Showing posts with label Blu-ray release. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Blu-ray release. Show all posts

Friday, 20 November 2015

Twice-Told Tales gets a Kino Lorber Blu-ray release

A Terrifying Trilogy of Passion, Poison and Possession! 

It's spine-tingling terror in triplicate virtuoso of horror. Vincent Price dials up the depravity in this spellbinding trilogy of Nathaniel Hawthorne's chilling classics!

Dripping with demented genius, poisonous plants, oozing blood and a corpse in a wedding gown, Twice Told Tales spins three gripping, diabolical nightmares of madness, mayhem and murder most foul.

Price stars in all three stories, including Dr Heidegger's Experiment, about a scientist who finds the fountain of youth... and lives to regret it; Rappaccini's Daughter, the twisted tale of a demented father whose love for his daughter turns poisonous; and The House of the Seven Gables, the ghostly legend of an ancient cursed family who lived for power... and died for greed.


Out on Blu-ray and DVD (Region A, in the original 1.85:1 aspect ratio) from Kino Lorber on 1 December 2015.

Special Features
• Audio Commentary by Film Historians Richard Harland Smith and Perry Martin
• Trailers From Hell with Mick Garris
• Trailers for Twice Told Tales, Tales of Terror and Black Sabbath

UK fans might be interested to know that Final Cut Entertainment also put out a new DVD release of this title back in May 2015, although the only extras included were a stills gallery.



Tuesday, 28 July 2015

Cover art for Kino Lorber's The Oblong Box Blu-ray release unearthed!


Here is the cover art for the 20 October Blu-ray/DVD release in the US from Kino Lorber of The Oblong Box. Interestingly, according to The Vincent Price Exhibit curator Rick Squires, it wasn't the first time that American International Pictures had used the same illustration. As you can see below, it was used as pre-publicity for the US release of Witchfinder General (The Conqueror Worm).

Kino's Oblong Box release will include an audio commentary from film historian Steve Haberman and one very exciting extra that I have never seen before, the 10-minute 1969 World Wide Adventures short Annabel Lee narrated by Vincent Price. Transferred from an original 35mm print, this has come from the personal collection of Price fan and Drive In Super Monster-Rama head honcho, George Reis. Now this is something worth checking out.

https://www.facebook.com/vincentpriceexhibit

Saturday, 21 February 2015

The Comedy of Terrors (1963) | Your favourite creeps together again in HD - the Arrow Video UK release

With the 1963 horror farce, The Comedy of Terrors, now in HD, here's what you get in the new Arrow Video UK Blu-ray/DVD combo release.




THE ARROW UK BLU-RAY/DVD RELEASE
The Comedy of Terrors is presented its original aspect ratio of 2.35:1 with mono 2.0 audio (uncompressed PCM on Blu-ray). The HD master was made available by MGM via Hollywood Classics, and includes optional English subtitles.

THE EXTRAS
• Audio commentary with David Del Valle and Rapid Heart TV's David DeCocteau. Del Valle dedicates this commentary to actress Joyce Jameson, a great friend to the film historian who tragically took her life in 1987, aged 54. My full analysis of the commentary is coming soon.

Vincent Price: My Life and Crimes: This is the unseen alternate cut of the 1987 David Del Valle interview that was previously released on DVD in 2002 as The Sinister Image. An historic testament to Price, despite the ageing video source material.

Whispering in Distant Chambers: 17-min video essay by David Cairns, exploring the recurrent themes (like the 'nocturnal walk') and stylistic motifs of Tourneur's work. This is quite informative, nicely narrated by Fiona Watson, with Cairns quoting the director.

Richard Matheson Storyteller - Comedy of Terrors This featurette on the late screenwriter also appears on the Shout! Blu-ray and on the older MGM Midnite Movies DVD.

• Original US theatrical trailer The film looks racier and scarier than it actually was in this unrestored trailer.

• Collector’s booklet featuring a critical analysis of the film by Chris Fujiwara, author of Jacques Tourneur: The Cinema of Nightfall, plus archive stills and posters. Nice litte primer for classic horror newbies and film studies students.

• Newly commissioned artwork by digital artist Paul Shipper. See more of his work (here)



OTHER RELEASES
Also available on Blu-ray from Scream Factory (from October 2014), an imprint of Shout! Factory, as part of their Vincent Price Collection II bundle, which includes a Iowa Public Television introduction with Price, but no audio commentary. Blu-ray reviewers have praised Arrow’s transfer over this one, both for its excellent print and audio transfer, and for the fact that a couple of seconds that were missing in the Shout! release are present here. A German Blu-ray was also released in May 2013.

Friday, 13 February 2015

The Comedy of Terrors | A look back at Jacques Tourneur's 1963 horror farce starring four masters of the macabre!



To mark the 16 February UK Blu-ray/DVD release of 1963's The Comedy of Terrors from Arrow Video, here's a look back at the vintage horror farce.

‘You’re invited to a funeral’
Welcome to the Hinchley & Trumbull funeral parlour, the only establishment of its kind that has found the secret of increasing business - by furnishing its own corpses! From Jacques Tourneur, director of the horror classics, Cat People, I Walked with a Zombie and Night of the Demon, comes the 1963 horror spoof, The Comedy of Terrors, starring four masters of the macabre - Vincent Price, Peter LorreBasil Rathbone and Boris Karloff.

‘What place is this?’
Inebriate undertaker Waldo Trumbull (Price) is running a New England funeral home business owned by his ageing father-in-law (Karloff)… straight into the ground. Hounded by his penny-pinching landlord Mr Black (Rathbone) for non-payment of rent, Trumbull and his put upon assistant Felix Gillie (Lorre) hatch a plan to boost business. But murder is not their forté, especially when their latest ‘client’ refuses to stay dead…

‘Every shroud has a silver lining when old friends get together for a real swinging blast of grave robbery… poisoning, and multiple mayhem!’

So declared the promo poster for American International Pictures' horror spoof, The Comedy of Terrors, which famously brought together four great names from the horror hall of fame. In the early-1960s, AIP were riding high with their winning formula of director Roger Corman, star Vincent Price, screenwriter Richard Matheson, composer Les Baxter, et all. Following their full-on Colorscope Gothic horrors, The Fall of the House of Usher and The Pit and the Pendulum, AIP added some comic relief in 1962's Tales of Terror, in a segment called The Black Cat, whose highlight was an improvised wine tasting scene between Price and Lorre.

Because the two spooks gelled so well, director Corman gave Price and Lorre the chance to do it all over again in his 1963 fantasy spoof, The Raven. Out of that was born a gruesome twosome comedy duo that were like an Abbott & Costello for the drive-in generation. Wanting to tap those funny bones again, AIP gave Matheson free reign to conjure up another vehicle for them. The result was The Comedy of Terrors (originally called Graveside Story), which was shot over 15 days, starting 4 September 1963, and released in US cinemas on 22 January 1964.

‘Comedy and terror are closely allied. My job as an actor is to try and make the unbelievable believable and the despicable delectable’ Vincent Price

As the roguish Waldo Trumbull, Price is at his ‘delicious boozy hammiest’ - according to the New York Herald Tribune – and has a whale of a time making the most of Matheson’s venomous dialogue – in particular his sardonic put-downs on Lorre's wanted fugitive Felix (who is a terrible coffin-maker, I might add), while their slapstick misadventures evoke Laurel and Hardy – Price even gets to reappropriate their famous catchphrase: ‘A fine mess you’ve made of things again!’

Sadly, this would be the last time that the two pals got to act together, as the 59-year-old Lorre was in poor health during the shoot (his regular stunt double Harvey Parry did all of his action scenes wearing a mask), and died just two months after the film’s release. Fittingly, it was Price who delivered the eulogy.


Interestingly in this film, Price and Lorre reverse the roles they played in Tales of Terror, and again there's Joyce Jameson playing a buxom mistreated wife with a drunk for a hubby. As Amaryllis, an unfulfilled opera star with the ‘vocal emissions of a laryngitic cow’, Jameson hits a real high with her ‘off-key’ singing during a funeral service, while her verbal sparring with Price is eminently quotable.


Veterans Rathbone and Karloff are also game for a laugh in this Arsenic and Old Lace-styled affair (and shares a similar structure as that classic 1941 play which famously sent up Karloff's horror screen persona). Rathbone is exceptional as the Shakespearean-spouting cataleptic who refuses to ‘shuffle off his mortal coil’, while he also gets to play up his thespian image and swashbuckling days (the sword play being an homage to 1938's The Adventures of Robin Hood.)

At 76, and suffering from arthritis, Karloff was not up to playing Mr Black, a role which was originally offered to him. But as the endearingly senile Amos, who somehow manages to avoid the poison that Waldo offers him at every turn, Karloff is only one who keeps the farce from taking full flight.


The downside to Tourneur's film, however (it was the director's second-to-last feature before some TV work and then retiring), is that it's rather stagey and old-fashioned (especially for the 1960s teen crowd that it was aimed at). It remains, however, a firm favourite of mine – a gleefully ghoulish slapstick affair with a classy never-to-be-repeated cast of old Hollywood greats.

This fine caricature by Jack Manning was available as part of AIP’s original marketing campaign.

DID YOU KNOW?
Richard Matheson scripted a follow-up called Sweethearts and Horrors, that was to feature the fearsome four once again, but it was shelved due to Lorre’s death and the film’s poor box-office takings. The unfilmed screenplay ended up being released in 2009 as part of Matheson's collected works, entitled Visions Deferred.

THE SCORE
The music is by celebrated composer Les Baxter (who also did the US scores for Mario Bava's Black Sabbath and The Evil Eye in 1963, as well as Corman's The Raven). The complete mono session which was recorded in November 1963 at Goldwyn Studios was uncovered from the MGM vaults last year and released on a now sold out CD.


 RHUBARB | THE CAT IN THE HOUSE OF UNHOLY HORROR
Cleopatra is played by one of Hollywood’s most celebrated animal stars, Rhubarb (aka Orangey) – a 12-pound marmalade tabby who won two American Humane Association’s PATSY awards for 1951’s Rhubarb and 1961’s Breakfast at Tiffany’s (in which he has almost seven minutes of screen time), and who also appeared in The Incredible Shrinking Man (1957) and Village of the Giants (1965). In The Comedy of Terrors, Rhubarb gets an inspired scene in the closing credits.



My review of Arrow's UK Blu-ray/DVD release - coming soon!



Wednesday, 28 January 2015

Roger Corman's horror classic Tales of Terror gets a US Blu-ray release from Kino


Here’s a first look at the reversible artwork for the US Blu-ray/DVD release of Roger Corman’s 1963 classic, Tales of Terror, starring Vincent Price, Peter Lorre, Basil Rathbone and Joyce Jameson, which is due out in April.

It was be released through the US label Kino Lorber Studios Classics, and the transfer will be based on MGM’s HD master (2.35:1 widescreen). The extras will include a new interview with producer/director Roger Corman, audio commentaries by film historian Tim Lucas, David Del Valle and actor David Frankham, Roger Corman’s Trailers from Hell review of the film, and theatrical trailer.

Tales of Terror is also available on Blu-ray as part of Arrow's Six Gothic Tales release, and will be available separately from 9 March with the same extras that were included in the boxset (read more here).

So what do you make of the covers? Let's us know, by leaving a comment below.



Sunday, 14 December 2014

Vincent Price in Six Gothic Tales | A peek inside the collector’s booklet?


If you want a further reason to add Arrow's Vincent Price in Six Gothic Tales limited edition Blu-ray box-set to your collection, here's a look at the collector's booklet...

  
The House is the Monster Video Watchdog editor Tim Lucas, who also supplies the commentary on The Fall of the House of Usher (1960), looks back at why Roger Corman chose to adapt Edgar Allan Poe’s tale of ‘corrupted lives and imminent doom’ for the big screen. This essay was originally published in Arrow’s booklet accompanying their stand-alone Blu-ray release (read my review here).

  
The Waiting Pit of Hell Gothic Horror author Jonathan Rigby waxes lyrical over The Pit and the Pendulum (1961), Corman’s second Poe adaptation, paying particular attention to star Vincent Price’s barnstorming performance. This essay also appeared in Arrow’s booklet that went out with the stand-alone Blu-ray release (reviewed here).

 
Three Down, Five to Go A Natural History of Ghosts author Roger Clarke traces the history of Tales of Terror (1962), the third Corman/Poe film in which star Vincent Price gives a trio of ‘lip-smacking turns’: as a Byronic necrophiliac (Morella); an adulterous wine connoisseur (The Black Cat); and a man suspended in a mesmeric trance (in The Case of Mr Valdemar).
• The title of this article includes Corman's The Premature Burial, which starred Ray Milland instead of Price, in the series. It should, however, have been called Four Down, Five to Go, as that film went out three months before Tales of Terror. 1964's Masque of the Red Death is not included in this release as it's owned by StudioCanal.
• Best bit of trivia: Voice-over artist Lennie Weinrib, who plays a policeman in the Black Cat segment, was the original voice of Scrappy-Doo in 1979 (still hate that character), and also voiced HR Pufnstuf (one of my favourites).


Comedy and Karloff BFI National Archive curator Vic Pratt reveals how Roger Corman’s 'Mad Magazine parody of a Corman horror', The Raven (1963) was a showcase for veteran star Boris Karloff’s skill and versatility as an actor, and introduced the old-timer to a new generation, the college crowd.

  
Strange Echoes and Fevered Reptitions Birbeck College professor Roger Luckhurst traces the history of Corman’s fifth Poe adaptation, the underrated The Haunted Palace (1963), which was actually based on the 1927 HP Lovecraft novella, The Case of Charles Dexter Ward.

  
The Last of the Corman-Poes: Excavating The Tomb of Ligeia Julian Upton provides a witty and incisive essay on the making of The Tomb of Ligeia (1964), Corman’s lush final Poe entry, that gave the director the best reviews of his entire career and remains the finest interpretation of a Poe tale on the big screen.


Vincent Price: His Movies, His Plays, His Life An excerpt from the 1978 biography that was ghost written for the legendary actor. This made me want to dig my copy out again.  

Better to be On the Set than in the Office Film historian David Del Valle interviews Roger Corman about his Poe screen adaptations. This is a reprint of an article that originally appeared in Films & Filming in November 1984. For those not familiar with Corman’s cycle, this is an informative inclusion.

The Black Cat/The Trick Director Rob Green (The Bunker) discusses the making of his two 1990s shorts. Having never heard of the director before, I would have preferred the inclusion of Curtis Harrington’s first and final shorts (both adaptations of Poe’s Usher story) as that 'cult' director had a direct connection to Corman.

The Dell Comic Tie-Ins Included are full reproductions of the Dell Comic adaptations of Tales of Terror (originally published in February 1963), The Raven (1963) and Tomb of Ligeia (1965). This is real treat (and something I will be elaborating on in an article for a book to be published in 2015).


Saturday, 6 December 2014

Vincent Price in Six Gothic Tales | Everything you want to know about Arrow's Special Edition Contents


Arrow’s limited edition box-set, Vincent Price in Six Gothic Tales, not only contains HD Blu-ray presentations of all six features directed by King of the B's Roger Corman, but also a wealth of new and archives commentaries, interviews and featurettes for each film. Plus, some of the best newly commissioned illustrations I have ever seen. Here’s a break down of what’s inside the box-set, with my comments attached.  

 
THE FALL OF THE HOUSE OF USHER
(these supplements are a re-issue, click here for my original review)
• Audio commentary with Roger Corman. This is the same one that you get on the 2001 MGM Midnight Movies DVD release and was also included on Scream Factory's Vincent Price Collection I Blu-ray.
Legend to Legend (27min): Joe Dante talks low-budget movie making and provides some neat anecdotes.
The House is the Monster (30min): Gothic Horror author Jonathan Rigby re-examines the film. This featurette comes with a spoiler warning.
• Vincent Price - Malibu - Julliet 86 (12min): Interview subtitled in French by Claude Ventura, which was broadcast on French TV on 18 November 1986. This is well known amongst Price fans and was done while Price was doing Basil, The Great Mouse Detective.
Fragments of the House of Usher (11min): Critic and filmmaker David Cairns examines Corman’s film in relation to Poe’s story.
• US trailer (unrestored) • Artwork by Graham Humphreys

The Scream Factory Vol 1 Blu-ray have the added bonus of Price's intros, but this is a must-have. It also boasts a superior transfer. 



THE PIT AND THE PENDULUM
(This is also a re-issue, click here for my original release)
• Audio commentary with the always charismatic Roger Corman. This was first included on the 2001 MGM DVD release, and is also on the Scream Factory Vol 1 Blu-ray.
• Audio commentary courtesy of the always informative Tim Lucas.
The Story Behind the Swinging Blade (43min): Documentary on the making of the film.
An Evening of Edgar Allan Poe (1970, 52min): Four classic Poe tales dramatised by Vincent Price unplugged, including The Tell-Tale Heart, The Sphinx, The Cask of Amontillado and The Pit and the Pendulum. (Unfortunately the 1080p transfer doesn’t improve on the original video source).
• Added TV Sequence (5min): Shot in 1968 to pad out the film for the longer TV time slot, this scene features star Luana Anders.
• US trailer (unrestored and pan and scan)
• Artwork by Gilles Vranckx

ED: This is also a must-have, with Tim Lucas' audio commentary and the inclusion of the Poe TV dramatisation being the highlights.


 TALES OF TERROR
The Directors - Roger Corman (90min): This 1990 documentary explores Corman’s career.
NEW Kim Newman on Edgar Allan Poe (30min): the novelist and critic, who'd make a darn fine lecturer in film studies, looks back at Poe’s influence on the big screen. There's an error on the screen menu: 'in' instead of 'on', however Arrow tell me that was corrected and only appears on the review copies.
NEW Cats in Horror Films (10min): Anne Billson, a novelist, critic, photographer and blogger (catsonfilm.net), discusses the contributions of our feline friends to genre cinema.
NEW The Black Cat (1993, 18min): Short film directed by Rob Green. Though it abridges Poe’s original verse, the visuals are very Cormanesque.
• US theatrical Trailer (unrestored, but in the correct ratio)
• Artwork by Dan Mumford

ED: This is a coup for Arrow as it is not on either of Scream Factory’s Blu-ray box sets.



 THE RAVEN
NEW Peter Lorre: The Double Face (1984, 60min): Documentary about the German actor, from his early days in the theatre with Bertolt Brecht to his death in 1964. Subtitled. (unrestored).
Richard Matheson: Storyteller (1993, 62min): This interview with the novelist and screenwriter also appeared on the 2001 MGM DVD release and on the Scream Factory Vincent Price Collection II Blu-ray.
Corman’s Comedy of Poe (2003, 8min): Roger Corman (in cool, calm and collected mode) on the making of the spoof comedy. This is also included on the Scream Factory Vol 2 Blu-ray.
NEW The Trick (1997, 12min): Director Rob Green’s short film about rival magicians. This has shades of The League of Gentlemen meets Buston Keaton.
• Gallery: Fantastic stuff. Can we have a pdf please Arrow? BTW: Check out Lorre smoking what looks like joint.
NEW Promotional Record (6min): OMG! Paul Frees introduces Peter Lorre reciting Poe’s poem with Boris Karloff telling us its ‘the most blood curling thing you’ll ever see’! Also included on the Scream Factory Vol 2 Blu-ray.
• US trailer (unrestored)
• Artwork by Vladimir Zimakov

ED: The promo record is a real bonus here.


THE HAUNTED PALACE
NEW Audio commentary by David Del Valle and Derek Botelho (author of The Argento Syndrome). Dedicated to the late Cathie Merchant, who appears as Hester Tillinghast in the horror, this commentary is fascinating stuff from David Del Valle, who shares my love for this underrated film. He has some great anecdotes (like Price becoming a millionaire after taking a profit percentage instead of a salary for House on Haunted Hill), while Derek makes a great sidekick - when he finally gets a word in. Best bit of trivia: the Aztec symbol painted on the dungeon wall also appears in Die, Monster, Die and The Dunwich Horror (which were also designed by Daniel Haller).
NEW Kim Newman on HP Lovecraft (30min): The novelist looks at the challenges of adapting Lovecraft's stories to the screen. You can tell this was filmed on the same day as his Tales of Terror segment by the bits of dust (or are they crumbs of food) on his jacket.
A Change of Poe (2003, 10min): Roger Corman looks at the making of the film. This was also on the 2001 MGM DVD release and is included in the Scream Factory Vol 1 Blu-ray.
• Gallery (silent, with a couple of newbies)
• US trailer (unrestored)
• Artwork by Matthew Griffin

ED: The audio commentary is the highlight here.



THE TOMB OF LIGEIA
• Audio commentaries by Roger Corman and Elizabeth Shepherd. These originally appeared on the 2001 MGM DVD release, and are also on the Scream Factory Vol 2 Blu-ray. (The Shepherd one also has poor sound).
NEW Interview with Paul Mayersberg, who worked as Corman’s everyman assistant, doing everything from finding the location and hiring the cats (they kept running away), script rewrites and filming the holiday sequence at Stonehenge. Recorded 30 September 2014. (25min).
NEW Interview with 1st AD David Tringham, who talks about working with the fast-working Corman and his fears of the studio set catching fire. Recorded 26 September 2014 (8min).
NEW Interview with clapper loader Bob Jordan about shooting in widescreen on a low budget and of filming on location. Recorded 7 October 2014 (8min).
NEW Interview with composer Kenneth V Jones, who talks about the challenges of creating a score without Corman’s input. Recorded 11 March 2014. (6min). Now this is one soundtrack that so needs an official release. Anyone? • US trailer (unrestored)
• Artwork by the Twins of Evil (aka Luke Insect and Kenn Goodall)

ED: Those interviews are priceless. Thank you Arrow.

Each feature is presented in the original 2.35:1 aspect ratio and offer uncompressed linear PCM 2.0 mono tracks. I found them all to be a richly colourful, pristine-looking upgrade on my MGM DVD releases. And while I already have the Usher and Pit SteelBooks, this Blu-ray box-set makes for a great companion piece. Now, what do I do with those DVDs?  

Vincent Price in Six Gothic Tales is available on Blu-ray from Arrow from Monday 8 December 2014

Friday, 28 November 2014

Vincent Price in Six Gothic Tales | Arrow unwrap their Blu-ray box-set

Christmas has come early for Vincent Price fans (like myself) and aficionados of Roger Corman's 1960s-lensed films inspired by the feverish imaginings of Edgar Allan Poe, as Arrow Films unwrap their Six Gothic Tales Blu-ray box-set (due out on 8 December).



Included in the box-set is 1960's The Fall of the House of Usher and 1961's The Pit and the Pendulum (both released separately earlier this year); 1962's Tales of Terror (which adapts Poe’s Morella, The Black Cat and The Facts in the Case of Mr Valdemar); 1963's The Raven (a comic take on Poe's poem co-starring Boris Karloff and Peter Lorre); 1964's The Haunted Palace (the first screen adaptation of a HP Lovecraft story); and the necromantic masterpiece The Tomb of Ligeia, which ended the Poe/Price/Corman cycle in 1965.


 
This limited edition run of just 2000 copies features all six features in high definition Blu-ray (based on the MGM HD masters, with additional restoration overseen by Arrow), with original uncompressed mono PCM audio and optional English subtitles. The special features are pretty impressive (click here for the full list) and there's a hardback collector’s book which features full repros of three comic tie-ins as well as some insightful essays on the films. Eagle eyes will notice a slight change to the packaging, as Roger Corman's name has been dropped since I last did a post about this release back in October.

While there are no plans for any Steelbook releases for these titles, unlike The House of Usher and The Pit & the Pendulum, Arrow will be releasing The Haunted Palace and The Tomb of Ligeia as standalone Blu-ray releases on 23 February 2015, featuring some wicked cover designs; while Jacques Tourneur's 1963 spoof The Comedy of Terrors (one of my favourites) will be out on 16 February. The Raven will also be released in 2015, but no date has been set, and the same goes for Tales of the Terror.

And if you are wondering why Masque of the Red Death isn't included in this box-set - ask StudioCanal. They own the print and denied Arrow's request to sublicense it for this release. Silly them! Don't they know there are some serious completists out there! Me included.

I'll be posting reviews of the box-set and its contents shortly, so watch this space!

Amazon Order Link Here £61.25
Arrow Video Order Link Here £69.99
Zavvi Order Link Here £59.99

Monday, 27 October 2014

Take a look at the Vincent Price Collection II Blu-ray Collection from Scream Factory!


Get ready for seven chilling tales starring the master of the macabre as Shout!'s Scream Factory release the second volume of their Vincent Price Blu-ray collection for the US/Canada markets, all featuring new re-mastered HD presentations, a host of extras and a collector’s book. Here’s the full run down.

While its the first time for most of these features to be presented in HD*, not all of the bonus content is new. What I am looking forward though are the Iowa Public Television Gothic Horrors segments (they were the best part of Vol 1), Elizabeth Shepherd's audio commentary for Tomb of Ligeia, and also the commentaries by David Del Valle, who is always a scream. The Raven, The Comedy of Terrors, and The Last Man on Earth also feature the late Richard Matheson discussing his work on those films (I haven’t seen those before, so am not sure they have exised elsewhere).

Have you got your box set yet and want to share your thoughts, then do leave a comment here.

House on Haunted Hill (1959)

A millionaire offers $10,000 to five people who agree to be locked in a spooky house overnight.
(1080p HD Widescreen, 1.78:1, DTS Master Audio Mono, Black & White, 75 min)
• Audio Commentary by Film Historian Steve Haberman
• Theatrical Trailer
Vincent Price: Renaissance Man featurette
The Art of Fear Featurette
• Working with Vincent Price featurette

The Return of the Fly (1959)
15 years after the tragic death of scientist Andre Delambre, his son Philippe (Brett Halsey) takes up transportation experimentation with equally horrifying results.
(1080p HD Widescreen, 2.35:1, DTS Master Audio Mono, Black & White, 86 min)
• Audio Commentary with actor Brett Halsey and film expert David Del Valle
• Theatrical Trailer
• TV Spot
• Still Gallery

The Comedy of Terrors (1963)

An undertaker and his assistant (Peter Lorre) are forced to commit a murder in order to keep their business from going under.
(1080p HD Widescreen, 2.35:1, DTS Master Audio Mono, Color,  83min)
• Introduction and Parting Words by Vincent Price (IPT Gothic Horrors segment)
• Richard Matheson Storyteller: The Comedy of Terrors
• Theatrical Trailer
• Still Gallery

The Raven (1963)

A magician (Peter Lorre) who has been turned into a raven turns to a former sorcerer (Price) for help in returning him to his human form.
(1080p HD Widescreen, 2.35:1, DTS Master Audio Mono, Color, 86min)• Introduction and Parting Words by Vincent Price (IPT Gothic Horrors segment)
• Richard Matheson Storyteller: The Raven
• Corman's Comedy of Poe
• Promotional Record (I'm liking this)
• Theatrical Trailer
• Still Gallery

The Last Man on Earth (1964)

When a disease turns all of humanity into the living dead, a scientist (Price) becomes a reluctant vampire hunter.
(1080p HD Widescreen, 2.35:1, DTS Master Audio Mono, Black & White, 87min)
Richard Matheson Storyteller: The Last Man On Earth
Still Gallery
Audio Commentary With Authors David Del Valle And Derek Botelho

Tomb of Ligeia (1964)

A man’s obsession with his dead wife drives a wedge between him and his new bride (Elizabeth Shepherd).
(1080p HD Widescreen, 2.35:1, DTS Master Audio Mono, Color, 82min)
• Introduction and Parting Words by Vincent Price (IPT Gothic Horrors segment)
• Audio Commentary By Producer/Director Roger Corman
• Audio Commentary with Elizabeth Shepherd NEW

Dr Phibes Rises Again (1972)

The vengeful Phibes heads to Egypt in an attempt to resurrect his beloved wife Victoria, but he’s not the only one seeking the elixir of life.
(1080p HD Widescreen, 1.85:1, DTS Master Audio Mono, Color, 89min)
• Theatrical Trailer
• Still Gallery
* The Complete Dr Phibes Blu-ray release from Arrow in the UK is actually a far superior release to this one. (check out my review); while a stand alone Region A/1 Blu-ray was released in May 2014 from Cinema Cult.

Order from
Shout! Factory



Monday, 19 May 2014

Theatre of Blood (1973) | Vincent Price has reserved a seat for you as the cult black comedy makes its Blu-ray debut




With its worldwide Blu-ray debut coming out today (Monday 19 May), here's my retrospective look at the deliciously macabre 1973 cult classic and a full analysis of Arrow Video's fantastic release. 

A TOAST TO THE IMMORTAL BARD
In a role that was tailor-made for the actor, Vincent Price plays tormented tragedian Edward Lionheart who executes an ingenious plot to use the works of William Shakespeare to kill off London's leading theatre critics who had ridiculed his career. Three years after a failed suicide attempt, and with a group of meths-swilling vagrants acting as his chorus and his devoted daughter Edwina (Diana Rigg) as his leading lady, Lionheart opens his grisly new season devoted to the immortal Bard at the dilapidated Burbage Theatre. [SPOILER'S AHEAD]

George Maxwell (Michael Hordern) is butchered on the Ides of March in a re-enactment of the death of Julius Caesar; Hector Snipe (Dennis Price) is speared and his corpse dragged behind a horse, the fate of Hector at the hands of Achilles in Troilus and Cressida; and Horace Sprout (Arthur Lowe) has his head sawed off in a bizarre reworking of Cymbeline.

Theatre of Blood (1973)

Baffled, the police (Milo O’Shea and Eric Sykes) call on leading critic Peregrine Devlin (Ian Hendry) to help them in their investigation, but Lionheart’s show must go on. The Merchant of Venice’s Shylock gets his pound of flesh from Trevor Dickman (Harry Andrews); Richard the III drowns booze-hound Oliver Larding (Robert Coote) in a cask of Chambertin 1964, and Othello’s Iago coerces possessive Solomon Psaltery (Jack Hawkins) into smothering his wife (Dina Dors). While recreating the famous duel scene in Romeo and Juliet – on trampolines – Lionheart vents his rage on Devlin before revealing how he survived his suicide attempt. Meanwhile, the might of the entire London police force are unable to stop Lionheart as Ms Chloe Moon (Coral Browne) is electrocuted while having a shampoo and pedicure in a flamboyant restaging of Joan of Arc being burnt at the stake in Henry VI, Part 1, and effeminate glutton Meredith Merridew (Robert Morley) is force-fed his ‘babies’ (his pet poodles) a la Queen Tamora in Titus Andronicus.

Theatre of Blood (1973)

With just one critic and one play left in his repertoire, Lionheart kidnaps Devlin and, as King Lear did to the Earl of Gloucester, threatens to blind him with two red-hot daggers if he does not give him the coveted Best Actor award. But when the police arrive, Lionheart sets the theatre on fire and, in the confusion, his daughter Edwina is struck dead with the award. Carrying her body aloft, Lionheart gives one final monologue on the top of the theatre before taking his bows. To which Devlin wryly comments: ‘It was a remarkable performance, but he was madly overacting as usual, but you must admit he did know how to make an exit.’

Theatre of Blood (1973)

LIONHEART IS IMMORTAL!

Theatre of Blood is arguably the magnum opus of actor Vincent Price’s film career and marked a fitting end to his Master of Menace persona, which had started out with 1953's House of Wax 20 years previously. It’s also a bone fide British cinema classic that holds its own thanks to a winning combination: brilliant one-of-a-kind supporting cast, first-rate production values, Anthony Greville-Bell’s literate script, which is an ingenious feat of dark comedy and pathos, Michael J Lewis’s glorious Elizabethean-inspired score, and the fabulous London locations, looking their summer best.

Theatre of Blood (1973)

But topping it all is Vincent Price’s tour-de-force performance. He’s certainly having gleeful fun appearing in a host of disguises: camp hairdresser, Scottish masseur, French chef, while picking off his victims, played by a bevy of respected British (and Australian) thespians, in ghoulish tongue-in-cheeck Grand Guignol fashion. But while giving full reign to his Master of Menace horror persona and playing up to his campy Uncle Vincent style of acting, Price – who called this his ‘favourite funny film’ – also lends great dignity to his demented Lionheart.

Theatre of Blood (1973)

The multiple guises also gave the 61-year-old the opportunity to show his own critics his extensive range, as well as the chance to perform his beloved Shakespeare, something he had been unable to do owing to his long-running film contract with American International Pictures. But while Price only gets to quote snippets from the Bard, he does so with aplomb – his ‘To Be or Not to Be’ projects real anger, while his King Lear speech is truly heartfelt.

Away from the screen, Price did get the chance to woo critics when he took to the stage in 1977 to play Oscar Wilde in John Gay’s Diversion & Delights. This one-man play would go on to perform in some 300 cities in the US, and a jaunt in Australia, over three years, thus giving Price the serious accolades he had longed sought after and so richly deserved.

 Theatre of Blood (1973)  

ABOUT THE ARROW BLU-RAY Arrow Films have done a fantastic job in bringing director Douglas Hickox’s cult black comedy to Blu-ray (and in a Blu-ray Steelbook) in the UK, beginning with a delightful menu that uses clips from the film and a section of Michael J Lewis’ melodic theme tune playing underneath. Arrow’s mastering of the MGM 1080P transfer is pristine with practically no grain. However, the audio in the feature (a linear PCM 2.0 channel at 2304 kbps) sounds slightly tinnie through my amp, and is particularly noticeable in the extras where clips from the film are used. There was also a glitch in the Harmony of Horror extra, which resulted in a delay in the release. Niggles aside, this is a great addition to my Vincent Price collection and your cult cinema library. And now for those wonderful extras…

THE EXTRAS
• The audio commentary by The League of Gentlemen (aka Mark Gatiss, Steve Pemberton, Reece Shearsmith and Jeremy Dyson) is hugely entertaining. Their imitations of the film’s best lines had me in stitches and I got a real chuckle out of them mistaking actor/choreographer Tutte Lemkow for a woman. This so deserves to be a stand alone podcast.

A Priceless Pot-Boiler: Vincent Price’s daughter Victoria takes a personal look at how the film marked the end of her father’s 23-year marriage to her mother, Mary, and the beginning of her relationship with her ‘wicked’ stepmother, Coral Browne. Victoria also describes what a wonderful speaker of verse her dad was, who also taught her to speak in iambic pentameter as a young child.

A Fearful Thespian: Film historian David Del Valle (who interviewed Price as part of his Sinister Image series in 1987) discusses how the black comedy was the actor’s favourite film and why Price’s legacy lives on because he always gave 100% in his performances, even when he was 'over acting'.

Staged Reaction: Actress Madeline Smith (one of the few cast members still alive) recalls how there was ‘nothing romantic’ about the making of the film, given its short filming schedule, tight budget, it’s hard task master director and aging cast. She also reveals how her scenes as Ian Hendry’s love interest were cut (which now explains why her character is present in the film's climax).

A Harmony of Horror: The larger than life composer Michael J Lewis recounts how he created the score, then performs the main themes on a 1894 Bechstein piano that he had used to compose the music (although he goes off key playing Edwina’s Theme). And if you want to know why he’s wearing that pink satin shirt and cowboy hat, it’s because he’s a big devotee of Texas honky tonky. This one is certainly a coup in my books, as Lewis has also been one of my all-time favourite composers.

• UK theatrical trailer: Watching this unrestored, pan-and scan-trailer, just shows how good the HD transfer really is.

Saturday, 12 April 2014

Scream with delight! Arrow's Theatre of Blood Blu-ray to include a commentary by The League of Gentlemen!


Yes! Yes! Yes! The full specs are in from Arrow Films forthcoming 5 May release on Blu-ray (and DVD) of THEATRE OF BLOOD. Here they are:

  • Limited Edition SteelBook packaging
  • High Definition Blu-ray (1080p) presentation of the feature, transferred from original film elements by MGM
  • Original uncompressed mono PCM audio
  • Optional English SDH subtitles for the deaf and hard of hearing
  • Audio commentary with The League of Gentlemen, Jeremy Dyson, Mark Gatiss, Steve Pemberton and Reece Shearsmith
  • A Priceless Potboiler: Victoria Price discusses Theatre of Blood
  • A Fearful Thespian: an interview with David Del Valle
  • Staged Reaction: an interview with star Madeleine Smith
  • A Harmony for Horror: an interview with composer Michael J. Lewis
  • Original Trailer
  • Collector’s booklet featuring new writing on the film by film critic Cleaver Patterson and a reproduction of original press book material, illustrated with original archive stills.
These extras are all fantastic news, and kudos go to Arrow for producing them. But did you know the kinds of extras you see in yellow are now under threat due to reclassification changes by the BBFC in the UK to the Video Recordings Act (VRA), which means increased costs in producing them.

A petition was set up in March and attracted over 3,000 signatures, but the revised VRA has since become law. But you can still make a difference. The next stage is that the BBFC will decide how to change their rules to accomodate the revised VRA. So please use the link below to sign, then forward it to your friends and share on Facebook and Twitter.

Thank You

https://you.38degrees.org.uk/p/vra


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Saturday, 22 February 2014

Arrow Video has reserved a seat for you in The Theatre of Blood on Blu-ray



Now this I'm excited about. Arrow Video will be releasing Theatre of Blood on Blu-ray and as a Limited Edition Blu-ray SteelBook on 28 April, complete with a high definition transfer and a stack of special extras. No news yet on what they might me. But as soon as I hear, I'll post it up here. Cross fingers Michael J Lewis' excellent soundtrack is included as an extra. And wouldn't it be a coup to have Dame Diana Rigg interviewed about her time on the film?

Friday, 21 February 2014

Arrow Video announce the UK Blu-ray release of Pit & the Pendulum and the Complete Dr Phibes

Arrow Video have announced the dates for the UK Blu-ray releases of The Pit & the Pendulum and the two Dr Phibes films.





The Pit and the Pendulum will be released on 12 May (just in time for Price's birthday on the 27th) and will include a high definition digital transfer, newly created exclusive content (which is yet to be finalised), reversible sleeve featuring original and newly commissioned artwork by Gilles Vranckx, collector’s booklet featuring new writing on the film, archive content and more
. Now, will you go for the standalone Blu-ray or the SteelBook?




The Complete Dr Phibes will be released as a two-disc box-set on 9 June, again with HD digital transfers of both films, bonus content, deluxe edition collector’s box featuring original artwork and a 100-Page collector’s booklet. Not sure what the special features will be, but wouldn't it be cool if it contained the two soundtracks and pdfs of William Goldstein's tie-in novels?


 

Monday, 30 September 2013

Blu-ray release | The Monster Club (1980) | Catch the ghouls, vampires, shadmocks and Vincent Price in HD



Out today (30 September) from Scorpion Releasing comes the 1980 horror anthology, The Monster Club, on Blu-ray for the very first time.


WELCOME TO THE MONSTER CLUB
This attempt by Milton Subotsky at resuscitating the horror anthology formula that he started back in 1965 with Dr Terrors House of Horrors, but in a semi-comic vein, proved a disappointment on its release and was the final film from his Amicus outfit. But the film has since attracted a cult following.

The first story deals with a shadmock, the professor of a lethal whistle (James Laurenson), and the woman (Barbara Kellerman) who tries to steal from him. The second story is a comical autobiographical film by producer Lintom Bustosky (Anthony Steel) involving his father vampire (Richard Johnson) and the cop (Donald Pleasance) on whom he turns the tables. The final episode, which is the most effective of the three, concerns a film producer (Stuart Whitman) whose ideal horror movie location proves to be populated by real ghouls.



Vincent Price appears in the framing device as a vampire who inducts John Carradine’s horror writer into a club for monsters, and it’s these scenes where the film is at its weakest - mainly due to the cheap make-up effects used for the club’s denizens and an embarrassing final dance scene (check out my monster mash-up on YouTube here). But there are some stand-out moments, namely Kellerman’s grisly demise, the fog-shrouded town that Whitman tries to escape from, and Price’s big speech in which he declares that man is the biggest monster of them all.

The stories are all based on the work of Ronald Chetwynd-Hayes and is directed by Hammer/Amicus veteran Roy Ward Baker. The music, which ranges from the dub sounds of UB40 and the rock of The Pretty Things (who celebrated 50 years on the road this year), was also released on record - now quite collectable, fetching up to US$400 on e-Bay. The film also appeared in comic form (pictured below) in Issue 25 of Dez Skinn's legendary UK Hammer horror fanzine Halls of Horror, which was drawn by John Bolton and David Lloyd (thanks Baron F from correcting me on that).


THE RELEASE
The Scorpion Releasing Blu-ray features a brand new HD transfer, a 62-minute interview with Vincent Price conducted in 1987 by film historian David Del Valle, a 40-minute audio interview between Del Valle and Price, on camera interview with Del Valle, Original Trailer, and isolated ME track.

THE VERDICT
I haven't had the chance to see this Blu-ray version - I have to wait until the UK version becomes available from Networking Distributing on 18 August (2014). But if you have, then do let me know what you think.