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Review Redemption Films  / Vampyr [1932]
Actors & Directors
  • Maurice Schutz
  • Jan Hieronimko
  • Julian West
  • Henriette Gerard
  • Sybille Schmitz
  • Carl Theodor Dreyer
Run time: 62 min.
RRP: £12.99
Price: £17.95

Review Vampyr [1932] / Redemption Films:


Review Visionary Comms. Ltd.  / Mystery Of The Wax Museum [1933]
Actors & Directors
  • Michael Curtiz|Lionel Atwill|Fay Wray|Glenda Farrell
Release date: 1996-08-19
Run time: 76 min.
Price: £12.99

Review Mystery Of The Wax Museum [1933] / Visionary Comms. Ltd.:


Actors & Directors
  • Joseph Cawthorn
  • Robert Frazer
  • John Harron
  • Victor Halperin
  • Bela Lugosi
  • Madge Bellamy
Release date: 1993-09-13
Run time: 64 min.
Price: £12.99

Review White Zombie [1932] / Redemption Films:


Review Delta Visual Entertainment  / The Ghoul [1934]
Actors & Directors
  • Dorothy Hyson
  • Ernest Thesiger
  • Jack Raine
  • Cedric Hardwicke
  • Boris Karloff
  • T. Hayes Hunter
Release date: 2000-06-26
Run time: 75 min.
RRP: £4.99
Price: £1.95

Review The Ghoul [1934] / Delta Visual Entertainment:


Review 4 Front Video  / Murders In The Rue Morgue [1932]
Actors & Directors
  • Betty Ross Clarke
  • Robert Florey
  • Leon Ames
  • Bert Roach
  • Bela Lugosi
  • Sidney Fox
Release date: 2001-05-07
Run time: 89 min.
Price: £9.99

Review Murders In The Rue Morgue [1932] / 4 Front Video:


Review Redemption Films  / The Vampire Bat [1933]
Actors & Directors
  • Fay Wray
  • Maude Eburne
  • Lionel Atwill
  • George E. Stone
  • Melvyn Douglas
  • Frank R. Strayer
Run time: 60 min.
Price: £12.99

Review The Vampire Bat [1933] / Redemption Films:


Actors & Directors
  • Bramwell Fletcher
  • James Whale
  • Tod Browning
  • Karl Freund
  • Helen Chandler
  • Bela Lugosi
  • Zita Johann
  • David Manners
Release date: 2001-10-01
Run time: 208 min.
RRP: £12.99
Price: £29.95

Review Dracula / Frankenstein / The Mummy [1931] / 4 Front Video:


Review Universal Pictures UK  / Dracula (Plus The Making Of) [1931]
Actors & Directors
  • David Manners
  • Edward Van Sloan
  • Bela Lugosi
  • Helene Chanel
  • Dwight Frye
  • Tod Browning
Release date: 2003-03-19
Run time: 75 min.
RRP: £5.99
Price: £3.89

Review Dracula (Plus The Making Of) [1931] / Universal Pictures UK:

When Universal Pictures picked up the movie rights to a Broadway adaptation of Dracula, they felt secure in handing the property over to the sinister team of actor Lon Chaney and director Tod Browning. But Chaney died of cancer, and Universal hired the Hungarian who had scored a success in the stage play: Béla Lugosi. The resulting film launched both Lugosi's baroque career and the horror-movie cycle of the 1930s. It gets off to an atmospheric start, as we meet Count Dracula in his shadowy castle in Transylvania, superbly captured by the great cinematographer Karl Freund. Eventually Dracula and his blood-sucking devotee (Dwight Frye, in one of the cinema's truly mad performances) meet their match in a vampire-hunter called Van Helsing (Edward Van Sloan). If the later sections of the film are undeniably stage bound and a tad creaky, Dracula nevertheless casts a spell, thanks to Lugosi's creepily lugubrious manner and the eerie silences of Browning's directing style. (After a mood-enhancing snippet of Swan Lake under the opening titles, there is no music in the film. ) Frankenstein, which was released a few months later, confirmed the horror craze, and Universal has been making money (and countless spin-off projects) from its twin titans of terror ever since. Certainly the role left a lasting impression on the increasingly addled and drug-addicted Lugosi, who was never quite able to distance himself from the part that made him a star. He was buried, at his request, in his black vampire cape. [+]
-Robert Horton.

Actors & Directors
  • John Boles
  • Boris Karloff
  • James Whale
  • Mae Clarke
  • Colin Clive
  • Elsa Lanchester
Run time: 134 min.
RRP: £10.99
Price: £24.00

Review Frankenstein / The Bride Of Frankenstein (1931/1935) / Paramount Home Entertainment:


Review Visionary Comms. Ltd.  / Island Of Lost Souls [1932]
Actors & Directors
  • Erle C. Kenton|Charles Laughton|Richard Arlen|Leila Hyams
Release date: 1996-07-22
Run time: 68 min.
Price: £12.99

Review Island Of Lost Souls [1932] / Visionary Comms. Ltd.:


Review   / Dr. Jekyll And Mr. Hyde (1932)
Actors & Directors
  • Robert Mamoulian
  • Miriam Hopkins
  • Fredric March
Run time: 92 min.
Price: £20.99

Review Dr. Jekyll And Mr. Hyde (1932):

The first and arguably the best talkie version of R. L. Stevenson's classic tale of good and evil. Restored from the edited version put out at the times, this excellent working holds the attention from start to finish. Great central performances handles well by an experienced director.

Review Pioneer Entertainment Europe Ltd  / Tenchi Muyo V5-Hello Baby [1933]
Actors & Directors
  • Satoshi Kimura|Masami Kikuchi|Ai Orikasa|Yumi Takada
Release date: 1997-03-24
Run time: 56 min.
Price: £12.99

Review Tenchi Muyo V5-Hello Baby [1933] / Pioneer Entertainment Europe Ltd:


Review Universal Pictures UK  / The Bride of Frankenstein [1935]
Actors & Directors
  • Boris Karloff
  • James Whale
  • Valerie Hobson
  • Ernest Thesiger
  • Colin Clive
  • Elsa Lanchester
Release date: 2003-05-19
Run time: 75 min.
RRP: £5.99
Price: £6.95

Review The Bride of Frankenstein [1935] / Universal Pictures UK:

It appeared, at the end of the epochal 1931 horror movie Frankenstein, that the monster had perished in a burning windmill. But that was before the runaway success of the movie dictated a sequel. In Bride of Frankenstein, we see that the monster (once again played by Boris Karloff) survived the conflagration, as did his half-mad creator (Colin Clive). This remarkable sequel, universally considered superior to the original, reunites other key players from the first film: director James Whale (whose life would later be chronicled in Gods and Monsters) and, of course, the inimitable Dwight Frye, as Frankenstein's bent-over assistant. Whale brought campy humour to the project, yet Bride is also somehow haunting, due in part to Karloff's nuanced performance. The monster, on the loose in the European countryside, learns to talk and his encounter with a blind hermit is both comic and touching. (The episode was later spoofed in Mel Brooks's Young Frankenstein. ) A prologue depicts the author of Frankenstein, Mary Shelley, being urged to produce a sequel by her husband Percy and Lord Byron. She's played by Elsa Lanchester, who reappears in the climactic scene as the man-made bride of the monster. Her lightning-bolt hair and reptilian movements put her into the horror-movie pantheon, despite being onscreen for only a few moments. [+]
But in many ways the film is stolen by Ernest Thesiger, as the fey Dr. Pretorious, who toasts the darker possibilities of science: "To a new world of gods and monsters!" -Robert Horton.

Review Universal Pictures UK  / Dracula [1931]
Actors & Directors
  • David Manners
  • Helen Chandler
  • Dwight Frye
  • Bela Lugosi
  • Tod Browning
  • Edward Van Sloan
Release date: 1999-09-27
Run time: 71 min.
RRP: £10.99
Price: £8.95

Review Dracula [1931] / Universal Pictures UK:

When Universal Pictures picked up the movie rights to a Broadway adaptation of Dracula, they felt secure in handing the property over to the sinister team of actor Lon Chaney and director Tod Browning. But Chaney died of cancer, and Universal hired the Hungarian who had scored a success in the stage play: Béla Lugosi. The resulting film launched both Lugosi's baroque career and the horror-movie cycle of the 1930s. It gets off to an atmospheric start, as we meet Count Dracula in his shadowy castle in Transylvania, superbly captured by the great cinematographer Karl Freund. Eventually Dracula and his blood-sucking devotee (Dwight Frye, in one of the cinema's truly mad performances) meet their match in a vampire-hunter called Van Helsing (Edward Van Sloan). If the later sections of the film are undeniably stage bound and a tad creaky, Dracula nevertheless casts a spell, thanks to Lugosi's creepily lugubrious manner and the eerie silences of Browning's directing style. (After a mood-enhancing snippet of Swan Lake under the opening titles, there is no music in the film. ) Frankenstein, which was released a few months later, confirmed the horror craze, and Universal has been making money (and countless spin-off projects) from its twin titans of terror ever since. Certainly the role left a lasting impression on the increasingly addled and drug-addicted Lugosi, who was never quite able to distance himself from the part that made him a star. He was buried, at his request, in his black vampire cape. [+]
-Robert Horton.

Actors & Directors
  • Bruce Cabot
  • Robert Armstrong
  • Ernest B. Schoedsack
  • Fay Wray
  • Merion C. Cooper
Release date: 1992-07-27
Run time: 100 min.
RRP: £5.99
Price: £1.89

Review King Kong [1933] / Universal Pictures UK:

"Now you see it. You're amazed. You can't believe it. Your eyes open wider. It's horrible, but you can't look away. There's no chance for you. No escape. You're helpless, helpless. There's just one chance, if you can scream. Throw your arms across your eyes and scream, scream for your life!" And scream Fay Wray does most famously in this monster classic, one of the greatest adventure films of all time, which even in an era of computer-generated wizardry remains a marvel of stop-motion animation. [+]
Robert Armstrong stars as famed adventurer Carl Denham, who is leading a "crazy voyage" to a mysterious, uncharted island to photograph "something monstrous. neither beast nor man". Also aboard is waif Ann Darrow (Fay Wray) and Bruce Cabot as big lug John Driscoll, the ship's first mate. King Kong's first half-hour is steady going, with engagingly corny dialogue ("Some big, hard-boiled egg gets a look at a pretty face and bang, he cracks up and goes sappy") and ominous portent that sets the stage for the horror to come. Once our heroes reach Skull Island, the movie comes to roaring, chest-thumping, T-rex-slamming, snake-throttling, pterodactyl-tearing, native-stomping life. King Kong was ranked by the American Film Institute as among the 50 best films of the century. Kong making his last stand atop the Empire State Building is one of the film's most indelible and iconic images. -Donald Liebenson, Amazon. comOn the DVD: Although a little light on extras, this is happily the Director's Cut, restoring scenes that were censored after the film's original 1933 run, including Kong peeling off Fay Wray's clothes like a banana, and our hirsute hero using unfortunate natives as dental floss. The ratio of 4:3 is correct for a film of this age; the picture and (mono) sound are perfectly acceptable without being revelatory. The 25-minute "making of" documentary from 1992 is a 60th anniversary tribute to the film, which details all of Kong's many ground-breaking contributions to cinema, from Willis O'Brien's use of stop-motion and rear projection effects to Max Steiner's music score. There are contributions from film historians, modern admirers of the film including composer Jerry Goldsmith-who admits that Steiner created a template that Hollywood composers are still following-and a few surviving participants such as sound effects man Murray Spivak. Apparently, director Merian C. Cooper's original idea was to capture live gorillas, transport them to the island of Komodo and film them fighting the giant lizards! Thanks to Willis O'Brien's pioneering effects work good sense prevailed and a cinema classic was born. -Mark Walker.

Actors & Directors
  • Karl Freund
  • Boris Karloff
  • Zita Johann
  • Christy Cabanne
  • Bramwell Fletcher
  • Edward Van Sloan
  • David Manners
Run time: 137 min.
Price: £10.99

Review Mummy, The / The Mummy's Hand [1932] / Paramount Home Entertainment:


Price: £8.98

Review The Black Cat:


Review 4 Front Video  / Dracula's Daughter [1936]
Actors & Directors
  • Otto Kruger
  • Marguerite Churchill
  • Gilbert Emery
  • Lambert Hillyer
  • Edward Van Sloan
  • Gloria Holden
Release date: 2001-05-07
Run time: 68 min.
RRP: £9.99
Price: £12.26

Review Dracula's Daughter [1936] / 4 Front Video:

Dracula's Daughter was Universal's cut-rate sequel to their 1931 hit Dracula, this time sans Bela Lugosi. But it turns out to be an unexpectedly sleek and stylish movie. Gloria Holden, tall, dark and continental, is the aristocratic title character fighting her nature and seeking a cure for her affliction. A sympathetic psychiatrist, Dr Garth (Otto Kruger), encourages her to "face her fears" but when she lures a pretty young streetwalker to her room to model for a painting, the temptation of her fleshy offering proves too much to overcome. Edward Van Sloan reprises his role as Van Helsing, held by the police for the murder of Count Dracula (the film opens on the final scene from Dracula) but released in the nick of time to help Garth, now at the mercy of the bitter and vindictive vampire. Director Lambert Hillyer makes the most of his low budget with austere, angular sets and an almost abstract sense of the foggy city night. Holden's mysterious face and tall, willowy body make her an even more striking vampire than Lugosi, and Irving Pichel's offbeat servant is like an American gangster with the breeding of a European aristocrat: thick and thuggish, but always proper. The script falls into the usual rut of Universal's later horror films, losing the mood in the busy plot, but the smooth style and Holden's dignified performance lift this above most Universal sequels. -Sean Axmaker, Amazon. com.

Review Universal Pictures UK  / The Mummy [1932]
Actors & Directors
  • Zita Johann
  • David Manners
  • Boris Karloff
  • Arthur Byron
  • Edward Van Sloan
  • Karl Freund
Release date: 2003-05-19
Run time: 72 min.
RRP: £5.99
Price: £2.99

Review The Mummy [1932] / Universal Pictures UK:

You have to hand it to the walking dead. What they lack in speed and agility, they more than make up for in sheer single-minded determination. Im-Ho-Tep is a case in point. He's an ancient Egyptian priest, cursed for his terrible crimes against the gods. A team of British archaeologists digs up his sarcophagus, along with a box inscribed with a warning that opening it will unleash death and destruction. You'll never guess what they do. Once freed, Im-Ho-Tep takes on the appropriately evil alias Ardath Bey and gets to the task of resurrecting his ancient lover-which will, of course, require a living human surrogate. While the premise may sound formulaic, The Mummy in fact turns out to be bracingly weird, relying on atmospheric creepiness rather than on jump-out-and-scare-you effects. Boris Karloff gives a terrific performance as Im-Ho-Tep. He has all the malevolence the film requires, but also manages subtler touches; the expression in his eyes as he is wrapped in preparation for being buried alive is absolutely chilling. [+]
Instead of forcing him to do all the tedious shambling around that so many mummies resort to, the filmmakers have wisely given Im-Ho-Tep/Ardath Bey a nearly living appearance once he's cleaned up and has a few psychic powers to boot, making him a potent adversary. Stock up on ace bandages and prepare for a good spooky evening. -Ali Davis.

Actors & Directors
  • Boris Karloff
  • Dorothy Hyson
  • Anthony Bushell
  • Ernest Thesiger
  • T. Hayes Hunter
  • Cedric Hardwicke
Release date: 1996-04-15
Run time: 67 min.
RRP: £5.99
Price: £3.90

Review The Ghoul [1933] / ITV DVD:


Models & Brands:
Vampyr [1932], Mystery Of The Wax Museum [1933], White Zombie [1932], The Ghoul [1934], Murders In The Rue Morgue [1932], The Vampire Bat [1933], Dracula / Frankenstein / The Mummy [1931], Dracula (Plus The Making Of) [1931], Frankenstein / The Bride Of Frankenstein (1931/1935), Island Of Lost Souls [1932], Dr. Jekyll And Mr. Hyde (1932), Tenchi Muyo V5-Hello Baby [1933], The Bride of Frankenstein [1935], Dracula [1931], King Kong [1933], Mummy, The / The Mummy's Hand [1932], The Black Cat, Dracula's Daughter [1936], The Mummy [1932], The Ghoul [1933]

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