The Thing with Two Heads
The Thing with Two Heads | |
---|---|
Theatrical release poster | |
Directed by | Lee Frost |
Produced by |
Wes Bishop Jonathan Lawrence |
Written by |
Lee Frost Wes Bishop James Gordon White |
Starring |
Ray Milland Rosey Grier Don Marshall Roger Perry Kathy Baumann Chelsea Brown |
Music by | Robert O. Ragland |
Cinematography | Jack Steely |
Edited by | Edward J. Forsyth |
Distributed by | AIP |
Release dates |
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Running time | 90 min. |
Country | United States |
Language | English |
The Thing with Two Heads is a 1972 American science fiction film directed by Lee Frost.[1][2] The film stars Ray Milland, Rosey Grier, Don Marshall, Roger Perry, Kathy Baumann, and Chelsea Brown.[1][2]
Some early visual effects work from Rick Baker is also featured. The movie is known for its soundtrack, produced by MGM Records producer Michael Viner with a rotating cast of studio musicians that he called the Incredible Bongo Band.
Plot summary
A car pulls into a pathway and up to a vast mansion. The driver gets out and takes a wheelchair from the trunk as an orderly comes out to open a rear door. Dr. Maxwell Kirshner (Ray Milland) is helped out of the car and put into the wheelchair, then is wheeled up the steps and into the mansion.
Kirshner asks if his experiment has been a success. He is told by the orderly that it has been. He is wheeled down the stairs into a basement, where we see the experiment is in fact a two headed gorilla (Rick Baker) that Dr. Kirshner has created. The experiment is to determine whether two heads can survive on a single body. Dr. Kirshner has done this because he hasn't much longer to live and wants to transplant his still living head from his lifeless body and onto a donor so that he may continue living and continue working as the world's most successful surgeon. He approaches the bars of the cage that hold his new creature, even when told not to, but he is unafraid. He says that the creature understands him and therefore will not hurt him.
Dr. Kirshner returns to his hospital institute to over look an operation performed by his close friend and associate doctor, Phillip Desmond (Roger Perry). An onlooker asks, during the operation, why he can't see more blood. He is told that both patients are hooked up to individual heart and lung machines and the blood is easily passed through plastic tubing all the time during the operation. Dr. Kirshner returns to the basement and his two headed gorilla to remove one of the heads from its body. A cage is opened to allow them to get inside from their original cage. The cage has no bottom layer so they place the cage onto a table. Kirshner orders his assistants to sedate his creature, but plans go awry when the creature is upset about the needle and knocks both the cage off of the table and Dr. Kirshner out of his wheelchair, hurting him severely. It then proceeds to smash up the lab and escapes. Kirshner tells the assistant to get the creature back as he doesn't have much time left to live. The creature runs away and into a supermarket, chased by the assistants. The gorilla is found eating a banana in the fruit section of the supermarket.
Kirshner hires a new doctor to help his friend with the transplant. He soon discovers that the new doctor is African American - Kirshner hates African Americans. He is a bigot and a racist. He tells the new doctor that his services that were about to start are now no longer required because he doesn't want an African American doctor working anywhere near him or with him. He tells the doctor that he will be reimbursed for his time and the original duration that he was supposed to be working for. The African American doctor, whose name is Dr. Fred Williams, (Don Marshall) takes great offence to this. Dr. Desmond sticks up for Dr. Williams, that that whether he is African American or not, he is a damned good doctor.
This disgusts Kirshner and he wheels himself out of the office. He returns once again back to the basement where he successfully removes the second head of the creature. He calls Dr. Desmond, who rushes over. Kirshner tells Desmond he is ready for his own transplant to a healthy donor. Desmond is not sure, until Kirshner tells him that the head that is now on the gorilla is in fact the second head he put on. He had successfully removed the original gorilla's head and replaced it with the second transplanted one.
Meanwhile, on death row, convicts are told that donating their bodies to science will save them from the electric chair. One convict is led to the chair - an African American himself, named Jack Moss (Roosevelt "Rosey" Gier). Just as they sit him in the chair, he decides to volunteer for the science experiment because he is innocent of the crime he was supposed to have committed and therefore he believes that in 30 days he will have freed himself of the accusation. The police, including Sergeant Hacker (Roger Gentry), escort Jack to the transplant center for this experiment they have been told about. The doctors are surprised to see a large African American being brought before them for this experiment, knowing full well that when Kirshner wakes up, he isn't going to like what he sees. However, the doctors work around the clock to transplant Dr Kirshner's head onto Jack's body.
After the operation, Kirshner wakes up, and Desmond tells him that the operation was a success. Kirshner says he can feel the breath in his new lungs and that he can move his arm. Desmond tells him that they had no other choice but to transplant his head onto the African American's body. Kirshner says to Desmond "is this part of a joke?" Desmond tells him that he would not have lived another day if they hadn't operated when they did.
At that moment, Jack awakens and is freaked out by the fact that Kirshner's head is on his body. Kirshner tells him to shut up and rest so they can recuperate the energy to test drive his new body and try out his surgical procedures to become the world's greatest doctor again. Jack gets angry and try to get up from the table, but Kirshner cries out for someone to sedate Jack, which Desmond does. Kirshner exhausted, tells Desmond that he couldn't control the Jack side of the body; he can only control the body if Jack is sedated or asleep. Kirshner is worried that Jack may harm his half of the body.
Desmond tells him that he will keep the Jack side heavily sedated all the time while Kirshner regains the power to move the body. Leaving Kirshner to rest, Desmond meets up with Dr. Williams again and tells him he needs his help. Williams is reluctant at first, but Desmond reassures him that his beliefs are not the same as Dr. Kirshner's and that his help is very much needed. Although Williams still doesn't know what has been asked of him, he is told by Desmond to go home and get some things together.
Meanwhile, a nurse (Britt Nilsson) comes to administer a sedative to Jack's side of the body. Jack tricks the nurse into thinking he's asleep, and then injects her with the sedative instead. He tricks one of the cops outside the door to come in and knocks him unconscious. Grabbing the cop's gun, he beats up the other cop and runs out of the building, taking Williams with him/them. Williams drives the car under gunpoint by Jack and Desmond chases after them. Jack asks Williams if he can remove Kirshner's head from his body. He threatens to kill Kirshner and remove his head himself if Williams doesn't help. Williams warns him that if he does that, he'd be killing himself as well. He also tells him that Kirshner's head can only be removed surgically.
The police chase after Jack, Kirshner and Williams. Jack takes over driving and accidentally crashes the car, resulting in a flat tire. Williams sits with Kirshner and Jack beneath a tree and asks why Jack was on Death Row. Jack tells him that he was framed for a stick up that went wrong; a friend of his used a gun that Jack owned to knock off a store and shoot a cop. As Jack's fingerprint were on the gun, Jack was arrested for the murder.
Kirshner then tries to appeal to Williams by offering him the accolades he's receive by performing a successful transplant. Williams refuses the offer, as it would mean that he would have to remove Jack's head.
All three of them run up a hill and find a motocross track. When a motocross rider falls off his bike, Jack takes the bike and rides around the motocross track with Kirshner and Williams riding also. Several bikes crash after seeing the two headed horror and soon the police are hot on their trail. Kirshner screams to Jack that he will get them all killed. Jack snaps back that he will get them out of this mess. The bike speeds towards a very deep gap, which Jack easily jumps. The police cars chasing them crash one after the other.
Jack rides the bike to his wife's house. Lila (Chelsea Brown) isn't that pleased to see him because of Kirshner's head on his body. Jack asks his wife to kiss him; she almost does but is put off from the intimate moment by Kirshner's head. She then asks if he has two of everything (implying genitals). Jack laughs at this. Jack lays down to rest and Jack's wife Lila says she is going to get dinner. Jack asks her to stay and he feels some sexual energy towards her. She is put off. Jack tells her that if Kirshner's head is putting her off, he will cover it with a pillow case. That doesn't change her mind and she walks off. Jack turns to Kirshner and tells him for interrupting his sexual activity that he has got to go.
While Jack is sleeping, Kirshner finds out that he can now control the body almost fully. Jack, Kirshner, Williams and Lila sit down for dinner. Jack offers some to Kirshner, who tells him he doesn't eat that kind of food. Lila asks Kirshner "what's the matter baby, don't you like soul food?" Kirshner replies "what's for pudding? Watermelon?" Jack tells Kirshner not to worry about the food, as he is eating it, not Kirshner. Lila lights a cigarette, and Kirshner asks for one. Lila gives him one, and the smoke ends up coming out of Jack's mouth while he is eating. Disgusted by this, Jack takes the cigarette out of Kirshner's mouth and tells him not to smoke while he is eating. Lila asks what it will take to take Kirshner's head from Jack's body. Kirshner tells her that without a specially crafted surgical team, it is impossible to do the operation and both of them will die. Williams tells Kirshner that he is dead wrong about that, as the removal procedure is easily done without the aid of the surgical team.
Williams drives to a medical warehouse to get what he needs for the operation. Frightened by what Williams has told him, Kirshner manages to take over Jack's body and starts playing around with his face. Jack asks him to stop it and Kirshner knocks out Jack by punching him in the face. Cornered by William, Kirshner calls Desmond for help in removing Jack's head so that he may live. Kirshner manages to get away and drives back to the basement of his house. Before Kirshner can sedate Jack, Williams comes in and stops him. Williams then calls Desmond to get over to Kirshner's house as soon as possible. Desmond arrives with a nurse and an associate, who find Kirshner's detached head lying on the utensil table, hooked up to a heart and lung machine which has his blood constantly pumping through the plastic tubes to keep him alive for a while. Kirshner calls to Desmond and begs for him to bring him another body.
The film ends with Lila, Jack and Dr. Williams driving down the highway singing "Oh Happy Day."
Cast
- Ray Milland as Maxwell Kirshner
- Rosey Grier as Jack Moss
- Don Marshall as Dr. Fred Williams
- Roger Perry as Dr. Philip Desmond
- Kathy Baumann as Patricia
- Chelsea Brown as Lila Moss
- Jane Kellem as Miss Mullen
- Rod Steele as Medical Salesman
- Lee Frost as Sergeant Hacker
- Wes Bishop as Dr. Smith
- Rick Baker as Gorilla
In popular culture
- In The Simpsons episode "Treehouse of Horror XXIV", the plot of the "Dead and Shoulders" story borrows the premise from the film where Bart Simpson's head is grafted onto Lisa Simpson's body. It had previously been referenced at the end of "Treehouse of Horror II", in which Mr. Burns' head was grafted onto Homer Simpson's body at the end of the "If I Only Had a Brain" segment.
Release
The Thing with Two Heads was released in theatres on July 19, 1972. The film was released on DVD on June 5, 2001 and June 23, 2015.[3]
See also
References
- 1 2 Tyner, Adam (June 22, 2015). "The Thing with Two Heads". DVD Talk. Internet Brands. Retrieved August 9, 2016.
- 1 2 "The Thing with Two Heads". Turner Classic Movies. Atlanta: Turner Broadcasting System (Time Warner). Retrieved November 6, 2016.
- ↑ "The Thing with Two Heads". MGM Home Entertainment. MGM. ASIN B00005AUK3. Retrieved November 6, 2016.
External links
- The Thing with Two Heads at the Internet Movie Database
- The Thing with Two Heads at AllMovie
- The Thing with Two Heads at Trailers from Hell
- The Thing with Two Heads at Grindhouse Database