Showing posts with label archive. Show all posts
Showing posts with label archive. Show all posts

Wednesday, 9 October 2019

WARNER BROTHERS ARCHIVE LATEST! ARE YOU TEMPTED? DONT MISS OUT!


TEMPTED? It looks like Peter Cushing's, shop proprietor of 'Temptations Ltd, has been restocking his store! 😉😊



WARNER ARCHIVE COLLECTION released the remastered blu ray of Amicus films, 'From Beyond The Grave' yesterday . . . 😃starring Peter Cushing, Donald Pleasence, David Warner, Ian Ogilvy, Diana Dors, Lesley-Anne Down, Jack Watson, Ian Carmichael, Ian Bannen, Margaret Leighton and many more . . we'll be launching our PCASUK competition very SOON. 🙂 It's your chance to win yourself a copy of this REGION FREE, remastered Amicus films, classic 🙂 DON'T miss out . . it's a BARGAIN 😉 - Marcus




Thursday, 5 April 2018

GIF WEDNESDAY! PACKED WITH PC ON THE FIDDLE: SHERLOCK : THE GHOUL AND A SLICED ROBIN HOOD : CLIPS AND WHOLE MOVIES


#CUSHINGGIFWEDNESDAY! LOTS OF COMMENTS and messages posted to me here and at our PCAS YOUTUBE CHANNEL these past few weeks on PETER CUSHING in THE GHOUL. EVEN interest in the music that Cushing's character DR LAWRENCE plays to Veronica Carlson's Daphne! Cushing did quite a convincing job, of faking playing, and there have been quite a few times where he has had to do the 'FIDDLE' visually, but I don't ever recall him doing so with a piano, which almost the most common musical fake up on screen ! HOW MANY can YOU THINK OF?


PETER CUSHING as SHERLOCK HOLMES in the BBC version of 'THE BLUE CARBUNCLE'


ABOVE THE ENTIRE CUSHING 'THE BLUE CARBUNCLE ' EPISODE 
from the BBC series in 1968


MUCH OF THE SOURCE MATERIAL FOR OUR WEEKLY GIFS, CAN BE FOUND IN THE ENTIRE UPLOADS OF THE PETER CUSHING FILMS AT OUR PCAS YOUTUBE CHANNEL!


JUST CLICK HERE  and be ENTERTAINED for HOURS! Please support us too and PLEASE SUBSCRIBE!
 

IT'S A GREAT PITY that both PETER CUSHING and DAVID WARNER only got to share such a short time together in a film, FROM BEYOND THE GRAVE. You can see in that scene, how they both had a chemistry, that complemented each other. IF they could have shared another film together, WHICH TITLE one would you choose?? Here nearing the end of  WARNER'S story in one of Amicus portmanteau movies, his poor character Edward Charlton in THE GATE CRASHER loses his will to find the 'figure' in the mirror, but sadly knows nothing of his own fate....   


CUSHING and WARNER in their very entertaining scene
together in FROM BEYOND THE GRAVE


FIND OUT MORE about the Amicus film FROM BEYOND THE GRAVE and other films that PETER CUSHING made with the company through out his career, at THIS excellent EIGHT PART serial on THE AMICUS FILMS OF PETER CUSHING. PART SIX covers FROM BEYOND THE GRAVE and several others from the period of time, including MADHOUSE with VINCENT PRICE! AS usual it's just a click away, RIGHT HERE!



HERE IS SOMETHING EXTRA CONNECTED TO 'FROM BEYOND THE GRAVE' . . MANY THANKS TO ROBIN MCDONALD who provided us with two great items for our #TOOCOOLTUESDAY posts a little while ago, you may have missed.... This artwork was produced as a in joke among the crew of Amicus films 'From Beyond The Grave' with Peter Cushing..the artwork was pinned to the clapper-board during some of the shooting! Robin McDonald, was a clapper operator on many of Peter's films.


AGAIN, MANY THANKS to Robin McDonald . .  who sent us his much treasured cards from Peter Cushing, to share with you. Peter DID so very much love his cuppa tea!!!


BARBARA MURRAY who sadly only died quite recently in September 2014, was an actress who SHOULD have appeared in MORE work of the THRILLER AND SUSPENSE kind with AMICUS or Hammer films. Sadly, she never did. MURRAY was very famous for her TV work and few films. She looks like the kind of actress that BOTH film companies would have employed, but apart from a role as Enid Jason in segment 4 "Wish You Were Here" in AMICUS 'TALES FROM THE CRYPT' it all passed her by. 


RICHARD GREEN  who plays her VICTIM Husband, Ralph Jason, . . . a role that PETER CUSHING was originally going to play in the film, NOT ARTHUR GRIMSDYKE, for which he just about stole the whole film and won much respect and an award for... and the late Roy Dotrice, who sadly left us last year, as her lover. It's a bit of a GORY-STORY, this one for Amicus, considering producer's MILTON SUBOTSKY dislike of any inclusion of BLOOD or sex in his scripts and finished films. BUT Barbara does good and Richard Greene, who also worked with PETER CUSHING in Hammer films, SWORD OF SHERWOOD FOREST, in his famous Robin Hood role . .dies, wonderfully!


SWORD OF SHERWOOD FOREST, was one the CUSHING FILMS that made the GREAT list of TOP FIVE PETER CUSHING NON HORROR MOVIES... TO FIND OUT what titles made the OTHER FOUR  CLICK HERE! 


#DRACULAAD1972, is slowly starting to get the respect and interest it maybe should have received on it's release SOOO MANY years ago, by Hammer films. We have relentlessly posted about it in FEATURES and GALLERIES since we first arrived on the net back in 2010. There is ONE particular scene, that we have dug around in for a LONG time. The DEATH OF BOB. For those of you, those of you not so familiar with the character played by, PHILLIP MILLER, Bob was a bit of limp boyfriend of CAROLINE MUNRO"S character LAURA BELLOWS. Bob was a kind of hip but sensible version of  FRED from the epic children's cartoon series SCOOBY DOO, but unlike Fred...DIES! It's not long before he too, falls under the spell of Christopher Lee's DRACULA and those two pointy teeth, until he is found denim's creased and he lifeless in the cemetery of St Bartolph's Church, by PETER CUSHING'S,  Professor Lorrimer Van Helsing. BUT HOW he got there OR died was never explained in the film. It was only when studying some CONTACT SHEETS in the PCAS archive, that we came across the solution . . . READ BELOW! What FUN!


ABOVE: COME WITH US in a GREAT BEHIND THE SCENES DOCUMENTARY on the MAKING of DRACULA AD 1972, in this upload from our PCAS YOUTUBE CHANNEL!


 AND TO WRAP WITH FOR THIS WEEK: HERE is a GREAT PCAS CAROLINE MUNRO Dracula AD 1972 and EARTH'S CORE GALLERY! RIGHT HERE CLICK!



Saturday, 29 April 2017

#HAMMERFILMSATURDAY: ROYAL APPROVAL FOR THE BARON THE COUNT AND CO


#HAMMERFILMSATURDAY: In a few weeks time, it will be almost 50 years since Hammer films were awarded the Queens Award to industry Award, a highly sort after and respected acknowledgement of a company's efforts towards the country's economical well being.



THE EFFORTS and contributions of Peter Cushing and Christopher Lee were certainly a contribution to all that lolly in the UK's coffers. Here is a lovely GIF taken from news footage shot at the award ceremony, which Peter, Christopher lee, Veronica Carlson and many others from Hammer films attended...It was certainly a day to celebrate. 


THE AWARD is now in a private collection. Look out for our own celebration to mark that day 49 years ago, in a few weeks time!


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 reach our 30K following total for Peter Cushing BIRTHDAY on MAY 26th 2017 AND Help Keep The Memory Alive!

Friday, 28 April 2017

#THROWBACKTHURSDAY: EVIDENCE OF A LOST PETER CUSHING FILM UNEARTHED!


#THROWBACKTHURSDAY: VERY INTERESTING evidence has come to light of a film that Peter Cushing appeared in the 1940's. THE NEW SCHOOL, in pre production titles, The New Teacher, was made in the UK by the UK government's CROWN FILM UNIT and mostly shot in Yorkshire and at the Homerton Collage, Cambridge . There are several pieces evidence, that appear to indicate that this was a public information film, popular at the time, and before the advent of mass broadcasting television in the UK. For the first time, we are presenting here a cover from the shooting script, a photograph of the crew on location at Homerton Collage, along with it's Crown copyright reverse side. We are working alongside a partner interest in finding out more about this 'unknown' addition to the Cushing filmography, and will keep you up to date, with any further developments and finds. Many thanks to S. Paterson for their keen eye and assistance. - Marcus



IT MIGHT BE YOU (1946) IS ANOTHER example of a film which Peter Cushing made with the CROWN FILM UNIT (above) In it, Peter Cushing plays a doctor, in a what is basically a film about driving and road safety. His diction is very much standard BBC, clipped and perfect! ... Peter Cushing appears for the duration after 1.45 mins into the short. Look out also for actor Peter Madden who would later work with Cushing in Hammer films, 'Frankenstein Created Woman' (1967) as the Chief of Police and before that, in Amicus films, 'Dr Terrors House of Horrors' in 1965. Enjoy!





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 reach our 30K following total for Peter Cushing BIRTHDAY on MAY 26th 2017 AND Help Keep The Memory Alive!

Thursday, 4 August 2016

WEDNESDAY IS GIMME THE GIF WEDNESDAY!


WEDNESDAY'S will have a new feature here at PCASUK... It seems you pretty much like our GIFS. We try and come up with what we think you'd like to see as a GIF and it works out pretty well. Then we had an idea... what if YOU decided what would make the best Peter Cushing GIFS! So, every Wednesday is now GIMME THE GIF WEDNESDAY! You request a GIF, telling us what film, scene, sequence..and we'll dedicate that GIF to you!


SO IT'S OVER TO YOU, just post your suggestion by using our email petercushingpcas@gmail.com..ANY CUSHING film that is on VHS, DVD or blu ray, a GIF can be up to 12 secs long. If you can think of a link between Cushing and a ANY Hammer / Amicus / Horror film..we'll make those too. So, have fun and send us your requests!


COME JOIN OUR PCASUK FACEBOOK FAN PAGE OPEN TO ALL
WHERE EVER YOU ARE! NOW WITH ALMOST 25 THOUSAND FOLLOWERS 
AND FRIENDS. JUST CLICK HERE THEN CLICK LIKE THERE!

Sunday, 24 July 2016

MARK IVESON: THE GREATEST FILMS PETER CUSHING NEVER MADE FEATURE


WHEN AN ACTOR reaches a certain level of fame, he gets inundated with job offers, and being in demand will also provide a degree of financial security to be able to pick and choose acting roles. Conflicting film schedules, contractual obligations, illness, personal reasons and getting fired are also factors that can prevent an actor from starring in a movie. When Peter Cushing secured his status as one of Britain’s top film stars, the work was coming in, and thanks to his extensive commitments, especially in the late fifties, he had to turn down offers for various reasons.


THIS DATES BACK to his Hollywood days. After quickly establishing himself in A Chump at Oxford (1939), Vigil in the Night (1940) and Laddie (1940), more film work came his way. He was pencilled in for a role in Tom Brown’s Schoolday's (1940) but nothing came of it. Following the recent discovery of his bit part in The Howards of Virginia (1940) the possibility that he appeared in a lot more films than previously known seems likely.


PLEASED WITH CUSHING'S well received performance as the suicidal Young Clive of India in the movie short Your Hidden Master (1941), MGM offered him a lucrative contract. However homesickness, a condition that cost him a lot of work overseas in later years, finally got the better of him, and he turned down the offer in order to work his passage back to England, therefore missing out on potential Hollywood stardom.


HAD CUSHING STAYED in Hollywood, he would have been an effective light leading man on the lines of David Niven and Ray Milland. His performance in Your Hidden Master also showed his dramatic range, and like Niven and Milland would have emerged as an excellent character actor. Back in England, Cushing joined ENSA where he met his beloved Helen. Throughout the forties he focused on the stage with his only film being Hamlet (1948).


Not the easiest of times considering war was ranging in Europe. Britain was producing a number of wartime propaganda movies, so its surprising Cushing didn’t appear in any. With many actors serving overseas, the opportunities to play officers and other assorted military men would have been in abundance. But despite regular stage roles and steady employment with Laurence Olivier, it’s fair to say Cushing theatre career was not as satisfactory as it should have been, with long periods of unemployment in between short-lived appearances at the Q Theatre. These years of struggle may have contributed to his extra marital affairs and eventual nervous breakdown.

WHY HE NEVER MADE himself available for better paid film work remains a mystery. British films were doing extremely well with Gainsborough and Ealing being at the forefront of movie production (even the fledgling Hammer enjoyed some success). Cushing could have made a decent career playing aristocratic charmers much on the lines of Denis Price or Stewart Granger.



THE FIFTIES PROVIDED the turning point for Cushing, thanks to television. But despite being TV’s first Mr D’Arcy, his nerves got the better of him and he disappeared from view by taking an impromptu holiday with Helen without telling his agent about his plans. With TV stardom secured in Pride and Prejudice, failure to tell his agent probably cost him a lot of lucrative film, TV and stage work at a time when he could ill afford to lose out on.

 


NOW A TOP TV STAR Cushing’s constant appearances in many classic plays and serials, made him one of the medium’s most versatile actors. Naturally his extensive commitments and contractual obligations to the BBC limited his options regarding cinema work. By the mid fifties his movie career was gathering momentum. His brief cameo in Moulin Rouge (1952) was followed by a superb piece of villainy in The Black Knight (1954). Then a trio of cuckolded husbands in The End of the Affair (1955), Magic Fire (1956) and Alexander the Great (1956), the latter being a big budget epic that made good use of classically trained British actors. If it wasn’t for The Curse of Frankenstein (1956), Cushing would have had a very successful film career in supporting roles.



BUT THEN IF IT WASN'T for The Curse of Frankenstein, Cushing would not have been a star. Horror had become fashionable and with Hammer spearheading this bandwagon, Cushing followed. With Dracula (1958), Revenge of Frankenstein (1958), The Hound of the Baskervilles (1959) and The Mummy (1959) doing well, Cushing now had enough financial security to pick and choose his roles. This also included non horror projects Violent Playground (1959) and John Paul Jones (1958). The late fifties remained busy for him, especially when he had his commitment to the BBC that included the abortive TV play Cyrano de Begerac.



THERE WAS AN INTERESTING Hammer project the actor was pencilled in for called Night Creatures, Richard Matheson’s screen adaptation of his novel I Am Legend. With Val Guest was slated to direct, Cushing, along with Stanley Baker, Laurence Harvey, Kieran Moore and Ian Hendry were considered for the role of vampire hunter Robert Neville. However, censorship restrictions and the constant use of bad language prompted Hammer to cancel the project. It would have been interesting to have seen Cushing play Neville, although it is highly unlikely he’d be comfortable with the mild use of bad language, plus Baker, Harvey, Moore and Hendry, being more contemporary leading men, looked more ideally suited in the role.



OF A POINT OF INTEREST Night Creatures was used for the American title of the Cushing swashbuckler Captain Clegg (1962). The actor loved the film so much he wrote a screenplay for an unproduced sequel. Whether Hammer considered it for possible film production remains unknown. Cushing was set to play The Man Who Could Cheat Death (1959). However such was his demand for film and TV roles (he still had a long term contract with the BBC), conflicting schedules prompted him to turn down the role, although his decision had more to do with the London exhibition of his watercolours entitled Here and There. Anton Differing replaced him, but his lack of warmth undermines the film’s effectiveness. Hammer needed Cushing, but did Cushing really need Hammer?


AFTER YEARS OF STRUGGLE, the actor was in a position to pull his weight when it came to film work. This was apparent when he initially turned down Van Helsing in The Brides of Dracula (1960) because he did not like the way the part was originally written, as he felt it was out of character. (Van Helsing uses black magic to destroy Baron Meinster). His instincts proved correct. Cushing’s horror career reached its creative peak with The Brides of Dracula. It also marked his temporary departure from the genre. With Christopher Lee seeking non-horror roles in Europe and Vincent Price making his mark as America’s king of horror, the time was right to move on.


UNFORTUNATELY Look Back in Anger (1958) and Room at the Top (1959) spearheaded radical new changes to British cinema of the sixties. Saturday Night and Sunday Morning (1960), A Kind of Loving (1962), This Sporting Life (1963) and Billy Liar (1963) not only presented a new and gritty style of social realism, it introduced a new breed of testosterone fuelled young men in the shape of Albert Finney, Richard Harris, Tom Courtney and Alan Bates. These new kids on the block brought a raw and dangerous edge that made classical actors like Cushing redundant. There was still a demand for the old style in television drama and theatre but in cinema, casting proved more of a problem.



THERE WERE OTHER FACTORS to consider. Cushing was approaching 50, his hair was thinning and his youthful good looks gave way to the familiar gaunt face of middle age; not the kind of image to sustain starring roles in the all important youth market. He continued to work in films without ever equalling the commercial impact of his horror days. Perhaps the lively but forgettable swashbucklers The Hellfire Club 1961) and Fury at Smugglers Bay (1961) were not the wisest of choices. It was the welcome arms of Hammer where he gave his finest non horror performances in Cash on Demand (1961) and Captain Clegg (1962). His appearance in The Devil’s Agent (1962) was removed from the final print.



TELEVISION AND THEATRE still made good use of classical actors so in the absence of film work, Cushing could return both mediums. Surprisingly he made very few TV appearances, mainly to avoid too much exposure as it coincided with his movie output. As for the theatre, he was already winding down stage work in the late fifties and by the time he appeared in Thark in 1965, he hadn’t tread - the - boards for six years.


BIBLICAL EPICS, big budget spectaculars and international ventures also kept classical actors busy. It was well paid work and producers could always rely on an actor like Cushing to turn up on time and deliver the goods without a word of complaint. His constant homesickness and Helen’s increasing poor health may have prevented him from working abroad, but that didn’t stop him going to Israel to star in She (1965), and Helen always travelled with him. Whatever the case, it stopped him from taking on lucrative film work further afield. These professional and personal factors may have influenced his decision to return to horror full time. In addition to the welcome arms of Hammer, genre specialists Amicus, Tigon and American International Pictures were more than willing cast the actor in their chillers. But apart from a few high points, it’s fair to say his best horror work was behind him and the downturn in quality could be reflected in The Blood Beast Terror (1967) and Corruption (1968). His participation in these stinkers prompted Cushing’s decision to return full time to television.


AFTER BEING CONSIDERED to play Professor Quatermass in Quatermass and the Pit (1967), Cushing disenchantment with the horror genre made him turn down two Tigon films that would have teamed him up with Boris Karloff. The first The Haunted House of Horrors (1969), a film that also had pre stardom David Bowie pencilled in for a role. Poor health prevented Karloff taking part so he was replaced by the equally ill Dennis Price. Cushing, now completely fed up with horror, turned his role down; he was replaced by George Sewell. The second was The Curse of the Crimson Altar (1969), and this time Karloff remained on board alongside Christopher Lee, Barbara Steele and Michael Gough. How much Cushing knew about their involvement is unknown. In any case he bowed out. The exact part he was going to play is unknown. It was either written out or taken by Karloff or Lee. Had Cushing and Karloff appeared in both films, they would have been elevated to cult status. 

 
CUSHING'S TV COMEBACK didn’t work out as planned following his unhappy experience on the Sherlock Holmes series. With Helen’s increasingly frail health, he continued winding down his film commitments to spend more time with her. The stress around this time was clearly evident during the making of The House That Dripped Blood (1970) and I Monster (1970)
. As she grew increasingly worse, it all got too much for him and he turned down the role of Giles Barton in Lust for a Vampire (1970) and the Judge in Blood on Satan’s Claw (1971). He dropped out of Blood From the Mummy’s Tomb (1971) after one day’s shooting when Helen finally lost her life. This prevented him from playing Dr Pretorious in The Abominable Dr Phibes (1971); even the original posters show his name on the credits. To cope with his loss, Cushing threw himself into his work, and his extensive commitments during that period may have cost him more interesting roles in better films. He turned down a role in Tales From the Crypt (1972) because he was more interested in playing another character in the film – Arthur Grimsdyke. The end result was the performance of his career.



ANOTHER FILM he came close to turning down was Horror Express (1972), which would shot in Spain during December of 1971. As it was his first Christmas without Helen, he wanted to be away from his familiar surroundings, but his homesickness got the better when he arrived in Spain. It was up to the support of his old friend Christopher Lee that prevented him taking a quick exit back to the UK. Because Cushing went from one film to another without taking a break, conflicting schedules made him turn down what could have been the acting challenge of his career. He was first choice to play Neil Howie in The Wicker Man (1973) but was unable to accept due to taking on more work than he could handle. 


BY THE MID SEVENTIES British horror began to decline and the number of unrealised Hammer projects were increasing. Cushing was linked to quite a few of these. His face features on a poster for a proposed Hammer war film called The Savage Jackboot, which, by the sounds of it, was a blessing it never got made. Other unmade Hammer projects including reprising Van Helsing in Kali, Devil Bride of Dracula, a sequel to Legend of the 7 Golden Vampires (1974). Cushing later starred in the routine thriller Shatter (1975) where he played British agent Rattwood opposite Stuart Whitman in the title role. Although poorly received on its release, there were plans for a TV series starring both actors. That too never got off the ground.


AWAY FROM HAMMER FILMS, Cushing was due to work with Vincent Price in The Naked Eye, if AIP hadn’t decided to close down their London base. Next on the list was Tyburn’s The Satanists. Filming was due to commence at the start of 1976 only to be cancelled at the last minute. Returning to Hammer, Cushing was set to star in Vampirella in 1977 but that too was dead in the water. Cushing also turned down the chance of reprising Holmes in a 1974 Broadway production as he felt his theatre career was behind him (although he did accept the role of Dr Soaper in The Heiress the following year). He also turned down an interesting horror stage show produced by Hammer – another abortive venture.


BY THE LATE SEVENTIES English Gothic was dying out and Cushing was ready to move away from the genre. He initially turned down the role of neurotic writer Wilbur Gray in The Uncanny (1977) but changed his mind out of loyalty to ex Amicus producer Milton Subotsky. For the most part his career was based in Europe and his low key output consisted mainly of cameo roles. “As I get older I find it difficult finding the right scripts,” he once commented, adding, “Most of the scripts I get are pure pornography.” But it is fair to say there were few films roles available for men of Cushing’s age.


ON SAYING THAT, the actor turned down some higher profile roles in favour of working in Europe. They included House of Mortal Sin (1977), Halloween (1978), Warlords of Atlantis (1978) and three roles in The Monster Club (1980), but he did appear in an episode of The Hammer House of Horror TV series out of loyalty to the now defunct studio.


TURNING DOWN THE ROLE of Dr Loomis in Halloween could have cost him major Hollywood stardom in a variety of major roles. His replacement, part time horror star Donald Pleasence certainly didn’t look back. However, Cushing would never have been comfortable with the new style of horror. Nor would he have resorted to self parody in the sequels, something that Pleasence did with unfailing regularity. The year 1977 also  was the start of a whole series of one page ads, press releases and drum rolls, for a project that never did materialise, The Coming starring Barbara Bach, fresh from here Bond appearance, ironically was a another no show.


BY 1980 CUSHING went into semi retirement, his sporadic film and TV appearances further curtailed due to poor health. He had been considered to play Rotwang and an abortive remake of Metropoils (1924). After starring as a rather frail Sherlock Holmes in the TV movie The Masks of Death (1984), the proposed sequel, The Abbott’s Cry had to be shelved due to his health problems. This also prevented him from playing opposite Jeremy Brett on TV in The Sussex Vampire. Around the time he decided to retire, Cushing had been offered two film unknown roles. With acting now behind him he continued to work as a writer and brilliant raconteur until the prostrate cancer finally got the better of him in August 1994.


THE AMOUNT OF FILM work Cushing turned down was certainly varied, and in some cases, perhaps questionable. In some cases he missed out on some career defining moments. One wonders what else he might have turned down.

Mark Iveson
July 2016


MARK IVESON'S CONNECTION with the Peter Cushing Appreciation Society goes way back, in fact Mark was a member of PCAS in the late 1970's, when it was a journal and newsletter postal club! What a buzz then, that now, some 30 odd years later, he is writing a feature for PCAS, and what a feature! During his research Mark has found some new nuggets of information about the projects that Peter Cushing passed on. Some of the titles maybe familiar to you, but the reasons behind Cushing's decisions may not be. If you've enjoyed Mark Iveson's feature, you maybe pleased to read that Mark has recently published his first book with TELOS PUBLISHING entitled, 'CURSED HORROR FILM STARS', a fascinating, engaging and insightful read which features five classic horror movie stars whose lives all had tragic aspects: Lon Chaney Jnr, Basil Rathbone, Peter Lorre, Bela Lugosi and Robert Quarry. 

On first impressions one might think this would be a depressing and gloomy read, thankfully this is not the case. Through creative and imaginative storytelling, Mark cleverly manages to communicate the passion and the incredible determination of spirit, that these actors possessed. Positive proof of living and dying by the old adage, '...the shows not over, until the fat lady sings..!' And there are some, still self destructively fighting, long after the last note....




You can purchase your copy of 'CURSED HORROR FILM STARS' by clicking this link : HERE


 
MARK WRAPPED on the writing of this 'Unmade Peter Cushing' feature some two weeks ago, and we've been busy researching photographs, magazines, press releases for visuals since Mark's treatment flew into the PCAS email IN Box! So, how easy is it to resource visuals on films that never had a single frame exposed on them? The answer is, it's extremely difficult! In the case of, Blood from the Mummy's Tomb, there are a few photographs, but everything else we have had to dig deep and in some cases create original artwork and blu ray boxes, depicting how those releases may have looked, had they been produced. This has been a lot of fun and thrown up some interesting choices on creating on style and tone of the blu ray artwork. We hope you have as much fun seeing these, as we did creating them!


Never Miss Any Of Our POSTS by SUBSCRIBING to THIS WEBSITE. JOIN our FACEBOOK FAN PAGE. UPDATED Several times EVERY day. 

ACCESS a VAST ARCHIVE of RARE STILLS,
features, clips and interviews PLUS Prize GIVE-AWAYS and COMPETITIONS!

2016 marks the 60th anniversary of PCAS, help us celebrate Peter Cushing life and career, by sharing our post on any of our sites.
Facebook Fan Page:HERE  Youtube: HERE  Tumblr:HERE  Website:HERE

Related Posts Plugin for WordPress, Blogger...