Japanese special effects whiz, born in 1956 in
Osaka. Real name:
Joji Tani. He specializes in
bizarre,
surreal,
fleshy special effects and claims
surrealist artist Salvador Dali as a primary
influence, which would explain an awful lot.
After moving to
New York City in the late 1970s, George attended the
School of Visual Arts and formed a band called
The Mad, which he described as "
shock performance punk funk". The Mad (which went through an unknown number of name changes) performed at
CBGBs and included everything from
short films and
animation to
pantomines. Early performances of the
band ended with George
gutting and
castrating himself onstage, all thanks to the
magic of special effects.
George's work in special effects led him to special effects guru
Rick Baker, who encouraged him to move to
Hollywood and work in the
film industry. He formed
Screaming Mad George, Inc. in 1986 and worked on films like "
A Nightmare on Elm Street 4", "
Bride of Re-Animator", "
The Guyver" (which he also directed), "
Freaked", "
Necronomicon", "
Tales from the Hood", "
Wishmaster", "
Progeny", "
Faust", "
Minority Report", and "
Destiny", but the
movie that still seems most typical of George's
style is 1988's "
Society", a way-
freaky flick about a bunch of high-class
swingers whose
stomach-churning orgies feature lots of
flesh merging together in ways that
biology never intended. George's effects had
body parts swapping and twisting around, people getting glued together on a
cellular level, the (infamous? hilarious? I'm not sure) "
butt-head" scene, and lots and lots and lots of
slime. The
film wasn't generally considered too outstanding, but George's
hallucinatory, surreal,
gooey effects are still considered some of the best and most
disturbing that the '80s had to offer.
In addition to movies, George has also worked on a huge number of
music videos (including, among others,
Marilyn Manson,
Eminem,
Tenacious D,
Missy Elliot,
Beck,
Ozzy Osbourne,
the Ramones,
'N Sync, and
Shania Twain). He also works on
commercials,
oil paintings, and even supervised the
interior design of a (probably really
weird)
nightclub in
Tokyo.
Research from the Internet Movie Database (www.imdb.com) and George's website (www.smgfx.com)