hellbent queer horror

Itโ€™s 11 pm, October 31, 2003, and Iโ€™m walking backwards down Santa Monica Boulevard. My hand is on the back of a DP, guiding him as he, too, walks backwards while filming a menacing, bare-chested Abercrombie model wearing a devil hood and little else. Next to me is filmmaker Paul Etheredge, also walking backwards, with one eye on a portable monitor and the other on the action heading toward him.

Along for the stroll are a makeup person, an assistant camera op, and Karen Wolf, the daughter of Joe Wolf (producer of Halloween), dressed as a sexy lady cop. Weโ€™re navigating over curbs, across intersections, and around thousands of mostly gay, mostly costumed, mostly drunk revelers. This is the West Hollywood Halloween Carnival. Iโ€™m a production coordinator, and tonight, principal photography begins on what would eventually become the first widely known gay slasher โ€“ Hellbent

The Hellbent origin story is a classic Hollywood tale of being in the right place at the right time. In the early 2000s, Etheredge was working in various capacities for producer Steven Wolfe. โ€œSteven was trying to get a queer horror film off the ground with Joe Wolf from the Halloween franchise, and at the time, Irwin Yablans was involved,โ€ Etheredge recalls. As luck would have it, Etheredge happened to be walking down the hall in the production offices at just the right moment.

โ€œSteven popped out and just yanked me into the meeting. Literally, it was me walking in and Joe and Irwin turning to me and saying, โ€˜Gay horror film, killer in WeHo, what do you got?โ€™โ€ Thinking fast, Etheredge pitched a story inspired by Black Orpheus, a film heโ€™d been exposed to as a child by his mother, who also happened to be a film studies teacher. โ€œIt was a film that both Joe and Irwin also knewโ€ฆ So it was quick bonding over that, and it made it a hell of a lot easier.โ€ Etheredge left the room with the gig.

Etheredgeโ€™s first task was to craft his off-the-cuff pitch into an actual screenplay. The filmmaker presumed queer audiences would be hungry for something new after years of standard LGBTQ film festival fare. โ€œSo many of the [gay] filmsโ€ฆ dealt with coming out, falling in love with a straight hustler, having some kind of drug addiction crisis, having some sort of crisis within the church,โ€ he recalls. โ€œAnd I'm just like, my God, this is so dreary.โ€

Along with these uplifting themes, the prevailing wisdom at the time was that the success of your gay film required one special ingredientโ€”penis. โ€œโ€™ You won't make a nickel if you don't show the pickle.โ€™โ€ Etheredge was advised. โ€œI didn't agree with any of that.โ€ Etheredgeโ€™s formula for a good gay horror flick was simple. โ€œI just want to see my friends going out to a party and getting picked off, and that was my approach.โ€

Fellow queer filmmaker Mark Bessenger, whose gay vampire flick Bite Marks was released in 2011, points to Etheredgeโ€™s character building as one of the main reasons Hellbent imprinted on him back in the day. โ€œFor the first time in a long time, a slasher film had characters that I really cared about,โ€ he offers. โ€œIn most of these movies, the characters are ciphers, walking zeros that you donโ€™t care whether they live or die. But in Hellbent, I really felt bad when the main characters were killed.โ€ He chuckles, โ€œWhenโ€™s the last time that happened in a slasher movie?โ€

hellbent queer horror

Making any film is a Sisyphean task, more so for filmmakers rolling that boulder up the hill on a low budget. Success means understanding how to make a dime look like a dollar, and on Hellbent, that meant Etheredge shooting the climax of the film in his own apartment.  Etheredge recalls Wolfe informing him, โ€œโ€˜โ€ฆwe have to use all of our assets for free.โ€™ And I'm like, okay, great. My husband's going to love this.โ€ Ultimately, โ€œI left that place with blood still on the walls,โ€ confesses Etheredge.

The highlight of that day was the creation of the filmโ€™s most iconic moment, eventually adopted as Hellbentโ€™s key art โ€“ the eyeball meets the scythe. Out gay writer/director David Kittredge, creator of the gay genre mixer Pornography: A Thriller, looks back on that scene with the highest of praise. โ€œItโ€™s a great horror moment. A perfect punchlineโ€” simultaneously horrifying and hilarious. Most horror movies wish they could have a moment that great.โ€

(Behind the scenes, this writer remembers watching the actor playing the hooded villain laboring with a scythe to chop through a door that hadnโ€™t been scored properly. What could have been ten minutes of action turned into at least an hour and a very fatigued shirtless gay demon.)

hellbent queer horror

The inspiration for the scene was a too-good-to-be-true real-life incident from Etheredgeโ€™s high school days. โ€œMy best friend and I were sitting across the table from each other, and he had a metal ruler and was scraping it along the bottom of his eyelid, and I joked, โ€˜Stop that, you'll put your eye out,โ€™โ€ recalls Etheredge. โ€œAnd he laughed and stuck his ruler under his eye and popped it out into my folder.โ€ The filmmaker shudders as he remembers. โ€œHe had a glass eye and I had never known.โ€

After a contest to name the film (โ€œQueer Eye for the Dead Guy I think was one of the entries,” recalls Etheredge), Hellbent hit the festival circuit in 2004. โ€œI remember seeing the film at Outfest in Los Angeles, and the audience reaction was extraordinary,โ€ recalls out filmmaker JT Seaton, whose gay horror short film Nightshadows was also making the festival rounds. โ€œSeeing a feature film so embraced by the community was incredibly inspiring.โ€ Seaton would go on to make the gay zombie comedy George: A Zombie Intervention.

Prior to Hellbentโ€™s festival debut, LGBTQ horror content could be found in films from the earliest days of cinema; however, true โ€œgay horror,โ€ as the genre was known then, with LGBTQ plots, themes, and leading characters, was limited to a handful of micro-budget indies like 1988's Curse of the Queerwolf, and the 2002 lesbian slasher Make a Wish. October Moon and Scab (both 2005) were fellow travelers with Hellbent at the queer film fests. But post-Hellbent, the genre would grow exponentially.

Although still limited, still micro-budget, and still indie, fare like Bessenger, Kittredge and Seatonโ€™s films, plus Creatures from the Pink Lagoon and In the Blood (both 2006), Gay Bed and Breakfast of Terror, Gay Zombie, and this writerโ€™s Socket (all 2007), and Eulogy for a Vampire (2009) would find life in heavy festival rotation and DVD distribution.

But Hellbent got the golden ticketโ€” after crossing the LGBTQ film festival finish line in 2004, Hellbent rolled out in an actual, honest-to-goodness theatrical release in 2005. โ€œEvery gay filmmaker I knew was thrilled when Hellbent got a theatrical release,โ€ Kittredge recalls. โ€œFor a moment, it felt like a door could open for gay genre films to actually play in theaters.โ€ 

hellbent queer horror

Hellbent didnโ€™t exactly set the box office on fire, nor did it truly open any doors for Etheredge moving forward. But what the film did do was show queer audiences what a horror film with gay characters, written and directed by a gay man, could look like. The previously mentioned projects that followed in Hellbentโ€™s wake, plus genre TV shows like Danteโ€™s Cove, The Lair, and the constant flow of horror films and TV movies by David DeCoteau for queer PPV network Here TV, among others, all owed a debt to that gay canary in the rainbow coal mine.

Etheredge, currently promoting his latest horror feature, The Other, regards Hellbent positively in the context of the filmโ€™s legacy.  โ€œIt didn't necessarily get me career-wise in a place, but I am very proud of what that film has done. And even now, I get emails from various people my age or slightly younger who saw the film, and it was a formative experience. โ€˜It's the first time I actually felt I saw myself on screen,โ€™ that kind of thing.โ€ โ€œThereโ€™s a real point of view hereโ€ฆโ€ says Kittredge of the film, โ€œโ€ฆsimultaneously examining these well-worn horror tropes but also slightly twisting them, inverting them, challenging them.โ€

In the end, a film crew walked backwards down Santa Monica Blvd. in West Hollywood so queer horror could run.