They play in a series of nearly-subliminal flashes in the current cut, and it’s striking to watch fellow crew members like producer Jeremy Bolt and set decorator Crispian Sallis wish vividly for a chance to reinstate some of this footage more wholly to find the superior, unrushed cut of Paul W.S. Anderson, who comes across as a genial, soft-spoken man in these disc’s special features, speaks reverently about the attempts at “beauty” in these vignettes of mayhem, citing painters like Hieronymus Bosch as being integral to the conception and execution of these hellscapes. But the desire of a truer director’s cut, filled with more of this carnal carnage, remains floating not just within the fandom, but within many of the creators’ imaginations. The studio’s revulsion, combined with some displeased test screenings, combined with the relentlessly rushed post-production period led to Anderson and Hunter making the necessary concessions and dramatic chops to result in the 96 minute cut we all know and love today (emphasis on “today,” as nobody really loved it much “then”). How on earth could this graphic, explicit horror show be a summer blockbuster taking the place of friggin’ Titanic for Paramount? And they balked, hard, at the horrific, gruesome, surreal images being foisted upon them. Paramount had stopped watching dailies by the time these were constructed by Anderson and his team. Some of the most startling moments in the film come from the images we see from the initial Event Horizon crew as they destroy themselves (as Anderson put it bluntly, they “fuck themselves to death” in a kind of “blood orgy”), and then from the similar “visions of Hell” jammed into Laurence Fishburne’s brain by a corrupted Sam Neill. So Anderson and Hunter’s initial cut, running over two hours, came as a shock to the system. Paramount began the production by watching dailies, quickly printed footage shot each day to ensure everything’s going well, but when they kept seeing footage they liked, they eventually stopped watching. ![]() But with Anderson’s production running into its own logistical hurdles, not to mention Anderson’s insistence on directing second-unit footage himself, the editing process began to collide with the photography process, leaving Anderson and editor Martin Hunter only four weeks in the editing bay to try and hastily assemble together a first cut.Īnd this first cut left quite the impression. ![]() Thus, with a giant summer blockbuster-shaped hole on their hands - ironically, also about a doomed ship - Paramount asked Anderson to cut the post-production time of Event Horizon from the traditional 10 weeks to a compressed six weeks in order to make an August ‘97 release date. The studio was banking heavily on a little Cameron film called Titanic to come out the summer of ‘97, but as Cameron’s production was falling apart, so too did Paramount’s scheduling plans. According to several interviews and making-of documentaries on the recent Shout Factory Blu-ray, Paramount Pictures contracted Anderson to direct Event Horizon after the smash success of his Mortal Kombat adaptation, then smashed an impossible circumstance upon him, thanks to a cinematic jerk by the name of James Cameron. Part of the mystique surrounding Event Horizon revolves around the possible existence of a longer, even more ultraviolent director’s cut. IPad 3, iPad 4, iPad Air, iPad iPad, iPad Mini 2, iPad Mini 3, iPad Mini 4, 9.RELATED: 10 Box Office Bombs That Are Now Considered Classics Shortened Post-Production Schedule IPhone 12 Pro Max, iPhone 13 Pro Max, iPhone 14 Plus: 1284x2778 IPhone Xs Max, iPhone 11 Pro Max: 1242x2688 IPhone X, iPhone Xs, iPhone 11 Pro: 1125x2436 IPhone 6 plus, iPhone 6s plus, iPhone 7 plus, iPhone 8 plus: 1242x2208 IPhone 6, iPhone 6s, iPhone 7, iPhone 8: 750x1334 IPhone 5, iPhone 5s, iPhone 5c, iPhone SE: 640x1136 IPhone: iPhone 2G, iPhone 3G, iPhone 3GS: 320x480
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