Showing posts with label hell. Show all posts
Showing posts with label hell. Show all posts

Saturday 6 September 2014

WIN HAMMER FILMS 'THE HOUND OF THE BASKERVILLES' BLU RAY DVD COMBO HERE!


The Hound Of The Baskervilles Blu Ray / DVD: During the month of September, The UK Peter Cushing Appreciation Society in association with Shock Entertainment, Cinema Cult and Screenpop are launching TWO competitions, offering TEN copies of Hammer films classic 'The Hound of the Baskervilles' starring Peter Cushing and Christopher Lee...for the very first time on Blu Ray...as prizes!


Here we present the first competition, with FIVE blu rays up for grabs! All you have to do is use your POWERS of OBSERVATION to win your copy!


OBSERVE ABOVE EXHIBIT A: A vintage photograph from 'The Hound of the Baskervilles' Featuring Peter Cushing as Sherlock Holmes and Andre Morell as Watson.

OBSERVE BELOW EXHIBIT B: The same photograph, but with TEN DIFFERENCES. Things moved, changed or missing!


To ENTER the competition, list ALL TEN DIFFERENCES and send your list to us, BY EMAIL TO : THEBLACKBOXCLUB@GMAIL.COM. ANY entries posted as comments will be deleted and not counted as an entry. ALL correct entries will be placed in a hat and FIVE winning names will be drawn.

Competition ENDS Saturday 27th SEPTEMBER 2014 at MIDNIGHT! Winners names will be posted here on the PCASUK blog / website on Sunday 28th SEPTEMBER 2014.

Have FUN and Good LUCK!



Join CINEMA CULT and SCREENPOP at FACEBOOK


Purchase Hammer films, The Hound of the Baskervilles starring Peter Cushing
and Christopher Lee : HERE 

Monday 12 May 2014

SIX COPIES OF RUE MORGUE MAGAZINE: 'MONSTER FROM HELL' COVER AND FEATURE ISSUE TO BE WON!


COMPETITION NOW CLOSED: WE'LL BE ANNOUNCING THE WINNERS AT 10PM TODAY.

Here's your chance to win one of the SIX copies of the 'Frankenstein and the Monster from Hell' cover and feature edition of RUE MORGUE magazine!

It's easy to enter our competitions and they are open to anyone, wherever in the world you may be! You just EMAIL YOUR ANSWER TO US AT THEBLACKBOXCLUB@GMAIL.COM. Couldn't be easier!

COMPETITION QUESTION:
During the duration of the shooting of #hammerfilms 'Frankenstein and the Monster from Hell' at Elstree studios in 1972, WHICH LONDON HOTEL did Peter Cushing stay at? 


(Chose ONE of the following options)

A) The Dorchester Hotel 
B) The Conaught Hotel 
D) Brown's Hotel
E) Lord Jim's Hotel 
F) The Grosvenor Hotel 
G)  The Langham Hotel

All you have to do is answer the question ABOVE and send us your answer by EMAIL, as described above.

The competition closes TOMORROW 9PM GMT. Winners names will be drawn and announced ONE HOUR LATER AT 10PM GMT AND POSTED HERE. GOOD LUCK EVERYONE!

REMEMBER: THERE IS AN EXCLUSIVE PETER CUSHING CELEBRATION THIS WEEK and We'll be marking it with a superb COMPETITION DURING THIS WEEK. So, keep checking the page for details!

Friday 2 May 2014

INTERVIEW: SHANE BRIANT Q AND A PART TWO AT THE HORROR CHANNEL WEBSITE


NOW AT THE HORROR CHANNEL FACEBOOK PAGE! http://bit.ly/PWu9 Here's PART TWO of our Q AND A with SHANE BRIANT star of Hammer Films, 'FRANKENSTEIN AND THE MONSTER FROM HELL' now out on blu ray, Uncensored in a great three disc set, also starring Peter Cushing, Madeline Smith and Dave Prowse. Just following the link! The Horror Channel Q and A with Shane Briant

You can now order your copy of the UNCUT, three disc blu ray / dvd of 'Frankenstein and the monster from Hell' starring Peter Cushing, Shane Briant, Madeline Smith and Dave Prowse... just by clicking this link! (http://amzn.to/1i51bHI 

Wednesday 30 April 2014

THE SHANE BRIANT 'FRANKENSTEIN AND THE MONSTER FROM HELL' Q AND A': YOUR QUESTIONS ANSWERED!


The WINNING entries and questions...and the best of, from our 'Frankenstein and the Monster from Hell: Shane Briant Q and A! Congratulations to our lucky winners and many thinks to everyone who entered, to Shane for taking part, Hammer films, and everyone at Fetch!

Part two of our Shane Briant 'Frankenstein and the Monster from Hell' Q and A will be a THE HORROR CHANNEL facebook page shortly :)

You can now order your copy of the UNCUT, three disc blu ray / dvd of 'Frankenstein and the monster from Hell' starring Peter Cushing, Shane Briant, Madeline Smith and Dave Prowse... just by clicking this link! (http://amzn.to/1i51bHI) We will be posting a review of this UK release at this blog later today at the blog!

Wednesday 16 April 2014

FRANKENSTEIN AND THE MONSTER FROM HELL BLU RAY WEEK : STARTS NEXT WEEK


NEXT WEEK: To celebrate the release of the Hammer films classic ‘Frankenstein And The Monster From Hell’ -starring Peter Cushing and Shane Briant- coming to 2-disc DVD & single-disc UNCUT Blu-ray for the first ever time in the UK on 28th April 2014, here at the PCASUK blog and PCASUK Facebook Fan Page we are marking the occasion in style! Join us for Competitions, Prizes, Win Copies of the Blu Ray...and MUCH more besides.

Sunday 2 March 2014

DR TERROR'S HOUSE OF HORRORS: CUSHING CLASSIC WITH A FULL DECK


The horror anthology can be traced back as far as German expressionist cinema, with early classics like Richard Oswald’s Eerie Tales (1919) and Paul Leni’s Waxworks (1924), but for many viewers it begins with the Ealing Studios’ production of Dead of Night (1945).


This portmanteau of macabre tales made a profound impression on many people, including a young Milton Subotsky.  Born in New York in 1921, Subotsky was a film buff from an early age and began producing in the 1950s.  He had a particular passion for horror, fantasy and sci-fi and would partner with fellow New Yorker Max J. Rosenberg to form Amicus Productions.  Amicus would initially focus on rock and roll pictures, but in 1964 they decided to switch gears and offer up some health competition to England’s reigning “horror factory,” Hammer Film Productions.  Subotsky explicitly referenced Dead of Night when he set about to write the studio’s first “official” horror film (bearing in mind, they had produced the well-regarded City of the Dead under the banner of Vulcan Productions), ultimately released as Dr. Terror’s House of Horrors.


The film would follow a basic formula which Subotsky would repeat again and again: a group of characters are united in a claustrophobic setting, where they have their fortunes told to them by a mysterious character.  In this instance, the mysterious “seer” is Dr. Schreck, played by Peter Cushing.  Hidden behind bushy eyebrows and a stubbly beard, Cushing is seedier than usual and he plays the role with a nicely understated sense of menace and foreboding.  Cushing would become the company’s mascot of sorts and his loyalty to Subotsky would lead him to accept appearances in some films that he might otherwise have done well to have taken a pass on.


The first of the characters to have their fortunes told is Scottish architect Neil McCallum.  In McCallum’s story, he goes to his ancestral home, which is now owned by grand dame Usrula Howells.  There’s a family curse afoot involving a werewolf and the “surprise” reveal of the creature’s identity shouldn’t come as a surprise to a five year old.  The story may be slim and predictable, but director Freddie Francis and cinematographer Alan Hume give it style and atmosphere to burn.  Of all the segments, it’s the only one that really captures an atmosphere of dread and as such, it’s a good intro that sets the tone for what is to follow.


The second segment deals with family man Alan Freeman (a popular DJ in his day, making a rare acting appearance) who returns from vacation to discover that a strange vine is slowly enveloping his house. Enlisting the aid of scientists Bernard Lee and Jeremy Kemp, Freeman attempts to destroy the pesky plant, but it would appear to have ideas of its own…  Freeman does a credible job and Lee and Kemp do their best to keep a straight face delivering some ridiculous dialogue, but the bargain basement special effects don’t do it any favors.
 

The next segment involves musician Roy Castle, who steals a tune used in a voodoo ceremony and may or may not live to regret it… This is easily the weakest of the film’s stories and is shamelessly ripped off from an episode of the Boris Karloff TV series Thriller, which featured John Ireland in a not-dissimilar role as a musician who runs afoul of a vengeful voodoo god after incorporating a similar tune into one of his night club routines.  Even without the air of plagiarism, the segment is a mess: Castle’s incessant mugging is a constant irritant and the attempts at humor are feeble at best.  On the plus side, the segment has some terrific jazz music by the great Tubby Hayes. Indeed, director Francis had hoped to have Hayes score the entire film, but the musician’s problems with cocaine dependency made him unreliable, so Francis asked for the services of the distinguished Elisabeth Lutyens instead.


Up next, Christopher Lee plays a pompous art critic who drives artist Michael Gough to suicide.  Gough’s hand (which had been severed in an accident engineered by Lee) returns to exact vengeance.  The special effects work is awkward, admittedly, but this segment succeeds due to the heartfelt performances of Lee and Gough.  Lee is at his imperious best as the ultra-bitchy critic whose acerbic words destroy the lives of others, while Gough is genuinely touching and restrained as the sympathetic victim.



The final segment involves newly married doctor Donald Sutherland, who discovers that his wife (Jennifer Jayne, looking lovely but sporting a dicey French accent) is actually a vampire.  The segment has some nice touches, but it’s slowly paced and the payoff is much too predictable.  Sutherland impresses in one of his earliest screen roles, while Max Adrian quietly steals his scenes with one of his less florid and theatrical performances, as Sutherland’s medic colleague.


The film draws to a close as the train carting the characters pulls into the station.  Dr. Schreck disappears into thin air and the characters decide to laugh off what they’ve been shown … but it will be Dr. Schreck who has the last laugh.


Amicus would go on to produce some better anthologies than this one, notably The House That Dripped Blood and From Beyond the Grave, but Dr. Terror’s House of Horrors remains one of their seminal works.  It’s a fun film on its own terms and it shows Freddie Francis working at the top of his game as a director.  Francis’ frustration with being typecast as a horror director (he was no fan of the genre and was very open about this) would later result in some truly hackneyed work, but at this stage in the game he was still doing his best to shore up weak screenplays with plenty of visual fireworks.  Subotsky’s screenplay is derivative and unimaginative, but the anthology format proves to be beneficial in that once one weak story is out of the way, there’s always the chance for something better in the next segment.


In the case of Dr. Terror, the good fortunately outweighs the bad.  The Werewolf and Crawling Hand segments remain highlights in the Amicus canon and the Vampire story is by no means disposable, either.  The fine performances, eerie music score by Lutyens, stylish direction by Francis and expert widescreen color photography from Hume all add up to make this a film worth seeing again and again.
 
Review: Troy Howarth
Gallery: Marcus Brooks


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