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Hellraiser 1989
Hellraiser 1989




hellraiser 1989 hellraiser 1989

Pinhead acts as the inspiration for the cover art of this US alternative music, art, film and culture magazine. This German magazine eventually transformed into X-Rated but back when it was called Art of Horror, it listed Hellraiser at number 4 and Hellraiser II at number 9 in its Top 50 best horror films, followed by Hellraiser III at 33, Candyman at 40 and Nightbreed at 44. The French get Pinhead on the cover of this magazine that includes restrospectives on both Clive's films and his books.

hellraiser 1989

Pinhead squeezes into the left hand sidebar as Phil and Sarah Stokes are interviewed inside about Clive Barker's Dark Worlds.Īction Figure Digest - No 105, December 2002:Īction Figure Digest - No 113, August 2003:Īngelique graces the cover as the second series of Hellraiser figues is released by NECA.Ĭontains an interview with Doug Bradley, Nicholas Vince and Simon Bamford at the September 1997 Monster Modelfest in Boston. Plenty for the faithful to look forward to then, but if Hellraiser teaches us anything, it's that you should be careful what you wish for.Absolute Underground - No 108, October/November 2022: You can download a free eight-page prelude right hereīarker has been working on The Scarlet Gospels, a meeting of the Hellraiser mythos and his frequent protagonist Harry D'Amour (played by Scott Bakula in Lord of Illusion) for years, and the Drive Angry writer/director team of Patrick Lussier and Todd Farmer are working on a Hellraiser reboot. Oh, and it looks like The Harrowers will be involved. And we also pick up with the life of Kirsty Cotton, protagonist of the first two Hellraiser films (and a key player in Hellseeker, the actually-not-bad sixth). The first issue sees a jaded Pinhead lamenting his cenobite afterlife and looking to make a faustian bargain of his own.

hellraiser 1989

Words and pictures by: Clive Barker, Christopher Monfette and Leonardo MancoĪnd so to the new series, turning its back on Marvel's later cartoon capers and returning the franchise to its creator. Taking in the Wild West, the Incas, medieval Europe and a "Climactic Cro-magnon Clash!!!" there's fun to be had here, but we're now a *long *way off-message. In 1993 Pinhead battled Toxic Comic's "costume killer" Marshal Law in the two-issue War in Hell, and received the full Marvel treatment, true believers, in this six-part epic charting a time travelling battle with his mighty foe Aggregate.






Hellraiser 1989