22° TORINO FILM FESTIVAL
John Landis

Twilight Zone: The Movie

Twilight Zone: The Movie

Country: USA
Year: 1983
Duration: 120'


Divided into four episodes plus a prologue, the film is a tribute to the television series The Twilight Zone, which was created by Rod Serling in the late 1950's and continued throughout the 1960's. Landis produced the film with Spielberg, and he wrote and directed the prologue, during which two men driving in a car one night reminisce about the highlights of the series, and the episode Time Out, the project's one original script. In this episode, a white racist is sent back in time and forced to suffer everything he would have liked to do to blacks, Jews, Germans and Vietnamese.

"In Time Out, I wanted to be true to the spirit of the old program and insert a healthy dose of Serling's political and moral interests. To be exact, it is the only episode of the film that has political or moral intentions." (J. Landis)

Biography

film director

John Landis

John Landis was born on August 3, 1950 in Chicago, shortly before his family moved to Los Angeles. In 1966 he enrolled at UCLA, but the next year he abandoned his studies to become an errand boy at 20th Century Fox. He worked on various European productions as an odd-job man and stuntman, and in 1971 he debuted as a director with Schlok, a parody of B horror films which he financed himself and which made 6 million dollars in box office receipts. In 1977 the Zucker brothers and Jim Abrahams called on him to make a comedy based on their Kentucky Fried Theatre; the result was The Kentucky Fried Movie. Universal Studios noticed him and entrusted him with the college-humor comedy National Lampoon's Animal House (1978). The extraordinary success of the film, which he doubled with his next film, The Blues Brothers (1980), made Landis one of Hollywood's most famous young directors and the author of a new type of catastrophic and demented humor. In 1981 he produced and directed An American Werewolf in London, a contamination of horror and comedy, and in 1983 he directed the sophisticated comedy Trading Places, plus a homonymous tribute to the 1950's science fiction TV series Twilight Zone. Continuing his contamination of genres, and often working with trusted actors like Dan Aykroyd, Eddie Murphy and Chevy Chase, he directed the comedy Into the Night (1985), the nuclear parody Spies Like Us (1985) and, with the "Saturday Night Live" crew, the western comedy ¡Three Amigos! (1986). His film Amazon Women on the Moon (1987) was an attempt to repeat the project of The Kentucky Fried Movie, and then success returned with Coming to America (1988), a comic fairy tale starring Eddie Murphy. In the early 1990's he exploited the Universal Studios for the TV series Dream On, which he produced. He directed several episodes of the series, that lasted until 1994. Then he made several very different films: the farce Oscar (1991), the horror film Innocent Blood (1992), the action movie Beverly Hills Cop III (1994) and the children's film The Stupids (1996). The sequel to The Blues Brothers, Blues Brothers 2000, is dated 1990, after which he made the independent production Susan's Plan (1998), his last fiction film before the documentary Slasher (2004).

FILMOGRAFIA

Schlok (Slok, 1971), The Kentucly Fried Movie (Ridere per ridere, 1977), National Lampoon's Animal House (Animal House, 1978), The Blues Brothers (id., 1980), An American Werewolf in London (Un lupo mannaro americano a Londra, 1981), Coming Soon! (TV, 1982), Trading Places (Una poltrona per due, 1983), Twilight Zone (Ai confini della realtà, co-regia Steven Spielberg, Joe Dante, George Miller, 1983), Michael Jackson's Thriller (videoclip, 1983), Into the Night (Tutto in una notte, 1985), B.B. King - Keeping The Blues Alive (co-regia Jeff Okun, 1985), Spies Like Us (Spie come noi, 1985), ¡Three Amigos! (I tre Amigos, 1986), Amazon Women on the Women (Donne amazzoni sulla luna, co-regia Carl Gottlieb, Peter Horton, Joe Dante, Robert K. Weiss, 1987), Coming to America (Il principe cerca moglie, 1988), Disneyland 35th Anniversary Special (TV, 1990), «Dream On» - The First Episode (TV, 1990), Oscar (Oscar- Un fidanzato per due figlie, 1991), «Dream On» - The Second Greatest Story Ever Told (TV, 1991), Black or White (videoclip, 1991), Innocent Blood (Amore all'ultimo morso, 1992), «Dream On» - Nightmare on Bleecker Street; It Came From Beneath the Sink; Come and Knock on Our Door (TV, 1992), Beverly Hills Cop III (Beverly Hills Cop III - Un piedipiatti a Beverly Hills, 1994), «Dream On» - Oral Sex, Lies and Videotape; Portrait by an Artist on the Young Man; Martin Tupper in Magnum Farce (TV, 1993), «Dream On» - Attack of the 59" Woman; The Courtship of Martin's Father; I Never Promised You Charoses Martin; Off-Off-Broadway Bound; The Spirit of the 76th & Park; She Won't Do It, but Her Sister Will; Take Two Tablets and Get Me to Mount Sinai (TV, 1994), The Stupids (id., 1996), Blues Brothers 2000 (Blues Brothers - Il mito continua, 1998), Susan's Plan (Delitto imperfetto, 1998), Slasher (doc, 2004).

Joe Dante

Joe Dante (Morristown, New Jersey, 1948) studied at the Philadelphia College of Art. He made his first full-length film in 1968, a 420-minute-long experimental film made by editing B-movie clips: The Movie Orgy. Public recognition of his artistry arrived with Piranha (1978) and The Howling (1980), in which the director interprets horror in a modern key. In 1984 he made Gremlins for Steven Spielberg, followed by a sequel in 1990. His two films The Second Civil War (1997) and Small Soldiers (1998) were parodies of war. In 2003 he made Looney Tunes: Back in Action with the famous Warner Bros. characters; the film premiered in Italy at the Torino Film Festival.

FILMOGRAFIA

The Movie Orgy (1968), Hollywood Boulevard (1976), Piranha (id., 1978), The Howling (L’ululato, 1981), Gremlins (id., 1984), Explorers (1985), Innerspace (Salto nel buio, 1987), The Burbs, (L’erba del vicino, 1989), Gremlins 2: The New Batch (Gremlins 2 - La nuova stirpe, 1990), Matinée (id., 1993), The Second Civil War (La seconda guerra civile americana, 1997), Small Soldiers (id., 1998), Looney Tunes: Back in Action (id., 2003), Haunted Lighthouse (2003), Masters of Horror (ep. Homecoming, TV, 2005).

George Miller

FILMOGRAFIA

Mad Max (Interceptor, 1979), Mad Max 2 (Interceptor - Il guerriero della strada, 1981), Twilight Zone: The Movie (Ai confini della realtà, ep. 4, 1983), The Dismissal (serie tv/tv series, 1983), The Last Bastion (serie tv/tv series, 1984), Mad Max Beyond Thunderdome (Mad Max - Oltre la sfera del tuono, 1985), The Witches of Eastwick (Le streghe di Eastwick, 1987), Lorenzo’s Oil (L’olio di Lorenzo, 1992), 40,000 Years of Dreaming (doc., 1997), Babe: Pig in the City (Babe va in città, 1998), Happy Feet (id., 2006), Happy Feet 2 (2011), Mad Max: Fury Road (id., 2015). 

Menu