Contents



Heads Will Roll

1999



Sleepy Hollow (1999)  
    
Directed by 
Tim Burton    
  
Writing credits (WGA) (in credits order) 
Washington Irving   (story The Legend of Sleepy Hollow) 

 
Kevin Yagher   (screen story) & 
Andrew Kevin Walker   (screen story) 
Andrew Kevin Walker   (screenplay) 
  
Cast (in credits order) 
Johnny Depp ....  Constable Ichabod Crane  
Christina Ricci ....  Katrina Van Tassel  
Michael Gambon ....  Baltus Van Tassel  
Casper Van Dien ....  Brom Van Brunt  
Jeffrey Jones ....  Reverend Steenwyck  
Christopher Lee ....  Burgomaster  
Richard Griffiths (I) ....  Magistrate Phillipse  
Ian McDiarmid ....  Doctor Lancaster  
Michael Gough ....  Notary Hardenbrook  
Christopher Walken ....  Hessian Horseman  
Marc Pickering ....  Young Masbath  
Lisa Marie (I) ....  Lady Crane  
Steven Waddington ....  Killian  
Claire Skinner ....  Beth Killian  
Alun Armstrong ....  High Constable  
Mark Spalding ....  Jonathan Masbath  
Jessica Oyelowo ....  Sarah  
Miranda Richardson ....  Mrs. Van Tassel  
Tony Maudsley ....  Van Ripper  
Peter Guinness ....  Lord Crane  
Nicholas Hewetson ....  Glenn  
Orlando Seale ....  Theodore  
Sean Stephens ....  Thomas Killian  
Gabrielle Lloyd ....  Dr Lancaster's wife  
Robert Stella ....  Dirk Van Garrett  
Michael Feast ....  Spotty man  
Jamie Foreman ....  Thuggish constable  
Philip Martin Brown ....  Constable 1  
Sam Fior ....  Young Ichabod Crane  
Tessa Allen-Ridge ....  Young Lady Van Tassel  
Cassandra Farndale ....  Young Crone  
Lily Phillips ....  Girl 2  
Bianca Nicholas ....  Little girl  
Paul Brightwell ....  Rifleman  
rest of cast listed alphabetically  
Martin Landau ....  Van Garrett (uncredited)  
Keeley O'Hara ....  Uncredited  
  
Produced by 
Francis Ford Coppola   (executive)  
Celia D. Costas   (line)  
Larry J. Franco   (executive)  
Mark Roybal   (associate)  
Scott Rudin    
Adam Schroeder    
Andrew Kevin Walker   (co-producer)  
Kevin Yagher   (co-producer)  
  
Original music by 
Danny Elfman    
  
Cinematography by 
Emmanuel Lubezki    
  
Film Editing by 
Chris Lebenzon    
  
Casting 
Susie Figgis    
Ilene Starger    
  
Production Design by 
Rick Heinrichs    
  
Art Direction 
Ken Court    
John Dexter (III)    
Andrew Nicholson (III)    
Leslie Tomkins    
  
Set Decoration 
Peter Young (I)    
  
Costume Design by 
Colleen Atwood    
  
Makeup Department 
Peter Owen ....  hair designer
makeup designer  
  
Production Management 
Lorraine Fennell ....  production coordinator  
Dusty Symonds ....  unit production manager  
  
Second Unit Director or Assistant Director 
Edward Brett ....  first assistant director: second unit  
Ben Howarth ....  assistant director  
Patrick Mangan ....  assistant director: New York  
Alan Munro ....  second unit director  
Christopher Newman (II) ....  first assistant director  
Janet Nielsen ....  assistant director  
Thomas A. Reilly ....  assistant director: New York  
  
Sound Department 
David Acord ....  utility sound  
Gary Alper ....  production sound mixer: New York  
Craig Berkey ....  sound effects editor  
Jaya Bishop ....  second boom operator  
Tony Dawe ....  production sound mixer  
Sean Garnhart ....  sound effects editor  
Chris Gurney ....  boom operator  
Skip Lievsay ....  supervising sound editor  
Steve Mayer (II) ....  second boom operator: cable man  
Frank Morrone ....  sound re-recording mixer  
Shawn Murphy ....  sound re-recording mixer  
  
Special Effects 
Theresa Corrao ....  visual effects coordinator: ILM  
Paddy Eason ....  supervising visual effects designer: CFC  
Dan Glass ....  visual effects designer  
Libby Hazell ....  visual effects line producer: CFC  
Drew Jones ....  visual effects producer: CFC  
Jim Mitchell (II) ....  visual effects supervisor: ILM  
Aaron Muszalski ....  digital rotoscope and paint artist: ILM  
Joss Williams ....  special effects supervisor  
Gareth Wingrove ....  special effects technician  
Kevin Yagher ....  human/creature special effects  
  
Stunts 
Nick Gillard ....  co-ordinator
stunt co-ordinator  
Rob Inch ....  horseriding double: Headless Horseman
stunt double: Headless Horseman
trick riding: Headless Horseman  
Ray Park ....  fight double: Headless Horseman  
  
Other crew 
John Bailie ....  focus puller: second unit  
Mauro Borelli ....  illustrator  
Patrick Capone ....  camera operator  
Clive Coote ....  still photographer  
Rohan Berry Crickmar ....  grip  
Robert Dawson (I) ....  title designer  
Cosmas A. Demetriou ....  set designer  
Steve Dent ....  horse master  
Conrad L. Hall ....  director of photography: New York  
Conrad W. Hall ....  second unit camera: New York  
Peter Hannan (I) ....  director of photography: second unit  
Darren Harrison ....  runner: Leavesden  
Brian Hathaway ....  transportation manager  
Robin Heinson ....  painter  
John Higgins (III) ....  gaffer  
Claire L. Kenny ....  accounting assistant  
Michael King (II) ....  production buyer  
Mark McKenzie ....  additional orchestrator  
Neil Munro (II) ....  electrician  
Shawn Murphy ....  score mixer  
Jennifer Nash ....  music editor  
Jim Passon ....  color timer  
Alex Payman ....  digital paint artist: CFC  
Miles Proudfoot ....  clapper loader  
David Rosenbaum (I) ....  unit driver  
Debra Schutt ....  set decorator: New York  
Matthew Spiegel ....  assistant to line producer  
John Wright Stevens ....  art director: New York  
Will Sweeney (I) ....  production intern  
Jayne-Ann Tenggren ....  script supervisor  
Gavin Toomey ....  digital effects compositor  
Su Whitaker ....  assistant art director  
Allan Wilson ....  conductor  
Rolf Wilson ....  concertmaster  
  
 

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SLEEPY HOLLOW
A film review by Steve Rhodes
Copyright 1999 Steve Rhodes
RATING (0 TO ****):  ***

Tim Burton's campily creepy SLEEPY HOLLOW has great visuals and Johnny Depp's usual imaginative acting. A fun film, it is light-years better than the schlock horror pictures that played this past Halloween, when this movie should have more appropriately opened.

But first a warning is in order.

No, not about the gore. If you purchase a ticket to SLEEPY HOLLOW and are shocked to see explicit violence in a movie about a serial decapitator, then you have only your own naive stupidity to blame.

The warning is about the script and the miscasting of the female lead. Kevin Yagher's underdeveloped script, based on the famous Washington Irving story, "The Legend of Sleepy Hollow," has some good ideas but lacks a cohesive narrative.

Cast opposite Johnny Depp, as Constable Ichabod Crane, is Christina Ricci, as his love interest, Katrina Van Tassel. Ricci, wearing wisps whites and pastel blues, looks wonderful on her large white horse. Everything is fine until she speaks. The script, which takes advantage of none of her signature sarcasm, offers her few opportunities to shine. The result is a bland performance in which there is no chemistry between her and Depp. Basically, to enjoy the show the viewers are required to ignore Ricci and focus exclusively on Depp and on the film's mesmerizing look.

Called from New York City to investigate the macabre murders in the remote village of Sleepy Hollow, Crane takes such a soundly scientific approach to the crimes that he would make Sherlock Holmes proud. Using gadgets of his own invention, he researches the crime scenes and the bodies, which he exhumes. He completely rejects the notion of the frightened villagers that the missing heads of the victims were "taken by the Headless Horseman back to Hell." (With sharp triangular teeth, Christopher Walken, in a cameo, does an hilarious, over-the-top rendition of the Headless Horseman.)

"Murder needs no ghost come from the grave," Crane lectures the assembled, whom he views as a bunch of impressionable country bumpkins. Once he encounters the fiend, however, Crane retreats to the safety of the bedcovers of his bed and whimpers like a schoolboy.

The marvel of Depp's performance is that he encourages us to laugh with him and not at him. With shifty eyes and dramatic gestures, he lets us in on the joke. When he cuts into a tree that splatters blood on him, we're supposed to grimace and then laugh. "It's okay," he seems to be saying to us, "we know you're going to find this funny. Laugh all you want and have a good time." After all, what other reaction can there be to a movie that has a headless guy, who can't be killed (he's already dead, you see), riding around slicing off other people's heads.

Ah, and then there are the visuals, which are certainly worth the price of admission. When he pulls the camera back to show the grand vistas, Burton's picture has the grandeur of a Frederick Edwin Church painting of upstate New York where the story is set. The gothic village itself has a wonderfully eerie feel. Emmanuel Lubezki's cinematography features denuded color in some scenes and a strong steel-blue look in others. As the scenes change, "wow" is the most common reaction.

It's fun, it's funny, it looks great and it's got Johnny Depp. What else do you need to know about the movie, anyway?

SLEEPY HOLLOW runs 1:45. It is rated R for graphic horror violence and gore, and for a scene of sexuality and would be fine for most teenagers.

Email: Steve.Rhodes@InternetReviews.com Web: http://www.InternetReviews.com




Have I seen this movie: Yes
And what did I think: Sleepy Hollow is neat, creepy film from Tim Burton who is known for his beautiful but odd looking films. Such great films include Edward Scissorhands, The Nightmare Before Christmas, Ed Wood and the first 2 Batmans. Sleepy Hollow is no exception here. Based on the American legend of the Headless Horseman, its set in the small town of Sleepy Hollow just before the beginning of the 19th Century. Johnny Depp teams up with Tim Burton for the third time and is very good and comical as the lead charcter Ichabod Crane. The film is somewhat of a dark comedy as well, and Depp has fun playing the chearacter. The film has a good supporting cast as well. Christina Ricci plays the love interest, Katrina Van Tassel and she looks great here with the blonde hair and beautiful dresses she wears. Casper Van Dien of Starship Troopers has a smaller part here as Brom Van Brunt, the man who is bethroed to Katrina. Rounding out the cast is horror film legend Christopher Lee, Jeffrey Jones, Michael Gough (Alfred from the Batman movies), Martin Landau, Miranda Richardson and Christopher Walken as the horseman with his head. The story here is only based on the legend and differs a lot from it. This is the movie's flaw because the story can get a bit mundane at times and drags from time to time. The character of Ichabod Crane is a lot different, here he is a constable in New York City and is sent to Sleepy Hollow to investigate the murders. While there, he discovers the secrets of the small town and falls in love with Katrina. The atmosphere of the town is very eerie and done in true Tim Burton style. As you would expect, there are lots of decapitations here, but they are not that grisley looking. I think this will make a good Halloween movie for years to come, but the script could have been reworked some to make it even better.

I give Sleepy Hollow 3.5 out of 5 stars
Review written May 25, 2000
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