In honor of the last day of 2015, SHOCK unearths an interview with BLOODY NEW YEAR director Norman J. Warren.
The eccentric exploitation films of British filmmaker Norman J. Warren are certainly flawed and nowhere near as angry or socially-minded as his contemporary, Pete Walker, but they have a charm all their own.
Film like INSEMINOID (aka HORROR PLANET), PREY (aka ALIEN PREY), TERROR, SATANS SLAVE and of course, his final film to date, BLOODY NEW YEAR, offer nothing save 90 minutes (or less) of pure, dirty escapism; well-crafted genre romps made to distract, shock and titillate.
And theres nothing wrong with that at all.
Warrens roots were in short films and eventually included, as many European genre directors early credits did, soft core porn comedies; but it is with horror and dark fantasy that we concern ourselves and that put the charming director on the small stretch of the cult film map he now occupies.
So then, in honor of this being New Years Eve, SHOCK gives you this chat with the man behind the extremely odd BLOODY NEW YEAR, the extremely cool Norman J. Warren.
SHOCK: After your initial short film experiments in the mid 60s, your first feature length picture was 1968s A PRIVATE HELL a naughty film, no?
NJW: Yes, it was! There were of course many films like it around from Germany and Sweden, sexploitation films we called them then and still do, but none really that were made in England. So when Her Private Hell came along, it suddenly became this enormous hit and I think that it was because it was homegrown. It was also one of the first sex films to really tell a coherent story. So while it was still pretty far from being a great film, it was unique and box office wise it was an amazing hit, which did me a world of good, I assure you!
SHOCK: The BBFC have always been notorious for their hatred of horror but what were their views on the sexploitation film? How much could you show without getting your figurative knuckles rapped?
NJW: If you were to see HER PRIVATE HELL now, it would seem innocent, naïve and really, it was never that bad. But still, the censor was very particular about what you could put on screen. If you had a bare breast you couldnt show the nipple. And of course the guy still had to keep his pants on in bed or else you had to cover him with a sheet. So it was a very innocent time. My film did run into trouble, however, even though most of my nudity was only shown from the rear. I made only one more sexploitation film called Loving Feeling the following year in color and in cinemascope and by that time the censor had relaxed. We could at this point show the nipple and show SOME female frontal nudity. Things were beginning to change
SHOCK: Your first horror film was 1976s SATANS SLAVE with one of my favorite British character actors, Michael Gough. Had you been a fan of the genre before this point?
NJW: Well yes, but not any more than other movies really. I mean, all little boys are attracted to horror to some extent probably because horror movies are the first ones to be forbidden by your parents. But I must confess that I just loved movies in general. My mother used to take me to the movies and we would watch everything, all kinds of films, all genres, including all the old Lugosi and Karloff pictures which were then considered quite gentle. When it came to more extreme horror though, I think you had to be either 16 or 17 to get into horror pictures theatrically so I had to wait awhile. The first horror stuff that really hit me was Hammer CURSE OF FRANKENSTEIN in 1957 and then DRACULA the following year, both of which hit everybody in the UK in a BIG way.
SHOCK: Youve never been a darling of the critics. Were the British press ever cruel to you because of the pictures you were making?
NJW: Well, not cruel really, but to be honest its always been the same climate in England. You see, horror has always been looked down upon and not deemed to be worth anyones attention. So really, the critics just ignored me. Theres a lot of snobbery in the UK about movies and especially the kind of movies I was making .
SHOCK: I love INSEMINOID. Its so gory and weird. I saw it first on home video as HORROR PLANET. That film was released near the early days of the Video Nasty witch-hunt in the UK. Did you ever have any problems with the picture getting banned?
NJW: We never did actually and INSEMINOID, thankfully, never ended up on any Video Nasty list, but it WAS banned in Germany and it did get into some trouble in the press, but in ways that just helped the box office, really.
SHOCK: How so?
NJW: It got into hot water with various womens groups, especially with the graphic birth scenes. I think we really tapped into a very primal fear that pregnant women have that theyll give birth to a monster so we had women writing to the theaters trying to get the film banned! Again, it really helped sell tickets!
SHOCK: INSEMINOID was obviously an attempt to ride the coattails of the success of Ridley Scotts ALIEN or am I wrong?
NJW: Youre wrong. Weve always had this thing where people said we were copying Alien but thats simply just not true. The similarities between the two films were purely coincidental. I first got wind of the connection when 20th Century Fox started asking about INSEMINOID; they wanted to screen it to see if it was a copy. It isnt at all and I was actually quite surprised when I finally got around to watching ALIEN that there were a few scenes that were similar. But we did not set out to copy Scotts film at all.
SHOCK: Lets talk about the Sci-Fi horror film you did prior to INSEMINOID, the sexy and eccentric exploitation gem PREY, or ALIEN PREY as its known in North America
NJW: Well that film has an interesting story. Terry Marcel, the producer wanted to make a movie where an alien comes to earth, encounters lesbians and finds out humans are high in protein and easy prey and I agreed to direct it. But then they told me there was no script and we had to start filming in three weeks time! It was incredibly low budget and we had to shoot in only 10 days. There was just a hurriedly put together script. But it was quite an amazing experience and a lot of fun.
SHOCK: Which one of your pictures stands as the one that you’re most proud of?
NJW: Thats a difficult question, because for various reasons Im proud of most of my films. However, if I have to make a choice, it would be between TERROR and INSEMINOID. Both films were commercially successful, but for sheer enjoyment I would have to say TERROR is my number one. Making a film can be extremely hard work, but at the same time it can also be fun, and I can honestly say that Terror was the most enjoyable and certainly the happiest film I have ever worked on. The same was felt by the entire cast and crew, and it was just like a group of friends coming together to make a film, and nobody really wanting it to end. We managed to achieve an enormous amount in just four weeks of shooting. Not just with scenes which included action and effects, but also with the number of different sets and locations that were used. We seemed to be constantly on the move and loading and unloading equipment, just like a traveling circus.
SHOCK: Why havent you made another feature film since BLOODY NEW YEAR?
NJW: Sigh BLOODY NEW YEAR was a very terrible experience for me; in fact it turned out to be a bloody nightmare. We had the wrong producers on that film and they didnt know anything about horror. So the film lacks in every department and by the end of it, my heart just wasnt in it. And my God, the soundtrack is appalling and there were no sound effects at all in it. They wanted to make the film cheaply and terribly quick. So at the end of that picture, I was disheartened for a while and walked away from things. Ive tried several times to make another film, even in Hollywood, but they all just kept collapsing. Things changed. Everything has become corporations and committees terrifying stuff and very much beyond me.