ROANOKE TIMES Copyright (c) 1996, Roanoke Times DATE: Friday, August 23, 1996 TAG: 9608230027 SECTION: EXTRA PAGE: 1 EDITION: METRO DATELINE: NEW YORK SOURCE: DOUGLAS J. ROWE ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER
John Carpenter no longer feels the need to escape typecasting as a horrormeister.
He found it really frustrating when he was younger, he says, ``but I've come to really enjoy who I am and the work I've done. And I'm really proud of my work. That's just maturity.''
Some credit (others blame) the 48-year-old director of ``Escape From New York'' and its newly released sequel ``Escape From L.A.,'' for the slasher movies that lasted for years with sequel upon sequel. His success with ``Halloween'' in 1978 inspired the inevitable imitations - and the movie itself begat four follow-ups. (``Friday the 13th'' had as many as NINE!) Made for $300,000, ``Halloween'' grossed $60 million to $75 million, according to varying accounts.
Carpenter declines to accept either plaudits or indictments.
``I think the slasher movie in its modern form began back in 1960 with a movie called `Psycho,' '' he said during a recent interview. ``The shower scene is one of the most famous scenes in movie history. It's a SLASHING scene, with a knife. And it's very much in-your-face, and shocking at the time. `Halloween' was a movie much more about evil.... There's no blood in `Halloween.' There's nothing on the screen. It's all off-screen; it's what's implied.''
So Carpenter offers no apologies.
``I don't have a problem with slasher movies. I stopped watching them after awhile because it was kind of the same thing over and over again. They got repetitive and boring. The characters were so undifferentiated I didn't care whether anybody survived or not.''
Carpenter, whose work also includes 1980's ``The Fog,'' 1983's ``Christine,'' 1987's ``Prince of Darkness,'' and 1994's ``In The Mouth of Madness,'' maintains that another problem with horror movies is that some moviegoers see them ``as being just a little bit better than pornography.''
Carpenter's admirers point out that pigeonholing him is unfair, too, given that he's directed action films such as ``Assault on Precinct 13,'' (a homage to the Western ``Rio Bravo'' by his favorite director, Howard Hawks); the sweet, science-fiction romance ``Starman,'' starring Jeff Bridges; and the TV movie ``Elvis.'' He also wrote the screenplay for the suspense thriller ``The Eyes of Laura Mars.''
And now, 15 years later, his fans are excited that he's made a follow-up to ``Escape From New York,'' again starring Kurt Russell as the grizzled, one-eyed gunslinger Snake Plissken.
So what took so long?
``Kurt and I had talked about making the sequel back in 1985, but we could never come up with the L.A. we wanted to escape from,'' Carpenter says.
Back in 1981, it was almost too easy to think of the Big Apple as a futuristic penal colony, he says, but Los Angeles typically brought to mind ``palm trees and avocados and sunshine.''
Then came the recent years' mud slides, wildfires, earthquakes and riots, so they started developing a story with the thinking: ``Why do we still live here? Why don't we run away in terror?''
Carpenter and his collaborators came up with a Los Angeles separated from the mainland United States by The Big One and turned into an island prison where ``all the morally guilty people'' are sent.
Made for $50 million (``Escape From New York'' cost $7 million), ``Escape From L.A.'' has much spiffier special effects, and more action than the original.
And the film manages to aim zingers along various parts of the political spectrum, particularly the religious right.
``But we're broad scope,'' Carpenter demurs. ``We get in our digs against the people who don't want you to smoke, or eat red meat. It's the politically correct of both sides. Kurt said, `I don't want to just bash the right; let's bash the left, too. Let's bash them all - all people who wish to take away our freedom and our choices.' So that's what we did.''
Plissken finally lighting up a cigarette - with the not-so-subtle brand name American Spirit - amounts to a transcendent moment in the film.
Carpenter says he's tried to give a couple of his pictures an undercurrent of what he likes to call ``thematic relevance.''
And that's not to be confused with a ``message.'' Anyone with a message should go hold up a sign, he says. ``Movies don't have messages. But what they have is themes that you can work in that resonate with the audience.''
Carpenter, who won an Academy Award for best live action short with ``The Resurrection of Bronco Billy'' (1970), sees his trademark of composing the score for his films as a need growing out of two things his formative years.
He grew up with music all around him in Bowling Green, Ky., since his father was a music professor. And he learned at the University of Southern California film school that whatever you might be working on, ``make it your own, make it your personal movie.'' And composing his music is a way to do that.
His biggest creative disappointment was ``The Thing,'' a remake of another film by idol Hawks. He thought he made a good, scary movie, and it flopped.
``And that bothered me a lot,'' he said. ``It took me a little bit to get over it. But again when you're younger, things bother you more. You get older, you don't worry about them too much. It's just a movie. What the hell! It's not like we're operating on people and saving lives.''
LENGTH: Long : 102 lines ILLUSTRATION: PHOTO: AP. With "Escape from L.A.," director John Carpenterby CNBfinally is giving "Escape from New York" fans the sequel they
wanted. And Kurt Russell is back as Snake Plissken. color.