Artist
 BASIL GOGOS original painting of Peter as Van Helsing in Hammer Films 
'DRACULA AD 72' ..and how it appeared on the front cover of Forry 
Ackerman's Famous Monsters of Filmland...
Tuesday, 28 May 2013
BASIL GORGO: PETER CUSHNG 'FANOUS MONSTERS' COVER ART
Labels:
basil gogos,
dracula,
famous mosnters magazine,
forry j ackerman,
van helsing,
vintage magazine.
Sunday, 26 May 2013
WHAT THE MEMBERS OF PCASUK HAVE BEEN WATCHING THIS CENTENARY DAY! HOW MANY CAN YOU NAME?
Labels:
big screen,
blu rays,
christopher lee.,
dvd's,
hammer film productions,
peter cushing centenary,
screen grabs.,
screens
A HAPPY BIRTHDAY PETER CUSHING : CENTENARY CELEBRATION 1913 2013
Help us CELEBRATE Peter Cushing's Birthday 
and Centenary at our facebook Fan Page
Saturday, 25 May 2013
JUST HOURS TO GO: PETER CUSHING CENTENARY BIRTHDAY CELEBRATION AT PCASUK
Rare photographs, memorabilia and all things Peter Cushing are being shared and posted at
https://www.facebook.com/petercushingblog and http://petercushingblog.blogspot.co.uk/ tomorrow which marks what would have been Cushing's 100th birthday!
Labels:
amicus films,
celebration centenary,
milton subotsky,
pcasuk,
peter cushing,
robert bloch.,
the skull
Friday, 24 May 2013
COUNTDOWN TO CENTENARY BIRTHDAY: PETER CUSHING AS GUSTAV WEIL : 'TWNS OF EVIL'
3 Days To Go...
We're celebrating ALL day Sunday 26th. 24 hours of posts, rare photographs, features and competitions....right here at petercushing.org.uk and
We're celebrating ALL day Sunday 26th. 24 hours of posts, rare photographs, features and competitions....right here at petercushing.org.uk and
Thursday, 23 May 2013
THREE DAY TO GO: PETER CUSHING CENTENARY CELEBRATION
Three Days To Go...
We're celebrating ALL day Sunday 26th. 24 hours of posts, rare photographs, features and competitions....right here at petercushing.org.uk and
We're celebrating ALL day Sunday 26th. 24 hours of posts, rare photographs, features and competitions....right here at petercushing.org.uk and
Labels:
baron,
bray studios,
frankenstein must be destroyed,
hammer films.,
peter cushing centenary,
rare photographs
Wednesday, 22 May 2013
PETER CUSHING BIRTHDAY CENTENARY COUNTDOWN: FOUR DAYS
Labels:
bbc,
nigel stock,
peter cushing,
sherlock holmes,
the sign of four.,
watson
JUST FIVE DAYS TO GO: PETER CUSHING BIRTHDAY CENTENARY : DRACULA AD 72 PHOTOGRAPH
Labels:
caroline munro,
cushing centenary. hammer films.,
peter cushing,
stephanie beacham,
van helsing
Monday, 20 May 2013
PETER CUSHING CENTENARY SUNDAY: DOCTOR WHO AND THE DALEKS MOVIES SCREENINGS: CAMBRIDGE ARTS PICTUREHOUSE
Another Peter Cushing / Doctor Who Event happening in Cambridge, UK on Centenary Sunday:
This bank holiday Doctor
 Who fans can take advantage of the Arts Picturehouse’s Vintage Arts 
programme which will be screening digitally remastered versions of the 
two 1960s Doctor Who films. Robin Bunce, a Philosophy lecturer at 
Cambridge University, will introduce the films and discuss the 
philosophy of Daleks afterwards, while the best dressed customer could 
win a year’s membership to the cinema. Better get out your stripy scarf.
 
First up, on Sunday, catch Daleks’ Invasion Earth: 2150 A.D. Directed by Gordon Flemyng and starring Peter Cushing, Bernard Cribbins, Ray Brooks, Roberta Tovey and Jill Curzon, the film was first released in 1966.
 
Filmed in futuristic Technicolor, Cushing plays the eccentric Time Lord tackling a time in which the Daleks occupy London. The Doctor, his granddaughter Susan and niece Louise, join an underground resistance to fight the Daleks and reclaim the city – expect mishaps, challenges and tests of courage galore, as well as some space-age-y gizmos.
 
On Monday it’s the turn of Dr. Who and the Daleks (1965), also directed by Gordon Flemyng and again starring Peter Cushing, as well as Jennie Linden and Roy Castle. We’re not quite sure why this is being shown second, Dalek’s Invasion Earth being the sequel, but hey, go with it.
 
After the boyfriend of one of the Doctor’s granddaughters chucks a lever in the Tardis by accident, they find themselves shooting through time to Skaro, a place where the Daleks are determined to exterminate the planet’s peaceful inhabitants, the Thals. Taken hostage by the Daleks (how did he let that happen?), the Doctor and his crew are used as bait to lure the Thals into a trap: will the Thals accept extinction or fight for their lives?
 
There are rumours a life-size Dalek will be gracing the foyer of the Picturehouse too, there’s only one way to find out if it’s true…
 
:: The Daleks and Doctor Who, Arts Picturehouse, Sunday, May 26 – Monday, May 27 at 1pm. Tickets £9.50 from 08719 025 720 / www.picturehouses.co.uk/cinema/Arts_Picturehouse_Cambridge/
First up, on Sunday, catch Daleks’ Invasion Earth: 2150 A.D. Directed by Gordon Flemyng and starring Peter Cushing, Bernard Cribbins, Ray Brooks, Roberta Tovey and Jill Curzon, the film was first released in 1966.
Filmed in futuristic Technicolor, Cushing plays the eccentric Time Lord tackling a time in which the Daleks occupy London. The Doctor, his granddaughter Susan and niece Louise, join an underground resistance to fight the Daleks and reclaim the city – expect mishaps, challenges and tests of courage galore, as well as some space-age-y gizmos.
On Monday it’s the turn of Dr. Who and the Daleks (1965), also directed by Gordon Flemyng and again starring Peter Cushing, as well as Jennie Linden and Roy Castle. We’re not quite sure why this is being shown second, Dalek’s Invasion Earth being the sequel, but hey, go with it.
After the boyfriend of one of the Doctor’s granddaughters chucks a lever in the Tardis by accident, they find themselves shooting through time to Skaro, a place where the Daleks are determined to exterminate the planet’s peaceful inhabitants, the Thals. Taken hostage by the Daleks (how did he let that happen?), the Doctor and his crew are used as bait to lure the Thals into a trap: will the Thals accept extinction or fight for their lives?
There are rumours a life-size Dalek will be gracing the foyer of the Picturehouse too, there’s only one way to find out if it’s true…
:: The Daleks and Doctor Who, Arts Picturehouse, Sunday, May 26 – Monday, May 27 at 1pm. Tickets £9.50 from 08719 025 720 / www.picturehouses.co.uk/cinema/Arts_Picturehouse_Cambridge/
Labels:
cambridge picture house,
daleks,
daleks invasion earth,
doctor who,
dr who,
pcasuk.,
peter cushing centenary
COUNT DOWN TO BIRTHDAY CENTENARY: PETER CUSHING DR TERROR SIGNED PHOTOGRAPH
Another day falls to the Birthday Centenary Count Down, Peter Cushing and Christopher Lee autographed publicity still from Amicus films, 'Dr Terror;s House of Horrors' (1965, Freddie Francis)
Labels:
amicus,
centenary,
christopher lee,
death,
dr terror,
peter cushing,
signed photograph,
train,
whitstable.
PETER CUSHING CENTENARY COUNTDOWN: SEVEN VAMPIRES AND SEVEN DAYS TO GO
Labels:
birthdy,
centenary,
count down,
dracula,
hammer films,
pcasuk.,
peter cushing,
seven golden vampires,
van helsing
FEATURE: AMICUS / AIP 'SCREAM AND SCREAM AGAIN' WITH COLOUR GALLERY
Peter Saxon’s book The Disoriented Man was published in 1966, and were it not for the fact that it inspired the first-ever (and highly contentious) pairing of Vincent Price, Christopher Lee and Peter Cushing, it may well have disappeared into obscurity long ago. As a piece of pulp fiction, it offers up some energetic plotting, but by the time it made its way on to the screen, little enough of the original material was left in place. Amicus co-head Milton Subotsky saw great potential in the book however, and after snatching up the rights, he proceeded to adapt it to screenplay form himself. The picture wasn’t intended to be a vehicle for the genre’s biggest super stars, but when Amicus struck a deal with American International Pictures to secure added financing, the project took on a life of its own…
The story deals with an apparent government 
conspiracy involving a string of grisly murders and even stranger 
abductions.  Intrepid Detective Superintendant Bellaver (Alfred Marks) 
is on the case, with the assistance of brash pathologist David Sorel 
(Christopher Matthews).  Sorel discovers a link between the strange 
goings-on and the experiments of the mysterious Dr. Browning (Vincent 
Price), but the intervention of shadowy government official Freemont 
(Christopher Lee) throws the investigation into jeopardy…
An ardent fan of science fiction, fantasy and 
genteel horror, Milton Subotsky was a staunch believer in the “less is 
more” school of genre film making.  He was a derivative screenwriter, and
 directors who found themselves in charge of filming his scripts 
frequently found themselves struggling to overcome their deficiencies.  
Subotsky was also fond of taking over his productions in the editing 
room, thus creating further friction with his filmmakers.  More than 
once, he would claim to have “salvaged” one of Freddie Francis’ pictures
 in the editing room, an allegation that made the pragmatic 
cinematographer-turned-
In short, Subotsky saw himself as a hands-on, creative producer - a la Val Lewton. In the case of Scream And Scream Again, however, his control was virtually non-existent. Having enlisted AIP to provide financial assistance, he sat by helplessly as they took control of the picture. They brought in Gordon Hessler to direct, based on his work on their previous Edgar Allan Poe adaptation, The Oblong Box (the first film to co-star Price and Lee, with the latter reduced to a cameo appearance). Hessler didn’t like Subotsky’s script one bit and brought in his favored screenwriter, Christopher Wicking, to do a complete rewrite.
  
In short, Subotsky saw himself as a hands-on, creative producer - a la Val Lewton. In the case of Scream And Scream Again, however, his control was virtually non-existent. Having enlisted AIP to provide financial assistance, he sat by helplessly as they took control of the picture. They brought in Gordon Hessler to direct, based on his work on their previous Edgar Allan Poe adaptation, The Oblong Box (the first film to co-star Price and Lee, with the latter reduced to a cameo appearance). Hessler didn’t like Subotsky’s script one bit and brought in his favored screenwriter, Christopher Wicking, to do a complete rewrite.
Subotsky 
was furious, but AIP put their faith in the more youthful and innovative
 approach of their writer and director and backed the decision.  When 
filming commenced, Subotsky started coming on to the set, as was his 
wont; Hessler found him meddling and obtrusive, though he liked him on a
 personal level, and eventually asked line producer Louis M. Heyward to 
intercede.  Never one to mince words, Heyward blocked Subotsky from the 
set - a very strong move indeed, when one considers that he was still 
credited as the film’s producer.  Hessler favored a non-linear approach 
to the editing and storytelling,
 which sat in contrast with Subotsky’s more conservative approach - 
thus, he was also blocked from tinkering with the film in editing, and 
he surely had kittens when he saw the deliberately obtuse, even 
confusing film unspooling for the first time.  Hessler also brought a 
matter of fact quality to the blood letting, resulting in a film with a 
bit more blood (and nudity) than was the norm for Amicus.  At the end of
 the day, the film grossed a ton of money - its takings no doubt 
improved by the impressive roster of stars.  Subotsky, for his part, 
claimed to be baffled; he didn’t think much of the finished film, though
 inevitably his feelings were colored by his unpleasant behind the 
scenes battles with the AIP brass.
As a film, Scream and Scream Again is too often 
under appreciated for what it ISN’T, as opposed to being embraced for 
what it IS.  In many respects, it can be seen as a forerunner to the X 
Files TV show, with Sorel and his female assistant (Judy Bloom) 
functioning as a sort of “flower power” era version of Mulder and 
Scully.  The overall theme of paranoia and distrust also links it into 
the more overtly political sci-fi films of the past, including Fritz 
Lang’s Dr. Mabuse thrillers and Don Siegel’s Invasion of the Body 
Snatchers.  Hessler and Wicking were outspoken admirers of Siegel in 
fact, and sought to deliver a combination of Body Snatchers-style sci-fi
 and the two fisted approach of the director’s crime thrillers, such as 
Madigan and Coogan’s Bluff. 
The end result is a work of brazen style 
and energy, vacillating between various plot strands, all of which pull 
together at the end of the picture.  Viewers accustomed to a
 more linear, coherent approach have long described the film as 
incoherent - a view shared by Vincent Price, for what it’s worth - but 
more patient, open minded viewers are likely to disagree.  While the 
film is definitely difficult to follow the first time around, it is 
never boring - and by the end it all pulls together in a satisfactory 
manner.  Typical of the film’s “everything but the kitchen sink” 
approach, it can be classified as a horror film, a thriller, a sci-fi 
film, a police procedural, even a political allegory.  Whether it is 
successful in blending these strands is open to debate, but it marks a 
welcome departure from the more staid product that was typical of Amicus
 and AIP at that stage in the game; compared to Hessler’s previous 
picture, the stillborn Oblong Box, it is a real breath of fresh air: 
stylish, engaging and inventive, where the previous film was staid, 
tedious and predictable.
Where the film really loses points, for many fans,
 is in the use of its three stars.  As noted previously, the film was 
not specifically designed as a starring vehicle for Price, Lee and 
Cushing.  Indeed, when Subotsky first optioned the material and wrote 
the script, Price wouldn’t have been a realistic prospect, given his 
contractual ties to AIP.  It was Sam Arkoff who realized that, working 
in tandem, they could finally engage the three big “titans of terror” on
 the same poster - and sooner than find a way of accommodating them all 
properly, the urge was simply to sign them on and shoehorn them in 
wherever possible.  It could have been a budgetary restriction, but it’s
 clear that they could have cast all three actors in suitable, meaty 
roles.
Lee would have seemed a natural for the role of the steely and villainous Konratz, while Cushing would have been quite at home as Bellaver. Price, for his part, was perfect casting for Dr. Browning - and indeed, he would be cast in the part. Instead of making the best of this “dream team,” however, the decision was made to put Cushing in a small cameo appearance, while putting Lee in an important but still-smallish part as the shadowy government agent who may be playing both sides of the equation.
Lee would have seemed a natural for the role of the steely and villainous Konratz, while Cushing would have been quite at home as Bellaver. Price, for his part, was perfect casting for Dr. Browning - and indeed, he would be cast in the part. Instead of making the best of this “dream team,” however, the decision was made to put Cushing in a small cameo appearance, while putting Lee in an important but still-smallish part as the shadowy government agent who may be playing both sides of the equation.
While this is regrettable, in a 
way, one is hard pressed to criticize the performances as they stand.  
Alfred Marks, best known in the UK as a comic, gives a terrific, scene 
stealing account of himself as the harried and sardonic Bellaver.  
“Copper” roles in British horror are frequently of the plodding variety -
 see Cushing as Inspector Quennell in The Blood Beast Terror for another
 noteworthy exception - but Marks invests the role with much shading, 
nuance and credibility.  He comes off as a perfectly efficient and 
intelligent professional, albeit one who has been rendered a tad callous
 by the nature of his profession.  Marks
 delighted Hessler by improvising many scenes - just look at the 
marvelous scene wherein Hessler’s camera follows him through the squad 
room as he fires off one great ad lib after another, as when he picks up
 a sandwich, sniffs it and says “Smells like cheese, looks like ham” 
(takes a bite) “Not far off - it’s chicken!”.  Marks’ dynamic 
performance breathes life into scenes that are typically the bane of 
many horror films and thrillers of the era: the police procedural bits.
As the ice cold villain, Konratz, Marshall Jones is truly imposing.  
Jones made plenty of appearances on British TV in the 60s and 70s, 
nabbing guest bits on City Beneath the Sea and Division 4, but his film 
work is spotty - he did, however, play three roles for Hessler: as 
Konratz in this film, a sympathetic priest in The Cry of the Banshee, 
and an actor with a shady past in Murders in the Rue Morgue.  This is 
certainly his best role, not to mention his most
 substantial one, and he clearly relishes the chance to dominate so many
 scenes.  The part requires him to play it completely devoid of pity and
 emotion, and Jones never disappoints.
As for the three stars, Price 
gets the showiest part, and he plays it with a bit more sincerity than 
usual at this stage in the game - though he does mug it up a bit during 
the fight scene with Jones towards the end.  Price had risen to 
prominence on the stage, and his background in the theatre put him out 
of fashion in the 1950s, with the rise of “Actors Studio” almuni such as
 Montogomery Clift and Marlon Brando.  Price found himself typed as a 
heavy in horror films due to such popular hits as Andre De Toth’s House 
of Wax and William Castle’s The House on Haunted Hill, and he embraced 
his image with tongue in cheek glee.  By the late 60s, however, Price 
was growing discontent with the quality of the films he was being 
offered.  Scream and Scream Again would prove
 to be a highlight during this period, but apart from continuing his 
friendship with Lee (they bonded over laughs during the making of The 
Oblong Box) and making a new friend in Cushing, he didn’t appear to 
recognize the film’s merits when the topic was raised in interviews.
Lee’s part is smaller, though of equal import in the narrative, and he 
does a very good job with what he has to work with.  The role affords 
him a chance to play it “straight,” without any hint of anything 
supernatural, and if it doesn’t give him any real challenges, he still 
approaches it seriously and without condescension.  Cushing fares the 
worst of the three, in so far as screen time is concerned.  He plays a 
senior officer, part of the vaguely Nazi-esque military organization 
that employs Jones, and he’s basically required to chew out Jones before
 being offed in his first scene.  True to form, Cushing performs with 
fire and intensity, but it’s a minor
 appearance and doesn’t give him a chance to really shine.  The 
remainder of the cast performs quite capably, as well, especially the 
late Michael Gothard.  Gothard, later to appear in Ken Russell’s 
notorious The Devils, as the crooked exorcist Father Barre, plays a 
so-called “vampire” who drinks blood from the slashed wrists of various 
female victims.
The film moves like a house on fire, and it also 
looks terrific thanks to the contribution of the gifted cinematographer 
John Coquillon.  Coquillon had previously shot Michael Reeves’ brilliant
 Witchfinder General (featuring arguably Vincent Price’s finest genre 
work) and would soon become Sam Peckinpah’s cinematographer of choice on
 such pictures as Straw Dogs and Cross of Iron.  Like Hessler and 
Wicking, he was a young, energetic and innovative talent - and the 
enthusiasm that these men brought to the picture gave it a life and 
energy that was far removed from so many other, more disposable British 
“B” pictures of the period.  Special note also has to be made of the 
electrifying jazz score, provided by David Whittaker.
Whittaker would go on to score Vampire Circus and Dr. Jekyll & Sister Hyde for Hammer, and his work here is crucial to the film’s impact. Sadly, for many years, his music was erased on home video due to rights issues - it was only in the mid-90s, when the film was released by Orion as part of a series of Vincent Price movies on VHS, that the score was quietly reinstated; prior to that, the film lumbered under the limp and uninspired electronic doodling of Kendall Schmidt, who performed similar duties on the early VHS and laser disc editions of Witchfinder General and Mario Bava’s Planet of the Vampires.
Whittaker would go on to score Vampire Circus and Dr. Jekyll & Sister Hyde for Hammer, and his work here is crucial to the film’s impact. Sadly, for many years, his music was erased on home video due to rights issues - it was only in the mid-90s, when the film was released by Orion as part of a series of Vincent Price movies on VHS, that the score was quietly reinstated; prior to that, the film lumbered under the limp and uninspired electronic doodling of Kendall Schmidt, who performed similar duties on the early VHS and laser disc editions of Witchfinder General and Mario Bava’s Planet of the Vampires.
Labels:
aip,
alfred marks,
amicus,
centenary,
christopher lee,
christopher matthews,
pcasuk.,
peter cushing,
scream and scream again,
vincent price
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