Born and raised in Lansing, Michigan, William Malone was inspired by
films during weekly trips to the Lucian Theater to see the latest
releases of horror films. By age 14 he was making home movies with an
8mm camera and designing monster masks for himself and friends to wear
for Halloween.
Malone moved to Los Angeles at age 19 to become a rock star, but a
friend's request drew him back into mask-making, which led him to a job
with Don Post Studios in makeup and costume, as well as mask making. It
was Malone who designed and sculpted the mask used for the character of
Michael Myers for
Halloween (1978),
which he used from the mold of a previous design used by
William Shatner.
Malone also worked as a make up artist for
Dan Curtis NBC TV movie
The Norliss Tapes (1973)
and even acted in a few credited and uncredited parts in films, mostly
notably playing Beatle
George Harrison in
I Wanna Hold Your Hand (1978),
which recreated the Fab Four's 1964 appearance on
The Ed Sullivan Show (1948).
Malone also developed a reputation as a collector of old movie props
left over from various science-fiction films.
After attending classes at UCLA to study directing under the tutelage
of
Gilbert Cates--a former DGA
president--Malone decided to make a gamble with his first movie.
Scraping together around $74,000, he wrote and directed the sci-fi
horror shocker
Scared to Death (1980), which was
clearly inspired by the
Ridley Scott movie
film
Alien (1979), which was a terror tale
of a genetic creature haunting the sewers of Los Angeles. Despite being
a mild box-office his, Malone was not recognized by major film studios.
In 1984, with grant of more than $1 million, Malone went back to the
director's chair with
Creature (1985)
(aka "Titan Find"), which starred
Klaus Kinski and was also inspired by
"Alien". The film was nominated for a Saturn Award at the 1985 Academy
of Science Fiction and Horror films.
Malone spent the next 14 years as a director for episodic TV series,
beginning with such projects as the anthology series
Freddy's Nightmares (1988)
and a few episodes of the HBO series
Tales from the Crypt (1989).
He also directed a short-lived TV series called
Sleepwalkers (1997) as well as
the made-for-TV movie
W.E.I.R.D. World (1995).
In 1999
Joel Silver and
Robert Zemeckis hired Malone to direct
the SFX-studded
House on Haunted Hill (1999).
a remake of the
Vincent Price film
House on Haunted Hill (1959),
which Malone clearly remembered from repeated viewings from his
childhood and was happy to come on board as director.
In 2002 Malone pressed ahead with his own feature
Feardotcom (2002), about a police
detective's investigation of a website that kills its viewers. Malone's
work on that film gave him the opportunity to join the Director's
Guild, where in 2005 he was invited by
Masters of Horror (2005)
creator
Mick Garris to direct an episode for
the series, "The Fair Haired Child", adapted from a screen play my
Matt Greenberg.
He is currently in development of Thallium's Box, a new independent feature film that will shoot in the winter of 2019.