Joe Wawrzyniak posted this in FB group: https://www.facebook.com/groups/29082840986/permalink/10154978199925987/
"Three British bit players as parishioners in this photo. The guy with the beard and big ears wearing a skinny tie is Fred Wood (a.k.a. Burn the Witch Fred). The pretty brunette on the right in the front row with shoulder length hair wearing a dress is Pauline Chamberlain. The old guy in a back row wearing glasses along with a black tie and a black suit is Juba Kennerley."
More research lead me to Pauline might still be alive. Wood died in 2003. Kennerley was born in 1898 so who knows when he died.
Also, found this link to an online Final Cut:
http://wifimovies.net/watch/bdrrwydN-the-wicker-man-1973.html
Not high res but nice to have it online.
A blog for whatever news I run across about the 1973 film, The Wicker Man. And trivia. Trivial news and new trivia. And unanswered questions. If anyone has any photos, home movies, documents from the shoot or stories you can tell about the filming or distribution afterwards, please let me know. Thanks!
Wednesday, February 20, 2019
Monday, February 11, 2019
new tidbits
Robin Hardy director of The Wicker Man interview - Without Your Head
Lots of good info here. A standout about the storyboards:
Robin has sold some of the illustrations at auction and given some to authors of books (Brown? Earnshaw?) so the likelihood of there ever being a complete collection looks unlikely. He thinks some get sold on eBay but I've never seen any.Also, independent of that:
I discovered some showings of the movie in 1974 in the Atlanta area from searching for newspapers, in this case, The Atlanta Constitution. It had Warner Brothers pic ads for these dates: 5/14, 5/15 and one for 5/21 (Smyrna, GA). I can see that they use Warner Brothers ads but the 5/14 and 5/15 ads are different from the 5/21 ad which is thinner and only has the Wicker Man whereas the other two have the standard WB ad with Willow and LS below TWM.
Saturday, January 26, 2019
Some new tidbits from an interview about the FInal Cut, 9/21/13
Robin Hardy’s interview following The Wicker Man: The Final Cut on Sept 17th
"These students were marvelous, it was like a university project. Even when it came to raising the money, they all went to various areas of the east cost of the United States where they lived and persuaded doctors and dentists to help finance the restoration."
*Does he mean John Alan Simon and Ronald Weinberg or Ron and Micheline? (None were students but all were recent college graduates...)
Posted by neilmcgfilm ⋅ September 21, 2013
"Shepperton which was the big studio was on land owned by British Lion, it would have been worth much more as land for housing." Asset stripping...
"Someone quickly signed a cheque and that was it. There’s never been easier financing for any picture."
They "had already under Peter Snell’s excellent guidance made a wonderful film called DON’T LOOK NOW."
"Christopher Lee was furious with the way the film had been treated and took the film to Paris and entered into the Les Filmes du Fantastique Festival where it won the Grand Prix (In April of 1974) and probably the best review that I shall ever get from the film trade paper, Variety (in May of 1974)." (Parentheses my info)
"They had to make the film shorter in order to play with DON’T LOOK NOW. So about five scenes had to be cut out."
You were locked out of the editing room?
"Yes we were locked out of the cutting room, but we had already finished the film and the prints had gone out to distributors in the United States and that was how we were first able to restore the film in the United States based on the print that Roger Corman held."
"When we made that film, Tony was working with Hitchcock on FRENZY and had to go to New York to work with him, so he was only with us for the first week then after that Peter Schaffer really took over from him…..If I had problems with the script then I went to Peter or sometimes I spoke on the telephone to Tony in New York."
"We did have, surprising to me anyway, a sojourn in the south and the young students*, who were our guides through the distribution of the film, had a greater feeling, probably because they came from all over the United States, of what kind of reception we would have where, and how we would handle the PR and all that. They felt that we should literally take the bull by the horns with the priests and ministers in the south, so they arranged prayer breakfasts which are usually to talk about politics and not about films. They consulted with us after they had seen the film and we got them really interested. They loved the scenes on the beach and on the cliffs and Edward’s performance. They also loved his speech inside the Wicker Man, which you might be interested to know was the actual speech that Sir Walter Raleigh made before he went to the block (to be beheaded). Tony Schaffer suddenly found it almost hours before we actually shot the scene because we weren’t very happy with the dialogue which we had at that point and insisted it be used. It was a very good decision."
"These students were marvelous, it was like a university project. Even when it came to raising the money, they all went to various areas of the east cost of the United States where they lived and persuaded doctors and dentists to help finance the restoration."
*Does he mean John Alan Simon and Ronald Weinberg or Ron and Micheline? (None were students but all were recent college graduates...)
"There was a sequence that Christopher misses and I understand why. Tony Schaffer and I went and studied apples at East Grinstead where there are these orchards that contain every single type of apple….When we got to the cutting room we thought, perhaps this is a little too much."
What happened to the original footage?
"I think it was just put somewhere where it was out of harm’s way and they just kept telling me that they hadn’t got it."
Tuesday, January 15, 2019
TWM TV premiere
This says that TWM premiered on tv in the UK and probably anywhere on tv (This was on ATV) in 1978. It doesn't say the exact date though. The earliest reference to a tv airing that I have found after that is 3/16/79, also on ATV.
Saturday, January 12, 2019
Nice pic of the Wicker Man with torch bearers
A nice hi-res pic of the WM with the torch bearers here.
Other WM pics on that site:
https://i1.wp.com/bloody-disgusting.com/wp-content/uploads/2013/08/the-Wicker-Man-6.jpg
https://bloody-disgusting.com/wp-content/uploads/2013/08/the-Wicker-Man-5.jpg
https://bloody-disgusting.com/news/3250820/rialto-pictures-will-release-the-final-cut-of-the-wicker-man-in-the-states/#jp-carousel-3250821
Other WM pics on that site:
https://i1.wp.com/bloody-disgusting.com/wp-content/uploads/2013/08/the-Wicker-Man-6.jpg
https://bloody-disgusting.com/wp-content/uploads/2013/08/the-Wicker-Man-5.jpg
https://bloody-disgusting.com/news/3250820/rialto-pictures-will-release-the-final-cut-of-the-wicker-man-in-the-states/#jp-carousel-3250821
Tuesday, January 8, 2019
Myrtle Morrison's birthday
May mentions Myrtle had her ninth birthday "last Thursday" when she first meets Howie. That would be April 26 so she was born on April 26, 1964.
In one shot of the crowd enjoying themselves with Oak as the hobby horse outside the courtyard, we see Punch sneaking in to the courtyard (which is really, the Old Tollbooth in Kirkcudbright). At this point in the movie, Howie hasn't put on Alder's Punch outfit and Alder has only been seen wearing half of it so it is abit of a mystery as to what's going on here.
Does anyone know more about this?
Does anyone know more about this?
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