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Grindhouseland Salutes… Linda Blair

  • April 14, 2009 – 2:30 am
  • Posted in Grindhouseland Salutes
  • Tagged child star, Grindhouseland Salutes, linda blair
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Deacon Blues is back with another salute to an artist that exploitation cinema fans adore and mainstream critics love to hate. This time, it’s the Undisputed Queen of the B’s, and Oregon resident, Miss Linda Blair.

Linda Blair grew up in Westport, CT and began modelling and acting at a very young age, mostly appearing in commercials (for things like Gulden’s Mustard) before her breakthrough role in The Exorcist. Miss Blair originally wanted to be a veternarian, but was lured by Hollywood by the promise of raising money to take classes in horsemanship.

For better or for worse, Linda Blair will always be known primarily for her role in the 1973 film adaptation of William Blatty’s supernatural horror novel The Exorcist. The film garnered Miss Blair a Golden Globe Award and a nomination for an Oscar. Her chances at the Oscar were memorably damaged by allegations that she did not do most of the acting on the voice track, and that she had a body double, something that both Blair and the director William Friedkin deny.

Linda Blair followed up her performance in The Exorcist with a string of bad girl roles in made-for-TV movies such as Born Innocent, where she is notoriously raped with a broom handle by a gang of feral teenage lesbians. Soon later she starred in The Exorcist II: The Heretic, a film which garnered Miss Blair a Saturn Award, was widely panned critically, and featured no heretics.

Then came arguably the second most defining event of Linda’s life after The Exorcist. In December of 1977 she was, in an event that would pre-figure the media’s infatuation with teenage stars gone bad, arrested for conspiracy to purchase cocaine and amphetamines. Her career never recovered, and the string of non-hits which followed is largely what her career has been remembered for, if anything, other than her Academy Award nominated turn in the original Exorcist film. Roller Boogie, Hell Night, and Chained Heat are three films which can be placed in what is arguably, for hardcore fans of Linda Blair such as Deacon Blues, her classic period. But audiences had lost interest in the chubby cheeked, sexually provocative girl next door. Savage Streets is perhaps one of the most overlooked genre gems and cultural artifacts of the 1980s. During this period she received three Golden Raspberry nominations (for Hell Night, Chained Heat, and Savage Streets, the last of which garnered her the coveted Razzie).

The latter half of the 1980s was even crueler to Linda than the first half. She was reduced to pure camp schlock such as Zapped Again! and the Leslie Nielson spoof Reposessed. Even a recent resurgence of interest and the growth of her stock as a cult figure have not paid off in meatier film roles. Deacon Blues for one can’t understand why Quentin Tarantino hasn’t cast her in any of his films yet… except maybe because he’s a total fucking dick.

Deacon Blues highly recommends Savage Streets, Born Innocent, and Roller Boogie as three of Linda’s films that belong in any serious afficionado of b-movies, exploitation cinema, and the popular culture of the 1980s. Mark my words- Linda Blair will come back harder than Vanilla Ice. In fact, I’m quite surprised that she hasn’t already. Look for the upcoming Rick James (whom Linda dated for many years and wrote the song “Cold Blooded” about her) biopic to kickstart things for her.

Grindhouseland Salutes… Vincent Price

  • April 1, 2009 – 4:17 am
  • Posted in Grindhouseland Salutes
  • Tagged american international, gothic, Grindhouseland Salutes, horror, roger corman, vincent price
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***UPDATE!*** A BIG SHOUT OUT TO EVERYONE WHO CAME HERE FROM DISINFO. THANKS A MILLION FOR VOTING GRINDHOUSELAND TO THE FRONT PAGE. REGULAR READERS AND NEW READERS ALIKE- IF YOU LIKE WHAT YOU SEE, PLEASE GO VOTE FOR THIS ARTICLE HERE.

Now, a new series from your favorite purveyors of exploitation schlock, grindhouse goodies, and drive-in delectables Grindhouseland. In the Grindhouseland Salutes segment we’ll be paying our respects to the great actors and directors of paracinema. This time we kick off the series with the Grindhouseland Salute to Vincent Price.

Vincent Price is known primarily for three things. First his incredible voice, which has the rich timbre of a classically trained stage actor- can you think of anyone who can say “mmm… yes” quite the same way as Vincent Price? Second, his height (6-foot 4-inch), taking up tons of the screen without the kinds of scenery chewing you may have come to expect from other larger leading men of his generation (I’m looking at you, Orson Welles). Finally, for his knowing serio-comic manner. Vincent Price always knew he was making camp, but never let the horror aspects suffer. He was totally comfortable straddling the golden mean between the comedic and horror elements in his films, and that is perhaps what made Vincent Price who he is.

Raised in St. Louis, but eduated at Yale in art history and fine art, Vincent Price later turned his attentions toward the stage, proving himself to be a solid film actor in the 1930s and 1940s. His first venture into horror was the 1939 Boris Karloff vehicle, Tower of London. But it wasn’t until the 1950s that he made his name as one of the three leading horror actors of his generation, along with Christopher Lee and Peter Cushing.

By the 1960s the name Vincent Price was box office gold, particularly for American International Pictures, with whom Vincent Price frequently collaborated. This period of his career is particularly known for Price’s work with iconic AIP director Roger Corman in a number of films based on the work of Edgar Allen Poe. Price was particularly fond of playing the role of Egghead on the 1960’s Batman television series, once touching off a riotous egg fight between himself and stars Adam West and Burt Ward. The first man to star in an I Am Legend adaptation, it’s interesting to compare his brand of knowing, ironic camp in The Last Man on Earth with Chuck Heston’s over the top, more naive campy portrayal in The Omega Man.

In the late 1970s Price’s output slowed considerably, but he still managed to stay in the public eye, appearing on Hollywood Squares and The Brady Bunch, Alice Cooper albums, and one of the best films of his career, the unforgettable The Abominable Dr. Phibes. Described as a “witty raconteur” he was also a frequent and beloved guest on the Johnny Carson-era Tonight Show. His final major film role was in something that you only watch at Christmas, unless you’re a 14 year old girl. His performance on the title track from Thriller is unforgettable.

Check out the films of Vincent Price, reviewed right here on Grindhouseland, and do think about making a purchase of one or ten. They’re all worth the price of admission. Of particular note are Fall of the House of Usher, The Masque of the Red Death, The Oblong Box, and The Abominable Dr. Phibes.

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