Misplaced Pages

Eric Red: Difference between revisions

Article snapshot taken from Wikipedia with creative commons attribution-sharealike license. Give it a read and then ask your questions in the chat. We can research this topic together.
Browse history interactively← Previous editNext edit →Content deleted Content addedVisualWikitext
Revision as of 19:33, 6 April 2008 editThoughUnlessUntilWhether (talk | contribs)21 editsm dude you were doing so well- this is the correct version- it was up for months until this am← Previous edit Revision as of 04:40, 7 April 2008 edit undoPolarscribe (talk | contribs)Autopatrolled, Pending changes reviewers, Rollbackers22,997 edits revert insertion of undue weight + unsourced speculation.Next edit →
Line 4: Line 4:


A major studio remake of '']'' was released in 2007, with Red on board as a consultant. A major studio remake of '']'' was released in 2007, with Red on board as a consultant.

== Film discussion ==
Some genre fans see three of Red's films, ''The Hitcher,'' ''Body Parts'' and ''Bad Moon,'' as a "Classic Monsters" series, a discussion which has taken place on various horror-themed message boards. To whit:
*''The Hitcher'' can be seen as a ] analogy, as the lead villain (portrayed by ]) uses a somewhat homoerotic psychological method of seducing the hero character (portrayed by ]) into becoming like him. In vampire mythology, vampires often used seduction to lure victims into receiving their bite, thus turning the victim into a vampire, as well.
*''Body Parts'' can be seen as an analogy for both ] and ]. The story's lead character (portrayed by ]) loses his arm in an auto accident and receives a replacement appendage from an executed serial killer during an experimental surgery. Later, the seemingly executed killer, with support from the doctor who performed the surgery, returns to reclaim the appendages donated to various amputees so that she might stitch him back together from the body parts (a la Frankenstein's monster). After receiving the donated arm the lead character soon begins to suffer nightmarish visions, uncontrolled rage and violent outbursts -- a releasing of his "inner evil," as it were. This would satisfy the same ] aspects of the Mr. Hyde analogy, while the character's profession (a criminal psychologist) would satisfy the Dr. Jekyll aspect.
*''Bad Moon'' is, of the three films, the most straightforward in respect to how it reflects upon the "classic monsters" analogies. The lead character (portrayed by ]) is inherently the same character as played by ] in the original film, ]. Both become victims of their curse when bitten by werewolves, and both struggle to keep their animal urges from surfacing, to little effect. Also worth considering is that that the werewolf legend itself could also be seen as a starting point for Jekyll and Hyde, as both deal with normally civil people falling victim to their murderous inner demons, whatever the trigger may be.


==Selected filmography== ==Selected filmography==
Line 25: Line 19:


==Fatal car crash== ==Fatal car crash==
Red was determined to be at fault in a car accident that caused two deaths on ], ]. No criminal charges were brought, but a jury in a civil suit found that he had acted intentionally. The suit, which awarded over a million dollars to the families of the two men killed in the accident, was appealed to state and federal courts which confirmed the original jury finding.<ref> - Death Race</ref>

On ], ], Red was involved in an automobile collision on ] in ]. Red, driving a ], hit the back of a stopped ] at a red light. When the Honda's driver, Kenny Hughes, got out to speak to Red, the Jeep began driving forward, propelling the damaged car into the intersection. Because Hughes had set his ] before he got out, the Honda's passenger (Hughes's girlfriend, Aine Behan), was able to escape. The Jeep then crossed Wilshire and crashed through the window of a ] bar. One patron, 34 year old Noah Baum<ref> - with links to stories about the crash</ref>, was fatally crushed against the bar by the Jeep. Another, 26 year old David Roos, suffered massive internal injuries and died the following day. There were few indications that the Jeep had braked at any point, and Red seemed lucid immediately afterward, but then tried to commit ] at the scene, and has since claimed to have suffered a ]. ] authorities ultimately declined to file criminal charges against Red, but Red's driver's license was automatically suspended by the DMV<ref></ref>. Although Red tried to discharge his responsibility for the crash by filing for bankruptcy in Texas, the federal bankruptcy judge determined that Red acted intentionally in driving into the pub "in a fit of uncontrollable rage," causing the deaths of the two men<ref></ref>. A Santa Monica jury thereafter awarded over a million dollars to the families of the two deceased young men, although Red has refused to pay the judgment. The finding that Red had acted intentionally was confirmed in both federal <ref></ref> and state courts of appeal<ref></ref><ref> - Death Race</ref>.


==References== ==References==

Revision as of 04:40, 7 April 2008

Eric Red (born Eric Joseph Durdaller on February 16, 1961, in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania) is a screenwriter and director, best known for writing the horror classics The Hitcher and Near Dark.

Red attended the AFI Conservatory and graduated in 1983. His thesis script, The Hitcher, was produced in 1986, and is considered a cult-horror classic.

A major studio remake of The Hitcher was released in 2007, with Red on board as a consultant.

Selected filmography

Fatal car crash

Red was determined to be at fault in a car accident that caused two deaths on May 31, 2000. No criminal charges were brought, but a jury in a civil suit found that he had acted intentionally. The suit, which awarded over a million dollars to the families of the two men killed in the accident, was appealed to state and federal courts which confirmed the original jury finding.

References

  1. LA Weekly story - Death Race

External links

Categories: