Sold Date:
October 23, 2022
Start Date:
October 16, 2022
Final Price:
$59.99
(USD)
Bid Count:
1
Seller Feedback:
1783
Buyer Feedback:
0
eBay listing template 2013
Artist
DANNY
ELFMAN
Title
CLIVE BARKER'S NIGHTBREED
ORIGINAL MOTION PICTURE
SOUNDTRACK
Format
12"
Vinyl LP
Condition
New/Mint/Original
Factory Sealed
Country of manufacture
USA
Label
Catalog #
UPC
Release Date
Waxwork
Records
WW007
0728028376180
July 9, 2015
Info
RARE and LONG OUT-OF-PRINT LP!
From
2015:
Waxwork
Records and
Morgan Creek
are proud to
present the
deluxe LP
re-issue of
Danny Elfman’s
score to CLIVE
BARKER’S
NIGHTBREED.
Long out of
print and
prohibitively
expensive, the
original
soundtrack
release of
NIGHTBREED has
become a
sought after
collectable LP
for horror
fans and vinyl
soundtrack
enthusiasts
alike.
Waxwork
Records and
Morgan Creek
have partnered
to release the
NIGHTBREED
soundtrack as
a deluxe
re-issue vinyl
LP package
featuring
re-mastered
audio,
incredible
full package
artwork by
Rich Kelly,
180 gram
colored vinyl,
and high
quality
packaging.
Fans of Clive
Barker,
horror,
soundtracks,
and vinyl can
now look no
further for an
overpriced,
out of print
version of
this
remarkable,
classic score
by the
legendary
Danny Elfman.
This is the
attainable,
super high
standard real
deal straight
from the
depths of
Midian.
Deluxe LP
reissue of the
classic Danny
Elfman score
Remastered
Original Score
by Danny
Elfman
180 gram EXCLUSIVE
SUBSCRIBER
ONLY "Peloquin"
VARIANT
Maroon
with Cream
& White
Swirl Colored
Vinyl
Heavyweight
Tip-On
Gatefold
Jacket
12" x 12" Art
Print
Artwork by
Rich Kelly
Tracklist:
Side A
A1 Main
Titles / Dream
A2
Carnival
Underground
A3 Into
Midian / Meat
For The Beast
A4
Resurrection
Suite / Boone
Transforms
A5 The
Initiation /
Scalping Time
A6
Rachel's
Oratory /
Party In The
Past
Side B
B1 Poor
Babette / Uh,
Oh... Decker!
B2 "Then
Don't Say It!"
B3 Boone
Gets A Taste
B4 Breed
Love
B5
Mayhem In
Midian
B6
Baphomet's
Chamber
B7
Farewell / 2nd
Chance
B8 End
Credits
B9
Country Skin
(Vocals –
Michael
Stanton)
Copyright © – Morgan Creek Productions,
Inc.
Copyright © –
Waxwork
Records
Recorded By –
The Burbank
Studios
Mixed At – CBS
T.V.
Edited At –
A&M
Studios
Mastered At –
A&M
Studios
Artwork,
Design – Rich
Kelly
Choir [Adult
Choir] –
Members of the
LA Master
Choir*
Conductor,
Orchestra
[Conducting
and Additional
Orchestrations]
– Shirley
Walker
Editor [Music
Editors] – Bob
Badami, Sally
Boldt
Editor,
Mastered By
[Original 1990
Soundtrack
Release
Editing and
Mastering] –
Dave Collins
Engineer
[Assistant] –
Sharon Rice
Executive-Producer
– Kathy Nelson
Mastered By
[Mastered For
Vinyl By] – J.
Yuenger
Mixed By –
Shawn Murphy
Orchestrated
By – Steve
Bartek
Producer –
Elfman, Bartek
Recorded By –
Bobby
Fernandez,
Shawn Murphy
Deluxe LP
reissue of the
classic Danny
Elfman score
Remastered for
Vinyl
Super
Heavyweight
Tip-On
Gatefold
Jacket
Printed Insert
Artwork by
Rich Kelly
Barcode
(Sticker on
shrink wrap):
7 28028 37618
0
Barcode
(Scanned):
0728028376180
Matrix /
Runout (Side A
[Stamped]):
127208E1/A
Matrix /
Runout (Side B
[Stamped]):
127208E2/B
Payment & Shipping
All items are packed with
individual care and shipped promptly upon receipt of payment.
100% positive feedback rated
seller since 1998.
With ManhattanMusic, you can bid with confidence!
Bio
Nightbreed
is a 1990 American dark
fantasy horror film
written and directed by
Clive Barker, based on
his 1988 novella Cabal.
It stars Craig Sheffer,
Anne Bobby, David
Cronenberg, Charles
Haid, Hugh Quarshie, and
Doug Bradley. The film
follows an unstable
mental patient named
Aaron Boone who is
falsely led to believe
by his doctor that he is
a serial killer. Tracked
down by the police, his
doctor, and his
girlfriend Lori, Boone
eventually finds refuge
in an abandoned cemetery
called Midian among a
tribe of monsters and
outcasts known as the
"Nightbreed" who hide
from humanity.
At the time of its
release, the film was a
commercial and critical
failure. In several
interviews, Barker
protested that the film
company tried to sell it
as a standard slasher
film,[3] and that the
powers-that-be had no
real working knowledge
of Nightbreed's story.
Since its initial
theatrical release,
Nightbreed has become a
cult film.
Over time, Barker
expressed disappointment
with the final cut
approved by the studio
and always longed for
the recovery of the
reels so the film might
be re-edited. In 2014,
original film elements
for the cut material
were re-obtained and
were edited into a
director's cut, released
through Scream Factory.
In Calgary, Aaron Boone
dreams of Midian, a city
where monsters are
accepted. At the request
of girlfriend Lori
Winston, Boone is seeing
psychotherapist Dr.
Phillip Decker, a serial
killer who convinces
Boone that he committed
Decker's murders. Decker
drugs Boone with LSD
disguised as lithium and
orders Boone to turn
himself in. Before he
can do so, Boone is
struck by a truck and
taken to a hospital.
There, Boone overhears
the rants of Narcisse, a
seemingly insane man who
seeks to enter Midian.
Convinced that Boone is
there to test him,
Narcisse gives Boone
directions to the hidden
city before tearing the
skin off his face in
order to show his "true"
face. He is quickly
subdued by hospital
staff, and Boone leaves.
Boone makes his way to
Midian, a city beneath a
massive graveyard in the
middle of nowhere. Upon
encountering
supernatural creatures
Kinski and Peloquin,
Kinski says they should
bring him below, but
Peloquin refuses to
allow in a normal human.
Boone claims to be a
murderer, but Peloquin
smells his innocence and
attacks him. Boone
escapes, only to
encounter a squad of
police officers led by
Decker. Boone is gunned
down after Decker tricks
the police into
believing Boone is
armed. Due to Peloquin's
bite, Boone returns to
life in the morgue. When
he returns to Midian, he
finds Narcisse there and
is inducted into their
society by the
Nightbreed's leader,
Dirk Lylesburg. In an
initiation ceremony,
Boone is touched by the
blood of their deity,
Baphomet.
Seeking to understand
why Boone left her, Lori
investigates Midian. She
befriends a woman named
Sheryl Anne and drives
to the cemetery with
her. Leaving Sheryl Anne
at the car, Lori
explores the cemetery,
where she finds a dying
wolf-like creature. A
woman named Rachel (a
nightbreed with the
power to transform into
smoke) pleads from the
shadows for Lori to take
it out of the sunlight.
Once in the shadows, it
transforms into a little
girl, Rachel's daughter
Babette. Lori asks about
Boone but is rebuffed by
Lylesburg and scared off
by Peloquin. While
leaving the cemetery,
Lori discovers Sheryl
Anne's corpse and her
killer, Decker. Decker
attempts to use Lori to
draw Boone out of
hiding. Boone rescues
Lori, and Decker learns
Boone cannot be killed
due to his
transformation. Decker
escapes, and Boone takes
Lori into Midian. Rachel
explains to Lori that
the monsters of folklore
were peaceful beings who
were hunted to
near-extinction by
humans. Lylesburg
banishes Boone and Lori
from Midian. Decker
learns how to kill the
Nightbreed and murders
the residents of the
hotel where Boone and
Lori are staying. When
Boone discovers the
crime scene, he
uncontrollably drinks
the blood. The police
find Boone and take him
into custody. At
Decker's urging, the
police form a militia
led by Police Captain
Eigerman. A drunken
priest named Ashberry
joins them as God's
servant in their
upcoming battle against
Midian. Lori, Rachel and
Narcisse rescue Boone,
and the four return to
Midian, where Boone
convinces the Nightbreed
to fight.
During the battle,
Ashberry learns there
are women and children
amongst the Nightbreed.
When he tries halting
the attack, he is beaten
by Eigerman. Ashberry
finds the idol of
Baphomet and swears
allegiance to it. When
he is splashed by its
blood, he is burned and
transformed. Boone
learns from Lylesburg
that Baphomet plans to
destroy Midian. Boone
argues to release the
Berserkers, a monstrous
feral breed that were
imprisoned due to their
insanity. When Lylesburg
is killed before he can
open the cages, Boone
releases them and the
Berserkers turn the tide
of battle. Decker
confronts Boone and is
killed. When Boone faces
Baphomet, Baphomet says
that Boone has caused
the end of Midian, which
had been foretold.
Baphomet charges Boone
with finding a new home
for the Nightbreed and
renames him Cabal.
Boone leaves Midian with
Lori and meets with the
remaining Nightbreed in
a barn, where he says
his goodbyes to Narcisse
and promises to find a
place where they will be
safe. In the ruins of
Midian, Ashberry stands
in front of Decker's
corpse and states that
he wants vengeance on
Baphomet and the Breed.
When he presses
Baphomet's blood to
Decker's wound, Decker
springs back to life
with a scream as
Ashberry repeatedly
hollers "Hallelujah!".
In the alternative
ending used in The Cabal
Cut and Director's Cut
of the film, Narcisse is
killed earlier in the
battle by Decker, so he
is not present during
the subsequent events.
The Nightbreed await
Boone in a barn whilst
Boone says his goodbyes
to Lori, as he must find
a new home for the
Nightbreed. Boone
promises to return to
her, but knowing that
Boone will retain his
youth and immortality as
she grows old, Lori
suddenly stabs herself,
forcing Boone to
resurrect her as a
Nightbreed. They profess
their love for one
another and begin their
journey.
Meanwhile, Captain
Eigerman wanders the
underground remains of
the cemetery, where he
stumbles upon the
transformed Ashberry,
who longs for revenge
after his burning by
Baphomet. Eigerman
shares this desire, but
Ashberry rejects
Eigerman's offer, kills
him, and starts his hunt
for the Nightbreed.
The surviving Nightbreed
watch Boone and Lori in
the distance. Rachel
tells Babette that Boone
will return soon,
perhaps the next day, to
lead them to a new
haven. Boone and Lori
now appear together as
part of a prophecy in a
Nightbreed painting.
In The Cabal Cut, the
resurrection of Decker
plays as a post-credits
scene.
Cast
Craig Sheffer as Aaron
Boone / Cabal, a man who
is turned into a
Nightbreed.
Anne Bobby as Lori
Winston, Aaron's
girlfriend.
David Cronenberg as Dr.
Philip K. Decker /
Curtis, a
psychotherapist who
doubles as a masked
serial killer.
Charles Haid as Captain
Eigerman, a police
captain that allies with
Decker.
Hugh Quarshie as
Detective Joyce
Bradley Lavelle as
Cormack
Hugh Ross as Narcisse, a
Nightbreed with a
removable face.
Doug Bradley as Dirk
Lylesberg, a Nightbreed
who serves as their
acolyte and lawgiver.
Catherine Chevalier as
Rachel, a shapeshifting
Nightbreed that cannot
deal with sunlight.
Bob Sessions as Pettine
Malcolm Smith as Father
Ashbury, a drunken
priest who allies with
Decker.
Oliver Parker as
Peloquin, a Nightbreed
that is responsible for
biting Aaron.
Debora Weston as Sheryl
Ann, a woman that Lori
befriends.
Nicholas Vince as
Kinski, a Nightbreed
with a crescent
moon-shaped head.
Simon Bamford as Ohnaka,
a tattooed member of the
Nightbreed.
Kim Robertson and Nina
Robertson as Babette,
the Nightbreed daughter
of Rachel who has the
same traits as her.
Christine McCorkindale
as Shuna Sassi, a
Nightbreed with an
animalistic face that is
covered in quills.
Tony Bluto as Leroy
Gomm, an overweight
Nightbreed who has
retractable tentacles
coming out of his
stomach.
Bernard Henry as
Baphomet, a demon who is
the deity of the
Nightbreed
"[Writer-director Clive]
Barker, himself a gay
man, makes his
Nightbreed spectacularly
queer, chiefly through
its visual design and
dishy repartee: the
monsters sport leather,
tattoos, body-piercings,
shaved heads and/or
pony-tails, Doc Marten
boots, vests upon bare
chests, and van dykes
("Satan beards" or
"queer beards"), a look
that was concurrently
being made fashionable
by Queer Nationalists,
members of Act Up, and
the visual stylizations
of queer theatre pieces
such as Reza Abdoh's
Bogeyman".
— Monsters in the
Closet: Homosexuality
and the Horror Film
(Inside Popular Film) by
Harry M. Benshoff, 1997.
Nightbreed has been
characterized as
containing themes
related to queerness and
the LGBT community. In
1997, author Harry M.
Benshoff called it, "One
of the first horror
films to make an
explicit connection
between monsters and the
activist politics of the
queer community".
Filmmaker Alejandro
Jodorowsky called
Nightbreed "the first
truly gay horror fantasy
epic", explaining how
the unconsummated
relationship between
doctor and patient is in
his view the central
theme. In 2015, Tyler
Coates of Decider called
Jodorowsky's
interpretation of the
characters' relationship
as being "only the tip
of the iceberg and, I'd
argue, a red herring";
Coates focuses instead
on the presence of queer
subtext "blatantly seen
in the Nightbreed's
culture", writing that,
"Because normalcy is
subjective and based
solely on how the
majority defines it,
it's important to
establish mini-societies
and cultures with people
like you."
In 2019, Trace Thurman
of Bloody Disgusting
wrote that the
Nightbreed as depicted
in the film "represent
queerness, or any
fill-in-the-blank
'Other' you can think
of." Noting that, beyond
writer-director Clive
Barker being "one of the
most famous queer horror
artists of our time
[...] The narrative
itself is filled to the
brim with queerness and
serves as an allegory
for intolerance. Can
anyone watch Nightbreed
and not automatically
associate the titular
creatures with queer
people? They've been
outcast by society and
are deemed as dangerous
by the 'normal' people.
The climax of the film
culminates in an assault
on the Nightbreed's home
base of Midian as the
'normies' would rather
kill all of them as
opposed to understand
them." That same year,
Leigh Monson of Birth.
Movies. Death. wrote
that the director's cut
of the film "places on
display the full scope
of a narrative that is a
broad and potent
allegory for the
persecution of the queer
community."
In 2021, The A.V. Club's
Charles Bramesco also
examined the presence of
queer themes in the
film's director's cut,
writing that some of its
homoerotic subtext was
initially removed when
executives at 20th
Century Fox demanded
that the film be trimmed
during its
post-production.
Bramesco argued, "They
were blind to the
subtext of this
community as a home for
misfits, where the
placeless Boone—who
doesn't seem all that
interested in sex with
his torch-singing
girlfriend—can find an
accepting family. The
director's cut allows us
more time with the
creatures and ups their
number, emphasizing that
they're only fearsome to
those afraid of
difference."
Barker always loved
monsters and felt that
"there's a corner of all
of us that envies their
powers and would love to
live forever, or to fly,
or to change shape at
will. So, when I came to
make a movie about
monsters, I wanted to
create a world we'd feel
strangely at home in".
He was interested in
creating a "horror
mythology from the
ground up" and
developing characters
that would live on in
sequels. As he finished
writing the novella
Cabal, he realized that
it would make a good
film that he would
direct himself. He
originally envisioned a
trilogy of films.
Nightbreed was the first
of a planned
three-picture deal
Barker had with Morgan
Creek, Joe Roth's
production company, that
included an adaptation
of Son of Celluloid and
a sequel to Nightbreed.
The first compromise
Barker made was to
change the title of the
film from Cabal to
Nightbreed because
Morgan Creek insisted on
a more commercial title
and thought that the
original one did not
mean anything. He was
given a budget of $11
million, which was a
considerable increase
from the $2 million he
had to work with on
Hellraiser. His goal was
to make the Star Wars of
horror films. The
monsters in the book are
represented
impressionistically over
two or three paragraphs
and the challenge Barker
faced was to visualize
them in much greater
detail for the film.
For the film, Barker
used three soundstages
at Pinewood Studios
shooting some scenes on
location at Wexham Park
Hospital, Slough,
Berkshire, UK over
several nights and in
Calgary, Alberta,
Canada. Bob Keen and his
crew had two months to
play around with ideas
before doing any
modeling work. They used
computer-controlled
animatronics but only
where necessary. Towards
the end of principal
photography, Barker
brought Star Wars
concept artist Ralph
McQuarrie in to paint
mattes for the
Necropolis sequences and
design the history of
the Breed in a symbolic
way on an enormous mural
across a 60-foot space
on the set at Pinewood
to be used in the
opening credits.
During an interview in
2022 on The Ghost of
Hollywood,
cinematographer Robin
Vidgeon, mentioned that
he disliked working with
David Cronenberg,
stating Cronenberg
complained to Clive that
he was being usurp.
Barker was contractually
obligated to deliver an
R-rated film and could
not make it as gory as
his previous picture
Hellraiser. Barker
previewed the first cut
of Nightbreed with a
temporary soundtrack
that did not go well, as
people were confused by
the characters' motives.
He made some changes and
the second test
screening was much more
successful. However, the
ending with Decker's
death was not well
received and Barker
changed it. In late July
1989, the studio pushed
the release date for
Nightbreed from its
original autumn 1989
date to early February
1990 instead. The press
release cited "the
complex demands of the
film's ground-breaking
post-production optical
effects", but this also
included McQuarrie's
mural and matte
paintings, and a week of
additional shooting in
late August that would
see key parts of the
narrative re-shot.
Barker shot extra scenes
over three days in Los
Angeles in late 1989
which included
additional scenes with
David Cronenberg which
expanded and clarified
his character. Barker's
original version ran
two-and-a-half hours and
Fox asked for almost an
hour to be cut prompting
editor Richard Marden to
leave the project in
protest. Nightbreed was
cut to two hours and
then again to 102
minutes.
Soundtrack
Nightbreed (Original
Motion Picture
Soundtrack)
Film score by Danny
Elfman
Released March 20, 1990
Recorded 1990
Genre Soundtrack
Length 46:46
Label MCA
Producer Danny Elfman
and Steve Bartek
Danny Elfman chronology
Batman
(1989) Nightbreed
(Original Motion Picture
Soundtrack)
(1990) Dick Tracy
The score was composed
by Danny Elfman and
conducted by Shirley
Walker, who also wrote
the additional cue
"Charge of the
Berserkers" for the
film's climax and
received an onscreen
credit. Elfman said of
his score: "Once again
it was time for me to
stretch out... Combining
dark/fun/sweet/tribal
all into one. The great
joy in the score for me,
other than working for
Clive Barker, was being
able to use the
children's voices and a
whole slew of ethnic
drums and instruments
together with an
orchestra, in an attempt
to bring a unique
musical tone to the
film". Barker said
"Danny is an
extraordinary talent.
The most uncompromised
portion of that entire
movie is the score".
In an article on Elfman,
described as a rising
composer in Hollywood
who had just scored Tim
Burton's Batman and was
about to score Warren
Beatty's Dick Tracy,
Entertainment Weekly's
Ron Givens noted that
Nightbreed wouldn't get
as much attention as
these two big-budget
movies, yet Givens
praised Elfman's
"needle-sharp crescendos
and creepy choral
plainchants" and added:
"Seldom has scary-movie
music been so
spiritual".
The song "Country Skin"
is a country-and-western
rendition of the Oingo
Boingo song "Skin"
(which appears on the
1990 album Dark at the
End of the Tunnel), it
was written by Elfman
and performed by country
singer Michael Stanton.
It can be heard in the
film, played on a radio.
It was available as a
bonus track on the CD
and cassette version of
the soundtrack.
According to Barker, the
studio did not promote
it well with posters
that misinterpreted the
content. When he saw the
way they were selling
Nightbreed, he freaked
out and said: "What you
doing? This isn't the
movie, and was given all
kinds of excuses ...
Well, there isn't time
to change it, we have to
release it now". The
head of marketing at
Morgan Creek never
watched all the way
through because it
"disgusted and
distressed" him,
according to Barker. The
studio did not
understand it, it had no
movie stars, it was
violent, and it had
elements of fantasy and
horror which they saw as
a weakness while Barker
saw it as a strength.
They ended up marketing
Nightbreed as a slasher
film with television
teasers that were
confusing and did not
represent it. The
trailer was sent to the
MPAA and it was rejected
12 times. They forbade
any monster footage, and
it was cut down to
someone being terrorized
with a razor, which
constituted only five
minutes of Barker's
film. Looking back,
Barker realized that Fox
was better at promoting
films like White Men
Can't Jump but "not so
good at selling the
quirky stuff".
The studio argued that
there was no point
showing Nightbreed to
critics because the
people who see horror
films do not read
reviews. Therefore, the
film had to be sold to
the lowest common
denominator. They
refused to preview the
film for critics, a
decision which angered
Barker.
Rotten Tomatoes, a
review aggregator,
reports 47% of 32
surveyed critics gave
the film a positive
review; the average
rating was 5.5 out of
10. The site's consensus
states: "Nightbreed's
imaginative
world-building and
startling creature
designs are no match for
its clumsy, uneven
plotting". In his review
for the Toronto Star,
Henry Mietkiewicz wrote
"Nightbreed might have
been a monster movie
milestone, if Clive
Barker's directorial
abilities had kept pace
with his skill as a
master of British horror
fiction. Unfortunately,
Nightbreed probably will
be remembered as much
for its haphazard
plotting and
underdeveloped
characters as its
delightfully daring
concept". Derek Malcolm
wrote in his review for
The Guardian that "it is
neither direct nor
subtle enough as a piece
of film-making. It is
difficult to suggest
that evil is human and
monsters have souls
within the context of a
mountain of special
effects. The result is
patchy in the extreme
and not always capable
of transcending a genre
that has become less and
less intriguing as less
and less is left to the
imagination".
However, Entertainment
Weekly's Ty Burr gave
the film a "B" rating,
writing: "From the
film's Gothic sets,
fantastic makeup, and
nightmarish plot line,
it's clear that Barker
owes as much to Poe and
Lovecraft as to classic
Hollywood screamers like
Island of Lost Souls.
But Barker's most
perverse touch is that
he makes these creatures
the good guys (no wonder
the PR flacks were
bamboozled). Despite
their grotesque
appearance, they're a
more colorful and
engaging bunch than the
emissaries of the normal
world. Barker piles on
more subversive subtext
than his story can bear
— it's a monster movie,
after all — but his
daft, Grand Guignol
vision has real power.
The quality that freaked
out the studio, Barker's
ambition, is precisely
what makes Nightbreed so
impressive".
Nightbreed was released
on February 16, 1990, in
1,488 theaters, grossing
$3.7 million on its
opening weekend. It went
on to make $8.8 million
in the United States and
Canada and $7 million
internationally for a
worldwide total of $16
million on an $11
million budget.
In 1990, to tie in with
the film's box office
release, Epic Comics
produced a four-issue
adaptation of the film,
which included
significant differences
from the finished movie,
more closely related to
Clive Barker's original
script. The comic book
continued to run past
the end of the film,
ultimately stretching to
twenty-five issues
before it was cancelled.
The comic book was
initially written by
Alan Grant and John
Wagner and drawn by Jim
Baikie.
A two part graphic novel
was also produced,
Hellraiser vs
Nightbreed: Jihad, which
merges the two worlds
created by Clive Barker
and features the
Cenobites as agents of
order against their
chaotic nemesis the
Nightbreed, and the
Jihad (Holy War) of
extermination that the
first wage on the
latter.
Nightbreed returned in
1992, as a short story
in the second issue of
the four issue Epic
anthology series.
A 12 issue mini-series
was published by BOOM!
Studios in 2014-2015
following the storyline
of the Director's Cut of
the film.
Two video games based on
the film were released
shortly after the movie.
The games were intended
to form a trilogy but
due to the poor
performance of the first
two the third was never
made.
Nightbreed, The Action
Game
The first was a
traditional action game
and was released for the
Commodore Amiga, Atari
ST, Commodore 64, ZX
Spectrum and Amstrad
CPC, and for DOS.
Loosely following the
same plot as the movie,
it intersperses various
action sequences.
Nightbreed, The
Interactive Movie
The second game was
released for the Amiga
and ST and for DOS. Also
based on the film, there
was less action involved
as it was more of an
interactive movie.
Morgan Creek reportedly
began developing a
television series based
on the original film in
2014. In the following
year, Morgan Creek
announced the sale of
the domestic rights to
its library of 78 films,
but the production
company plans to retain
the TV rights to
Nightbreed. In June
2018, Syfy, Morgan Creek
and Barker teamed up to
develop the series. It
is being written by Josh
Stolberg and directed by
Michael Dougherty for
SyFy.
In 2009, Mark Miller,
co-head of Barker's
production company,
Seraphim Films, helped
track down the missing
footage that was cut out
of the director's cut of
Nightbreed. Miller
discovered, after
talking to a production
executive at the studio,
that the footage was
never actually lost but
readily accessible. When
asked, a studio
executive said that
there was not a big
enough audience to
warrant the studio
spending money on a new,
extended cut of the
film. A VHS copy of
Barker's 145-minute
version of the film's
mid-1989 workprint was
discovered. It did not
feature any of the
re-shoots of Decker's
murders. An extended
159-minute cut version,
from another VHS found
in July 2009, premiered
on March 27, 2010, as
part of the HorrorHound
Weekend in Indianapolis.
This new version adds
almost an hour that was
cut from the theatrical
release, including a
song sung by Lori, and
more animation. Barker
said that he hopes to
bring back Danny Elfman
to add more music.
In early 2012, Russell
Cherrington, a senior
lecturer in film and
video production at the
University of Derby,
created a composite cut
of the film using the
footage found on both
VHS tapes and a DVD then
recently released by
Warner Archive
Collection, Warner's
made-to-order DVD
service. This version is
the most complete
version of Barker's film
available and has been
dubbed The Cabal Cut.
The cut runs 155 minutes
long and was shown at
that year's "Mad Monster
Party" in North Carolina
with actors Craig
Sheffer and Anne Bobby
attending.
The "Mad Monster Party"
projection of the Cabal
Cut led to a renewal of
interest among fans,
especially on the
Internet. A new petition
was created and social
networks were used to
raise awareness for the
extended cut and to
encourage producers to
release it. This would
be colloquially known as
"Occupy Midian", a term
coined by actress Anne
Bobby.
A Blu-Ray release of the
"Cabal Cut" was
announced on July 13,
2017, via the Clive
Barker Podcast. This
release utilized
then-restored footage
from the Director's Cut
and the pre-existing VHS
copies, for a total
length of 145 minutes.
The release features new
material and commentary
tracks exclusive to that
release. Handled by
Morgan Creek and
Seraphim Films, the
Cabal Cut Blu-Ray was
released in a limited
quantity through Clive
Barker's online store.
In 2013, Shout! Factory
released The Cabal Cut
on DVD. This version was
later clarified to be a
brand new director's cut
that uses the footage
and not the full Cabal
Cut.
Shout! Factory released
The Director's Cut
Blu-ray in 2014. This
version, overseen by
Clive Barker, runs
twenty minutes longer
than the theatrical
version and contains
forty minutes of new and
altered footage. Shout,
with Morgan Creek
Entertainment, located
the original film
elements in the Warner
archives to newly
restore the sequences.
Barker said, "when
Scream Factory told me
that they found the
Nightbreed film footage,
I was gob-smacked! This
is the ultimate
validation of choices
made by myself and Mark
Miller all the way back
in 2008". Shout later
published a Special
Edition Blu-ray / DVD
combo pack and a 3-disc
limited edition Blu-ray,
containing a booklet and
the theatrical cut. When
the limited edition sold
out during pre-orders,
Shout! doubled their
production run.
-
wikipedia