Vincent Price's diabolical surgeon produces a new breed of supermen, except that his latest 'composite' creation is also a serial-killing vampire. While the mayhem keeps the cops busy, the conspiracy spreads to a foreign dictatorship, where another composite is consolidating power through high-level murders. British agent Christopher Lee is ferreting out the conspiracy-- or is he part of it? Scream and Scream Again Blu-ray Twilight Time Limited Edition 1969 / Color / 1:78 widescreen / 95 min. / Ship Date October 13, 2015 / available through Twilight Time Movies / 29.95 Starring Vincent Price, Christopher Lee, Peter Cushing, Alfred Marks, Christopher Matthews, Judy Huxtable, Yutte Stensgaard, Anthony Newlands, Michael Gothard Cinematography John Coquillon Production Design Bill Constable Film Editor Peter Elliott Original Music David Whitaker Written by Christopher Wicking from a novel by Peter Saxon Produced by Louis M. Heyward, Max Rosenberg, Milton Subotsky Directed by Gordon Hessler
Reviewed by Glenn Erickson
Scream and Scream Again hangs in there as a genre curiosity,...
Reviewed by Glenn Erickson
Scream and Scream Again hangs in there as a genre curiosity,...
- 03/11/2015
- por Glenn Erickson
- Trailers from Hell
Cinema Retro has received the following press release from the British Film Institute regarding their popular series of "Flipside" DVD titles:
BFI 12.00 Normal 0 false false false En-us X-none X-none MicrosoftInternetExplorer4
'Every time BFI Flipside releases a newly discovered film I always go and get it. It's like finding lost treasure.' Nicolas Winding Refn (Award-winning director of Drive)
'The Flipside is Britain's most far-out DVD label - bold film choices, gorgeous transfers, imaginative extras. Every release a revelation.' Kim Newman
'Flipside provides a window onto a time in British cinema when real film artists stalked our land.' Ben Wheatley (Award-winning director of Kill List)
Launched in May 2009, the BFI’s Flipside label has dedicated itself to unveiling the hidden history of British cinema, drawing upon materials preserved by the BFI National Archive. To date, the series has published over 60 films (features and shorts), and has met with universal acclaim,...
BFI 12.00 Normal 0 false false false En-us X-none X-none MicrosoftInternetExplorer4
'Every time BFI Flipside releases a newly discovered film I always go and get it. It's like finding lost treasure.' Nicolas Winding Refn (Award-winning director of Drive)
'The Flipside is Britain's most far-out DVD label - bold film choices, gorgeous transfers, imaginative extras. Every release a revelation.' Kim Newman
'Flipside provides a window onto a time in British cinema when real film artists stalked our land.' Ben Wheatley (Award-winning director of Kill List)
Launched in May 2009, the BFI’s Flipside label has dedicated itself to unveiling the hidden history of British cinema, drawing upon materials preserved by the BFI National Archive. To date, the series has published over 60 films (features and shorts), and has met with universal acclaim,...
- 06/10/2011
- por nospam@example.com (Cinema Retro)
- Cinemaretro.com
Fifty years ago, Thorold Dickinson kickstarted the first British film studies course at Ucl. It didn't last long – but its influence did
It's 50 years since film first became a university subject in Britain. Earlier dates are arguable, but on 16 January 1961 Thorold Dickinson gave his inaugural lecture in the physics theatre at University College London, accompanied by a programme evoking the dawn of cinema. Later dates have also been argued, and the general perception of film studies and its origins still involves a very 1970s blend of structuralism, semiotics, and psychoanalytic theory. Dickinson's department was a more free-spirited affair and has paid the price in obscurity and misrepresentation.
The idea had come from the BFI, the money from Wardour Street, and the Slade was in the frame largely because its director, William Coldstream, had in his 1930s youth dabbled in documentary under the tutelage of John Grierson. Coldstream's old colleagues were...
It's 50 years since film first became a university subject in Britain. Earlier dates are arguable, but on 16 January 1961 Thorold Dickinson gave his inaugural lecture in the physics theatre at University College London, accompanied by a programme evoking the dawn of cinema. Later dates have also been argued, and the general perception of film studies and its origins still involves a very 1970s blend of structuralism, semiotics, and psychoanalytic theory. Dickinson's department was a more free-spirited affair and has paid the price in obscurity and misrepresentation.
The idea had come from the BFI, the money from Wardour Street, and the Slade was in the frame largely because its director, William Coldstream, had in his 1930s youth dabbled in documentary under the tutelage of John Grierson. Coldstream's old colleagues were...
- 28/01/2011
- The Guardian - Film News
Dame Helen Mirren Turns 65
Happy birthday Dame Helen!
Oscar winner, stage veteran, tough TV cop, Britain's beloved monarch - Dame Helen Mirren has proved she fits perfectly into any role, and she's still sexy at 65.
Born in London in 1945, Mirren joined the National Youth Theatre at 18 and went on to grace the stage at the renowned Royal Shakespeare Company.
Famous for playing a buxom beauty who wasn't afraid to bare all on camera, she went from arthouse to the mainstream after landing the role of detective Jane Tennison in British TV hit series Prime Suspect.
She has won an Oscar for her role as Queen Elizabeth II, four Baftas, three Golden Globes and four Emmys, as well as a legion of fans around the world - becoming one of the most sought after stars as she entered her sixth decade.
And to celebrate such a legend, we have dug deep into her colourful past to uncover 10 fascinating facts about Britain's sauciest Dame. All Hail Helen!
- Dame Helen was chosen as one of People Magazine's annual 100 Most Beautiful People in the World in 2007.
- She is only one of three actresses to win two Golden Globes for acting in the same year. Joan Plowright and Sigourney Weaver are the other two.
- Dame Helen has portrayed an English Queen three times; Queen Charlotte in The Madness of King George, Elizabeth I in Elizabeth I, and Elizabeth II in The Queen. She has also played monarchs in The Prince of Egypt, The Snow Queen and Caligula.
- She was voted the world's sexiest older woman in 2007.
- She can speak fluent French.
- Her real name is Ilyena Lydia Vasilievna Mironov. Her father changed the family name to help them fit in with London life.
- She has a fansite dedicated to her, called The Helen Mirren Appreciation Society.
- Dame Helen documented her life in a picture book, released in 2008.
- She plays an unfaithful brothel owner in her latest movie Love Ranch, which was directed by her real-life husband Taylor Hackford. It's only the second time Hackford has directed Mirren - he was the man behind the lens for 1985 film White Nights.
- Her first acting credit on imdb.com is listed as Herostratus in 1967.
Oscar winner, stage veteran, tough TV cop, Britain's beloved monarch - Dame Helen Mirren has proved she fits perfectly into any role, and she's still sexy at 65.
Born in London in 1945, Mirren joined the National Youth Theatre at 18 and went on to grace the stage at the renowned Royal Shakespeare Company.
Famous for playing a buxom beauty who wasn't afraid to bare all on camera, she went from arthouse to the mainstream after landing the role of detective Jane Tennison in British TV hit series Prime Suspect.
She has won an Oscar for her role as Queen Elizabeth II, four Baftas, three Golden Globes and four Emmys, as well as a legion of fans around the world - becoming one of the most sought after stars as she entered her sixth decade.
And to celebrate such a legend, we have dug deep into her colourful past to uncover 10 fascinating facts about Britain's sauciest Dame. All Hail Helen!
- Dame Helen was chosen as one of People Magazine's annual 100 Most Beautiful People in the World in 2007.
- She is only one of three actresses to win two Golden Globes for acting in the same year. Joan Plowright and Sigourney Weaver are the other two.
- Dame Helen has portrayed an English Queen three times; Queen Charlotte in The Madness of King George, Elizabeth I in Elizabeth I, and Elizabeth II in The Queen. She has also played monarchs in The Prince of Egypt, The Snow Queen and Caligula.
- She was voted the world's sexiest older woman in 2007.
- She can speak fluent French.
- Her real name is Ilyena Lydia Vasilievna Mironov. Her father changed the family name to help them fit in with London life.
- She has a fansite dedicated to her, called The Helen Mirren Appreciation Society.
- Dame Helen documented her life in a picture book, released in 2008.
- She plays an unfaithful brothel owner in her latest movie Love Ranch, which was directed by her real-life husband Taylor Hackford. It's only the second time Hackford has directed Mirren - he was the man behind the lens for 1985 film White Nights.
- Her first acting credit on imdb.com is listed as Herostratus in 1967.
- 26/07/2010
- WENN
Zach Campbell
The Book He Never Wrote
David Cairns
The Forgotten: Head Shots
The Forgotten: The Radio Dicks
The Forgotten: The Dance of the Bread Rolls
The Forgotten: Who Killed Santa?
Images of the Day: Damsel in Distress #2
Adrian Curry
Movie Poster of the Week: "Small Change"
Movie Posters of the Decade
Movie Posters of the Decade: A Follow-Up
Manny Farber
Nervous from the Service
Films at Canadian Artists ’68: Art Gallery of Ontario
The New Breed of Filmmakers: A Multiplication of Myths
Daniel Kasman
Image of the Day: The Many Faces of Dr. Mabuse
Video Sundays: The Modern Charade Continued, Video Games Edition
Video Sundays: Flip Six Three Hole, or Football and The Great American Pastiche
Video Sundays, The Art of the Trailer Edition: "The Crazies" vs. "Green Zone"
The Notebook's 2nd Annual Writers' Poll: Fantasy Double Features of 2009, Part I
The Notebook's 2nd Annual Writers' Poll: Fantasy Double...
The Book He Never Wrote
David Cairns
The Forgotten: Head Shots
The Forgotten: The Radio Dicks
The Forgotten: The Dance of the Bread Rolls
The Forgotten: Who Killed Santa?
Images of the Day: Damsel in Distress #2
Adrian Curry
Movie Poster of the Week: "Small Change"
Movie Posters of the Decade
Movie Posters of the Decade: A Follow-Up
Manny Farber
Nervous from the Service
Films at Canadian Artists ’68: Art Gallery of Ontario
The New Breed of Filmmakers: A Multiplication of Myths
Daniel Kasman
Image of the Day: The Many Faces of Dr. Mabuse
Video Sundays: The Modern Charade Continued, Video Games Edition
Video Sundays: Flip Six Three Hole, or Football and The Great American Pastiche
Video Sundays, The Art of the Trailer Edition: "The Crazies" vs. "Green Zone"
The Notebook's 2nd Annual Writers' Poll: Fantasy Double Features of 2009, Part I
The Notebook's 2nd Annual Writers' Poll: Fantasy Double...
- 07/01/2010
- MUBI
Nothing happens fast in Herostratus, Don Levy's two-hour-and-twenty-three minute feature film, the only feature he made. Go look at the descriptions of it on the web, check out the plot descriptions, they all invariably boil down the same. A disillusioned young poet, Max (Michael Gothard), pitches his own suicide to an ad man, who then puts together a multi-sponsored spectacle to mark the event. Yes, there's quite a hook for you: the hyper-sensitive youth of Swinging London's counterculture forging a morbid alliance with the plastic forces of commerce and commercialism.
Except that in any "normal" narrative film the hook would be revealed and the deal made in the first ten minutes at least, or even quicker, before the opening credits with the marketing-department-approved pop song by the hottest current combo playing under them. Herostratus works differently.
Except that in any "normal" narrative film the hook would be revealed and the deal made in the first ten minutes at least, or even quicker, before the opening credits with the marketing-department-approved pop song by the hottest current combo playing under them. Herostratus works differently.
- 01/12/2009
- MUBI
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