The Fly (film series)
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The Fly | |
---|---|
Based on | Short story "The Fly" by George Langelaan |
Distributed by | 20th Century Fox |
Release date | 1958–1989 |
Country | United States |
Language | English |
The film series of The Fly is a sequence of science fiction-horror films, consisting of an original series started in 1958 and a remake series made in the 1980s. The first film of the series, The Fly, was produced and distributed by 20th Century Fox in 1958 as a colour film. The two following black and white sequels, Return of the Fly and Curse of the Fly, both produced by Associated Producers, were released in 1959 and 1965 respectively. The original film was remade in 1986, directed by David Cronenberg. The remake film received the Academy Award for Best Makeup in 1987. Its sequel, The Fly II, was released in 1989. All five films within the series were distributed by 20th Century Fox.
Films[]
Film | U.S. release date | Director(s) | Screenwriter(s) | Producer(s) |
---|---|---|---|---|
Original series | ||||
The Fly | July 16, 1958 | Kurt Neumann | James Clavell | Kurt Neumann |
Return of the Fly | July 1959 | Edward Bernds | Edward Bernds | Bernard Glasser |
Curse of the Fly | May 1965 | Don Sharp | Harry Spalding | Robert L. Lippert and Jack Parsons |
Remake series | ||||
The Fly | August 15, 1986 | David Cronenberg | David Cronenberg and Charles Edward Pogue | Stuart Cornfeld |
The Fly II | February 10, 1989 | Chris Walas | Mick Garris, Jim Wheat, Jim Wheat and Frank Darabont | Steven-Charles Jaffe |
Original series (1958–1965)[]
The Fly (1958)[]
The screenplay of the first move is based on a short story of the same name written by George Langelaan in 1957, presenting a scientist, André Delambre (David Hedison), who accidentally mixes his molecules with a fly in an experiment of his new invention, a matter transference device, and therefore transformed into a human-fly hybrid monster, leading to a series of inevitable tragedies.
Return of the Fly (1959)[]
Years after the first movie, Phillipe Delambre (Brett Halsey), the son of the scientist who turned in to human-fly hybrid, has become an adult and decides to complete the work of his deceased father: the experiment on the matter transporter. He hires Alan Hines (David Frankham), who then turns out to be an industrial spy by the name of Ronald Holms, to help with the experiment. As the experiment going on the right track, Ronald's true intention is beginning to be uncovered.
Curse of the Fly (1965)[]
Martin Delambre (George Baker) encounters a beautiful young girl, Patricia Stanley (Carole Gray), one night on his way to Montreal. The loving couple soon get married, but they are both keeping horrible secrets to each other: Patricia was actually escaping from an asylum the night they met; and Martin is secretly experimenting on a teleportation project which has already made considerable victims with his father, Henri Delambre (Brian Donlevy). With Patricia being traced down, secrets of the couple are facing the risk of getting revealed.
Remake series (1986–1989)[]
The Fly (1986)[]
Scientist Seth Brundle (Jeff Goldblum), has successfully invented a teleportation device which can disintegrate matter in one “Telepod” and reintegrate it in another. Journalist Veronica “Ronnie” (Geena Davis) agrees to document Seth's project, and the two become lovers. One night, Seth rashly decides to test the process on himself, but fails to notice a common housefly which has slipped into the transmitter pod with him. The computer becomes confused by the fly's presence, and merges it with Seth at the genetic level. Unaware of the accident, Seth initially believes that his newly-increased strength and energy are a result of the teleportation process purifying and improving his body, but his behavior soon becomes arrogant and violent. Veronica notices the disturbing changes in Seth's personality, whose body begins a prolonged and grotesque process of deteriorating into a human-insect hybrid creature, which Seth dubs “Brundlefly”. Ronnie and the diseased Seth must both cope with the effects of his transformation on their relationship, while Seth desperately searches for a cure before his humanity—and his sanity—completely drain away.
The Fly II (1989)[]
The sequel continues the story, with Veronica Quaife dying in the process of giving birth to Seth Brundle's mutant son. The child, named Martin Brundle (Eric Stoltz), is adopted by Anton Bartok (Lee Richardson), the head of Bartok Industries and sponsor of Seth's experiment. Martin's unique heritage (which he is kept unaware of) results in his suffering from rapid aging, but also provides him with a photographic memory and no need for sleep. Physically a grown adult by his fifth birthday, Martin is given the task of repairing his father's Telepods by Bartok, and also falls in love with Bartok employee Beth Logan (Daphne Zuniga). However, Bartok has ulterior motives for his seeming kindness toward Martin: He intends to use to Telepods’ ability to gene-splice for nefarious purposes, and has been aware from the start that Martin will eventually mutate into a human-fly hybrid creature. Martin and Beth must race against time to escape from Bartok and find a way to cure Martin before he suffers the same grotesque fate as his father.
Cast and characters[]
Characters | Original series | Remake series | |||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
The Fly | Return of the Fly | Curse of the Fly | The Fly | The Fly II | |
1958 | 1959 | 1965 | 1986 | 1989 | |
André Delambre | David Hedison | ||||
Hélène Delambre | Patricia Owens | ||||
François Delambre | Vincent Price | ||||
Inspector Charas | Herbert Marshall | Charles Carson | |||
Emma | Kathleen Freeman | ||||
Nurse Anderson | Betty Lou Gerson | ||||
Philippe Delambre | Charles Herbert | Brett Halsey | |||
Dr. Éjoute | Eugene Borden | ||||
Gaston | Torben Meyer | ||||
Ronald Holmes
/ Alan Hinds |
David Frankham | ||||
Cecile Bonnard | Danielle De Metz | ||||
Inspector Beecham | John Sutton | ||||
Max Barthold | Dan Seymour | ||||
Granville | Jack Daly | ||||
Mme. Bonnard | Janine Grandel | ||||
Gaston | Michael Mark | ||||
Sgt. Dubois | Richard Flato | ||||
Inspector Evans | Pat O'Hara | ||||
The Fly-Creature | Ed Wolff | ||||
Henri Delambre | Brian Donlevy | ||||
Martin Delambre | George Baker | ||||
Patricia Stanley | Carole Gray | ||||
Tai | Burt Kwouk | ||||
Wan | Yvette Rees | ||||
Albert Delambre | Michael Graham | ||||
Judith Delambre | Mary Manson | ||||
Inspector Ronet | Jeremy Wilkins | ||||
Madame Fournier | Rachel Kempson | ||||
Seth Brundle | Jeff Goldblum | Jeff Goldblum (archive footage) | |||
Veronica "Ronnie" Quaife | Geena Davis | Saffron Henderson | |||
Stathis Borans | John Getz | ||||
Tawny | Joy Boushel | ||||
Dr. Brent Cheevers | Leslie Carlson | ||||
Marky | George Chuvalo | ||||
Gynecologist | David Cronenberg | ||||
Martin Brundle | Eric Stoltz
Sterling Cottingham (Newborn) Rodney Clough Jr. (1½ years old) Matthew Moore (Age 4) Harley Cross (age 10) | ||||
Beth Logan | Daphne Zuniga | ||||
Anton Bartok | Lee Richardson | ||||
Dr. Shepard | Frank C. Turner | ||||
Dr. Jainway | Ann Marie Lee | ||||
Scorby | Garry Chalk | ||||
Simms | Jerry Wasserman |
Additional crew and production details[]
Film | Crew/Detail | ||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Composer(s) | Cinematographer | Editor(s) | Production companies |
Distributing company |
Running time | ||
The Fly | Paul Sawtell | Karl Struss | Merrill G. White | 20th Century Studios | 20th Century Fox | 96 minutes | |
Return of the Fly | Paul Sawtell and Bert Shefter | Brydon Baker | Richard Meyer | Associated Producers Inc | 80 minutes | ||
Curse of the Fly | Bert Shefter | Basil Emmott | Robert Winter | Lippert Pictures | 86 minutes | ||
The Fly | Howard Shore | Mark Irwin | Ronald Sanders | Brooksfilms SLM Production Group |
96 minutes | ||
The Fly II | Christopher Young | Robin Vidgeon | Sean Barton | Brooksfilms | 105 minutes |
Production[]
Development[]
The Fly (1958)[]
The movie was based on the short story "The Fly" written by George Langelaan, which was published on Playboy magazine in 1957. According to Maury Dexter, an American producer who once worked with Robert Lippert, the novel was originally found and brought to the studio by Kurt Neuman.[1] Although Robert Lippert was the one who brought the idea to 20th Century Fox and got its agreement on filming the movie, Fox replaced Lippert by Neuman as the producer afterwards due to Lippert's conflict with Screen Actors Guild. The Fly was then made in colour as a Fox Film.[2] James Clavell was hired by Lippert for the adaption of the screenplay, and his work, based on what Harry Spalding has said, was “the best draft” he has even seen.[3]
The special effect of the human-fly hybrid was said to be created by covering the actor's head by a rubber sheath. To make the mask more alive, the original beaded domes as the eyes were made iridescent, and Hedison may wriggle his “proboscis” through a wooden plug held in his mouth.[2] The budget was claimed to be $480,000 by Lippert, and $28,000 of which was spent on the construction of the laboratory set.[4][5] The film was released in July 1958 and became the biggest hit of Fox that year, grossing $3,000,000 in domestically. However, Kurt did not witness the huge success of his work as he died from a heart attack few weeks after the release of the film.[5]
Return of the Fly (1959)[]
Due to the success of its preceding work, Return of the Fly was created double-billed with The Alligator people and was released in 1959. The idea of making this sequel was first brought out by Harry Spalding. He recalled the screenplay was not easy to start since the first movie “was a one-short deal, an accident” which was “not like a Frankenstein Monster, someone you can revive”. He then stated the budget of the movie was higher than the normal $125,000, yet it turned out to be profitable. According to Bernard Glasser, the producer of the movie, their budget was then increased to $275,000. The movie was asked to move from an independent shooting lot to the studio of Fox by its production department, which gave the crew more autonomy over the production . Glasser also complained about the slow production pace of Fox, claiming that most of the money were spent unproductively, which made Lippert “have to obtain additional fund”.[6]
Because Ed Wolff, the Fly portrayer, had problem breathing wearing the Fly head, most of his action sequences were done by his stuntman, Joe Becker. The actor of the original “Fly”, Vincent Price has also taken part in this sequel, being paid at $25,000. However, are Glasser recalled, he was “not overly enthusiastic about the screenplay".[6]
Curse of the Fly (1965)[]
When Lippert first mentioned the idea of making a third Fly, Spalding was surprised and kind of reluctant, saying they were “lucky to be able to do a second one”. Having Claude Rains in his mind as the main character, Spalding completed the script. However, Lippert put Brian Donlevy in the role instead, since Donlevy has previously worked well in another horror movie, Creeping Unknown, and Lippert wanted to stick to what has worked before. Spalding also pointed out the difficulty of writing the screenplay in Los Angeles for a production located in England due to the lack of collaboration between him and the director as well as the rest of the crew.[3]
The Fly (1986)[]
In the early 1980s, producer Kip Ohman proposed to Charles Edward Pogue about the idea of remaking the classic sci-fi horror movie The Fly (1958 film). After reading the original novel by George Langelaan and watching The Fly made in 1958, Pogue was very interested in the remake plan, therefore he found Stuart Cornfeld to work with 20th Century Fox. Pogue's initial idea of the screenplay was very similar to Langelaan's original work, but he and Cornfeld then felt the focus should be put on the protagonist's mutating process, not the final result of the mutation. Unexpectedly, the film script did not impress Fox, and the shooting intentions immediately fell through. After multiple negotiations, Fox finally agreed to distribute the film, only if Cornfeld and his crew raise the fund themselves.[7][8]
Cornfeld found Mel Brooks to co-produce the film. The two had previously worked together in David Lynch's The Elephant Man. When Brooks and Confield began looking for the suitable director, their first choice was David Cronenberg. However, Cronenberg was busy with assisting Dino de Laurentis to prepare for Total Recall at the moment. After watching several short films made by Robert Bierman, Cornfeld decided to corporate with this young British director. However, when the pre-production of the film went on the right track, Bierman's daughter died in an accident. Brooks and Cornfeld waited for a month to let Bierman arrange the funeral and adjust his mood. But still, Bierman said that he could not resume his work in a short time. After three months, they had to cancel the contract.[9] Knowing that Cronenberg had given up Total Recall, Cornfeld once again invited him. Cronenberg then agreed to be the director, but only if he could personally rewrite the script. the screenplay written by Cronenberg was very different, but it still retained the original basic plot and the core concept of genetic variation.[7]
Since Cronenberg did not want to break the actions for the special effect, the optical effect department adopted the real-time motion control system to create a "moving lock-off shot". Hoyt Yeatman, the optical effect supervisor of The Fly, described the technology in the following way:[10]
The shots were programmed by keyboard, and since they were working in real time, we didn't have to do move tests per se… … And once we got it down, then we'd do a number of takes with the object to be teleported in the booth. Then we would basically do nothing more than remove the object from the booth and redo the. Lights exactly as before: each time we had to change the globes and then we'd do another move. Then we'd use the motion control rig to repeat the shot exactly for the "B" side of the cut with the empty pod. At that point, we had two pieces of film with a common sync point - the first side being the "A" side containing the object, the second side or "B" side was the empty pod - and when you match those together in a synchroniser you can dissolve or pop between them and the move is exactly the same.[10]
The Fly II (1989)[]
According to a journal Hollywood Reporter in 1989, while filming the 1986 remake of The Fly, Stuart Cornfeld noticed Chris Walas, the person who later won the 1987 Academy Award for his work as special effects makeup. He then recommended Walas to be the director of the sequence and contributed to Walas’ collaboration with Brooksfilms, the company that produced both movies of the remake series. The Fly II therefore became the directorial debut of Walas. The shooting started in April 1988 and was done in Bridge Studios located in Vancouver, Canada, with a shooting schedule of 12 weeks.[11]
Possible reboot[]
According to an interview in 2017 made by /Film with J.D. Dillard, the director of the American drama film Sleight, a plan of remaking David Cronenberg's The Fly was at its early phase of negotiations. Dillard disclosed in the interview that he might work with Alex Theurer, the co-writer of the movie Sleight, for the remake: "For me – and this would be about The Fly, but this is also about Alex and my approach to remakes because post-Sleight that has been the conversation for what a lot of big flashy studio gigs are – no matter what, we want to start with character".[12] However, doubts on the possibility of the remake have been risen since the Disney/Fox merger taken place in 2019, owing to the well-known family-friendly Disney style.[13][14]
Reception[]
The original series[]
As the first movie of the whole series, The Fly received a mixed-to-positive reception. The Variety review credited its “unusual believability” as a strong factor,[15] yet some critics held a relatively negative comment, for Ivan Butler commenting the film as "the most ludicrous, and certainly one of the most revolting science-horror films ever perpetrated".[5] Michael J. Weldon wrote in his book The Psychotronic Encyclopedia of Film, describing the film as "brilliant, sick, absurd... Unforgettable”.[16] The film also has opened the path for Vincent Price as a horror movie actor who then collaborated with William Castle and Roger Corman and took part in many horror classics.[2]
Return of the Fly has mostly received negative critics, receiving 38% rating on Rotten Tomatoes compared to the 95% rating received by is predecessor.[17][18] Mass media regarded it as a sequel to “cash in on the latter’s reputation as a grosser”. Despite a short compliment of the movie’s special effect, Glen of the Variety critiqued it in his article for Berlin Film Festival Reviews:
It’s typical of writer-director Edward Bernds’ script that this incredible and dreadful tale, told to the loving son himself on the day of his mother’s funeral, should be made to seem almost banal for a lack of imaginative dialog and absence of appropriate tempo in the scene. What follows is one unmotivated episode after another, loosely tied to the theme that the son, in following in his father’s footsteps, will come to the same bad end… …Without the reputation of “The Fly to trade on, this one would be a dud.[19]
Being the final film of the trilogy, Curse of the Fly received an overall negative public critic since most people were annoyed by this Fly movie with no "fly".[20]
The remake series[]
In 1987, The Fly (1986 film) won the Academy Award for Best Makeup in credit of the work of the Makeup team led by Chris Walas and Stephan Dupuis. It was also nominated for the BAFTA Award for the Best Makeup and Hair as well as the Hugo Award for the Best Dramatic Presentation. Although the press favoured Goldblum's acting, and the Academy Awards entertained the possibility of nominating Goldblum for Best Actor,[21] the situation never occurred.[22]
The Fly II has received a 27% approval rating over 15 reviews and scored 23% for audience review on Rotten Tomato.[23] Janet Maslin from The New York Times commented the final half hour of the film was “a series of slime-ridden, glop-oozing special effects” and Walas’ directorial work as “competent but hardly clever”.[24] David Hughes from Empire Magazine described the story as “unimaginative”, saying the movie was “not as tightly scripted or keenly directed as its parent”.[25]
Box office performance[]
Films | U.S. release date | Box office revenue | Budget | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
North America | International | Worldwide | |||
The Fly | July 16, 1958 | $30,000,000 | $30,000,000[26] | $480,000[4] | |
Return of the Fly | July 1959 | $275,000[27] | |||
Curse of the Fly | May 1965 | $90,000[3] | |||
The Fly | August 15, 1986 | $40,456,565 | $20,172,594 | $60,629,159 | $15,000,000[28] |
The Fly II | February 10, 1989 | $20,021,322 | $18,881,857 | $38,903,179 | $12,500,000[7] |
Critical and public response[]
Film | Rotten Tomatoes | Metacritic | CinemaScore |
---|---|---|---|
The Fly | 95% (38 reviews)[18] | N/A | N/A |
Return of the Fly | 38% (13 reviews)[17] | N/A | N/A |
Curse of the Fly | N/A | N/A | N/A |
The Fly | 92% (60 reviews)[29] | 79 (11 reviews)[30] | B[31] |
The Fly II | 27% (15 reviews)[23] | 36 (15 reviews)[32] | N/A |
References[]
- ^ Dexter, Maury. High Way to Hollywood (PDF). p. 99.
- ^ a b c "THE FLY (1958)". American Film Institute. Retrieved 20 May 2019.
- ^ a b c Weaver, Tom (2003). Double Feature Creature Attack: A Monster Merger of Two More Volumes of Classic Interviews. North Carolina: McFarland Classics. pp. 323, 335. ISBN 0-7864-1366-2.
- ^ a b A, Ryon (23 September 1962). "Third-run film king tells industry's woes". Los Angeles Times.
- ^ a b c Smith, Richard Harland. "The Fly (1958)". Turner Classic Movies. Retrieved 20 May 2019.
- ^ a b Weaver, Tom (2006). Return of the B science fiction and horror heroes. Jefferson: McFarland & Company, Inc. pp. 115, 116.
- ^ a b c "THE FLY (1986)". American Film Institute. Retrieved 20 May 2019.
- ^ Westwood, Emma. "The Fly: A 30-Year Love Story". 4:3. Retrieved 20 May 2019.
- ^ "Fear of The Flesh: The Making of The Fly". 20th Century Fox. 2005.
- ^ a b Magid, Ron (1986). "More About The Fly". American Cinematographer. 67 (9): 69.
- ^ "The Fly II". American Film Institution. Retrieved 20 May 2019.
- ^ Sciretta, Peter (5 May 2017). "'The Fly' Remake: J.D. Dillard Wants To Bring Some Real Emotion To The Blockbuster Re-Do". /Film. Retrieved 16 May 2019.
- ^ Bradshaw, Peter (21 March 2019). "'A monopolistic blob': what the Disney/Fox merger means for cinema". Retrieved 16 May 2019.
- ^ Sprague, Mike (6 March 2019). "Will The Fly Remake Still Happen After Disney / Fox Deal Is Done?". Retrieved 16 May 2019.
- ^ "The Fly". Variety. 6. 16 July 1958.
- ^ J. Weldon, Michael (1983). The Psychotronic Encyclopedia of Film. Ballantine Books.
- ^ a b "Return of the Fly". Rotten Tomatoes. Retrieved 20 May 2019.
- ^ a b "The Fly 1958". Rotten Tomatoes. Retrieved 20 May 2019.
- ^ "Berlin Film festival Review - Return of the Fly". Variety. 215 (7): 6, 12. 15 July 1959 – via ProQuest.
- ^ Gallman, Brett (28 September 2012). "Curse of the Fly (1965)". Horror Review. Retrieved 20 May 2019.
- ^ Mathews, Jack (27 August 1986). "GOLDBLUM'S 'FLY' MAY LAND IN OSCAR CIRCLE". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved 20 May 2019.
- ^ Siskel, Gene (18 February 1987). "OSCAR SWATS 'THE FLY'". Chicago Tribune. Retrieved 20 May 2019.
- ^ a b "The Fly II". Rotten Tomatoes. Retrieved 20 May 2019.
- ^ Maslin, Janet (11 February 1989). "Review/Film; Another Look at Insecthood As a Possible Way of Life". The New York Times.
- ^ Hughes, David (1 January 2000). "The Fly II Review". Empire Magazine.
- ^ "Top Grossing Films of 1950-1959". Retrieved 20 May 2019.
- ^ "Return of the Fly (1959)". IMDbPro. Retrieved 20 May 2019.
- ^ "The Fly (1986)". IMDbPro. Retrieved 20 May 2019.
- ^ "THE FLY". Rotten Tomatoes. Retrieved 20 May 2019.
- ^ "The Fly 1986". Metacritic. Retrieved 20 May 2019.
- ^ "Cinemascore".
- ^ "Critic Reviews for The Fly II - Metacritic". Metacritic.com. Metacritic. Retrieved 6 November 2019.
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