Bordello of Blood
Tales from the Crypt Presents: Bordello of Blood is a 1996 American horror comedy film directed by Gilbert Adler and written by Adler and A. L. Katz.[2][3][4] Dennis Miller stars as Rafe Guttman, a private investigator hired by Catherine Verdoux (Erika Eleniak) to investigate the disappearance of her brother Caleb (Corey Feldman). Guttman's investigation leads him to a bordello run by Lilith (Angie Everhart). Guttman learns that the prostitutes are vampires, and must team up with televangelist Reverend J.C. Current (Chris Sarandon) to stop the vampire threat.
Bordello of Blood | |
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Theatrical release poster | |
Directed by | Gilbert Adler |
Produced by | Gilbert Adler |
Screenplay by |
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Story by | |
Starring | |
Music by | Chris Boardman |
Cinematography | Tom Priestley |
Edited by | Stephen Lovejoy |
Production company | Crypt Keeper Pictures[1] |
Distributed by | Universal Pictures[1] |
Release date |
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Running time | 87 minutes[1] |
Country | United States[1] |
Budget | $2.5 million |
Box office | $5.6 million |
The film was developed by Bob Gale and Robert Zemeckis in the 1970s after their college graduation. The duo conceived the original script as an exploitation film designed to break the duo into the film industry, but it went unproduced.[5] The concept was subsequently revisited to serve as the second film in a proposed Tales from the Crypt film trilogy greenlit by Universal Pictures following the success of the first film spinoff of the HBO series, Demon Knight (1995).[6] Miller and Everhart were suggested for the cast by executive producer Joel Silver, though Adler and Katz wanted other actors to play the parts.
Filming took place in Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada, where the production was troubled by limited night time and continuity issues due to Miller's constant improvisation and refusal to show up on set. Released in North America on August 16, 1996, Bordello of Blood grossed $5.6 million,[7] turning a profit from its $2.5 million budget.[8] The film received generally negative reviews from critics and fans of the series,[9] but has since gained a fanbase, becoming a cult film.[8]
Plot
A group of treasure hunters led by Vincent explore a forest, until they find a cave containing the coffin of Lilith, mother of all vampires. Vincent takes out a box containing the four sections of her heart and puts it in her body, reviving her. Lilith awakens and kills all the treasure hunters, except Vincent, who subdues her with the key from Demon Knight.
After having a fight with his sister Catherine, Caleb Verdoux goes to a dive bar, where an odd man named Jenkins tells him of a brothel hidden in a funeral home. Caleb and his friend Reggie visit the address, where the mortician McCutcheon forces them at gunpoint to climb into a coffin that takes them to said brothel. However they are unaware the prostitutes are all vampires led by Lilith. Lilith kills Reggie and turns to Caleb.
When the police fail to find Caleb, Catherine reluctantly hires Rafe Guttman, a cynical and sarcastic private investigator. Rafe tracks Caleb's trail to the bar, where Caleb's friends direct him to the funeral home. At his first daytime visit, it appears to be just a funeral home. After a tip from Jenkins, Rafe revisits the funeral home that night. He discovers the funeral home is a front for a corrupt organization run by Reverend Current. Rafe overhears Lilith interview a woman, Tamara, followed by Tamara's scream and a body hitting the floor.
On his third visit, Rafe is admitted into the brothel and approached by Tamara, who is now a vampire. Rafe tricks her into letting him strap her to a torture rack so he can investigate further, finding Jenkins decapitated in a coffin. While fleeing, Rafe drops his wallet, allowing Lilith to find his address. Having tasted Rafe's blood, Lilith takes an interest in Rafe and tries to seduce him. When Catherine arrives, Rafe follows and tells her of the brothel's activity. They alert the police, but the police dismiss Rafe as a fraud when they find no evidence. Meanwhile, Vincent destroys the key, freeing Lilith.
As Catherine looks over footage where she confronted Lilith, she notices Lilith is not in the shot. Realizing that Rafe might be right, she calls him over. Caleb calls for help, asking them to meet him at the power plant. When they arrive, they discover Caleb is a vampire. Rafe and Catherine flee, but Rafe falls out a window, landing on the police chief's car. The vampires catch Catherine and bring her back to the brothel.
Rafe awakens in a hospital and is nearly killed by Tamara, posing as a nurse. Rafe exposes her to sunlight, killing her. Catherine awaken at the brothel and begs Caleb to free her, but he refuses, too ingrained as Lilith's servant and fully embraced his newfound vampiric lifestyle. Lilith prepares to feed on Catherine while Caleb watches. Rafe loads up on Super Soakers filled with holy water and raids the brothel, killing Vincent and McCutcheon. He meets up with Current, who has realized his error and is attempting to rectify it. Current tells Rafe that Lilith's heart must be removed from her body and cut into four pieces, as before she was found by Vincent. Rafe gives him a spare water gun and the two enter the brothel, spraying all the vampires, including Caleb, who burn and explode.
They find Lilith, who mortally wounds Current and flees after Rafe attacks her with an axe. Rafe finds Catherine, and they head to Current's church to reveal the existence of vampires with its media equipment. Lilith returns, handcuffs Rafe to a railing, and attacks Catherine. Rafe uses a nearby laser to hit Lilith in the heart, cutting it into four parts. As the pieces remain in her body, Lilith remains alive. As Lilith devolves into a hideous form and attacks Rafe, Catherine grabs a candle stand and stabs out Lilith's heart. Lilith's body burns and collapses to the ground. The two have Lilith's remains burned and lock away the box with the heart pieces. Later, they sit in his car and Rafe fondles Catherine, which she seems more accepting of now. When he pulls back her skirt, he sees a pair of bite-marks on her thigh. Catherine, now a vampire, bites Rafe in the neck.
Cast
Main cast
- Dennis Miller as Rafe Guttman
- Erika Eleniak as Catherine Verdoux
- Angie Everhart as Lilith
- Chris Sarandon as Reverend J.C. Current
- Corey Feldman as Caleb Verdoux
- Aubrey Morris as McCutcheon
- Phil Fondacaro as Vincent Prather
- Juliet Reagh as Tallulah
- Eli Gabay as Miguel
- Matt Hill as Reggie
- Eric Keenleyside as Noonan
- Robert Munic as Zeke
Cameos
- John Kassir as the voice of the Crypt Keeper
- William Sadler as Mummy[10]
- Whoopi Goldberg as Hospital Patient (uncredited)[3]
Development
After graduating from USC in 1973,[11] Bob Gale and Robert Zemeckis wrote an early draft of Bordello of Blood, wanting to break into the film industry by making an exploitation film about "a whorehouse full of vampires".[5][12] They pitched Bordello of Blood to producer John Milius in the 1970s, but ultimately it was not produced at that time, and the three wound up making 1941 instead, but Milius described the scripts for Bordello and another proposed film from the duo entitled Tank as being "pretty darn good".[13]
Following the commercial success of the Tales from the Crypt film Demon Knight (1995), Universal Pictures greenlit two more Tales films, planning to make a film trilogy.[6] The original proposed second film was Dead Easy (a.k.a. Fat Tuesday), a zombie film set in New Orleans, which never made it past the screenwriting stage because the producers felt the scripts leaned too heavily towards horror and lacked the series' humor.[14] The producers also considered Quentin Tarantino's screenplay From Dusk till Dawn as a possible Tales from the Crypt film,[6] as well as Peter Jackson's The Frighteners.[15] During this development process, Robert Zemeckis was offered a contract with DreamWorks, and considering leaving Universal. To appease him into staying with the studio, it was agreed that a revised Bordello of Blood be produced as the second Tales film.[10]
Production
The production budget was $2.5 million.[8] Gilbert Adler was hired to direct, having previously been a showrunner for Tales from the Crypt. Adler and A.L. Katz rewrote Gale and Zemeckis' script to make the film more modern.[8][16] Corey Feldman, who was friends with executive producer Richard Donner and had previously acted in an episode of Tales, was cast in the movie as Caleb.[8] Adler and Katz wanted Daniel Baldwin to play Rafe Guttman, and Robin Givens to play Lilith.[8] Executive producer Joel Silver, however, wanted Dennis Miller to play Rafe, and Angie Everhart to play Lilith. Silver had recently produced a movie with a supermodel in a leading role, and while Everhart, whose only previous performance was a minor role in Last Action Hero, was not a trained actress, Silver thought "supermodel actresses" was "the next big thing". Everhart was introduced to Silver by Sylvester Stallone, who suggested her for the part of Lilith.[8][17] Miller, who did not want to make the movie, said he would play the lead for $1 million, but Universal refused to put up this salary for Miller, so Silver cut $750,000 from the special effects budget to hire Miller.[8]
The movie was filmed in Vancouver because of Silver's past union disputes, and Katz described the Canadian production crew as being inexperienced.[8] In addition, Vancouver's limited night hours in July and August caused problems trying to film night scenes.[18] Miller disliked his character's scripted dialogue and once he started filming, he proceeded to improvise nearly all of his dialogue.[17] The Bordello of Blood shoot was rescheduled to work around the shooting of Dennis Miller Live, and the Canadian crew became angry at Miller because the filming schedule prevented their seeing their families on the weekends.[17] On some days, Miller's assistant told the production that he was too tired to show up, which meant that some of Miller's scenes had to be shot without him with the script supervisor standing in for Miller. The cast became angry at Miller, and the script supervisor sometimes did not remember all of Miller's improvised dialogue, which led to continuity problems.[17][16]
According to Katz, after filming began, Erika Eleniak's manager told the production that she would not travel to the set unless significant portions of the script that she found unacceptable were rewritten. Eleniak had left Baywatch because she wanted to be taken seriously as an actress, and allegedly did not want to play the character of Catherine as previously written. Katz claimed Catherine was scripted as being a stripper, and Adler and Katz frantically rewrote the script and changed these aspects of the character so she would travel to the set. However, Eleniak disputes this claim, saying that her argument with the producers was due to Joel Silver wanting to add a "sexy" scene between her and Everhart which had not been in the script, and that changes had been made to the script based on Eleniak's casting to make her character "sexier".[17] Eleniak expressed disappointment that due to rewrites, the backstory of Catherine having a past as a 300lb ex-porn star named Chubbie O'Toole was removed from the film. Eleniak recalled later that she wore special makeup effects that were created for a brief scene in which Catherine discovers a Chubbie O'Toole poster in Rafe's office.[19]
Soundtrack
Bordello of Blood | ||||
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Soundtrack album | ||||
Released | August 7, 1996 | |||
Genre | ||||
Label | Universal | |||
Tales from the Crypt chronology | ||||
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Review scores | |
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Source | Rating |
Allmusic | [20] |
The film's soundtrack album was released on August 7, 1996.[20] It focused predominately on heavy metal and glam music by artists such as Anthrax, Red Kross, Kerbdog, Sweet, Scorpions and Cinderella.[20] It received a score of two out of five stars from Allmusic.[20]
No. | Title | Artist | Length |
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1. | "Bordello Of Blood" | Anthrax | 4:12 |
2. | "This Is Not A Love Song" | Kerbdog | 2:25 |
3. | "All Right Now" | Free | 5:32 |
4. | "Jailbreak" | Thin Lizzy | 3:59 |
5. | "Ballroom Blitz" | Sweet | 4:02 |
6. | "Deuce" | Redd Kross | 3:12 |
7. | "Still Loving You" | Scorpions | 6:26 |
8. | "30 Days In The Hole" | Humble Pie | 3:56 |
9. | "Love's Got Me Doin' Time" | Cinderella | 5:16 |
10. | "From The Underworld" | The Herd featuring Peter Frampton | 3:16 |
Total length: | 42:13 |
Release
In a televised appearance prior to the film's release, Dennis Miller told viewers not to see Bordello of Blood.[21] Bordello of Blood grossed $5.6 million.[8][7] Upon release, the film was generally disliked by fans of the TV series,[9] but later it developed a fanbase and is now considered a cult film.[8] While the third film in the Tales from the Crypt film trilogy was never produced, Ritual (2002) is considered an unofficial entry in the Tales series.[10]
On October 20, 2015, Shout! Factory subsidiary Scream Factory released a special edition of the film on Blu-ray and DVD.[22][23] On July 16, 2016, the film was given a special 20th anniversary screening at the Canadian Rio Theatre in Vancouver, BC, attended by Adler and special effects artist Todd Masters. John Kassir also participated via Skype.[24]
Critical reception
Upon release, the film was poorly received by critics.[9] Leonard Maltin gave the film two stars, calling it a "fitfully amusing juvenile horror comedy".[3] Chicago Tribune reviewer Mark Caro wrote, "The Crypt tradition is ghoulish irreverence, but here it seems merely a hip excuse to stoop low."[25] The Deseret News wrote, "For a horror-comedy film to work, it's got to be both funny and scary. Tales From the Crypt Presents Bordello of Blood is neither. Instead, it's only a bath of blood and bare skin, with some lame wisecracks thrown in for bad measure."[2] Writing for The Washington Post, Richard Harrington said, "Triple the length of its cable television inspiration, Tales From the Crypt Presents Bordello of Blood is triple the gore, triple the naked women, but not, alas, triple the fun."[26] Variety panned the film, writing, "another cheesy goulash of smart-alecky humor and full-bore gore, spiced with more shots of topless lovelies than you'd find in a '60s sexploitation flick. Adolescent boys might groove to the mix, but most other ticketbuyers will avoid this tawdry opus like the plague."[27] TV Guide gave the film 1 out of 5 stars, writing, "Miller is the best thing about the film, but a little of him goes a long way, and he's on screen a lot. [...] This is a travesty, and if Tales From the Crypt publisher Bill Gaines isn't spinning in his grave, it can only be because someone's already put a stake through his heart."[28] Peter Stack of the San Francisco Chronicle wrote, "Bordello of Blood, ... easily could have been called 'Bore-dello of Blood.' This gory vampire spoof is remarkably free of jolts, hardly registering as a fright film, with a series of weak special effects involving many globs of guts."[29]
The New York Times critic Lawrence Gelder wrote, "Vampires aren't the only things in Bordello of Blood that can't stand up to daylight. Neither can the plot."[30] Austin Chronicle critic Marc Savlov gave the film 1 out of 5 stars, calling it "The Dennis Miller Show... with nekkid vampire-vixens."[31] Exclaim! writer Robert Bell gave the film 4 out of 10, writing, "Tales from the Crypt was known for its twist endings, morality parables and askew sensibility; this feature shared none of those traits, and wouldn't be recognizable as a part of the series without the presence of the Cryptkeeper bookending the film."[16] Dread Central gave the film a score of 2 out of 5, writing, "If you told me the screenwriters dug through Miller's trash and inserted his discarded one-liners into the script, I would have no problem believing it. Not a single one of his lines works, and every time he opens his mouth it only further reinforces the fact he was so very, very wrong for this role."[9] Allmovie also gave the film a score of two stars out of five, writing, "Even with its obligatory Crypt Keeper bookends, the 87-minute Bordello of Blood seems as inflated as the many surgically enhanced breasts on display."[4]
However, not all reviews were negative. The Los Angeles Times writer Jack Matthews gave the film a favorable review, calling it a "bloody good vehicle for Dennis Miller", writing, "What it lacks in irony and suspense, Gilbert Adler's Tales From the Crypt Presents Bordello of Blood makes up for in whimsy and cheeky self-assurance. [...] This is the version of Dracula that Bram Stoker would have written with the collaboration of Mel Brooks and the Marquis de Sade over drinks at Hooters."[32] Arrow in the Head also reviewed the film favorably, giving it a score of 6 out of 10, writing, "this second entry in the Tales From The Crypt big screen series doesn't fully measure up to its predecessor, but sill manages to deliver a mindless fun ride".[33] ComingSoon.net wrote that "Bordello is in many ways a superior Tales from the Crypt entry. Adler had previously directed episodes of the show and the film feels like an amplified episode, brightly lit, garish and tricked out with even more sleaze, sex, blood and general luridness".[6] The Digital Bits wrote, "Despite itself, Bordello of Blood is a fun movie. It's not the best in the Tales from the Crypt series, but it's miles above [Ritual]. [...] Sure there are plenty of eye-rolling moments, [...] but it's worth a couple of watches... especially to see William Sadler as a mummy."[10]
The film holds a 15% approval rating on Rotten Tomatoes based on 34 reviews, and the average rating is 3.33/10. The consensus states: "Bordello of Blood is not as scary or funny as it thinks it is (or should've been), and all of Dennis Miller's lines sound like castoffs from his stand-up material".[34]
See also
References
- "Tales from the Crypt Presents Bordello of Blood (1996)". AFI Catalog of Feature Films. Retrieved August 28, 2018.
- Vice, Jeff (August 19, 1996). "Film review: Tales From the Crypt Presents Bordello of Blood". Deseret News.
- Maltin, Leonard. "2015 Movie Guide".
- Dillard, Brian. "Bordello of Blood". Allmovie.
- "Bob Zemeckis, Zooming Ahead". The Washington Post. July 3, 1985.
- "SHOCK takes a critical look at a double-dose of TALES FROM THE CRYPT features on Blu-ray". ComingSoon.
- Joshi, S. T. (2011). Encyclopedia of the Vampire: The Living Dead in Myth, Legend, and Popular Culture. ABC-CLIO. ISBN 9780313378331.
- Tainted Blood: The Making of Bordello of Blood Part 1.
- "Bordello of Blood". Dread Central.
- "Bordello of Blood". The Digital Bits.
- Notable Alumni, USC School of Cinematic Arts Archived August 26, 2009, at the Wayback Machine.
- "25 Development Facts Behind the Back to the Future Trilogy". Huffington Post. October 21, 2015.
- Milius, John (2002). The Making of 1941: In the Beginning (DVD). Universal Studios. Event occurs at 01:39. ISBN 0783231032.
- The Bordello Follows, Fangoria Magazine, No. 156, September 1996, p. 29
- Who's Afraid of The Frighteners? by Michael Helms, Fangoria Magazine, No. 154, July 1996, p. 36
- Bell, Robert (October 20, 2015). Tales from the Crypt Presents: Bordello of Blood. Exclaim!.
- Tainted Blood: The Making of Bordello of Blood Part 2.
- Tainted Blood: The Making of Bordello of Blood - Shooting the climax in Vancouver.
- Tainted Blood: The Making of Bordello of Blood - Make-up/Visual Effects.
- Ankeny, Jason. "Bordello of Blood [Original Soundtrack]". Allmusic.
- Feldman, Corey. "Coreyography: A Memoir".
- "Tales From The Crypt Presents: Bordello Of Blood [Collector's Edition]". ShoutFactory.com. 2015-10-20. Retrieved 2015-07-07.
- Miska, Brad (September 2, 2015). ""Tales From the Crypt" Films 'Demon Knight' and 'Bordello of Blood' Get Collector's Blu-rays!". Bloody Disgusting.
- "Bordello of Blood". Rio Theatre.
- Caro, Mark (August 16, 1996). "'Bordello Of Blood' Stuck In Adolescence". Chicago Tribune.
- "Pleasure of the Flesh ... and Blood". WashingtonPost.com. 1996-08-16. Retrieved 2014-08-01.
- "Review". Variety. August 19, 1996.
- "Review: Bordello of Blood (1996)". TV Guide.
- Stack, Peter (August 17, 1996). "FILM REVIEW -- Bordello of Blood". San Francisco Chronicle. Retrieved 2018-07-03.
- Gelder, Lawrence (August 16, 1996). "Blood And Guts, And Blood, And Blood". The New York Times.
- Savlov, Marc (August 23, 1996). "Tales From the Crypt Presents Bordello of Blood". Austin Chronicle.
- Matthews, Jack (August 16, 1996). "Bordello' a Bloody Good Vehicle for Dennis Miller". Los Angeles Times.
- "Bordello Review". JoBlo.com.
- "Tales from the Crypt Presents Bordello of Blood (1996)". Rotten Tomatoes. Retrieved 2016-03-09.