George A. Romero's 1973 film The Crazies is one of his least
recognized works. Most people don't remember it and you'd be
hard-pressed to find anyone who has seen it praising it. Until recently
it was almost impossible to find a copy to rent or buy on DVD as well.
So why would anyone want to remake it, let alone Breck Eisner -- the son
of former Disney CEO Michael Eisner?
"I had a strong memory of
the concept and of a few primary scenes [of the original] -- the woman
sweeping the grass, the daughter and the father relationship as they
'get' together, and the guy at the end being lifted into the helicopter
naked. More than anything the thing that was in my mind was the concept
of your friends and family and people you know and love best turning on
you. That was the terrifying and terrific idea that sat in my mind over
the years," he says.
The Crazies deals with a small town
that has their water supply contaminated after a plane carrying a
special vaccine crashes nearby. The townspeople are infected and become
increasingly violent and murderous leading to the military being called
in to quarantine the area. Filming a movie this big on a limited budget
posed many challenges.
"When Romero made his he had $220,000
which is insanely low," Breck states. "We had a significantly higher
budget but in terms of making movies today it's a low-budget movie. We
didn't have time for things to go wrong. When that car explodes...that
took three hours to rig and that was a devastatingly long period of time
in the budget. We were always adapting and changing and evolving on
set. We never really had time to do everything we wanted to do, and had
to figure out ways to get it done. It's a road movie -- a lot of sets, a
lot of places, and a lot of set pieces. That stuff takes time and time
was our biggest enemy."
Breck admits he's impressed when someone
tells him they've seen the original and believes the small number of
fans it has will enjoy his approach. He says even Romero approves.
"I
feel confident that people who do know it and do like it will respond
[to] and enjoy the new version. I spoke with [Romero] after he saw the
movie and he was quite pleased," he says.
He also hopes his is
remembered for years to come as a lot of time and effort went into it.
"It
seems that there's so many things that get lost and forgotten. I just
hope it's a movie that strikes a chord in the audience and sits for a
while."
Although Breck doesn't want to build his career on
remakes, he is taking on the iconic Flash Gordon character next
but is adamant it's not a retelling of previous adaptations.
"It
definitely is not a remake of any version that's been done before. It
has no connection to the '80s version and is not camp in any way. It's
also not connected to the serials. It goes back to the Alex Raymond [the
creator of Flash Gordon] period of the comics as the source
material and imagining it as if those comics were drawn today and not in
the '30s and '40s. It's adventure, it's sci-fi, it's aggressive, it's
intense, it's a strong character piece but it's definitely an
action-adventure film and not tongue-in-cheek," he says.
As for
the reaction he wants to get out of his telling of The Crazies he
hopes that people get the message he's trying to tell but also enjoy
the film.
"It's not a heavy message but it is a message movie. I
think any good genre movie is allegorical and does have a message in it
and has a reason to be made. The post-9/11, post-George Bush-Iraq War
world that we live in is one that the movie comments on and I hope
people see that in it. But I really hope people enjoy the ride of the
movie and the message comes from the enjoyment of the experience."
The
Crazies is in theatres February 26.
brian.mckechnie@citynews.rogers.com
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image: Breck Eisner on the set of The Crazies. Courtesy Alliance Films.