Showing posts with label creepy. Show all posts
Showing posts with label creepy. Show all posts

Monday 11 April 2016

NAME THAT MOVIE MONDAY : ONE STILL. ONE TITLE. CAN YOU NAME THAT CUSHING MOVIE?


Over at our PCAS FACEBOOK FAN PAGE we are just about to kick off a new regular feature for Monday's...As well as our regular  #MONSTERMONDAY feature, you can now enjoy a #NAMETHEMOVIEMONDAY feature! Every Monday we'll be posting some fiendish screen grabs and lesser seen publicity stills from Peter Cushing and Hammer films, and asking you to tax your grey matter and identify, the title of the film, from the image.

Above is this week's puzzler. See if you can NAME THE MOVIE? Either email us at theblackboxclub.com or join us at the PCAS Facebbok Fan Page!


QUICK LINK TO OUR OTHER WEB PLATFORMS

Sunday 20 March 2016

DRACULA AND GOLDEN VAMPIRES NARRATED BY PETER CUSHING AND CHRISTOPHER LEE



TONIGHT... turn off the lights, get comfy, put on your headphones and...Get an EAR FULL of classic Hammer with Peter Cushing and Christopher Lee in TWO great narrated stories with music by James Bernard, sound effects in glorious stereo ... at our Peter Cushing Appreciation Society YOUTUBE Channel and HERE NOW!


Thursday 15 October 2015

MORE HALLOWEEN GOODIES TO WIN! THE SKULL BLU RAY & DVD COMBO FROM EUREKA AT PCAS


THIS COMPETITION IS NOW CLOSED! SEE WINNERS AT BOTTOM OF THIS FEATURE!

We have LOADS MORE GREAT Prizes and Giveaways for you in the next two weeks leading up to Halloween!! AND SO... on to our next HALLOWEEN COMPETITION which launches TOMORROW.. 16th October 2015. We have THREE copies up for grabs, courtesy of EUREKA, a duo package that contains both the BLU RAY and DVD of Peter Cushing's SUPERB Amicus film, 'THE SKULL' also starring Christopher Lee. Look out for the COMPETITION TOMORROW. It's open to anyone, anywhere... and closes in five days time. So... who's up for a copy??

 THE TRAILER TO 'THE SKULL'




EUREKA'S THE SKULL isn't released until OCTOBER 26th...BUT hyou can place your ORDER HERE NOW:  Here's the spec of what both the DVD  and BLU RAY contains:


Exclusively restored 1080p presentation of the film on Blu-ray
 

Optional English subtitles for the deaf and hard-of-hearing.


New video interview with film scholar Jonathan Rigby.

















New video interview with critic & author Kim Newman
 

Reversible sleeve featuring original and new artwork
Limited Edition Collector’s Booklet.





It's a real smashing release. The film has excellent audio and visuals, plus includes a great LIMITED EDITION booklet keep sake too. 
JOIN US TOMORROW!

AVAILABLE TO ORDER FROM : Amazon http://amzn.to/1MvMRFf 


The Story Behind THE SKULL: 
After making a number of successful ‘Hammer Horrors’ in the early sixties, Director and Academy Award winning cinematographer Freddie Francis (Paranoiac, Tales From the Crypt, Dr. Terror’s House of Horrors) moved to the fledgling Amicus Productions and produced an incredible run of horror titles that would make them the only studio able to rival the ascendant Hammer Pictures during the peak years of British horror filmmaking. Of these films, the most chilling is The Skull.


Peter Cushing stars as Dr. Christopher Maitland, a writer and collector of occult items (with a preference for those with a somewhat macabre history), who is offered the chance to purchase a highly expensive and unusual item – the skull of the Marquis de Sade. Warned against obtaining the item by fellow collector (Christopher Lee in a rare non-villainous role), the skull’s influence draws Maitland in, madness and death soon follow…


Adapted from a short story by Robert Bloch (Psycho) and featuring a score by avant-garde composer Elisabeth Lutyens, The Skull is one of the most expertly crafted British horror movies of its era. Eureka Entertainment is proud to present The Skull in a special Dual Format edition.



Join Us By Clicking: HERE

Thursday 12 June 2014

MADNESS AND TEMPTATION: THE AMICUS FILMS OF PETER CUSHING: PART SIX


Cushing would next be lured to Amicus with a role that referred back to his first assignment for the company.  From Beyond the Grave was another anthology film and like Dr. Terror’s House of Horrors, it cast Cushing in the linking segment and gave the actor a relatively rare opportunity to don makeup and an accent while playing a real character part.


Cushing is splendid as the sinister proprietor of a shabby antique shop known as Temptations Limited. The gimmick is simple: the various people who come into the shop are morally compromised in one way or another and as they look to get one over on the doddering proprietor, they set themselves up for some just desserts. “The Gate Crasher” stars David Warner as a man who buys a mirror which houses a bloodthirsty spirit; in “An Act of Kindness,” a sad sack executive (Ian Bannen) befriends a peddler (Donald Pleasence) and his creepy daughter (Angela Pleasence) and doesn’t live to regret it.


 “The Elemental” deals with a spirit which attaches itself to a middle aged businessman (Ian Carmichael), thus requiring the intervention of a wacky spiritualist (Margaret Leighton); and Ian Ogilvy regrets purchasing “The Door” when it becomes apparent that the object has the ability to gain access to a mysterious room housing an even more mysterious resident (Jack Watson).


The film benefits from an infusion of fresh material: sooner than fall back on another one of Subotsky’s derivative screenplays or offer up another collection of Robert Bloch-penned slices of irony, this one draws from the stories of R. Chetwyn-Hayes.  The stories offer a nice variety of mood and if the opening and closing segments are a little too similar for comfort, they are still successful in their own aims.  First time director Kevin Connor does a fantastic job with the material, going for shock effects where needed, while also taking the time to build character, notably in the affecting “An Act of Kindness” segment.


The individual segments are all of a high caliber, as are the performances. Cushing is in fine form in the linking segments, while Margaret Leighton comes close to stealing the show as the comically over the top spiritualist in the comic “Elemental” segment.  Ian Bannen and Donald Pleasence give wonderfully subtle performances in “An Act of Kindness,” with the actor’s real-life daughter Angela Pleasence making for a wonderfully baleful and eerie presence.


David Warner, Ian Carmichael and Ian Ogilvy all do excellent work, as well.  The stylish and atmospheric photography by Alan Hume recalls his work on Dr. Terror, while Douglas Gamley’s soundtrack is more subtle and effective than usual.


All things considered, From Beyond the Grave proved to be a fitting farewell for Cushing to the world of Amicus anthologies, but their business relationship was far from finished.  For their next outing, Amicus and Cushing would again be joined by American International Pictures. 


On paper, Madhouse had the makings of a classic.  It united Vincent Price with Peter Cushing and added up-and-coming genre star Robert Quarry to the mix.  Price and Cushing had already co-starred in Scream and Scream Again and Dr. Phibes Rises Again, but this film would finally allow them to share some scenes together.

 

The story, adapted from the novel “Devilday” by Angus Hall, could be seen as a sort of horror version of All About Eve, with some memorably bitchy dialogue that was particularly well suited for Price. And yet, sadly, it all went wrong … quite, quite wrong.


Paul Tombes (Price) is a horror film star who is finally enjoying a happy and stable personal life, thanks to finding true love. However, his fiancée is burtally murdered and he suffers a major mental breakdown. Years later, he returns to England to resume his career in genre films, with his old friend Herbert Flay (Cushing) acting as his screenwriter.  Unfortunately, embittered producer Oliver Quayle (Quarry) is none too supportive and regards the “has been” actor with suspicion. Things get worse when a series of strange events, including some killings, threaten to push Paul completely over the edge …



Editor-turned-director Jim Clark makes a botch job of this one.  There’s some indication that the script may have been intended to be done tongue in cheek, but Clark’s uninspired direction only succeeds in making it come off as plodding.  There are too many unlikely plot developments and the final twist is simply too absurd to be taken seriously.  Perhaps in the hands of a witty stylist like Robert Fuest (who directed the Dr. Phibes films so beautifully), the film might have come to life; as it stands, however, this is one of the most disappointing of Price’s many horror films.


Price walks through the film with an air of disinterest, suggesting that he was none too thrilled to be cast in the film to begin with.  The real standout is Quarry, who indulges in a marvelously pointed parody of AIP’s head honcho Samuel Z. Arkoff in his performance as the producer Oliver Quayle. Quarry’s acidic line readings give vent to his frustration over being shoehorned into one bad project after another and his onscreen tension with Price is a direct continuation of their off-screen relationship. Cushing rather disappears into the background in all of this, but he does have a few good moments towards the end of the picture.


Adrienne Corri is also very good as a crazed former starlet who has a thing for spiders, while Hammer horror veteran Linda Hayden (Taste the Blood of Dracula) is appropriately sultry as a femme fatale. In a cheeky bit of advertising, the film gives “special participation” credit to Boris Karloff and Basil Rathbone, by virtue of some extensive clips of their appearances in AIP’s earlier (and much better) The Raven and Tales of Terror.  Both actors were long dead by the time this film rolled along, but their presence does serve to remind one of the better days of Gothic horror on screen.


 

Pretty much everybody involved in Madhouse knew it was a lox and the general lack of enthusiasm does the film no favors.  It had the potential to sit side by side with Price’s truly brilliant Theatre of Blood, but a daft script and lackluster direction ensures that it’s not even on par with some of the lesser Edgar Allan Poe vehicles that were made after director Roger Corman jumped ship.

Written by Troy Howarth
Images and design: Marcus Brooks


COMING UP NEXT WEEK : THE FINAL PART : BOWING OUT WITH A WOLF
AND A MOLE : THE AMICUS FILMS OF PETER CUSHING BY TROY HOWARTH : PART SEVEN


Join The Peter Cushing Appreciation Society
Facebook Fan Page : Rare Images : Competitions 
 

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