The PCASUK #FrankensteinFriday
 comes back for a month THIS Friday, I have some interesting 
photographs, on set and behind the scenes of 'The Evil of Frankenstein' I 
want to share with you, some great bits and pieces on Peter playing the 
Baron... plus there are TWO Hammer Frankenstein Competitions, which I 
think you will enjoy too! It all starts this Friday for just a month, 
don't miss it 😉 - Marcus
Showing posts with label bandages. Show all posts
Showing posts with label bandages. Show all posts
Tuesday, 18 June 2019
#FRANKENSTEINFRIDAY! RETURNS FOR JUST ONE MONTH!
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Friday, 16 June 2017
#FRANKENSTEINFRIDAY: HAND TINTED CURSE OF THE BANDAGES AND NEW FOR SATURDAYS!
#FRANKENSTEINFRIDAY:
 Here's a request for Gail Bridgeman who has asked us to repost our 
tinted 10 x 8 publicity still of Peter Cushing from 'The Curse of 
Frankenstein' she wrote, 'I saw a lovely colour photograph of Peter on 
your page a few weeks ago, I should have copied it when I saw it, but I 
thought  I would go back and find it later. Guess what? Finding things 
on facebook is HARD! Would you repost it please? Many thanks and keep up
 the great work, Gail'
 NEW FOR SATURDAYS!
EVERY SATURDAY 
PCAS YOUTUBE CHANNEL LIVE NOW 
EVERY SUNDAY
If you LIKE what you find posted here . . Please visit us at our daily themed posts at our PCAS FACEBOOK FAN PAGE and help 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.
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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Saturday, 20 August 2016
#ONSETSATURDAY DALEKS ASYLUM AND BANDAGES
#onsetsaturday
 :RARE AND EXCLUSIVE behind the scenes on Peter Cushing's second DALEK 
DR WHO feature film, Daleks Invasion Earth 2150 AD. Here at Shepperton 
studios the pyrotechnics are about to go off and take the deadly Daleks 
with them! NOTE bottom left corner, a film camera operator with camera, 
crouched to shoot the action..!
#onsetsaturday : Producer Milton Subotsky, actors Richard Todd and Sylvia Syms and director Roy Ward Baker, stop for a break... and maybe, discuss the best way of chopping up a body and storing it in the chest freezer! Brrrr Yikes!
#onsetsaturday
 : IT'S TOUGH being the title role, of a Hammer film... Christopher Lee 
wrapped from head to toe in latex and bandages as Kharis in Hammer films
 THE MUMMY... the suit did have eye fasteners at the back..but, boy that
 latex, glue, tissue paper and bandages sure pulled on your eye brows, 
come taking it ALL off at that end of the day!
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Friday, 25 September 2015
THE MUMMY MADE IT'S UK PREMIER 56 YEARS AGO TODAY
Join us at the Peter Cushing Appreciation Society Facebook Fan Page
UPDATED daily. Competitions, Features, Rare Photographs and more: HERE 
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yvonne furneaux
Monday, 7 September 2015
CHRISTOPHER LEE AND THE STEAMING BANDAGES
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Wednesday, 23 October 2013
TROY HOWARTH 'CURSE OF FRANKENSTEIN' REVIEW AND LOBBY CARD GALLERY
Sometime in the 1950s, American writer/producer Milton 
Subotsky (later to head Hammer's rival, Amicus) approached Hammer with 
the idea of doing a remake of James Whale's Frankenstein.  Producer 
Anthony Hinds didn't think much of the idea and rightly reckoned that 
any infringement on the material as established in the earlier versions 
of the 30s and 40s would bring the legal eagles at Universal Studios 
swooping down on Hammer.  Hinds saw potential in completely ignoring the
 earlier versions, however, and decided to entrust screenwriter Jimmy 
Sangster with delivering a fresh adaptation of Mary Shelley's classic 
novel.  In 1956, Sangster was still a "lowly" production manager, but he
 pitched an idea that Hinds liked, and was given the chance to write his
 first script, for the Quatermass
 knock-off X The Unknown.  Hinds recognized that Sangster had talent as a
 writer and, better still, he also had a practical understanding of the 
limitations of Hammer's resources.  He could be relied upon to deliver a
 filmable script which wouldn't stretch the company's coffers too far.  
Frakenstein would be Sangster's sophomore effort as a writer, and the 
final result would have undreamed of repercussions for just about 
everybody connected with the project.

Whereas the Universal series highlighted the character of
the monster - played in the first three films by Boris Karloff, but then
reduced to lesser actors with mixed results for the remaining sequels -
Sangster decided to focus his energies on the character of Frankenstein
himself.  It's a common misconception,
created in large part by Universal themselves, that Frankenstein is the
monster, whereas in fact, he is actually the creator himself.  Sangster ignored Shelley's conception of an
earnest, well-intended medical student who overstretches his bounds by
attempting to create life.  Instead, he
recreated the character as a Byronic dandy with a sadistic streak.  The monster and the creator were to become
one, in essence. 

Hinds was thrilled with Sangster's efforts and assembled a 
dream team to realize his vision.  Director Terence Fisher later 
maintained that he was owed a project by the company, but Hinds would 
contradict this, stating that he knew he was the best man for the job 
and would have hired him regardless.  Fisher's career up to that point 
was not terribly distinguished: a long string of low budget potboilers 
with little to distinguish them from the "quota quickie" pack, though he
 did helm a few fine pictures like Portrait from Life and So Long at the
 Fair.  He had also directed Hammer's earliest brushes with sci-fi and 
fantasy, Spaceways, Four Sided Triangle and A Stolen Face, and the 
thematic concerns of those films would be reflected here.  Fisher proved
 to be a natural for the
 Gothic; by his own admission, he was not a fan of the genre at the time
 and had not seen the original Universal horrors, and he even rejected 
invitations to see them, hoping to keep his own approach fresh and 
uninfluenced by what had come before.  He was wise to do so, as his 
matter-of-fact, down-to-earth approach helped to make this a very new 
kind of horror film.  Fisher was also given a crew that would help to 
define the look and style of Hammer horror: cinematographer Jack Asher, 
production designer Bernard Robinson, camera operator Len Harris, editor
 James Needs, composer James Bernard, etc.

To head the cast, Hammer elected to ignore their 
long-standing policy of importing a faded American name for marquee 
value.  This was to be a very British horror film, and only a British 
actor could do it justice.  Hinds turned to Peter Cushing, then the 
biggest TV star in the country, who surprised by the producer by 
enthusiastically accepting the project.  Cushing would subsequently 
weigh the pros and cons of doing further films for the studio, rightly 
recognizing that being associated with genre fare might impact his 
chances of getting more "serious" film work, but he eventually decided 
to embrace the steady flow of work, and a horror icon was born.

To play the creature (no longer referred to as the monster, 
lest Universal's lawyers get tetchy about it), Hinds initially turned 
his eye to imposing comic actor Bernard Bresslaw.  In the end, however, 
they decided to go with bit part player Christopher Lee.  Standing 6'5" 
in height, Lee also had background in mime, which would come in very 
handy given that the role was mute.  Lee suffered under the hands of 
makeup artist Phil Leakey, who was challenged with the task of devising a
 new monster makeup design.  His early sketches ranged from the bizarre 
to the ludicrous, with Lee imploring that it should just look like a 
jigsaw puzzle as he's been stitched together from various body parts.  
The final makeup drew jeers from fans accustomed to Jack Pierce's iconic
 Karloff
 design, but it has stood the test of time and is every bit as effective
 a piece of work in its own way.

Finally released to cinemas as The Curse of Frankenstein, 
the film was the first Gothic horror to be filmed in color - and the 
added bonus of some then-graphic gore and an emphasis on busty women in 
cleavage-hugging period gowns outraged critics and tickled audiences.

Seen today, The Curse of Frankenstein remains one of 
Hammer's finest films.  Fisher directs with a sure and steady hand.  The
 characterization of the Baron it matched by Peter Cushing's superb 
interpretation.  Lee's creature is at once pitiable and genuinely 
frightening; it is most assuredly one of his most under-valued 
performances.  The production values are solid and belie the film's low 
budget.  It also set the style for everything which would follow and did
 so in a way that seems far more sure-footed than it probably should.

The character would be revisited in a series of sequels, 
with Cushing appearing in all but one of them - that one being an 
ill-advised parody of sorts, The Horror of Frankenstein (1970), starring
 Ralph Bates.  Sangster would pen the first follow-up, The Revenge of 
Frankenstein (1958), while Hinds himself handled writing chores on most 
of the other entries.  Ironically, it was the Hinds and Sangster-free 
Frankenstein Must Be Destroyed (1969), written by Bert Batt, which would
 mark the series' high watermark.  The various writers brought different
 interpretations to bear on the character of the Baron, making it 
impossible to view the series as one long-running saga, but Cushing's 
commitment to the role made the films a delight.  The Curse of 
Frankenstein may not be as audacious as
 some of the later entries, but it still remains one of the best of the 
lot - and a classic slice of Hammer horror.

Appropriately enough, the film was the first of the initial 
Hammer Gothics to hit blu ray through Icon and Lionsgate.  Their Region 
B/Region 2 blu ray/DVD combopack was met with much derision, however, 
owing to a flawed transfer.  Word has it that a 4K master was provided 
by Warner Brothers, but Hammer failed to capitalize on the format's 
capabilities by cleaning up the image and going for a sharper, better 
defined image.  As is so often the case with these controversies, 
however, the extreme reactions are a bit over the top.  While the 
presentation is far from definitive and will never be used as a 
reference quality disc for showing off the capabilities of the medium, 
it's still quite watchable - especially in the full frame transfer which
 restores some information missing in
 the 1.66 version which was also included.  Colors are a bit pale and 
the image isn't as sharp as one would like, but it marks an improvement 
over the DVD edition from Warner Bros and restores a shot which had been
 censored for many years (you'll know it when you see it).  The disc is 
also overflowing with extras, including an informative and entertaining 
commentary by Jonathan Rigby and Marcus Hearne and a wonderful 
featurette about Cushing. 
Review: Troy Howarth
Images: Marcus  Brooks
Labels:
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