Keep It 1 68
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The Keep | |
---|---|
Directed by | Michael Mann |
Produced by |
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Screenplay by | Michael Mann |
Based on | |
Starring | |
Music by | Tangerine Dream |
Cinematography | Alex Thomson |
Edited by | |
Distributed by | Paramount Pictures |
Release date | |
Running time | 96 / 210 min. |
Country | United Kingdom / United States |
Language | English |
Budget | $6,000,000 (est.) |
Box office | $3,661,757 (USA) |
The Keep is a 1983 horror film written and directed by Michael Mann and starring Scott Glenn, Gabriel Byrne, Jürgen Prochnow, Alberta Watson and Ian McKellen. It was released by Paramount Pictures. The story is based on the F. Paul Wilsonnovel of the same name, originally published in 1981.[1]
Plot[edit]
Following the commencement of Operation Barbarossa in 1941, a unit of the Wehrmacht under the command of Capt. Klaus Woermann occupies an uninhabited citadel near a village in Romania to control the Dinu Mountain Pass in the Carpathian Alps. Two soldiers attempt to loot a metallic icon within the keep but accidentally unleash a spectral entity, which kills them. The being, known as Radu Molasar, proceeds to kill several more soldiers in the following days and begins to take corporeal form. A detachment of Einsatzkommandos under the command of the sadistic SDSturmbannführer Erich Kaempffer arrives to deal with what is thought to be partisan activity, executing villagers as collective punishment.
At the instigation of the local village priest, Father Fonescu, the Germans retrieve an ailing Jewish historian, Prof. Theodore Cuza, from a concentration camp. He deciphers a mysterious message emblazoned on a wall of the citadel before Molasar saves the professor's daughter, Eva, from sexual assault by two Einsatzkommandos and cures Cuza of his debilitating scleroderma by touch. The professor becomes indebted to the entity who demands that Cuza remove a talisman from the keep so that Molasar can escape its confines.
Having remotely sensed Molasar's presence, a mysterious stranger named Glaeken arrives, seducing Eva and incurring the professor's ire. The malign power of Molasar begins to affect the villagers, seemingly driving them mad. After an unsuccessful attempt by the professor to have the stranger stopped, Kaempffer and Woermann clash over the former's sadistic crimes; Woermann furiously denounces the Nazis, claiming that the monster hunting them is a reflection of their evil. He is murdered by Kaempffer who flees the scene only to find his men have been slaughtered by Molasar. Kaempffer is killed as Cuza goes to remove the talisman from the keep. When Eva attempts to prevent him from doing so, Cuza refuses Molasar's command to kill her. In response, Molasar returns Cuza to his diseased state. Glaeken arrives and confronts Molasar. After their battle, the latter is weakened and banished back into the innermost recesses of the keep. Glaeken is transformed in a storm of light and seals the aperture that freed Molasar, condemning the entity within once more. The villagers, freed from Molasar's influence, escort Eva and Cuza away.
Cast[edit]
- Scott Glenn as Glaeken Trismegestus
- Alberta Watson as Eva Cuza
- Jürgen Prochnow as Capt. Klaus Woermann
- Robert Prosky as Father Fonescu
- Gabriel Byrne as Sturmbannführer Erich Kaempffer
- Ian McKellen as Dr. Theodore Cuza
- W. Morgan Sheppard as Alexandru
- Royston Tickner as Tomescu
- Michael Carter as Radu Molasar
- Rosalie Crutchley as Josefa
- Wolf Kahler as S.S. Adjutant
- Bruce Payne as Border Guard
Production[edit]
The movie had a very troubled production. Shooting started in September 1982 and lasted for 13 weeks. Filming was very grueling, and once principal photography was finished, additional re-shoots were done which extended the filming for a total of 22 weeks. The look of the main villain of the movie, Molasar, was changed many times during filming because Michael Mann wasn't sure how he wanted him to look. There was even a mechanical figure built which was to be used in the scene where Molasar talks with Dr Cuza for the second time, but that design was changed to a man in a suit once Mann decided to film the scene differently. Two weeks into post-production, visual effects supervisor Wally Veevers died, which caused enormous problems because nobody knew how he planned to finish the visual effects scenes in the movie, especially the ones that were planned for the original ending. According to Mann, he had to finish 260 shots of special effects himself after Veever's death.[2]
Because of this, several new endings had to be filmed long after the crew and original cinematographer had left the production. Originally Mann had two ideas for the film's climax, one with a battle between Glaeken and Molasar on top of the keep, and one taking place inside the keep.
The original climax that Mann chose involved Glaeken and Molasar in an epic effects-laden battle on top of the keep tower, ending with Glaeken opening an energy portal that blasts forth from the ground of the keep. It was to be some type of dimensional portal, which probably would have had effects similar to the star gate in Kubrick's 2001: A Space Odyssey (a film Veevers also worked on). The two were to fall from the keep wall and get sucked into the portal and tumble through a void. After that, Glaeken would materialize in the cavern below the keep by a pool and be reawakened as a mortal man.[3][4]
With the constant production extensions and the film already well over budget, Paramount refused to pay for the filming of the additional footage needed for this finale, so the simplified ending Mann put together for the released film was a weak, somewhat unsatisfactory compromise.
The 210 minute cut[edit]
Michael Mann's original cut of the movie was 210 minutes long. He was only allowed to have a two-hour-long movie. Test screenings of the two-hour cut were not positive so Paramount cut the movie down to 96 minutes, against Mann's wishes. These last-minute cuts resulted in many plot holes, continuity mistakes, very obvious 'jumps' in soundtrack and scenes, and bad editing issues. Even the sound mixing of the movie could not be finished properly because of Paramount's interference which is why every version of the movie suffers from bad sound design. The original June 3, 1983 release date was pushed back to December 16 due to the many problems in post-production.
The original happier ending, which had Eva finding Glaeken inside the keep after he defeated Molasar and Eva and her father leaving Romania by boat with Glaeken, was completely cut out by Paramount in order for the movie to have a shorter running time. Removal of these scenes made no sense because numerous stills of this ending were shown in many movie magazines when a movie was to be released and even cast and crew members, including Mann, said in interviews that the movie had a happy ending. Part of the 'happy' ending, in which Eva goes into the keep and finds Glaeken, was used in 1980s TV versions of the film. Other deleted scenes include more backstory between Glaeken and Molasar, actual explanation for why Eva and Glaeken fall in love, Glaeken killing the captain of the boat (the one who brings him into Romania) who tries to steal his 'weapon' which he uses in the end to kill Molasar, more scenes between villagers and with Father Mihail and Alexandru, and Alexandru being killed by his sons when the keep starts to corrupt the village.[5]
Theatrical and TV trailers for the movie were edited by using the footage from one of the earlier, pre-release cuts of the film which is why there are some alternate and deleted scenes included in them: a longer conversation between Woermann and Alexandru in which Woermann says that the keep looks like it was built to keep something in; a longer version of the scene where Molasar is talking with professor Cuza for the first time (also in this scene Cuza asks Molasar 'What are you?' one more time); Glaeken talking with Eva asking her if she found what she was looking for and if she expected to find him; Glaeken touching Eva's face while she asks 'What's happening to me?'; Glaeken walking inside the keep with his eyes turning white; longer version of the ending where Glaeken is standing at the entrance of the keep looking over Molasar's fog/white smoke; different version of the scene (different visual effects) where Glaeken is walking towards the room where Molasar is waiting for him (in this alternate scene Glaeken's sword is covered with some glowing grey light).
Contrary to some rumors, there actually was going to be a scene near the ending showing Molasar killing all the German soldiers inside the keep. Much of the effects for this scene including shots of soldiers heads exploding were filmed but this scene, which would include a lot more complicated effects, couldn't be finished after Veever's death.[6][7]
Filming[edit]
The sets for the Romanian village were built at the disused Glyn Rhonwy quarry, a former slate quarry near Llanberis in North Wales.[8] Some interiors of the keep utilised the stonework within the Llechwedd Slate Caverns, near Blaenau Ffestiniog. Due to heavy rain, the film suffered significant delays in its shooting schedule.[9]Shepperton Studios near London was used for interior Keep scenes featuring the demon Molasar. A secondary crew also went to Spain for footage depicting Greece.
The special effects for the creature were made by Nick Maley, helped by Nick Allder, who had previously worked on Alien and The Empire Strikes Back.[10] Molasar was conceived by Enki Bilal.
Music[edit]
The theme and incidental music was composed by Tangerine Dream. The band previously worked with Michael Mann on his first theatrical film Thief. The score to The Keep is primarily made up of moody soundscapes, as opposed to straightforward music cues, composed by Tangerine Dream. Most notably, an ambient cover of Howard Blake's 'Walking in the Air' was featured during the end sequence of the film. Additionally, Tangerine Dream's arrangement of the song 'Gloria' from Mass for Four Voices by Thomas Tallis can also be heard in the film.
Due to rights issues, the version of the film that is currently available on streaming media sites contains a different score than its original release. A limited run of 150 original soundtrack CDs were sold at a concert by the group in the UK in 1997, and Virgin Records soon announced that the album would be available for general release in early 1998, but legal issues with the film studio stopped the release. The full score can be found in the laserdisc and VHS versions of the film.In 2020, all the music that Tangerine Dream's recorded for the film was finally released in full on the boxed set compilation Pilots of Purple Twilight (The Virgin Recordings 1980–1983).
Parts of the soundtrack can also be found on the Logos Live album from 1982.
Performance artist and musician Laurie Anderson also composed a rejected score for the film which later became the basis for material on her album United States Live.
Release[edit]
The film, extensively cut by the studio from its original 3.5-hour runtime[11][12][13][14][15] to just over one and a half hours, was given a limited release theatrically in the United States by Paramount Pictures on 16 December 1983. It grossed $4,218,594 at the domestic box office.[16] A board game based on the film was designed by James D. Griffin and published by Mayfair Games.[17] Under their Role Aids label, Mayfair Games also produced the role-playing game adventure The Keep based on the film.[18]
The film was released on laserdisc and VHS by Paramount Home Video.[19] Although the film was available for purchase on YouTube, as well as streaming on Amazon Video and available on Netflix (UK and Ireland), streaming with the Tangerine Dream soundtrack, it was not released on DVD or Blu-ray Disc in any country until January 20, 2020, when it was officially released on DVD in Australia by the Via Vision Entertainment label. This Australian DVD release is in 2.35:1 aspect ratio and includes the original trailer as a special feature.
Reception[edit]
The Keep has received generally negative reviews, with a Rotten Tomatoes rating of 40%.[20]
Michael Nordine in the LA Weekly stated The Keep 'can’t always keep its many moving parts in lockstep, what with its hinted-at mythos that obscures more than it elucidates and its cast of enigmatic characters whose precise dealings with one another are never made entirely clear'. However Nordine praised Mann's direction, saying it showed 'Mann's ... rare ability to elevate ostensibly schlocky material into something dark and majestic'.[21]
Gene Siskel, film reviewer for the Chicago Tribune, rated The Keep two out of four stars, complaining that the Tangerine Dream soundtrack tended to overwhelm the dialogue. Siskel wrote, 'Stay away from The Keep, one of the most inaudible movies ever made. Oh, sure, you can look at the pictures, but without the dialogue it's going to be most difficult to figure what's going on'.[22]
Writing for the Sydney Morning Herald, film reviewer Susie Eisenhuth praised the movie, calling it 'visually spectacular' and 'mesmerising from the opening moments'. 'The Keep is the sort of movie I expect to see in one of the big cinema centres, being fed to the masses raised on Spielberg and spectacle', Eisenhuth wrote in her review.[23]
F. Paul Wilson has publicly expressed his distaste for the film version, writing in the short story collection The Barrens (and Others) that it is 'Visually intriguing, but otherwise utterly incomprehensible.' In the foreword of the graphic novel adaptation, he expressed disappointment, claiming to have created the comic, 'Because I consider this visual presentation of THE KEEP my version of the movie, what could have been ... what should have been.'
It's been mentioned that Michael Mann disowned the movie but in a 2009 interview he said that the production design and the form of the film were in better shape than the content, which is why he likes it for those aspects.[24]
Although a financial and critical failure at the time of its release, The Keep gained a strong fan following and is considered by some to be a cult classic.[citation needed] Fans of the movie have made petitions for release of the original cut and for the movie to finally get a DVD/Blu-ray release.
A documentary conceived in 2011 and entitled 'A World War II Fairytale: The Making of Michael Mann's The Keep', claims that it will offer production history, interviews, and other info on the film. An initial Indiegogo crowd-funding campaign for the documentary did not reach its final goal, although additional funding was raised, and the documentary's producers predicted project completion by the end of 2016.[citation needed] Various funding and production delays moved the documentary completion to end of 2018 and early 2019. As of October 2020, the documentary has not presented any material to the public outside of a trailer.
On Feb 12, 2016, at BAM, an Internet fan question asked whether Mann had plans to re-release his 1983 sci-fi horror film. Mann's answer: “No ... we were never able to figure out how we were to combine all these components that were shot (pre blue and green screen). That one’s going to stay in its ...” at which point Mann trailed off.[citation needed]
References[edit]
- ^'In Defense of Michael Mann’s THE KEEP', Coming Soon, Oct. 19, 2015
- ^Mad Movies #47, 1987
- ^'Pictures of Mann's original Duel ending'. Kitrade.net.
- ^Thekeep.0catch.com
- ^Thekeep.0catch.com
- ^Hors Serie Starfix #2, Dec. 1988 http://thekeep.0catch.com/ar/starf88-2.htm
- ^Starfix No. 3 Hors Serie (April 1984) http://thekeep.0catch.com/ar/starf84-8.htm
- ^'Anyone work on 'The Keep' in 1980s'. Life in the Vertical. Retrieved 14 December 2012.
- ^McKellen, Ian. 'The Keep: Notes by Ian McKellen'.
- ^Everitt, David (1984). 'The creature effects of The Keep'(PDF). Fangoria. O'Quinn Studios Inc. (33): 20–23. ISSN0164-2111. Archived from the original(PDF) on 31 December 2013. Retrieved 14 September 2013.
- ^Navarro, Alex (5 January 2011). 'It Came from My Instant Queue: The Keep'. Screened. Retrieved 28 December 2013.
- ^'Movie Of The Day: The Keep'. CHUD.com. Retrieved 28 December 2013.
- ^Anderson, Kyle (21 November 2013). 'Schlock & Awe: THE KEEP « Nerdist'. Nerdist.com. Retrieved 28 December 2013.
- ^'Horror Reviews - Keep, The (1983)'. Oh-the-horror.com. 19 October 2013. Retrieved 28 December 2013.
- ^'Will we ever see The Keep on Blu-ray?'. Den of Geek. 19 April 2011. Retrieved 28 December 2013.
- ^'The Keep'. boxofficemojo.com. Retrieved 19 April 2011.
- ^'The Keep boardgame'. www.boardgamegeek.com. Retrieved 14 December 2012.
- ^Index.rpg.net
- ^'Company Credits for The Keep'. IMDb. Retrieved 19 April 2011.
- ^'The Keep Rotten Tomatoes'. Rotten Tomatoes. Retrieved 14 April 2013.
- ^Michael Nordine, Michael Mann's Long Lost Film 'The Keep' Rises Again, LA Weekly,August 22, 2013. Retrieved February 6, 2015.
- ^'21 Dec 1983, 60 - Chicago Tribune at Newspapers.com'. Newspapers.com. Retrieved 15 April 2018.
- ^'30 Sep 1984, Page 108 - The Sydney Morning Herald at Newspapers.com'. Newspapers.com. Retrieved 15 April 2018.
- ^The Art of Film: John Box and Production Design (Wallflower)
External links[edit]
- The Keep at IMDb
- The Keep at AllMovie
- The Keep at Metacritic
- The Keep at Rotten Tomatoes
- The Keep Extended Broadcast TV Ending wherein Eva revives Glaeken (not on VHS, Beta, LaserDisc nor Netflix)
- A World War II Fairytale: the Making of Michael Mann's the Keep Facebook page
- Stéphane Piter's Keep website dedicated to getting a director's cut of the film released to DVD or Blu-ray
- Molasar's Homepage fansite
- 'Facebook Page Fansite' Facebook page
Keep It 1.10
Keep It is for writing notes, keeping web links and documents, and finding them again. Available on Mac, and as a separate app for iPhone and iPad, Keep It is the destination for all those things you want to put somewhere, confident you will find them again later.
Notes and Links
Make Notes
Create notes with built-in styles that look good and read well on all your devices. Notes can contain checklists, bulleted and numbered lists, images, links and other attachments.
Save Web Links
Save web links to Keep It, view them in the app, open them in your browser, or save them as PDFs for offline reading.
Files
Add Anything
Any kind of file can be added to Keep It or saved to its folders, and opened for editing in their original applications. With iCloud, changes are automatically made available across all your Macs and iOS devices.
Preview and Edit
Keep It generates thumbnails and summaries for most files, can edit its own notes, rich and plain text files, and show previews for PDFs, images, web pages and most other documents.
Search and Filter
Search
Keep It can search the content of most files. Suggestions appear as you type, allowing you to narrow down results to exactly what you need, or use keywords and natural language. Save searches for later reuse.
Tag Filter
Keep It’s Tag Filter makes finding things by their tags a pleasure. Choose a tag to see all the tagged items and any other relevant tags; choose another tag to drill down further.
Organize
Folders
Folders let you organize items and bundles hierarchically, when needed. Select a folder to see everything it contains.
Bundles
When you need to gather things into one place, make a bundle. Items can be in more than one bundle at a time, and when you remove the bundle, everything else stays where it was.
Labels
Use labels to color-code items for quick visual recognition. Labels are listed in the sidebar so you can quickly see everything with a particular label.
More Lists
Use the Recents list to see things you’ve added or viewed lately, with the latest shown at the top. Favorites provide quick access. Deleted Items are automatically removed after 30 days.
Where You Need It
Compact Mode
In compact mode, Keep It for Mac becomes a single column, ideal for using alongside other apps or in split screen.
Works with Other Apps
Pretty much anything can be dragged to Keep It, and you can also add things from a variety of apps with Keep It’s share extension.
What's New:
Version 1.10:Summary
- Search for items by their attachments
- Saved searches can now find shared items, and items by their file size
- Search for items that are not of a particular kind
- Hierarchical folder and bundle list in the Share extension and Import view
- Option to automatically use the last import destination by default
- Choose a format when saving existing web links
- Option to underline links in notes
- Improved reliability when sharing items and folders
- Search for items that have attachments, by presence, name or kind. When searching, suggestions will be shown for attachments that exist in your library.
- It’s now possible to search for items that are not of a particular kind.
- Saved searches can now find items by their file size.
- Saved searches can now find shared items.
- On macOS Big Sur, the item count will now always be shown when searching.
- The saved search editor now includes separators in the field menu.
- iCloud progress for saves is now shown as a percentage.
- Improved reliability when sharing items and folders.
- Fixed an issue where saving to iCloud could continue when everything has been deleted from iCloud on another device.
- “Empty Deleted Items” is now only shown in the sidebar contextual menu if Deleted Items or one of its subfolders is selected.
- Items List
- Use Command-Up and Down arrows to scroll to the beginning and end of the list without changing the selected item (use Option and the arrow keys to select the first or last item, as in earlier versions).
- Imports
- The “Where” pop-up shown in the Share extension and Import View is now hierarchical.
- In Import preferences, it’s now possible to set the Default Import Destination to “Last Used”, and that will apply when using the Share extension or import view.
- Recent items and lists are now shared between the app and the share extension. Recents from earlier versions of Keep It will not be used.
- Improved fetching summaries from HTML files in some cases.
- Fixed a crash that could occur at startup when there is an invalid import created by the Share extension.
- It’s now possible to show links in notes as underlined — change the setting by clicking Edit Styles in Fonts preferences and selecting the Body style.
- Rich Text Files
- Rich Text files will now show PDFs inline by default to match TextEdit and the thumbnails produced by Quick Look on the Mac. Choose Format > View PDFs in Place from the menu to toggle that behavior on or off for all rich text files.
- Web Links
- When viewing a web link, use the Web Link > Save As menu to choose a format.
Keep It 1 68 Equals
- The Save As Stationery menu item has moved from the File menu to the Item menu.
- It’s no longer possible to create an alias to Keep It’s Files folder insider that Files folder.
Screenshots:
- Title: Keep It 1.10
- Developer: Reinvented Software
- Compatibility: macOS 10.13.0 or later
- Language: English
- Includes: K'ed by TNT
- Size: 27.03 MB
- visit official website