Joseph Ellison(I)
- Director
- Writer
- Second Unit Director or Assistant Director
Joseph Ellison was born in Manhattan in 1948, where he first fell in
love with music, especially the diverse sounds of Hank Williams Sr,
Thelonious Monk, and The Maguire Sisters. His Texas born father
instilled a strong sense of morality in him while moving him around the
nation. He recalls his childhood as being largely uneventful and
typical, which is a far cry from the type of childhood depicted in his
most famous work. "Don't Go in the House", where a sadistic mother
punishes her son by burning him. By the 1960s he fell in love with
movies, particularly the art films of Fellini. Due to this he decided
to become a filmmaker. After leaving New York University in 1971 he
toyed around in various post production projects for smaller films. It
was during this time that director George A. Romero asked him to be in
his 1973 viral horror classic "The Crazies", but was unable to do so do
to scheduling conflicts. He spent the next several years working on
various exploitation films until 1980 when he was finally able to make
his own movie. "Don't Go in the House" was a grim and sickening
variation on Alfred Hitchcock's "Psycho" (1960) about a young man who
is severely abused by his mother. Every time the boy misbehaves the
mother burns the poor boy. When she finally dies he loses his mind and
begins kidnapping young women and setting the on fire with a
flamethrower in order to get back at his mother. "Don't Go in the
House" came out at a time when the horror genre was being attacked by
feminist on grounds of it being misogynistic and Ellison's film, along
with William Lustig's "Maniac" made the same year (even though "Don't
Go in the House" was shot earlier) was seen as the two prime examples
to why the genre was dangerous. Critics were no better, calling it
"lurid trash" and "sickening" amongst other things. Some critics even
went as far to suggest that both the audience and the creators of this
film were sick, deranged people. Ellison himself recalls just how
strongly the audience reacted to his film. One time the director went
to a double feature of "Friday the 13th" and "Don't Go in the House" in
New York. While "Friday the 13th" was playing, the audience screamed
and cheered; they were having a good time. However, when "Don't Go in
the House" was played the audience sat there not moving. Ellison had
made a film that was so effective it took the audience out of their
comfort zone. It would be another six years before Ellison made another
film, and it wasn't a horror film. The little seen drama "Joey" came
and went without all the outrage that had accompanied Ellison's debut
effort. After the release of "Joey", Ellison retired from filmmaking.