Gremlins

Gremlins (1984)Cast and Crew

Movie"Cute. Clever. Mischievous. Intelligent. Dangerous."

Cast

B
Brad Kesten
as Mogwi / Gremlins / Additional Voices (uncredited)

Crew

B
Bob MacDonald Jr.
Special Effects
J
Jackie Carr
Set Decoration
C
Cheri Ruff
Hairstylist
K
Kenneth Hall
Music Editor
N
Noel Regney
Original Music Composer
G
Greg LaCava
Makeup Artist
M
Marty Wunderlich
Property Master
R
Ron Kenyon
Best Boy Electric
K
Ken King
Production Sound Mixer
D
David E. Stone
Sound Editor
W
William Kenney
Dolly Grip
R
Ray Berwick
Animal Coordinator
W
Warren Hamilton Jr.
Sound Editor
L
Lex Rawlins
Second Assistant Camera
M
Michael A. Jones
Camera Operator
R
Robert Raring
Color Timer
T
Tim Mangini
Assistant Sound Editor
S
Stephen Purvis
Dialogue Editor
J
Joan Rowe
Foley Artist
L
Linda Matthews
Costume Supervisor
B
Bruce Edwin Gregory
Assistant Property Master
R
Robert Miller
Best Boy Grip
R
Robert Neilson
Transportation Coordinator
N
Norman Cattell
First Assistant Camera
N
Norman A. Burza
Costume Supervisor
D
Dave Robling
Transportation Captain
C
Carol Green
Second Assistant Director
D
Donah Bassett
Negative Cutter
R
Richard Moran
Key Grip
S
Steve Maslow
Sound Re-Recording Mixer
M
Michael Muscarella
Construction Coordinator
B
Bill Varney
Sound Re-Recording Mixer
T
Tom Finan
Assistant Editor
K
Kenneth Gilbert
Script Supervisor
R
Ralph Nelson Jr.
Still Photographer
K
Kevin O’Connell
Sound Re-Recording Mixer
W
William F. Matthews
Set Designer
J
James Quinn
First Assistant Director

The Gremlins Collection

Gremlins is a 1984 American horror comedy film directed by Joe Dante, Steven Spielberg was the film's executive producer and the screenplay was written by Chris Columbus. The film is about a young man who receives a strange creature called a Mogwai as a pet, which then spawns other creatures who transform into small, destructive, evil monsters. This story was continued with a sequel, Gremlins 2: The New Batch, released in 1990. Unlike the lighter sequel, the original Gremlins opts for more black comedy, which is balanced against a Christmas-time setting. Both films were the center of large merchandising campaigns.