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Straight to Hell

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Expand view Topic review: Straight to Hell

  • Quote coxe

Re: Straight to Hell

Post by coxe Fri Dec 02, 2011 5:05 pm

ALEX COX (Repo Man, Sid and Nancy) comes to Dallas for a two-night stand. He will screen an original 35-mm print of Walker (1987, 95 mins., R) on Dec. 1 at 7:45 p.m., and he will present Highway Patrolman (1991, 104 mins., not rated) followed by a restored 35-mm print of Straight to Hell Returns (2010 director’s cut of 1987 movie, 91 mins., R) on Dec. 2 starting at 7:45 p.m. A Q&A will follow each screening at the Texas Theatre, 231 W. Jefferson Blvd. in Oak Cliff, Dallas. $7.75-$9 per film; $14-$15.50 for double feature. 214-948-1546. thetexastheatre.com.
ALEX COX (Repo Man, Sid and Nancy) comes to Dallas for a two-night stand. He will screen an original 35-mm print of Walker (1987, 95 mins., R) on Dec. 1 at 7:45 p.m., and he will present Highway Patrolman (1991, 104 mins., not rated) followed by a restored 35-mm print of Straight to Hell Returns (2010 director’s cut of 1987 movie, 91 mins., R) on Dec. 2 starting at 7:45 p.m. A Q&A will follow each screening at the Texas Theatre, 231 W. Jefferson Blvd. in Oak Cliff, Dallas. $7.75-$9 per film; $14-$15.50 for double feature. 214-948-1546. thetexastheatre.com.
  • Quote RoddyRuddy

Re: Straight to Hell

Post by RoddyRuddy Sat Nov 26, 2011 3:31 pm

http://press-street.com/scumbag-cinema- ... t-to-hell/
Scumbag Cinema – Hated! & Straight to Hell
Film Screening: 9:00pm Wednesday, December 7, 2011
Location: Press Street's Antenna Gallery - 3161 Burgundy Street, New Orleans, LA 70117
.Admission FREE
http://press-street.com/scumbag-cinema-hated-straight-to-hell/
Scumbag Cinema – Hated! & Straight to Hell
Film Screening: 9:00pm Wednesday, December 7, 2011
Location: Press Street's Antenna Gallery - 3161 Burgundy Street, New Orleans, LA 70117
.Admission FREE
  • Quote RoddyRuddy

Re: Straight to Hell

Post by RoddyRuddy Sun Oct 30, 2011 7:53 pm

Now Showing
http://projectionbooth.moonfruit.com
http://www.nowtoronto.com/movies/repcinema.cfm

The Projection Booth

1035 gerrard e. 416-466-3636, projectionbooth.ca

Thu 27 - City Of Life And Death (2009) D: Lu Chuan. 9 pm.
Fri 28 - Straight To Hell Returns (2010) D: Alex Cox. 6:30 pm. Grinderhouse Halloween Party including screenings: Bong Of The Dead (2011) D: Thomas Newman. 8:30 pm. The Millennium Bug (2011) D: Kenneth Cran. 10:30 pm.
Sat 29 - Cartoons. 10 am. Bong Of The Dead. 5 pm. Straight To Hell Returns. 7 pm. Autumn (2011) D: Steven Rumbelow. 9 pm.
sun 30 - Cartoons. 10 am. The Millennium Bug. 5 pm. Straight To Hell Returns. 7 pm. Bong Of The Dead. 9 pm.
mon 31 - Carry On Screaming! (1966) D: Gerald Thomas. 7 pm. Straight To Hell Returns. 9 pm.
Tue 1 - The Millennium Bug. 7 pm. Straight To Hell Returns. 9 pm.
Wed 2 - Son Of The Sunshine (2009) D: Ryan Ward. Discussion with director to follow screening. 9 pm.
http://www.nowtoronto.com/movies/repcinema.cfm
http://www.nowtoronto.com/movies/story. ... ent=183397
Now Showing
http://projectionbooth.moonfruit.com
http://www.nowtoronto.com/movies/repcinema.cfm

The Projection Booth

1035 gerrard e. 416-466-3636, projectionbooth.ca

Thu 27 - City Of Life And Death (2009) D: Lu Chuan. 9 pm.
Fri 28 - Straight To Hell Returns (2010) D: Alex Cox. 6:30 pm. Grinderhouse Halloween Party including screenings: Bong Of The Dead (2011) D: Thomas Newman. 8:30 pm. The Millennium Bug (2011) D: Kenneth Cran. 10:30 pm.
Sat 29 - Cartoons. 10 am. Bong Of The Dead. 5 pm. Straight To Hell Returns. 7 pm. Autumn (2011) D: Steven Rumbelow. 9 pm.
sun 30 - Cartoons. 10 am. The Millennium Bug. 5 pm. Straight To Hell Returns. 7 pm. Bong Of The Dead. 9 pm.
mon 31 - Carry On Screaming! (1966) D: Gerald Thomas. 7 pm. Straight To Hell Returns. 9 pm.
Tue 1 - The Millennium Bug. 7 pm. Straight To Hell Returns. 9 pm.
Wed 2 - Son Of The Sunshine (2009) D: Ryan Ward. Discussion with director to follow screening. 9 pm.
http://www.nowtoronto.com/movies/repcinema.cfm
http://www.nowtoronto.com/movies/story.cfm?content=183397
  • Quote RoddyRuddy

Re: Straight to Hell

Post by RoddyRuddy Wed May 18, 2011 3:26 pm

Image
Was the above Returns DVD [not the music cd] ever realeased in region 2 (Eire ,UK, Europe,etc ) format.
Or was it just a USA Region 1 encoding (requires a North American or multi-region DVD player and NTSC compatible TV. )

Have seen the original film Straight To Hell and have video and dvd copies but have never see the revisted "Straight To Hell Returns".The one with extra scenes etc.
[img]http://ecx.images-amazon.com/images/I/5153yF1-A-L._SL500_AA300_.jpg[/img]
Was the above Returns DVD [not the music cd] ever realeased in region 2 (Eire ,UK, Europe,etc ) format.
Or was it just a USA Region 1 encoding (requires a North American or multi-region DVD player and NTSC compatible TV. )

Have seen the original film Straight To Hell and have video and dvd copies but have never see the revisted "Straight To Hell Returns".The one with extra scenes etc.
  • Quote RoddyRuddy

Re: Straight to Hell

Post by RoddyRuddy Sun Mar 27, 2011 8:50 pm

http://www.nypress.com/blog-8378-straig ... x-cox.html

"...New York Press: Tell me about the Straight To Hell Returns. How close is the relationship to Straight To Hell?
Alex Cox: It’s really the same film. It contains additional scenes which weren’t in the original version, because we cut them in the eleventh hour. It has a completely different visual aspect, because the cameraman, Tom Richmond, re-toned the picture, gave it this completely different color cast. It has a new soundtrack, because everything of course has to be 5.1 stereo and the original soundtrack was mono. And it has additional violence, bloodshed, flies and skeletons, all of which were either done digitally or as stop-motion motion animation (you know, like when they move the little puppets one frame at a time)........."
http://www.nypress.com/blog-8378-straight-talk-from-alex-cox.html

"...New York Press: Tell me about the Straight To Hell Returns. How close is the relationship to Straight To Hell?
Alex Cox: It’s really the same film. It contains additional scenes which weren’t in the original version, because we cut them in the eleventh hour. It has a completely different visual aspect, because the cameraman, Tom Richmond, re-toned the picture, gave it this completely different color cast. It has a new soundtrack, because everything of course has to be 5.1 stereo and the original soundtrack was mono. And it has additional violence, bloodshed, flies and skeletons, all of which were either done digitally or as stop-motion motion animation (you know, like when they move the little puppets one frame at a time)........."
  • Quote RoddyRuddy

Re: Straight to Hell Returns

Post by RoddyRuddy Sun Mar 27, 2011 8:44 pm

The film has returned.
"......All to be in theaters again in October and November 2010, and on DVD and download on December 14. This - along with Microcinema's release of SEARCHERS 2.0 - must be the perfect stocking-filler. Oh! And did I mention all the digital violence by Collateral Image, and the dolly tracks, and the new shot of George's shoes?......"

[img]http://www.alexcox.com/images/STHR_screening_Westwood_000.jpg
http://www.alexcox.com/dir_straighttohell.htm[/img]
Imagehttp://www.google.co.uk/url?sa=t&source=news&cd=1&ved=0CCoQqQIwAA&url=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.indiewire.com%2Farticle%2F2011%2F03%2F04%2Falex_cox_straight_to_hell_returns_opens_the_door_to_the_wretched_party&ei=xqGPTZGlFonfsgaD-fjSAw&usg=AFQjCNFOS3o1Sska-q-JtbtUD4rmcvuQCg
The film has returned.
"......All to be in theaters again in October and November 2010, and on DVD and download on December 14. This - along with Microcinema's release of SEARCHERS 2.0 - must be the perfect stocking-filler. Oh! And did I mention all the digital violence by Collateral Image, and the dolly tracks, and the new shot of George's shoes?......"

[img]http://www.alexcox.com/images/STHR_screening_Westwood_000.jpg
http://www.alexcox.com/dir_straighttohell.htm[/img]
[img]http://www.alexcox.com/images/STHR_screening_Westwood_000.jpg[/img]http://www.google.co.uk/url?sa=t&source=news&cd=1&ved=0CCoQqQIwAA&url=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.indiewire.com%2Farticle%2F2011%2F03%2F04%2Falex_cox_straight_to_hell_returns_opens_the_door_to_the_wretched_party&ei=xqGPTZGlFonfsgaD-fjSAw&usg=AFQjCNFOS3o1Sska-q-JtbtUD4rmcvuQCg
  • Quote firehazard

Re: Straight to Hell

Post by firehazard Fri Nov 26, 2010 3:07 pm

Today's Guardian film blog by Danny Leigh:

http://www.guardian.co.uk/film/filmblog ... l-alex-cox

Punks, guns and coffee: why Straight to Hell gives me a thirst for the past
Alex Cox's 1987 spaghetti western homage was loathed on release, but its reissue is a reminder of a bygone counterculture

Nostalgia is a feeling I try to avoid. Even so, I couldn't help a pang while re-acquainting myself with Straight to Hell – director Alex Cox's berserk homage to Sergio Leone made back in distant 1987, a tribute to the spaghetti western so grubby it had blood and pasta sauce down its shirt, which is now the recipient of a polished-up DVD reissue complete with once-deleted scenes restored. It's no one's idea of a lost masterpiece; it's far from its creator's best work; and yet it's still in some small, strange way a landmark.

That said, I think we can be confident there will have been little thought while the film was being made that it would be the subject of critical pondering 23 years later. While occasionally hugely enjoyable, the whole thing is the definition of throwaway, and the plot's portrait of a trio of bank robbers taking refuge in a dusty ghost town is the flimsiest of pretexts for a series of deadpan riffs on guns, caffeine and sexual jealousy. But plot was never the selling point here – that was the then all-conquering Cox, and the cast he assembled in Leone's old Spanish stomping ground of Almería. From his deathless debut Repo Man came the jittery Dick Rude and laconic Sy Richardson, joined by the comebacking Dennis Hopper, a young Courtney Love, and a ragbag of rock stars including Elvis Costello, Shane MacGowan and, in the lead, Joe Strummer.

Written in three days, shot in three weeks and widely loathed on release, the film now reveals what might best be described as a wilful sloppiness. But it's hard not to be charmed by the freewheeling energy and genuine oddball sensibility (for all the bloodshed, the closest thing to foul language is an invitation to "go boil yer 'ead"), while Strummer in particular is unexpectedly great. The result is, if nothing else, an interesting halfway house between the sardonic glee of Repo Man and the Central American odysseys of Walker and Highway Patrolman, three films that provide the bulk of their director's finest moments.

Yet the really striking thing about re-encountering this parched romp in the bitter final weeks of 2010 is the gulf between today and the era from which it sprang – watching it now, it feels as distant as a silent movie. Part of that is probably down to the period being the all-but-forgotten high watermark of Cox's career, his success with 1986's Sid and Nancy meaning he could casually wave away job offers from Hollywood – this time missing the chance to direct Steve Martin in Three Amigos, disappear into the desert to piss about with his friends and have the results released into cinemas worldwide.

But still more anachronistic might be the film's sense of being part of what was, however quaint it sounds, a true counterculture, influenced by and bound up with punk rock. It was a mood expressed in, for instance, the edgiest stretch of Martin Scorsese's career (notably The King of Comedy with its cameo for Strummer and the rest of The Clash and After Hours with its Bad Brains interlude), and the green shoots of an independent-minded new school that included Cox alongside the likes of Jim Jarmusch, Spike Lee and the Coen brothers, still then spiky weirdos rather than literary adapters and remakers for hire.

And if the circumstances of the film being made owed much to such a quintessentially 80s cause as declaring solidarity with the Sandinistas, then it also came out of Cox embracing the role of film-maker as someone who simply hustles up a tiny budget, packs his camera and heads off into the unknown. I know that his funding occasionally came from Universal Studios – but I still can't think of many directors who more deserved the title of guerrilla film-maker, making only the movies he wanted to make on only the terms he felt comfortable with. Whereas now, in some quarters, that phrase has simply come to mean making hugely commercial projects on the cheap – not so terrible an ambition, but not quite the same thing in polarised times like these, when the prime minister's chipper brief for British directors is to help promote UK tourism. Like I say, it's not good to give in to nostalgia. Sometimes, though, it's unavoidable ...
Today's [i]Guardian[/i] film blog by Danny Leigh:

http://www.guardian.co.uk/film/filmblog/2010/nov/26/straight-hell-alex-cox

[b]Punks, guns and coffee: why Straight to Hell gives me a thirst for the past[/b]
[i]Alex Cox's 1987 spaghetti western homage was loathed on release, but its reissue is a reminder of a bygone counterculture
[/i]
Nostalgia is a feeling I try to avoid. Even so, I couldn't help a pang while re-acquainting myself with Straight to Hell – director Alex Cox's berserk homage to Sergio Leone made back in distant 1987, a tribute to the spaghetti western so grubby it had blood and pasta sauce down its shirt, which is now the recipient of a polished-up DVD reissue complete with once-deleted scenes restored. It's no one's idea of a lost masterpiece; it's far from its creator's best work; and yet it's still in some small, strange way a landmark.

That said, I think we can be confident there will have been little thought while the film was being made that it would be the subject of critical pondering 23 years later. While occasionally hugely enjoyable, the whole thing is the definition of throwaway, and the plot's portrait of a trio of bank robbers taking refuge in a dusty ghost town is the flimsiest of pretexts for a series of deadpan riffs on guns, caffeine and sexual jealousy. But plot was never the selling point here – that was the then all-conquering Cox, and the cast he assembled in Leone's old Spanish stomping ground of Almería. From his deathless debut Repo Man came the jittery Dick Rude and laconic Sy Richardson, joined by the comebacking Dennis Hopper, a young Courtney Love, and a ragbag of rock stars including Elvis Costello, Shane MacGowan and, in the lead, Joe Strummer.

Written in three days, shot in three weeks and widely loathed on release, the film now reveals what might best be described as a wilful sloppiness. But it's hard not to be charmed by the freewheeling energy and genuine oddball sensibility (for all the bloodshed, the closest thing to foul language is an invitation to "go boil yer 'ead"), while Strummer in particular is unexpectedly great. The result is, if nothing else, an interesting halfway house between the sardonic glee of Repo Man and the Central American odysseys of Walker and Highway Patrolman, three films that provide the bulk of their director's finest moments.

Yet the really striking thing about re-encountering this parched romp in the bitter final weeks of 2010 is the gulf between today and the era from which it sprang – watching it now, it feels as distant as a silent movie. Part of that is probably down to the period being the all-but-forgotten high watermark of Cox's career, his success with 1986's Sid and Nancy meaning he could casually wave away job offers from Hollywood – this time missing the chance to direct Steve Martin in Three Amigos, disappear into the desert to piss about with his friends and have the results released into cinemas worldwide.

But still more anachronistic might be the film's sense of being part of what was, however quaint it sounds, a true counterculture, influenced by and bound up with punk rock. It was a mood expressed in, for instance, the edgiest stretch of Martin Scorsese's career (notably The King of Comedy with its cameo for Strummer and the rest of The Clash and After Hours with its Bad Brains interlude), and the green shoots of an independent-minded new school that included Cox alongside the likes of Jim Jarmusch, Spike Lee and the Coen brothers, still then spiky weirdos rather than literary adapters and remakers for hire.

And if the circumstances of the film being made owed much to such a quintessentially 80s cause as declaring solidarity with the Sandinistas, then it also came out of Cox embracing the role of film-maker as someone who simply hustles up a tiny budget, packs his camera and heads off into the unknown. I know that his funding occasionally came from Universal Studios – but I still can't think of many directors who more deserved the title of guerrilla film-maker, making only the movies he wanted to make on only the terms he felt comfortable with. Whereas now, in some quarters, that phrase has simply come to mean making hugely commercial projects on the cheap – not so terrible an ambition, but not quite the same thing in polarised times like these, when the prime minister's chipper brief for British directors is to help promote UK tourism. Like I say, it's not good to give in to nostalgia. Sometimes, though, it's unavoidable ...
  • Quote johnfoyle

Re: Straight to Hell

Post by johnfoyle Mon Nov 15, 2010 10:44 pm

http://www.latimes.com/entertainment/ne ... 9562.story

Image
Jennifer Balgobin, left, Sue Kiel, Cait O’Riordan and Kathy Burke play the gun-toting women of Blanco Town in "Straight to Hell." (UCLA Film & Television Archive, UCLA Film & Television Archive )

By Mark Olsen, Special to the Los Angeles Times

November 15, 2010


There was a time in the mid-1980s when filmmaker Alex Cox would have been considered on par with such contemporaries as Jim Jarmusch, Gus Van Sant and David Lynch at the forefront of the ascendant notion of "independent film." Coming off the critical successes of "Repo Man" and "Sid and Nancy," Cox stood to bring a punk-inflected sensibility of subversive smarts to a broader audience.

Then he made the one-two punch of "Straight to Hell" and "Walker," both released in 1987, two unapologetically political, inside-out genre pastiches. "Straight to Hell," in particular, was a flaky, sweat-stained take on spaghetti westerns, hitman pictures and corporate intrigue that featured a catch-all cast of actors, friends and rock 'n' rollers.

"My career in features, I started out working for Universal and I ended up working for Roger Corman," said the English-born Cox, 55, during a recent phone call from his home in Ashland, Ore. "It's supposed to go the other way."



Film screenings

A new version of "Straight to Hell," dubbed "Straight to Hell Returns" — which screens Friday at the UCLA Film and Television Archive, where Cox is scheduled to appear in person — might help the movie finally get the reappraisal it has long deserved. This new cut is 41/2 minutes longer, with a few deleted scenes added back in — including a hilarious bit with a bound Elvis Costello being slapped silly by a roomful of women — some newly created animation and insert shots, a new sound mix and a digitally revised color scheme overseen by the film's original cinematographer, Tom Richmond.

Also screening over the weekend is 1986's "Sid and Nancy," which turned the doomed tale of Sex Pistols bass player Sid Vicious and his girlfriend Nancy Spungen (played with incendiary power by Gary Oldman and Chloe Webb) into something of a tragic romance, and "Highway Patrolman," Cox's Spanish-language 1991 story of a Mexican cop.

Shannon Kelley, head of public programming at the UCLA archive, noted that not only is Cox a graduate of UCLA's film program but also that the original elements used for "Straight to Hell Returns" were discovered at the school's archive.

"It's a nice chance to first of all salute a career like Alex Cox's and the conviction behind it," said Kelly, "but also to remind ourselves that it was fostered at this institution."

Shot in Almería, Spain, on locations actually used for classic spaghetti westerns, the film features the Clash's Joe Strummer, Costello, members of the Pogues and a young, chubby-cheeked Courtney Love as an odd assortment of killers, bandits and sidekicks. It's dotted with faces that have gone on to be familiar character actors, including Xander Berkeley, Miguel Sandoval and Sy Richardson, and there are cameos by Dennis Hopper, Grace Jones and Jim Jarmusch. British actress Kathy Burke and future director Sara Sugarman can also be seen in small roles.

Producer Eric Fellner has gone on to be part of the successful production company Working Title Films.

"It's densed up over the years," Cox noted of how the film arguably plays better today than when it was originally released. "Partially, there's a nostalgia aspect to it because some of the people who were in it aren't around anymore. I also think it's gotten better, with all the weird stuff we've just done to the film. Some films you can improve and other films — you couldn't really go and do a 'Citizen Kane' redux, that wouldn't make it any better."

Offbeat origins

The new version had its debut in San Francisco on Halloween and is making a small theatrical rollout at festivals and art houses across the country before being released on DVD in December.

The original "Straight to Hell" sprang from origins as offbeat as the story it tells. When Cox couldn't fund his initial plan of taking Costello, Strummer and the Pogues on a rock 'n' roll tour of war-torn Nicaragua in support of the Sandinista rebels — "Big media corporations do not support revolutionary movements in the Third World," noted Cox — he decided to shoot a feature film in the same period of time the musicians already had blocked off.

A script was quickly prepared, everyone decamped to Spain, and the film was shot in four weeks.

The response to the movie on its initial release in summer 1987 — with a local premiere at a Burbank drive-in — was largely one of derision and dismissal. "It's going straight to nowhere," proclaimed Variety, while the New York Times called it "a mildly engrossing, instantly forgettable midnight movie."

'Badge of honor'

Dick Rude, cowriter and costar of the film, specifically remembers that when "Straight to Hell" made a list of the worst films of the year in the Los Angeles Times, "I was so proud. It was such a badge of honor to me. That meant I succeeded in making people feel something. And it served as a paradigm for years after that when people would write about other films — 'this is almost as bad as 'Straight to Hell.'"

Since "Straight to Hell" and the follow-up film "Walker" — a historical story in Nicaragua filled with purposeful anachronisms — Cox has remained extremely prolific, though off the radar of the Hollywood industry. He hosted the British television show "Moviedrome" for seven years and has continued to make features such as "Death and the Compass," "Three Businessmen," "Revengers Tragedy" and "Searchers 2.0."

Cox is heartened that "Straight to Hell Returns" could receive some retroactive appreciation.

"It's a bizarre fusion of its time and right now," said Cox. "It has become the film that it should have been."

calendar@latimes.com
http://www.latimes.com/entertainment/news/la-et-alex-cox-20101115,0,1439562.story

[img]http://www.latimes.com/media/photo/2010-11/57645021.jpg[/img]
Jennifer Balgobin, left, Sue Kiel, [b]Cait O’Riordan [/b]and Kathy Burke play the gun-toting women of Blanco Town in "Straight to Hell." (UCLA Film & Television Archive, UCLA Film & Television Archive )

By Mark Olsen, Special to the Los Angeles Times

November 15, 2010


There was a time in the mid-1980s when filmmaker Alex Cox would have been considered on par with such contemporaries as Jim Jarmusch, Gus Van Sant and David Lynch at the forefront of the ascendant notion of "independent film." Coming off the critical successes of "Repo Man" and "Sid and Nancy," Cox stood to bring a punk-inflected sensibility of subversive smarts to a broader audience.

Then he made the one-two punch of "Straight to Hell" and "Walker," both released in 1987, two unapologetically political, inside-out genre pastiches. "Straight to Hell," in particular, was a flaky, sweat-stained take on spaghetti westerns, hitman pictures and corporate intrigue that featured a catch-all cast of actors, friends and rock 'n' rollers.

"My career in features, I started out working for Universal and I ended up working for Roger Corman," said the English-born Cox, 55, during a recent phone call from his home in Ashland, Ore. "It's supposed to go the other way."



Film screenings

A new version of "Straight to Hell," dubbed "Straight to Hell Returns" — which screens Friday at the UCLA Film and Television Archive, where Cox is scheduled to appear in person — might help the movie finally get the reappraisal it has long deserved. This new cut is 41/2 minutes longer, with a few deleted scenes added back in [b]— including a hilarious bit with a bound Elvis Costello being slapped silly by a roomful of women —[/b] some newly created animation and insert shots, a new sound mix and a digitally revised color scheme overseen by the film's original cinematographer, Tom Richmond.

Also screening over the weekend is 1986's "Sid and Nancy," which turned the doomed tale of Sex Pistols bass player Sid Vicious and his girlfriend Nancy Spungen (played with incendiary power by Gary Oldman and Chloe Webb) into something of a tragic romance, and "Highway Patrolman," Cox's Spanish-language 1991 story of a Mexican cop.

Shannon Kelley, head of public programming at the UCLA archive, noted that not only is Cox a graduate of UCLA's film program but also that the original elements used for "Straight to Hell Returns" were discovered at the school's archive.

"It's a nice chance to first of all salute a career like Alex Cox's and the conviction behind it," said Kelly, "but also to remind ourselves that it was fostered at this institution."

Shot in Almería, Spain, on locations actually used for classic spaghetti westerns, the film features the Clash's Joe Strummer, Costello, members of the Pogues and a young, chubby-cheeked Courtney Love as an odd assortment of killers, bandits and sidekicks. It's dotted with faces that have gone on to be familiar character actors, including Xander Berkeley, Miguel Sandoval and Sy Richardson, and there are cameos by Dennis Hopper, Grace Jones and Jim Jarmusch. British actress Kathy Burke and future director Sara Sugarman can also be seen in small roles.

Producer Eric Fellner has gone on to be part of the successful production company Working Title Films.

"It's densed up over the years," Cox noted of how the film arguably plays better today than when it was originally released. "Partially, there's a nostalgia aspect to it because some of the people who were in it aren't around anymore. I also think it's gotten better, with all the weird stuff we've just done to the film. Some films you can improve and other films — you couldn't really go and do a 'Citizen Kane' redux, that wouldn't make it any better."

Offbeat origins

The new version had its debut in San Francisco on Halloween and is making a small theatrical rollout at festivals and art houses across the country before being released on DVD in December.

The original "Straight to Hell" sprang from origins as offbeat as the story it tells. When Cox couldn't fund his initial plan of taking Costello, Strummer and the Pogues on a rock 'n' roll tour of war-torn Nicaragua in support of the Sandinista rebels — "Big media corporations do not support revolutionary movements in the Third World," noted Cox — he decided to shoot a feature film in the same period of time the musicians already had blocked off.

A script was quickly prepared, everyone decamped to Spain, and the film was shot in four weeks.

The response to the movie on its initial release in summer 1987 — with a local premiere at a Burbank drive-in — was largely one of derision and dismissal. "It's going straight to nowhere," proclaimed Variety, while the New York Times called it "a mildly engrossing, instantly forgettable midnight movie."

'Badge of honor'

Dick Rude, cowriter and costar of the film, specifically remembers that when "Straight to Hell" made a list of the worst films of the year in the Los Angeles Times, "I was so proud. It was such a badge of honor to me. That meant I succeeded in making people feel something. And it served as a paradigm for years after that when people would write about other films — 'this is almost as bad as 'Straight to Hell.'"

Since "Straight to Hell" and the follow-up film "Walker" — a historical story in Nicaragua filled with purposeful anachronisms — Cox has remained extremely prolific, though off the radar of the Hollywood industry. He hosted the British television show "Moviedrome" for seven years and has continued to make features such as "Death and the Compass," "Three Businessmen," "Revengers Tragedy" and "Searchers 2.0."

Cox is heartened that "Straight to Hell Returns" could receive some retroactive appreciation.

"It's a bizarre fusion of its time and right now," said Cox. "It has become the film that it should have been."

calendar@latimes.com
  • Quote cagliostro

Re: Straight to Hell

Post by cagliostro Thu Nov 11, 2010 4:17 pm

Damn damn hell piss and blood. It's not coming anywhere near me. Well, I'll be in line for the DVD then.
Damn damn hell piss and blood. It's not coming anywhere near me. Well, I'll be in line for the DVD then.
  • Quote Cdn Steve

Re: Straight to Hell

Post by Cdn Steve Sun Nov 07, 2010 6:56 pm

I'm in - Vancity Theatre - Vancouver, Nov 13. Any other BC Medusans want to make a night of it?
I'm in - Vancity Theatre - Vancouver, Nov 13. Any other BC Medusans want to make a night of it?
  • Quote philipchevron

Re: Straight to Hell

Post by philipchevron Sun Nov 07, 2010 10:09 am

Actually, it's worth seeing on the big screen, if only for the fabulous cinematography.
Actually, it's worth seeing on the big screen, if only for the fabulous cinematography.
  • Quote johnfoyle

Re: Straight to Hell

Post by johnfoyle Sun Nov 07, 2010 9:51 am

Straight To Hell Returns Trailer

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vxyWxkL5 ... r_embedded


http://seattletimes.nwsource.com/html/m ... ter05.html

Seattle Times

November 5, 2010

(extract)

The Grand Illusion this week presents "Straight to Hell Returns," director Alex Cox's ("Sid & Nancy," "Repo Man") revisiting of his '80s Western parody "Straight to Hell." Cox has added a few effects and an extra 5 or 6 minutes of footage cut from the original version, which stars Sy Richardson, Dick Rude, Dennis Hopper, Joe Strummer, Courtney Love, Elvis Costello and The Pogues. Through Thursday at the Grand Illusion, 1403 N.E. 50th St., Seattle; 206-523-3935 or http://www.grandillusioncinema.org.


http://www.alexcox.com/STH_RETURNS.htm

STRAIGHT TO HELL RETURNS TO THE CINEMA

31 Oct 2010 -- Roxie, San Francisco
1 Nov -- San Rafael Film Center, Mill Valley
3-11 Nov -- Zeitgeist, New Orleans
3 Nov -- Nickelodeon, Portland
5-11 Nov -- Grand Illusion, Seattle
11 Nov -- CCA, Santa Fe, NM
12,13 Nov -- The Guild, Albuquerque, NM
12,13 Nov -- Vancity Theatre, Vancouver
13 Nov -- The Loft, Tucson, AZ
13-17 Nov -- Cinema du Parc, Montreal
19 Nov -- Billy Wilder Theater, Los Angeles
(followed by HIGHWAY PATROLMAN on 20 Nov)
21 Nov -- Movies on a Big Screen, Sacramento
9-15 Dec -- Bijou Art Cinema, Eugene OR
10-16 Dec -- Clinton St Theatre, Portland OR
11 Dec -- Olympia Film Society, Olympia WA
12 Dec -- Pickford Cinema, Bellingham WA
13 Dec -- Grand Cinema, Tacoma WA
6 Jan 2011 -- Times Cinema, Milwaukee
7,8 Jan 2011 -- FilmBar, Phoenix, AZ


http://www.alexcox.com/dir_straighttohell.htm

Alex Cox



WHAT'S UP WITH STRAIGHT TO HELL RETURNS?


It's the result of my watching - in quick succession - the old DVD of STRAIGHT TO HELL, and thinking, oh, I wish we'd had the digital technologies of violence and grotesquesness then (back in 1986, when Courtney was still a baby and Shane an innnocent genius and Strummer resembled the young Michael Caine), followed by the DVD of APOCALYPSE NOW REDUX, which Kim Aubry had very kindly given me, and thinking, wait a minute: it's not too late! Because thanks to the wonderful relationship with Collateral Image, who did the million and one special effects backgrounds for REPO CHICK, and most of that film's model stuff, I realised I DID have access to just those violent and perverse technologies. And this new, longer, crueller 'return' is the result.

HOW DIFFERENT IS THIS RETURN FROM THE ORIGINAL STRAIGHT TO HELL?


There was once a version of STRAIGHT TO HELL which was five or six minutes longer. At the eleventh hour, the producer, the editor and I cut out half a dozen scenes, in a misguided flight cutting room madness, thinking that by making the film shorter we were making it better, by making it go a bit faster we were making it funnier...

We were wrong. Now, fortunately, the UCLA Film and TV Archive has rescued the original Interpositive of the uncut version, the missing scenes are restored, and a new HD master has been created, Dan Wool has recovered the missing audio, Richard Beggs has whipped the picture into aural shape, Tom Richmond and Beau Leon have created a new visual strategy - heavy on the yellows and deep blacks - and Webster Colcord has animated some additional skeletons.

All to be in theaters again in October and November 2010, and on DVD and download before the end of the year.
This - along with Microcinema's release of SEARCHERS 2.0 - must be the perfect stocking-filler. Oh! And did I mention all the digital violence by Collateral Image, and the dolly tracks, and the new shot of George's shoes?


HOW DID STRAIGHT TO HELL HAPPEN?

While we were editing SID & NANCY, Commies From Mars Inc. organized a concert at the Fridge, in Brixton, in support of the FSLN (Sandinista National Liberation Front) in Nicaragua. The Pogues, Elvis Costello, and Joe Strummer played to a full house and we made a couple of thousand quid for the Nicaragua Solidarity Campaign.

Eric Fellner, the producer of SID & NANCY, came up with a grander scheme: since the public clearly loved the musicians and was sympathetic to the Nicaraguan cause, why not organize a rock'n'roll tour of Nicaragua, involving the same guys? Eric figured that a video deal would pay for it, and we persuaded the musicians in question to sign up for a month-long accoustic Nicaragua Solidarity Tour in August 1996. The bands agreed; but, as time went by, we couldn't find a video company that would fund the tour.

WHY NOT?

You know why not. This was the mid 1980s. The Reagan/Thatcher maniac front was working overtime to destroy the Sandinista revolution by any means. Thatcher had even attempted to criminalize the word "Sandinista" -- hence the Clash album of the same name. It would be a mistake to underestimate the power of the punk movement at that time: the Clash, the Jam, the Pistols and their successors were almost the only beachhead many of us had against a tidal wave of reactionary politics. Which put Commies from Mars in a somewhat embarrassing position, having persuaded at least a dozen musicians not to tour or record for the entire month of August. Eric's solution? Make a film instead: as he predicted, it was easier to raise $1m for a low-budget feature starring various musicians than to find $75,000 to film them playing in a revolutionary nation in the middle of a war.

WHAT DO YOU THINK OF STRAIGHT TO HELL?


I think it's very funny. I like that it has no swearing at all (the worst thing anybody says is "Go boil yer 'ead!"). It has great cinemascope compositions by Tom Richmond. And it is completely autobiographical. It has fine performances - Sy Richardson, Fox Harris, Biff Yeager, Miguel Sandoval, Xander Berkeley, Elvis Costello, Jennifer Balgobin, Courtney Love, the list unends. The characters were written for the actors: Courtney was the Spungenesque heroine - a Nancy who was tougher and more together. This was her first leading role, and she acquited herself very well, I thought. It was Sy Richardson's first lead role in a feature, too: now he is a great actor - I've been very fortunate to work with him so many times.

Plus there was a great deal of pleasure attached to being there. In Almeria, in the desert, in midsummer, at night. It's a pleasure I can't explain. There are people who think the desert looks like a slag-heap. That is their point of view. For me the greatest pleasure of STRAIGHT TO HELL was filming in that fantastic, surreal Andalucia landscape -- the desert of LAWRENCE OF ARABIA, THE GOOD, THE BAD & THE UGLY, and FIGURES IN A LANDSCAPE - films with extraordinary locations: the weird, ancient clay and sandstone and volcanic badlands, the huge triangular mountain of El Faro on the horizon. Filming there, and making a homage to the great Spaghetti Westerns -- the Leone films, DJANGO, ¿QUIEN SABE?, HELLBENDERS, and DJANGO KILL.

There is an inexplicable beauty to being on location, to working in Spain, in Mexico, staying in a small country town, walking its streets at night, then rising at dawn and going out to the surrounding desert to film till the last light is gone....

WHY WAS THE REACTION TO THE FILM SO EXTREME?


I don't know. Perhaps it was a little ahead of its time: there was not then a vogue for jokey films about black-suited professional hit-men a la Jean-Pierre Melville. Certainly some people didn't "get it" -- having rigidly observed our "no swearing" rule, we received an R-rating from the American film censors for "strong language."

And there is also an expectation on the part of film critics that a director will follow a certain trajectory. In their hearts critics have this Hollywoodian fantasy: they imagine all directors want to "graduate" into gigantically-budgeted movies full of special effects and petulant stars.. But this trajectory is illusory: it has nothing to do with me. I turned down the opportunity to direct THE THREE AMIGOS and made STRAIGHT TO HELL instead.

DO YOU REGRET THAT?

Not at all. Of course, if I'd done THE THREE AMIGOS I would have earned a lot more money. But that money would be spent by now. I would have had to shoot in the United States, and not in my beloved Almeria. I would essentially have been a hired hand for some comedians from Saturday Night Live. It would not have been a good experience, for them or me. The script had these weird political overtones: it promoted the idea that Americans have the right to intervene in a violent way in foreign countries - for all that it was supposed to be a comedy, it was actually propaganda for the Monroe Doctrine. STRAIGHT TO HELL, for better or worse, is my film, and I like it very much.

DOES STRAIGHT TO HELL HAVE OTHER MERITS, BESIDES THE LOCATIONS?

The music, by Pray For Rain, Strummer, Schloss, The Pogues, and the McManus Gang. And the costumes by Pam Tait. Especially the womens' costumes!

WHAT ABOUT THE RUMOUR THAT SERGIO LEONE WAS INVOLVED IN STRAIGHT TO HELL?

It isn't true. The only spaghetti veterans were Juan Torres, a flamenco singer from the gypsy quarter of Almeria city, and some of the stunt men. But I was told later that Leone saw the film at the Madrid Film Festival, where he was on the jury.

WHAT DID HE THINK OF IT?


I don't know. There was a rumour that we'd won a prize of some kind, but I never heard any more about it. It would be nice to think that the Old Master did see STRAIGHT TO HELL.
Straight To Hell Returns Trailer

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vxyWxkL5hUI&feature=player_embedded


http://seattletimes.nwsource.com/html/movies/2013345518_atatheater05.html

Seattle Times

November 5, 2010

(extract)

[b]The Grand Illusion [/b]this week presents "[b]Straight to Hell Returns," [/b]director Alex Cox's ("Sid & Nancy," "Repo Man") revisiting of his '80s Western parody "Straight to Hell." [b]Cox has added a few effects and an extra 5 or 6 minutes of footage cut from the original version[/b], which stars Sy Richardson, Dick Rude, Dennis Hopper, Joe Strummer, Courtney Love, Elvis Costello and The Pogues. Through Thursday at the Grand Illusion, 1403 N.E. 50th St., Seattle; 206-523-3935 or http://www.grandillusioncinema.org.


http://www.alexcox.com/STH_RETURNS.htm

[b]STRAIGHT TO HELL RETURNS TO THE CINEMA [/b]

31 Oct 2010 -- Roxie, San Francisco
1 Nov -- San Rafael Film Center, Mill Valley
3-11 Nov -- Zeitgeist, New Orleans
3 Nov -- Nickelodeon, Portland
5-11 Nov -- Grand Illusion, Seattle
11 Nov -- CCA, Santa Fe, NM
12,13 Nov -- The Guild, Albuquerque, NM
12,13 Nov -- Vancity Theatre, Vancouver
13 Nov -- The Loft, Tucson, AZ
13-17 Nov -- Cinema du Parc, Montreal
19 Nov -- Billy Wilder Theater, Los Angeles
(followed by HIGHWAY PATROLMAN on 20 Nov)
21 Nov -- Movies on a Big Screen, Sacramento
9-15 Dec -- Bijou Art Cinema, Eugene OR
10-16 Dec -- Clinton St Theatre, Portland OR
11 Dec -- Olympia Film Society, Olympia WA
12 Dec -- Pickford Cinema, Bellingham WA
13 Dec -- Grand Cinema, Tacoma WA
6 Jan 2011 -- Times Cinema, Milwaukee
7,8 Jan 2011 -- FilmBar, Phoenix, AZ


http://www.alexcox.com/dir_straighttohell.htm
[b]
Alex Cox [/b]

[b]
WHAT'S UP WITH STRAIGHT TO HELL RETURNS?[/b]

It's the result of my watching - in quick succession - the old DVD of STRAIGHT TO HELL, and thinking, oh, I wish we'd had the digital technologies of violence and grotesquesness then (back in 1986, when Courtney was still a baby and Shane an innnocent genius and Strummer resembled the young Michael Caine), followed by the DVD of APOCALYPSE NOW REDUX, which Kim Aubry had very kindly given me, and thinking, wait a minute: it's not too late! Because thanks to the wonderful relationship with Collateral Image, who did the million and one special effects backgrounds for REPO CHICK, and most of that film's model stuff, I realised I DID have access to just those violent and perverse technologies. And this new, longer, crueller 'return' is the result.
[b]
HOW DIFFERENT IS THIS RETURN FROM THE ORIGINAL STRAIGHT TO HELL?[/b]

There was once a version of STRAIGHT TO HELL which was five or six minutes longer. At the eleventh hour, the producer, the editor and I cut out half a dozen scenes, in a misguided flight cutting room madness, thinking that by making the film shorter we were making it better, by making it go a bit faster we were making it funnier...

We were wrong. Now, fortunately, the UCLA Film and TV Archive has rescued the original Interpositive of the uncut version, the missing scenes are restored, and a new HD master has been created, Dan Wool has recovered the missing audio, Richard Beggs has whipped the picture into aural shape, Tom Richmond and Beau Leon have created a new visual strategy - heavy on the yellows and deep blacks - and Webster Colcord has animated some additional skeletons.
[b]
All to be in theaters again in October and November 2010, and on DVD and download before the end of the year.[/b] This - along with Microcinema's release of SEARCHERS 2.0 - must be the perfect stocking-filler. Oh! And did I mention all the digital violence by Collateral Image, and the dolly tracks, and the new shot of George's shoes?


[b]HOW DID STRAIGHT TO HELL HAPPEN?[/b]

While we were editing SID & NANCY, Commies From Mars Inc. organized a concert at the Fridge, in Brixton, in support of the FSLN (Sandinista National Liberation Front) in Nicaragua. The Pogues, Elvis Costello, and Joe Strummer played to a full house and we made a couple of thousand quid for the Nicaragua Solidarity Campaign.

Eric Fellner, the producer of SID & NANCY, came up with a grander scheme: since the public clearly loved the musicians and was sympathetic to the Nicaraguan cause, why not organize a rock'n'roll tour of Nicaragua, involving the same guys? Eric figured that a video deal would pay for it, and we persuaded the musicians in question to sign up for a month-long accoustic Nicaragua Solidarity Tour in August 1996. The bands agreed; but, as time went by, we couldn't find a video company that would fund the tour.

[b]WHY NOT?[/b]

You know why not. This was the mid 1980s. The Reagan/Thatcher maniac front was working overtime to destroy the Sandinista revolution by any means. Thatcher had even attempted to criminalize the word "Sandinista" -- hence the Clash album of the same name. It would be a mistake to underestimate the power of the punk movement at that time: the Clash, the Jam, the Pistols and their successors were almost the only beachhead many of us had against a tidal wave of reactionary politics. Which put Commies from Mars in a somewhat embarrassing position, having persuaded at least a dozen musicians not to tour or record for the entire month of August. Eric's solution? Make a film instead: as he predicted, it was easier to raise $1m for a low-budget feature starring various musicians than to find $75,000 to film them playing in a revolutionary nation in the middle of a war.
[b]
WHAT DO YOU THINK OF STRAIGHT TO HELL?[/b]

I think it's very funny. I like that it has no swearing at all (the worst thing anybody says is "Go boil yer 'ead!"). It has great cinemascope compositions by Tom Richmond. And it is completely autobiographical. It has fine performances - Sy Richardson, Fox Harris, Biff Yeager, Miguel Sandoval, Xander Berkeley, Elvis Costello, Jennifer Balgobin, Courtney Love, the list unends. The characters were written for the actors: Courtney was the Spungenesque heroine - a Nancy who was tougher and more together. This was her first leading role, and she acquited herself very well, I thought. It was Sy Richardson's first lead role in a feature, too: now he is a great actor - I've been very fortunate to work with him so many times.

Plus there was a great deal of pleasure attached to being there. In Almeria, in the desert, in midsummer, at night. It's a pleasure I can't explain. There are people who think the desert looks like a slag-heap. That is their point of view. For me the greatest pleasure of STRAIGHT TO HELL was filming in that fantastic, surreal Andalucia landscape -- the desert of LAWRENCE OF ARABIA, THE GOOD, THE BAD & THE UGLY, and FIGURES IN A LANDSCAPE - films with extraordinary locations: the weird, ancient clay and sandstone and volcanic badlands, the huge triangular mountain of El Faro on the horizon. Filming there, and making a homage to the great Spaghetti Westerns -- the Leone films, DJANGO, ¿QUIEN SABE?, HELLBENDERS, and DJANGO KILL.

There is an inexplicable beauty to being on location, to working in Spain, in Mexico, staying in a small country town, walking its streets at night, then rising at dawn and going out to the surrounding desert to film till the last light is gone....
[b]
WHY WAS THE REACTION TO THE FILM SO EXTREME?[/b]

I don't know. Perhaps it was a little ahead of its time: there was not then a vogue for jokey films about black-suited professional hit-men a la Jean-Pierre Melville. Certainly some people didn't "get it" -- having rigidly observed our "no swearing" rule, we received an R-rating from the American film censors for "strong language."

And there is also an expectation on the part of film critics that a director will follow a certain trajectory. In their hearts critics have this Hollywoodian fantasy: they imagine all directors want to "graduate" into gigantically-budgeted movies full of special effects and petulant stars.. But this trajectory is illusory: it has nothing to do with me. I turned down the opportunity to direct THE THREE AMIGOS and made STRAIGHT TO HELL instead.

[b]DO YOU REGRET THAT?[/b]

Not at all. Of course, if I'd done THE THREE AMIGOS I would have earned a lot more money. But that money would be spent by now. I would have had to shoot in the United States, and not in my beloved Almeria. I would essentially have been a hired hand for some comedians from Saturday Night Live. It would not have been a good experience, for them or me. The script had these weird political overtones: it promoted the idea that Americans have the right to intervene in a violent way in foreign countries - for all that it was supposed to be a comedy, it was actually propaganda for the Monroe Doctrine. STRAIGHT TO HELL, for better or worse, is my film, and I like it very much.

[b]DOES STRAIGHT TO HELL HAVE OTHER MERITS, BESIDES THE LOCATIONS?[/b]

The music, by Pray For Rain, Strummer, Schloss, The Pogues, and the McManus Gang. And the costumes by Pam Tait. Especially the womens' costumes!

[b]WHAT ABOUT THE RUMOUR THAT SERGIO LEONE WAS INVOLVED IN STRAIGHT TO HELL?[/b]

It isn't true. The only spaghetti veterans were Juan Torres, a flamenco singer from the gypsy quarter of Almeria city, and some of the stunt men. But I was told later that Leone saw the film at the Madrid Film Festival, where he was on the jury.
[b]
WHAT DID HE THINK OF IT?[/b]

I don't know. There was a rumour that we'd won a prize of some kind, but I never heard any more about it. It would be nice to think that the Old Master did see STRAIGHT TO HELL.
  • Quote MacRua

Re: Straight to Hell

Post by MacRua Wed Apr 02, 2008 11:23 am

DzM wrote:
pogues24 wrote:No that wouldn't be right, Courtney Love must come first

Along with that hell-spawn pillow she's pregnant with.

What a mismanagement! To kill a hen that lays downy pads.. Tut!
I'd better become a proud pillow breeder.. Start my own little business..
[quote="DzM"][quote="pogues24"]No that wouldn't be right, Courtney Love must come first[/quote]
Along with that hell-spawn pillow she's pregnant with.[/quote]
What a mismanagement! To kill a hen that lays downy pads.. Tut!
I'd better become a proud pillow breeder.. Start my own little business..
  • Quote Kriss

Re: Straight to Hell

Post by Kriss Tue Apr 01, 2008 9:18 pm

DzM wrote:
pogues24 wrote:
philipchevron wrote:
Kriss wrote:It's been 4 days now and I still can't get that Weiner kid's song out of my head.

Let's kill him.

No that wouldn't be right, Courtney Love must come first

Along with that hell-spawn pillow she's pregnant with.


The square edges did kind of give it away.
[quote="DzM"][quote="pogues24"][quote="philipchevron"][quote="Kriss"]It's been 4 days now and I still can't get that Weiner kid's song out of my head.[/quote]
Let's kill him.[/quote]
No that wouldn't be right, Courtney Love must come first[/quote]
Along with that hell-spawn pillow she's pregnant with.[/quote]

The square edges did kind of give it away.
  • Quote DzM

Re: Straight to Hell

Post by DzM Tue Apr 01, 2008 8:54 pm

pogues24 wrote:
philipchevron wrote:
Kriss wrote:It's been 4 days now and I still can't get that Weiner kid's song out of my head.

Let's kill him.

No that wouldn't be right, Courtney Love must come first

Along with that hell-spawn pillow she's pregnant with.
[quote="pogues24"][quote="philipchevron"][quote="Kriss"]It's been 4 days now and I still can't get that Weiner kid's song out of my head.[/quote]
Let's kill him.[/quote]
No that wouldn't be right, Courtney Love must come first[/quote]
Along with that hell-spawn pillow she's pregnant with.

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