Every once in a while, I get the urge to rent a movie just to see if it's as bad as everyone says it is. That's why I rented the 2003 remake of
Willard last weekend. I was disappointed. The movie was neither especially bad nor very good. I couldn't figure out if it was intended to be campy or scary - it didn't seem to achieve either, but it seemed, at times, to try for one or the other. It was so mediocre that I wouldn't have even bothered to make a blog entry about it, if I hadn't watched the DVD extras.
A couple of the DVD extras were so good that I'm still thinking about them today. I almost wish I could own the extras without the movie. The deleted scenes, with the commentary turned on, presented a vivid portrait of a director sacrificing artistic vision in order to get his project accepted by a studio that wanted a more "family friendly" horror movie. (The best of those deleted scenes was a wonderful character development between the male and female leads that would have explained a lot of their motivations, cut because the studio wanted the movie to "move along.") Then there was an hour and a half long "making of" documentary that I think should be required viewing for film students. It told the story, from beginning to end, of a medium-budget movie production in which nothing disastrous happens, and yet nothing goes exactly to plan. (For instance, the production got pushed back by four months because of the difficulty of finding an actor willing to star in the movie.) The documentary went into informative details not usually covered in "making of" features - including an interview with the production assistant assigned to menial tasks like guarding the parking lot, but happy to be working on a real movie.