| The Frighteners | |
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Theatrical poster for The Frighteners |
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| Directed by | Peter Jackson |
| Produced by | Robert Zemeckis |
| Written by | Fran Walsh Peter Jackson |
| Starring | Michael J. Fox Trini Alvarado John Astin Jeffrey Combs Dee Wallace-Stone Jake Busey Chi McBride |
| Music by | Danny Elfman |
| Cinematography | John Blick Alun Bollinger |
| Editing by | Jamie Selkirk |
| Distributed by | Universal Pictures |
| Release date(s) | July 19, 1996 |
| Running time | Theatrical: 110 min. Director's Cut: 122 min. |
| Country | New Zealand U.S. |
| Language | English |
The Frighteners is a 1996 comedy/horror film directed by Peter Jackson about a psychic private detective who stands in the way of a murderous Grim Reaper-like creature. As with his later films, Jackson filmed the movie in his home country, New Zealand on location in Lyttelton and Governor's Bay. Released on July 19, 1996, the film earned $16 million at the U.S. box office. The film was originally intended to be a Tales from the Crypt episode, (which Robert Zemeckis also executive produced), but the "Tales from the Crypt" marquee was removed during development and expanded into a feature length film.[1]
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The film starts with a panicked girl named Patricia Bradley running from a ghost seen through the shape of walls. She is saved when her mother appears and shoots at the Grim Reaper-like ghost. The movie then shifts to the story of Frank Bannister. After losing his wife, Bannister (Michael J. Fox) gave up his job as an architect, letting his unfinished "dream house" sit incomplete for years. Following his wife's death, Bannister gains the power to see ghosts and puts this skill to use by befriending three ghosts named Cyrus (a 1970s individual), Stewart (a nerd, presumably from the 1950s) and The Judge (an Old West gunslinger) and getting them to haunt houses in the area to drum up work for his ghostbusting business; Frank then proceeds to "exorcise" the houses for a fee ( One of these houses is that of Dr. Lucy Lynskey and her husband) however, he is seen around town as a conman. Frank later discovers that the husband of Lucy has been killed and an encounter with his ghost leads him to discover that an entity resembling the Grim Reaper is killing people, marking numbers on their forehead beforehand. Frank tries to help the people whom the Reaper is after. His motivation was that his wife was found dead after the car crash with a similar (lower) number carved into her forehead. Sure that they are connected, Frank decides to hunt down and discover the identity of the killer. Because he can see the numbers ahead of time, Frank can foretell the murders, but this puts him under suspicion by the police, and an eccentric FBI agent named Milton Dammers (Jeffrey Combs). He tries to stop the murder of the Reaper latest target, but ends up with Judge getting 'killed' by the grim reaper after (along with with Cyrus and Stewart) trying to help Frank get away from the police and the reaper, and Frank getting the blame for the death of the person he was trying to save, being subsquently arrested.
In prison, after Frank is interrogated by Dammers, Lucy pays Frank a visit, however it is then revealed that Lucy is the reaper's next target. In trying to stop the Reaper Cyrus and Stewart attempt to fight it off but then winding up with Stewart getting 'killed'. After breaking out Cyrus, upset by the death of his friend sacrifices himself in order for Frank and Lucy to get away. Frustrated by his inability to fight the reaper Frank attempts to kill himself to do so. However Lucy gets him to instead go to the freezing works so that he can be brought back.
Upon confronting the Reaper Frank discovers that the killer is the ghost of Johnny Bartlett. In life, Bartlett was crazy about being a prolific serial killer and murdered twelve people in a mental hospital with the assistance of Patricia, who was Bartlett's under aged girlfriend and daughter of the Director of the Hospital. The two were arrested and tried: Patricia was sent to prison on suspicion despite maintaining her innocence, but eventually released to live with her overbearing mother under careful observation, while Bartlett received the electric chair, just after shouting that he killed "one more than Starkweather." Using Barletts Scythe against him, Frank rids Charlie of his Reaper form but before he can do anything else he is forced back into his body.
After learning the identity of the Reaper, Lucy worries that Patricia will become one of Johnny's targets. She enters the house, however makes a terrifying discovery: Patricia, who did aid Bartlett in the original murders, is still working with Bartlett's ghost. Patricia kills her mother and tries to kill Lucy, but Frank saves her and the two flee, stealing Bartlett's ashes from Patricia's room. Hoping to take the ashes to holy ground, they run for the chapel of an abandoned hospital to send Bartlett to Hell. Frank's powers help him realise that this was the hospital where the original crimes were committed through visions from the past. Unfortunately, the ashes are released by Dammers (whose is subsequently blasted with a shotgun by Patricia). Bartlett and Patricia hunt down Frank and Lucy. It is then that Frank makes sense of his repressed memories about the car crash that killed his wife. Bartlett, it seems, drove the two off the road and killed Frank's wife, Debra, then Patricia used Frank's box knife to cut the number into her forehead. The two kill Frank by strangling him, however, Frank's ghost seizes Patricia's spirit and drags her up towards Heaven with him, with Bartlett in hot pursuit. When they arrive, both Bartlett and Patricia are sent down to Hell, while Frank, after meeting Debra's spirit (as well as Cyrus and Stewart, implying that Barlett 'forced' them up to heaven by destroying their ghost forms), is told it is not yet his time and is sent back to earth. He and Lucy fall in love. After this, due to the traumatic experience the two went through, it is revealed that Lucy can see the ghosts too- including a very displeased Dammers, evidently assigned as a guardian angel to the local sheriff - and Frank goes back to being an architect, demolishing the dream house that he never finished for his wife and building a life with Lucy.
The film's digital special effects were innovative at the time of its release. The museum in the film was, at that time, the National Museum of New Zealand.
One of the ghost characters is played by John Astin, most recognizable on The Addams Family as Gomez Addams, the macabre head of the family. His stepson, Sean Astin, stars in the The Lord of the Rings film trilogy as Samwise Gamgee. In his book There and Back Again: An Actor's Tale, Sean Astin cites his father's enthusiasm for working with Peter Jackson as the chief reason for his auditioning for the role.
R. Lee Ermey, playing the ghost of Sergeant Hiles, virtually reprises (not for the first time) his role from Stanley Kubrick's Full Metal Jacket.
In 1998, Jackson commissioned Universal Studios home video to release a laserdisc special edition of the film (with a 4 1/2 hour documentary) as well as a standard edition DVD. Some collectors have spent up to $500 to get a copy of the out-of-print laserdisc special edition on eBay.
A Director's Cut Edition DVD was released in December 2005, to coincide with the release of Jackson's film King Kong. This edition included the 4 1/2 hour documentary and feature commentary of the laserdisc version, as well as a short introduction by Jackson recorded for the DVD. The Director's Cut DVD set is available in Regions 1, 2, 4, and 5. An HD DVD edition of the Director's Cut was also made available prior to the ending of HD DVD production and has been made available in the fire sales with exactly the same features as the Director's Cut DVD.
Despite numerous attempts by Peter Jackson to achieve a PG-13 rating, the MPAA granted The Frighteners an R rating for terror violence. The MPAA was particularly perplexed by the film's shift in tone from wild comedy to gory thriller. Jackson felt this decision was unfair, as he always intended the film to be a PG-13. Because of this, the film lost much of its potential audience.
The film's box office response was disappointing. The majority of people involved felt this was due to the film's rating, even though it was generally billed as a youth-friendly supernatural comedy in the vein of Beetlejuice or Ghostbusters. Despite this, the film garnered mostly positive reviews, maintaining a 68% Fresh Rating on rottentomatoes.com. It has gone on to gain considerable success on Laserdisc, VHS and later DVD due to a cult following amongst horror enthusiasts and Peter Jackson fans.
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