A Clockwork Orange (Comedy)
Wednesday, July 25th, 2007CREATED BY: Recca Phoenix
MOVIES USED: A Clockwork Orange
“A Clockwork Orange” becomes an ’80s teen comedy when Alex decides to take a day off, Ferris Bueller style.
CREATED BY: Recca Phoenix
MOVIES USED: A Clockwork Orange
“A Clockwork Orange” becomes an ’80s teen comedy when Alex decides to take a day off, Ferris Bueller style.
CREATED BY: Ian Marks (Crew Cuts)
MOVIES USED: Enter The Dragon
The classic martial arts movie Enter The Dragon is recut as a blaxploitation film. This trailer mash received 2nd place at the 2006 New York AICE Trailer Park competition.
CREATED BY: Wyatt Bernstein
MOVIES USED: Halloween
Wyatt Bernstein recuts Halloween, the 1978 John Carpenter horror classic, asking the question: “What if Michael Myers was really a comic genius who had trouble expressing himself?”
CREATED BY: Steven Kenny
MOVIES USED: Scarface
Al Pacino plays an uptight loser who has to learn to cut loose and free his heart. The title is a reference to the 1998 movie How Stella Got Her Groove Back.
This video won third place in ebaumsworld.com’s Submit Your Content competition for June 2006.
CREATED BY: Mike Dow & Ari Eisner (Smacky Productions)
MOVIES USED: The Ten Commandments, Pulp Fiction (audio)
Using footage from The Ten Commandments (1956), and a short audio clip from Pulp Fiction, comes a teen comedy “3000 years in the making”. The title of this clip is a reference to the 1999 teen comedy 10 Things I Hate About You.
CREATED BY: Mike Dow & Ari Eisner (Smacky Productions)
MOVIES USED: Jaws
Stephen Spielberg’s classic horror becomes a family movie similar to Free Willy. The title is a parody of the romantic comedy Must Love Dogs.
CREATED BY: Robert Ryang (P.S. 260)
MOVIES USED: Blue Velvet
Jeffrey Beaumont’s life was going great, until he met his girlfriend’s zany dad! This Blue Velvet trailer remix was cut by Robert Ryang for the 2006 Independent Spirit Awards.
CREATED BY: Robert Ryang (P.S. 260)
MOVIES USED: The Shining
The trailer that started it all. Stanley Kubrick’s 1980 horror film starring Jack Nicholson and Shelley Duvall becomes a feel-good movie about a writer struggling to find his muse and a boy lonely for a father.
It won the AICE (Association of Independent Creative Editors) Trailer Park competition in New York 2005, and became an Internet phenomenon almost overnight.