Thursday, 1 October 2020

REMEMBERING ACTOR MICHAEL GOODLIFFE ON ANNIVERSARY OF BIRTHDAY : 'THE GORGON' 'END OF THE AFFAIR' 'CAMP ON BLOOD ISLAND'


REMEMBERING MICHAEL GOODLIFFE on the anniversary of his Birthday today, October 1st! Goodliffe, was an English actor known for playing suave roles such as doctors, lawyers and army officers, a quite a few Brit films and tv dramas. He was also sometimes cast in working class parts. Born in 1914, educated in Canterbury, he joined the British Army at the beginning of the Second World War, and received a commission as a Second Lieutenant in the Royal Warwickshire Regiment in February 1940. He was wounded in the leg and captured at the Battle of Dunkirk. Goodliffe was incorrectly listed as killed in action, and even had his obituary published in a newspaper! He was to spend the rest of the war a prisoner in Germany. Whilst in captivity he produced and acted in (and in some cases wrote) many plays and sketches to entertain fellow prisoners. These included two productions of William Shakespeare's Hamlet, one in Tittmoning and the other in Eichstätt, in which he played the title role. 

AFTER THE WAR GOODLIFFE, resumed his professional acting career. As well as appearing in the theatre, he worked in expanding his film work and appeared in a huge amount of television drama. Goodliffe also appeared in the film, 'The Wooden Horse' in 1950 and in other POW films. His best-known film  was maybe, 'A Night to Remember' (1958) directed by Roy Ward Baker, in which he played Thomas Andrews, designer of the RMS Titanic. Goodliffe, put some of his 'being captive experience' into his first film for Hammer films, 'The Camp on Blood Island' (1958) as Father Paul Anjou. In this film he worked with actress Barbara Shelley, who he would work with again in 1964 in Hammer's 'The Gorgon'..with Peter Cushing. He played his role so well, it was a shame when his character, Professor Jules Heitz left the story.




GOODLIFFE HAD WORKED in another Cushing film back in 1955, 'The End of the Affair' with Deborah Kerr and Van Johnson. Goodliffe is an actor, who sadly gets forgotten today, but his filmography is quite prolific with some box office winners... 'The Battle of the River Plate' (1956), 'A Night to Remember' (1958), 'The 39 Steps' (1959), 'Peeping Tom' (1960), '633 Squadron' (1964), 'Von Ryan's Express' (1965), 'Cromwell' (1970), . . and his two final films, with Christopher Lee : The Man with the Golden Gun (1974) and for Hammer films, 'To the Devil a Daughter' (1976).


SADLY, GOODLIFFE suffered with depression, and had a major breakdown in March 1976, during the period that he was rehearsing for a revival of the theatre production of 'Equus'. . . and he left us on 20th March 1976 aged just 61. Goodliffe was an actor with great authority, who commanded your attention in whatever role he played, despite the distractions of his health, which were never evident to the people he worked with or his audience. Today we mark and celebrate the anniversary of his birthday and the high standard of the roles he played during his career!


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Wednesday, 30 September 2020

WHEN PETER CUSHING WROTE TO DISNEY! #HAMMERFILMS CAPTAIN CLEGG VS #DISNEY DR SYN

LETTER from #PETERCUSHING to DISNEY! Here is an interesting bit of background, that clearly illustrates Peter's passion for one particular character that he played and his efforts in expanding the options with a script, that HE actually wrote HIMSELF!

AS MANY OF YOU probably know, #Hammerfilms 1961 production of 'Captain Clegg' ran into some difficulties, before production began... the copyright of the Dr Syn stories written by Russell Thorndike's novel, which their film was to have been based on, were OWNED by Disney.. so Hammer were not allowed to use the story as per novel OR indeed the name of the central character, played by Cushing... Dr Syn. But, of course this didn't stop them, they renamed the character Clegg and came up with their own pirate story... but it was tricky. Peter loved the character and story so much, he actually wrote his own screenplay and submitted it to Tony Hinds at Hammer films, for his and director, Peter Graham Scott's consideration... as was Hammer's want, they liked their plots and detail to be as basic and cheap enough to fit their budgets.




SADLY, PETER WITH HIS EYE, for detail and a true lover of swashbuckling antics, also liked his plot to carry accurate detail and .. some expensive requirements. Hammer and Hinds winced at the costs and kindly passed on his script, and Hinds wrote their own script with additional dialogue from tv writer, Barbara S. Harper (...who she?) Not to be thwarted, Peter sent on his script to #Disney, who owning the rights, were setting up their own Dr Syn film... and were looking for an actor to play their pirate captain. Peter wasted no time, shipped off the script, his CV and a sweet request, asking that they consider him for their Captain, if possible! As it worked out, they too passed on Cushing's script and went on to cast the little known Irish actor #PatrickMcGoohan as Dr Syn in their adaption of the character in 'Dr. Syn, Alias the Scarecrow' in 1963 with a full British cast, with a more family entertainment target.

ABOVE: OUR PCASUK FULL FEATURE WITH GALLERY ON CAPTAIN CLEGG starring Peter Cushing, can be found right HERE!

HAMMER RELEASED their film as 'Captain Clegg' and 'Night Creatures' in the US in 1961. It was released as a double bill with Hammer's 'Phantom of the Opera' with Herbert Lom as 'the 'Phantom' Universal had problems not knowing HOW to market both films, so re-edited any 'horror' or 'unsuitable' plot and visuals from both films, rendering BOTH films 'tooth-less' as Hammer films and pushed them as almost 'family entertainment'! Cushing nursed his passion for the character and the stories for many years to come, hoping one day he would play him again... If you have seen BOTH films, how do you rate them? I saw Disney's 'Dr Syn' as a kid in the cinema one #Halloween and loved it. 'Captain Clegg' I watched many years later.. but I LOVE them both! - Marcus 

 
PLEASE COME JOIN US at the FACEBOOK PCASUK FAN PAGE! With posts every day, rare images and photographs, features and prize competitions.You'll have good company with over 34 thousand followers, all celebrating the LIFE and CAREER of Peter Cushing OBE!

Tuesday, 29 September 2020

THE MAKING OF THE HOUSE OF LONG SHADOWS : DEREK PYKETT'S AMAZING DOCUMENTARY : PETE WALKER : JULIE PEASGOOD

#WATCH With #PETERCUSHING! 'IF you love the film, you will adore this doc!' Over at the Facebook PCASUK Fan Page, I have just posted and shared this superb feature length documentary, by Derek Pykett, and its is a must if you enjoyed the film, when it was released back in 1983. Lots of anecdotes from director Pete Walker, script-writer Michael Armstrong, Julie Peasgood and Desi Arnaz jr.. and many others... plus a trip done memory lane in THE house! Derek Pykett did a brilliant job making both this and his Amicus films documentary, as a labour of love.... LOVE the film? You will ADORE this doc! It up as a #WatchWithCushing post at the Fan Page NOW! - Marcus



PLEASE COME JOIN US at the FACEBOOK PCASUK FAN PAGE! With posts every day, rare images and photographs, features and prize competitions.You'll have good company with over 34 thousand followers, all celebrating the LIFE and CAREER of Peter Cushing OBE!

Sunday, 27 September 2020

NEWS REVIEW: INDICATOR / POWERHOUSE : REMASTERED AMICUS FILMS 'I MONSTER' BLU RAY : LEE AND CUSHING CLASSIC LOADED WITH EXTRAS!


SOME OF THE FAVOURITE titles in the Amicus films locker are films that also feature, BOTH Christopher Lee AND Peter Cushing. As usual, the chemistry worked, even if the script and production values were dim to 'someone get a candle'!  That chemistry worked so well, because maybe of several support system, in casting both of their characters were in conflict with each, (see The Creeping Flesh, Dracula, The Gorgon, The Mummy). One instance that threw a curve ball was the film 'Horror Express' where they both actually complemented each other, even though their characters were in competition. But, when there is a 7ft tall flesh eating alien/zombie on the loose and you are trapped in a long journey, on a cramped Siberian Steam Express, you join forces. One of the few that tried to follow this 'PC and CL characters working together was, 'Nothing But The Night' a complicated plot didn't help and not so defined development of their roles, made what could have been a great film, into a confusing one.
 

CINEMA AUDIENCES in the 1960's and 70's liked their fantasy and horror movies, quite simple until flicks like 'The Exorcist' 'Halloween' and 'Alien' came along. Even if the roles played were small variations on what they had seen times before, it was popular : Good Guy, Bad Guy, Trusted guy, Liar...and the also carrying tropes, tried and tested and often box office winners. BUT stray too far from the expected, that has brought that bottom, paying and on that seat, and you are in danger of loosing them and your box office returns. Amicus Films, 'I MONSTER' is such a film. Only a producer like the legendary... oh yes he was.. Milton Subotsky, would take such a gamble. Did he change the characters names from Jekyll and Hyde to Marlowe and Blake, because his personal competitor, Hammer films, had produced and were releasing a swing and twist on the well known story of Jekyll and Hyde, 'Dr Jekyll and SISTER Hyde', that would be released around the time of his efforts? Well, in 1982 I asked him. He said, 'No! I thought it would be fun. I think the public would be bored of another telling of the story and the SAME names.!' Hmmm . .
 

SUBOTSKY also took another gamble, on looking for a young and fresh pair of eyes to direct his planned 'J and H', in all but name, flick. He took a recommendation and suggestion from his lading star name... Christopher Lee. Stephen Weeks was a very young 22 year old, who Subotsky signed up, his trust based on a  aguy who had staretd his career when just 17, directing a series of short films for UK Southern Television's 'Day-by-Day' programme and his cinema short film, 'Moods of a Victorian Church' (1967) at age 19, and his first cinema drama, a film set in the First World War in France '1917' (1968) when he was 20. The film '1917' was the film that Lee had seen, and impressed shared with Milton...


AS IF SUCH YOUNG EYES and hands on the wheel wasn't enough of a tricky path to take, Subotsky threw another dice and this time found numbers, that would almost sink the production. To give his turn on the Jekyll and Hyde story, and a potentially a lap passes Hammer and their throw, Subotsky decided to turn the whole production in a '3D Extravaganza' a costly process, that his bet stake would not cover, so he would put his stake on, a hit and miss hobby and gimmick process called,  The Proven Pulfrich effect, (The Pulfrich effect is a psychophysical percept wherein lateral motion of an object in the field of view is interpreted by the visual cortex as having a depth component, due to a relative difference in signal timings between the two eyes.) For a short time, director Weeks went along with it, until set designers unfortunatley made and  errected sets, that were the WRONG way around, and coud not be covered by the camera, by panning in the desired direction. Weeks quietly dumped any further shooting of footage in Subotsky's recommended request. This is WHY in the film, several scenes that were planned to be used as part of the entire 3D film, were still used in the released 2D footage. The camera pans, sways and never stops moving or dancing around. Shots show the camera straying behind pillars, during conversations and waltzing like a dervish, for no appartent reason . .  it's different! Needless to say, the film was released in traditional 2D, and the 3D became a rumour years after the release, with ferriting fans finding truth around 2000.    



ABOVE:
WITH THE HELP OF PCASUK collection photgraphs, you can visit our GALLERY POST FEATURE from AUGUST 2018, of make up artist HARRY FRAMPTON creating CHRISTOPHER LEE'S Mr Blake : RIGHT HERE 
 

MUCH OF THE VALUE in Amicus films , 'I Monster' is the fortunate casting of Lee and Cushing. Weeks did well to let them do their thing. Lee very much enjoyed working on the film and probably, not since Hammer films 'The Curse of Frankenstein' and 'The Mummy', had he given such agreement and assent to wear such disguising make up and prosthetics. His Mr Blake is really enhanced by Peter and Harry Frampton's make uo skills. You can see Lee IS enjoying the role and plays it very well indeed. Sadly, Peter Cushing plays door-mat Utterson, Marlowe's lawyer, which in all versions of the Robert Louis Stevenson story, acts in narrator and damp squid by numbers role. It's a role that, with Subotsky taking some liecence with the Dr and Mister names and some multiplication with his screenplay, really should have also added some meat to the Utterson role too. There is some action with Cushing and Lee in the closing moments, but Cushing looks like he is waiting on the chocks, ready to demonstraite his acting chops. Mike Raven plays a wonderful empty wardrobe in all his scenes, while also guesting Richard (Doctor Who) Hurndall looks the part and plays well with what he has... The fims pace is different to ANY Hammer film, it really ISN'T a Hammer film. What it quite cleverly and bravely is, it plays almost like a victorian melodrama. It's unusal, but works extremely well. Weeks knew what he was doing for sure, so much so there are many fans who credit 'I Monster' as a very faithful adaptation!  

THE INDICATOR BLU RAY RELEASE of Amicus film 1971 'I Monster' is a NEW 2K restoration by Powerhouse films, from ORIGINAL FILM MATERIALS. Indicator here offers TWO presentation of the film : An ORIGINAL 75 minute in dusration THEATRICAL CUT and the lesser seen EXTENDED 80 minute version, BOTH seamlessly branched on a single layered bly ray disc.There is a solid look to the visuals of the film, a typical 'film-like' texture, typical to the UK presentation look of the early 1970's era. The look isn't particularity full of different ranges, which is also typical of theatrical releases at this time. You will spot areas of softness, a look that one can see is inherent in the actual production. This takes nothing away from the experience of the film, and is not to be associated with a fault of the 1080p transfer of this film.  

QUICK LISTING OF 'I,MONSTER' EXTRAS

• Audio commentary with director Stephen Weeks (2020)

• Audio commentary with Weeks and film scholar Sam Umland (2005)
• The BEHP Interview with Peter Tanner - Part One, 1914-1939 (1987): an archival audio recording, made as part of the British Entertainment History Project, featuring the celebrated editor in conversation with Roy Fowler and Taffy Haines (1:15:05)
• Introduction by Stephen Laws (2020): appreciation by the acclaimed horror author (5:57)
• Stephen Weeks at the Manchester Festival of Fantastic Films (1998): archival video recording of the director in conversation (15:47)
• Interview with Milton Subotsky (1985): archival audio recording of the famed producer (3:01:50)
• Interview with Carl Davis (2020): the renowned composer discusses his score (18:07)
• Image gallery: publicity and promotional material
* UK Original theatrical trailer (3:01) / US theatrical trailer (1:47)
• Kim Newman and David Flint trailer commentary (2017): short critical appreciation by the genre-film experts (1:47)
• Limited edition exclusive 36-page booklet with a new essay by Josephine Botting, Milton Subotsky on I, Monster, an archival interview with Stephen Weeks, an overview of contemporary critical responses, and film credits
• World premiere on Blu-ray
• Limited edition of 3,000 copies

INDICATOR'S #EXTRAS features for their blu ray release of Amicus films, 'I, MONSTER' gets off to a great start, with a NEW commentary provided the film's director Stephen Weeks. rarely these days, do we get a Peter Cushing / Christopher Lee release, with such a current vibe! Most directors, of such a film from an era produced over 50 years ago, sadly are no longer with us, to provide a such a current and fresh delivery. Weeks provides all the background on many of the issues concerning the production of this film, from his own and excellent perspective. We all know that the production was to have been produced in 3D, it is very refreshing to not only get the full background on why that was proposed and most importantly, why it didn't happen! He gives us a very informative breakdowns on scenes, the chosen angles, lighting and his experience of working with the cast. It's ALL here.

AFTER DECADES of much speculation from fanzines and magazines, we are able to at last hear his views on working with the producer teams of Subotsky and Rosenberg, warts and all. In my experience talking and corresponding with Weeks for several years, I have always found him to be, very honest, quite detailed in his recall on making 'I Monster'.. having waited a LONG time for a recorded interview with depth and opportunity to finally come along, it's a very reassuring demonstration of the fact, that he is and has always been a director, who even when younger, and produced I Monster, who had bags of vision and talent. 

AS A PLUS we also get the opportunity of a SECOND INTERVIEW with Weeks, which was recorded back in 2005, with Sam Umland. There is also the choice of watching the feature with the accompaniment of over an hour of a BEHP interview with 'Peter Tanner - Part One, 1914-1939  from 1987'. This is an archival audio recording, made as part of the British Entertainment History Project, which features this celebrated editor in conversation with Roy Fowler and Taffy Haines! Indicator are very generous in providing all of the THREE audio options on BOTH edits of 'I Monster'  All three of these audio options are available on both cuts of I, Monster

THERE IS ALSO a new six minute introduction by acclaimed horror author, Stephen Laws, next we get a 20 minute archival video recording of Stephen Weeks from 1998, at the Manchester Festival of Fantastic Films

NEXT ON THE LIST is another archival interview, this time from producer Milton Subotsky recorded in 1985. As with all Subotsky interviews, there's detail, stories and quite a few surprises. It's a packed THREE HOUR experience!. Renowned composer, Carl Davis provides us with a 18 minute interview, discussing his score for 'I,Monster'.

SOMETHING THAT IS AN EXPECTED EXTRA on blu ray releases these days also gets the Indicator treatment is an IMAGE GALLERY, any of these stills , will probably come as new to most collectors, on set, behind the scenes and press plus there's the gallery of publicity and promotional material, both UK original theatrical trailer and US theatrical trailer plus a Kim Newman and David Flint trailer commentary from 2017, this gives the package a cool, informed and  critical appreciation by two respected genre-film experts. 


VISIT THE TWO PART PCASUK GALLERY FEATURE from AUGUST 2018 with a collection of on set and behind the scenes photographs during the shooting of Amicus films 1971, 'I, MONSTER' :HERE  and  HERE 

IT'S WORTH NOTING THAT this package has a limited edition (3,000 copies) exclusive 36-page booklet with a NEW essay by Josephine Botting, Milton Subotsky on I, Monster, an archival interview with Stephen Weeks, an overview of contemporary critical responses, and film credits. If EXTRAS on blu rays is YOUR THING, like me you will be quite impressed by what is on offer here and busy for quite sometime. Indicator has obviously taken time and care in finding EXTRAS that matter and give the package added value to collector and fans! With an opportunity of seeing this film again, with a cleaner print, crisper image and the whole SKIP LOAD of very interesting extras, these are the reasons for my pre-order. It also brings my Amicus Cushing collection on BLU RAY to a very nice end, shelf stacked and looking complete! So, be wise, place your order and tell them...'TAKE MY MONEY, please . . . '


PLEASE COME JOIN US at the FACEBOOK PCASUK FAN PAGE! With posts every day, rare images and photographs, features and prize competitions.You'll have good company with over 34 thousand followers, all celebrating the LIFE and CAREER of Peter Cushing OBE!
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