Carnival Magic | |
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![]() DVD cover art | |
Directed by | Al Adamson |
Produced by | Elvin Feltner |
Production company | Krypton Productions |
Release date |
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Running time | 100 minutes |
Country | United States |
Language | English |
Carnival Magic is a 1983 [1] American film directed by Al Adamson and starring Don Stewart.
Marketed as a family-oriented children’s film, [2] it has since gained a cult following in underground and B movie film circles owing to its surreal plot and incongruously-adult themes. [3] Carnival Magic is Adamson's penultimate film. [4]
Markov the Magnificent is a talented magician and mind-reader whose career is fading. When he partners with a super-intelligent talking chimp named Alexander the Great, the duo suddenly become a big draw—and the potential savior for their struggling, small-time traveling circus. Markov and fellow workers inside the circus must fend off a jealous, alcoholic tiger-tamer and an evil doctor intent on stealing the chimp.
Principal photography took place for the film over the span of three weeks in July 1980 [5] in Gaffney, South Carolina, [1] during that city's South Carolina Peach Festival. [5] Many of the scenes in Gaffney were shot at the peach festival's carnival, its parade, and in a second parade staged for the movie. [5] Additional work for the film was done at the Earl Owensby Studios in Shelby, North Carolina. [5]
Producer Elvin Feltner and director Al Adamson intended the film as family fare, aimed at children, and it was in fact given a G rating by the MPAA. [1] However, the prevalence of adult themes (alcoholism, sex, abuse, violence) left many viewers confused. The film premiered at the Crosscreek Cinemas in Greenwood, South Carolina, on March 4, 1983, [1] and was also shown in other theatres in the region beginning on that date. By November it had seen a wider release, and was (for example) being shown in New York City. [6]
This was the last acting role for Regina Carrol, who was married to director Adamson and featured in several of his films. [7] Philip Morris, a real-life ringmaster, magician, and costume maker, appears as a carnival barker. [8] This was also one of Adamson’s last two films before retiring from the film industry and pursuing a career in real estate. [9]
For two decades Carnival Magic was considered a lost film, and no prints were known to exist. This changed in 2009, when a 35mm print was discovered in a warehouse, sparking a revival of interest among cult film aficionados. [6] Following the discovery of this print, Carnival Magic was restored and re-mastered in 2010, receiving its television debut on Turner Classic Movies in October of that year, as part of their TCM Underground series. [7] It saw a DVD release in early 2011 from Film Chest and HD Cinema Classics, reissued on Blu-ray and containing bonus material. The bonus material includes out-takes, trailers, audio commentary and interviews with cult film historian Joe Rubin and producer Elvin Feltner. [10]
The film was featured in an episode of Mystery Science Theater 3000 as a part of the show's eleventh season, released on April 14, 2017 through Netflix.
Various commentators found the film was a "strange move" in Adamson's career [2] and that although its targeted audience was allegedly children, the film was not actually shaped to that purpose, one reviewer confessing for instance: "the G-rated Carnival Magic is the most thematically adult “kids” film I’ve ever seen. [11]"