It’s Valentine’s Day (unless you’re reading this after February 14th in which case you can ignore this sentence), so picking this week’s Commentary was something of a no-brainer. 1981’s My Bloody Valentine is a solid little Canadian slasher with a memorable killer, but 2009’s remake ups the ante on the visual front at every turn with gory kills, an unusually long nude scene, and 3D shenanigans. It’s a fun watch and worth revisiting for Valentine’s Day.
Keep reading to see what I heard on the My Bloody Valentine 3D commentary.
My Bloody Valentine 3D (2009)
Commentators: Patrick Lussier (director) and Todd Farmer (co-writer/actor)
1. Farmer introduces himself as having written “part of this movie,” to which Lussier replies “you wrote all the best parts of this movie.”
2. The opening newspaper intro offers backstory in an interesting, 3D way, but it also offered the opportunity to toss in names of friends and family including Farmer’s wife Melanie and Lussier’s son Devin. Farmer jokingly laments how fast the newspapers move across the screen knowing how long it took him to write the copy.
3. The film was shot just north of Pittsburgh, PA.
4. They actually shot Harry Warden (Richard Walters) attacking the nurse in the opening hospital scene but decided it works better simply seeing him rise from the hospital bed. Plus the next scene shows an abundance of carnage in the hospital’s hallways, so it wasn’t needed.
5. It was suggested to Lussier by author Tom Piccirilli that Tom Atkins should play a role in the film, and conveniently, Atkins lived in Pittsburgh at the time of production. Once he agreed the role of Sheriff Burke was beefed up and given a longer life before finally catching the wrong end of Harry’s axe.
6. The hospital slaughter was filmed in a real hospital, but while they received approval to put blood on the walls for the shoot “I don’t think they understood quite how much we were going to do.” Hospital staff arrived the next morning only to respond with “what the fuck happened here?” They apparently had to bring in an actual crime scene clean-up crew to erase it all. “They thought it was quite funny as the blood is made with maple syrup and has this smell of a pancake house from hell.”
7. The studio (Lionsgate) expressed doubts over the effectiveness of the first “scare” as they didn’t see how hitting someone in the back of the head would matter in 3D. Lussier suggested they wait until they see it as he had a 3D component planned. Tom Jane watched it the night before the commentary was recorded, and “he just screamed, just screamed.”
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