With a couple of directing credits outside the franchise under his belt, Tunnicliffe had become the natural candidate to assume to director’s chair. Especially after his own short film.
“After we did
Hellraiser: Hellworld, which I thoroughly loathe, I said ‘that’s it⦠That’ll be the end of it, no one’ll ever ask me to direct a
Hellraiser movie’.
āSo I did a
Hellraiser short called
No More Souls, which if you look online you can see. I play an old-age Pinhead in it. Dimension saw that and were like ‘that’s great! Can we put that on the DVD?’”
Later, when the series relaunched with
Hellraiser: Revelations, Tunnicliffe was into effects work on
Scream 4 and so unable to direct (he did write the screenplay, though).
“A couple of years later, I got a call saying, it isn’t the film that you should be offered – it was only $400,000 at the time – but if you still want a bite of the cherry⦠I was like, look, if you tell me it’s $10 and a camcorder and it’s
Hellraiser, I’ll do it because I’m a sucker. I love
Hellraiser, I would love to try and put my stamp on it.”
While working with the sort of budget that would make many indie filmmakers’ wince (eventually settling at just $350,000), he still had to navigate the cantankerous studio system.
“I’d written the script and sent it in and I had like 12 executives on a call sitting around a table. Then it was two executives. Then those two had gone and it’s two new executives. Then it was six new executives.”
The difficulty of this, Tunnicliffe explains, is that executives were changing quicker than he could address their notes.

“Two months in I’d have my new bunch of people going, we really don’t like this thing in the script. I’d go, no, I don’t like it either, it’s fucking stupid.”
“Why did you write it?”
“Because your predecessor demanded that I put it in there.”
The final film is a compromise; maybe a 65-35 split in his favour, by his reckoning. To have dragged it through this process must feel like a win, especially with so many suits intent on exorcising the more extreme elements of the movie.
But it’s
Hellraiser; isn’t it meant to be extreme? In an almost mournful tone, Tunnicliffe explains how one segment was softened.
“They were like, no vomit eating, not gonna happen. Although what’s really weird is when you see reviewers reviewing the movie, they say people are eating vomit in the film all the time. And I’m like, there’s no vomit eating; I wanted it but they wouldn’t allow it.”
Hellraiser: Judgment and Hellraiser: Revelations are on digital demand, DVD and Blu-ray now.
ā
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