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Haunted Honeymoon

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Haunted Honeymoon
Theatrical release poster
Directed byGene Wilder
Written byGene Wilder
Terence Marsh
Produced bySusan Ruskin
Starring
CinematographyFred Schuler
Edited byChristopher Greenbury
Music byJohn Morris
Distributed byOrion Pictures
Release date
  • July 25, 1986 (1986-07-25)
Running time
82 minutes
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish
Budget$9 million[1]
Box office$8 million[2]

Haunted Honeymoon is a 1986 American comedy horror film starring Gene Wilder, Gilda Radner, Dom DeLuise and Jonathan Pryce. Wilder also served as writer and director. The title Haunted Honeymoon was previously used for the 1940 U.S. release of Busman's Honeymoon based on the stage play by Dorothy L. Sayers.

Honeymoon was distributed by Orion Pictures through a deal with HBO. The film flopped by grossing just short of its $9 million budget, whilst it received negative reviews from the critics. The film earned DeLuise the Razzie Award for Worst Supporting Actress. The film represents the last feature film appearance for Radner (prior to her diagnosis and death from ovarian cancer) and the last directorial role for Wilder.

Plot

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Larry Abbot and Vickie Pearle are performers on radio's "Manhattan Mystery Theater" who decide to get married. Larry has been plagued with on-air panic attacks and speech impediments since proposing marriage. Vickie thinks it is just pre-wedding jitters, but his affliction could get them both fired.

Larry's uncle, Dr. Paul Abbot, decides that Larry needs to be cured. Paul decides to treat him with a form of shock therapy to "scare him to death" in much the same way someone might try to startle someone out of hiccups.

Larry chooses a castle-like mansion in which he grew up as the site for their wedding. Vickie gets to meet Larry's eccentric family: great-aunt Kate, who plans to leave all her money to Larry; his uncle, Francis; and Larry's cousins, Charles, Nora, Susan, and the cross-dressing Francis Jr. Also present are the butler Pfister and wife Rachel, the maid; Larry's old girlfriend Sylvia, who is now dating Charles; and Susan's magician husband, Montego the Magnificent.

Paul begins his "treatment" of Larry and lets others in on the plan. Unfortunately for all, something more sinister and unexpected is lurking at the Abbot Estates mansion. The pre-wedding party becomes a real-life version of Larry and Vickie's radio murder mysteries, werewolves and all.

Cast

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Production

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Development

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Wilder wrote the opening scene while filming Silver Streak in 1976. He wanted to make a "comedy chiller" inspired by such films as The Cat and the Canary (1939), The Old Dark House (1932) and The Black Cat (1941), and radio shows like The Inner Sanctum. "Since I was six years old I have been scared of horror movies", said Wilder "And the movies that I liked the best – even though I was scared by them – were what was called then 'comedy-chillers.' They were horror movies yet they had comedy, or they were comedies and yet they had horror. They were not comedy-mysteries, they were not comedy-thrillers, they were comedy-chillers." Wilder says when he started writing the film "I knew I wanted it to be a comedy-chiller", but he struggled and the film wound up as an "autobiographical psycho/sexual comedy with music."[1]

Wilder and Radner fell in love while making Hanky Panky (1982) and he decided to revisit the project as a vehicle for them both. "I always thought that Gilda has been one of our most brilliant television comediennes, but now I think she's becoming more than very good as a comic movie actress, which is a very, very different thing", said Wilder.[1]

Wilder rewrote the script with writing partner, Terry Marsh. "I knew that I wanted it to be not a parody and not a satire, but to re-create a comedy-chiller", said Wilder.[1] "I don't like naturalism. I like things that are fantastical – I'm not saying necessarily fantasies, but more than reality."[4]

Wilder says the film was partly inspired by a song Jeanette MacDonald and Jack Buchanan sang in the film Monte Carlo (1930). Wilder says he heard it while watching the film in bed with Radner. "I'm always looking for some emotional spine to what I'm doing. I look over at her [Radner] and tears are coming down from her eyes. It was so sweet and innocent. Like little children. And I thought that's what this [Haunted Honeymoon] is about."[4]

"I couldn't imagine him singing it with any other girl", said Radner. "So, I just had a tantrum and said I had to be the fiancée – not a big tantrum, just a tiny tantrum."[4]

He says he was also inspired by seeing Jean Cocteau's Beauty and the Beast in the early 1980s. "The world opened up for me", he said. "I'm more comfortable when I don't have to be held down by authenticity. In this film, which is set in the '30s, I feel that I'm presenting authenticity of the heart. I'm not interested in everyday reality, but in the reality of the heart. I like fantasy, like a fairy tale. I'm interested in shadows and contrasts. It's like the opening scene in the movie, when a character says, 'It's not what you think.' Well, it's probably what you think. But it's too complicated."[5]

The movie was one of 14 films financed by Orion Pictures through a deal with HBO.[6]

Shooting

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The film was shot in London at Elstree Studios in 1985 over 11 weeks.[7] "Gene calls it a 'comedy chiller'", said Gilda Radner. "For me, this is a part very similar to my own life. I wear a wedding gown in 95% of the movie. Since I didn't wear a gown when Gene and I got married, I asked the 'Haunted Honeymoon' photographer to make me a wedding album!" Radner said.[8]

Wilder says his aim was to "make a 1930s movie for 1986."[1] He and the cinematographer used no primary colors and lit the film darkly.[1] "It's black and white in color", said Wilder. "The fat lady in Akron, Ohio, doesn't have to know that. But she should feel that it's believable in the way that an old '30s film is believable."[4]

Wilder and Radner celebrated their first wedding anniversary during filming in September.[1]

Jonathan Pryce later recalled, "It was one of those films where, when there's a break and they’re doing the next setup and people usually go back to their dressing rooms, nobody went back to their dressing rooms. We’d all sit around in a circle of camp chairs or whatever they call them—director's chairs—and be entertained by Dom DeLuise. It was a blissful time. It was a great time."[9]

Wilder says he told DeLuise to play his role straight, telling him, "I want you to be my aunt. We'll get the laughs later. But first don't go for 'I'm-really-a-guy, I'm-really-a-guy, and-I'm-doing-this-little-joke.'"[1]

Release

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Orion elected not to screen the film to critics before general release. Producer Susan Ruskin said:

I know people have the tendency to think, 'Well, the studio must not be comfortable about the film.' They're very comfortable about the film, they've been behind it 100 percent. A lot of the studios, with a lot of their films, are considering not doing advance critics' screenings. There has been a tendency with the critics lately to be quite vicious about films, and we don't necessarily feel it's right to cater to that. . . . I would like the people to make a judgment on the film.[1]

Reception

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The film received negative reviews.[10][11] On review aggregator website Rotten Tomatoes, the film holds an approval rating of 18%, based on eleven reviews, and an average rating of 3.6/10.[12] Dom DeLuise won the Razzie Award for Worst Supporting Actress for his performance in drag. Audiences polled by CinemaScore gave the film an average grade "C−" on an A+ to F scale.[13] The film received a 29 rating on Metacritic.

Alex Stewart reviewed Haunted Honeymoon for White Dwarf #83, and stated that "Amid Wilder's overindulgence in timid, repetitive gags, it's hard to sort out who's plotting with whom to bump off who else, and harder still to care. Only an admirably unpredictable performance from Dom DeLuise as wacky old Aunt Kate puts any kind of edge on the silliness at all."[14]

Box office

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The movie was a financial flop, grossing only $8,000,000 in America, entering the box office at number 8, then slipping to 14 the following week.

The movie represents the last feature film appearance for Radner (prior to her diagnosis and death from Ovarian cancer) and the last directorial role for Wilder. While Radner was struggling with cancer, she wrote the following about the film:

On July 26 [1986], Haunted Honeymoon opened nationwide. It was a bomb. One month of publicity and the movie was only in the theaters for a week – a box-office disaster.[15]

Another source said the film earned $3.2 million in the US.[16]

References

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  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i Rea, Steven (July 24, 1986). "THEIR COMEDY, ALAS, IS NO LAUGHING MATTER". Philadelphia Inquirer. p. D.1.
  2. ^ Haunted Honeymoon at Box Office Mojo
  3. ^ "Yearns For Motherhood : Gilda Radner In Life-career Squeeze". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved July 9, 2012.
  4. ^ a b c d WILLISTEIN, PAUL (July 25, 1986). "FOR GILDA RADNER AND GENE WILDER, ANOTHER HONEYMOON". Morning Call (FIFTH ed.). p. D01.
  5. ^ "GILDA RADNER SHE'S WILDER, – BUT TAMER THE ZANY COMEDIAN SEEMS TO HAVE MELLOWED SINCE HER MARRIAGE TO ACTOR GENE WILDER". Chicago Sun-Times. August 23, 1986. p. 1D.
  6. ^ LAURA LANDRO (February 26, 1985). "Time Unit Extends Pact With Orion For Movie Rights". Wall Street Journal. p. 45.
  7. ^ Sneed, Lavin & O'Malley INC. (July 9, 1985). "Not exactly like a virgin...". Chicago Tribune. p. 16.
  8. ^ Mills, Nancy (July 23, 1986). "YEARNS FOR MOTHERHOOD: GILDA RADNER IN LIFE-CAREER SQUEEZE". Los Angeles Times. p. I7.
  9. ^ "Jonathan Pryce on working with Glenn Close, playing Bond and Bradbury villains, and the many sides of Terry Gilliam". AV Club. August 29, 2018.
  10. ^ "Movie Review : Smiles Of A 'Haunted' Honeymoon". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved July 9, 2012.
  11. ^ Goodman, Walter (July 26, 1986). "Movie Review – Haunted Honeymoon". The New York Times. Retrieved July 9, 2012.
  12. ^ "Haunted Honeymoon (1986)". Rotten Tomatoes. April 5, 2016. Retrieved April 10, 2018.
  13. ^ "Cinemascore". Archived from the original on December 20, 2018.
  14. ^ Stewart, Alex (November 1986). "2020 Vision". White Dwarf (83). Games Workshop: 16.
  15. ^ Radner, Gilda. It's Always Something. New York: Simon and Schuster, 1989. p. 56
  16. ^ Thompson, Anne. "The 12th Annual Grosses Gloss". Film Comment. Vol. 23, no. 2 (Mar 1987). New York. pp. 62–64, 66–69.
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