Status

Released

original language

English

Budget

$ 18000000

Revenue

$ 5900000

Top Billed Cast

Johnny Depp

Ed Wood

Martin Landau

Bela Lugosi

Sarah Jessica Parker

Dolores Fuller

Patricia Arquette

Kathy O'Hara

Jeffrey Jones

Criswell

G.D. Spradlin

Reverend Lemon

Vincent D'Onofrio

Orson Welles

Bill Murray

Bunny Breckinridge

Mike Starr

Georgie Weiss

Max Casella

Paul Marco

Brent Hinkley

Conrad Brooks

Lisa Marie

Vampira

Jim Myers

Tor Johnson

Juliet Landau

Loretta King

Clive Rosengren

Ed Reynolds

Norman Alden

Cameraman Bill

Leonard Termo

Makeup Man Harry

Ned Bellamy

Dr. Tom Mason

Danny Dayton

Soundman

Ross Manarchy

Camera Assistant

Bill Cusack

Tony McCoy

Aaron Nelms

Teenage Kid

Biff Yeager

Rude Boss

Joseph R. Gannascoli

Security Guard

Carmen Filpi

Old Crusty Man

Lisa Malkiewicz

Secretary #1

Melora Walters

Secretary #2

Conrad Brooks

Bartender

Don Amendolia

Salesman

Tommy Bertelsen

Tough Boy

Reid Cruickshanks

Stage Guard

Stanley DeSantis

Mr. Feldman

Lionel Decker

Executive #1

Edmund L. Shaff

Executive #2

Gene LeBell

Ring Announcer

Bobby Slayton

TV Show Host

Gretchen Becker

TV Host's Assistant

John Rice

Conservative Man

Catherine Butterfield

Conservative Wife

Mary Portser

Backer's Wife

King Cotton

Hick Backer

Don Hood

Southern Backer

Frank Echols

Doorman

Matthew Barry

Valet

Ralph Monaco

Waiter

Anthony Russell

Busboy

Tommy Bush

Stage Manager

Gregory Walcott

Potential Backer

Charles C. Stevenson Jr.

Another Backer

Rance Howard

Old Man McCoy

Vasek Simek

Professor Strowski

Alan Martin

Vampira's Assistant

Salwa Ali

Vampira's Girlfriend

Rodney Kizziah

Vampira's Friend

Korla Pandit

Indian Musician

Hannah Eckstein

Greta Johnson

Luc De Schepper

Karl Johnson

Vinny Argiro

TV Horror Show Director

Patti Tippo

Nurse

Ray Baker

Doctor

Louis Lombardi

Rental House Manager

Jim Boyce

Theatre Manager

Ben Ryan Ganger

Angry Kid

Ryan Holihan

Frantic Usher

Marc Revivo

High School Punk

Charlie Holliday

Tourist

Adam Drescher

Photographer #1

Ric Mancini

Photographer #2

Daniel Riordan

Pilot / Strapping Young Man

Mickey Cottrell

Hammy Alien

Christopher George Simpson

Organist

Robert Binford

Choir Member

Herbert Boche

Choir Member

Linda Rae Brienza

Choir Member

Marlene Cook

Choir Member

Sylvia Coussa

Choir Member

Audrey Cuyler

Choir Member

Joseph Golightly

Choir Member

Carrie Starner Hummel

Choir Member

Ramona Kemp-Blair

Choir Member

Carolyn Kessinger

Choir Member

Nancy Longyear

Choir Member

Matthew Nelson

Choir Member

Robert Nuffer

Choir Member

William Michael Short

Choir Member

Susan Eileen Simpson

Choir Member

George F. Sterne

Choir Member

Charles Alan Stephenson

Choir Member

Cheri A. Williams

Choir Member

Cynthia Ann Wilson

Choir Member

Maurice LaMarche

Orson Welles (voice) (uncredited)

Jesse Hernandez

Wrestling Opponent

Lena Banks

Sexy Pedestrian (uncredited)

Ada Tai

Vampira's Friend (uncredited)

Arlene Tai

Vampira's Friend (uncredited)

Rayder Woods

Car Vandal (uncredited)

Bill Blair

Carny (uncredited)

Bill Anderson

Wrestling Referee (uncredited)

Eugenie Bondurant

Dagmar (uncredited)

Mike Breyer

Photographer (uncredited)

Patrick Cranshaw

Editor on Studio Lot (uncredited)

Ryal Haakenson

Wedding Guest / Theatre Goer (uncredited)

Zachary Keats

Trick-or-Treating Kid (uncredited)

Susan Knego

Girl in Theater Lobby (uncredited)

Navya La Shay

Secretary (uncredited)

Tanya Marten

Secretary (uncredited)

Gorja Max

Bra Stuffing Transvestite (uncredited)

Johnny Meyer

Kid At Movie Theater (uncredited)

John Michael Quinn

Minister (uncredited)

Jeff Shrewsbury

Theater Patron (uncredited)

Richard Yett

Wrap Party Guest (uncredited)

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Movie Reviews

A review by FilipeManuelNeto

Written by FilipeManuelNeto on 2023-09-12

**A sincere tribute to the man and his work, full of bizarreness, humor, artificial octopuses and angora.** I've been wanting to see this for a while now, and the opportunity finally came. Very intelligently directed by Tim Burton, it is a brief biography that honors Ed Wood, reckoned as the worst director Hollywood has ever known (although that title is disputed by other more recent directors). I already knew Ed Wood's work, I've seen one or two of his films, and I can guarantee that his fame is justified: the films are the most amateurish imaginable and the number of errors and problems is such that even the general public saw the director's inability and naïveté. I won't dwell on this point, just add that this film covers the filming of “Glenn or Glenda”, “Bride of the Monster” and “Plan 9 from Outer Space”. As is typical of Burton's films, there is a certain amount of bizarreness which makes the most sincere homage to Ed Wood's work. One notices, implicitly, a certain sympathy or admiration for the director, who never achieved fame (at least, positive) and to whom success has eluded. He is a man with a vision and a dream, but without any ability to achieve it and who, even so, never gave up. Johnny Depp was a smart choice for the protagonist. The actor likes unusual roles and portrayed Wood in a very faithful way, emphasizing his incorrigible and absolutely blind optimism, as well as his habit of dressing like a woman and the problems that caused him in being taken seriously. There is, in the character, a certain bizarre fetish about angora fabrics that I don't know if it was real, but it fit very well. I also really liked Martin Landau, a very respectable veteran who fit wonderfully into the role of Bela Lugosi, the mythical horror actor who was forgotten by the industry towards the end of his life and succumbed to morphine addiction and depression, and Lisa Marie, who played Maila Nurmi, Finnish actress famous for her character Vampira. Sarah Jessica Parker also did an impeccable job as Wood's girlfriend. Jeffrey Jones does a good job as Criswell, a fake psychic famous for his TV appearances. Bill Murray appears little, but does a decent job whenever asked. The film was very well shot in black and white, and I believe this fit better with the spirit of the film, and the way it was designed. There is a beautiful limpidity and the cinematography is very crafted and stylistically rich. The film plays a lot with the difficulties that Wood encountered in filming and promoting his films, and the total amateurism with which he did so, and this is funny and, at the same time, moving. The sets and costumes are excellent, convincing, and the reproduction of the films was well done and honors the originals. The soundtrack, written by Howard Shore, does the rest and gives the film a bizarrely delicious tone. Finally, a word about the opening and ending of the film, in a style magnificently suited to cheap horror productions of the time.