Abby (film)

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Abby

Theatrical release poster.
Directed by William Girdler
Produced by William Girdler
Mike Henry
G. Cornell Layne
Written by G. Cornell Layne
Starring William Marshall
Terry Carter
Austin Stoker
Carol Speed
Music by Robert O. Ragland
Cinematography William Asman
Editing by Henry Asman
Corky Ehlers
Distributed by American International Pictures
Release date(s) December 25, 1974
Running time 89 min
Country U.S.
Language English
Budget $100,000 (inflated figure reported as $400,000)
Allmovie profile
IMDb profile

Abby is a 1974 blaxploitation/horror film about a woman who is possessed by an African sex demon. The film starred William H. Marshall, best known for portraying the lead role in Blacula, Terry Carter, and Carol Speed as the title character, Abby. It was directed by William Girdler, who co-wrote the film's story with screenwriter Gordon Cornell Layne. The film was a financial success, but was pulled from theaters after the film's distributor, American International Pictures, were accused of copyright violation by Warner Bros., who saw the film as being derivative of The Exorcist, and filed a lawsuit against AIP.

Contents

[edit] Production

Abby was written and produced by William Girdler, a filmmaker who specialized in exploitation pictures that were often in the horror genre. Films such as Grizzly and The Manitou are some of Girdler's more notable productions, while Abby achieved a more infamous reputation because it was accused of copyright violation by Warner Bros., who felt it was a direct copy of The Exorcist. Warner Bros. won their court case, and Abby was eventually pulled from theaters, but not before it was able to take in almost $4 million.[1][2]

Abby was filmed in 1974 in Louisville, Kentucky.[3] Carol Speed landed the part of Abby after the original actress demanded a masseuse, for which the film's low budget had no provisions. Speed's agent recommended her to Girdler, and she flew to Louisville, meeting her director for the first time on the set.

In one scene, Speed's character was required to sing a song in church, and the song was one that Speed herself composed, "Is Your Soul A Witness?".

The production of the film was met with an unusual threat when Louisville experienced a series of tornadoes that tore through the area around the set of Abby. Speed recalled spending time with co-star Juanita Moore huddled in the lobby of their hotel, wrapped in blankets for protection. "Juanita and I immediately left the set when the daytime sky turned pitch black. We ended up rolled in some blankets on the lobby floor. Ramada had built this nice hotel, but no basement or tornado shelter. Just glass windows...everywhere."[4]

William Marshall was vocal about his unhappiness with the production of Abby, mostly because he'd been promised certain script revisions that never materialized. Marshall did add certain elements to the film regarding the Yoruba religion.[5]

[edit] Critical reaction

The tone and content of Abby seems to have left it difficult to take seriously. The New York Times review published December 26, 1974, mentioned that "Abby is more silly than shocking even if it seems to take itself seriously."[6]

[edit] Scarcity of prints

Abby was out of circulation for many years, partially due to the lawsuit instigated by Warner Bros., and also because of the uncertain propriety of distribution rights. The ownership of the original film elements of Abby is still in question. The film was finally released on DVD on three different occasions, all within a year's period of each other. It was first released October 2006 as a Collector's Edition, released by CineFear. It appears to have been transferred from a visually flawed 16 mm print of the film, which is possibly the only format in which celluloid prints of Abby are still found.[7] The Black Exorcist Edition was then released June 2007. Its third DVD release appeared as part of a Demonic Double Feature set in September 2007, packaged with the German Exorcist film Magdalena, vom Teufel besessen.

[edit] References

  1. ^ J. Patrick Kelly III interview at williamgirdler.com. Retrieved on 2007-04-20.
  2. ^ Career overview at williamgirdler.com. Retrieved on 2007-04-20.
  3. ^ IMDb. Retrieved on 2007-04-20.
  4. ^ Interview with Carol Speed at williamgirdler.com. Retrieved on 2007-04-20.
  5. ^ (1998) What It Is... What It Was!; The Black Film Explosion of the '70s in Words and Pictures. Miramax Books. ISBN 0786883774. 
  6. ^ New York Times review, December 26, 1974. Retrieved on 2007-04-20.
  7. ^ DVD Talk review. Retrieved on 2007-04-20.

[edit] External links