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Alan Ormsby
View on WikipediaAlan Ormsby (born December 14, 1943) is an American director, screenwriter, make up artist, actor and author.[1]
Key Information
Career
[edit]Ormsby began work in feature films with the Bob Clark-directed Children Shouldn't Play with Dead Things (1972), co-writing the script with Clark, providing the make-up effects and starring as the lead, Alan, alongside his then-wife Anya Ormsby.[2] Two years later, Ormsby and Clark re-teamed on Deathdream, directed by Clark and penned by Ormsby.[3] Deranged (1974), a horror film inspired by serial killer Ed Gein, saw Clark producing with Ormsby writing and co-directing the feature (with Jeff Gillen).[4]
In the 1980s, Ormsby continued working as a screenwriter, penning the screenplays for The Little Dragons (1980),[5] My Bodyguard (1980), Paul Schrader's Cat People (1982) and Clark's Porky's II: The Next Day (1983).[6] Ormsby returned to directing with Popcorn (1991), which he'd also written, but left the production early on and was replaced by Porky's actor Mark Herrier.[7] Ormsby's work includes the three "films-within-a-film" in the finished movie.[8] In the early 1990s, he was initially recruited to write the screenplay for a remake of The Mummy for Joe Dante, although it was later re-written by John Sayles.[9] In 1996, he co-wrote The Substitute.[10]
Other works
[edit]In addition to his work in film, Ormsby is known for having authored the 1970s special make-up effects book Movie Monsters, as well as creating the doll Hugo: Man of a Thousand Faces,[11] the latter of which was featured in The Pee-wee Herman Show and on Uncle Floyd's variety show.[citation needed]
References
[edit]- ^ "Alan Ormsby". Movies & TV Dept. The New York Times. 2014. Archived from the original on September 4, 2014. Retrieved April 23, 2015.
- ^ Janisse, Kier-La (2012). House of Psychotic Women. Godalming, Surrey, England: FAB Press. p. 232. ISBN 978-1-903254-69-1.
- ^ "Dead-of-Night - Cast, Crew, Director and Awards". The New York Times. Archived from the original on November 13, 2012. Retrieved May 30, 2023.
- ^ "AFI Catalog - Deranged". American Film Institute. Retrieved June 2, 2023.
- ^ "The Little Dragons (1980)". Turner Classic Movies. Archived from the original on December 30, 2022. Retrieved May 30, 2023.
- ^ "AFI Catalog - Alan Ormsby". American Film Institute. Retrieved May 30, 2023.
- ^ Muir, John Kenneth (2011). Horror Films of the 1990s. McFarland Publishing. pp. 170–172. ISBN 9780786440122.
- ^ Vanderbilt, Mike (January 19, 2017). "Long out-of-print horror classic Popcorn comes home in a box this spring". The A.V. Club. Retrieved May 30, 2023.
- ^ Squires, John (June 8, 2017). "George Romero and Clive Barker Almost Directed 'The Mummy' Remakes in the 90s". Bloody Disgusting. Retrieved May 30, 2023.
- ^ "The Substitute (1996)". Turner Classic Movies. Archived from the original on October 18, 2020. Retrieved May 30, 2023.
- ^ Alan Ormsby and Anya Liffey (2017). A Recollection With Star Anya Liffey and Writer/Makeup Artist Alan Ormsby (Deathdream Blu-ray featurette). West Hollywood: Blue Underground. BLU-BD-8020.
External links
[edit]- Alan Ormsby at IMDb
Alan Ormsby
View on GrokipediaEarly life and education
Birth and upbringing
Alan Ormsby was born on December 14, 1943, in Atlanta, Georgia, United States.[1] As a child, Ormsby grew up immersed in classic horror and fantasy films, including King Kong and Disney's Pinocchio, which sparked a deep fascination with animation and storytelling.[2] He aspired to become a cartoonist and hosted impromptu garage shows for neighborhood children, presenting original stories illustrated on large sheets of paper to captivate his young audience.[2] These early creative pursuits evolved when Ormsby began documenting his garage performances using an 8mm camera, marking a pivotal shift toward live-action filmmaking and performance that shaped his formative interests in drama.[2] This foundation prepared him for formal drama studies at the University of Miami.[1]University years
Ormsby pursued higher education in the late 1960s at the University of Miami, where he studied drama in the theater program.[5] During his university years, he met fellow student Bob Clark in the drama department, forming a key creative partnership that introduced Ormsby to experimental low-budget filmmaking concepts.[2] This period marked Ormsby's initial immersion in theatrical arts, including acting and production elements, which honed skills essential to his subsequent entry into horror cinema.[2]Film career
Debut and collaborations with Bob Clark
Alan Ormsby's entry into professional filmmaking occurred with the 1972 low-budget horror film Children Shouldn't Play with Dead Things, directed by his longtime collaborator Bob Clark. Ormsby co-wrote the screenplay with Clark, portraying the lead role of Alan, a theatrical director who leads a group of actors to a remote cemetery for a ritualistic prank that unleashes reanimated corpses. Additionally, Ormsby served as the special makeup effects artist, creating the film's rudimentary yet effective zombie transformations using practical techniques. Produced on a shoestring budget and shot on 35mm film primarily at a Miami-area cemetery with amateur performers, the project exemplified the DIY ethos of early 1970s independent cinema, marking Ormsby's debut as a multifaceted contributor in the genre.[6] The partnership between Ormsby and Clark deepened with Deathdream (1974), where Ormsby penned the screenplay for Clark's direction. Drawing inspiration from W.W. Jacobs' "The Monkey's Paw," the narrative centers on a Vietnam War soldier who returns home undead after being killed in action, gradually revealing his vampiric-zombified nature through blood dependency and physical decay. Ormsby's script subtly weaves themes of postwar trauma, capturing the era's pervasive grief, alienation, and societal rejection of returning veterans without explicit battle scenes, instead emphasizing familial horror and psychological unraveling. This collaboration elevated their work from campy exploitation to more thematically resonant horror, with early gore effects by Tom Savini enhancing the film's visceral impact.[7] Ormsby expanded his role in Deranged (1974), co-directing with Jeff Gillen and writing the screenplay, which Clark produced after declining to helm it due to its disturbing content. Loosely based on the real-life crimes of serial killer Ed Gein, the film follows Ezra Cobb (Roberts Blossom), a reclusive farmer whose obsessive attachment to his deceased mother leads to grave-robbing, necrophilia, and murder. Production faced significant constraints, including a modest $200,000 budget sourced from concert promotion profits, which necessitated updating Gein's 1950s story to a contemporary setting to bypass costly period-specific sets and costumes while maintaining authenticity through location shooting in rural Ontario. Despite these limitations, the film's unflinching portrayal of psychological descent and maternal fixation distinguished it as one of the earliest cinematic adaptations of Gein's atrocities.[8][9] The Clark-Ormsby alliance during this period profoundly shaped Ormsby's approach to independent horror, blending low-budget ingenuity with social commentary and character-driven narratives that influenced subsequent genre filmmakers. Their joint efforts on these early projects honed Ormsby's versatility across writing, directing, and effects, establishing a foundation for gritty, introspective tales that prioritized emotional depth over spectacle in the post-Night of the Living Dead landscape.[10]Directorial works
Alan Ormsby's directorial debut came with the 1974 horror film Deranged, which he co-directed with Jeff Gillen.[11] The movie is a fictionalized account of the real-life crimes of serial killer Ed Gein, focusing on a rural farmer named Ezra Cobb who descends into madness after his mother's death, leading him to exhume corpses and commit murders.[9] Ormsby and Gillen cast character actor Roberts Blossom in the lead role, whose nuanced portrayal of Cobb's deteriorating psyche earned widespread praise for its authenticity and unsettling depth.[11] Produced on a modest budget, Deranged employed a pseudo-documentary style with on-screen narration and interviews to heighten its realism, drawing comparisons to contemporaneous films like The Texas Chain Saw Massacre.[12] Critically, it has been recognized as a cult classic in the exploitation horror genre, with a 50% approval rating on Rotten Tomatoes and commendations for its psychological intensity over gratuitous shocks.[13] Ormsby's next directorial effort was the 1991 slasher Popcorn, for which he received solo credit initially but departed the project several weeks into production due to creative differences with the producers.[14] The film centers on a group of film students who stage an all-night horror marathon in an abandoned theater to raise funds, only to become targets of a masked killer employing elaborate gimmicks inspired by classic horror tropes.[15] Ormsby's screenplay, which he wrote under the pseudonym Tod Hackett after his dismissal, infused the story with meta-horror elements, such as references to vintage exploitation films and interactive audience effects like 3D projections and "shock" seats.[16] Mark Herrier completed direction, but Ormsby's vision emphasized the theater as a claustrophobic trap, blending suspense with homages to the genre's history.[17] Though it underperformed commercially, Popcorn has gained a niche following for its inventive kills and self-referential wit, predating similar meta-slashers like Scream.[16] Throughout his limited directorial output, Ormsby demonstrated a style rooted in low-budget ingenuity, maximizing tension through atmospheric settings and character-driven dread rather than high production values.[12] In Deranged, he balanced graphic elements—like preserved body parts—with psychological exploration of grief and isolation, reflecting 1970s exploitation cinema's raw edge.[9] By Popcorn, his approach evolved toward 1990s slasher conventions, incorporating playful genre commentary and practical effects to create immersive, theater-bound horror that critiqued while celebrating B-movie traditions.[14] This progression highlights Ormsby's adaptability within independent horror, prioritizing narrative economy and emotional unease over spectacle.[18]Screenwriting credits
Ormsby's screenwriting career in the 1980s marked a shift toward mainstream Hollywood assignments, moving beyond his earlier indie horror collaborations to encompass teen dramas, comedies, and erotic horror remakes. He penned the screenplay for My Bodyguard (1980), a coming-of-age story about a new student navigating high school bullying by hiring a bodyguard, directed by Tony Bill and praised for its realistic portrayal of adolescent pressures. Similarly, Ormsby contributed to the script of The Little Dragons (1980), a martial arts comedy involving two young brothers using their karate skills to rescue their kidnapped sister, blending family adventure with lighthearted action under director Curtis Hanson.[19] His work extended to the comedy sequel Porky's II: The Next Day (1983), co-written with Roger E. Swaybill and director Bob Clark, which followed high school students staging a Shakespeare production amid censorship battles and pranks. A notable entry in Ormsby's horror portfolio was the screenplay for Cat People (1982), a sensual remake of the 1942 Val Lewton classic directed by Paul Schrader, centering on a woman discovering her feline shapeshifting curse and its impact on her relationships, emphasizing themes of repressed desire and transformation.[20] Ormsby performed additional rewrites during production to refine the narrative's psychological depth.[21] In the 1990s, Ormsby returned to original horror scripting with Popcorn (1991), a meta-slasher film he co-directed initially before handing over to Mark Herrier, involving film students trapped during a midnight movie marathon with a killer recreating classic gimmicks.) His later credits included co-writing The Substitute (1996), an action-thriller directed by Robert Mandel about a mercenary posing as a teacher to dismantle a corrupt school ring, collaborating with Roy Frumkes and Rocco Simonelli. Ormsby's writing often explored recurring motifs of isolation and inner monstrosity, evident in the alienated protagonists of Cat People and the vengeful undead in his earlier horror works, transitioning seamlessly from low-budget genre fare to polished studio productions.[22] Among his unproduced efforts was a 1993 screenplay for a The Mummy revival, featuring a modern-day archaeologist awakening the ancient curse, which underwent rewrites by John Sayles before the project stalled.[23]| Film | Year | Genre | Key Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| The Little Dragons | 1980 | Martial Arts Comedy | Co-written; family rescue plot |
| My Bodyguard | 1980 | Teen Drama | Original screenplay; bullying theme |
| Cat People | 1982 | Erotic Horror | Remake adaptation; shapeshifting curse |
| Porky's II: The Next Day | 1983 | Comedy Sequel | Co-written; high school antics |
| Popcorn | 1991 | Slasher Horror | Original script; meta-movie setting |
| The Substitute | 1996 | Action-Thriller | Co-written; undercover teacher story |
