Little Shop of Horrors (2021 film)

Little Shop of Horrors is a 2020 horror comedy musical film directed by Greg Berlanti, based on themusical comedy of the same name written by Howard Ashman with music by Alan Menken, which in turn was based on the 1960 film The Little Shop of Horrors, directed by Roger Corman. The film stars Josh Gad, Celine Dion, Danny DeVito, Jim Carrey, and Mark Hamill as the voice of Audrey II, with Destiny's Child as the three urchins and cameo appearances from Jack Black, Steve Buscemi, Bill Hader, and others. Like other adaptations of the play, the film follows Seymour, a passive, nerdy florist shop employee who becomes a celebrity on the filthy town of Skid Row when he discovers a strange flytrap-like plant lovingly dubbed "Audrey II". Unfortunately for Seymour (and all of mankind), this plant needs human blood to grow, and when it begins to demand more blood than one man can give, poor Seymour is forced to commit murder. Meanwhile, Seymour's secret crush, Audrey, is in an abusive relationship with sadistic dentist Orin Scrivello (D.D.S.), and while Seymour's meek demeanor prevents any dominate action on his part, all it takes is a little push from the plant and Seymour serves revenge in a dish best served bloody.

Like the 1986 film adaptation, this film is faithful to the stage version, with a few changes; the song "Now (It's Just the Gas)" is removed, and the scene where Orin suffocates to death from his laughing gas is replaced with Seymour becoming so incensed over Orin insulting Audrey that he grabs a chainsaw (which he found in the tool shed behind Mr. Mushnik's florist shop) and goes straight-up Leatherface on the screaming dentist (off-screen, of course) before feeding his blood-soaked remains to Audrey II. Some of the dialogue and song lyrics are slightly rewritten (for example, "He knows your life of crime" from "Suppertime" to "He knows about your crime"), Seymour omits "...and so am I!" when referring to Audrey II as a monster during the climax, and a sequence is added during Patrick Martin's appearance where Seymour flashes back to the events of the film, realizing in horror that the plant had a plan to take over the world, and that he had helped it grow in power. Unlike the 1986 film, the movie ends with the song "Don't Feed the Plants" (composed in a slower, more somber tone), as in the stage version, where Audrey II succeeds in conquering the world.

The film was produced by Warner Bros. Pictures and released in the United States on October 30, 2020, the day before Halloween. The film was shot on-location at the Bowery, known as New York's Skid Row, and the Skid Row in Los Angeles, to accurately depict the Skid Row featured in the show.

The plant pod puppets in the film were built by Jim Henson's Creature Shop in New York, based on original designs for the off-Broadway play by Martin P. Robinson. Robinson was directly involved with the creation of the film's puppets, overseeing the building process and even acting as principal performer for Audrey II, leading a team of eleven puppeteers from the Jim Henson Company, in charge of operating his lips, vines, and leaves. During the "Don't Feed the Plants" number, the twelve-ft puppet required 112 puppeteers to control all of its parts.

Cast
Mark Hamill as Audrey II (voice)

Josh Gad as Seymour Krelborn

Celine Dion as Audrey

Danny DeVito as Mr. Mushnik

Jim Carrey as Dr. Orin Scrivello, D.D.S.

Beyonce Knowles-Carter as Crystal

Michelle Williams as Ronette

Kelly Rowland as Chiffon

Steve Buscemi as Patrick Martin

Jack Black as Wink Wilkinson

Bill Hader as Arthur Denton

Pam Ferris as Mrs. Luce

Adam Sandler as First Customer

Andy Samberg as Skip Snip

Kevin James as Bernstein

Ellen Greene as Supermarket Clerk

Lee Wilkof as Newspaper Salesman

Al Roker as Television News Reporter

Morgan Freeman as Narrator

Audrey II Lead Puppeteer: Martin P. Robinson

Audrey II Puppeteers: Anthony Asbury, Karen Prell, David Rudman, Bill Barretta, Matt Vogel, Eric Jacobson, Peter Linz, Noel MacNeal, Tyler Bunch, Ryan Dillon

Additional Puppeteers: Brad Abrell, Pam Arciero, Heather Asch, Grant Baciocco, Greg Ballora, David Barclay, Jennifer Barnhart, Nate Begle, Tau Bennett, Carol Binion, Ronald Binion, Tim Blaney, Rickey Boyd, Warrick Brownlow-Pike, Lisa Buckley, Julianne Buescher, Kevin Carlson, Raymond Carr, Leslie Carrara-Rudolph, Kristin Charney, Ceili Clemens, Bruce Connelly, Frankie Cordero, Melissa Creighton, Stephanie D'Abruzzo, Carole D'Agostino, Nathan Danforth, Dorien Davies, Alice Dinnean, Jamie Donmoyer, Jodi Eichelberger, Nameer El-Kadi, Artie Esposito, Darci Lynne Farmer, David Matthew Feldman, Mark Gale, Aymee Garcia, Rob Gardner, Cameron Garrity, Dan Garza, James Godwin, BJ Guyer, Terri Hardin, Christopher Hayes, Andy Hayward, Rachel Herrick, Haley Jenkins, Patrick Johnson, Scott Johnson, Sean Johnson, Avery Lee Jones, James Kemp, Vicki Kenderes-Eibner, John Kennedy, Kathleen Kim, Donna Kimball, Joe Kovacs, Adam Kreutinger, Jim Kroupa, Tim Lagasse, Bruce Lanoil, Michael Latini, Jayden Libran, Spencer Lott, Paul Louis, Rick Lyon, Lara MacLean, Amanda Maddock, Greg Manion, Jim Martin, Drew Massey, Ed May, Paul McGinnis, Jess McKay, Alison Mork, James Murray, Michael Oosterom, Brett O'Quinn, Carmen Osbahr, Anney Fresh Ozar, Annie Peterle, Marc Petrosino, David Quesal, Mike Quinn, Tim Rose, Nicolette Santino, Rob Saunders, Michael Schupbach, Michelan Sisti, David Skelly, Colleen Smith, Kenny Stevenson, Andy Stone, John Tartaglia, Norman Tempia, Allan Trautman, Russ Walko, Robin Walsh, James Wojtal, Eric Wright, Victor Yerrid, Bryant Young

Crew
Directed by Greg Berlanti

Screenplay by Jordan Peele

Based on the musical of the same name by Howard Ashman, in turn based on the film "The Little Shop of Horrors" directed by Roger Corman and written by Charles B. Griffith

Produced by Andrew Lloyd Webber

Executive Producers: Tim Burton, David Geffen, Tim Rice

Director of Photography: Guillermo del Toro

Edited by Gregory Plotkin

Music by Danny Elfman and Hans Zimmer

Songs from the play: music by Alan Menken, lyrics by Howard Ashman

Production Designer: Bo Welch

Costume Designer: Tom Broecker

"Audrey II" built by Jim Henson's Creature Shop, New York based on original off-Broadway designs by Martin P. Robinson

Special Effects Supervisor: Rick Lazzarini