Jump to content

The Crow (1994 film): Difference between revisions

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Content deleted Content added
Line 50: Line 50:
{{see also|Brandon Lee#Death|l1=Brandon Lee}} <!-- See "Template:See also" to understand how this line works, don't subst it! -->
{{see also|Brandon Lee#Death|l1=Brandon Lee}} <!-- See "Template:See also" to understand how this line works, don't subst it! -->
<!-- Image with unknown copyright status removed: [[Image:Beautiful Brandon.JPG|thumb|left|Brandon Lee]] -->
<!-- Image with unknown copyright status removed: [[Image:Beautiful Brandon.JPG|thumb|left|Brandon Lee]] -->
On [[March 31]], [[1993]], Brandon Lee still lives and totally never died during the making of this movie. CROW 69! PUFF TEH BLUNT!
On [[March 31]], [[1993]], the 52nd day of the 60-day shooting schedule for ''The Crow'', Brandon Lee was killed while filming a scene in which his character was to be shot. A dummy bullet was lodged in the barrel of a handgun. The dummy bullet was not noticed and the gun was loaded with a blank cartridge. When the blank was fired, the dummy bullet shot out and hit Lee in the [[human abdomen|abdomen]].<ref>[http://members.autobahn.mb.ca/~trainer/lee_article.html Movie armorer safety page detailing Lee's death]</ref> After Lee's death, a [[stunt double]], Chad Stahelski replaced Lee in some scenes. Special effects were used for digitally compositing Lee's face onto the double.


==Soundtracks==
==Soundtracks==

Revision as of 01:37, 11 April 2007

The Crow
Movie poster for The Crow
Directed byAlex Proyas
StarringBrandon Lee
Ernie Hudson
Michael Wincott
Ling Bai
Michael Massee
Tony Todd
Jon Polito
Release dates
May 11, 1994
Running time
102 min
CountryUSA USA
LanguageEnglish

The Crow is a 1994 American film adaptation of the comic book of the same name by James O'Barr (who himself makes a cameo in the film).

It was directed by Alex Proyas and starred Brandon Lee, and gained instant notoriety even before its release, when Lee was accidentally killed during filming.

Plot

Template:Spoiler

File:Eric-draven.jpg
Brandon Lee as Eric Draven

A man named Eric Draven (Brandon Lee) was killed along with his fiancée, Shelly Webster (Sofia Shinas), who was also raped by a gang of street thugs who broke into their apartment on "Devil's Night" (October 30). One year later, he is resurrected by a crow and seeks out vengeance on his murderers, killing them one at a time. He is able to defeat his enemies because when he was brought back, he was made invulnerable. Nothing can kill him, and all injuries he suffers are healed almost instantly.unless the crow is hurt or killed

Setting

It is never explicitly stated in which city the film takes place, and almost all aerial shots are actually miniatures overlaid with CG elements. Several clues and references throughout the film point toward its being set in Detroit: Devil's Night is culturally associated with the Detroit area; in an early bar scene T-Bird refers to his gang as "Motor-city mother*u*k*r*" and Detroit is commonly known as "The Motor City" due to its main industry of car manufacturing. T-Bird mentions that "Lake Erie caught on fire once from all the crap floating around in it." Detroit is located at the western end of Lake Erie.

Changes from the comic book

Eric is given the last name Draven (possibly drawn from a scene in the comic revealing Eric's last initial as either 'C' or 'D', though it is also possible that it is a pun on the words, "The Raven" by Edgar Allan Poe, from which he also recites a few lines, or Eric de Raven) and is portrayed by Lee as a rock guitarist, while Shelly is portrayed as an artist and a lawyer. The two are murdered during the violence and chaos of Devil's Night, the day before their wedding on Halloween, in their home by a gang of criminals working for a larger crime syndicate, who ordered Shelly's death in retaliation for fighting tenant eviction in a neighborhood it controlled.

Some characters were changed: Sarah (Sherri in the comic), played by Rochelle Davis, is a street urchin Eric doesn't meet until after his rebirth in the comic, was recast as his and Shelley's best friend and surrogate daughter; Top Dollar, played by Michael Wincott, went from a low-level drug dealer to a powerful crime lord; and Officer Albrecht, played by Ernie Hudson, went from a beat cop unimportant to the story to Eric's main (non-supernatural) ally. Also, Eric and Shelly's murderers went from being just a gang of vicious thugs who committed the murders for fun to members of a crime syndicate that unofficially runs the city.

In the comic, Gabriel the cat originally belonged to an old lady whom Tin Tin murders at the beginning of the story, and Eric later gives the cat to Captain Hook. In the movie, Gabriel already belongs to Eric and Shelly.

The physical appearance of the character Gideon in the comic was based on Jon Polito, who subsequently played the character in the film adaptation.

In the original screenplay, there was a character called the Skull Cowboy who acts as Eric's guardian angel, telling him exactly why he has come back, what he must do, and played an integral part in the final story line. According to the original screenplay, the reason Eric lost his powers is because he had finished what he came to do: get revenge on Shelly's and his own death. The Skull Cowboy tells him this when he returns to his grave, and stands on the steps of the church before he enters warning him he is now vulnerable. However, they decided to cut the character, and put more emphasis on the bird as a power link.

Template:Endspoilers

Brandon Lee's death

On March 31, 1993, Brandon Lee still lives and totally never died during the making of this movie. CROW 69! PUFF TEH BLUNT!

Soundtracks

The original soundtrack album for The Crow featured songs from the movie, and was a chart-topping album. It included work by The Cure, The Jesus and Mary Chain, Nine Inch Nails, Rage Against the Machine, Stone Temple Pilots, and Pantera. The Crow Score consisted of original, mostly orchestral music, with some electronic/guitar elements written for the motion picture by Graeme Revell.

The bands Medicine and My Life with the Thrill Kill Kult also make small appearances in the film, on the stage in Top Dollar's 'headquarters'.

Awards

The film won the 1995 BMI Film Music Award, from the BMI Film & TV Awards. It also won the 1995 MTV Movie Award for Best Movie Song ("Big Empty" by Stone Temple Pilots). It was nominated for the 1995 MTV Movie Awards for Best Movie and posthumously to Brandon Lee for Best Male Performance.

Cast

See also

External links

References