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Christine (film) - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Christine (film)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Christine
Directed by John Carpenter
Produced by Richard Kobritz
Larry J. Franco
Written by Novel:
Stephen King
Screenplay:
Bill Phillips
Starring Keith Gordon
John Stockwell
Alexandra Paul
Music by John Carpenter
Alan Howarth
Cinematography Donald M. Morgan
Editing by Marion Rothman
Distributed by Columbia Pictures
Release date(s) December 9, 1983
Running time 110 min.
Language English
Allmovie profile
IMDb profile

Christine (also known as John Carpenter's Christine) is a 1983 horror film about a supernaturally malevolent automobile and its effects on the teenager who owns it, adapted from a novel written by Stephen King. The film was directed by John Carpenter.

Contents

[edit] Plot

Two "survivors" of the many red-and-white 1958 Plymouth Fury stunt cars used in Christine now reside in private hands, one in California (pictured) and one in Florida.
Two "survivors" of the many red-and-white 1958 Plymouth Fury stunt cars used in Christine now reside in private hands, one in California (pictured) and one in Florida.

The movie stars Keith Gordon as Arnie Cunningham, a typical high school nerd with only one friend, a childhood companion named Dennis Guilder (John Stockwell), a popular jock. Arnie's life begins to change when he discovers Christine, a red 1958 Plymouth Fury in serious need of repair. Arnie begins to restore Christine to her original beauty, but as he spends more and more of his time repairing her, those in his life notice that he is changing as well. Formerly shy, Arnie develops a cocky arrogance. Dennis, as well as Arnie's new girlfriend Leigh Cabot, played by Alexandra Paul, discover that the car has a deadly past. The previous owner, Roland LeBay, became consumed with Christine and he paid for it with his life. Leigh and Dennis try to save Arnie from a similar fate. They realize that the only way to save Arnie is by destroying Christine. Christine, however, isn't ready to give up Arnie without a fight.

During the film a group of bullies from school form together and tear the car apart with sledge hammers, pry bars and knives etc. The gang bears a grudge against Arnie after a shop class confrontation that results in the gang's leader, Buddy Repperton (William Ostrander), getting expelled for threatening Arnie with a switchblade.

The prolonged gang attack on Christine leaves her totally ruined, fit only for the smelter. Arnie sees the wreck of Christine the next day and is totally shocked that all the work he put into restoring the car has been destroyed. Arnie is determined to restore Christine yet again to her former glory. As Arnie looks her over, he turns his back and hears the crinkling of metal behind him. Arnie looks at Christine again and sees that part of her engine is now repaired. Arnie simply smiles and says, "Okay...show me." Christine then comes to life and restores herself so she looks good as new. Subsequently, Christine seeks out and kills the individual members of the gang who destroyed her, one by one.

In one incident, Christine has a long chase with one of the boys, during which Christine could easily kill the boy, but maliciously toys with the boy simply to terrorize him further. In the end, Christine tires of her game and crushes the boy to death against the wall of a building. In another incident, she destroys a gas station (trapping and burning one of the vandals inside) before running down Buddy Repperton as he flees the scene in terror. She also kills Will Darnell (Robert Prosky), the owner of the garage where she resides. In each of these night-time attacks Christine is badly damaged (crushed or totally burned etc) but miraculously regenerates herself every time so she looks good as new, like she just drove off the production line in 1957.

Arnie pays the ultimate price when he dies after he crashes Christine into Darnell's office in an attempt to kill Leigh. Arnie is thrown through Christine's windshield and is impaled on a shard of glass, killing him. Christine continues to attack Dennis and Leigh, sustain damage, and regenerate even after Arnie is killed. After Dennis and Leigh destroy Christine, the car is compacted into a cube and tossed into a junkyard. As the camera zooms in on the crushed cube that was formerly Christine, a piece of the grill slowly bends back into shape.

[edit] Cast

Actor Role
Keith Gordon Arnold "Arnie" Cunningham
John Stockwell Dennis Guilder
Alexandra Paul Leigh Cabot
Robert Prosky Will Darnell
Harry Dean Stanton Detective Rudolph "Rudy" Junkins
Robert Darnell (died January 27, 1991) Michael Cunningham
Christine Belford Regina Cunningham
Roberts Blossom Ronald LeBay
Kelly Preston Roseanne
William Ostrander Clarence "Buddy" Repperton
Malcolm Danare Peter "Moochie" Welch
Steven Tash Richard "Richie" Trelawney
Stuart Charno Don Vandenberg
David Spielberg Mr. Casey

[edit] Differences between book and film

There are a number of changes made from the original Stephen King book, including the following:

  • The book is set in Libertyville, Pennsylvania. The film takes place in Rockbridge, California.
  • The book has Arnie purchasing Christine from Roland D. LeBay himself, who dies a few weeks later. The film has Arnie purchasing it from Roland's brother, George LeBay. George tells Arnie and Dennis that his "asshole brother" has recently died, and he is selling the car for him (although the character in the film is named George, he is wearing a rotten back brace, just like Roland in the book).
  • The book details that the corpse of Roland LeBay appears in front of Arnie several times, and that LeBay's spirit has possessed Arnie, causing his personality to change. It is revealed later in the book that it is the spirit of LeBay that takes control of the car to commit the gruesome murders. The film dispenses with LeBay completely and concentrates on the car itself being evil (director John Carpenter points out in the DVD commentary that this change streamlined the plot, and he felt that the corpse appearing was too similar to scenes in An American Werewolf in London, a film that had recently been released in theaters).
  • Many scenes are out of order, such as the fight with Buddy Repperton that happens near the middle of the book but appears at the beginning of the film.
  • In the book, when Christine nearly kills Leigh inside Darnell's Garage, the corpse of Arnie's dad, Michael Cunningham, killed by carbon monoxide poisoning, lands in front of her, not Arnie. Later, when Dennis wakes up in the hospital, he finds out that Arnie and his mother were driving home when Roland LeBay's ghost appeared and fought with them, causing them to crash into a truck. In the film, Arnie is killed after flying through Christine's windshield when the car crashed into Darnell's office in an attempt to kill Leigh. A thick shard of glass pierced his stomach causing internal bleeding.
  • In the book Christine is apparently restored four years after being "killed" inside Darnell's Do-It-Yourself Garage, as Sandy Galton in California (one of the bullies responsible for vandalizing her) was murdered by a car that smashed through the theater where he worked. Reading the headline, Dennis suspects the nightmare is not over. He fears Christine (or LeBay) will go for Roland's living siblings, Leigh, then Dennis. This was left out of the film, but in the movie after Christine is run through the car crusher, the block of metal is shown to be twitching, as if it is still alive.
  • In the book, Dennis and Leigh attack Christine using a tank truck named Petunia. In the movie, they use a bulldozer. According to Stephen King himself, the idea of the final showdown of the book was something like "a duel between two ladies on wheels", in which Christine (the evil lady) was faced and defeated by a large tank truck also baptized after a female name - Petunia (the good lady).
  • In the book, Christine's license plate is a 1978 Pennsylvania plate with HY-6241-J as the number. In the movie, the license plate is a black-on-yellow 1956 California plate with CQB-241 as the number and a (presumably) 1979 sticker on the rear in most shots.

[edit] Trivia

  • The book that Dennis pulls off the shelf in the library before asking Leigh out is Christine by Stephen King.
  • Arnie's nemesis, Detective Rudolph Junkins, also drives a Plymouth Fury. Junkins's blue car, which can be seen when he meets Arnie in the high school parking lot, is a 1977/1978 Plymouth Fury - a popular police car of the late 1970s.
  • As a joke on director John Carpenter, Alexandra Paul's twin sister Caroline Paul stood in for her during some scenes, most notably the ride on the bulldozer.
  • To simulate the car regenerating itself, hydraulic pumps were installed on the inside of some of the film's numerous Plymouth Fury "stunt doubles". These pumps were attached to the cars' bodywork, and when they compressed, they would "suck" the paneling inwards. Footage of the inward crumpling body was then reversed, and hence gave the appearance of the car spontaneously retaking form.
  • It was speculated that Christine was driven at a distance by using some type of remote controlling system, but the truth is completely different: according to director John Carpenter, when Christine was on her "evil personality" its windows were painted solid black - save for the whole left half of the windshield, which was covered only with dark window tint so that the stunt driver could see outside without being focused by anyone out of the car. Indeed, the stunt driver had only half of his frontal view, no rear or side views, and night driving was even more difficult. Additionally, in order to film the "Arnie's death" scene at the end of the movie, the car was hooked up to cables and pulled strongly towards the wall. A stunt double dressed as Arnie went through the dark windshield - a fake glass screen made with sugar and black paint - and only after this the real Arnie (Gordon) would be focused lying on the ground with the fake glass shard "piercing" through his body.
  • Stephen King's popularity was such at the time that the film went into production before the book was even published.
  • One of the stunt Furys used in the film - the one that chases, corners and kills Peter "Moochie" Welch inside the narrow space in the forklift docking area - had a rubber front end (it was forced into the narrow space, pulled from behind the actor with a cable). The chase car was destined for the salvage yard, and has been restored using parts from the other "stunt" vehicles. This vehicle now belongs to private hands - more specifically, since 1984 it is the property of movie car and memorabilia collector Martin Sanchez.[1]
  • The other surviving Fury used in the film - the one that smashes into Buddy Repperton's Camaro at the gas station scene (after a vast search) - was found and reborn by Jim Garvie as a wish from his beloved son Derek - due to Derek's failing health, the car was sold and now belongs to Bill Gibson.
  • The movie playing at the drive-in scene is Thank God It's Friday (1978).
  • Kevin Bacon was offered the lead role but ended up choosing Footloose (1984) instead.
  • Various scenes were shot in Valencia, California. The scene where the gas station explodes was located on a vacant lot on the corner of McBean Parkway and Valencia Blvd. A full-size gas station set with fake gas pumps and garage bays was constructed and then blown up.
  • The "Mobico" oil company is completely fictional, the name is reminiscent of a combination of Mobil and either Amoco, Sunoco, Texaco or Conoco, and the colors and design of the station are highly reminiscent of a Sinclair station.
  • According to a commentary on the DVD, the car used in the scene in which the flame-engulfed Christine chases down Buddy Repperton stalled during an attempt to film the vehicle first backing out of the burning gas station. Fire crews (presumably on-hand for the shooting considering the nature of the scene) had to be called in to put out the burning car and get the stunt driver (who was wearing a full fireproof suit for protection) out.
  • At the beginning of another Stepehen King movie Cat's Eye the car which almost hits the cat is a red 1958 Plymouth Fury, with a sticker reading "Hi, I'm Christine."
  • In the Futurama episode "Anthology of Interest II", the short story "Wizzin'" features Fry, as the Scarecrow of Oz, attempted to scare a crow by reading Christine.
  • In the Futurama episode "The Honking", Bender is run down by one of the most feared of robot monsters, a "were-car" which is a red 1958 Plymouth Fury. The "were-car" passes it's curse onto Bender causing him to change form and become "Bender the were-car."
  • Christine is seen as the polar opposite to Herbie The Love Bug, often prompting online discussions between fans of the two cars as to who would win in a race, or even a fight.
  • In the Quantum Leap episode "Boogeyman", Sam Beckett's "kiss with destiny" inspires "Stevie" (King) with ideas for Carrie and shows Stevie driving off in an aquamarine 1958 Plymouth Fury, after petting his St. Bernard, "Cujo."
  • In the Ned's Declassified School Survival Guide episode "Woodshop", Cookie believes a green mechanical saw named Christine is trying to kill him.
  • Buddy's blue Camaro which Christine crashes onto and drags backwards at the gas station scene is actually a stunt - full-attention viewers can run the film in slow motion and notice the car has no engine or inside dashboards. The real Camaro was parked offscreen and the stunt was replacing it to the crash moment.
  • At the end of the movie, the white car in which Christine crashes on then flings aside has small rollers installed under it - when this car is thrown aside by Christine, the commented rollers can be clearly seen under it, actually being a continuity error.
  • In the Disney/Pixar movie Cars, Christine (or a car very much like her) makes a small cameo appearance, in the "Our Town" segment when we see old cars entering and leaving the town, she is one of the cars leaving.
  • Christine makes a very brief cameo in the It miniseries when Ben Hanscom leaves school for the first time. There is also an appearance in the book after Henry Bowers attacks Mike Hanlon in the library. The 1958 Plymouth Fury is mentioned as being the dream car of Henry's father, Butch Bowers.
  • Christine can be seen briefly in the South Park in the episode of "Imaginationland Episode II", after the wall that separates Good Imgainationland and Bad Imaginationland is destroyed and fictional characters from Bad Imaginationland enter.
  • The song "Christine" by the metal band Malice is based on the film/novel.
  • "Christine" is spoofed in the Malcolm in the Middle episode "Malcolm's Car". Malcom buys a beat-up Plymouth Barracuda and becomes so obsessed with fixing it up that the mechanic helps stage an intervention. The scene from "Christine" in which Leigh almost chokes to death is spoofed in a scene in which Malcolm becomes locked in the car while it is in the garage running, At the end of the episode, Hal comments that when he was Malcolm's age, he had the same experience with his Plymouth Fury.
  • On September 24, 2005, a twelve year-old ambulance nicknamed "Christine" by its crew for its unusually long service life was the last ambulance to respond to a call in the impact zone of approaching Hurricane Rita until the storm passed. The ambulance drove into a fallen tree at over 60 mph and was heavily damaged, then abandoned in the face of the storm and not recovered for days. True to her namesake, "Christine" returned to duty three months later and remained in service for another two years.
  • The intro song used on this movie is "Bad to the Bone" from George Thorogood.
  • In the 1977 thriller/horror movie "The Car" James Brolin plays a police officer in a small Utah town that is terrorized by a demonic car.

[edit] References

[edit] External links


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