Tales from the Darkside: The Movie

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Tales from the Darkside

DVD release of Tales from the Darkside: The Movie
Directed by John Harrison
Produced by Mitchell Galin,
Richard Rubinstein
Written by Michael McDowell,
Arthur Conan Doyle (short story "Lot. 249"),
Stephen King (short story "Cat from Hell"),
George Romero
Starring Deborah Harry,
David Forrester,
Matthew Lawrence,
Christian Slater,
Steve Buscemi,
Julianne Moore
Music by John Harrison,
Chaz Jankel,
Jim Manzie,
Pat Regan
Cinematography Robert Draper
Editing by Harry Miller III
Distributed by Paramount Pictures (USA)
Laurel Entertainment (non-USA)
Release date(s) 1990
Running time 93 min
Country Flag of the United States United States
Language English
Budget USD $3,500,000 (est.)
Gross revenue $16,324,573 (USA)
Preceded by Creepshow 2 (unofficially)
Allmovie profile
IMDb profile

Tales from the Darkside is a 1990 movie directed by John Harrison based on the anthology television series Tales from the Darkside. The film, shot in anthology style, depicts a kidnapped paperboy who tells three stories of horror to the suburban witch who is preparing to eat him, a la Hansel and Gretel.

Paramount Pictures' (which distributed this movie) television division would later gain distribution rights to the Tales from the Darkside TV series.

The original basis of this film was to be at one point the 2nd sequel in the Creepshow franchise. It didn't come to be, and with the popularity of the Tales From the Darkside television series, producers opted to add the title of that show to the film. However, Tom Savini has been quoted as saying that this film is the real "Creepshow 3".

Contents

[edit] Synopsis

The movie opens with a young paperboy (played by Matthew Lawrence) delivering newspapers during his daily rounds. One of the women on his route (played by Deborah Harry) lures him into her house with the promise of cookies, and then captures him. She takes him into her kitchen and informs him that she is going to cook him (in the giant oven in her kitchen) and serve him up at a dinner party. In the style of Shahrazad,the boy stalls the woman by telling her three horror stories. After telling his stories, he manages to shove the woman into her own oven, killing her.

[edit] Stories

Lot 249 - In the first segment, Michael McDowell adapts Arthur Conan Doyle's short story, "Lot No. 249." A graduate student, Bellingham (played by Steve Buscemi), reanimates a mummy and uses it to take revenge on some of his enemies. The mummy then goes on to wreak bloody havoc on three other college students: Andy (played by Christian Slater), Susan (played by Julianne Moore), and Lee (played by Robert Sedgwick). The mummy kills two of the students, but the remaining student manages to destroy the mummy. More trouble ensues when the student brings back his two dead friends.

Cat From Hell - In the second tale, George Romero adapts a Stephen King short story (of the same name). It is the story of a wealthy, wheelchair-bound elderly man, Drogan (played by William Hickey), who hires a hitman, Halston (played by David Johansen), for one of the strangest jobs of his career: kill a black cat which Drogan believes is murderously evil. Drogan explains that there were three other occupants of his house before the cat arrived: his sister, Amanda (played by Dolores Sutton),her friend Carolyn (played by Alice Drummond), and the family's butler, Gage (played by Mark Margolis). The cat was adopted by Carolyn and Amanda, who ignore Drogan's claim that he can sense that the cat is evil. Drogan claims that one by one, the cat killed the other three: first it tripped Amanda, causing her to fall down a flight of stairs; then it clamped on to Carolyn's face until she suffocated; and finally, after Gage managed to capture the beast and tried to take it to the vet to put it down, it scratched his face, causing Gage to get into a fatal car crash. Drogan believes that he is being punished because his pharmaceutical company killed 5,000 cats while testing a new drug. Halston doesn't believe the story, but is more than willing to eliminate the cat since Drogan is offering $100,000. Halston soon discovers that the cat is extremely difficult to kill after he tries to kill it several times. Eventually the cat kills the hitman, forcing itself down his throat and into his stomach. Drogan returns and finds the hitman's body; the cat climbs out of the hitman's mouth and jumps at Drogan, which causes him to have a fatal heart attack.

Lover's Vow - The third segment is written by Michael MacDowell and based on "Woman in the Snow", one of the episodes in Kwaidan[1]. In the story, a despondent artist named Preston (played by James Remar) witnesses a gruesome murder by a gargoyle-like monster. The monster gets Preston to swear to never speak of what he saw in exchange for the promise of a much better life. True to his word, Preston ends up with a beautiful, loving wife (played by Rae Dawn Chong) and a successful art career. But Preston is still tormented by guilt about his silence, and is reconsidering his bargain.

[edit] Main cast

[edit] External links

[edit] References

  1. ^ AllMovieGuide entry