Showing posts with label bernard cribbins. Show all posts
Showing posts with label bernard cribbins. Show all posts

Friday 27 March 2020

KINO LORBER BRINGS BOTH 1960'S DR WHO FILMS TO THE USA ON BLU RAY FOR FIRST TIME!


SOME #GREATNEWS! #KinoLorber is putting out both #DrWho films starring #PeterCushing on blu-ray for the first time in US. The release dates have been announced but I am not sure the if current situation would effect these. I will keep you posted here!


DR. WHO AND THE DALEKS (1965)
• NEW Audio Commentary by Writer, Film Critic, Film Historian Kim Newman and Screenwriter, Writer, Film Historian Robert Shearman
• Audio Commentary with Actresses Jennie Linden and Roberta Tovey and Author Jonathan Sothcott
• Dalekmania: 57-Minute Documentary
• Interview with Author #GarethOwen
• Restoring #DrWhoandtheDaleks
• Optional English Subtitles
• Dual-Layered BD50 Disc
• Theatrical Trailer
Release Date: July 7th #2020



DALEKS' INVASION EARTH 2150 A.D. (1966)
• NEW Audio Commentary by Writer, Film Critic, 
Film Historian #KimNewman and Screenwriter, Writer, 
Film Historian Robert Shearman
#Dalekmania: 57-Minute Documentary
• Interview with Actor #BernardCribbins
• Interview with Author Gareth Owen
• Restoring Daleks’ Invasion Earth 2150 A.D.
• Optional English Subtitles
• Dual-Layered BD50 Disc
• Theatrical Trailer
Release Date: July 7th #2020


PCASUK FEATURE on the HISTORY of the DALEK MOVIE merchandise with #CallumMcKelvie with GALLERY HERE!  


 MORE PCASUK DR WHO DALEKS HERE!
 

ANOTHER #CALLUMMCKELVIE  Dr Who feature with STILLS GALLERY on 'DALEK INVAISION EARTH 2150 AD' RIGHT HERE!

Wednesday 10 April 2019

54 YEARS AGO THIS MONTH : THE MOST BEAUTIFUL WOMAN IN THE WORLD!


54 YEARS AGO, this month Hammer films, 'SHE' starring #PeterCushing, Ursula Andress, Christopher Lee and Bernard Cribbins opened in the UK on April 18th 1965! At the time of the opening Andress was billed as the most 'Beautiful Woman In the World'...maybe. Our PCAS album today, features Ursula in the role Ayesha, 'She Who Must Be Obeyed!' in the movie. These three posed 'on set' shots were taken by the studio photographer and quickly sent to the press publicity office... though few made it into the newspapers and magazines, which is a shame considering how amazing she looks. Blessed with a beauty that the camera loved, it was Hammer make up artist, Roy Ashton's job, to devise a whole series of make up's that turned Ursula into a woman of several hundred years old...and dust! How do you rate Andress with the many other attractive actresses who starred in Hammer / Cushing films?

#petercushing #bondgirl #pinup #hammerfilms #obey! #hellodarling!"




HERE IS A PCAS feature and a pretty comprehensive guide to the various SHE cinema adaptions over the years  and a GALLERY including #PeterCushing's role of Holly in Hammer films 1965 production! JUST CLICK HERE! 



Saturday 29 December 2018

BERNARD CRIBBINS HITS 90 YEARS OF AGE AND WE REMEMBER THE QUEEN OF CREEPY WOMEN TODAY!


IT'S A VERY HAPPY 90TH BIRTHDAY to BERNARD CRIBBINS TODAY! Born in 1928, Cribbins started his acting career at the tender age of 14! An actor since the age of 14 and was a major star on the London stage by his mid-20s. It would be another ten years before he became a national star with success in film comedies, with likes of Peter Sellers and a string of hit records, the most popular probably being, 'A Hole In The Ground' and 'Right Said Fred'. He appeared in several of the "Carry On" series, and also achieved a great degree of success doing voice-overs for cartoons and TV commercials. One of his biggest successes being the 1970's children's animated puppet series, 'The Wombles'.



CRIBBINS also took PETER CUSHING snorkelling in the Gulf of Aqaba! The pair were in Israel filming the Hammer films 'She', and Bernard recalls: “We did a couple of films together and that particular one was out in the Negev desert and we used to have a little swim at lunchtime. Peter was a very athletic gentleman. He played rugby, he told me, ‘I used to love to tackle people’ and you can’t imagine that ostensibly gentle man knocking people over! He was a good swimmer but he’d never been snorkelling, diving down and having a look at things, and he kept talking to me underwater, sounding like Bill and Ben the Flowerpot Men which had me in hysterics!"


BACK IN 1974 Cribbins was interviewed for the role of DOCTOR WHO in 1974, as the BBC prepared for Jon Pertwee, leaving the role. 'I didn't actually audition. But when Jon Pertwee was leaving, the producer Barry Letts - who died quite recently - interviewed a lot of actors, one of whom was me. I went along and sat down and he said 'now then what can you do?' I said 'I'm a very good swimmer, I was a paratrooper, I could fight' - and he said 'Oh no, no fighting no, the Doctor is never seen fighting at all!' So Tom Baker became the next Doctor, and one of the first things I remember him doing was knocking somebody out.'


BERNARD also appeared in many tv drama programes as a guest star throughout the 1960's and 70's including the popular 'The Avengers' in TWO episodes. 'The Girl From Auntie' and the weird, 'Look, Stop Me If You've Heard This One, But There Are These Two Fella's'! Of all his movie roles, Cribbins has a fondness for 'The Railway Children' directed by Lionel Jeffries in 1970, where he played Albert Perks. Cribbins has a longstanding association with the science-fiction series Doctor Who (1963). 


ABOVE: Cribbins as Arkwright in The Girl from Auntie (1966) ... his first role in the UK television series, 'THE AVENGERS'


ABOVE Cribbins as Bradley Marler, with comedian Jimmy Jewel in "Look - (Stop Me If You've Heard This One) But There Were These Two Fellers..." his second appearnce in The Avengers in 1966. 

NOT ONLY DID HE play a companion in the second Peter Cushing film, 'Daleks' Invasion Earth 2150 A.D.' (1966), which was 40 years before his regular role as a companion, Wilfred Mott, in the Russell T. Davies version of Doctor Who (2005). It certainly has been a very active and sucessful 90 years for sure. Please let us know what your favorite Cribbin's films, roles and shows so far . ..over at the FACEBOOK PCAS FAN PAGE. I think he is far from over yet! HAPPY 90th BIRTHDAY BERNARD and have a wonderful day😀


TODAY WE ARE ALSO REMEMBERING and marking the BIRTHDAY of actress . .  FREDA JACKSON who was born today. 29th December in 1907. Was there ever a more frightening actresses in a Peter Cushing Hammer film? Here we see her as the 'hair-raising' Greta in 'The Brides of Dracula' (1960) starring Peter Cushing, Yvonne Monlaur and David Peel. I have always thought it was a great shame that Hammer didn't cast her in any of their other films. She does appear in that 'is it a Hammer film or isn't it?'... 'Shadow of the Cat' (1961) as Clara the maid. But what a waste! Freda's performance as Greta in 'Brides' is as powerful now, as it was when the film was released all those years ago. What an actress! Happy Birthday, Freda!



FRED JACKSON'S GRETA, was also one of the very few feamle roles in Hammer's films, that also featured Cushing, that could give his character Van Helsing a fair fight on screen!!! 😮😉

Sunday 15 April 2018

CALLUM MCKELVIE'S CUSHING SUNDAY FEATURE: FLAMES GAMES AND PASSION! SHE HAS IT ALL!!


ANOTHER TRIP DOWN memory lane this week, examining a film that, although not strictly a horror picture, has become one of my all-time favourite Cushing roles. More than that it’s a film that represents what can be described as a ‘by-gon’e age of fiction, both literary and cinematically, that of the ‘Boys Own’ style adventure story. Produced in 1965, She was one of Hammer films most expensive productions and certainly one of their most lavish. Featuring an all-star cast, including ex-bond girl Ursula Andress as the title character, it’s a bold move for the studio and one that demonstrates that they really could compete with the big boys and weren’t just up to making horror pictures. I saw She during my early teens, when I became fascinated with the science fiction and fantasy of the Victorian age and of course the wonderful films of the 50’s and 60’s based on these works.




FROM THE EARLY 1950’s all the way to the mid 1970’s, there was a slew of science fiction, fantasy and adventure styled films based on the works of classic Victorian writers and adapted as period pieces. Amongst these were the works of such noted authors as H.G Welles, Jules Verne. Arthur Conan Doyle and the subject of todays piece H. Rider Haggard. These films were extravagant adventure films, with often fantastic set designs and equally superb casts. Amongst these films include such classics as Journey to the Centre of the Earth (1959), The Time Machine (1960), First Men in the Moon (1964), At The Earth’s Core (1976) and The Lost World (1960). 





DURING MY OBSESSION with this fascinating sub-genre I saw all of these and more, including films like Walt Disney’s wonderful adaptation of 20,000 Leagues Under the Sea. The latter is still one of my favourite films and James Masons portrayal is evident of the quality that was brought to this kind of film. It’s a genre that has, somewhat sadly, faded into the past. Partly this is due to the more dynamic difference between children’s and adult cinema, with family films now being dominated primarily by the Superhero genre. Also it can be connected to the dated colonial subtext of many of these films and their respective novels (though not all 20,000 Leagues is a wonderful piece of anti-colonial literature, with Nemo waging war against ‘that hated nation’).




MANY OF THESE FILMS helped me discovered the brilliant novels behind them and She is no exception. When I was first getting into Hammer, I purchased Marcus Hearn and Alan Barnes wonderful The Hammer Story, as something of a go-to guide. My Mother was fascinated upon discovering She was a Hammer film, it being something of a minor favourite of hers. That Christmas (along with The Reptile and Dracula: Prince of Darkness






I RECEIVED SHE as a gift and we watched it that boxing day. In my mind it’s still the perfect Boxing Day film, the mix of old fashioned adventure and pure wonder making great mid-afternoon viewing. Immediately I fell in love with Cushing’s portrayal of the character of Major Holly and the wonderful sincerity he brought to the role. When embarking on an exchange trip to Spain, I was inspired enough by the film to purchase the novel and well, I can safely say it’s a book that changed my life.


I HAVE SOMETHING of a theory that books read during ones formative years, if of significant quality will leave a lasting impression. Rider Haggard's She did that for me. Whilst certainly dated and having some….bizarre concepts (She herself being so beautiful that anyone who looks at her immediately falls in love- an idea thankfully scrapped in hammers film version) it’s still a wonderfully powerful exercise in fantasy. I have so many memories connected to that novel, reading it on the plane out loud to a friend and suddenly noticing that all the aisles surrounding me had gone quiet. Listening? Or wondering what the weird kid was doing reading out loud? I guess I’ll never know!







SADLY THOUGH, as grand and as wonderful as Hammers film version is, it simply couldn’t compete with the epic vistas presented in the novel. For the most part when reading there was very little I visualised from the film. I pictured a different woman to Ursula Andress (it may be sacrilege but I always found her portrayal a little stilted), the Balali of the novel is a kindly old man and so Christopher Lee was out too. All except Cushing. I’ve no idea if he read the book, though I suspect he did but he nails Rider Haggards portrayal instantly. Holly is the narrator and in many ways the main character of the novel and despite having slightly less to do in the film Cushing still manages to bring across the same sincerity and honesty that made him such a wonderful character.

ANOTHER SUNDAY CUSHING DOUBLE BILL RETURNS NEXT WEEK: JOIN US! 


DID YOU MISS CALLUM MCKELVIE'S SUNDAY CUSHING FEATURE LAST WEEK ON BRIDES OF DRACULA??? NO PROBLEM! THE CLIPS, GIFS AND RARE STILLS GALLERY ARE RIGHT HERE JUST CLICK THESE BLUE WORDS!




Saturday 30 December 2017

HAPPY BIRTHDAY BERNARD CRIBBINS!


IT'S A VERY HAPPY BIRTHDAY to BERNARD CRIBBINS TODAY! Born in 1928, Cribbins started his acting career at the tender age of 14! An actor since the age of 14 and was a major star on the London stage by his mid-20s. It would be another ten years before he became a national star with  success in film comedies, with likes of Peter Sellers and a string of hit records, the most popular probably being, 'A Hole In The Ground' and 'Right Said Fred'. He appeared in several of the "Carry On" series, and also achieved a great degree of success doing voice-overs for cartoons and TV commercials. One of his biggest successes being the 1970's children's animated puppet series, 'The Wombles'.


CRIBBINS was interviewed for the role of DOCTOR WHO in 1974, as the BBC prepared for Jon Pertwee, leaving the role. 'I didn't actually audition. But when Jon Pertwee was leaving, the producer Barry Letts - who died quite recently - interviewed a lot of actors, one of whom was me. I went along and sat down and he said 'now then what can you do?' I said 'I'm a very good swimmer, I was a paratrooper, I could fight' - and he said 'Oh no, no fighting no, the Doctor is never seen fighting at all!' So Tom Baker became the next Doctor, and one of the first things I remember him doing was knocking somebody out.'




BERNARD CRIBBINS also appeared in many tv drama programes as a guest star throughout the 1960's and 70's including the popular 'The Avengers' in TWO episodes. 'The Girl From Auntie' and the weird, 'Look, Stop Me If You've Heard This One, But There Are These Two Fella's'! Of all his movie roles, Cribbins has a fondness for 'The Railway Children' directed by Lionel Jeffries in 1970, where he played Albert Perks. Cribbins has a longstanding association with the science-fiction series Doctor Who (1963). Not only did he play a companion in the second Peter Cushing film, 'Daleks' Invasion Earth 2150 A.D.' (1966), which was 40 years before his regular role as a companion, Wilfred Mott, in the Russell T. Davies version of Doctor Who (2005).



CRIBBINS also appeared with Peter Cushing in the Hammer films, 'SHE' in (1965). Peter also appeared as a guest on his  BBC light Entertainment show, 'CRIBBINS' in the 60's!


HAPPY BIRTHDAY BERNARD! 


REMEMBER! IF YOU LIKE what you see here at our website, you'll  love our daily themed posts at our PCAS FACEBOOK FAN PAGE.  Just click that blue LINK and click LIKE when you get there, and help us . . Keep The Memory Alive!. The Peter Cushing Appreciation Society website, facebook fan page and youtube channel are managed, edited and written by Marcus Brooks, PCAS coordinator since 1979. PCAS is based in the UK and USA
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