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Basket Case (film)

Basket Case is a 1982 American horror film written and directed by Frank Henenlotter in his feature directorial debut. Produced by Edgar Ievins, the film stars Kevin Van Hentenryck as Duane Bradley, a young man who seeks vengeance on the doctors and nurses who performed an unwanted surgery that separated him from his deformed conjoined twin brother Belial, whom Duane hides in a large wicker basket.

Basket Case
Theatrical release poster
Directed byFrank Henenlotter
Screenplay byFrank Henenlotter
Produced by
  • Arnold H. Bruck
  • Edgar Ievins
  • Tom Kaye
Starring
  • Kevin Van Hentenryck
  • Terri Susan Smith
  • Beverly Bonner
CinematographyBruce Torbet
Edited byFrank Henenlotter
Music byGus Russo
Production
company
Basket Case Productions
Distributed by
  • Analysis Film Releasing Corporation
  • Rugged Films
  • Creswin Distribution (Canada)
  • Euro Space (Japan)
  • Sinfonia Films (France)
Release date
  • April 7, 1982 (1982-04-07)
Running time
91 minutes
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish
Budget$35,000[1]

Basket Case was shot on 16 mm in New York City, on a budget of around $35,000. The film was blown up to 35 mm for its original theatrical release in April 1982. Receiving mixed reviews upon release, it has since become considered a cult film,[2][3] and has spawned two sequels, Basket Case 2 (1990) and Basket Case 3: The Progeny (1991), both of which were also directed by Henenlotter.

In 2017, Basket Case was selected for preservation by the Museum of Modern Art (MoMA), who oversaw a restoration of the film from its original 16 mm camera negative.[4][5] The 4K restoration was released on Blu-ray and DVD by Arrow Video in 2018.[6]

Plot edit

Dr. Julius Lifflander is frightened by something outside his forest home. A shadowed creature then cuts his phone line and power before killing Lifflander by tearing at his face.

Duane Bradley arrives in New York City with a locked wicker basket. He gets a room at a cheap hotel right down the hall from a sex worker named Casey. He takes some hamburgers and feeds them to a creature in his basket which talks to him telepathically. When Duane is out the next day, a man named Brian O'Donovan looks through Duane's keyhole in order to steal Duane's wad of money. Casey scares him off and informs Duane about it. Duane takes his basket to see Dr. Harold Needleman and befriends his assistant Sharon. Needleman contacts Dr. Judith Kutter and tells her about Duane's visit and Lifflander's death, but she ignores him. Duane goes back to Needleman's that night and empties the creature, who is revealed to be his twin brother Belial,[a] onto the floor. Belial kills Needleman by gutting him with his claws.

The next day, Duane goes to meet Sharon at the Statue of Liberty and they kiss. Belial senses this and trashes the hotel room in a temper tantrum. He hides when the hotel manager opens the door to see what the commotion is. O'Donovan sneaks back inside to steal Duane's money but is killed by Belial when he opens the basket. Duane senses the attack telepathically and hurries back. Duane tells Belial that he deserves some time for himself. Duane, with the basket, runs into Casey at a bar and drunkenly tells her that Belial is his twin brother.

A flashback relates their backstory. They were conjoined at birth and their aunt was the only one who would take care of them. However, the twins were surgically separated at an early age by Dr. Lifflander, Dr. Needleman and Dr. Kutter, which explains their hatred for the doctors. They then murdered their father, which was ruled an accident, and lived with their aunt before she died. They then went to murder the doctors who had separated them. Belial deeply resents being cut off from his normal-looking brother, and Duane equally resents how heartless everyone acts towards his brother.

Back in the present day, Belial sneaks into Casey's bedroom and scares her out before stealing her panties. The next day, Duane and Belial go to Dr. Kutter's office. She tries to dismiss them, but Duane reveals who he is before Belial kills Kutter by shoving her face into a drawer of sharp objects. Sharon goes to Duane's apartment seeking safety after Needleman's death and they start to make love before a jealous Belial starts screaming and Duane is forced to toss Sharon outside.

That night Belial goes out to find Sharon while Duane has a dream that tells him about it. Belial sneaks into Sharon's apartment and tries to rape her. He attacks and kills her when she wakes up and screams. Enraged at his brother for his actions, Duane takes Belial back to the apartment in a scene that attracts several people to his apartment, which exposes the existence of Belial. Belial attacks Duane which results in the two brothers falling from a hotel window. They are knocked out as everyone surrounds their unconscious bodies.

Cast edit

  • Kevin Van Hentenryck as Duane Bradley[8]
  • Terri Susan Smith as Sharon[8]
  • Beverly Bonner as Casey[8]
  • Robert Vogel as Hotel Manager[8]
  • Lloyd Pace as Dr. Harold Needleman[8]
  • Bill Freeman as Dr. Julius Lifflander[8]
  • Diana Browne as Dr. Judith Kutter[8]
  • Joe Clarke as Brian 'Mickey' O'Donovan[8]
  • Ruth Neuman as Duane's Aunt[8]
  • Richard Pierce as Duane's Father[8]
  • Sean McCabe as Young Duane[8]
  • Dorothy Strongin as Josephine[8]
  • Kerry Ruff as Detective[8]
  • Ilze Balodis as Social Worker[8]
  • Tom Robinson as Thief in Theater[8]
  • Chris Babson as Kutter's Date[8]
  • Maria T. Newland as Patient[8]
  • Florence Shultz as Nurse #1[8]
  • Mary Ellen Shultz as Nurse #2[8]
  • Constantine Scopas as Hotel Tenant #1[8]
  • Charles Stanley as Hotel Tenant #2[8]
  • Sydney Best as Hotel Tenant #3[8]
  • Johnny Ray Williams as Hotel Tenant #4[8]
  • Yousef Abuhamdeh as Hotel Tenant #5[8]
  • Lubi Kirsch as Hotel Tenant #6[8]
  • Catherine Russell as Hotel Tenant #7[8]
  • Mitchell Huval as Hotel Tenant #8[8]
  • Noel Hall as Drug Dealer[8]
  • Bruce Frankel as Second Detective[8]
  • Pat Ivers as Street Girl #1[8]
  • Emily Armstrong as Street Girl #2[8]
  • Russell Fritz as Casey's John[8]
  • Jerry Butler as Casey Greeter (uncredited)
  • Frank Henenlotter as Theater Patron (uncredited)
  • David H. Kramer as Belial Bradley (voice; uncredited)

Themes and interpretations edit

Author Jon Towlson wrote that the sexual desires of Belial in Basket Case provide the film with "a transgressive undercurrent", adding that Belial "can be seen as the id, the dark side within us all. Duane is the eternal misfit who carries his monster—his darkness—around in a basket, afraid to let it out for fear of transgression.[1]

John Kenneth Muir argued that Basket Case examines the topic of abortion, highlighting a flashback scene that depicts Belial, "indisputably a life", being discarded in a trash bag: "[...] is a deformed monster such as Belial actually worth saving? Should he have been mercifully terminated rather than forced to live as he is, a thing more than a man? Basket Case hedges its bets and appears to come down on neither side of the pro-life/pro-choice equation. On the one hand, Belial is a murderous, nasty little bugger, but on the other, he's clearly capable of expressing love."[9]

Production edit

Development and filming edit

Writer-director Frank Henenlotter met producer Edgar Ievins during the production of the former's 1972 short film Slash of the Knife,[10] and the two eventually collaborated on an unrealized film project titled Ooze.[11] Henenlotter recalled, "We tried to get the money for Ooze and couldn't, so I just wrote a film that could be made for far less money. Right out in front, I wrote a film that was designed to be made for a low, low budget."[11] The resulting screenplay, Basket Case, was written by Henenlotter as he walked around Times Square, which he called a "seedy, wonderful atmosphere."[12] He reportedly wrote the dialogue for the film on napkins while in the basement of a Nathan's Famous.[12]

Basket Case was shot on 16 mm film. It had a budget of about $35,000,[1] financed by a small production team largely with its own rental money to enable the film to be realized.[13] It was shot in part on Manhattan's 42nd Street.[14]

Henenlotter did not have control over the post-production, and the result was dark, murky, and converted to a different aspect ratio.

Special effects edit

The special effects for Belial consist largely of a puppet in some scenes and stop motion in others. When Belial's hand is seen attacking his victims, it is really a glove worn by Henenlotter. The puppet is used in scenes with an actor and where the eyes glow red. The sequence for Belial's rampage used stop motion animation.[15]

Release edit

Basket Case was released theatrically in the United States by Analysis Film Releasing Corporation beginning in April 1982. Though filmed in 16 mm film, it was blown up to 35 mm for its original theatrical release.[16] It played as a midnight movie for several years after this.[17]

Critical reception edit

Contemporary reviews edit

Diane Haithman of the Detroit Free Press gave Basket Case a score of seven out of ten, writing that, despite it being "gratuitously bloody", as well as "occasionally much, much sicker" in its themes than other low-budget horror films of the time, "somehow, there's something likable, even touching about it. And that's scary enough in itself. [...] It's like E.T. as written and directed by a psychopath."[18] A reviewer for Variety called Basket Case "an ultra-cheap monster film [...] with a tongue-in-cheek approach", commending the performances but criticizing the audio recording, "grainy blowup from 16 mm", and score.[19]

John Stark, writing for the San Francisco Examiner, lamented Basket Case as a "crudely made, low-budget work [that] lacks the outrageousness and campiness that an underground film needs."[20] He characterized the film as "too preoccupied with its monster, a badly constructed special effect", and wrote that "the gore and hokey-looking beast keep deflating the film's clever premise."[20]

A quotation by film critic Rex Reed ("This is the sickest movie ever made!") that was used in promotional materials for the film was not from any printed review. Reed had sought out the film after hearing negative reviews and was asked his opinion after emerging from the cinema. Unknown to Reed, the person who asked him was director Frank Henenlotter. Initially furious that his comment was used to promote the film, Reed eventually relented and granted permission.[21]

Retrospective assessments edit

On the review aggregator website Rotten Tomatoes, Basket Case holds a 77% approval rating based on 26 critic reviews, with an average rating of 6.3/10. The consensus reads: "While Basket Case definitely delivers all the gonzo gore promised by its cracked premise, it's really set apart by its rich vein of genuine pathos."[22]

In 2001, G. Noel Gross of DVD Talk gave Basket Case a rating of five out of five stars, calling it "an undeniable, unavoidable and unforgettable clasSICK".[23] In 2003, author Scott Aaron Stine wrote of the film: "The innovation and verve this movie displays surpasses its innumerable shortcomings, all products of a film that qualified as destitute before the cameras even started rolling. The fact that most of the 'actors' had probably never stepped foot in front of a camera prior to this only adds to the movie's squalid charm; their talents may be slim, but their presence is priceless."[3]

In 2007, Muir called the film "a fine, competent low-budget effort that generates thrills and discomfort not only from its tale of symbiotic (and separated) Siamese twins, but from its authentic sense of place. New York City has never felt more delightfully and dangerously squalid."[24] Muir goes on to call it "oddly compelling, deeply disturbing and inexplicably touching".[24]

In 2011, David Harley of Bloody Disgusting wrote that the film's "warped sense of humor and brazen attitude make it a blast to watch and, ultimately, one of the best horror comedies of the 1980s."[25] That same year, Heather Wixson of Dread Central gave the film three-and-a-half out of five stars, referring to it as an "insane masterpiece that lovingly celebrates the sometimes schlocky and sleazy side of cinema".[26] Patrick Naugle of DVD Verdict wrote, "The movie is just pure shock value" but "a heck of a lot of fun."[27]

2017 restoration edit

"I'm both humbled and proud to announce that Basket Case is now part of the permanent film collection of the Museum of Modern Art. (And, yes, I asked them if they actually watched the film and they assured me they did.)"

– writer-director Frank Henenlotter, 2017[4]

In March 2017, Basket Case was selected for preservation and restoration by the Museum of Modern Art (MoMA).[4][28] Henenlotter provided MoMA with the film elements required for the restoration,[4] including the original 16 mm camera negative from which the restoration would be sourced.[5] In addition to the film's footage being restored in 4K resolution, its audio also underwent a restoration, using the original magnetic tracks of the sound mix as the source.[5]

Home media edit

Basket Case was released on Betamax and VHS[29] by Media Home Entertainment. It was released on DVD in the United States by Image Entertainment in 1998.[30] In 2001, a special edition DVD release of the film was issued by Something Weird Video.[31]

On September 27, 2011, Something Weird Video released the film on Blu-ray.[32] Henenlotter supervised the Blu-ray release himself, which features a restoration of the film taken from a 35 mm interpositive, with the original 16 mm negative (which had initially been thought lost) used as a reference.[14][33]

In November 2017, it was announced that Arrow Video would be releasing Basket Case on Blu-ray and DVD, featuring the 4K restoration of the film overseen by MoMA.[5][6] The release includes such bonus features as an audio commentary by Henenlotter and Van Hentenryck, interviews with members of the cast, a making-of featurette, and the 1972 Henenlotter-directed short film Slash of the Knife.[5] The Arrow Video release was issued on February 27, 2018.[5][6]

Notes edit

  1. ^ The name "Belial" has been noted as appearing in some Hebrew texts as a reference to the devil.[7]

References edit

  1. ^ a b c Towlson, Jon (2014). Subversive Horror Cinema: Countercultural Messages of Films from Frankenstein to the Present. McFarland & Company. p. 185. ISBN 9781476615332.
  2. ^ Tierney, John (January 14, 1991). "Era Ends as Times Square Drops Slashers for Shakespeare". The New York Times. Retrieved January 29, 2014.
  3. ^ a b Stine, Scott Aaron (2003). The Gorehound's Guide to Splatter Films of the 1980s. McFarland & Company. p. 37. ISBN 978-0786415328. Retrieved November 29, 2022.
  4. ^ a b c d Squires, John (March 8, 2017). "The Museum of Modern Art is Preserving and Restoring 'Basket Case'". Bloody Disgusting. Retrieved November 29, 2022.
  5. ^ a b c d e f Squires, John (November 27, 2017). "Arrow Video Bringing 4K Restoration of 'Basket Case' to US Blu-ray". Bloody Disgusting. Retrieved November 29, 2022.
  6. ^ a b c Bowen, Chuck (March 9, 2018). "Blu-ray Review: Frank Henenlotter's Basket Case on Arrow Video". Slant Magazine. Retrieved November 29, 2022.
  7. ^ Thompson, Rocco (March 9, 2018). "Belial Be Damned!: Arrow Video Sets "Basket Case" Loose". Rue Morgue. Retrieved November 29, 2022.
  8. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae af "AFI Catalog - Basket Case". AFI Catalog. Retrieved July 22, 2023.
  9. ^ Muir 2007, p. 219.
  10. ^ Martin 1981, p. 55.
  11. ^ a b Martin 1981, p. 56.
  12. ^ a b Sorrento, Matthew (December 22, 2008). . Film Threat. Archived from the original on December 16, 2014. Retrieved January 29, 2014. Oh yeah—I literally walked around Times Square while I was writing [Basket Case]. There was a big Nathan's where ABC Television is now. I had part of the story then—I thought about a guy walking around with a monster in his basket. It worked up to a certain point, but then I wondered, why would anybody walk around with a monster in a basket? So then I thought—who's in the basket? I thought of it being his brother, which I knew was a great idea, and then the dialog starting coming. I wrote it down in Nathan's, in that seedy, wonderful atmosphere.
  13. ^ Basket Case Trilogy – This Is Horror
  14. ^ a b Galluzzo, Rob (November 3, 2011). "Fright Interview – Frank Henenlotter (Writer/Director of Basket Case)!". IconsOfFright.com. Retrieved January 29, 2014.
  15. ^ "In Search of Hotel Broslin". Basket Case DVD special features.
  16. ^ Gross, G. Noel (September 28, 2001). "Basket Case: SE". DVD Talk. Retrieved January 29, 2014.
  17. ^ Duvoli, John (July 30, 1983). "'Basket Case' one cut above usual". The Evening News. Newburgh, New York. Retrieved January 29, 2014.
  18. ^ Haithman, Diane (November 12, 1982). "One film is horrid, one frightfully good". Detroit Free Press. Detroit, Michigan. pp. 1C, 10C. Retrieved November 29, 2022 – via Newspapers.com.
  19. ^ "Review: 'Basket Case'". Variety. December 31, 1981. Retrieved January 29, 2014.
  20. ^ a b Stark, John (July 2, 1982). "The latest midnight horror". San Francisco Examiner. San Francisco, California. Retrieved November 29, 2022 – via Newspapers.com.
  21. ^ Walentis, Al (March 13, 1983). "Rex Reed on 'Basket Case'; 'Plan 9' sequel among undead". Reading Eagle. Retrieved January 30, 2014.
  22. ^ "Basket Case (1982)". Rotten Tomatoes. Fandango Media. Retrieved October 30, 2022.
  23. ^ Gross, G. Noel (September 28, 2001). "Basket Case: SE". DVD Talk. Retrieved January 29, 2014.
  24. ^ a b Muir 2007, p. 217–219.
  25. ^ Harley, David (October 19, 2011). "Basket Case". Bloody Disgusting. Retrieved January 29, 2014.
  26. ^ Wixson, Heather (September 19, 2011). "Basket Case (Blu-ray)". Dread Central. Retrieved January 29, 2014.
  27. ^ Naugle, Patrick (September 23, 2011). . DVD Verdict. Archived from the original on December 31, 2013. Retrieved January 29, 2014.
  28. ^ Farrow, Kevan (March 9, 2017). "Basket Case Preserved by the Museum of Modern Art! Seriously!". Scream. Retrieved November 29, 2022.
  29. ^ Weiner, David J.; Gale, Thomson (1991). Video Hound's Golden Movie Retriever, 1991. Visible Ink Press. p. 39. ISBN 0-8103-9404-9.
  30. ^ "Basket Case". dvdempire.com. Retrieved March 31, 2011.
  31. ^ . somethingweird.com. Archived from the original on February 16, 2007. Retrieved April 1, 2011.
  32. ^ Barton, Steve (July 11, 2011). "Basket Case Hits Blu-ray! All is Right in the World!". Dread Central. Retrieved January 29, 2014.
  33. ^ Wixson, Heather (September 21, 2011). "Exclusive: Frank Henenlotter Talks Basket Case Blu-ray; Possible Basket Case 4?". Dread Central. Retrieved January 29, 2014.

Bibliography edit

Works cited edit

  • Cunningham, Lisa (2012). ""What's in the Basket?": Sexualized and Sexualizing Violence in Frank Henenlotter's Basket Case". In Ritzenhoff, Karen A.; Randell, Karen (eds.). Screening the Dark Side of Love: From Euro-Horror to American Cinema. Palgrave Macmillan. pp. 145–157. ISBN 9781137096630.

External links edit

basket, case, film, basket, case, 1982, american, horror, film, written, directed, frank, henenlotter, feature, directorial, debut, produced, edgar, ievins, film, stars, kevin, hentenryck, duane, bradley, young, seeks, vengeance, doctors, nurses, performed, un. Basket Case is a 1982 American horror film written and directed by Frank Henenlotter in his feature directorial debut Produced by Edgar Ievins the film stars Kevin Van Hentenryck as Duane Bradley a young man who seeks vengeance on the doctors and nurses who performed an unwanted surgery that separated him from his deformed conjoined twin brother Belial whom Duane hides in a large wicker basket Basket CaseTheatrical release posterDirected byFrank HenenlotterScreenplay byFrank HenenlotterProduced byArnold H Bruck Edgar Ievins Tom KayeStarringKevin Van Hentenryck Terri Susan Smith Beverly BonnerCinematographyBruce TorbetEdited byFrank HenenlotterMusic byGus RussoProductioncompanyBasket Case ProductionsDistributed byAnalysis Film Releasing Corporation Rugged Films Creswin Distribution Canada Euro Space Japan Sinfonia Films France Release dateApril 7 1982 1982 04 07 Running time91 minutesCountryUnited StatesLanguageEnglishBudget 35 000 1 Basket Case was shot on 16 mm in New York City on a budget of around 35 000 The film was blown up to 35 mm for its original theatrical release in April 1982 Receiving mixed reviews upon release it has since become considered a cult film 2 3 and has spawned two sequels Basket Case 2 1990 and Basket Case 3 The Progeny 1991 both of which were also directed by Henenlotter In 2017 Basket Case was selected for preservation by the Museum of Modern Art MoMA who oversaw a restoration of the film from its original 16 mm camera negative 4 5 The 4K restoration was released on Blu ray and DVD by Arrow Video in 2018 6 Contents 1 Plot 2 Cast 3 Themes and interpretations 4 Production 4 1 Development and filming 4 2 Special effects 5 Release 6 Critical reception 6 1 Contemporary reviews 6 2 Retrospective assessments 7 2017 restoration 8 Home media 9 Notes 10 References 10 1 Bibliography 11 Works cited 12 External linksPlot editDr Julius Lifflander is frightened by something outside his forest home A shadowed creature then cuts his phone line and power before killing Lifflander by tearing at his face Duane Bradley arrives in New York City with a locked wicker basket He gets a room at a cheap hotel right down the hall from a sex worker named Casey He takes some hamburgers and feeds them to a creature in his basket which talks to him telepathically When Duane is out the next day a man named Brian O Donovan looks through Duane s keyhole in order to steal Duane s wad of money Casey scares him off and informs Duane about it Duane takes his basket to see Dr Harold Needleman and befriends his assistant Sharon Needleman contacts Dr Judith Kutter and tells her about Duane s visit and Lifflander s death but she ignores him Duane goes back to Needleman s that night and empties the creature who is revealed to be his twin brother Belial a onto the floor Belial kills Needleman by gutting him with his claws The next day Duane goes to meet Sharon at the Statue of Liberty and they kiss Belial senses this and trashes the hotel room in a temper tantrum He hides when the hotel manager opens the door to see what the commotion is O Donovan sneaks back inside to steal Duane s money but is killed by Belial when he opens the basket Duane senses the attack telepathically and hurries back Duane tells Belial that he deserves some time for himself Duane with the basket runs into Casey at a bar and drunkenly tells her that Belial is his twin brother A flashback relates their backstory They were conjoined at birth and their aunt was the only one who would take care of them However the twins were surgically separated at an early age by Dr Lifflander Dr Needleman and Dr Kutter which explains their hatred for the doctors They then murdered their father which was ruled an accident and lived with their aunt before she died They then went to murder the doctors who had separated them Belial deeply resents being cut off from his normal looking brother and Duane equally resents how heartless everyone acts towards his brother Back in the present day Belial sneaks into Casey s bedroom and scares her out before stealing her panties The next day Duane and Belial go to Dr Kutter s office She tries to dismiss them but Duane reveals who he is before Belial kills Kutter by shoving her face into a drawer of sharp objects Sharon goes to Duane s apartment seeking safety after Needleman s death and they start to make love before a jealous Belial starts screaming and Duane is forced to toss Sharon outside That night Belial goes out to find Sharon while Duane has a dream that tells him about it Belial sneaks into Sharon s apartment and tries to rape her He attacks and kills her when she wakes up and screams Enraged at his brother for his actions Duane takes Belial back to the apartment in a scene that attracts several people to his apartment which exposes the existence of Belial Belial attacks Duane which results in the two brothers falling from a hotel window They are knocked out as everyone surrounds their unconscious bodies Cast editKevin Van Hentenryck as Duane Bradley 8 Terri Susan Smith as Sharon 8 Beverly Bonner as Casey 8 Robert Vogel as Hotel Manager 8 Lloyd Pace as Dr Harold Needleman 8 Bill Freeman as Dr Julius Lifflander 8 Diana Browne as Dr Judith Kutter 8 Joe Clarke as Brian Mickey O Donovan 8 Ruth Neuman as Duane s Aunt 8 Richard Pierce as Duane s Father 8 Sean McCabe as Young Duane 8 Dorothy Strongin as Josephine 8 Kerry Ruff as Detective 8 Ilze Balodis as Social Worker 8 Tom Robinson as Thief in Theater 8 Chris Babson as Kutter s Date 8 Maria T Newland as Patient 8 Florence Shultz as Nurse 1 8 Mary Ellen Shultz as Nurse 2 8 Constantine Scopas as Hotel Tenant 1 8 Charles Stanley as Hotel Tenant 2 8 Sydney Best as Hotel Tenant 3 8 Johnny Ray Williams as Hotel Tenant 4 8 Yousef Abuhamdeh as Hotel Tenant 5 8 Lubi Kirsch as Hotel Tenant 6 8 Catherine Russell as Hotel Tenant 7 8 Mitchell Huval as Hotel Tenant 8 8 Noel Hall as Drug Dealer 8 Bruce Frankel as Second Detective 8 Pat Ivers as Street Girl 1 8 Emily Armstrong as Street Girl 2 8 Russell Fritz as Casey s John 8 Jerry Butler as Casey Greeter uncredited Frank Henenlotter as Theater Patron uncredited David H Kramer as Belial Bradley voice uncredited Themes and interpretations editAuthor Jon Towlson wrote that the sexual desires of Belial in Basket Case provide the film with a transgressive undercurrent adding that Belial can be seen as the id the dark side within us all Duane is the eternal misfit who carries his monster his darkness around in a basket afraid to let it out for fear of transgression 1 John Kenneth Muir argued that Basket Case examines the topic of abortion highlighting a flashback scene that depicts Belial indisputably a life being discarded in a trash bag is a deformed monster such as Belial actually worth saving Should he have been mercifully terminated rather than forced to live as he is a thing more than a man Basket Case hedges its bets and appears to come down on neither side of the pro life pro choice equation On the one hand Belial is a murderous nasty little bugger but on the other he s clearly capable of expressing love 9 Production editDevelopment and filming edit Writer director Frank Henenlotter met producer Edgar Ievins during the production of the former s 1972 short film Slash of the Knife 10 and the two eventually collaborated on an unrealized film project titled Ooze 11 Henenlotter recalled We tried to get the money for Ooze and couldn t so I just wrote a film that could be made for far less money Right out in front I wrote a film that was designed to be made for a low low budget 11 The resulting screenplay Basket Case was written by Henenlotter as he walked around Times Square which he called a seedy wonderful atmosphere 12 He reportedly wrote the dialogue for the film on napkins while in the basement of a Nathan s Famous 12 Basket Case was shot on 16 mm film It had a budget of about 35 000 1 financed by a small production team largely with its own rental money to enable the film to be realized 13 It was shot in part on Manhattan s 42nd Street 14 Henenlotter did not have control over the post production and the result was dark murky and converted to a different aspect ratio Special effects edit The special effects for Belial consist largely of a puppet in some scenes and stop motion in others When Belial s hand is seen attacking his victims it is really a glove worn by Henenlotter The puppet is used in scenes with an actor and where the eyes glow red The sequence for Belial s rampage used stop motion animation 15 Release editBasket Case was released theatrically in the United States by Analysis Film Releasing Corporation beginning in April 1982 Though filmed in 16 mm film it was blown up to 35 mm for its original theatrical release 16 It played as a midnight movie for several years after this 17 Critical reception editContemporary reviews edit Diane Haithman of the Detroit Free Press gave Basket Case a score of seven out of ten writing that despite it being gratuitously bloody as well as occasionally much much sicker in its themes than other low budget horror films of the time somehow there s something likable even touching about it And that s scary enough in itself It s like E T as written and directed by a psychopath 18 A reviewer for Variety called Basket Case an ultra cheap monster film with a tongue in cheek approach commending the performances but criticizing the audio recording grainy blowup from 16 mm and score 19 John Stark writing for the San Francisco Examiner lamented Basket Case as a crudely made low budget work that lacks the outrageousness and campiness that an underground film needs 20 He characterized the film as too preoccupied with its monster a badly constructed special effect and wrote that the gore and hokey looking beast keep deflating the film s clever premise 20 A quotation by film critic Rex Reed This is the sickest movie ever made that was used in promotional materials for the film was not from any printed review Reed had sought out the film after hearing negative reviews and was asked his opinion after emerging from the cinema Unknown to Reed the person who asked him was director Frank Henenlotter Initially furious that his comment was used to promote the film Reed eventually relented and granted permission 21 Retrospective assessments edit On the review aggregator website Rotten Tomatoes Basket Case holds a 77 approval rating based on 26 critic reviews with an average rating of 6 3 10 The consensus reads While Basket Case definitely delivers all the gonzo gore promised by its cracked premise it s really set apart by its rich vein of genuine pathos 22 In 2001 G Noel Gross of DVD Talk gave Basket Case a rating of five out of five stars calling it an undeniable unavoidable and unforgettable clasSICK 23 In 2003 author Scott Aaron Stine wrote of the film The innovation and verve this movie displays surpasses its innumerable shortcomings all products of a film that qualified as destitute before the cameras even started rolling The fact that most of the actors had probably never stepped foot in front of a camera prior to this only adds to the movie s squalid charm their talents may be slim but their presence is priceless 3 In 2007 Muir called the film a fine competent low budget effort that generates thrills and discomfort not only from its tale of symbiotic and separated Siamese twins but from its authentic sense of place New York City has never felt more delightfully and dangerously squalid 24 Muir goes on to call it oddly compelling deeply disturbing and inexplicably touching 24 In 2011 David Harley of Bloody Disgusting wrote that the film s warped sense of humor and brazen attitude make it a blast to watch and ultimately one of the best horror comedies of the 1980s 25 That same year Heather Wixson of Dread Central gave the film three and a half out of five stars referring to it as an insane masterpiece that lovingly celebrates the sometimes schlocky and sleazy side of cinema 26 Patrick Naugle of DVD Verdict wrote The movie is just pure shock value but a heck of a lot of fun 27 2017 restoration edit I m both humbled and proud to announce that Basket Case is now part of the permanent film collection of the Museum of Modern Art And yes I asked them if they actually watched the film and they assured me they did writer director Frank Henenlotter 2017 4 In March 2017 Basket Case was selected for preservation and restoration by the Museum of Modern Art MoMA 4 28 Henenlotter provided MoMA with the film elements required for the restoration 4 including the original 16 mm camera negative from which the restoration would be sourced 5 In addition to the film s footage being restored in 4K resolution its audio also underwent a restoration using the original magnetic tracks of the sound mix as the source 5 Home media editBasket Case was released on Betamax and VHS 29 by Media Home Entertainment It was released on DVD in the United States by Image Entertainment in 1998 30 In 2001 a special edition DVD release of the film was issued by Something Weird Video 31 On September 27 2011 Something Weird Video released the film on Blu ray 32 Henenlotter supervised the Blu ray release himself which features a restoration of the film taken from a 35 mm interpositive with the original 16 mm negative which had initially been thought lost used as a reference 14 33 In November 2017 it was announced that Arrow Video would be releasing Basket Case on Blu ray and DVD featuring the 4K restoration of the film overseen by MoMA 5 6 The release includes such bonus features as an audio commentary by Henenlotter and Van Hentenryck interviews with members of the cast a making of featurette and the 1972 Henenlotter directed short film Slash of the Knife 5 The Arrow Video release was issued on February 27 2018 5 6 Notes edit The name Belial has been noted as appearing in some Hebrew texts as a reference to the devil 7 References edit a b c Towlson Jon 2014 Subversive Horror Cinema Countercultural Messages of Films from Frankenstein to the Present McFarland amp Company p 185 ISBN 9781476615332 Tierney John January 14 1991 Era Ends as Times Square Drops Slashers for Shakespeare The New York Times Retrieved January 29 2014 a b Stine Scott Aaron 2003 The Gorehound s Guide to Splatter Films of the 1980s McFarland amp Company p 37 ISBN 978 0786415328 Retrieved November 29 2022 a b c d Squires John March 8 2017 The Museum of Modern Art is Preserving and Restoring Basket Case Bloody Disgusting Retrieved November 29 2022 a b c d e f Squires John November 27 2017 Arrow Video Bringing 4K Restoration of Basket Case to US Blu ray Bloody Disgusting Retrieved November 29 2022 a b c Bowen Chuck March 9 2018 Blu ray Review Frank Henenlotter s Basket Case on Arrow Video Slant Magazine Retrieved November 29 2022 Thompson Rocco March 9 2018 Belial Be Damned Arrow Video Sets Basket Case Loose Rue Morgue Retrieved November 29 2022 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae af AFI Catalog Basket Case AFI Catalog Retrieved July 22 2023 Muir 2007 p 219 Martin 1981 p 55 a b Martin 1981 p 56 a b Sorrento Matthew December 22 2008 The Basket Case Returns Interview with Frank Henenlotter Film Threat Archived from the original on December 16 2014 Retrieved January 29 2014 Oh yeah I literally walked around Times Square while I was writing Basket Case There was a big Nathan s where ABC Television is now I had part of the story then I thought about a guy walking around with a monster in his basket It worked up to a certain point but then I wondered why would anybody walk around with a monster in a basket So then I thought who s in the basket I thought of it being his brother which I knew was a great idea and then the dialog starting coming I wrote it down in Nathan s in that seedy wonderful atmosphere Basket Case Trilogy This Is Horror a b Galluzzo Rob November 3 2011 Fright Interview Frank Henenlotter Writer Director of Basket Case IconsOfFright com Retrieved January 29 2014 In Search of Hotel Broslin Basket Case DVD special features Gross G Noel September 28 2001 Basket Case SE DVD Talk Retrieved January 29 2014 Duvoli John July 30 1983 Basket Case one cut above usual The Evening News Newburgh New York Retrieved January 29 2014 Haithman Diane November 12 1982 One film is horrid one frightfully good Detroit Free Press Detroit Michigan pp 1C 10C Retrieved November 29 2022 via Newspapers com Review Basket Case Variety December 31 1981 Retrieved January 29 2014 a b Stark John July 2 1982 The latest midnight horror San Francisco Examiner San Francisco California Retrieved November 29 2022 via Newspapers com Walentis Al March 13 1983 Rex Reed on Basket Case Plan 9 sequel among undead Reading Eagle Retrieved January 30 2014 Basket Case 1982 Rotten Tomatoes Fandango Media Retrieved October 30 2022 Gross G Noel September 28 2001 Basket Case SE DVD Talk Retrieved January 29 2014 a b Muir 2007 p 217 219 Harley David October 19 2011 Basket Case Bloody Disgusting Retrieved January 29 2014 Wixson Heather September 19 2011 Basket Case Blu ray Dread Central Retrieved January 29 2014 Naugle Patrick September 23 2011 Basket Case Blu ray DVD Verdict Archived from the original on December 31 2013 Retrieved January 29 2014 Farrow Kevan March 9 2017 Basket Case Preserved by the Museum of Modern Art Seriously Scream Retrieved November 29 2022 Weiner David J Gale Thomson 1991 Video Hound s Golden Movie Retriever 1991 Visible Ink Press p 39 ISBN 0 8103 9404 9 Basket Case dvdempire com Retrieved March 31 2011 Basket Case somethingweird com Archived from the original on February 16 2007 Retrieved April 1 2011 Barton Steve July 11 2011 Basket Case Hits Blu ray All is Right in the World Dread Central Retrieved January 29 2014 Wixson Heather September 21 2011 Exclusive Frank Henenlotter Talks Basket Case Blu ray Possible Basket Case 4 Dread Central Retrieved January 29 2014 Bibliography edit Martin Bob December 1981 Basket Case Fangoria Vol 3 no 16 Starlog Group Inc ISSN 0164 2111 Retrieved November 29 2022 Muir John Kenneth 2007 Horror Films of the 1980s McFarland Publishing ISBN 978 0 7864 2821 2 Works cited editCunningham Lisa 2012 What s in the Basket Sexualized and Sexualizing Violence in Frank Henenlotter s Basket Case In Ritzenhoff Karen A Randell Karen eds Screening the Dark Side of Love From Euro Horror to American Cinema Palgrave Macmillan pp 145 157 ISBN 9781137096630 External links editBasket Case at IMDb Basket Case at AllMovie Basket Case at Rotten Tomatoes Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Basket Case film amp oldid 1181258419, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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