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Rob Zombie Talks Unrated “Halloween,” Says a Western Flick, Not “C.H.U.D.” Is On the Horizon

12/6/07, 6:01 pm EST


Rob Zombie has become adept at balancing two careers, so we put his multitasking to the test yesterday by questioning him about his career as a director from Oklahoma City, where his joint tour with Ozzy Osbourne had temporarily docked. So, just how does he balance rock and film? “Working on Halloween was intense,” he admits. “I was burnt out, so to be on tour and be doing something completely different is great. I get to use a different part of my brain.”

On December 18th, the unrated version of Zombie’s Halloween comes out on DVD, and while “unrated” has become synonymous with copious amounts of T&A and gore, Zombie’s disc out adds ten minutes of footage in the form of — gasp — character development, something Zombie says is essential to the story. Thankfully, Zombie is not planning on making any additional Halloweens, saying he’ll end his Michael Myers saga where the original 1978 version should have: after the first installment. “One is all I need,” says Zombie. Talking about his influences, while Zombie’s musical and cinematic output are deeply indebted to the horror films of decades past, as a director he finds inspiration in some of the great filmmakers. “The realist directors of the Seventies,” he cites as pivotal for him. “Scorsese, Spielberg, their bodies of work,” Zombie says, “I prefer Altman’s McCabe and Ms Miller than Nightmare on Elm Street.”

Musically, Zombie just wrapped up the score for The Haunted World of El Superbeasto, an animated film based on a comic he wrote. He’s also writing songs for his next album while on the road. As for that long-overdue White Zombie box set, don’t start holding your breath. “I’m not real big on going back and repackaging the past,” Zombie said. For his next film, Zombie told us that the Internet rumor that he was remaking 1984’s C.H.U.D. is “a joke” and admits that while he’d love to make a feature-length Werewolf Women of the S.S., the short film he directed as a mock trailer for Grindhouse, he doesn’t think that’ll happen. Instead, Zombie is considering working on another genre: the Western. Zombie, who loved this year’s 3:10 to Yuma and is aching to see No Country for Old Men, says, “It’s one of my favorite genres. I love John Ford, Howard Hawks.” Don’t worry, horror fans, he name-checked George A. Romero and John Carpenter too.


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Comments

Sevensinner | 12/16/2007, 12:23 pm EST

I dying waiting for a relaese date for el super beasto I have seen all his movies and really want to see this one. Im sure it will rock.

dolphingirl | 12/12/2007, 1:38 pm EST

i would love to see rob zombie tackle a western-as long as william forsythe has a spot.

reeel deeel | 12/9/2007, 12:19 pm EST

“stick to music”? dude, have you seen “the devils rejects”? freak’n awesome.

me | 12/8/2007, 7:10 pm EST

thAT MOVIE WAS COOL

mike | 12/7/2007, 3:14 pm EST

I thought he did an excellent job of capturing the whole mind set of Michael Meyers. I’d like to see more horror flicks by R.Zombie. I grew up in the ’70’s & 80’s like him so I think maybe it’s a generation thing if you cant appreciate his work.

zombie is king | 12/7/2007, 2:53 pm EST

has brought a great wrinkle to new horror movies. the only one putting anything out worth seeing in the genre for the last 5 years

DUDEYO | 12/7/2007, 9:32 am EST

Zombies don’t have brains that is why they are called zombies. Dude
get tuned in turn on and get a clue. Peace out.

Cody | 12/6/2007, 9:17 pm EST

Im glad Zombies not planning on making a second movie. The first Halloween is the only one we need.

Mr. Man | 12/6/2007, 7:27 pm EST

Stick to music.

Dana Doll | 12/6/2007, 6:54 pm EST

“Satan’s Rejects” was one sick flick! And William Forsythe ruled as “The Hand Of God”!

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