Notes For September 18th, 2024
This Day In Literary History
On September 18th, 1987, Hellraiser, a feature film adaptation of the classic horror novella The Hellbound Heart by Clive Barker, was released to theaters.
The movie was written and directed by Clive Barker himself - the first time that the popular English horror novelist ventured into filmmaking. It was not the first time that Barker's writings were adapted for the screen.
His short stories Transmutations and Rawhead Rex were adapted as feature films in 1985 and 1986, respectively. Barker hated both movies, which is why he decided to write and direct the next film adaptation himself.
Hellraiser opens with Frank (Sean Chapman), a hedonistic adventurer always in search of new sexual thrills, buying a mysterious antique Chinese puzzle box in an unnamed third world country. It's not really Chinese; it's a diabolical object called the Lament Configuration that opens a door to another dimension.
Back home in England, Frank solves the puzzle. Chains with small hooks on them fly out of the box and tear into Frank's flesh, then tear him apart as three demonic beings called Cenobites cross over from their hellish dimension and into ours.
The Cenobites examine Frank's remains, after which, the leader, Pinhead, (Doug Bradley) picks up the puzzle box and closes it. The room returns to normal. Later, Frank's brother Larry (Andrew Robinson) moves into Frank's house, along with his wife, Julia (Clare Higgins).
They don't know what happened to Frank - they think he's off on another one of his adventures. When Larry enters the upstairs room where Frank was killed, he cuts his hand and some of his blood drips onto the floor - and mysteriously disappears into the floorboards.
This allows Frank's tortured soul to partially regenerate his body. He appears to Julia, with whom he once had an affair, and convinces her to help him complete the regeneration of his body so he can escape from the Cenobites, breaking the deal he made with them.
Soon, Julia is luring men up to the attic on the pretense of sex, where Frank drains them of their blood, which he uses to regenerate his body. He tells Julia about the Lament Configuration and how it allows the Cenobites to cross over from their world into ours.
Soon, Frank, Julia, and Frank's teenage niece Kirsty (Ashley Laurence) all run afoul of the demonic Cenobites, who believe that the extremes of pleasure and pain are inseparable - and are more than happy to introduce the trio to the pleasures of pain.
When Hellraiser was completed, in order to avoid an X rating, the MPAA ratings panel required Clive Barker to trim some of the gore and tone down the overall sadomasochistic theme of the movie.
Some of the cuts would later be restored without resulting in the loss of the film's R rating. The movie's first working title was Sadomasochists From Beyond The Grave.
Hellraiser became a huge box office hit, grossing twenty times its budget. Rightfully considered one of the great cult classic horror films, it inspired numerous sequels and made English actor Doug Bradley, who plays Pinhead, a cult film icon.
The Cenobite leader was not called Pinhead in the novella or in the screenplay. In the book, he's referred to as "the Hell Priest." In the screenplay, he has no name. He was nicknamed Pinhead by the crew and fans because his head and face were pierced by metal pins. The nickname stuck and was used in the sequels.
Clive Barker would write and direct more film adaptations of his works, including Nightbreed (1990) and Lord of Illusions (1995).
In 2011, Barker was supposed to write and direct a remake of Hellraiser for Dimension Films, which owned the film rights to the Hellraiser franchise. Unfortunately, the project fell through.
When Dimension Films realized that their contract with Clive Barker stipulated that they would lose the rights to the Hellraiser franchise if they didn't produce the movie, they rushed a film into production on a tiny budget of $300,000.
Barker wanted nothing to do with the film, Hellraiser: Revelations, a sequel to Hellraiser: Hellworld (2005). After the advertising claimed it was "from the mind of Clive Barker," the angry writer referred to it as "no child of mine" in a profanity laced tweet.
Hellraiser: Revelations was the first film to not star Doug Bradley as the iconic Pinhead. Bradley tweeted that he backed out because the script read like an unrevised first draft (it was, and there would be no revisions) and his salary would be about, in his words, "the price of a fridge."
Stephan Smith Collins was cast as Pinhead in Hellraiser: Revelations, which is considered by many to be the worst film in the popular series. Despite backlash from fans and critics, another installment of the series was released seven years later so Dimension could keep the film rights.
The role of Pinhead in Hellraiser: Judgement (2018) was again offered to Doug Bradley, but he turned it down when he learned that he would have to sign a non-disclosure agreement just to read the script, to prevent him from publicly expressing any displeasure he might have with it.
This time, Bradley was replaced by a newcomer, Paul T. Taylor, who had impressed writer-director Gary J. Tunnicliffe. Together, they decided to give Pinhead a new look and a new interpretation. Here, he works for Hell as a harvester of condemned souls.
The movie opens with Pinhead and the Auditor of the Stygian Inquisition discussing updating their methods in the age of advanced human technology. Meanwhile on Earth, three police detectives - Sean Carter, his brother David, and Christine Egerton - are investigating a brutal serial killer.
The killer is called The Preceptor because he murders his victims based on the Ten Commandments. As the body count continues, David Carter follows the clues and is stunned to discover that Sean, his brother and fellow detective, is the Preceptor.
Sean is caught by Pinhead first, and finds himself in Hell. He escapes, stealing the Lament Configuration, which he plans to use to sic the Cenobites on his wife and his brother in retribution for their affair...
Despite the studio toning down some of the gore and sexual content, Hellraiser: Judgement was surprisingly well received by fans and critics, with Dread Central horror film critic Steve Barton saying:
Hellraiser: Judgment's biggest accomplishment is that it's actually good. All of the acting is solid, as is the story. Pinhead is omnipresent, and Taylor delivers a worthy performance and is every bit as majestic as you'd hope he'd be... while not perfect nor as good as the classic Hellraiser films, [it] delivers a rather striking vision that feels as new as it does familiar.
In April of 2020, preproduction was finally set to begin on a Hellraiser reboot. By December, Clive Barker had regained the U.S. rights to the franchise. The film, produced by the Hulu streaming service, began shooting in Serbia the following year and was released on Hulu in October of 2022.
More faithful to Barker's novella than its predecessors, here Pinhead is referred to as The Priest and played by a woman, Jamie Clayton - a nod to the Cenobite leader's androgyny in the book. The main character, Riley McKendry, is a recovering drug addict struggling to stay clean. She's living with her estranged brother David, his boyfriend Colin, and their roommate, Nora.
Riley and her boyfriend Trevor find the Lament Configuration in an abandoned warehouse. After a fight with David, who accuses her of relapsing, Riley runs off and solves the puzzle box. David tracks her down, cuts himself on the box, and is abducted by the Cenobites.
After discovering that the Lament Configuration was previously owned by hedonistic millionaire Roland Voight, Riley and Trevor visit Voight's abandoned mansion and find his journals. Riley learns the horrifying truth about the puzzle box and the Cenobites - and what she'll have to do to save her brother from eternal torment in Hell...
Stylish and gruesome, the Hellraiser reboot received mostly good reviews from critics and fans and was the most watched movie on all streaming platforms during its first week of release.
Quote Of The Day
"My imagination is my polestar; I steer by that."
- Clive Barker
Vanguard Video
Today's video features a documentary on Hellraiser and the film franchise it spawned. Enjoy!
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