Showing posts with label dvd. Show all posts
Showing posts with label dvd. Show all posts

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 8 October 2015

AMICUS VAULT OF HORRORS DVD: DONALD FEARNEY'S DEFINITIVE DOCUMENTARY ON THE WORKS OF SUBOTSKY AND ROSENBERG


Here's an exclusive for you! You remember Donald Fearney's EXCLUSIVE AMICUS BOOK we shared with you earlier this year, and the news that the book would be followed up with a documentary on Amicus from Donald also??? Well, the good news is, IT'S HERE! Or rather, it's at the LONDON FILM CONVENTION Westminster on Saturday November 14th 2015! This eagerly anticipated documentary goes on sale at the convention for the first time on this day and it's expected that business will be BRISK!

'Milton Subotsky's and Max Rosenberg's Amicus Vault of Horrors, promises to be the definitive works on Amicus. Over two hours in duration, covering every film that Amicus produced, packed with rare footage, photographs, interviews and limited to only 500 copies. One of the highlights is an interview with Milton Subotsky, never before seen, that PCAS shot in 1981. Among those interviewed are David Warner, Geoffrey Bayldon, Linda Hayden, Caroline Munro and many others. The narration is provided by Roy Hudd.

The price for the dvd purchased at the convention is £15.00. We will have FOUR copies up for grabs in a competition here on our page and website on November 14th too! You will also be able to purchase copies through PCAS in the near future during November. The dvd is region 0. This means it can be played on any dvd player...in any country! Here's a first draft of the cover, which cleverly reproduces the cover style of the comic stories that provided the background for many of the Amicus very popular portmanteau films, like Tales from the Crypt, Dr Terrors House of Horrors and Vault of Horror. It's a rare pic of the two lads too, not often seen and quite shy of the camera. And there's lots more where that came from. All on the DVD!  

So, if you are planning to attend the London Film Convention on November 14th, do pop along and see Donald at his stand and grab yourself a copy, and say hello! He'll be pleased to see you!

Come and join over 20,000 others at our official PCAS Facebook Fan
Page. Just CLICK: HERE 

Sunday 6 September 2015

COMPETITION: THREE PETER CUSHING BBC SHERLOCK HOLMES BOX SETS UP FOR GRABS : COMPETITION POSTED AND NOW OPEN



All episodes star Peter Cushing as Sherlock Holmes and Nigel stock as Dr Watson and were originally broadcast as the BBC television series 'Sherlock Holmes' in 1968. All programmes are in colour. The discs are region 2.

THE PRIZES:
We have THREE DVD BOX SETS up for grabs. Each box set contains the following episodes: The Hound of the Baskervilles, The Blue Carbuncle, The Sign of Four and The Boscombe Valley Mystery.... and here's YOUR chance to bag your own BOX SET!


ALL YOU HAVE TO DO:
Take a look at PHOTOGRAPH ONE and PHOTOGRAPH TWO above.... No. A CLOSE look. Several CLOSE looks. On closer inspection, you will notice there are some differences between the two pics. They are not identical. Some differences are easier to spot than others. We have hosted 'Spot The Differences In The Photographs' competitions in the past, and they have proven very popular. We post the pics, tell you how many differences there are, and you try and spot em! Where THIS 'Spot The Differences' competition is fiendishly different is, this time, we aren't going to reveal HOW MANY DIFFERENCES Photograph Two actually contains... it could be three, six, five, two or seven? It's your job to use your powers of detection and spot them ALL! There are NO trick differences. It's either THERE or it ISN'T !

WHAT YOU DO NEXT, WHEN YOU'RE FEELING QUITE NAUSEOUS, CAN'T LOOK AT THE PICS FOR A MOMENT LONGER, BUT THINK YOU HAVE SPOTTED ALL OF THEM :
When you think you have spotted all of the differences between Photograph One and Photograph Two...send your answers, telling us where the differences are and how many there are in total. You do this by sending us an email at theblackboxclub@gmail.com. You MUST include ALL the differences to qualify as a correct entry.

YOU HAVE SEVEN DAYS. JUST IN CASE YOU WANT TO BE QUITE SURE, YOU HAVE SPOTTED ALL OF THEM:
The competition is open until SUNDAY 13th (Oh Dear!) SEPTEMBER MID DAY GMT. THREE correct entries will be chosen at random and declared the winners, one hour later at 1pm GMT and announced on the page and contacted through your personal message button on your account! So, DO check your personal messages on Sunday.

Good luck everyone. HAVE FUN!


 Please Come Join  The OFFICIAL FACEBOOK FAN PAGE OF PCAS : HERE

Wednesday 12 August 2015

EUREKA ANNOUNCES EXTRA FEATURES FOR DUAL RELEASE OF THE SKULL


NEWS: Peter Cushing's THE SKULL (1965 Amicus. Dir Freddie Francis) has been available on dvd and blu ray in other region formats for a long time, but never in a format we could watch here in the UK.... until now! You may remember we confirmed the very exciting news of the EUREKA dual blu ray / dvd release a few weeks ago...and that this release is also a NEWLY RESTORED VERSION of the film.


We can now also confirm the extra features. They are as follows:

SPECIAL FEATURES:
Exclusively restored 1080p presentation of the film on Blu-ray
New video interview with film scholar Jonathan Rigby
New video interview with critic & author Kim Newman
Optional English subtitles for the deaf and hard-of-hearing
Reversible sleeve featuring original and new artwork
Limited Edition Collector’s Booklet.


Trailer: The Skull (Amicus 1965)

Eureka Entertainment to release THE SKULL, the blood curdling Amicus horror starring Peter Cushing and Christopher Lee, in a Dual Format (Blu-ray & DVD) edition for the first time in the UK on 26 October 2015

Pre-order now http://amzn.to/1MvMRFf



READ MORE ABOUT THE SKULL IN OUR FEATURE: HERE 

PLEASE COME JOIN US AT OUR FACEBOOK PAGE : UPDATED DAILY: HERE

Sunday 9 August 2015

FROM 8MM HOME MOVIE WITH FLEXI DISC TO DVD AND BLU RAY: HAMMER'S DRACULA JOURNEY


For the folks who grumble about the quality of blu rays... lol Back in the 60's we went to extraordinary and unrealistic lengths to see just ten minutes of Peter Cushing and Christopher Lee, in colour and with sound..well sort of. The US release of 200ft of 8mm film of 'Dracula/Horror of Dracula' from Americom came complete with a floppy vinyl disc (..remember those?) ...and the idea was the start up your 8mm film projector and your 'record player' simultaneously...so the sound from your record and the film on your projector, would play together...in sync. HA! Never happened.


VHS? Wonderful. DVD? Incredible. Blu Ray? As good as it gets!


The journey of Hammer films 'Dracula' release for home viewing in the US and finally getting to the UK, with the UK title and a playable format...


Come check out our official PCAS Facebook Fan Page
Updated Daily! Just Click HERE 

Sunday 16 November 2014

'SHOCK WAVES : OUR WINNERS BAG BLUE UNDERGROUND PETER CUSHING ZOMBIEFEST REMASTERED BLU RAY PRIZES!


Congratulations to our THREE WINNERS! A very popular competition! 'SHOCK   WAVES' is released on TUESDAY 25th NOVEMBER 2014 and is available for PRE ORDER right NOW! ORDER HERE


Tuesday 11 November 2014

SHOCK WAVES IS BACK! BLUE UNDERGROUND 'SHOCK WAVES' REMASTERED DVD AND BLU RAY COMPETITION


For many Peter Cushing fans, Christmas has come early this year. A month to the day in fact, because on November 25th, marks the release date of a Cushing film much sort after, rarely seen in any kind of decent condition and often if you did get your hands on a copy, it looked like it had been badly transfered using a camera lens through cheese cloth! Blue Underground's remastered blu ray and dvd release for some, will arrive with a fanfare, and a sigh relief. What's on the discs as extra features? How does the quality of the transfer hold up, where can you PURCHASE it...or indeed WIN yourself a copy... all answered here!


Peter Cushing was recommended to Queens-born director Ken Wiederhorn by British producer Richard Gordon, who worked with Cushing on Terence Fisher’s Island of Terror (1966). Wiederhorn and his partner Reuben Trane had already won an Academy Award in 1973 for Manhattan Melody, a first in the dramatic student film category, and next wanted to make a $300,000 16mm horror opus. It was originally titled Death Corps and later blown up to 35mm. We know it better today as Shock Waves (’77).

 

Shock Waves is exactly the kind of horror flick they might make for todays market, only now it might be intentionally funny. Like Piranha 3D (‘10), it could look like a throwback to the slapdash days of DIY guerrilla filmmaking. That's not to say that Shock Waves was intended to be bad or funny. Quite the contrary. The film seems more like a Larry Cohen/It's Alive exercise in genre rubbing rather than true drive-in exploitation fare. It's not all slapdash either. The underwater photography by Irving Pare is quite memorable, for any budget. The pulsating synth score by composer Richard Einhorn, who currently suffers from sensory neural hearing loss, is equally expressive.


The plot: a group of passengers on a chartered boat trip, captained by a cantankerous John Carradine, happen upon an island whose sole inhabitant (Cushing) is the elderly leader of an elite Nazi SS group of zombie-like U-boat soldiers who somehow survived the war. It's possibly a fallacy to call these storm troopers “zombies” even though that's how they’ve always been billed. They don’t seem interested in consuming flesh as they stalk, drown and garrote their victims.


The story is told in flashback by a battered-looking Brooke Adams (Days of Heaven, ‘78; Invasion of the Body Snatchers, ‘78) whose narration bookends the film. This was the era of Jaws (‘75) and The Deep (‘77). Shock Waves fits rather nicely into that sub-genre of suntan-thrillers. A cute bikini-clad Adams snorkeling underwater quickly gives way to the other classic horror star in the movie, Carradine. I can remember watching his imposing presence as a kid in just about every conceivable film genre there was. My favorite Carradine role will always be his sadistic guard in John Ford's The Prisoner of Shark Island (‘36). I suppose it was only fitting that ol' John should find himself once again back on the high seas toward the end of his vast and varied film career. For an actor with over 300 credits to his name, it must have seemed like just another troll around the island.


The people on board the boat actually unearth the “Death Corps”, or “Der Toten Korps”, before making their way to the island. The seafloor rattles like a radiation detector on THX overload as one of the young heroes has the nerve to say: "Did you hear something?" Equally amusing is a scene when the ship's co-pilot, a Nick Nolte lookalike, dryly proclaims: "Jesus, look at the sun" as the whole screen is awash in a piss-colored haze. Carradine, eyes bulging and slurring lines like “old fart”, makes his performance a minor classic in its own right. One must remember this isn’t The Godfather -- hell, it isn't even Disco Godfather -- but it never fails to entertain, especially when inducing chuckles.


The abandoned hotel itself is a grand setting for what could have been some truly creepy haunted house happenings. Unfortunately, they settled on some overgrown weeds scattered about the floor for unknown effect. The shipwreck setting -- the real SS Sapona off the coast of Bimini -- proves to be a far better atmospheric set piece. The Corps emerge from underneath like balletic stalkers moving in slow motion along the ocean floor. Their jackboots and blond hair give them away long before any swastika could. Their eye-goggles hide a deeper secret, but is it worth the big reveal soon to come?


The underwater action shots with mounting score really are quite fascinating. The expressionless head with waterlogged skin slowly rising from the water is almost as indelible an image as the foot-long scar across Cushing's face. His entrance is perhaps one of the most perplexing of his entire career. A swell of orchestral music starts playing on a phonograph off screen, the halls seem deserted, and the not-so-bright looking cast members wander around wondering where the source of the outburst is coming. The nerdy guy in the plaid shorts and his annoying wife stumble upon it first. The others appear not soon after and stare at the antiquated player as it immediately begins to cease functioning. The music dies and that familiar voice booms from out of nowhere: "I am near, but also far." A little like his pseudo-German accent in the film that also comes and goes.


The troupe's exchange with the off-screen Cushing is at once painful and comical. They seem like models that have wandered in off the boxes of Wheaties cereal ads. Then he appears silhouetted on a balcony in the distance, says a few words and disappears again. When next we see him a few moments later he is running through the island brush as lithe as a cat on the prowl. This is all soon eclipsed by one of the Death Corps walking straight into the water until completely submersed. The film is not without it's memorable moments, such as Cushing staggering around the beach like a scarecrow on Romney Marsh. He often looks positively exhausted in the part and allegedly agreed to take it because he thought his name might help the modest little project along. One wonders if he enjoyed anything about his four-day shoot at Florida's Biscayne Bay other than the buckwheat pancakes he obsessed over at the nearby IHOP. The sad truth is, this may be the last satisfying straight horror performance Cushing ever gave, not counting his last hurrah for Hammer Films with the Hammer House of Horror episode Silent Scream (’80).



It's long in the tooth at times and the over acting from the ensemble is more than occasionally grating. Yet, it somehow remains satisfying on a zero-expectations sort of level. That “zombie” photography really is superb. I am also convinced the movie TRON (‘82) borrowed heavily from this soundtrack. Eventually, it all degenerates into a student film version of Deliverance (’72), with the not-so-frightened but pensive cast rowing -- and at one point trudging along the ocean floor -- in a small boat. My favorite laugh-out-loud moment in the entire film might be when the guy with the James Caan hair freaks out in the giant refrigerator room. He then inexplicably ends up in a swimming pool filled waste-deep with murky water and pseudo Nazi zombies. Eventually poor Brooke Adams and a dingy are all that's left.



Wiederhorn has since gone on to become a fairly notable film and television director, with the 21 Jump Street TV series and Return of the Living Dead Part II (’88) to his credit. His producing partner Trane gave up filmmaking to become something of a mad inventor and innovative boat builder. Brooke Adams is still active in television and film. John Carradine passed away in 1988 at the ripe old age of 82 while in Milan, Italy. Peter Cushing shuffled off this mortal coil in 1994, leaving behind a legion of dedicated fans and admirers the world over. What more can be said of Shock Waves except that it could be a cult film in search of a cult. Now that it’s officially out on Blu-ray, Cushing fans can only hope that day has come...


"Shock Waves is really a throwback to a simpler kind of horror movie. There’s nothing overly complicated or ambiguous about it. Despite the fact that it’s about Nazi zombies, monsters that could (and have) been given a far more visceral and shocking treatment, the movie is surprisingly non-exploitative. The movie chills more than it horrifies, sneaking up on you with lingering imagery you won’t soon forget. It’s far from perfect but it’s a ride worth taking.
thedigitalbits.com 

Blue Underground first released SHOCK WAVES on DVD in 2003, and the transfer was taken from the director’s own vault print since the original negative mysteriously disappeared, so the film seemed an unlikely candidate for a Blu-ray facelift. Now freshly transferred and fully restored in High Definition from the only surviving materials, for a film shot in Super 16mm and blown up to 35mm, it looks quite nice and greatly improved over the previous DVD. Presented in 1080p and in the original 1.85:1 aspect ratio, detail is greatly improved, especially in the daytime outdoor scenes and underwater scenes, which now have a good amount of depth to them. Naturally, grain is present and heavier in some of the night-time scenes, but never excessively problematic, and colors have a nice saturation to them. The audio is presented in a DTS-HD 1.0 option and is well balanced, with sound effects and music coming through fine and dialog being clear. Optional subtitles are included in English SDH, French and Spanish.
dvddrive-in.com

“Shock Waves” is as cultish as horror films get. It caters to a niche audience that does not care for glamorous over-produced horror fare, but instead appreciates the raw inspiration and translation of a vision. Typically, these kinds of films get the short-shrift by studios and never make their appearance on Blu-Ray or, if they do, their release, quality and features are very limited. Not here. Blue Underground once again sticks to its guns and impresses us with a top notch presentation for such a small and obscure film, and with extras that are nicely put together with a touch that shows love and appreciation for the movie. Nazi zombies aren’t something you see every day, and with the veritable Peter Cushing in one of the leads, you know that you’re getting some solid acting, so make sure you give this disc a try when you’re in the mood."
dvdreview.com

'The real delight of Shock Waves is that the monsters work so well! The Death Corps troopers are genuinely creepy!' 
 eccentric-cinema.com

'A master piece in the genre of zombie cinema. Not since the original Night Of The Living Dead' have zombies been so frightening!
horrordigital.com
      


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