Quicksilver Highway

1997 American TV series or program
Screenplay byMick GarrisDirected byMick GarrisStarringChristopher Lloyd
Matt Frewer
Raphael SbargeMusic byMark MothersbaughCountry of originUnited StatesOriginal languageEnglishProductionProducersMick Garris
Ron MitchellCinematographyShelly JohnsonEditorNorman HollynRunning time90 minutesBudget$4,000,000 (estimated)Original releaseReleaseMay 13, 1997 (1997-05-13)[1]

Quicksilver Highway is a 1997 television comedy horror film directed by Mick Garris. It is based on Clive Barker's short story "The Body Politic" and Stephen King's 1992 short story "Chattery Teeth". The film was originally shown on television before being released on home media.

Plot

The main story is centered on Aaron Quicksilver (played by Christopher Lloyd), a travelling showman who tells horror stories to the people he meets. He first runs into a newly married couple who are hitchhiking, to whom he tells the story "Chattery Teeth", about a man who is saved from a dangerous hitchhiker by a set of wind-up toy teeth. He later runs into a pickpocket to whom he tells "The Body Politic", a story about a man whose hands rebel against him.

Cast

Production

Creative Artists Agency met with Garris about him writing the pilot script for a possible horror television series directed by John McTiernan and produced by his wife, Donna Dubrow.[2] The agency suggested multiple ghost stories and urban legends to write about, but Garris had another idea. The series would follow a mysterious character who describes himself as "only a storyteller" but is actually much more than that.[2] Each episode would be set in a different location, with the same actors playing different characters.[2] Just after Brandon Tartikoff signed on as producer, Garris pitched the idea to staff at the American Broadcasting Company; the heads of the network weren't interested as they didn't want any horror material in their broadcast schedule, but a couple of the network's executives like Greer Shephard got on board.[2] After writing a pilot script based on Stephen King's short story "Chattery Teeth," Garris pitched the series to Fox.[2] However, Fox wanted a two-hour television film.[2] He wrote a screenplay of Clive Barker's "The Body Politic" to serve as the film's second part after "Chattery Teeth."[3] Casting director Lynn Kressel, who previously worked with Garris on The Stand (1994) and The Shining (1997), came up with the idea of Christopher Lloyd as Quicksilver; while the network loved the decision, Garris was a bit skeptical, reasoning that he want a "little more seductive" actor to play the part.[3] In the end, however, Garris loved the decision.[3]

The moment Fox began developing the project, McTiernan left the director's seat on the project, leaving Garris to have to direct the screenplay himself.[3] "The Body Politic" was filmed at the Santa Monica Pier,[4] while "Chattery Teeth" was filmed in Lancaster, California.[5] When playing Dr. Charles George, Matt Frewer had a tough time making the hand move as if it had a separate mind; it took around three days for him to master the trick, and by the third day was having "hand nightmares" while resting between shoots.[4] Steve Johnson handled the chattery teeth effects, while Flash Film Works and Bill Mesa was responsible for the moving hands.[4] Around 90% of the hands were digitally animated with LightWave 3D and composed in the shots with the Chyron program Liberty.[6] The more practical hand effects, such as George's left hand, were performed by Christopher Hart, whose work as a magician got him hand-only characters in projects such as three Addams Family films.[4] The same trick for composing Hart's hand into the shots of The Addams Family films was used in Quicksilver Highway; Hart wore a rubber prosthetic on the top of his hand and a green sleeve, and by using green screening and footage that matched the background of the shots of Hart's hand, his arm was removed.[4] Four days were spent shooting Hart's hand.[5]

Home media

The home media version of Quicksilver Highway switched the orders of the two stories from the television version, where "The Body Politic" comes first and "Chattery Teeth" last. Fox required this change, which Garris disliked as he felt "The Body Politic" was more climactic than "Chattery Teeth."[1]

See also

References

  1. ^ a b Warren (July 1997), p. 48.
  2. ^ a b c d e f Warren (June 1997), p. 40.
  3. ^ a b c d Warren (June 1997), p. 41.
  4. ^ a b c d e Warren (June 1997), p. 42.
  5. ^ a b Warren (June 1997), p. 43.
  6. ^ "Quicksilver Highway". Flash Film Works. Retrieved November 2, 2019.

Works cited

  • Warren, Bill (June 1997). "The Quicksilver Highway to Horror". Fangoria. No. 163. pp. 40–43.
  • Warren, Bill (July 1997). "Shining Quicksilver". Fangoria. No. 164. p. 48.

External links

  • Quicksilver Highway at IMDb Edit this at Wikidata
  • Quicksilver Highway at AllMovie
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