| Oakland Tribune - February 13, 1981 |
Legend has it that the film was butchered by the MPAA in order to get that mandated R-rating. Some (if not most) of that cut footage was restored by Scream Factory. So if you are interested, check it out.
Just the ramblings, observations, opinions, memories, and memorabilia of a Gen X Horror Geek.
| Oakland Tribune - February 13, 1981 |
Legend has it that the film was butchered by the MPAA in order to get that mandated R-rating. Some (if not most) of that cut footage was restored by Scream Factory. So if you are interested, check it out.
| San Francisco Examiner - February 12, 1981 |
My ill-informed guess is that this is the hardcore version, while Dracula Sucks (1978) may have been a soft core version. I think.
I have not seen either version, from beginning to end, but I do know that Reggie Nalder (who played Mr. Barlow in the first Salem's Lot mini-series and was the henchman of Dracula's Dog) was mortified to learn that the scenes he had filmed for what he had been told was a soft core sex comedy were also used in the hardcore version.
| Oakland Tribune - February 11, 1970 |
As far as that supposed tampering goes, I heard there was a "last minute" decision it "spice up" the film with a sexual assault that, according to an interview with Veronica Carlson that appeared in (I think) Fangoria magazine, had both Cushing and Fisher apologizing to the actress throughout the filming of the scene.
Another ill-advised "last minute" inclusion was the comedic investigating carried on by Inspector Frisch (Thorley Walters). One could excise both the assault and Frisch scenes from the film and be left with a tighter, leaner, and far better paced movie, I think.
My favorite hammer Frankenstein's remain The Revenge of Frankenstein and Frankenstein Created Woman.
Double-billed with Frankenstein Must Be Destroyed is Dracula Has Risen from the Grave, the middle section of Hammer Film's trilogy of direct sequels to [Horror of] Dracula. While an interesting and entertaining enough follow up to Dracula Prince of Darkness, picking up more or less where that film ended, and leading directly into Taste the Blood of Dracula, I have to say that I prefer and enjoy both Prince and Taste a great deal more than Grave.
It is not bad, I just find it a tad slow and, because of that, it has tested of my patience at times. Other times, not so much.
| San Francisco Examiner - February 10, 1991 |
Nothing But Trouble is an utterly bizarre and bonkers horror-comedy. Think National Lampoon's House of 1,000 Corpses. Really.
It tries, and fails spectacularly, at being something very weird and very different. Outside of Dan Ackroyd, who wrote and directed, I think only John Candy and Taylor Negron seemed to understand the assignment and role with it. Chevy Chase and Demi Moore both seemed stiff and embarrassed about being in the movie and I don't blame them.
All that being said, I do revisit the Mr. Bonestripper scene every so often.
| Oakland Tribune - February 9, 1972 |
Okay...