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Blood Brothers
It
But some things never change. Again the brothers found themselves at odds with the ratings board. They had to trim one of From Hell's throat slashings in order to avoid an NC-17. They also softened, by choice, the sound effects for a scene in which the killer disembowels a woman with surgical instruments. "Every time I heard that, it bothered me," says Allen. "It sounded like a knife on the bone against the meat. It disturbed a lot of people."
The Hughes brothers, in fact, have been disturbing audiences since 1993. That was when--after dropping out of high school in Pomona, Calif., and learning their craft on music videos--they grabbed Hollywood by the collar with Menace II Society. The film, about black, disenfranchised youth, opened to critical acclaim and big box office. They returned to that milieu in 1995 with the ambitious Dead Presidents, about a black Vietnam soldier returning to a life of crime in the hood. With American Pimp, a controversial 1999 documentary, they took a straight-on view of the gold-medallion and Cadillac set.
But the duo wanted to branch out. Albert says they wondered, "How come no white actors want to work with us? Damn! Because we're doing black movies." In 1996 they signed a deal with Universal, but "we languished for four years," says Albert, "because I think they were scared to make a movie with us." Even then the two saw From Hell--adapted from the graphic novel by Alan Moore and Eddie Campbell--as a chance to do something unexpected. Universal passed, then the script stalled at New Line before finding a home at Fox. "We jumped on it," says Fox chairman Tom Rothman, who was intrigued with putting "an incredibly contemporary sensibility in turn-of-the-century London."
Despite the bigger budget ($35 million), a radical change of scene and an all-white cast, From Hell has some striking similarities to the Hughes twins' previous work: it's populated by hookers, and even good men are seduced by drugs. Depp's lavish, opium-induced visions help him solve the crime and let the brothers show off their visual bravado. "It was an interesting way to tell what was going on in his head," says Allen. ("We make no secret that we smoke marijuana," says Albert, who calls it "an aid to creativity.")
While they look for their next project, they are also examining their partnership. It has worked so far, with Allen handling the actors and Albert working the camera. Yet they have started to grow apart. "He likes doing stuff that gets seen," says Albert, implying that his sibling has gone Hollywood. Allen counters that Albert "is still more into violence than I am. I could do an ironic movie or a love story and be just as happy." With From Hell, at least, they seem to be having it both ways.
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