A Bucket of Blood

{{Short description|1959 film}}

{{About|the 1959 movie|the 1995 remake|A Bucket of Blood (1995 film)|other uses|Bucket of Blood (disambiguation)}}

{{Use American English|date=January 2025}}

{{Use mdy dates|date=November 2020}}

{{Infobox film

| name = A Bucket of Blood

| image = Bucket of blood affiche.jpg

| caption = Theatrical release poster

| director = Roger Corman

| producer = Roger Corman

| screenplay = Charles B. Griffith

| starring = Dick Miller
Barboura Morris
Antony Carbone

| music = Fred Katz

| cinematography = Jacques R. Marquette

| editing = Anthony Carras

|studio = Alta Vista Productions

| distributor = American International Pictures

| released = {{Film date|1959|10||ref1={{cite web |url=http://afi.com/members/catalog/DetailView.aspx?s=&Movie=52842 |title=A Bucket of Blood |access-date=July 29, 2016 |publisher=American Film Institute |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20161003175924/http://afi.com/members/catalog/DetailView.aspx?s=&Movie=52842 |archive-date=October 3, 2016 |url-status=dead }}}}

| runtime = 65 minutes

| country = United States

| language = English

|gross=$180,000{{cite news |last=Isenberg |first=Barbara |date=May 5, 1970 |title=Formula flicks |newspaper=The Wall Street Journal|id={{ProQuest|133440245}}}}

| budget = $50,000{{cite book |last=Corman |first=Roger |author-link=Roger Corman |author2=Jerome, Jim |title=How I Made a Hundred Movies in Hollywood and Never Lost a Dime |publisher=Da Capo Press |isbn=0-306-80874-9 |pages=[https://archive.org/details/howimadehundredm00corm/page/61 61–62] |url=https://archive.org/details/howimadehundredm00corm/page/61 |date=1998-08-22 }}

}}

File:A Bucket of Blood (1959) by Roger Corman 2.webm

A Bucket of Blood is a 1959 American comedy horror film directed by Roger Corman. It starred Dick Miller and was set in the West Coast beatnik culture of the late 1950s. The film, produced on a $50,000 budget, was shot in five days and shares many of the low-budget filmmaking aesthetics commonly associated with Corman's work.{{cite book |last=Gray |first=Beverly |title=Roger Corman: Blood-Sucking Vampires, Flesh-Eating Cockroaches, and Driller Killers |year=2004 |publisher=Thunder's Mouth Press |isbn=1-56025-555-2 }} Written by Charles B. Griffith, the film is a dark comic satire{{cite web|url=http://www.sensesofcinema.com/2005/35/charles_b_griffith/ |title=Little Shop of Genres: An interview with Charles B. Griffith |access-date=2007-03-11 |author=Graham, Aaron W. |publisher=Senses of Cinema |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20070125222016/http://www.sensesofcinema.com/contents/05/35/charles_b_griffith.html |archive-date=2007-01-25 |url-status=live }} about a dimwitted, impressionable young busboy at a Bohemian café who is acclaimed as a brilliant sculptor when he accidentally kills his landlady's cat and covers its body in clay to hide the evidence. When he is pressured to create similar work, he becomes a serial murderer.Gary A. Smith, The American International Pictures Video Guide, McFarland 2009 p 35

A Bucket of Blood was the first of a trio of collaborations between Corman and Griffith in the comedy genre, which include The Little Shop of Horrors (which was shot on the same sets as A Bucket of Blood){{cite AV media notes |title=A Bucket of Blood |year=2000 |chapter=Fun Facts |publisher=MGM Home Entertainment |isbn=079284680X}} and Creature from the Haunted Sea. Corman had made no previous attempt at the genre, although past and future Corman productions in other genres incorporated comedic elements. The film is a satire not only of Corman's own films but also of the world of abstract art as well as low-budgeted teen films of the 1950s. The film has also been praised in many circles as an honest, undiscriminating portrayal of the many facets of beatnik culture, including poetry, dance, and a minimalist style of life.{{citation needed|date=August 2020}} The plot has similarities to Mystery of the Wax Museum (1933). However, by setting the story in the Beat milieu of 1950s Southern California, Corman creates an entirely different mood from the earlier film.Wright, Gene (1986). Horrorshow. New York: Facts on File Publications. {{ISBN|0-8160-1014-5}}. p. 4.

Plot

Poet Maxwell H. Brock regularly performs at The Yellow Door café. The dimwitted, impressionable busboy Walter Paisley hears him with admiration. Paisley is in love with the hostess Clara and returns home one night to attempt to create a sculpture of her face. He stops when he hears the meowing of Frankie, the cat owned by his inquisitive landlady, Mrs. Surchart, who has gotten himself stuck in Walter's wall. Walter attempts to get Frankie out using a knife, but accidentally kills the cat when he sticks the knife into his wall. Instead of giving Frankie a proper burial, Walter covers the cat in clay, leaving the knife stuck in it.

File:A Bucket of Blood - Beatnik coffeehouse (1959).jpg coffeehouse.]]

File:Cast with Dead Cat cropped.png

The next morning, Walter shows the cat to Carla and his boss Leonard. Leonard dismisses the oddly morbid piece, but Carla is enthusiastic about the work and convinces Leonard to display it in the café. Walter receives praise from Will and the other beatniks in the café. An adoring fan, Naolia, gives him a vial of heroin to remember her by. Naively ignorant of its function, he takes it home and is followed by Lou Raby, an undercover cop, who attempts to take him into custody for narcotics possession. In a blind panic, thinking Lou is about to shoot him, Walter hits him with the frying pan he is holding, killing Lou instantly.

Meanwhile, Walter's boss discovers the secret behind Walter's Dead Cat piece when he sees fur sticking out of it. The next morning, Walter tells the café-goers that he has a new piece, which he calls Murdered Man. Both Leonard and Carla come with Walter as he unveils his latest work and are simultaneously amazed and appalled. Carla critiques it as "hideous and eloquent" and deserving of a public exhibition. Leonard is aghast at the idea, but realizes the potential for wealth if he plays his cards right.

The next night, Walter is treated like a king by almost everyone, except for a blonde model named Alice, who is widely disliked by her peers. Walter later follows her home and confronts her, explaining that he wants to pay her to model. At Walter's apartment, Alice strips nude and poses in a chair, where Walter proceeds to strangle her with her scarf. Walter creates a statue of Alice which, once unveiled, so impresses Brock that he throws a party at the Yellow Door in Walter's honor. Costumed as a carnival fool, Walter is wined and dined to excess.

After the party, Walter later stumbles towards his apartment. Still drunk, he beheads a factory worker with his own buzzsaw to create a bust. When he shows the head to Leonard, the boss realizes that he must stop Walter's murderous rampage and promises Walter a show to offload his latest "sculptures". At the exhibit, Walter proposes to Carla, but she rejects him. Walter is distraught and now offers to sculpt her, and she happily agrees to after the reception. Back at the exhibit, however, she finds part of the clay on one figure has worn away, revealing Alice's finger. When she tells Walter that there is a body in one of the sculptures, he tells her that he "made them immortal", and that he can make her immortal, too. She flees, he chases, and the others at the exhibit learn Walter's secret and join the chase. Walter and Carla wind up at a lumber yard where Walter, haunted by the voices of Lou and Alice, stops chasing Carla, and runs home. With discovery and retribution closing in on him, Walter vows to "hide where they'll never find me". The police, Carla, Leonard, Maxwell, and the others break down Walter's apartment door only to find that Walter has hanged himself. Looking askance at the hanging, clay-daubed corpse, Maxwell proclaims, "I suppose he would have called it Hanging Man ... his greatest work."

Cast

{{Cast listing|

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Production

=Development=

{{quote box|quote= I, being a young director and knowing a lot of young directors and writers, hung out with a group that could be considered vaguely beatnik. I was not a beatnik, however. When we made A Bucket of Blood, the beat scene was more or less at its peak... A Bucket of Blood was ultimately an affectionate satire on a movement that was soon to be replaced by the hippie generation.{{cite web|last1=Alexander|first1=Chris|title=Interview: Roger Corman Remembers 1959's A BUCKET OF BLOOD |url=https://www.comingsoon.net/horror/news/748156-interview-roger-corman-remembers-1959s-bucket-blood|year=2016|page=ComingSoon.net}}
Roger Corman, 2016|width=25%|align=right|style=padding:8px;}}

In the middle of 1959, American International Pictures approached Roger Corman to direct a horror film—but only gave Corman a $50,000 budget and a five-day shooting schedule—plus leftover sets from Diary of a High School Bride (1959).Mark McGee, Faster and Furiouser: The Revised and Fattened Fable of American International Pictures, McFarland, 1996 p145

Corman accepted the challenge but later said he was uninterested in producing a straightforward horror film. He claims he and screenwriter Charles B. Griffith developed the idea for producing a satirical black comedy horror film about the beatnik culture.{{cite book |last=Clarens |first=Carlos |title=An Illustrated History of Horror and Science-Fiction Films |url=https://archive.org/details/illustratedhist000clar |url-access=registration |year=1997 |publisher=Da Capo Press |isbn=0-306-80800-5 |page=[https://archive.org/details/illustratedhist000clar/page/n227 148] }}

Charles Griffith later claimed Corman was very uneasy at the idea of making a comedy "because you have to be good. We don't have the time or money to be good, so we stick to action."Beverly Gray, Roger Corman: Blood Sucking Vampires, Flesh Eating Cockroaches and Driller Killers AZ Ferris Publications 2014 p 48 Griffith says he talked Corman around by pointing out that since the film was made for such a little amount of money over such a short schedule, he could not fail to make money.

Corman says that the genesis of the film was an evening he and Griffith "spent drifting around the beatnik coffeehouses, observing the scene and tossing ideas and reactions back and forth until we had the basic story."[http://www.laweekly.com/2007-10-18/film-tv/wild-imagination/ Roger Corman, "Wild Imagination: Charles B. Griffith 1930–2007", LA Weekly 17 October 2007] {{webarchive |url=https://web.archive.org/web/20140421083947/http://www.laweekly.com/2007-10-18/film-tv/wild-imagination/ |date=April 21, 2014 }} accessed 20 April 2014 The director says by the end of the evening they developed the film's plot structure, partially basing the story upon Mystery of the Wax Museum.

Griffith says Corman was uneasy about how to direct comedy, and Griffith, whose parents were in vaudeville, advised him that the key was to ensure the actors played everything straight.

=Shooting=

The film was shot under the title The Living Dead,{{cite book |last=Weaver |first=Tom |title=Science Fiction and Fantasy Film Flashbacks: Conversations with 24 Actors, Writers, Producers and Directors from the Golden Age |year=2004 |publisher=McFarland & Company |isbn=0-7864-2070-7 |pages=64–67 }} and filming started 11 May 1959.{{Cite news|title=FILMLAND EVENTS: Ilona Massey Signed for Airplane Drama|date=May 5, 1959|work=Los Angeles Times|page=A13}}{{cite magazine|magazine=Variety|url=https://archive.org/details/variety214-1959–05|page=[https://archive.org/details/variety214-1959–05/page/n14 15]|date=May 6, 1959|title=Briefs from the Lots}}

According to actor Antony Carbone, "[The production] had a kind of spirit of 'having fun,' and I think [Corman] realized that while making the film. And I feel it helped him in other films he made, like The Little Shop of Horrors−he carried that Bucket of Blood 'idea' into that next film."

Actor Dick Miller was unhappy with the film's low production values. Miller is quoted by Beverly Gray as stating that,

If they'd had more money to put into the production so we didn't have to use mannequins for the statues; if we didn't have to shoot the last scene with me hanging with just some gray make-up on because they didn't have time to put the plaster on me, this could have been a very classic little film. The story was good; the acting was good; the humor in it was good; the timing was right; everything about it was right. But they didn't have any money for production values ... and it suffered.

Release

File:Fine Arts Theatre Ad - 11 December 1959, Denton, TX.png]]

American International Pictures' theatrical marketing campaign emphasized the comedic aspects of the film's plot, proclaiming that the audience would be "sick, sick, sick—from laughing!",{{cite web |url=https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0052655/taglines |title=Taglines for A Bucket of Blood (1959) |access-date=2007-10-03 |publisher=Internet Movie Database |archive-date=June 22, 2016 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160622104427/http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0052655/taglines |url-status=live }} a reference to cartoonist Jules Feiffer's popular Village Voice comic strip and his 1958 book with the same title. The film's poster consists of a series of comic strip panels humorously hinting at the film's horror content.{{citation needed|date=October 2023}}

According to Tim Dirks, the film was one of a wave of "cheap teen movies" released for the drive-in market. They consisted of "exploitative, cheap fare created especially for them [teens] in a newly established teen/drive-in genre."{{cite web|author=Dirks, Tim|title=The History of Film – The 1950s: The Cold War and Post-Classical Era, The Era of Epic Films, and the Threat of Television, Part 1|url=http://www.filmsite.org/50sintro.html |access-date=2011-05-24 |url-status=live |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160507085623/http://www.filmsite.org/50sintro.html |archive-date=2016-05-07 }}

When Corman found that the film "worked well", he continued to direct two more comedic films scripted by Griffith: The Little Shop of Horrors, a farce with a similar plot to Bucket of Blood and using the same sets; and Creature from the Haunted Sea, a parody of the monster movie genre.

The film was acquired by MGM Home Entertainment upon the company's purchase of Orion Pictures, which had owned the AIP catalog. MGM released A Bucket of Blood on VHS and DVD in 2000.{{cite book|title=A Bucket of Blood |isbn = 0792845544}}{{cite book |title=A Bucket of Blood |isbn = 079284680X}} MGM re-released the film as part of a box set with seven other Corman productions in 2007. However, the box set featured the same menus and transfer as MGM's previous edition of the film.{{cite web |title=Roger Corman Collection|url=https://www.amazon.com/dp/B000SK5ZFC/ |asin=B000SK5ZFC |access-date=2007-10-03 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20090719090157/http://www.amazon.com/dp/B000SK5ZFC/|archive-date=2009-07-19|url-status=dead }}

Reception

From a contemporary review, the Monthly Film Bulletin stated that although "the horror ultimately becomes rather too explicit, this macabre satire on beatniks and teenage horror films has some particularly adroit dialogue and tragi-comic situations."{{cite magazine|magazine=Monthly Film Bulletin|title=Bucket of Blood, A, U.S.A., 1959|page=6|publisher=British Film Institute|volume=27|issue=312|year=1960}} The review praised Dick Miller, who "gives a performance of sustained poignancy as the half-wit hero."

In a retrospective review, Sight & Sound referred to the film as "Corman's best work" with "hilarious dialogue and a finale reminiscent of Fritz Lang's M" and that his "low-budget comedy horror pic works both as satire at the expense of the Beat generation and as a trenchant little allegory about the New York art world in general."{{cite magazine|magazine=Sight & Sound|title=A Bucket of Blood|page=59|publisher=British Film Institute|volume=7|issue=1|date=January 1997|last1=Tunney|first1=Tom|last2=Macnab|first2=Geoffrey}}

Corman later said the film "wasn't a huge success, but I think we were ahead of our time because The Raven, which is a triumph, is far less funny. Maybe the film was too modest, filmed in five days on sets that came from a film about youth. The distributors didn't know what to make of a movie that didn't belong to any particular genre. They were always scared of comedy."{{cite book|last=Nasr|first= Constantine|title= Roger Corman: Interviews|series=Conversations with Filmmakers|year=2011|url=https://archive.org/details/rogercormaninter00cons|url-access=limited|page= [https://archive.org/details/rogercormaninter00cons/page/n52 10]|publisher= University Press of Mississippi}}

Adaptations

The film was remade for television in 1995 under the same name, although the remake was also distributed under the title The Death Artist. The remake was directed by comedian Michael McDonald and starred Anthony Michael Hall and Justine Bateman. The cast also included cameos by David Cross, Paul Bartel, Mink Stole, Jennifer Coolidge and Will Ferrell.

A musical production of A Bucket of Blood was produced by Chicago's Annoyance Theatre in 2009.{{cite web|title=The Annoyance Theatre and Bar|url=http://www.theannoyance.com |access-date=2014-02-09 |url-status=live |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20161226212654/https://theannoyance.com/ |archive-date=2016-12-26 }} It opened September 26, and closed October 31, 2009, garnering exceptional reviews,[http://www.loyolaphoenix.com/sections/diversions/bucket-of-blood-giddy-gruesome-and-musical-1.526442] {{dead link|date=October 2016|bot=InternetArchiveBot|fix-attempted=yes}} including a recommendation from the Chicago Reader.{{Cite web|url=http://www.chicagoreader.com/chicago/Event?oid|title=Chicago Reader|date=June 9, 2011|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110609082825/http://www.chicagoreader.com/chicago/Event?oid|access-date=March 1, 2021|archive-date=June 9, 2011}} The musical was directed by Ray Mees, with music by Chuck Malone. The cast included James Stanton as Walter Paisley, Sam Locke as Leonard, Peter Robards as Maxwell, Jen Spyra as Carla, Colleen Breen as Naolia, Maari Suorsa as Alice, Tyler Patocka as William and Peter Kremidas as Lee. Another musical adaptation is currently{{when|date=December 2018}} in development, retitled Beatsville. It features a book by Glenn Slater and music and lyrics by Wendy Wilf.{{Cite web|url=http://www.playbill.com/news/article/new-music-namt-announces-selections-for-2008-festival-of-new-musicals-151718|title=New Music: NAMT Announces Selections for 2008 Festival of New Musicals - Playbill.com|date=February 6, 2016|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160206190604/http://www.playbill.com/news/article/new-music-namt-announces-selections-for-2008-festival-of-new-musicals-151718|access-date=March 1, 2021|archive-date=February 6, 2016}}

In March 2023, the La Mirada Theatre premiered a musical adaption of A Bucket of Blood entitled Did You See What Walter Paisley Did Today?{{cite web |last1=Gans |first1=Andrew |title=La Mirada World Premiere of New Musical "Did You See What Walter Paisley Did Today?" Begins March 16th |url=https://playbill.com/article/la-mirada-world-premiere-of-new-musical-did-you-see-what-walter-paisley-did-today-begins-march-16#:~:text=With%20a%20book%2C%20music%2C%20and,and%20perhaps%20some%20big%20trouble. |website=Playbill.com |publisher=Playbill}} Although no promotional material ever directly stated that Walter Paisley was an adaptation of Bucket of Blood, the plot and characters of the musical are identical to those of the film, including exact character names. The only major difference is the ending, in which Walter falls into a concrete mixer rather than hanging himself. The show featured a libretto by Randy Rogel and choreography by Connor Gallagher, as well as direction by BT McNicholl, and ran from March 16, 2023 to April 2, 2023.

See also

References

{{Reflist}}