's trying to bring him out of the dream. By the time the Glenn bed scene happens,
Starting point is 01:09:24 I feel like we've kind of let go of whatever the original. You know what I mean? The Glenn bed scene still works for me because he's falling asleep. No, no, no. That part, it's when the blood starts going back out and his mom is witnessing that, that I'd start to lose.
Starting point is 01:09:39 I don't know what's happening at that point because does Glenn have 220 gallons of blood in his body? You know what I mean? Freddy's just in our world at that point, is my point. Yeah, that's true. I actually think the reason that it's important that Freddie reappear at the end of the film is that that's the only way I can understand the ending of the film,
Starting point is 01:09:59 which is she has not woken up. Right. Okay. So that's what I was wondering. That's what I assumed. That's my interpretation. Yes. And I think that's what Bob Shea was going for.
Starting point is 01:10:08 Is that she's still asleep, yeah. She's still asleep. She has not defeated him. She's still in this nightmare. It's Inception. He's still dreaming, by the way. That's my take. That top is not falling over.
Starting point is 01:10:19 So post-production takes place over four or five weeks in New York. Editor Rick Shane reviews the footage with Bob Shea and West Craven. And Bob Shea goes, do you think there's a film there at all? They argued endlessly, especially over the ending. They held a bunch of mini test screenings to gauge audience reactions, and they struggled about how much of Freddy to show on screen. Plus, the budget is still tight. Composer Charles Bernstein, who'd done Kujo the year prior,
Starting point is 01:10:46 says, look, I'll just do the score at my house alone to save money. So they had to cut several seconds of blood splashing to maintain an R rating. Craven hated this decision. He thought it was censorship. Bob Shea, meanwhile, is looking for ways to get creative on the back end and save his company. The problem is, if they do a theatrical release, they will take all of the risk of this movie not potentially recouping its budget. So, Shea had gone to law school with a lawyer who had sold Sean Cunningham's Friday the 13th to Paramount. This is Michael Lynn, who would later become the president of New Line.
Starting point is 01:11:22 So Michael Lynn tells Shea, you can do the same thing. Set up a screening at Paramount. Get them to buy your movie for two or three million dollars up front, which is nothing for them, but would guarantee you a $900,000 profit. Right. So even after paying back your investors, new lines in the black, the company continues to make movies. But if they distribute it themselves, there's no guarantee. If nobody shows up for this movie, they get 50% of nothing.
Starting point is 01:11:49 And New Line ceases to exist. So Bob Shea says, let's set the screening up. They call Paramount. They get a screening set up for Frank Mencuso. He is the head of Paramount, the entire Paramount Marketing Department. This is it. This is the make or break moment. Will Bob Shea die in his sleep or will he wake up from his nightmare?
Starting point is 01:12:09 Screening's going well. Towards the end, the editor pulls Shea aside and goes, We have the wrong ending. No. They had accidentally loaded the final reel of the, ending that had tested the worst. No, no. And there's 17 minutes left in the screening.
Starting point is 01:12:26 And Bob Shea goes, get the fucking right one! And so the editor runs across the street, grabs the right reel, swaps it in, the right ending screens just in time. Wow. And Frank Mencuso says, we're going to pass. Why? Well, Paramount had released Dreamscape shortly before this, which is a movie that pulled liberally. from Nightmare on Elm Street. Remember, West Craven had sent this script
Starting point is 01:12:55 to every studio before this, and Dreamscape bombed. And Mukuso says, I don't really think movies about dreams work. Dreams are dumb. I don't really put a lot of things in them. I never had one. I'm paraphrasing.
Starting point is 01:13:08 He may be a lovely man, but I just like this idea that dreams are a little abstract. Let's be honest. He wishes Bob Shea luck, and Bob Shea is going to need it. He showed the movie to his dad, and his dad goes, what's up with the ending?
Starting point is 01:13:23 And they're in a bar together, apparently. And Shay's like, well, I had to compromise with Wes. And he says, like, the ending sucks. You gotta change it. And Bob, he goes, well, I can't. Instead, he goes, you gotta fuck up this movie. That's a real quote from Bob Shea. I love it.
Starting point is 01:13:42 Wes Craven's mom didn't even watch it. She didn't watch any of his movies. She always said, Wesley, why can't she make a nice movie? Wesley couldn't. So they sold you wrong. He's tried, Mom. He's tried. A week before the movie's going to open, the film lab calls, and they say,
Starting point is 01:14:00 we are not giving you the negative until we get paid because they had not been paid. And I could not figure out how, but Bob Shea pulls some business voodoo magic, film lab releases the negative, and a nightmare on Elm Street opens wide on November 16th, 1984. New Line Cinema gets a call. I'm guessing around noon, because John Woff. Had gone to the 10 a.m. showing on the opening day in Baltimore. And he called New Line and said, you've got a hit.
Starting point is 01:14:29 Oh. And John Waters was right. The reviews were mixed, but it didn't matter. In its first week, A Nightmare in Elm Street made $1.45 million. And its second week, it made just over $2 million. It ended its run at $25.8 million. $25 times its budget. And netting New Line Cinema, maybe over $10 million more than they would have made if they had sold it to Paramount.
Starting point is 01:15:04 Amazing. Wow. A franchise was born. And New Line Cinema became known as the house that Freddie built. So thanks to Freddie Krueger, we have Lord of the Rings. Exactly. New Line Cinema became. a mini-major, they produced the five sequels that followed, plus the underrated meta-entry. West Craven's new nightmare, which if you guys haven't seen, is really invented.
Starting point is 01:15:29 I thought you're going to say, Freddie versus Jason. No, that one's not so good. It's fun, but it's not so good. West Craven's new nightmare takes place in the real world. West Craven plays himself. Heather Langenkamp plays herself. Oh, cool. Yeah, they're making Nightmare on Street,
Starting point is 01:15:45 and Freddie enters that world. If you combine all nine Freddie-related movies, they gross a total of $370 million. Now, the franchise hit some lows. Lizzie, you mentioned Freddy versus Jason. Not the best. Also, the 2010 remake with Earl Haley and Rooney Mora, I believe, is in that one. Also didn't quite work. I believe Kellyn Lutz is in that.
Starting point is 01:16:06 That's right. I like Kellyn Lutz. Craven had little to no involvement outside of the original, with the exception of New Nightmare, which she wrote, directed, and produced. And again, is a bit of it feels like almost a warm-up lap before. scream. Johnny Depp went on to stardom. We don't need to talk about that. He left nightmare far, far behind, and entered Tim Burton's world of dreams and nightmares instead. My question is how, and I think, I think I understand. I think the stepping zone is 21
Starting point is 01:16:30 Jump Street. But it was. It's still just like, he's the, you know, I went into this being like, ooh, this is going to be, you know, Johnny Depp's just going to pop off the screen in a way that I'm going to be like, that kid's a star. And instead I was like, wow. He really sits there. He really just sucks the life out of everybody on the scenes with him. He's got, to be fair, he has a great look. He just, he can tell, you can tell he's never acted. I mean, he's, no, he has no idea what he's doing. And it's, I mean, it kind of works because he's just so disaffected.
Starting point is 01:17:03 You can almost see him looking at Wes Craven off camera. You're like, you can almost see him like, was that it, Wes? Did I get it? Great when he's asleep. Yeah. I do love that he would go on to be Edward's Scissor Hands, which is the closest cinematic character to Freddie Kruger that we have, technically speaking. And I want to be clear, I think Johnny Depp is a great actor.
Starting point is 01:17:22 So it's funny to see him start here. Exactly. The fact that he got good, it's amazing. It just takes practice. It takes practice. Yeah. Now, unlike Johnny Depp, who never returned to the franchise, Robert England found the role of a lifetime. He played Freddie and everything except the 2010 remake. I love that.
Starting point is 01:17:42 Heather Langenkamp reprised her role as Nancy in the third, sequel, and she played Heather playing Nancy in West Craven's New Nightmare. But her feelings toward the franchise are mixed at best. And I would like to play a clip about why that may have been. I have to say that I was more than a little jealous of Robert because, you know, Robert as Freddie was such a huge global icon very quickly after the second or the third movie. You know, kids were coming to my door in Freddie costumes. And I've been. felt very much that the heroine, Nancy, was getting short shrift by the culture. Like there wasn't a Nancy costume coming to my door. Not yet. And I worked really hard with Robert when we were
Starting point is 01:18:30 together at these, you know, comic cons and autograph shows that I kept trying to emphasize, like, well, Nancy's important too. Like, let's give Nancy credit where it's due. And so that effort on my part started maybe five years into it, ten years into it. And now I really feel like the fruits of that discussing final girls, getting the final girl, you know, talking about it with fans. Now she's using the term final girl in that clip. So I do want to very quickly explain what that is for anybody who doesn't know. The term was coined by Carol J. Clover in her book, Men, Women, and Chainsaw's gender in the modern horror film. And it really just refers to literally the final girl standing. So it refers to the protagonist, the last one who is left at the very
Starting point is 01:19:20 end of the movie who is in a one-on-one battle with your villain. Famous examples would be Laurie Strode and Halloween, Ripley and Alien, Gail Weathers, and Sidney Prescott and Scream, Jess Bradford and Black Christmas, and even arguably all the way back to Lila Crane in Psycho. It is interesting because, you know, on the one hand, I totally understand that like in this world, of course, Freddie is going to be the most eye-catching, the most interesting, you know, the easiest to replicate in terms of costumes. But when you think about final girls and you think about, like, people, you know, like iconic performances and I immediately Jamie Lee Curtis in Halloween comes to mind. I don't know. I think maybe they just gave her more to do. Maybe she's a bit more dynamic.
Starting point is 01:20:05 I'm not entirely sure that that's a letdown of the final girl character. It seems to me like it's something to do with this movie in particular, that it doesn't spend a ton of time making Nancy all that interesting. Yeah, my theory is two-pronged, and I think it overlaps a little bit with what you're saying. Jamie LeCurtis is the obvious one of an example where the final girl became as synonymous with the franchise as the villain. Yes. Sigourney Weaver is Ripley, an alien, would be the other example. 100%. And of course, both of whom would also go on to be massive movie stars. Absolutely. And they're candidly maybe a little bit about, like you mentioned, something about their presence or their acting ability. Let's be honest, Jamie Lee Curtis was more
Starting point is 01:20:51 of a sex symbol than, you know, Langenkamp became at this moment in time. I wonder if it is, in part, because of how much personality Freddie has. Yeah. Michael Myers is a personality-less character. The xenomorph is a personalityless character. Part of what's terrifying is they are machine-like. Unless you're watching Alien Earth, and then it's kind of cute. Right.
Starting point is 01:21:16 Right. Well, let's not get into that. Weird. I like it. Mess of a show. So I wonder if Freddie, by virtue of having such an expressive,
Starting point is 01:21:27 weird, campy, fun personality sucks more of the attention away from Langen camp, whereas again, Myers is so faceless, you are drawn to Curtis, you know, by extension. I don't think Curtis has given more to do than Langing Camp. I actually think Langencamp is given more to do a nightmare.
Starting point is 01:21:47 She is on the offensive more in the third act of this movie. She's setting booby traps. She's got a plan. Yeah, that's fair. More like a Ripley than Curtis in Halloween. And I think it maybe has more to do with the dynamic of the villain, respective to the final girl. That's just my theory.
Starting point is 01:22:05 Let us know what you guys think. Now, Langenkamp said doing Nightmare didn't really help my career. She said that people have a stuffy mentality about horror films, which I do think is true, especially women in horror films. And she said that I kind of feel what a porn actress might feel, trying to tell everyone how great her movie was. Now, ironically, despite having actually worked in adult films, West Craven was freed, in a sense, by a nightmare on Elm Street. He started adding comedy to his films. The People Under the Stairs, a vampire in Brooklyn. Scream is very funny.
Starting point is 01:22:40 He redefined the slasher genre. And West Craven finally made a nice movie. In 1999, which Lizzie, I'm sure you've seen I saw it in theaters, Music of the Heart, starring Meryl Streep. Yes, I have seen it. It was the first film of his that his mother ever saw. Oh. He passed away in 2015.
Starting point is 01:23:01 New Line Cinema was acquired by the Turner Broadcasting System, in 1994, which made Robert Shea more than $100 million in the process. But he always maintained his outsider perspective. He placed risky bets on movies that the rest of the town spurned like Lord of the Rings. Go listen to our episode. And I'd like to conclude this episode with a little thesis or thing or theory I've been thinking about. And Lizzie, we're both millennials, as has sometimes been begrudgingly noted by some of our
Starting point is 01:23:31 JanX listeners. but we appreciate you guys sticking with our limited viewpoint. And one thing I've always felt as a millennial is we are arguably the first generation, and I know this is not universal, but many of us were told, follow your dreams, follow your passions, right, in a way that prior generations had not been so privileged to experience. But as I've gotten older, and as I think about what I want to tell my own kids, in this increasingly complicated world,
Starting point is 01:24:01 I've heard a different phrase, which is don't follow your passion, follow your talent, and follow your opportunities. I think that's very good advice. Yeah, and it's something I've struggled with a little bit on a personal level as someone who has been so fortunate to be allowed to follow his passion and be supported in following his passion. And yet, candidly, has had maybe more success in unexpectedly podcasting than filmmaking at this point. I sometimes feel a little distress that do I go with my support? Well, and some of you'll be like, you talentless hack, you don't have anything on podcasting. So I say it's all relative. I'm just saying it relatively more on one versus the other.
Starting point is 01:24:43 But I think what I really appreciate about Craven and England and Bob Shea is that these were three very talented, very talented individuals who all followed their talent and opportunity. more than their passions. Bob Shea tied in a directing competition technically with Martin Scorsese, and yet the opportunity was in distribution, and that's the direction he went. Robert England was a Shakespearean classically trained theater actor, but the opportunity was this heightened, campy horror role, and it became the role of a lifetime. West Craven desperately wanted to make dramas and comedies,
Starting point is 01:25:23 by the way, which he did prove eventually he was very capable of, but the opportunity was in horror, and that's the direction he went. And as a result, you know, they've all forged unexpectedly. But, you know, their busts would be in the pantheon of horror, the Hall of Fame of Horror, so to speak. So I will just leave it. It continues to make me think about how to approach your career and what the right way. We on this podcast tend to, I think, glorify what could be a survivorship bias, right? Which is they were on their last leg.
Starting point is 01:26:03 It was their last audition. They were going to be done with Hollywood. And then all of a sudden the big break came. And you don't hear the stories of all the people who just had to quit because they didn't. And lost all their money. Yeah. Exactly. Yeah.
Starting point is 01:26:15 I'm glad you said that. I'm a big, big believer in saying yes, in being open to opportunities coming your way that may not be exactly what you're. you want or exactly what you're looking for because you do not know what doors those are going to open. You don't know where they're going to lead. And frankly, when you're 19, 20 years old, you don't really know what you like. At least that's been my experience. And I think that that is the best advice I could give is say yes, obviously, unless it's, you know, dangerous or against your beliefs and then feel free to say no. But in general, saying yes and being open to new opportunities is not going to hurt you. And it may, in fact, surprise you. Also, Chris is not a talentless.
Starting point is 01:26:55 if you have not seen his movies, go give him a watch. They're very good. All right. Lizzie, it's that time, and I have to ask you, what went right? Oh, I think the practical effects in this movie are fantastic. They're great. I just, they're, they feel very ahead of their time. They're very creative.
Starting point is 01:27:13 You know, in looking at them now, I think you can see pretty easily how a lot of them are done, but that's okay. They feel very inventive. They feel organic to the... format and they feel sort of groundbreaking for the time. I loved them. I just, I loved watching them. And they're fun, fun riffs on dream logic as well, right? You can't run very fast. Your feet are getting sucked into the floor. His arms can extend his, yeah, he can push through walls. He can, you know, all this stuff. Yeah, I think it's really clever. I think it looks great. I think it's really fun to watch. I very much enjoyed this movie. I agree. I'm going to give it to Bob Shea.
Starting point is 01:27:53 I don't know how you can, this is such a leap that nobody else was willing to make and mortgaging a company's future. You know, he was not a, he was young, but he was not a young man in the sense that he had responsibilities. He had employees. He had children. I just, I find it impressed. As I learn about him, he impresses me.
Starting point is 01:28:19 And I learned more about his background in this one. And I think it takes just again, a commitment to a vision that is not your own. I find more impressive at times than a commitment to a vision that is your own. It's rare. That's the good executive and those are rare. And that's why I have so much respect for below the line folks as well, because they are also committing to a vision. No, they're also contributing to it.
Starting point is 01:28:49 But anyway, so I'll give mine to Bob Shea. All right, Lizzie, should we tell the folks what we have coming next week? Absolutely. Next week, we have a movie that was an absolute disaster, I believe, behind the camera, and, of course, just crystallized its own genre. It is the Blair Witch Project, aka, take your dramamine now, because that camera is a shaky. AKA, is he possessed or peeing in the corner?
Starting point is 01:29:19 unclear, and it's terrifying either way. It's so fun, I can't wait. Yeah, it's really, it's great. And yes, as you mentioned, a originator of the found footage genre, and I'm very excited to learn more and the continued abuse of labor in the United States
Starting point is 01:29:36 by those with capital. The true horror. Right. All right, guys, if you're enjoying this podcast, there are five easy ways to support us. Number one, just tell a family member or friend. Just, you know, drag your nails down the chalkboard next to them and say, do you want to listen to something slightly more pleasant than that?
Starting point is 01:29:52 Number two, leave us a rating and review on whatever podcaster you are listening to us on five stars, five stars. Number three, you can join our Patreon. Patreon is a platform that connects podcasters like ourselves with dear listeners like you. You can join for free. You can join for a dollar and vote on films we recover in the future. You can join for $5 and get an ad-free RSS feed and bonus material, including reviews. We have got a fun one coming up on Gilmer. Mel Deltoros, Frankenstein,
Starting point is 01:30:23 Jacob Allorty, the most beautiful Frankenstein yet, as we will find out. And you can sign up for $50 a month to get a shout out like one of the ones we'll do in just a second, but the new way to support this show is if you don't want to join Patreon because you don't like the platform or you don't want to switch platforms or whatever, you can actually now sign up for our special features subscription
Starting point is 01:30:44 inside of Apple Podcasts, where you will get access to all of our bonus episodes for $4.99 a month. We are releasing one bonus episode per month at a minimum. So if you go to our show page and Apple Podcasts, go to the top, you'll see an option to subscribe for $4.99 a month to our special features. Now, we'll give you access to, again, all of our bonus episodes, including we just did a review on Paul Thomas Anderson's One Battle After Another. So if you're interested in that, sign up. All right, now for our $50 patrons, we do a fun shout-out. So we're going to do some Freddy-style shout-outs for you guys right now. Welcome to my nightmare, patrons.
Starting point is 01:31:22 Let me describe to you something so terrifying. You'll never wake up. Imagine a nightmare where you're holding a gun, but the gun never works because the gun's actually your penis. Maybe that's just me. All right, Adam Moffat, Adrian Pang, Korea, Angeline, Renee Cook, Ben Shindleman, Blaise Ambrose, Brian Donahue, Brittany Morris, Brooke, Cameron Smith, C, Grace B, Chris Leal, come to Freddy, Chris Zaka, D.B. Smith, Dave Friskillante, Darren and Dale Conkling, Don Schibel, Ellen Singleton, M. Zodia, Evan Downey, Felicia G.
Starting point is 01:32:05 All right, it's time for a dream, so terrifying, you'll never wake up. Imagine your teeth are falling, out one after another, tumbling to the floor, but you haven't brushed them in a long time. So the tooth fairy thinks it's disgusting and starts vomiting in front of you. And you're so embarrassed, you start vomiting to it, and you're vomiting up teeth. And the whole thing's a metaphor for how you're in love with your mom. I'm talking about you, film it yourself, Galen and Miguel, the broken glass kids, Grace Potter, Half Greyhound, Jake Killen, James McAvoy, Jason Frankel, Jen Master Marine.
Starting point is 01:32:42 J.J. Rapido, Jory Hill Piper, Jose Salto, Kay Kanaba, Kate Ellrington, Kathleen Olson. All right, it's time for the scariest dream of all. Imagine you've forgotten that today is the day of the big test, and now you're taking the test, and you don't know how to answer a single question because it turns out the test is on you, and all you have to do is think of one interesting thing to say about yourself,
Starting point is 01:33:06 and you realize that deep down you know there's not a single interesting thing about you. Wendy Olgeslager McCoy, Landrella, Lena, Lydia Howes, Matthew Jacobson, Michael McGrath, Nathanife, Nathan Centeno, Rosemary Southward, rural juror, Sadie, just Sadie, Scott Oshita, Soman Chinani, Steve Winterbauer, Suzanne Johnson, and the Provost family. Where the Oos sound like O's. Wow, thank you, Freddie. And just to be clear, those are not my dreams.
Starting point is 01:33:42 Those are just weird things that Freddie came up with on the spot. All right. Thanks so much, Chris. That was a great episode. Really enjoyed it. And we will be back next week with the Blair Witch Project. Go to patreon.com slash what went wrong podcast to support what went wrong. And check out our website at what went wrongpod.com.
Starting point is 01:34:04 What went wrong is a sad boom podcast presented by Lizzie Bassett and Chris Winterbauer. Editing and music by David Bowman. Research for this episode provided by Jesse Winterbauer.

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