![]() ![]() Rustin Parr made his first appearance in 1999, in the Curse of the Blair Witch, a mockumentary which aired on Syfy to promote the release of The Blair Witch Project. When the film became a massive success, Artisan Entertainment attempted to track Frank Pastor down, but was unable to, leading to them recasting the role for the film's sequel. Pastor attended the first screening of The Blair Witch Project in 1998 at the Enzian Theater in Maitland, Florida. His prison interview scene was filmed at the Old St. When it came to time to cast the role, Haxan chose Frank Pastor, who had been a free-lance gardener hired to tend to the garden around the Haxan office. For instance, several character names are near- anagrams: Elly Kedward (The Blair Witch) is Edward Kelley, a 16th-century mystic, and Rustin Parr, the fictional 1940s child-murderer, began as an anagram for Rasputin. In developing the mythology behind the film, the creators used many inspirations. Created by Haxan Films, the character has subsequently been represented in various other media, including novels, video games, and comic books. He first appeared in Curse of the Blair Witch (1999) as an old man on death row giving his last interview before being executed for the murders of seven children, in which he was portrayed by Frank Pastor. ![]() This soundtrack either needs more diversity or it should have included more well-known hits such as "Dragula" as is, it should appeal to only those with an insatiable taste for derivative late-'90s metal.Rustin Parr is a fictional character from the Blair Witch series of horror films. Yet when the best song on the album, Rob Zombie's industrial heavy metal anthem "Dragula," is an already acknowledged heavy metal classic of the 1990s, it's pretty obvious that executive producer Marilyn Manson is struggling to piece together a worthwhile soundtrack, as he is forced to choose from the glut of second-rate heavy metal bands signed to the majors after the unexpected popularity of the three aforementioned bands, Korn, Limp Bizkit, and Rage Against the Machine. Tony Iommi and Dave Grohl's "Goodbye Lament" is interesting mostly for its unlikely combination of Black Sabbath riffs and Foo Fighters melodicism Marilyn Manson does his best to present a gloomy ode to suicide much in the spirit of Nine Inch Nails circa The Downward Spiral, also harking back to some of David Bowie's more creepy moments in the early '70s and the album-concluding "Feel Good Hit of the Summer" by Queens of the Stone Age is good for a smile with its fun celebration of gluttonous drug use. does its best Limp Bizkit imitation or when Project 86 presents its take on Korn, but rather on the few songs here that aren't obviously derivative. The most interesting moments on this album aren't when P.O.D. For the most part, all of the featured bands and their respective contributions are little but second-generation attempts to duplicate the sound of Korn, Limp Bizkit, and Rage Against the Machine, arguably the three most important heavy metal bands of the mid- to late '90s - and undoubtedly the most influential. While this soundtrack is mostly forgettable as a lackluster compilation, it does have one noteworthy characteristic, standing as a well-compiled example of just how derivative heavy metal had become by the end of the 1990s. ![]()
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