Friday 15 May 2015

The real Jeepers Creepers!


The opening scenes of Jeepers Creepers (2001) bear an uncanny resemblance to an episode of the TV show Unsolved Mysteries that focused on the case of Dennis DePue – a Michigan resident who murdered his wife and dumped her body behind an abandoned schoolhouse. A couple, Ray and Marie Thornton, were driving by when they witnesses DePue with a bloody sheet acting suspiciously and a few minutes later they found themselves being pursued by him in his vehicle. After taking a turning off the road the couple decided to go back to the schoolhouse to investigate and discovered the bloody sheet partially stuffed into an animal hole. DePue was only tracked down once the Unsolved Mysteries episode aired but he committed suicide before the police could capture him.

Monday 11 May 2015

Gustave - The not quite so killer croc


The real crocodile from the 2007 film Primeval is called Gustave and is perhaps not quite such as prolific killer as depicted in the film. Travel writer Richard Grant met Patrice Faye (a Frenchman who has studied Gustave for many years in Burundi and who actually gave the croc its name) who immediately defended the killer croc when asked about his alleged 300-plus killings, “No, no, no, this is what they write but it is not true. I have investigated every case for eleven years, and Gustave he has killed only sixty people, maybe even less.” Faye had originally hunted the giant crocodile (estimated to be over a hundred years old, weighing a ton and measuring over 18 feet) and had even shot at him a few times but after he got a really good look at him one day he decided that he wanted to save and protect the large beast. Faye said, “I see this magnificent prehistoric creature, the last of the really big crocodiles. I put the rifle down. I cannot kill him.” Gustave was never captured and has since vanished, presumed dead – but who knows?!

Saturday 9 May 2015

The strange tale of Dominique Dunne

Along with The Omen and The Exorcist, Poltergeist is often associated with having a curse on it owing to the deaths of four of the actors within 6 years of each other. The rumored curse was often said to have manifested as a consequence of the prop department using real skeletons (apparently they were cheaper than plastic ones!). The most shocking death was arguably Dominique Dunne (who played the eldest daughter, Dana) who was killed by her boyfriend, John Thomas Sweeney just months after the film’s release. Sweeney had strangled her after she had broken up with him a few weeks earlier, causing her to fall into a coma and dying five days later - her co-star, 12 year old Heather O’Rourke (Carol Anne), would be buried in the same cemetery as Dunne (Westwood Village Memorial Park) six years later after a cardiac arrest caused by septic shock. Incredibly Sweeney was only charged with voluntary manslaughter (killing in the “heat of passion”) and only served three years and seven months of his six and a half year sentence. When he was released he worked as a sous chef in a restaurant in Santa Monica where Dominique’s mother and her brother Griffin (An American Werewolf in London star, Griffin Dunne) began handing out flyers stating that the food they were eating was cooked by the man who killed Dominique Dunne. In the 1990’s Dominique’s father, Dominick, was contacted by a doctor in Florida who was worried that his daughter might have just got engaged to John Sweeney, which it turned out was indeed the case. Griffin Dunne called the daughter to persuade her to call the engagement off but Sweeney accused the Dunnes of harassing him and abruptly changed his name and disappeared. Unperturbed, the Dunnes hired a private investigator to track him down and were informed he had moved to the Pacific Northwest and changed his named to John Maura. Eventually Dominick Dunne decided that he no longer wanted to waste his life away pursuing Sweeney and the investigations were called off.