Pinhead (Hellraiser)

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Hellraiser character
Pinhead
Gender: Male
Race Cenobite
Location Hell / The Labyrinth
Portrayed by: Doug Bradley

Pinhead is a fictional character from Clive Barker's Hellraiser universe. He is portrayed in the movies by actor Doug Bradley.

In the original film, Pinhead did not have a name, but was simply credited as the "Lead Cenobite". Pinhead was a name coined by the makeup crew that applied the prosthetics on Bradley to distinguish the Cenobites. Clive Barker has voiced his intention to kill off Pinhead in a future short story, saying: "I want to give Pinhead a good send-off. I want to do it right. If we are going to get rid of the old guy, let's do it with some style."[1]

Contents

[edit] Fictional character biography

Pinhead was not always a Cenobite, but was in fact once human. Pinhead originated as Captain Elliott Spencer, who was born into the middle class British society of the Victorian Era circa 1887.

He joined the British Expeditionary Force, eventually rising to the rank of Captain and served during World War I. Spencer was a charismatic and eloquent man, who could feel great empathy and compassion for those around him. These are factors which undoubtedly assisted in his mental breakdown which he suffered after the Battle of Flanders in 1916. Spencer did not believe he had a right to live after watching many of his comrades perish in horrific circumstances. He had also lost faith in the human race after witnessing the inhumanity one individual could enact upon another. He had lost faith in God, who he believed had failed humanity, claiming "God fell at Flanders too."

Whilst other survivors of the war turned to religion, philosophy, music, art and poetry, the disillusioned and jaded Spencer wandered the world and became something of a hedonist, turning to the baser methods of gratification for satisfaction and pleasure. These included opium, alcohol, and sex; however these were insufficient, as the sensations were never strong enough and Spencer always wanted greater highs, leading to his dabbling in the Occult, Satanism and black magic. By his own definition, he had become "an explorer of forbidden pleasures." He had indeed become a lost soul, descending deeper and deeper into madness and eventually sadomasochism as pain became indistinguishable from pleasure.

His transformation into Pinhead (a.k.a. "Lead Cenobite", "The Angel of Suffering" and "The Dark Prince of Pain") occurred when he opened the demonic Lament Configuration, which he picked up from a market in India in 1921. In the Hellraiser comic book series, Pinhead is depicted as the latest incarnation of the Cenobite spirit Xipe Totec, an entity derived from Aztec mythology.

Pinhead's role has varied with each Hellraiser installment. In the original Hellraiser, Pinhead was simply the "Lead Cenobite" and was part of a collective group giving pleasure and pain to those who opened the box. They were not "evil" as such, simply a force that existed to explore experience. The second film followed this but the third film radically changed the original concept, making Pinhead and the Cenobites into typical Hollywood monsters. In the fourth film he is presented as a demon of Hell bent on world domination, and by the fifth he simply tortures those who solve the box. The seventh film reverts closer to the original film, with the Cenobites responsible for pleasure and pain, but the characters seem more demonic as in later installments. In the Hellraiser comic book series, it would seem that Leviathan might be considered the overlord of the Cenobite world.

[edit] Character details and personality

The character of Pinhead presented something of a departure from the horror movie villains who preceded him. Unlike Leatherface, Jason Voorhees and Michael Myers, he can and does speak. However, he is rarely comical, as are Freddy Krueger or Chucky. When he does indulge in humour, it is notably dry. Another difference between Pinhead and other film killers, supernatural or otherwise, is his need to have been purposely summoned, as The Lament Configuration must be opened for the Cenobites to enter the (real) world. Pinhead does not kill indiscriminately, nor for vengeance; he kills because he was conjured from Hell by the opener of the puzzle box.

Pinhead's other difference from typical film killers is that he can be reasoned and bargained with. In both Hellraiser and Hellraiser: Hellseeker, the Kirsty character bargains with Pinhead to offer him more "souls" in exchange for her own (in particular, her human adversaries), thus resulting in her life being spared. Pinhead does not kill quickly, as he and the other Cenobites are well-versed in torture. Death does not end the suffering of his victims either, as they are brought to Hell/The Labyrinth, where, Pinhead says, "We have an eternity to know your flesh." Sometimes he stands back as the other Cenobites under his command do the actual killing. Pinhead is obsessed with pain and exploring the limits of the flesh, calmly observing his "experiments" as they suffer under the ministrations of him and fellow members of his order.

The act of opening The Lament Configuration is not always sufficient reason to be killed: in Hellbound: Hellraiser II, Pinhead stops the Cenobites from killing Tiffany, an emotionally traumatized girl who opened the box only after being manipulated by Dr. Channard. Pinhead remarks, “…it is not hands that call us, it is desire…” Later in the film Pinhead is killed by Dr. Channard who is by then a Cenobite himself, but not before Channard returns Pinhead to his original human form, as opposed to the other Cenobites, who were killed outright and then returned to their human forms upon dying.

He very rarely speaks to his subordinates and usually does so only when issuing an order. Only Cenobites of comparable ranking to himself, such as the Cenobite Princess Angelique, are spoken to as equals.

[edit] Powers and abilities

Pinhead is an extremely powerful being, and as such, has several supernatural abilities. He is virtually unstoppable and invulnerable in the physical sense, but rarely engages in physical combat, instead letting hooked chains do his bidding. His favorite form of attack is summoning these hooks and chains to mutilate victims, often pulling in several directions to rip them apart. These chains are subject to his total mental control and he may direct them at will. The chains may even change shape after having attached to a victim. Pinhead is highly resistant to damage and direct assault, able to shrug off all but the most potent attacks.

His magic is also used for creating objects out of thin air, teleporting, creating explosions at distances and deceiving opponents with illusions. Pinhead is also familiar with the Occult and magic, with an ability to read minds. He is at once charismatic and terrifying, and can often persuade others to perform horrific acts to his favour.

It is not known if Pinhead's power exceeds that of other Cenobites, although he was once killed by the Channard Cenobite after remembering his human life. In Parts 3 and 4, Pinhead creates Cenobites from his victims, which tend to be physically manipulated to resemble an aspect of their human lives with special abilities granted in the process. Pinhead is rarely without an entourage of such beings.

When the Pinhead character's inhuman evil (Unbound Pinhead) manifests in the world in Hellraiser III: Hell on Earth, it seems to have nearly unlimited and highly versatile powers. He could telekinetically control vast areas, transfer matter to different forms whether it be living or non living, create and control fire, animate objects, and the like. Towards the end of the film, Pinhead's human side suggests that he is no longer bound by the rules governing other Cenobites (suggesting others among them might have such power).

[edit] Other appearances

Cover to Pinhead #1.
Cover to Pinhead #1.
  • Pinhead appears in his own comic series, simply entitled Pinhead, created by Marvel Comics' Epic Comics imprint, in which he was cast as a major character in a war involving his master Leviathan. The comic series also reveals that the Pinhead persona of Captain Elliot Spencer is actually Aztec Warrior Xipe Topec.[2] Also published by Epic Comics was a two issue miniseries in which Pinhead is pitted against superhero Marshal Law.[3]
  • In the stop-motion parody television series Robot Chicken, Pinhead (voiced by Scott Adsit), alongside other horror icons such as Freddy Krueger, Leatherface and Jason Voorhees, appears in a spoof of reality television series Big Brother in the episode "That Hurts Me". In contrast to his persona in the films, Pinhead is portrayed as overly sensitive in the episode, at one point bursting into tears over losing his chance to use a cell phone to call his mother on her birthday. During the challenge, which involved retrieving a kitten from a block of ice, Pinhead resorts to scraping his head against the ice, since he's the only one in the house without a weapon. Jason Voorhees and Michael Myers also launch a prank war against him.[4] In a later episode of Robot Chicken entitled "Slaughterhouse on the Prairie", Pinhead, voiced by Seth Green, appears in the skit "Pinhead's New Haircut", which features him visiting a barber to have nails driven into his head.[5]
  • In the animated comedy series Family Guy Pinhead (erroneously referred to as "Hellraiser") appears in a cutaway gag in the episode "Meet the Quagmires" after character Peter Griffin states he is "going to raise more Hell than Hellraiser". The scene consists of a woman eating with Pinhead, who secretly unscrews the lid of a salt shaker when she asks him for it, causing her to pour salt all over her food, much to Pinhead's amusement ("You got more salt than you wanted!").[8]
  • Pinhead appears several times in the animated series South Park during the episode "Imaginationland Episode II". He can be seen in the background as one of the evil characters flooding through the destroyed gate that separated the good imagined creatures from the bad.[9] He also appears in the next episode, "Imaginationland Episode III", among the horde of evil creatures attacking the Castle of Sunshine; Pinhead is killed in battle during the episode, when he has his head sliced off by a sword-wielding Jesus.[10]
  • Pinhead also makes an appearance in a Motörhead music video for the song "Hellraiser" (originally co-writen by Ozzy Osbourne and Zakk Wylde with Motörhead bassist, singer and songwriter Lemmy). This song was directly associated with Hellraiser III: Hell on Earth, and uses some scenes from this film. It also, however, uses original scenes of Pinhead sitting in the audience listening to Lemmy and Motorhead, turning the remaining audience into Cenobites. Finally it shows Pinhead playing cards with Lemmy. Pinhead reveals 4 kings and a 2. Lemmy reveals 4 aces in a row. The final ace he reveals is the ace of spades. Then he adds a joker as his final card to top the whole thing off.
  • Pinhead's original incarnation, Captain Spencer, has a cameo appearance in the novel The Bloody Red Baron by Kim Newman, working as an agent of the Diogenes Club. In this a shell-shocked Spencer is invalidated out of the army after hammering nails into his own skull. (In the introduction to Newman's collection Famous Monsters, Neil Gaiman claims that Clive Barker based Pinhead partially on Newman, arguing "they are both snappy dressers".)

[edit] References

Wikiquote has a collection of quotations related to:
  1. ^ http://www.darkfocus.com/forum/viewtopic.php?p=147. Clive Barker talks about the end of Pinhead
  2. ^ Movie Maniac Comic Books
  3. ^  Marshal Law Vs Pinhead - Law in Hell #1 - 2  (1993)  Epic Comics
  4. ^ "That Hurts Me". Robot Chicken. Cartoon Network. 2005-07-10. No. 19, season 1.
  5. ^ "Slaughterhouse on the Prairie". Robot Chicken. Cartoon Network. 2007-11-11. No. 53, season 3.
  6. ^ "Treehouse of Horror V". The Simpsons. Fox Broadcast Company. 1994-09-30. No. 6, season 6.
  7. ^ "Stop, or My Dog Will Shoot!". The Simpsons. Fox Broadcast Company. 2007-05-13. No. 20, season 18.
  8. ^ "Meet the Quagmires". Family Guy. Fox Broadcast Company. 2007-05-20. No. 18, season 5.
  9. ^ "Imaginationland Episode II". South Park. Comedy Central. 2007-10-24. No. 11, season 11.
  10. ^ "Imaginationland Episode III". South Park. Comedy Central. 2007-10-31. No. 12, season 11.
  11. ^ "The Show that Dare Not Speak Its Name". The Grim Adventures of Billy & Mandy. Cartoon Network. 2006-10-06. No. 1, season 7.

[edit] External links