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Recent Headlines
a la Mod:

Domino is
a "disarmingly
straight-forward"
work that "pushes
us to reexamine our
relationship to images
and their consumption,
not only ethically
but metaphysically"
-Collin Brinkman

De Palma on Domino
"It was not recut.
I was not involved
in the ADR, the
musical recording
sessions, the final
mix or the color
timing of the
final print."

Listen to
Donaggio's full score
for Domino online

De Palma/Lehman
rapport at work
in Snakes

De Palma/Lehman
next novel is Terry

De Palma developing
Catch And Kill,
"a horror movie
based on real things
that have happened
in the news"

Supercut video
of De Palma's films
edited by Carl Rodrigue

Washington Post
review of Keesey book

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Exclusive Passion
Interviews:

Brian De Palma
Karoline Herfurth
Leila Rozario

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AV Club Review
of Dumas book

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Tuesday, August 1, 2023
'IT ALL STARTED WITH CARRIE'
CLIP FROM KING ON SCREEN VIA BLOODY DISGUSTING - BLU-RAY RELEASE SEPT 8TH

Posted by Geoff at 10:54 PM CDT
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Sunday, July 9, 2023
'RIGHTEOUS GEMSTONES' ALLUDES TO DE PALMA'S 'CARRIE'
IN EPISODE 5 OF 3RD SEASON, ACCORDING TO DIRECTOR DAVID GORDON GREEN
https://www.angelfire.com/de/palma/righteousgem.jpg

Variety's Charna Flam interviews David Gordon Green, director and executive producer of HBO's The Righteous Gemstones, about the latest episode of the series:
David Gordon Green returned to direct the series’ third flashback episode, and once again brought the audience back in time, as the Gemstones entered the new millennium. While the episode is set in 2000, Gordon Green explained how he and [Danny] McBride try to reference film and television of the 1980s and 1990s.

As the show’s director and one of its executive producers, Gordon Green said he leans into melding genres, and called out this episode’s pop-culture references — allusions to Brian De Palma’s “Carrie,” Olivia Newton-John in “Grease” and the “Halloween” franchise, both the original John Carpenter movies and his revival of them.

“We’re not shooting it like a comedy,” said Gordon Green. “I think part of what gives it a little bit of scope, and an unlikely interest, is because it’s not just putting the camera in the comedy place and telling the joke.

“It lets something be unexpectedly exciting or unexpectedly dramatic, and not fall into the tropes of the genre,” he continued. “And then be able to be inspired by all genres and bring it into this, [rather than] make a show that could be formulaic and could be technically, traditionally executed.”

Gordon Green’s latest revision of typical tropes occurs in the episode’s final scene, when Peter attempts to rob a bank. Rather than following him into the bank, Gordon Green positioned the camera in the diner booth where Peter had sat moments before. With a protected barrier, the audience watches Peter unsuccessfully, and almost fatally, try to rob the bank to gain the funds he had poorly invested. Gordon Green explained how that final sequence involved Zahn, a stuntman and personal friend, to ensure the “Texas switch” went off without a hitch.

“We’re just trying to up the ante, and do something different,” Gordon Green said. “It was something you had to map out and choreograph and do safely, so nobody got run over. Then you hope that the lighting stays the same so you can do it all in one take.”

He added, “It was cool to end it [that way]. We always try to build it so that there’s a bit of a launch and a leap at the end of an episode, so that it has a bit of an opera to it.”


Posted by Geoff at 12:01 AM CDT
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Friday, July 7, 2023
LEE GAMBIN BOOK ON 'CARRIE' IS FINALLY AVAILABLE
INTERVIEWS WITH DE PALMA, SPACEK, AMY IRVING, NANCY ALLEN, MARIO TOSI, STEPHEN KING, MORE
https://www.angelfire.com/de/palma/likebeingonmars45.jpg

Ten years ago, give or take, Ryan Clark and Lee Gambin were hard at work on a book about the 1976 film Carrie, interviewing many of the cast and crew, and even Stephen King himself. Last month, the book, Like Being on Mars - An Oral History of Carrie (1976), with only Gambin's name as the author, was finally published by BearManor Media, in paperback and hardback editions. In late May, Gambin posted the following on his Instagram account:
Alright - Sissy is too busy to write a foreword, that's fine - she delivers a fabulous interview for the book....but yes, the oral history of CARRIE is about to hit the printers! I reckon I expect it to be available by September. Lots of folk to thank - of course all the CARRIE alumni who are in the book (such as Sissy, Piper, Mr. King, Brian, Nancy, Amy, William and more), the wonderful Ryan Clark, Manoah Bowman, Darren Cotzabuyucas, Ben Ohmart, Chris Dumas, Michael Broom and a bunch of other folk.
The front gatefold is very cool - Darren, my fab designer, made it look like a high school year book with all the interviewees.

Posted by Geoff at 12:01 AM CDT
Updated: Saturday, July 8, 2023 1:29 AM CDT
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Wednesday, June 7, 2023
PODCAST - JOSEPH AISENBERG DISCUSSES 'CARRIE'
AUTHOR OF BOOK STUDY ON 'CARRIE' IS GUEST ON NEW "WRITERS ON FILM" PODCAST EPISODE
https://www.angelfire.com/de/palma/writersonfilm.jpg

Previously:
Joe Aisenberg commentary track added to Scream Factory's 4K Carrie

Posted by Geoff at 11:40 PM CDT
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Monday, June 5, 2023
NEW TRAILER FOR 'KING ON SCREEN'
IN THEATERS AUGUST 11, ON DEMAND & BLU-RAY SEPTEMBER 8, 2023


Posted by Geoff at 9:50 PM CDT
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Sunday, March 5, 2023
SUNDAY TWEET - 'CARRIE' AS TWO MOVIES THAT MERGE
https://www.angelfire.com/de/palma/tweetcarriein2.jpg

Posted by Geoff at 12:01 AM CST
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Friday, February 17, 2023
HER VERY EXISTENCE A QUIET ACT OF REBELLION
AT SLASH FILM, DEBOPRIYAA DUTTA DELVES INTO 'CARRIE' - ALSO, WILLIAM KATT INTERVIEW VIDEO
https://www.angelfire.com/de/palma/helpme55.jpg

Debopriyaa Dutta has written a terrific deep-dive analysis of Brian De Palma's Carrie for Slash Film, including a comparison of the film's ending with Stephen King's original novel. Here's an excerpt:
Although Carrie's story has been told and retold via various lenses and assumes many tints, the heart of the story remains the same: It is about a girl who experiences the horrors of isolation, where her very existence becomes a quiet act of rebellion. When pushed too far, she brings about literal carnage and bloodbath, too broken to care whether those trapped inside are cruel or kind-hearted.

Stephen King, who endorses Brian De Palma's adaptation of his novel, has stated on many occasions that he considers the film's ending more fitting than that of the novel. Those familiar with the novel would agree that while King's ending is suited solely for the purposes of novelistic storytelling, De Palma's highly-stylized, aesthetically-brilliant rendition of the ending works better from a purely cinematic point of view. Carrie's breakdown in the novel is much more deliberate and brutal, as she consciously seeks out her classmates to torment them and makes sure that they are beyond outside help. In fact, the school alone is not the target of her incandescent rage: Carrie makes sure that the whole town suffers her wrath, as she detonates the main gas lines and hunts down her tormentors. As she is on the verge of dying, Sue approaches her, and the two connect on a visceral, psychic level before Carrie breathes her last.

In contrast, De Palma utilizes his telltale split screens to unravel a saga of blood-soaked revenge that seems more guttural and trance-induced than consistently deliberate. Yes, Carrie shuts her classmates inside the burning building, but she does not seek out her bullies after her telekinetic floodgates open. Instead, she is forced to explode the car her tormentors are in to safeguard herself, and has no choice but to crucify Margaret after she stabs her daughter in the back. Heartbroken and betrayed by her own kin, Carrie screams in agony, allowing her power to consume and destroy, and she dies after her house topples under the weight of her trauma-fueled angst.

However, the crowning glory of De Palma's ending is the dream sequence that is the stuff of nightmares: the bloodied hand of a dead girl rising from the grave.

Unlike Stephen King's ending, which settles for an imperfect, yet compassionate mirroring between two complex female characters, Brian De Palma's ending lingers on rage, which comes back to haunt from beyond the grave. Sue, who alternates between bully and sympathizer, ultimately finds herself identifying with Carrie's pain. However, there is no closure for either Carrie or Sue — while Carrie is crushed under the weight of her own pain, Sue is compelled to carry the guilt of Carrie's death, which is now a source of horror to her. Even the way in which Carrie reaches out to Sue in the dream is aggressive, as her hand shoots up from her grave and grabs Sue, pulling her inside the crypt.

Although Sue is not nearly as cruel as the other bullies at school, she ends up shouldering the guilt of Carrie's tragic demise, which fuels bottomless grief and the fear of suffering a similar fate. Despite De Palma's sympathetic portrayal of Carrie, this shock ending paints her as a creature of terror in Sue's mind, who will now be forever haunted by the specter of a girl wronged. Within the ambit of genre tropes and the film's gothic overtones, this sequence works remarkably well, jolting audiences out of a latent state of complacency or the misconception that the worst is truly over.

If anything, this ending is more tragic. Despite attempts by those like Sue to understand and comfort Carrie, she breathes her last feeling cornered and betrayed by the world. Her rage, linked to her personhood and autonomy, momentarily paves the way to liberation in the form of vengeance, but is too much to sustain her. In the end, she remains condemned, even in death, only understood in surreal fragments through channeled feminine grief, and rage.


Read Dutta's full article at Slash Film. Meanwhile, also this week, at Elements of Madness, Noel Manning posted an Open Dialogue video with William Katt:

 


Posted by Geoff at 8:26 AM CST
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Wednesday, February 15, 2023
AMY IRVING COVERS DONAGGIO & MORE ON NEW ALBUM
"I NEVER DREAMED SOMEONE LIKE YOU" FROM 'CARRIE', JESSICA RABBIT SONG, ETC., DUE APRIL 7
https://www.angelfire.com/de/palma/borninatrunk.jpg

For years, many people have mistakenly assumed that Katie Irving, the singer on Pino Donaggio's Carrie song "I Never Dreamed Someone Like You Could Love Someone Like Me," must be Amy Irving's sister. Although Amy does have a sister named Katie, the Katie Irving who sings on the two Donaggio songs from Carrie is a different Katie altogether. Confusing enough.

Soon we will have a version of "I Never Dreamed Someone Like You..." sung by Amy Irving, when the track is released on her debut album, Born In A Trunk. According to The Hollywood Reporter's Mesfin Fekadu, Irving's album, "featuring 10 cover songs pulled from her life and career, will be released digitally on April 7. 'Why Don’t You Do Right?' — the first single which Irving sang as Jessica Rabbit in Who Framed Roger Rabbit — will be available on digital platforms on March 3."

Here's more from the Holywood Reporter article:

Born In a Trunk also features Irving covering songs like Pino Donaggio’s “I Never Dreamed” (from Carrie) and Death Cab for Cutie’s “I’ll Follow You Into the Dark,” dedicated to her husband Ken Bowser. Jules David Bartkowski aka Goolis arranged the album and lends vocals to the covers of Jimmy Webb’s “Children’s Song” (from Voices) and Tom Jobim’s “How Insensitive,” featuring Roy Nathanson on saxophone.

“Singing makes me happy. I considered myself an actor who could carry a tune, not a singer,” Irving says. “My youngest son, music manager Gabriel Barreto, turned me on to a terrific band he represents: Goolis. He convinced me to cut an album with them. It was so thrilling to step into another world.”

She adds that she chose the 10 songs “from my life’s work, liaisons, marriages, and family.”

“We made the album, then COVID hit,” she continues. “I spent two years working with Celeste Simone, an amazing vocal coach, who taught me how to get up on the stage and sing the songs for the launch. My husband Ken Bowser helped me write intros to the songs. This is my story. It’s been quite a ride. And thanks to Gabe, and Jules and Ken, (and our 2 dogs), the ride continues.”

Willie Nelson heard Irving’s version of his song “I’m Waiting Forever,” reimagined as a galloping calypso, and asked to sing harmonies on the track for the new album. The song, which Nelson recorded for his 1996 album Spirit, was written for Irving and it references their relationship during the production of 1980’s Honeysuckle Rose.

“It is a real pleasure to be singing with my good friend Amy Irving. She has a great band behind her and I look forward to doing more with her,” Nelson tells THR in a statement.

The Born In a Trunk cover art features Irving’s mother, actress Priscilla Pointer, smudging makeup on a 2-and-a-half-year-old Irving. The performer’s father, Jules Irving, was a director and actor.

Irving recorded the album live in the studio with Goolis and eight other band members.



Posted by Geoff at 11:35 PM CST
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Thursday, February 9, 2023
'THE BEST THE FILM HAS LOOKED ON HOME ENTERTAINMENT'
GEEK VIBES NATION REVIEWS SCREAM'S 4K UHD EDITION OF 'CARRIE'
https://www.angelfire.com/de/palma/carrie4kuhd1a.jpg

"This film was originally released on Blu-Ray by Scream Factory a little over six years ago, which was derived from an older master," states Geek Vibes Nation's Dillon Gonzales in a review of Scream Factory's recent 4K UHD edition of Carrie. "While that was a fine release, this new presentation blows it out of the water in every respect." Here's more from the review:
One of the aspects that will dazzle fans the most is the stunning implementation of Dolby Vision which does not let you down with its depth and nuance. As you might expect, the glorious flames of the finale provide a really nice visual spectacle. Other less obvious elements such as pieces of clothing and some of the environmental elements show their worth. There is also a greater accuracy to the more ruddy colors in some of the interiors of Carrie’s house. The new presentation reaches a level of accuracy and color detail that likely tops the original prints.

This disc also delivers some magnificent natural film grain which brings out so much distinct texture in the production design, the special effects and more. This grain resolves well with nothing ever appearing frozen or spiking throughout. This disc executes every environmental change with ease. Even difficult scenes like the steamy shower scene does not turn into a blocky mess. The black levels are pretty strong with no blatant crush present, and white levels never get too hot. Any lingering specks and bits of damage have been eradicated with this latest pass. The makeup effects showcase viscus elements with great clarity which makes the work all the more unsettling. There are a few moments where the encode could have potentially been better optimized, but it is miles away from poor. This is the best the film has looked on home entertainment, and Brian De Palma fans will be thrilled to own one of his top tier works on the format.


Of the new audio commentary track, Gonzales writes:
Joe Aisenberg, Author Of Studies In The Horror Film: CARRIE provides a very thorough and entertaining commentary track in which he discusses the background and development of the film, the themes of the story, the direction of Brian De Palma, the differences between the movie and the Stephen King source material, the background of some of the performers, anecdotes from the production he gained while researching the book and much more that is well worth a listen.

Posted by Geoff at 9:16 PM CST
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Tuesday, December 27, 2022
TIM BURTON PAYS TRIBUTE TO 'CARRIE' WITH 'WEDNESDAY'
"IN 1976, I WENT TO A HIGH-SCHOOL PROM - IT WAS THE YEAR 'CARRIE' CAME OUT..."
https://www.angelfire.com/de/palma/wednesdayprom245.jpg

After reading a pilot script written by showrunners Miles Millar and Alfred Gough, Tim Burton quickly decided to join the production of the Netflix series Wednesday, which stars Jenna Ortega in the title role. Burton is a hands-on executive producer of the series, and directed the first four episodes. The fourth episode, "Woe What a Night," pays clear tribute to Brian De Palma's 1976 adaptation of Stephen King's Carrie. An article by Olly Richards in the November 2022 issue of Empire magazine begins with Burton himself bringing up De Palma's film:
"In 1976, I went to a high-school prom," says Tim Burton, with a tone far from nostalgic. "It was the year Carrie came out. I felt like a male Carrie at that prom. I felt that feeling of having to be there but not being part of it." He gives a big, rueful smile. "They don't leave you, those feelings, as much as you want them to go."

We tell this little story not to make your day a bit sadder, but to illustrate just why Burton decided to direct Wednesday, his first TV project. Despite years of fans clamouring for Burton - cinema's patron saint of the macabre - to make an Addams Family project of some sort, he has never really been interested. It was only when presented with the chance to tell the story of a lonely teenager who hates school and doesn't understand her parents that he felt he'd found something that click-clicked. "You know," he grins, "Wednesday and I have the same worldview."



Posted by Geoff at 12:01 AM CST
Updated: Thursday, December 29, 2022 10:46 PM CST
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