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Review 2 Entertain Video  / Doctor Who - Planet of Evil [1963]
Actors & Directors
  • Richard Martin (IV)
  • John Gorrie
  • Tom Baker
  • Elizabeth Sladen
Release date: 1993-12-29
Run time: 94 min.
RRP: £10.99
Price: £4.90

Review Doctor Who - Planet of Evil [1963] / 2 Entertain Video:


Review Universal Pictures UK  / Dracula (Plus The Making Of) [1931]
Actors & Directors
  • Bela Lugosi
  • Dwight Frye
  • Edward Van Sloan
  • David Manners
  • Tod Browning
  • Helene Chanel
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.

Review 4 Front Video  / Bedlam [1946]
Actors & Directors
  • Billy House
  • Ian Wolfe
  • Boris Karloff
  • Anna Lee
  • Richard Fraser
  • Mark Robson
Release date: 1998-06-08
Run time: 80 min.
RRP: £5.99
Price: £8.99

Review Bedlam [1946] / 4 Front Video:


Review DD Home Entertainment  / Gorgo [1960]
Actors & Directors
  • Vincent Winter
  • William Sylvester
  • Eugene Lourie
  • Bill Travers
  • Joseph O'Conor
  • Christopher Rhodes
Release date: 1993-08-31
Run time: 79 min.
Price: £10.99

Review Gorgo [1960] / DD Home Entertainment:


Review 2 Entertain Video  / Doctor Who - The Robots of Death [1986] [1963]
Actors & Directors
  • Tom Baker
  • Louise Jameson
  • Michael E. Briant
Release date: 1995-02-13
Run time: 91 min.
RRP: £7.99
Price: £3.99

Review Doctor Who - The Robots of Death [1986] [1963] / 2 Entertain Video:

By Tom Baker's third season in the role the actor had become firmly established in the minds of many fans as the definitive Doctor. First broadcast in early 1977, "Robots of Death" follows on directly from "Face of Evil", which was writer Chris Boucher's debut and also that of Louise Jameson's Leela, the Doctor's most shapely companion (a kind of Neanderthal Seven of Nine if you will). Boucher's second Who story concerns an isolated mining ship on which a series of inexplicable deaths take place-although as the Doctor opines, "nothing is inexplicable, only unexplained". The Doctor and Leela inevitably become embroiled in events, which soon turn into a sci-fi murder-mystery: imagine Isaac Asimov crossed with Agatha Christie in a Frank Herbert Dune-like setting. Add an undercover robot sent by "the company" and the claustrophobic, not to say deadly setting of the mining ship and there is a fascinating foreshadowing of Alien, too. It is tightly plotted, intelligent Saturday teatime entertainment (something that was possible then but is now an unthinkable oxymoron) with a typically strong cast of redoubtable thesps in supporting roles (not to mention extravagant costumes and garish make-up). There may be no Daleks or Cybermen, but this is vintage Who nevertheless. -Mark Walker.

Review Paramount Home Entertainment  / Star Trek : Episodes 55-56 - Assignment Earth / Spectre Of The Gun [1968]
Actors & Directors
  • Robert Lansing
  • William Shatner
  • Marc Daniels
  • Teri Garr
  • DeForest Kelley
  • Leonard Nimoy
  • Vincent McEveety
Release date: 1990-09-03
Run time: 98 min.
RRP: £10.99
Price: £0.99

Review Star Trek : Episodes 55-56 - Assignment Earth / Spectre Of The Gun [1968] / Paramount Home Entertainment:


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

Review White Zombie [1932] / Redemption Films:


Review Universal Pictures UK  / The Mummy [1932]
Actors & Directors
  • Arthur Byron
  • Boris Karloff
  • Karl Freund
  • Edward Van Sloan
  • David Manners
  • Zita Johann
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.

Review Connoisseur Video  / Weekend [1968]
Actors & Directors
  • Jean-Luc Godard
  • Valérie Lagrange
  • Jean Yanne
  • Mireille Darc
  • Jean-Pierre Kalfon
  • Jean-Pierre Léaud
Run time: 95 min.
RRP: £15.99
Price: £17.50

Review Weekend [1968] / Connoisseur Video:


Review Paramount Home Entertainment  / Star Trek : Episodes 23-24 - A Taste Of Armageddon / Space Seed [1967]
Actors & Directors
  • Marc Daniels
  • DeForest Kelley
  • Joseph Pevney
  • Ricardo Montalban
  • Leonard Nimoy
  • William Shatner
  • Leonard Opatoshu
Run time: 98 min.
RRP: £10.99
Price: £4.87

Review Star Trek : Episodes 23-24 - A Taste Of Armageddon / Space Seed [1967] / Paramount Home Entertainment:


Review Eureka Entertainment  / Metropolis [1926]
Actors & Directors
  • Gustav Fröhlich
  • Rudolf Klein-Rogge
  • Theodor Loos
  • Fritz Rasp
  • Alfred Abel
  • Fritz Lang
Release date: 1999-06-28
Run time: 138 min.
RRP: £14.99
Price: £10.40

Review Metropolis [1926] / Eureka Entertainment:

Fritz Lang's Expressionistic masterwork continues to exert its influence today, from Chaplin's Modern Times (1936) to Dr Strangelove (1963), and into the late 1990s with Dark City (1998). In the stratified society of the future (Y2K no less), the son of a capitalist discovers the atrocious conditions of the factory slaves, falling in love with the charismatic Maria in the bargain, who preaches nonviolence to the workers. But even the benevolent leadership of Maria is a challenge to the privileged class, so they have the mad-scientist Rotwang concoct a robot double to take her place and incite the workers to riot. The story is melodrama, but it's the powerful imagery that is so memorable. One of the most arresting images has legions of cowed workers filing listlessly into the great maw of the all-consuming machine-god Moloch. Unfortunately, the print used for this DVD is unfocused, scratchy, and five minutes short, altogether unworthy of a visionary masterpiece. It may be too much to hope for the complete film to be restored (only two hours of the original three-hour film are extant), but a clean transfer from a fine-grain negative ought to be possible. And why, when there are other possible future Metropolises to be had, should we downtrodden masses accept this junk? -Jim Gay If you think you know Fritz Lang's Metropolis backwards, this special edition will come as a revelation. Shortly after its premiere, the expensive epic-originally well over two hours-was pulled from distribution and re-edited against Lang's wishes, and this truncated, simplified form is what we have known ever since 1926. Though not quite as fully restored as the strapline claims, this 118-minute version is the closest we are likely to get to Lang's original vision, complete with tactful linking titles to fill in the scenes that are irretrievably missing. [+]
Not only does this version add many scenes unseen for decades, but it restores their order in the original version. Until now, Metropolis has usually been rated as a spectacular but simplistic science fiction film, but this version reveals that the futuristic setting is not so much prophetic as mythical, with elements of 1920s architecture, industry, design and politics mingled with the mediaeval and the Biblical to produce images of striking strangeness: a futuristic robot burned at the stake, a steel-handed mad scientist who is also a 15th Century alchemist, the trudging workers of a vast factory plodding into the jaws of a machine that is also the ancient God Moloch. Gustav Frohlich's performance as the hero who represents the heart is still wildly overdone, but Rudolf Klein-Rogge's engineer Rotwang, Alfred Abel's Master of Metropolis and, especially, Brigitte Helm in the dual role of saintly saviour and metal femme fatale are astonishing. By restoring a great deal of story delving into the mixed motivations of the characters, the wild plot now makes more sense, and we can see that it is as much a twisted family drama as epic of repression, revolution and reconciliation. A masterpiece, and an essential purchase. On the DVD: Metropolis has been saddled with all manner of scores over the years, ranging from jazz through electronica to prog-rock, but here it is sensibly accompanied by the orchestral music Gottfried Huppertz wrote for it in the first place. An enormous amount of work has been done with damaged or incomplete elements to spruce the image up digitally, and so even the scenes that were in the film all along shine with a wealth of new detail and afford a far greater appreciation for the brilliance of art direction, special effects and Helm's clockwork sexbomb. A commentary written but not delivered by historian Ennio Patalas covers the symbolism of the film and annotates its images, but the production information is left to a measured but unchallenging 45-minute documentary on the second disc (little is made of the astounding parallel between the screen story in which Klein-Rogge's character tries to destroy the city because the Master stole his wife and the fact that Lang married the actor's wife Thea von Harbou, authoress of the Metropolis novel and screenplay!). There are galleries of production photographs and sketches; biographies of all the principals; and an illustrated lecture on the restoration process which uses before and after clips to reveal just how huge a task has been accomplished in this important work. -Kim Newman.

Actors & Directors
  • Jacqueline Hill
  • William Russell
  • Richard Martin
  • William Hartnell
  • Andrew Morgan
  • Sylvester McCoy
  • Maureen O'Brien
Release date: 1993-09-06
Run time: 246 min.
Price: £30.99

Review Doctor Who - The Daleks (Limited Edition tin: The Chase[1965]/Remembrance of the Daleks[1988]):


Review Lumiere Pictures  / Dracula Prince Of Darkness [1966]
Actors & Directors
  • Barbara Shelley
  • Andrew Keir
  • Terence Fisher
  • Suzan Farmer
  • Francis Matthews
  • Christopher Lee
Release date: 1995-02-27
Run time: 87 min.
RRP: £12.99
Price: £2.42

Review Dracula Prince Of Darkness [1966] / Lumiere Pictures:

As the third in what became a series of eight, Prince of Darkness was distinguished among the Hammer Dracula movies for several reasons. It was the third and last directed by Terence Fisher and his familiarity with the mythos and studio practices meant the rushed production still came out looking spectacular in places. Moving into the tail end of the 1960s, Hammer looked for ways of cost cutting: the film's dramatic finale on a frozen river takes place on a two-for-one set being used simultaneously for another shoot. This was also the series entry that included a substitute for the Renfield character missing from the first movie. Thorley Walters as Ludwig is a colourful cameo and that's also all that can be said of Christopher Lee. Despite top billing, the mute monster occupies but a fraction of the overall on-screen time. The real frights come from gaunt butler Klove who scares the life (literally) out of hapless travellers Alan, Charles, Helen and Diana. Surely their fate would ensure no-one else took the mountain pass to Carlsbad? But only two years later, audiences discovered Dracula Has Risen from the Grave. On the DVD: apart from scene access there's nothing making use of the DVD format here. The 2. [+]
55:1 presentation is certainly welcome, and the mono audio somehow feels appropriate. -Paul Tonks.

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

Review The Ghoul [1933] / ITV DVD:


Review Encore Entertainment  / The Old, Dark House [1962]
Actors & Directors
  • fenella fielding
  • Robert Morley
  • Joyce Grenfell
  • Tom Poston
  • William Castle
  • Janette Scott
Release date: 1996-09-30
Run time: 83 min.
RRP: £12.99
Price: £54.99

Review The Old, Dark House [1962] / Encore Entertainment:


Review 4 Front Video  / First Men In The Moon [1964]
Actors & Directors
  • Edward Judd
  • Nathan Juran
  • Norman Bird
  • Martha Hyer
  • Miles Malleson
  • Lionel Jeffries
Release date: 2002-07-01
Run time: 99 min.
Price: £5.99

Review First Men In The Moon [1964] / 4 Front Video:


Review Bfi Video  / The Phantom Of The Opera [1925]
Actors & Directors
  • Norman Kerry
  • Arthur Edmund Carewe
  • Lon Chaney
  • Rupert Julian
  • Mary Philbin
Release date: 1998-09-07
Run time: 90 min.
RRP: £15.99
Price: £13.99

Review The Phantom Of The Opera [1925] / Bfi Video:


Actors & Directors
  • Dana Andrews
  • Athene Seyler
  • Maurice Denham
  • Peggy Cummins
  • Jacques Tourneur
  • Niall MacGinnis
Release date: 1996-03-25
Run time: 95 min.
Price: £12.99

Review Curse Of The Demon [1957] / Encore Entertainment:


Review Warner Home Video  / The Mummy [1959]
Actors & Directors
  • Eddie Byrne
  • Yvonne Furneaux
  • Terence Fisher
  • Felix Aylmer
  • Christopher Lee
  • Peter Cushing
Release date: 2000-05-01
Run time: 84 min.
RRP: £5.99
Price: £12.00

Review The Mummy [1959] / Warner Home Video:

Hammer's remake of the horror classic has been accused of falling between the simple integrity of the Karloff original and the swashbuckling, SFX romanticism of the 1998 version, but it has real strengths of its own. Principal among these is Christopher Lee, haughty and brutal as the High Priest and sorrowful, pathetic and menacing as the living mummy he has become for his crimes; his eyes convey a depth of dumb suffering and passion. Peter Cushing has rarely been so charismatic and elegant as he is in his role as the lame Egyptologist Banning, and veteran Felix Aylmer is touching as his doomed father. In the underwritten role of Banning's wife, with her strange resemblance to the dead Egyptian princess whose unearthing the Mummy is avenging, Yvonne Furneaux has at once charm and authority-she is plausibly a woman who might stop the avenging Mummy in its tracks. Terence Fisher directs with his usual efficiency and Gerard Schurmann contributes an atmospheric score, as effective in its high Egyptian pomp as in its sense of the English countryside. -Roz Kaveney.

Browse Horror & Suspense:

Models & Brands:
Doctor Who - Planet of Evil [1963], Dracula (Plus The Making Of) [1931], Bedlam [1946], Gorgo [1960], Doctor Who - The Robots of Death [1986] [1963], Star Trek : Episodes 55-56 - Assignment Earth / Spectre Of The Gun [1968], Mystery Of The Wax Museum [1933], White Zombie [1932], The Mummy [1932], Weekend [1968], Star Trek : Episodes 23-24 - A Taste Of Armageddon / Space Seed [1967], Metropolis [1926], Doctor Who - The Daleks (Limited Edition tin: The Chase[1965]/Remembrance of the Daleks[1988]), Dracula Prince Of Darkness [1966], The Ghoul [1933], The Old, Dark House [1962], First Men In The Moon [1964], The Phantom Of The Opera [1925], Curse Of The Demon [1957], The Mummy [1959]

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