The Monster Squad

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The Monster Squad
Monstersquadposter.jpg
Theatrical release poster
Directed by Fred Dekker
Written by
Produced byJonathan A. Zimbert
Starring
CinematographyBradford May
Edited byJames Mitchell
Music by Bruce Broughton
Color process Metrocolor
Production
companies
Distributed by Tri-Star Pictures
Release date
  • August 14, 1987 (1987-08-14)
Running time
82 minutes
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish
Budget$14 million [1]
Box office$3.8 million [2]

The Monster Squad is a 1987 American horror comedy film directed by Fred Dekker, and written by Dekker and Shane Black. Peter Hyams and Rob Cohen served as executive producers. It was released by TriStar Pictures on August 14, 1987. The film features pastiches of the Universal Monsters, led by Count Dracula. They are confronted by a group of savvy children out to keep them from controlling the world. Although it was financially unsuccessful during its theatrical run and received mixed reviews from critics, the film has gained a positive reception from audiences and has become a cult classic in the years since its release.

Contents

Plot

The Monster Squad is a club of pre-teens who idolize the Universal classic monster movies and their non-human stars. Club leader Sean Crenshaw, whose younger sister, Phoebe, desperately wants to join the club, is given the diary of legendary monster hunter Dr. Abraham Van Helsing, but his excitement abates when he finds it is written in German. Sean and the rest of the Monster Squad his best friend and second in command Patrick Rhodes, clumsy Horace, tough older kid Rudy and little Eugene go to visit an elderly man known as the "Scary German Guy", actually a kind gentleman and a former concentration camp prisoner, to translate the diary.

The diary describes an amulet that is composed of concentrated good. One day out of every century, as the forces of good and evil reach a balance, the otherwise-indestructible amulet becomes vulnerable. With the next day of balance happening within a few days at the stroke of midnight, the children realize they must gain possession of the amulet and use it with an incantation from Van Helsing's diary to open a wormhole in the universe and cast the monsters into Limbo. As shown in the film's prelude, Van Helsing had unsuccessfully attempted this one hundred years ago to defeat his old adversary Count Dracula; his apprentices then emigrated to the United States to hide the amulet out of Dracula's reach.

Nevertheless, Dracula seeks to obtain the amulet so that he can take over the world. To this end, he assembles several monstrous allies: The Mummy, the Gill-man, The Wolf Man, and three school girls whom the Count transforms into his vampiric consorts. Dracula then steals a crate containing Frankenstein's monster from a B-25 Mitchell in flight, thus completing his army. However, Frankenstein's monster is reluctant to aid Dracula and wanders into the forest, where he encounters Phoebe. Rather than being afraid, she shows him the kindness he has always sought, and they become friends. After Phoebe proves to the Monster Squad that Frankenstein's monster is not evil, he chooses to help the boys instead of Dracula.

The amulet is buried in a stone room beneath a house that Dracula and the other monsters now occupy and where Van Helsing's diary was found. The room is littered with wards which prevent the monsters from taking it. The Monster Squad break into the house, acquire the amulet and narrowly escape Dracula's grasp. They confer with Scary German Guy, who informs them that the incantation must be read by a female virgin. In revenge for their meddling, Dracula destroys the Squad's clubhouse, thereby drawing Police Detective Del Crenshaw, Sean, and Phoebe's father, into the fray.

As midnight approaches, the Squad makes their way to a local cathedral to make their last stand. The doors to the cathedral are locked, so the incantation must be read on the stoop, leaving the Squad vulnerable. They enlist Patrick's elder sister Lisa to help them, as she is the only virgin they know, but the incantation fails since Lisa is actually not a virgin anymore. As the monsters close in, the Squad deduces that Phoebe must complete the task of opening the portal, and Scary German Guy attempts to help her read the incantation while the Squad and Detective Crenshaw fend off the monsters.

In the ensuing battle, Dracula's consorts, the Mummy, the Gill-man, and the Wolfman are defeated. Dracula arrives to destroy the amulet when Frankenstein's monster intervenes, impaling him on a wrought-iron cross. Phoebe finishes the incantation, opening the portal, which begins to consume the bodies of the monsters. Dracula, still alive, attempts to drag Sean in with him, but Sean impales Dracula with a wooden stake, and Patrick grabs Sean before he gets pulled in with Dracula. Having briefly escaped from Limbo, Van Helsing appears and pulls Dracula to his doom. As Frankenstein's monster is drawn into the portal, Phoebe holds onto him and pleads for him to stay. Knowing he does not belong on Earth, Frankenstein's monster lets go of Phoebe's hand, but accepts her gift of a stuffed animal to remember her by. The portal then closes, ensuring the world's safety.

The United States Army arrives on the scene, having received a letter from Eugene earlier asking for their help against the monsters. When the confused general fails to make sense of the situation, Sean steps forward and presents the man with his business card, identifying himself and his friends as "The Monster Squad".

Cast

Production

Development and writing

The film had a relatively quick development, being first discussed in 1985 and shot the following year. [3] Dekker was toying with the idea of rebooting some classic series, such as The Little Rascals and the Universal Monsters. Upon watching Abbott and Costello Meet Frankenstein , he thought about doing a crossover of the two. While Dekker was putting the finishing touches to his debut Night of the Creeps , he offered Shane Black, his friend and roommate at a West L.A. filmmakers residence nicknamed the "Pad O'Guys", to turn that pitch into a screenplay. [4] Black's first draft, which included several epic scenes that would have sent the picture overbudget, clocked in at 150 to 160 pages, depending on recollections. It was trimmed down in two passes by Dekker, to about 100 pages. [5] [6] [7] The story was originally set in Baton Rouge, Louisiana, although the city was not mentioned in the finished film. [8]

As it drew inspiration from their catalogue, the project was first offered to Universal, but one executive proved particularly dismissive and they passed on it. However, they later accepted to handle international distribution. [9] Dekker asked one of his favorite directors, Peter Hyams, for guidance. The veteran helmer sent the script to Taft/Barish, who quickly expressed interest, and he agreed to serve as executive producer to help the film move forward. [10] [11] Hyams ended up having a sizeable influence on the venture, and his lean filmmaking approach sometimes conflicted with that of the less methodical Dekker, with the latter calling him "a very stern taskmaster". [6] [12] Hyams also brought in important crew members, such as editor James Mitchell, [12] production designer Albert Brenner and cinematographer Bradford May, all former collaborators of his. [13] On the other hand, composer Bruce Broughton was Dekker's choice, and Hyams would retain his services for his next three directorial efforts, starting with 1988's The Presidio . [14]

Casting and creature design

Duncan Regehr narrowly beat a then little known Liam Neeson for the role of Dracula. Neeson was still supposed to appear as a human disguise conjured by Dracula to conceal his identity, but that scene was not shot. [15] Following his breakthrough performance as a serial killer in Manhunter , Tom Noonan became sought after for similar, unsettling roles. He chose this film over Near Dark as his next project due to its more lighthearted nature, but Kathryn Bigelow was persistent and showed up on set to work out an early release with the producers in hope that he could do both. She was turned down. [16]

The special effects were contributed by a Stan Winston Studio team headed by Tom Woodruff Jr., who worked from Winston's concept arts. The characters were given subtle modifications, as their most famous designs—or in the case of the Creature from the Black Lagoon , the creature itself—were Universal intellectual properties. [17] [18] Woodruff was assigned to work on Frankenstein's monster, Shane Mahan was given the Mummy, John Rosengrant got the Wolfman, and Alec Gillis took care of Dracula's bat transformation. However, it's the Gillman suit, made by Matt Rose and studio newcomer Steve Wang, that came to be viewed as a milestone in the development of creature costumes. [19] Based on their Monster Squad work, Rose and Wang were entrusted with building a similar suit on short notice for Predator , which helped the struggling production move forward. [20] [21]

Filming and post-production

Principal photography kicked off on October 13, 1986. [22] Exteriors were shot at Warner Bros. Studios and the Warner/Columbia Ranch in Burbank, California, Universal Studios in Universal City, [23] and on location throughout the Los Angeles metropolitan area. Many interiors were shot at Culver Studios in Culver City. [24] [25] Due to most of the film taking place at night and regulations regarding how late young actors could work, the children filmed their scenes first for about three hours in the early evening, while the rest of the crew remained on set for much of the night. [24] Filming went a week over schedule, and lasted 50 days. [10] About 10 nights were devoted to the finale. [13]

There were tensions between Hyams, a proponent of traditional filming methods based on master shots, and the self-taught Dekker. Hyams even considered firing Dekker at the end of the first week of shooting, but producer Rob Cohen helped smooth out their differences, and the young man agreed to conform to industry standard practices after that. Hyams also directed some second unit material for the film, including the werewolf's phone booth scene. [24] [12] Night of the Creeps employed a 1.85:1 aspect ratio, but Hyams chose to shoot this one in 2.39:1. [13]

While the majority of the effects were done in camera, including the bat transformation [13] and some background lightning, [24] the film still included a number of visual effects, such as the vortex. They were supervised by Richard Edlund and Boss Films of Ghostbusters fame. [10] [26] The film was cut by 13 minutes by the producers, who did not want it to run more than 90 minutes. [5] According to Dekker, the film's brevity was largely due to Hyams, who felt that trimming subplots like Sean's parents' marital issues would make the film more tonally consistent, [6] although he disagreed with that assessment. [27] [28] Post-release budget estimates varied between $12.5 and 14 million. [10] [22]

Release

The Monster Squad was marketed through a series of posters designed to look like "Wanted" police placards, although the model used for Dracula was not Duncan Regehr. The main poster featured the Ghostbusters-inspired slogan "You know who to call when you have ghosts. But who do you call when you have monsters?". The film held its premiere party at the Hard Rock Café in Hollywood, California. Kiefer Sutherland, the star of The Lost Boys , was among those who showed up to support the film. [29] [30]

Box office

The film opened in the U.S. on August 14, 1987, generating $2.9 million in revenue in its first week, good only for 12th place. By its second weekend, the film was averaging a dismal $696 per screen and was pulled from theaters with a poor domestic tally of $3,769,990. [31]

Dekker wished that a company with better affinity for marketing feel good movies, such as Disney's Touchstone Pictures, had picked up the film. [6] The Monster Squad's PG-13 rating may have prevented it from reaching the audience most likely to identify with its characters, while older teenagers were more interested in the R-rated The Lost Boys, which opened just two weeks prior. [32] Some thought that the film's slogan made it look like a B-movie knockoff, [33] and the film suffered from further comparisons with The Goonies , although Dekker says he had not seen it at that point. [34]

Critical response

On Rotten Tomatoes, the film holds an approval rating of 56% based on 27 reviews, with an average rating of 5.7/10. The website's critical consensus reads, "A fun 80's adventure with a slightly scary twist, The Monster Squad offers tween-friendly horror with just enough of a kick". [35] On Metacritic it has a score of 61% based on reviews from 14 critics, indicating "generally favorable reviews". [36] Audiences polled by CinemaScore gave the film an average grade of "B+" on an A+ to F scale. [37]

Contemporary reviews were mixed. Kevin Thomas of the Los Angeles Times wrote that it is "fun for the kid in all of us". [38] British magazine Starburst wrote that "[t]reading almost the same route as The Lost Boys, The Monster Squad succeeds where that film failed because Dekker knows his stuff and doesn't see trendy video technique as a replacement for mood and style." However, it predicted that its 15 BBFC certificate would likely prevent it from reaching its intended audience in the country. [39]

Vincent Canby of The New York Times called it "a feature-length commercial for a joke store that sells not-great, rubber monster masks". [40] Dave Kehr of the Chicago Tribune found the film's juxtaposition of child heroes and intense visuals to be distasteful, writing "[p]art E.T. and part Abbott and Costello Meet Frankenstein, Fred Dekker`s The Monster Squad is crass but imponderable, bizarrely mixing glowingly back-lit sentimentality with stomach-churning violence and juvenile sex jokes. Its target audience appears to be practiced sadists in the 12- to 14-year-old age group". [41]

Retrospective reviews have typically been kinder to the film. Francis Rizzo III of DVDTalk wrote that "there's much more than nostalgia going for it, as the story of a band of horror film fans battling the classic movie monsters is a fun piece of filmmaking [...] and an exciting action flick." [42] Nathan Rabin of The A.V. Club stated that "Squad's gleeful monster mash anticipates bloated CGI orgies like Van Helsing , which likely cost a hundred times as much, yet boasts a hundredth of Squad's scrappy, ramshackle charm." [33] Keith Phipps of The Verge deemed it "a devoted homage to the films [Dekker] grew up loving", playing "like highly polished fan fiction from a creator who clearly never let his Famous Monsters of Filmland subscription lapse." [43] Jason Clark of Entertainment Weekly was more measured, calling it "the ultimate '80s movie", albeit "far from perfect". [28]

Accolades

The Monster Squad won a Silver Raven (special jury prize) at the 1988 Brussels International Fantastic Film Festival. [6] In its July 2006 list of "The 100 Greatest Villains Ever", Wizard placed Dracula at number 30 and chose Regehr's portrayal from The Monster Squad as the definitive version of the character. [44]

Post-release

Home video

The Monster Squad was first issued by Vestron Video in February 10, 1988 on VHS and Betamax, with the LaserDisc released shortly after by Image Entertainment. It was the film's only domestic release for nearly two decades. [45]

Following the 2006 reunion (see Theatrical revival section below), a fan campaign led to a 20th Anniversary Edition two-disc DVD being released by Lionsgate on July 24, 2007. It contains a variety of bonus features, including a five-part retrospective documentary titled Monster Squad Forever, two audio commentaries, deleted scenes, trailers, TV spots, and animated storyboards. [42] [46] It won the 2008 Saturn Award for Best Classic Film DVD Release. [47]

Lionsgate issued a region-free Blu-ray on November 24, 2009, containing the same extras as the DVD. This edition is now out of print. The Monster Squad became available for streaming on Hulu on September 1, 2017, [48] and on July 1, 2018 on Amazon Prime Video. [49]

In November, 2023, The Monster Squad was released on 4K UHD by Kino Lorber. The release features both a 4K and Blu-Ray version of the film, along with previous archival special features. Additionally, the set also includes a Blu-Ray copy of the feature-length retrospective documentary Wolfman's Got Nards . [50]

Theatrical revival

On April 16, 2006, Ain't It Cool News writer Eric Vespe organized two screenings of The Monster Squad at the Alamo Drafthouse Cinema in Austin, Texas. The event, which was attended by Dekker, Gower, Banks and Lambert, was a sellout and marked a turning point in the film's revival. It led to many more screenings and a letter-writing campaign for the film's home video re-release. [15] [51]

For its 30th anniversary, Gower and Lambert took the film on a tour of 17 American cities in association with Alamo Drafthouse Cinemas, bookended by an additional screening at London's Prince Charles Cinema. [52]

Legacy

On the heels of The Monster Squad, Dekker re-signed with Taft/Barrish for his dream project, a feature adaptation of the 1960s TV series Jonny Quest , but the box office failure of the former put the film in limbo. [10]

Actor Brent Chalem did not get to witness the film's popular resurgence, having met an untimely death from pneumonia in 1997, at the age of 22. [53]

Gower went on to direct and co-produce Wolfman's Got Nards, a feature-length account of The Monster Squad's cult status. [32] Primarily shot during the original film's 30th anniversary revival tour, the documentary was previewed in abridged form at various horror film events, [54] before premiering on April 7, 2018 at the Chattanooga Film Festival. It was also part of the official selection for the 2018 Sitges International Fantastic Film Festival. [55] It received extremely positive reviews, although they primarily emanated from genre film outlets rather than mainstream media. [56] In October 2019, the film embarked on a tour of 20 Alamo Drafthouse locations. [57]

Cancelled remake

In 2008, producer Rob Cohen said that the film rights were back with Paramount and there were plans to remake the film; however, he had no desire to direct.

In 2010, it was announced that Michael Bay's Platinum Dunes had officially signed on to produce, with Cohen to direct and Mark and Brian Gunn writing the screenplay. [58] [59] However in 2014, Platinum Dunes producers Brad Fuller and Andrew Form confirmed that the remake was no longer in development. [60] [61]

Soundtrack

The Monster Squad
Film score by
ReleasedOctober 8, 2007 [62]
Recorded 20th Century-Fox Studios,
Los Angeles [23]
Genre
Length57:24 [62]
Label Intrada Records [62]
Producer Bruce Broughton

The Monster Squad's score was composed and produced by Bruce Broughton. Film Score Monthly called it "one of the most full-blooded and enjoyable scores of the late 1980s", rating it four stars out of four. [63]

Singer and producer Michael Sembello also contributed two original songs, "Rock Until You Drop" and "The Monster Squad Rap", the latter of which humorously credits the titular Monster Squad as performers. [23] The original version of the rap includes a direct reference to the Creature from the Black Lagoon, although it was edited from the 1988 home video. [64]

The film's soundtrack was released on CD for the first time in 2007 via Intrada Records. [62] La-La Land Records reissued it in 2015. The new CD contained alternate versions, diegetic tracks and the two Sembello songs, which were absent from the Intrada pressing. [23] The soundtrack debuted in vinyl from Mondo in 2016. This version retains the Sembello songs but omits the alternate and diegetic tracks. Mondo has also released the two Sembello songs in 7-inch single format. [65]

See also

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