Danny Peary | |
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Born | Dannis Peary [1] August 8, 1949 |
Nationality | American |
Alma mater | |
Occupations | |
Years active | 1971–present |
Known for |
Dannis Peary (born August 8, 1949) [1] is an American film critic [2] and sports writer. [3] He has written and edited many books on cinema and sports-related topics. Peary is most famous for his book Cult Movies (1980), which spawned two sequels, Cult Movies 2 (1983) and Cult Movies 3 (1988) and are all credited for providing more public interest in the cult movie phenomenon. [4]
He is the brother of film critic, columnist, actor, and documentary filmmaker Gerald Peary. [5]
Peary was born in Philippi, West Virginia, to Laura Chaitan and Joseph Y. Peary, a professor. [1] During his childhood, he moved to South Carolina, [6] and then New Jersey. [7] In 1971, he earned a B.A. in history from the University of Wisconsin in Madison. [1] He also worked as a film critic for the Daily Cardinal student newspaper. [8] In 1975, he earned an M.A. in cinema, with honors, at the University of Southern California. [1] [7] While attending USC, he worked as the fine arts and sports editor for L.A. Panorama. [1]
Since 1977, Peary has lived in New York City. [7] He and his wife Suzanne have a daughter, Zoe. [7]
Over the years, his film criticism has been published in FilmInk , Movieline , Satellite Direct, OnDirect TV, TV Guide , Canadian TV Guide, Cosmopolitan , The New York Times , the New York Daily News, The Boston Globe , Sports Collectors Digest, the SoHo News , The Philadelphia Bulletin , Films in Focus, Films and Filming , Slant , L.A. Panorama, Memories and Dreams, The East Hampton Independent, and Country Weekly , [9] as well as The Velvet Light Trap and Newsday , [10] and the Sag Harbor Express. [11] He conducts celebrity interviews for Dan's Papers , in a column called "Danny Peary Talks To..." [12]
In 1981, Peary released his book Cult Movies . He followed it up with Cult Movies 2 in 1983 and Cult Movies 3 in 1989. (See bibliography) These books cover critically ignored (at the time) cult films. [8] Each book contained an essay for each film (100 in the first volume, [4] 50 in the second, [13] and 50 in the third), [14] including production details and information gleaned from Peary's interviews with various producers, directors and actors. Each volume contained an essay by contributor Henry Blinder. [15] [16]
Peary also wrote Guide for the Film Fanatic (1986), reviewing a wider range of films. [17]
Peary's Cult Movies trilogy, along with other touchstones such as Michael Weldon's Psychotronic Video magazine and books, helped establish a foundation for critical analysis of low-budget genre movies. As the Austin Film Society wrote,
There is what we might consider the Danny Peary faction. An excellent writer, Peary lionized a particular kind of “cult" criticism in his multiple volumes of the Cult Movies books. Never dismissive, Peary celebrates these films for their unique qualities and their advocacy of outsider voices. Peary is a fan of the subversive and the humanistic and the books are essential reading for anyone interested in what lies just outside the bounds of the canon. [18]
Peary has co-authored books with Major League baseball player-sportscasters Ralph Kiner and Tim McCarver; writer Tom Clavin; Olympic gold medalist and cancer survivor Shannon Miller on her memoir; and Muhammad Ali's daughter Hana Ali on a book about the origins of her father's greatest quotes. He has edited sports books including Baseball Immortal Derek Jeter: A Career in Quotes and Jackie Robinson in Quotes: The Remarkable Life of Baseball's Most Significant Player. (See bibliography)
Peary wrote an episode of the 1985-1989 animated series ThunderCats , titled "The Mountain." [19] He wrote an episode of SilverHawks , titled "Undercover", that aired October 28, 1986. [20]
Peary was a writer for the nationally syndicated sports-interview TV show The Tim McCarver Show [21]
Peary was interviewed for the 2010 documentary Machete Maidens Unleashed! . The director of the film, Mark Hartley, has said that, "I'd worn my copies of Cult Movies 1, 2 and 3 into the ground from constant re-reading so meeting author Danny Peary was a pleasure." [22] He appears in James Westby's documentary At the Video Store (2019), [23] and in the cult-movie documentary Time Warp (2020. [24]
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Glen or Glenda is a 1953 American independent exploitation film directed, written by and starring Ed Wood, and featuring Wood's then-girlfriend Dolores Fuller and Bela Lugosi. It was produced by George Weiss who also made the exploitation film Test Tube Babies that same year.
Adalberto "Junior" Ortiz Colón is a Puerto Rican former Major League Baseball catcher. He played all or part of thirteen seasons in the majors from 1982 to 1994. He was a member of the 1991 World Champion Minnesota Twins.
Cult Movies is a 1981 book by Danny Peary, consisting of a series of essays regarding what Peary described as the 100 most representative examples of the cult film phenomenon. The films are presented in alphabetical order, with each chapter featuring a story synopsis for the covered title, Peary's response to the film, production and release details, and a brief selection of contemporary critical reviews.
Psychotronic Video was an American film magazine founded by publisher/editor Michael J. Weldon in 1980 in New York City, covering what he dubbed "psychotronic movies", which he defined as "the ones traditionally ignored or ridiculed by mainstream critics at the time of their release: horror, exploitation, action, science fiction, and movies that used to play in drive-ins or inner city grindhouses." It was published through 2006. Most of the magazine's hundreds of reviews were written by Weldon himself. Other contributors provided career histories/interviews with cult filmmakers and actors such as Radley Metzger, Larry Cohen, Jack Hill, William Rotsler, David Carradine, Sid Haig, Karen Black, and Timothy Carey. Regular features included "Record Reviews" by Art Black, "Spare Parts" by Dale Ashmun, and "Never To Be Forgotten", an obituary column.
Nathan Rabin is an American film and music critic. Rabin was the first head writer for The A.V. Club, a position he held until he left the Onion organization in 2013. In 2013, Rabin became a staff writer for The Dissolve, a film website operated by Pitchfork Media. Two of his featured columns at The Dissolve were "Forgotbusters" and "Streaming University".
Cult Movies 2 is a 1983 book by Danny Peary, a follow-up to his 1980 book Cult Movies. Just like its predecessor it consists of a series of essays regarding what Peary described as the most representative examples of the cult film phenomenon. This book covered fifty films not among the hundred in the first volume.
Cult Movies 3 is a 1988 book by Danny Peary, a follow-up to his previous books Cult Movies (1980) and Cult Movies 2 (1983). Like its predecessors, it consists of a series of essays regarding what Peary described as the most representative examples of the cult film phenomenon. The book covers fifty films that were not discussed in the first two volumes.
...he relied on brilliant tomes penned by my film historian brother, Danny Peary.
I grew up in South Carolina.
I was born in West Virginia, grew up in South Carolina and New Jersey. ... I have been living in New York City since 1977 with my wife Suzanne (our married daughter Zoe...
Long before broadband or dial-up, there was Cult Movies, a landmark book by critic Danny Peary. Peary, 71, has authored, coauthored, or edited more than two dozen books, mostly about movies or baseball. None of his work has resonated with readers more than the 1980s trilogy that began with Cult Movies (1981) and continued with Cult Movies 2 (1983) and Cult Movies 3 (1988). In Cult Movies, an oversized, 400-page paperback that remains revered by film buffs, Peary defined the inchoate concept of cult cinema and highlighted 100 'special films which for one reason or another have been taken to heart by segments of the movie audience, cherished, protected, and most of all, enthusiastically championed.'
43. Henry Blinder, 'Willy Wonka and the Chocolate Factory', in Danny Peary, 'Cult Movies 2' (London: Vermillion, 1984), 169ISBN 0199988749 and 978-0199988747.
In Peary's Cult Movies 3, he includes an extended essay on Seconds written by Henry Blinder, who interviewed [John] Randolph, screenwriter John Carlino, composer Jerry Goldsmith, and producer Edward Lewis.
Executive Producer: Jim Moskovitz; Director: Jeff Mitchell; Producers: Jim Moskovitz & Gregg Foster; Writers: Danny Peary & Jim Moskovitz
...the presence of author Danny Peary ('Cult Movies"' book series) showed that the creative forces behind 'Time Warp' weren't trying to define cult film as much as celebrate it.