Showing posts with label KRIS GILPIN. Show all posts
Showing posts with label KRIS GILPIN. Show all posts

Tuesday, December 29, 2009

THE STRANGER (1987)



by Kris Gilpin

No, this ain’t the classic Albert Camus story of alienation, but -- judging by the video box art -- a suspenser posing as a horror flick. Made a year or two ago by Columbia, it received sparse (if any) theatrical distribution. Bonnie Bedelia stars as an amnesia victim under the care of shrink Peter Riegert. She can remember some creeps blowing a family away in a house in which she was hiding; she also recalls them chasing her and shooting at her before she got in her car and crashed it. Slowly she remembers a lover and something about a small aircraft company, as she makes occasional eyes with Riegert. The doc, meanwhile, is a gambler who owes $62,000 to a Las Vegas casino (they establish the city with a cheap $5 Spectra Star lens effect). At one point, the head Bad Guy approaches Riegert and offers to cover his debt if he helps them get to Bonnie (huh?!), but since they don’t follow up on their threat, nothing comes of it. There are several other moments of stupidity here which, I imagine, is what kept it out of most theaters, such as when the investigating cop (played by Barry Primus) wants to put Bonnie’s face in the papers under the headline “Does anyone know this woman?” (Gee, maybe the killers will tell them!). One baddie, played by David Spielberg, kills the super-shrink flown into town to handle the woman’s case, then proceeds to impersonate him -- extremely easily, I might add. But the biggest crock is when (note: there’s a spoiler coming, so skip this line if you don’t want a surprise in the film ruined for you) the co-cop is revealed to be "one of them." Oh, really? When did this happen, before he entered the force, or did he infiltrate his way in? Bedelia flashes a breast in her black-&-white remembrance/flashback scenes, which was a bit of a thrill for me as I’ve always thought she was a super-cutie. Riegert eventually sends her to the home of a nurse/friend to be treated as an outpatient, and when Spielberg breaks in one night and you think something’s finally going to happen -- nothing happens. Granted, the twist of the slaughtered family that no one can trace is an interesting and original (well, to me anyway) red herring, but it’s not enough to justify a rental of THE STRANGER. With no real suspense, this one’s only a mild mystery.

[Originally published in Temple of Schlock #13, November 1988]

Saturday, December 26, 2009

The return of Kris Gilpin's Movie Crossword Puzzles



Veteran fanzine writer Kris Gilpin's "Movie Crossword Puzzle" never really caught on as a weekly feature here at the Temple, mostly because of the clumsy printout presentation we chose for them, but we're very happy to report that they've become a big hit over at the Best Crosswords website. Way to go, Kris! A new puzzle just went up today, and you'll be able to find that one and 14 others waiting for you here. Good luck, movie fans!

Monday, August 24, 2009

Answers to Kris' Movie Crossword Puzzle #13



by Kris Gilpin


ANSWERS

ACROSS:
1) ____ Dick: MOBY
3) Directed 18 down: JOHN LANDIS
9) Freddy 7: ___ Park-Lincoln: LAR
10) Gosling & O'Neal: RYANS
12) Mr. Wenders: WIM
13) "It was 20 years ___ today...": AGO
14) Lout: OAF
15) Directed 12 down: NICOLAS ROEG
20) __ _ Glass Cage: IN A
21) The babe in the shower in AN AMERICAN WEREWOLF IN LONDON: JENNY AGUTTER
25) Limited, big-nosed actor who got to snog Halle B. on TV: BRODY
26) "You can do it if you want to--__ _ can": OR I
27) 70's porn babe, German Brigette _____: MAIER
28) Trans-World Airlines: TWA
30) __ ___ with Love: TO SIR
32) It helped to wipe out silent film: MIC
33) A LOVE ___ FOR BOBBY LONG: SONG
35) Where rabbit ears are in reference to the TV: ATOP
37) WE ___ THE NIGHT: OWN
38) 50's flick about a living TV set: TWONKY
39) Roseanne gets revenge in this: SHE-DEVIL

DOWN:
1) THE _____ HAS TWO FACES: MIRROR
2) $ in Japan: YEN
4) The "real" star of APOCALYPSE NOW and FULL METAL JACKET: 'NAM
5) First John fought there, later Dennis & Billy: ALAMO
6) Bitch: NAG
7) '71: one of Alex's hangers-on: DROOG
8) Crap 80's flick by Larry Cohen: STUFF
11) Answered the phones in GHOSTBUSTERS: ANNIE POTTS
12) Early Outback drama with the young 21 across: WALKABOUT
16) I saw it in Miami as THE FOLKS AT RED WOLF ___: INN
17) Don't say his name 3 times!: CANDYMAN
18) Unwatchably stupid film by 3 across: STUPIDS
19) Ran with Adam: EVE
22) Star of 18 down: TOM ARNOLD
23) Claimed he was a very good driver: RAINMAN
24) Directed THE GORE-GORE GIRLS: HERSCHELL
25) A cookie in London: BISCUIT
29) A _____ UNDER THE INFLUENCE: WOMAN
31) "$100, ___": O.B.O.
34) Cute actress ____ Hoffmann: GABY
36) Philip Seymour Hoffman, for short: PSH

Tuesday, August 18, 2009

AMSTERDAMNED (1988)



Reviewed by Kris Gilpin

Great schlocky title, and the film’s directed accordingly by Dick Maas, who made the similarly fun killer elevator movie THE LIFT a few years ago. In this dub job there’s a killer radioactive waste-face swimming around the canals of Amsterdam at night, hacking up folks with diving knives. The flick starts out pretty well as a bloody dead body hanging from a bridge is discovered by a boat tour of kids and nuns. The corpse is dragged along the glass roof of the vessel as it passes underneath the deceased, its blood smearing the glass. Maas directs this to come across as more funny than disgusting.

Eric (Huub Stapel), the cop on the case, lives with his bitchy young daughter, who answers phone calls for him with, “He’s in the john – I expect he’s masturbating.” There are other funny moments, as when Eric apprehends a knife-wielding kid in a bakery and smashes the punk’s face into a cake, as the storeowner chides him “You used excessive force and ruined my cake! We use the best ingredients only!” (Meanwhile, the kid’s eating the frosting). After one victim loses his head, Maas cuts from the morgue to a close-up of eggs, over which a hand squirts some ketchup.


Eric gets involved with Laura (Monique va de Ven), a pretty blonde with great lungs, while the killer finds more victims. One hot blonde lies in a clear plastic dinghy with her legs spread when a knife slices up into the raft between her thighs then, from a crotch point-of-view, zooms toward the camera. I did hate to see the old drunk lose his nice houseboat, though -- that was kinda mean – and there’s an off-screen suicide by harpoon (that’s a first!). Also, it looks like it would be neat to have a boat in water at the bottom of my garage.

The film is well photographed and shows off the water-logged city to good advantage. There’s a long, exciting chase in speedboats while cars drive over the ramps overhead, and I let out one satisfied yell when the underwater slasher took one in the face. The film seems to go on and on, though, and has a couple of false endings. One gets the idea that, should Maas ever take his tongue out of his cheek, he could make quite a slick thriller one day, as he is very proficient technically. Like THE LIFT, AMSTERDAMNED is an enjoyable foreign horror flick – not a great one – that’s worth a rental.

(Originally published in Temple of Schlock #18, June 1989)

Tuesday, August 11, 2009

Kris' Movie Crossword #13



by Kris Gilpin


ANSWERS TO PUZZLE #12

ACROSS:
1) Beauty, Black B-movie bombshell!: PAMGRIER
5) A fe/male fragrance: ARAMIS
9) A large monkey: BABOON
11) Man-machine interface (init.): MMI
12) Gross yellow-white ooze: PUS
13) A.k.a. National Academy of Design: NAD
14) John Landis' ____ the Night: INTO
15) A.k.a. Reserve Officers Training Corps.: ROTC
17) The heavens: ETHER
19) A.k.a. head of household on Big Brother: HOH
20) Mad Max's last name: ROCKATANSKY
22) The ___ Rock: HOT
23) _____ the Law: ABOVE
25) Boogie ___ you puke!: TIL
26) Liquid: FLUID
27) Space-y 80's Alan Arkin film: SIMON
29) For locating objects in water: SONAR
30) Creme of 10CC: LOL
31) Pieced-together flick with Price & Nicholson: RAVEN
33) Played Paul Kersey in popular '74 revenge tale: CHARLESBRONSON

DOWN:
1) A band-aid in London: PLASTER
2) Great new film with the great Sam Rockwell: MOON
3) Facially deformed actor from the '40s forced to play the heavy/creep/killer in films: RONDOHATTON
4) 2nd (at first underrated) solo album by McCartney: RAM
6) "Self facially deformed" comedienne who directed RABBIT TEST: (Joan) RIVERS
7) Excellent, underrated '89 Denzel film: MIGHTYQUINN
8) '85 Kelly Preston flick: SECRETADMIRER
9) She ain't fat, stupid, she has a ___ in the oven!: BUN
10) Long stick in a boat: OAR
11) Directed the tale mentioned in 33 across: MICHAELWINNER
12) Rare turd starring Eastwood: PINKCADILLAC
16) Rug rat: TOT
18) Tooth or head____: ACHE
21) Gives you instant sleep in the ring: K.O.
24) Zappa asked this brilliant guitarist to join his band: (Steve) VAI
26) Elvis song: "_____ __ Line.": FIRSTIN
27) Thin, creepy bad guy Henry _____: SILVA
28) One of our finest, "older" female actors: MERYL
32) The duct that transports sperm to the penis: ___ deferens: VAS

Friday, July 24, 2009

Kris' Movie Crossword #12




by Kris Gilpin


ANSWERS TO PUZZLE #11

ACROSS:
1) He's the sicko in 4 down: CHARLESNAPIER
8) Scary word (?!): BOO
9) What R. Russell's friends called her: ROZ
11) Robin Hood was one: ARCHER
12) ___ __ Know Your Rabbit: GETTO
13) Twisty consonant: ESS
16) Some dances are this type: LAP
19) Dusty H. in a bloody home-invasion drama: STRAWDOGS
20) Kill Me _____ : AGAIN
21) Awesome guitarist Steve ___: VAI
23) Prefix: no-/un-... : NON
25) Soon: ANON
26) Featured a big hitman who was gay: THEMEXICAN
27) Old "old" : OLDE
28) Actor ____ Edelman: HERB
31) Sex-crazed man who made 4 down: RUSSMEYER
36) Exclamations: OHS
37) The number on the box of some electronic products: UPC
38) Food made from fermented Japanese soybeans: MISOSOUP
39) ___'__ a Big Boy Now: YOU'RE
40) Directed 19 across: PECKINPAH

DOWN:
1) British interjection: COR
2) Ad ___ Committee: HOC
3) Awesome King Crimson instrumental: "_____ Tongues in Aspic" : LARKS
4) A sicko in this stabs a woman with a knife, punches her, then electrocutes her in a tub: SUPERVIXENS
5) Chauvinist male: PIG
6) Zappa's boy was named after this musical Ahmet: ERTEGUN
7) What your guts will do after you're dead: ROT
8) Great 70's killer road film starring Charlie S.'s dad: BADLANDS
10) Short for "a Zed and two naughts" : ZOO
14) Aka the Speech Association of America: SAA
15) Sexy Ellen B. played a man reincarnated as a woman in this: SWITCH
17) Earlier: AGO
18) Peter & Steve both played them: PANTHERS
22) Early Richard D. film in which he played a burnt-out porn director: INSERTS
24) A theater chain: AMC
25) Jimmy Olsen obviously had _ ____ for news: ANOSE
29) Dark skin mark: BRUISE
30) Lovely singer in Elf: ZOOEY
32) Not USPS: UPS
33) Weak later Woody film: SCOOP
34) Chairman ___ : MAO
35) Aka "gob" in Britain: YAP


Saturday, July 18, 2009

M. Emmet Walsh: "My best work's in front of me"



“He is one of the most recognized character actors working in the business today; he is also one of the most respected, and busiest. With over 110 feature film and television credits in both drama and comedy on his resume, M. Emmet Walsh has at least half a dozen films in the can, ready to be released soon (these do not include the miniseries BROTHERHOOD OF THE ROSE). To pick one as a starting point, there is WAR PARTY, set to come out in spring 1989. “It’s an interesting script,” the actor says. “In one of these depressed areas of Montana the townsfolk restage an Indian civil war battle with the cavalry and the Indians in order to bring the tourists in. And there’s some local Indian-white rancher friction to the event; one white guy gets drunk and shoots an Indian, then some Indians tomahawk a couple guys, and three Indian kids ride off into the mountains.” The actor plays a bounty hunter who, partnered with a Crow Indian, is called in to track down the young Indians.


The film was directed by Franc (THE BRIDE) Roddam. “I’m not sure we did enough homework to shoot a western. There are things about staging a chase or whatever that have to be learned and I don’t know if we had all that solved when we shot it. There was always a conflict of not getting enough work done but [I mean to imply] nothing negative about Franc.” Walsh enjoyed the opportunity to learn to ride a horse in the proper period manner for the production. “They paid for me to take lessons at the equestrian center in Burbank. I did nothing but ride for a month and I’m not a horseman. When I’m working I like to be able to do physical things. I learned to play piano for CANNERY ROW. For three months I tried to learn a boogie woogie tune.”

Walsh plays a CIA man in THE MIGHTY QUINN (formerly titled FINDING MAUBEE) sent down to straighten out a screwed up operation on a Caribbean island. “I’m a little heavy-handed. I end up hurting a couple people but it’s just in the line of work,” he explains. The mystery-comedy-buddy film starring Denzel Washington and Robert Townsend was helmed by Austrian director Carl Schenkel. “It was interesting to see Jamaica. That’s one of the interesting things about doing movies. They don’t shoot very many in Hollywood [anymore]. It was fun to make. I don’t know how they’ll sell it. It’s quite different. Denzel’s very good and there’s some good acting in it. It’s very pretty but the mystery may be just a little too vague.”


An experience which was decidedly not fun came with the production of RED SCORPION, a feature he now regrets having been a part of. “RED SCORPION I shot in Namibia, S.W. Africa. I have major reservations about it because, with hindsight, I shouldn’t have gone there. I was lied to. I said I wanted nothing to do with South Africa, and they said it was an entirely different country independent of South Africa.” The actor then found himself in Namibia, the buffer zone between South Africa and Angola, with Dolph Lundgren who plays a Russian soldier sent to assassinate a black freedom fighter (he later has a change of heart). Walsh portrays a Hemingway-type character who is recording the war. “So I get down there and here’s this movie having to do with war guns and tanks. The money is supplied by South Africa and I’m thinking, ‘Wow!’ And then it became a very un-fun situation. I’d worked with the director Joe Zito before, on the Chuck Norris film MISSING IN ACTION, but this time it was very difficult. They went way over budget and time. It was also very dangerous. You lose your unions over there.” The actor now says his working relationship with the director was “destroyed” during the course of filming.


“But my major point is that, when I got home, I got a lot of flak and I totally agree with ‘That stupid ass Emmet Walsh’ shouldn’t have gone over there. I did my work – and I felt a lot of people didn’t do their work – and I came home and there’s nothing you can do. I approach these jobs [thinking] each one may be the last I’ll ever do so I do them as well as I can.”

He can also be caught soon in CATCH ME IF YOU CAN, a comedy shot in Saint Cloud, Minnesota, in which Walsh plays a gambler betting on high school kids involved in drag races. “They paid me a lot of money to go up for one week but I gotta stop doing that stuff,” he laughs. Much more serious is his role in CHATTAHOOCHEE, in which he portrays a convicted gay bank robber serving time in an insane asylum. Co-starring Gary Oldman and Dennis Hopper, the film was directed by Britisher Mick Jackson, who made the haunting post-nuke tale THREADS.


Based on a true story, Oldman plays a disturbed Korean war vet who is tossed into a mental institution in Florida along with fellow inmates Walsh and Hopper. It is Walsh’s 59th movie. “Finally, after 59 films, Hollywood has decided I’m the sexy, romantic lead so I have a love interest in the film,” he jokes, “who turns out to be another convict who wears dresses.”

Walsh, a master of the naturalistic style of acting, approached this part – perhaps the most challenging of his prolific career – not much differently from his previous ones. “You don’t do anything about preparation, you just do it,” he says. “I did it because I thought it might be an interesting stretch for me as an actor. I just looked at it and played the man.”


On the question of research, the actor adds, “I did ORDINARY PEOPLE for Robert Redford, then he called and asked if I’d do THE MILAGRO BEANFIELD WAR. He said I’d play the governor of Santa Fe, New Mexico. So if you’re getting no money an d no billing you might as well play the governor,” he smiles. “Bob’s a charming guy and I like to work with him. We have a good time. I also did BRUBAKER with him. So this was a big thing: Who was playing the governor in MILAGRO? I’m in my motel room watching Redford talk to the press, and they ask him what preparation I did for the role and Bob said, ‘You don’t need any preparation to play a politician.’ So if you’re gonna play a gay prisoner, what do you do? You just do it. Working with Dennis Hopper was wonderful. I had a grand time with him. We’d made KID BLUE together years earlier. Gary was working very hard. He is a little private but he had to carry the whole damn movie. We had a pleasant time.

“You work very hard to learn the techniques of everything and you try to hide all the gears,” he says, elaborating on his style. “You can learn 85 or 90 percent of acting and then it requires the gifts or something. I don’t have an ego when I get at the work. If I’m playing a doctor I want you to see a doctor. I don’t want you to see an Emmet Walsh doctor and that’s, I think, been the confusion with my career. People know my work but they don’t know who I am. Maybe that's why I'm doing this interview. I've always had fun hiding in the character. I'm a character actor," he states proudly. "I can take on the skin and hide longer. I don't have a need to go in and overpower somebody. When Chuck Norris and I did MISSING IN ACTION we had a grand time making a nice relationship with the two characters. I let the character get up front and I get out of the way. If anything, I'm bigger than life, so occasionally [directors] say, 'Pull it back, simplify it.'" He is also in the upcoming movies THUNDERGROUND and SUNDOWN.


Michael Emmet Walsh was born on the Vermont-Quebec border, the son and grandson of U.S. customs officers. He received a degree in business administration with a major in marketing from Clarkson College in New York. His bachelor's degree was earned more to please his parents than himself and the dean of students told him he was graduating with the lowest marks of anyone in seven years. An obviously indifferent student, he had always enjoyed appearing in plays in high school and college, so he decided to see if he could make it as an actor in New York. "My basic motivation was not to be 40 years old, look back and wonder if I should have tried." He auditioned for, and was accepted at, the American Academy of Dramatic Arts in Manhattan, pretty good for a young man who'd grown up in a small town of 3,000 people.


Deaf in his left ear since age three, he has been able to use this to his auditory-acting advantage. "Deaf people speak louder for fear they're not being heard. If you do it for 50 years you end up with a huge instrument," he notes. His first job in professional theatre was as a prop man at Buck's County Playhouse in Pennsylvania. Soon afterwards he performed in summer stock in Vermont, Kentucky and at the Berkshire Theatre Festival in Massachusetts. He eventually wound up on Broadway in That Championship Season and Does the Tiger Wear a Necktie? where he'd keep his eyes open all around him. "New York was a very exciting place. I just kept looking around. An actor's a sponge. You just keep watching everything. You never know when, eventually, it's time to give some back."


Walsh, a very friendly fellow with a good sense of humor, would cue up with the crowds outside the theatres during intermission, then slip back in to see the last one or two acts of a play over and overa gain. "I'd watch [the actors] and think, 'What do you do with your hands?! Women must have it tough -- they have no pockets!'" A short while later, he got his first Esso commercial through a girlfriend of his, and this in turn got him his first agent. After doing dozens of commercials, he got tired of auditioning for TV ads and got a bit part in 1970's END OF THE ROAD, in which he hung from a crucifix in an asylum while wearing a mask and a tutu ("I had good legs. What the hell," he laughs).

Eight years later he gained much notice as Dustin Hoffman's parole officer in STRAIGHT TIME, although he feels his role in the film was misunderstood. "I didn't play it sleazily. I come from a long line of civil servants and I was not going to degrade these people who work hard but, basically, if you press this button, his reaction is this. And I became the nastiest guy in the world when I busted Dustin for Gary Busey's matches [used to burn coke with]."

It was, however, a turning point in Walsh's career, as he feels was 1984's BLOOD SIMPLE, in which he played a definitely sleazy detective for the producing-writing-directing team of Joel and Ethan Coen. The role in the brilliantly quirky mystery thriller, in fact, won him a best actor award from Independent Feature Projects West, and he would later volunteer to do a cameo in the brothers' next movie, RAISING ARIZONA.


M. Emmet Walsh, last seen as Michael Keaton's AA sponsor in CLEAN AND SOBER, is currently back in Canada as one of the stars of the upcoming NBC television series, tentatively titled UNSUB, in which he'll play an "intuitive cop type of guy who looks at that evidence. It's a special elite FBI group -- which doesn't exist -- that goes around trying to solve serial killings." He admits, though, when mentioning his dream role, he would "have nothing against doing a movie in which, for the entire two hours, Jamie Lee Curtis does nothing but lick the sweat off my body. I'm ready for that role. Jamie, of course, may wish to turn the role down," he smiles.


"I don't spend that much time in the past," the character actor says. "My best work's in front of me, Lord willing. The parts are all your children. They'll be my epitaph when they throw in that last shovelful of dirt. I'm a 53 year old bachelor; I don't wish to be a 53 year old bachelor but obviously my charm is in my work and not my sweet little nothings in somebody's ear," he chuckles. "Where my career's going, I don't know. Doing television's gonna make me a little more visible. And I do hope I work until the end. I'd like to get back onstage a little bit.


"For a little guy from a small town I've done all right. I haven't hurt a lot of people and I've had a good time. When I meet my mom and dad up there, later on, they'll say, 'Okay, Michael, you did good.' What else is there?"

by Kris Gilpin

Originally published in Drama-Logue, January 26-February 1 1989

Thursday, July 16, 2009

Kris' Movie Crossword #11



by Kris Gilpin


ANSWERS TO PUZZLE #10

ACROSS:
1) Canadian film: The _______ _____ in the World: SADDESTMUSIC
9) Starred Gena Rowlands & Denis Leary in '95: NEONBIBLE
11) Stone film about a guy who showed his weenis on stage: DOORS
13) What said weenis can do: PEE
14) "Everything" in England: (THE) LOT
15) What's always stained when you're hit by a car: UNDERWEAR
17) The 13th _____.: FLOOR
18) Majors or Marvin: LEE
19) Nic Cage eats 2 huge cockroaches onscreen!: VAMPIRESKISS
22) Brian Cox's beloved old dog is killed by scumbags: RED
23) aka United Press International: UPI
24) The Ox played this amazingly in the Who: BASS
26) Counterfeit bills, etc.: FAKES
27) Big turd: ___ and 1/2: COP
28) Ringo named his boy this: ZAK
30) The only motion picture to feature Sir John Gielgud -- & a close-up blow job!: CALIGULA
33) "Star" of Das Boot & Hunt for Red October: SUB
35) Alternative "alternate.": ALT
37) People used to flick it in commercials: BIC
38) Johnson: TOR
39) He was the Dust Devil: ROBERTBURKE
41) Burt comedy about death: (THE) END
42) Gorgeous Julie Dreyfus played her in Kill Bill: SOPHIE
43) Uber-nerd: "Dood, I just ______ in a Boba Fett Milk Bone for a rare sheet of Tarkin toilet paper!!": TRADED

DOWN:
1) The ______ Dwarf: SINFUL
2) Big turd: ____ ____ Fred: DROPDEAD
3) A tiny bit of a dying fire: EMBER
4) An Angel at My _____: TABLE
5) Alternative to a savings account?: USE IRAS
6) Some women have this inside them: IUD
7) Where the awesome Dust Devil was shot: AUSTRALIA
8) The name of the Forbin Project: COLOSSUS
10) Born (re: a female): NEE
12) Nickname for Aussie hopper: 'ROO
16) Campbell: NEVE
17) aka picture: FLICK
20) _____ Suite: PLAZA
21) More hazardous: RISKIER
22) Brooks & Attenborough: RICHARDS
25) Mineo: SAL
26) aka flying rubber: FLUBBER
29) Simon & Garfunkel, for instance: DUO
31) This cutie cut off someone's head in Kill Bill: LIU
32) Biting to the taste & smell: ACRID
33) Patrick & Ralph played him: (JOHN) STEED
34) aka Uma in Kill Bill: BRIDE
36) Big turd: Boat ____: TRIP
40) Plumb or Arden: EVE


Wednesday, July 08, 2009

Kris' Movie Crossword #10



by Kris Gilpin


ANSWERS TO PUZZLE #9

ACROSS:
1) The little con artist's name in a B&W 70's film: ADDIE
3) _ ____ who killed me: IKNOW
6) ___ don't leave: MEN
8) A N.W. China river: ILI
10) Colin & Anthony: QUINNS
11) The evil deity: LOK
13) Brian C. was a child molester: L.I.E.
14) Prices: COSTS
15) _______ with the mostest: HOSTESS
17) A stimulus: CUE
18) Gritty, eclectic N.Y. filmmaker: ABELFERRARA
21) In other words: IOW
22) ___ and away: FAR
23) (While Georgie's guitar ______ weeps): GENTLY
24) What she usually pleads in bed: NOTYET
25) Much ___ ...: ADO
26) Brainy report: EEG
27) Silky smooth: SATIN-LIKE
28) Winston or Lee: STAN
29) Notoriously wasted in 18 across film: HARVEYKEITEL

DOWN:
1) Allegorical, B&W 90's film about vampires in N.Y.: ADDICTION
2) Young headcase blinds 6 horses in this: EQUUS
4) Popular, violent film about a N.Y. ex-con drug dealer: KINGOFNEWYORK
5) Co-starred in 7 down: WILLEMDAFOE
6) Oldfield & Nesmith: MIKES
7) Love/hate-it film by 18 across with a totally unique, contemplative last half hour: NEWROSEHOTEL
9) Kent's girlfriend: LOIS
12) Stunning beauty who caused all the trouble in 7 down: ASIAARGENTO
16) Great indie queen who starred in 1 down: LILITAYLOR
17) In the 30's he helped bring up baby: CARYGRANT
19) Bend sharply: FOLD
20) What they do to a film before release: RATE