Jack Hill

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Jack Hill
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Hill in 2012.
Born (1933-01-28) January 28, 1933 (age 91)
Los Angeles, California, U.S.
Nationality American
Education UCLA
Occupation Film director
Years active 1960–82
Notable work The Big Bird Cage – 1972
Coffy – 1973
Foxy Brown – 1974

Jack Hill (born January 28, 1933)[1] is an American film director in the exploitation film genre. Several of Hill's later films have been characterized as feminist works.[2][3]

Early life and family

Hill was born in Los Angeles, California.[1] His mother, Mildred (née Pannill, b. February 1, 1907; death date n.a.),[4] was a music teacher,[5] and his father, Roland Everett Hill (February 5, 1895 – November 10, 1986),[6] worked as a set designer and art director for First National Pictures and Warner Bros.[5] on films including The Jazz Singer, Captain Blood, Action in the North Atlantic, and Captain Horatio Hornblower, and as well was an architect who designed the centerpiece Sleeping Beauty Castle at Disneyland in California.[7]

Hill attended UCLA, which he attended, he said, for "a couple of years" before leaving to get married and then returning to earn a degree in music.[8] While a student, he played in a symphony orchestra that performed for the soundtracks of Doctor Zhivago and The Brothers Karamazov, and he arranged music for burlesque performers; through this he met comedian Lenny Bruce, who daughter Kitty Bruce would act in Hill's 1975 film Switchblade Sisters.[8] He on to postgraduate studies at UCLA Film School, where instructor and former movie director Dorothy Arzner and encouraged Hill and his classmate and friend Francis Ford Coppola. Hill worked as a cameraman, a sound recorder (including on Coppola's student short "Ayamonn the Terrible"), and an editor on student films.[8] His short "The Host" starred Sid Haig, an acting student at the Pasadena Playhouse under teacher Arzner, who introduced them;[8] this marked the first of several films together.

Career

Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found. Hill went on to work with Coppola on several of that director's early movies, including producer Roger Corman's The Terror (1963).[9] He added 20 minutes to 1960's The Wasp Woman for its eventual television syndication release, shooting without access to any original cast-member.[9]

Legacy

Quentin Tarantino's company Rolling Thunder Pictures re-released Switchblade Sisters theatrically in 1996.[9] In the introduction to the film's DVD release, Tarantino calls Hill " “the Howard Hawks of exploitation filmmaking”.[10]

Hill's discoveries include Pam Grier, who starred in four of his films from The Big Doll House through Foxy Brown; Sid Haig, who acts in most of Hill's films, beginning with Spider Baby; and Ellen Burstyn, who starred in Pit Stop.

His student film The Hill was a partial influence on former classmate Francis Ford Coppola's Apocalypse Now.[1][9] Hill recalled in a 2000s interview that when he made "The Host",

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I had been reading James Frazer ... and I had enjoyed his best-known book, The Golden Bough; in fact, my writing teacher said of 'The Host', “This is the story that Frazer forgot to tell.” It was influenced by his writing and if you see Apocalypse Now and look at the very last act of the movie, the camera explores Kurtz’s hideaway and you see a stack of books on his shelf. Very prominently featured there is The Golden Bough. When I saw the movie, my jaw dropped because Francis knew very well that my story was adapted from that. ... The third act [of Apocalypse Now] didn’t work but that was mine—that was my story [laughs]. ... John Milius wrote the script and Francis thought it was great but he did not like the ending. In fact, he didn’t come up with the right ending until he was over in the Philippines shooting it. So he knew my student film very well and I got this straight from Steve Burum, who ... was my cameraman on "The Host" and he was the second unit cameraman on Apocalypse Now and he said, 'We were all laughing and saying that we were doing Jack Hill’s student film.'[11]

Film scholar Wheeler Winston Dixon believed that for Hill and fellow low-budget auteur Monte Hellman, film was primarily a means of personal expression while it remaining a "deeply financially dependent medium". Dixon wrote that Hill and Hellman's movies often were sufficiently successful while remaining true to their personal vision.[12]

Filmography

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References

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  5. 5.0 5.1 Jack Hill interview, Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  6. Stone (1995), "Roland Everett Hill". Retrieved November 1, 2014. Archived from the original on November 1, 2014.
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  9. 9.0 9.1 9.2 9.3 Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  10. Waddell, p. 2
  11. Waddell, pp. 9-10
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  13. Waddell, p. 9, which notes "The Host" received a public release in 2000 as an extra on the Switchblade Sisters DVD, with new titles, sound recording and music. Waddell calls "The Host" a 1961 film on page 9, but then asks, "Why was 'The Host' not finished back in 1960?" on page 10.
  14. Waddell, p.11

External links