Actors & Directors
- Abraham Sofaer
- Martin Landau
- Arlene Martel
- John Brahm
- Byron Haskin
- Chita Rivera
- Sally Kellerman
Release date: 1996-05-20 Run time: 103 min. Price: £7.99
Review The Outer Limits - Vol. 8 - Demon With A Glass Hand / The Bellero Shield [1964] / MGM Entertainment:
Actors & Directors
- Ray Dennis Steckler
- Brett O'Hara
- Carolyn Brandt
Run time: 81 min. Price: £10.99
Review The Incredibly Strange Creatures Who Stopped Living And Became Mixed Up Zombies [1964] / Rtm Sales and Marketing:
Actors & Directors
- Fritz Lang
- Gustav Fröhlich
- Alfred Abel
- Fritz Rasp
- Theodor Loos
- Rudolf Klein-Rogge
Release date: 1997-10-27 Run time: 238 min. RRP: £19.99 Price: £14.99
Review Metropolis / M [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
- Anton Diffring
- Cyril Cusack
- Julie Christie
- Oskar Werner
- François Truffaut
- Jeremy Spenser
Release date: 2000-03-06 Run time: 109 min. Price: £5.99
Review Fahrenheit 451 [1966] / 4 Front Video:The classic science fiction novel by Ray Bradbury was a curious choice for one of the leading directors of the French New Wave, François Truffaut. But from the opening credits onward (spoken, not written on screen), Truffaut takes Bradbury's fascinating premise and makes it his own. The futuristic society depicted in Fahrenheit 451 is a culture without books. Firemen still race around in red trucks and wear helmets, but their job is to start fires: they ferret out forbidden stashes of books, douse them with petrol and make public bonfires. Oskar Werner, the star of Truffaut's Jules and Jim, plays a fireman named Montag, whose exposure to David Copperfield wakens an instinct towards reading and individual thought. (That's why books are banned-they give people too many ideas. ) In an intriguing casting flourish, Julie Christie plays two roles: Montag's bored, drugged-up wife and the woman who helps kindle the spark of rebellion. The great Bernard Herrmann wrote the hard-driving music; Nicolas Roeg provided the cinematography. Fahrenheit 451 received a cool critical reception and has never quite been accepted by Truffaut fans or sci-fi buffs. Its deliberately listless manner has always been a problem, although that is part of its point; the lack of reading has made people dry and empty. [+]
If the movie is a bit stiff (Truffaut did not speak English well and never tried another project in English), it nevertheless is full of intriguing touches, and the ending is lyrical and haunting. -Robert Horton, Amazon. com.
Actors & Directors
- Kay Harding
- Peter Coe (III)
- Lon Chaney Jr.
- Dennis Moore
- Virginia Christine
- Leslie Goodwins
Release date: 2001-05-07 Run time: 57 min. RRP: £9.99 Price: £29.99
Review The Mummy's Curse [1944] / 4 Front Video:
Actors & Directors
- Tor Johnson
- Paul Marco
- Edward D. Wood Jr.
Release date: 1995-06-19 Run time: 68 min. RRP: £9.99 Price: £9.99
Review Night of the Ghouls [1959] / ITV DVD:
Actors & Directors
- Sidney Berger
- Herk Harvey
- Frances Feist
- Candace Hilligoss
Run time: 75 min. RRP: £12.99 Price: £7.99
Review Carnival Of Souls [1962] / Scream Time Video:
Actors & Directors
- Harry O. Hoyt|Wallace Beery|Lewis Stone|Lloyd Hughes
Run time: 60 min. Price: £12.99
Review The Lost World [1925] / Vision Replays:The granddaddy of giant monster movies, The Lost World was one of the most expensive movies ever made in 1925, costing more than a million dollars, and has remained one of the most influential. Every larger-than-life creature feature since-from King Kong to Godzilla and Jurassic Park-owes a debt to this original adventure fantasy based on Arthur Conan Doyle's novel. It's the story of a maverick scientist (Wallace Beery under a bushy beard) who finds a land that time forgot on a plateau deep within the South American jungles and comes back to London with a captured brontosaurus to prove it. His expedition includes Bessie Love, the daughter of an explorer who disappeared on the previous expedition, and big game hunter Lewis Stone. The ostensible stars of the picture are all upstaged by Willis O'Brien's dinosaurs, simple models brought to life with primitive stop-motion animation (the technique was soon to be perfected by O'Brien for King Kong). Hardly realistic by any measure, these pioneering special effects are still a sight to behold, especially the lumbering brontosaurus which receives the most care from O'Brien, both foraging in his jungle and rampaging through the streets of London. With the coming of talkies, The Lost World became obsolete: all known American prints were destroyed in favour of a sound remake (which became King Kong) and the film only survived in a severely truncated form (even the original negative was lost). For this release David Shepard meticulously "rebuilt" the film using material from eight different surviving prints from all over the world, cleaning and restoring along the way. The result is 50% longer than previously extant prints, still not complete but closer than any version since its 1925 debut. The difference is not merely in restored scenes but in a rediscovered sense of grace in scenes filled out to their original detail and pace. [+]
The film moves and breathes once again like a silent film. On the DVD: From the attractive solid slipcase to the wonderful "period" menu interface, this is a delightful DVD package. The film itself looks surprisingly good-a real tribute to the restoration team's efforts-with careful tinting in the style of the period (blues for evening, reds for dawn etc. ). The disc features the choice of either an original score by The Alloy Orchestra or a classical orchestral score compiled and conducted by Robert Israel (both enjoyable and effective), 13 minutes of O'Brien's animation outtakes (including a couple of isolated frames that capture O'Brien manipulating his models) and a well-meaning but basic commentary by Arthur Conan Doyle historian Roy Pilot. There's also a text biography of Conan Doyle and a display of original postcards, posters and other promotional items. -Sean Axmaker, Amazon. com.
Actors & Directors
- Barbara Shelley
- Andrew Keir
- Francis Matthews
- Christopher Lee
- Terence Fisher
- Suzan Farmer
Release date: 1995-02-27 Run time: 87 min. RRP: £12.99 Price: £3.02
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
- Hubert Noël
- Carole Gray
- Diana Decker
- William Sylvester
- Lance Comfort
- Tracy Reed (II)
Release date: 1995-10-02 Run time: 84 min. RRP: £12.99 Price: £15.95
Review Devils Of Darkness [1965] / Art House Productions Ltd.:
Actors & Directors
- Ford Beebe
- Leon Errol
- Evelyn Ankers
- Jon Hall
- John Carradine
- Alan Curtis
Release date: 2001-05-07 Run time: 74 min. Price: £9.99
Review The Invisible Man's Revenge [1944] / 4 Front Video:
Actors & Directors
- Yngve Nyqvist
- Richard Lund
- Victor Sjöström
- Renée Björling
- Tore Svennberg
- Tora Teje
Release date: 1995-01-23 Run time: 54 min. RRP: £12.99 Price: £29.95
Review The Monastery Of Sendomir [1919] / Redemption Films:
Actors & Directors
- Arthur Lubin
- Leo Carrillo
- Edgar Barrier
- Nelson Eddy
- Claude Rains
- Susanna Foster
Release date: 1999-07-01 Run time: 89 min. RRP: £9.99 Price: £4.86
Review The Phantom Of The Opera [1943] / Universal Pictures UK:
Price: £24.99
Review The Invaders - Box Set [1967] / Metrodome Video:
Actors & Directors
- Maude Eburne
- George E. Stone
- Fay Wray
- Lionel Atwill
- Melvyn Douglas
- Frank R. Strayer
Run time: 60 min. Price: £12.99
Review The Vampire Bat [1933] / Redemption Films:
Actors & Directors
- Geraldine Brooks
- Priscilla Morrill
- Frank Maxwell
- Byron Haskin
- Robert Culp
- Donald Pleasence
- Laslo Benedek
Release date: 1995-09-18 Run time: 102 min. Price: £9.99
Review The Outer Limits - Vol. 2 - Man With The Power / The Architects Of Fear [1963] / MGM Entertainment:
Actors & Directors
- Sidney Hayers
- Janet Blair
- Margaret Johnston
- Peter Wyngarde
- Anthony Nicholls
- Colin Gordon
Release date: 2000-05-01 Run time: 83 min. RRP: £5.99 Price: £4.30
Review Night Of The Eagle [1962] / Warner Home Video:
Actors & Directors
- DeForest Kelley
- Stephen Brooks
- Joseph Pevney
- Ralph Senensky
- Leonard Nimoy
- William Shatner
Release date: 1990-05-07 Run time: 96 min. RRP: £10.99 Price: £3.00
Review Star Trek : Episodes 47-48 - Obsession / The Immunity Syndrome [1967] / Paramount Home Entertainment:
Actors & Directors
- John Meredyth
- William Shatner
- DeForest Kelley
- Tony Young
- Jud Taylor
- Leonard Nimoy
Release date: 1990-09-03 Run time: 98 min. RRP: £10.99 Price: £4.99
Review Star Trek : Episodes 57-58 - Elaan Of Troyius / The Paradise Syndrome [1968] / Paramount Home Entertainment:
Actors & Directors
- Gil Perkins
- Stuart Wade
- Chuck Courtney
- Anne Gwynne
- Jacques R. Marquette
- Gloria Castillo
Release date: 1995-04-17 Run time: 64 min. RRP: £9.99 Price: £5.44
Review Teenage Monster [1957] / First Class Films:
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Models & Brands: The Outer Limits - Vol. 8 - Demon With A Glass Hand / The Bellero Shield [1964], The Incredibly Strange Creatures Who Stopped Living And Became Mixed Up Zombies [1964], Metropolis / M [1926], Fahrenheit 451 [1966], The Mummy's Curse [1944], Night of the Ghouls [1959], Carnival Of Souls [1962], The Lost World [1925], Dracula Prince Of Darkness [1966], Devils Of Darkness [1965], The Invisible Man's Revenge [1944], The Monastery Of Sendomir [1919], The Phantom Of The Opera [1943], The Invaders - Box Set [1967], The Vampire Bat [1933], The Outer Limits - Vol. 2 - Man With The Power / The Architects Of Fear [1963], Night Of The Eagle [1962], Star Trek : Episodes 47-48 - Obsession / The Immunity Syndrome [1967], Star Trek : Episodes 57-58 - Elaan Of Troyius / The Paradise Syndrome [1968], Teenage Monster [1957] |