BY TODD GARBARINI
I
love Joe Dante. He has directed some hugely entertaining films and is an
aficionado of the same genres I adore. Additionally, like most film directors,
he is highly versed in cinemaspeak. My introduction to his work came in 1983
when I bought his werewolf classic The Howling (1981) sight-unseen on
RCA’s now extinct CED system and immediately took to it. That failed stylus-based
videodisc format was severely limited to only several thousand titles, so I had
to rely on VHS to catch up with his Hollywood Boulevard (1976), Piranha
(1978), and Rock ‘n’ Roll High School (1979) in the mid-80’s following
theatrical viewings of Twilight Zone: The Movie in 1983 and Gremlins
in 1984. For some reason, his July 12, 1985-released outing Explorers,
which concerns the escapades of three young boys making their way through the
battlefield of junior high school, escaped my list of “must see†films during
that summer and I was only vaguely aware of it through a high school friend who
took to it. Looking back at the film’s opening weekend, it was rushed into
theaters almost ten days after Robert Zemeckis’s already phenomenally
successful Back to the Future and was also pitted against the Live-Aid
concert which was seen by nearly 2 billion people on television. Plus, I was
four months away from obtaining my driver’s license, so I still had to
embarrassingly prod my parents for trips to the theater which was some 10 miles
away.
Filmed
between October 1984 and February 1985, Explorers is most notable for
being the feature film debuts of Ethan Hawke and the late River Phoenix, both
of whom were 14 when the film was shot. Mr. Hawke landed the role while
accompanying a friend to the audition and had no previous acting experience. Mr.
Phoenix had already garnered a significant amount of television credits to his
name by the time filming began. Filling out the triumvirate is Jason Presson,
who appeared in Christopher Cain’s 1984 film The Stone Boy opposite
Robert Duvall and Glenn Close.
We
have all have had dreams of flying. A recurring dream of mine from childhood
consists of me flying on the top of a tree over the street I grew up on and
coming crashing down on to the pavement, awakening immediately afterwards. In Explorers,
Ben (Ethan Hawke) is a teenage science fiction aficionado who gravitates to
films of previous decades, such as War of the Worlds (1953) and This
Island Earth (1955). This rang true for me as my father gave me a copy of
the June 1978 issue of Star Encounters magazine when I was ten which
featured films from this era and was my introduction to them. Ben also dreams
of flying – in the clouds, and over a city that looks a lot like a circuit
board, the schematic of which he draws upon wakening. He shows these sketches
to his friend Wolfgang (River Phoenix) who is studious, nerdy and comes from an
eccentric family. Wolfgang does not have time for frivolities such as teenage
crushes, something that plagues Ben with his infatuation with Lori (the late
Amanda Petersen). Darren (Jason Presson) is disillusioned. His parents are
divorced, and his father has a girlfriend whom his dad argues with. He
befriends Ben and Wolfgang as an escape, but they share similar interests.
Using
Ben’s scribblings as a guide, Wolfgang builds a microchip that can create a
huge bubble that encompasses a large space while moving at incredibly fast
speeds. They take it upon themselves to build their own flying saucer out of an
old Tilt-A-Whirl ride, which they christen “Thunder Road†based on the name of
the song by The Boss. More of Ben’s dreams result in answers to limiting
issues, such as finding a way to produce an unlimited amount of oxygen on the
ship in order to leave Earth’s orbit, which they succeed in doing and end up
captured by a huge ship manned by aliens whose understanding of Earth is based
on television reruns. While this notion may have seemed interesting and
original on paper by the screenwriter, it eventually wears a bit thin in an
overly rambunctious episode that lasts longer than it should. Needless to say,
the boys make their way back to Earth and, well, you’ll just have to see for
yourself as to how their adventure ends.
When
I watched the special edition of The Howling on laserdisc in 1996, I
vaguely recalled Joe Dante mentioning that he had had a three-hour cut of Explorers,
but that it went missing, or it was stolen, etc. I often wonder how that
version would have fared in comparison. Watching Explorers now is
bittersweet as it contains performances by several people who tragically left
this world much too soon. Building on the special effects used to atmospheric
effect in Walt Disney’s Tron (1982), Explorers does an admirable
job of pushing the effects a little further. It is definitely an ‘80’s film and
that is something that cannot be faked. Rob Bottin, the genius behind the
effects for John Carpenter’s The Thing, created the aliens in this film,
with Robert Picardo of The Howling donning the makeup and costumes.
A
new special edition of the film is available on Blu-ray from Shout! Factory and it includes the home
video & theatrical cuts of the film, the differences of which were
imperceptible to me but probably stand out to die-hard fans more familiar with
it.
A
Science Fiction Fairy Tale: The Story of Explorers is a piece that runs about 65 minutes
and features new interviews with those involved with the production of the
film. Screenwriter Eric Luke explains having been given a copy of “Worlds of Ifâ€
magazine as a child ended up whetting his appetite, and he later worked at Los
Angeles’s A Change of Hobbit Bookstore which catered to science fiction
aficionados. Darlene Chan, the Junior Executive in charge of production, really
loved the script and how innocent it was. David Kirkpatrick, who was the Senior
Executive in charge of production of the film, reminisces on how the script
made him feel like a child again. Ernest Cline, author of Ready Player One,
echoes those sentiments. Ethan Hawke describes how the film got him his start
in acting.
Explorers was a far more ambitious film in
conception than it ended up being in execution. Numerous public screenings with
negative feedback unfortunately resulted in much of the original material
ending up on the proverbial cutting room floor as the studio rushed it into
theaters far too quickly.
Deleted
Scenes with Optional Commentary By Joe Dante – Further character beats enhanced in footage gleaned from a
Betamax-quality workprint found buried in the director’s garage reveals a far
more interesting dynamic than what is alluded to in the final film, truncated
at Paramount’s request due to an unreasonable running time. This segment runs
about 34 minutes and includes the Amanda Peterson birthday party scene; a
dinner scene with Ethan Hawke and his parents; a wordless scene wherein Mary
Kay Place finds the February 1982 issue of Playboy in her son’s room; more
of the alien ad-libs; a cute reference to Poltergeist (1982); and many
more. It can be viewed with on-set audio or alternatively with director Dante’s
comments. It would have been nice if the entire feature contained a commentary
– it’s absence is puzzling.
Interview
with Cinematographer John Hora
– at just under four minutes, this is a discussion of the challenges that the
production ran into while shooting a film with minors during the Fall. Dick
Miller, who passed away in January 2019, comes in at the end, which only made
me want to see more.
Interview
with Editor Tina Hirsch
– this piece runs over six minutes with the film’s editor and really makes me
want to see the full cut of the film!
The
theatrical trailer is also included.
While
watching the film now I cannot help but be reminded of the Netflix series Stranger
Things which takes place beginning in November 1983, and the wonderful
camaraderie among the youngsters on the show. Explorers, despite being
the unfortunate mess that it is, is a reminder of our childhood friendships and
how things truly seemed possible, no matter how farfetched they seemed.
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