Tag Archive for 'fanex-convention'

05
Aug

fanex convention and a japanese ripper film

Francis Matthews

Wow. What a weekend. We had a lot of fun hearing the stories of the celebrity guests–who included Carol Cleveland of Monty Python, American actress Beverly Washburn, and well-known British film, television and stage actor, Francis Matthews. They were all real sweethearts.

My husband and I had the pleasure of driving Mr. Matthews from the airport in Northern Virginia to the hotel on the northside of Baltimore, during the evening rush hour in Washington, DC. It was a long trip, but it was made easier by our delightful guest, who regaled us with stories (and voices) of Christopher Lee, Peter Cushing, Boris Karloff, and others. He even did Captain Scarlet for us (for whom he provided the voice… using his “silly Cary Grant imitation” as he puts it). And all this after a 9 hour flight from London! We spent much of the trip laughing hysterically.

I won’t go into tremendous detail about the convention, except to mention that there were great films, panels, Q&As, and repartee with our writer, actor, and filmmaker friends.

And now for the big news… I discovered a Japanese Jack the Ripper film! I found it in the catalog of a dealer I’ve known for about 7 years. The day after I spotted it in the catalog, I went to the dealer’s table and asked about the movie. Unbelievably he actually had it with him! (Well, perhaps NOT so unbelievably. He knows that the “Ripper Lady” will come to his table each year and buy a movie from him).

Naturally, I bought it. I’ll watch it in the next couple of days and write about it for the next installment of the blog. That movie got me to realize that there are yet entire continents to be mined for versions of the Ripper tale. Has Bollywood done a Ripper movie? Has Hong Kong? Has Manila? Latin America? the non-English majority of Europe?

Most visitors to Hollywood Ripper come from the English-speaking world of the US, the UK, Canada, Australia, and New Zealand. But we’ve also had about 600 unique visitors from non-English-speaking countries in Western Europe; over 100 from all over Asia (39 from Japan alone); about 60 from Latin America (largely from Brazil, Argentina, and Mexico); and over 50 unique visitors from countries that once were “behind the Iron Curtain.”

Obviously there’s a vast potential market for Jack the Ripper movies outside the English-speaking world. Now that I’ve run across my first Asian Ripper movie, I’ll be keeping my eyes open for more Ripper films from Asia and other places that I did not previously suspect.

29
Jul

off to the fanex convention

Well, I’m going to be at the Fanex Convention in Baltimore from Thursday till Monday. It’s going to be fun, so if you’re in the Mid-Atlantic region, you might want to come out and check it out.

I’ll be serving on panels discussing movies that deal with Satanism, Loss of Identity, Monster Rallies, and even Musicals. Curiously, several of these topics have implications for Jack the Ripper cinema and television… though that’s not how I’ll be approaching them at the convention.

Musicals: Well, the panel I’m on will be talking about the weirdest musical numbers we’ve ever seen on film. We’ve already talked amongst ourselves and have come up with a pretty impressive bunch of bizarre musical numbers… including “The Devil’s Cabaret.” If there were a Ripper screen musical, I’m sure we’d be showing a clip from it. But you know, even though no Ripper musical has ever made it to the screen, there have been Ripper musicals on stage. In fact, one will be opening in London in 2004. The theme song from the musical is pretty twisted (and is incorporated into the Flash intro for the website). So you might want to check it out!

Satanism: There are at least a couple of Ripper stories on the screen that place the Ripper in occult alliances with the forces of darkness. In “Yours Truly, Jack the Ripper,” an investigator discovers that the Ripper’s murders are actually blood sacrifices, and that the locations for the murders form patterns that have meaning in the world of the occult. The Ripper’s purpose? To maintain eternal life. (In this story, it’s already the 1960s, so the Ripper seems to be doing a pretty good job at maintaining his objective). In Ripper Man, the killer (who believes he is the reincarnation of Jack the Ripper) just simply would like to be one of the forces of darkness. And of course, there are some Ripperologists who maintain that the Ripper himself was a Satanist.

Loss of Identity: We’re going to talk about what a scary theme this is, and point to movies like Invasion of the Body Snatchers. How does this apply to Jack the Ripper? Well, for the Ripper, obviously, total anonymity was necessary in order to commit butchery with impunity. The fact that the Ripper has remained anonymous, though, is just not psychologically tenable for the culture at large. The Ripper has no known identity—and therefore the case has no closure. We lack two things that humans desperately need: a sense of order, a sense of justice. That’s my theory for why some people actually dedicate their lives and financial resources to giving the Ripper an identity.

For some Ripperologists, the Ripper’s identity is merely a parlor game. But the more dedicated and rigorous students of the case, I think, are often on a quest to right a historical wrong. The blood of the murdered women of Whitechapel screams out to them, and they hope to bring the Ripper out of the fog into which he slipped, and into the light.

In the very disturbing movies we will be discussing, people are stripped of their identity against their will. The Ripper willingly stripped himself of identity… but that fact itself remains disturbing enough that over a century later, we still seek to give him one.




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