The SunBreak

Recent Stories with tag John Amplas Remove Tag RSS Feed

By Tony Kay Views (143) | Comments (0) | ( 0 votes)

Just to the right of the tumult that is the autograph line for George Romero at ZomBcon, a man stands casually in front of a dealer's table, smiling unassumingly at passersby. Bright eyes twinkle from behind his glasses, and his tousled salt-and-pepper hair and aware-but-genial expression suggest a good-natured academic who's wandered into this den of undead mayhem by mistake.

But I know better. He's Martin the Vampire.

John Amplas began acting at age ten, honing his craft in various community theater ventures in Pennsylvania before studying at Pittsburgh's prestigious Playhouse School as a teenager. He's appeared in several films, and currently serves as associate professor of the Theater and Arts department at Point Park University, putting his four decades of experience in theater and film to work educating a new generation of actors and filmmakers. Impressive as these accomplishments are, however, Amplas is in Seattle thanks to his long association with director George Romero. He's appeared in a half-dozen Romero pictures, playing everything from a dyspeptic vengeful ghoul in Creepshow to an earnest scientist in 1985's Day of the Dead, but his most memorable portrayal remains his first for the director: the title character in the director's 1977 movie, Martin.

Released just a year before Romero blew the horror genre wide-open with Dawn of the Dead, Martin tells the story of a young man who may or may not be a vampire, satisfying his bloodlust amidst the dessicated husk of a small Pennsylvania industrial town. It's one of the director's most subtle pieces--less a horror flick than a haunting character study for most of its running time--and Amplas' incredible work in the movie gives it much of its quiet power. Few screen sociopaths this side of Norman Bates manage to engender such a beguiling combination of sympathy, pity, humor, and revulsion.

The SunBreak caught up with Amplas in between ZomBcon panels and screenings, and true to form, he offered choice insights on his finest film role, his years as part of George Romero's repertory company, and his career as an educator...all without sucking a drop of anyone's blood.

Martin's one of the great overlooked horror movies of the 1970's, in large part because of your work in it. How did you become involved with the production?

Thank you! I was acting in a play in my senior year [of college], and George Romero happened to see it. He contacted me, and two or three months later--fall of 1976--we started filming.

I heard that George re-wrote the script to accommodate you. Is that true?

Well, George told me that when he first wrote Martin, he'd written the character [as] much older. Then when he saw me, he went and revised the script to make Martin a younger man.... (more)

By Tony Kay Views (217) | Comments (0) | ( 0 votes)

Saturday, October 30: Celebrity Guests and Horror Screenings Galore

I won't lie. All of the scientific panels holding sway at ZomBcon make for interesting and lively brain food. But the big draw for yours truly (as well as the lion's share of attendees, undead or otherwise) is the galaxy of cult movie fixtures at hand.

Bruce Campbell, a battle-hardened veteran of everything from standard-issue horror cons to Xena conventions (he was a recurring guest star on that Lucy Lawless TV show in the 1990s), delivers advice on "How to Kill a Zombie" at one of ZomBcon's best-attended Undead Labs. Before and after that session, he signs autographs for fans and engages in an amusing Q&A at the Phelps. Sadly, I miss Campbell officiating over a renewal of wedding vows for a horde of the Married Dead. The actor's a total wiseacre, alternately cajoling and kidding attendees with the amusing candor of your smart-alecky older brother. Typical fan-to-actor exchange:

Fan: Are there any movies you regret having done?

Campbell: Not if I get paid [laughs]. If you pay me, your movie's my favorite damned movie ever!

Fan: Will there ever be an Alien Apocalypse 2?

Campbell: There shouldn't have been an Alien Apocalypse 1...... (more)