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News

Photo Gallery: L.A. Fright Night Reunion

Source:Ryan Rotten, Managing Editor
September 20, 2008


"Welcome to Fright Night...for real."

With that, a video greeting from Jerry Dandrige himself - actor Chris Sarandon - prepped fans for a midnight screening at the NuArt in Los Angeles of Tom Holland's "vampire next door" horror-comedy Fright Night. Sarandon, due to an ailing 92-year-old mother, could not attend the event but fans of the '85 horror movie were in for a treat as Holland, William Ragsdale, Stephen Geoffreys, Jonathan Stark, Chris Hendrie, editor Kent Beyda and FX artist Randall William Cook sat in to watch a handsome print play out before a sold-out audience.

It was the first time I had seen the film on the big screen since my father, and grandmother (!), took me to see it on August 2, 1985. I was nine, to give you some perspective, and on our drive to the theater, my father stopped in the middle of town (about a mile from my house) and told me, "Look, this film is going to be scary - if you want out, now's your chance." And by "if you want out," he actually meant, get out of the car, at that very spot, and walk back home. He was just as die hard a horror fan then as I am today and didn't want to miss the show time. I wasn't going to fault him for that. My father's offering this grim warning only spurred my curiosity on and I committed to seeing Mr. Holland's opus that paid a modern nod to the Universal and Hammer Films I had, until that time, grew up on.

Fright Night, to this day, remains my favorite horror films of all time. And you could say the nostalgia of seeing the movie opening night plays a big part in my (undying) adoration of it. Needless to say, the NuArt screening plopped me back into '85 with familiar friends Charley Brewster, Peter Vincent, Evil Ed Thompson, Dandrige, Amy and Billy Cole. Brad Fiedel's score still gives me goosebumps (even though it plays regularly on my iPod). The only difference this time is that I actually had the actors who brought those characters to life sitting directly behind me, save for the late Roddy McDowall.

I certainly wasn't alone in my fandom; the packed house stuck through the midnight screening until well past 3a.m. for the cast and crew Q&A moderated by Tim Sullivan and sponsored by the fellas at IconsofFright.com.

Here are some anecdotes from the discussion. For a complete photo gallery from the event, click on the image below or right here!

William Ragsdale on working with Roddy McDowall: "There was no sense of Hi, you're going to be working with me, Roddy McDowall. From the very beginning it was chummy and friendly, with a video camera on his shoulder shooting family movies the whole time while we [were shooting]. He was great and wonderful, very accessible. He was a good friend."

Tom Holland on Roddy McDowall: "Roddy was a walking aural history of Hollywood. I had the extraordinary experience the last day MGM [studios] was in existence, Roddy walked me through the backlot - the now Sony studios - and took me through the underground passageways of where they still store the nitrate film and utility pipes. [He] described to me what movies happened on what sets, what affairs happened in what dressing rooms. He told me stories about the silent stars, he went to see the silent stars, he was visiting Mary Astor to the end. He had a love of the business and carried the decades inside of him. He was a child star at eight-years-old and he survived it somehow. My one regret is he would not write his autobiography, he wouldn't because he knew where the bodies were buried. That he just couldn't betray the confidences. He was a wonderful, sweet man who cared about other people in the business and gave a great deal of time. He also was a collector. The vampire hunting kit [in the movie], he saved that and that's at Boston University. In a lot of ways, Roddy was the ultimate fan."

Randall William Cook on the "freebie": "Tom came to me one day and said, Can you make a shark mouth on Amy? I said, Well, it's not in the budget. And he said, Well, can you do it? I was a young kid, I didn't give a damn, I was going to be doing something I wasn't contracted to do and I wasn't going to charge them, so I said sure. [The prosthetic] couldn't be on for long because it couldn't be very good, we were going to [shoot it] on Monday, it was Thursday now. [Tom said] it was only going to be a few frames. So I threw something together and worked all weekend for nothing. Not because I'm a good guy - I am [laughs] - because this is something you get excited about. We got this thing done and it was just passable. The forms were good, but the details were crap. But it wasn't in a couple of frames! It's on there for three-quarters of the movie. They put it on the f**kin' poster. I just cringe when I see it. But, all in all we had fun."

William Ragsdale on rumors of him injuring his ankle on set: "Not true, I broke my foot. Christmas Eve. We had shot all of the exterior stuff and were wrapping up for the day on Christmas Eve and Tom thought I could run down the stairs a little faster so he said, Let's try this one more time and just really fly down the stairs. So I did and I fell. My ankle was swelling up a little bit, I got up on it and I thought I sprained my ankle. The sound guy came over and said, No, no...it's a break. He played it back and you can hear it on the soundtrack snapping. You can tell in a lot of the interior scenes with my mom when I'm running out of the bedroom, I fall out of frame, that's what that is."

William Ragsdale on Fright Night Part 2: "We did it. [laughs] It was a couple of years later and Roddy and I were the only people who came back for that. It was interesting, but it wasn't the original, it didn't have quite the rapport of the actors at all. You can feel we were doing something different. It's okay in its way, but it doesn't stand up to the original. It was fun, and it was nice being offered a job as opposed to having to try and get one."




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Posted by: IMPFX.COM on September 20, 2008 at 20:57:54

Cool show! Fright Night is such a well-crafted horror film. Great performances, humor, sexuality, non-CG FX, and suspence, it's a perfect mix. Too bad Hollywood has forgotten how to craft a great horror film!


Posted by: Scribe on September 20, 2008 at 22:10:32

Fright Night is indeed a classic horror film. Wish I could have gone to that screening. Its one of my favorites, right up there with Lost Boys. A remake won't be anywhere near as good as this.


Posted by: Yormomsayshi on September 21, 2008 at 02:21:33

This is definately one of my favorite movies of all time. I wish I would have been able to go. One more regret to add to the list...


Posted by: Kino Hammer on September 21, 2008 at 12:49:14

That was a great funny/scary comedy! Roddy McDowall, who certainly played his share of oddballs and other fringe types, showed his ability to play heroic roles with Peter Vincent's growing bravery and determined battle against Jerry Dandridge.


Posted by: joe asylo on September 22, 2008 at 17:37:01

good time, a very fanging good time.


Posted by: micheland on September 26, 2008 at 14:42:37

Thank you for giving us Fright Night fans a treat. Between the screenings, the interviews and the new commentaries, it made us excited again for this wonderful movie. This it what we had waited for since it originally came out on DVD. I enjoyed listening to the commentaries while I watched the movie.


Posted by: Lisa on October 16, 2008 at 22:16:24

Fright Night is indeed one of THE BEST horror movies of all time. And it was indeed the great actors that made this movie what it is. Chris Sarandon is one of the best, and IS the best with any character he portrays. As Jerry Dandridge, well, he is breath-taking, and still is today, at 66 years old! He is welcome to my home "in the night" anytime!


Posted by: Davis on June 16, 2009 at 16:40:55

This movie is by far my all time favorite horror Film EVER! I know fright night 1&2 by heart! yes BY HEART! the cast and such were amazing...LOVE AMANDA!!!! I can't wait to see it again tonight..lol


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