The Bicks Pod

Mark Frost - Scared Stiff and The Believers

03.14.2018 - By thebickspodPlay

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1987 was the time when David Lynch & Mark Frost first met and started to collaborate - so what exactly was Mark Frost up to right before that time?

Two semi-psychological thrillers that shared enough similarities we're discussing them as one.

"African" mysticism, single parents, curses, psychiatry, and a dash of 80s moral concern come up in both Scared Stiff and The Believers. We comb through these similarities to try and pick apart what interests, thoughts, and concerns were bubbling with Mark Frost as he and David Lynch began their collaboration on a number of projects that would culminate in Twin Peaks. We also finally take a stand and support what David Lynch has been saying for years: that Lynch/Frost productions really do have more than a healthy dose of Frostianism to them, a statement we feel comfortable making after working through Frost's pre-Peaks works.

Scared StiffStarring: Andrew Stevens, Mary Page KellerDirected by: Richard FriedmanWritten by: Mark Frost, Daniel F. Bacaner, Richard FriedmanProduced by: Daniel F. Bacaner, Charles S. Carroll

The BelieversStarring: Martin Sheen, Helen ShaverDirected by: John SchlesingerWritten by: Nicholas Conde (novel), Mark Frost (screenplay)Produced by: Edward Teets

Notes

Scared Stiff is available on YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-Eiy06dregg

Another similarity we forgot to mention in the podcast: both films feature children who have another pseudo-spiritual facsimile from another culture - a lamp and a doll, both with somewhat racially insensitive markings.

Aidan was right regarding the "anthropological work" described in The Believers - it was in Sudan, in East Africa, over 3,000 km from the Ivory Coast.

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