American journalist, columnist, film historian, and radio/television commentator
David Del Valle is a journalist, columnist, film historian, and radio and television commentator on horror, science-fiction, cult and fantasy films. Described by Entertainment Weekly as "Something of a cult celebrity himself,"[1] he was inducted into the Rondo Hatton Classic Horror Awards' Monster Kid Hall of Fame in 2016.[2]
Early life
Del Valle began his love of horror movies early, beginning "when I was four, or five, or six years old. So the first movies I saw were the Universal horror films, with Lon Chaney Jr. as the Mummy, and Bela Lugosi as Dracula. And then I started watching the films of Vincent Price, especially at the drive-in, when I was in high school, because that’s what they showed, nothing but triple-feature horror movies. So as a kid, that was what I watched, as an escape from school…. And I’m sure my story resonates with a lot of people, because you start out with that genre when you’re a little boy. That’s the way that works."[3]
Del Valle additionally produced and hosted a series of cable TV interviews entitled Sinister Image. His guests included actor Cameron Mitchell and directors Russ Meyer and Curtis Harrington.[3] A compilation was released on home video as Cult People (1990),[1] and the audio of Del Valle's 1987 Sinister Image on-camera interview with Vincent Price later appeared on the 2013 Shout Factory DVD/Blu-ray set The Vincent Price Collection.[17] He also hosted and curated the Full Moon Features streaming series Haunted Hollywood in 2020.[3] He was a producer and the onscreen interviewer of Vincent Price on the 1994 documentary Vincent Price: My Life and Crimes.[18]
He began doing audio commentary on movie home video releases in 1983,[19] and has continued to do them into the 2020s. (See "Audio commentary" below).
Del Valle curated the 2006 Los Angeles, California photo exhibit Nevermore, devoted to the Edgar Allan Poe films of Vincent Price and Roger Corman.[20] Additionally, he has worked as a Hollywood talent agent,[21] has done small, sometimes uncredited roles in low-budget films, and was casting director of the 1987 horror anthology film The Offspring aka From a Whisper to a Scream.[22]
Audio commentary
This article is missing information about and needs a fuller list of his audio commentaries. Please expand the article to include this information. Further details may exist on the talk page.(January 2023)
He has contributed audio commentary to the DVD/Blu-ray releases of films including for the Criterion Collection:
Del Valle, David (2010). Lost Horizons Beneath the Hollywood Sign. Albany, Georgia, USA: BearManor Media. ISBN978-1593936075.
Del Valle, David (2012). Six Reels Under. Albany, Georgia, USA: BearManor Media. ISBN978-1-593-93696-9.
Filmography
This article is missing information about and needs a fuller list of documentaries. Please expand the article to include this information. Further details may exist on the talk page.(January 2023)
^Lucas, Tim; Lucas, Donna. "Welcome to Video Watchdog!". videowatchdog.com. Retrieved January 31, 2023. "And the Watchdog 's Kennel of contributors consists of only the very best writers and historians working in the field of fantastic film research and criticism, including … David Del Valle…
^Del Valle, David (August 2003). "Return to the Rue Morgue: A Conversation with Gordon Hessler". Video Watchdog. No. 98.
^Biodrowski, Steve; Del Valle, David; French, Lawrence (January 1989). "Looking Back on Forty Years as Horror's Crown Prince". Cinefantastique. Vol. 19, no. 1–2. pp. 40–85, 119–20.
^Del Valle, David (Fall 2005). "Female on the Beach review". Scarlet Street.
^Del Valle, David (October 27, 2003). "When sex and death are indissoluble: Riccardo Freda's L'Orribile segreto del dottor Hichcock (The Horrible Secret of Dr Hichcock / Raptus, 1962)". Kinoeye. Vol. 3, no. 12.
^Del Valle, David (May 2010). "'Isobel, Let Down Your Hair': An interview with Yvonne Furneaux". Little Shoppe of Horrors. No. 24.
^Del Valle, David (November 1984). "Roger Corman". Films and Filming. London. pp. 15–20.
^Del Valle, David (September 1985). "Tall, Dark & Gruesome: Interview with Christopher Lee". Films and Filming. No. 372. London. pp. 29–31.
^Jane, Ian (October 11, 2013). "The Vincent Price Collection, Shout Factory, PG, October 22, 2013". DVD Talk. Retrieved January 30, 2023. "Scream Factory have dug up a few new extras for this disc, however, starting with a sixty-two minute long 'Vintage Interview with Vincent Price' that was conducted by film historian David Del Valle in 1987. This is basically Del Valle's Sinister Image interview that he conducted years back, a fascinating and thorough interview which finds Price very open and keen to talk about his work." Article includes still from the on-camera interview.