Horror Classics Vol
Christmas Horror Classics Vol. 1
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Horror Classics, Vol. 17: Man In The Attic/I Eat Your Skin/Bloodlust!/The... $4.49 |
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Horror Classics, Vol. 17: Man In The Attic/I Eat Your Skin/Bloodlust!/The... $4.85 |
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HORROR CLASSICS - VOLUME 11 - 4 MOVIES - NEW DVD $2.02 |
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HORROR CLASSICS - VOLUME 11 - 4 MOVIES - NEW DVD $5.02 |
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The Great Horror Classics Vol. 8 $1.25 |
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Horror Classics - Volume 13 - 4 Movies (DVD, 2008)---1 disc $5.00 |
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NEW HORROR CLASSICS VOLUME 9 BORIS KARLOFF - 4 MOVIES $6.99 |
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GREAT HORROR CLASSICS - VOL. 1 - NEW DVD $1.50 |
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GREAT HORROR CLASSICS - VOL. 1 - NEW DVD $4.50 |
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Great Horror Classics - Vol. 8 (DVD, 2003) $0.99 |
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"Great Horror Classics, Vol. 4 DVD" $3.65 |
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"Great Horror Classics, Vol. 5 DVD" $1.62 |
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HORROR CLASSICS, VOL. 12 (Four-Movie Set) DVD New! $9.98 |
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Great Horror Classics, Vol. 12 (Monstrosity, Black Dragons, Night of the Blood B $5.78 |
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GREAT HORROR CLASSICS - VOLUME 4 - NEW DVD BOXSET $6.71 |
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GREAT HORROR CLASSICS - VOLUME 4 - NEW DVD BOXSET $9.71 |
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GREAT HORROR CLASSICS - VOL. 5 - NEW DVD $3.83 |
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GREAT HORROR CLASSICS - VOL. 5 - NEW DVD $1.00 |
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Great Horror Classics - Vol. 8 (DVD, 2003) $6.99 |
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GREAT HORROR CLASSICS - VOL. 2 - NEW DVD $1.50 |
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GREAT HORROR CLASSICS - VOL. 2 - NEW DVD $4.50 |
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GREAT HORROR CLASSICS - VOL. 4 - NEW DVD $1.50 |
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GREAT HORROR CLASSICS - VOL. 4 - NEW DVD $4.50 |
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"Fox Horror Classics Collection, Vol. 2 DVD" $13.83 |
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Great Horror Classics - Vol. 8 (DVD, 2003) $1.99 |
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Horror Classics Volume 3 - 5-Movie Pack (DVD, 2004) $8.37 |
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Horror Classics Volume 8 - 4-Movie Pack (DVD, 2004, NEW) Phantom of the Opera $3.89 |
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Great Horror Classics - Vol. 1 ~ Bela Lugosi ~ 5 Movies $7.49 |
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Horror Classics 4 Movie Pack Vol. 2 $4.55 |
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Horror Classics 4 Movie Pack - Vol. 4 (DVD, 2005) - BRAND NEW! $0.85 |
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TV Land Presents: Favorite TV Theme Songs $8.99 All products are BRAND NEW and factory sealed. Fast shipping and 100% Satisfaction Guaranteed.... |
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Television's Greatest Hits, Vol. 1: From the 50s and 60s $21.98 65 TV themes from the 50's and 60's. Includes Mission Impossible. TVT 1100 CD.... |
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Television's Greatest Hits, Vol. 2: From the 50s and 60s $21.98 ... |
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Walt Disney Cartoon Classics Volume 3: Scary Tales $69.95 Contains' Six Cartoons. Donald Duck and the Gorilla, Duck Pimples, The Skeleton Dance, The Haunted House, Donald's Lucky Day, Pluto's Judgment Day... |
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Addams Family, Vol. 1 [VHS] $2.74 If The Munsters was a traditional family sitcom as reimagined by Famous Monsters of Filmland magazine, The Addams Family is a macabre twist on Father Knows Best. The Munster and Addams clans made their TV debuts in 1964 and lasted two seasons before the networks buried them. The Addamses are now gloriously resurrected in this three-disc set that digs up the series' first 22 episodes (oddly, 12 s... |
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Classic Literary Stories, Vol. 2 (The Cask of Amontillado [Poe]; The Necklace [Guy de Maupassant]) Productions of two classic stories; "The Cask of Amontillado" by Edgar Allen Poe is portrayed in eerie artistic still-shot art. "The Necklace" by de Maupassant is a live-action production.... |
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The Flight of the Phoenix $6.99 Robert Aldrich's tense, 1965 drama about a plane crash in the Sahara is a unique psychological study of men in desperate circumstances. In this somewhat revisionist view of classic heroism, every character within the mixed lot is stretched to his limit, and individual efforts to brave the elements and hostile nomads are duly punished. What is left is collective will and ingenuity. One could call t... |
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The Best of Abbott & Costello, Vol. 3 (Abbott & Costello Go to Mars / Abbott & Costello in the Foreign Legion / Abbott & Costello Meet Frankenstein / Abbott & Costello Meet the Invisible Man / Abbott & Costello Meet the Killer / Comin' Round the Mountain / Lost in Alaska / Mexican Hayride) $19.18 The laughs are out of this world as "Abbott and Costello Go to Mars" (1953); they star as wrestling promoters who get involved with a sexy spy in "Abbott and Costello in the Foreign Legion" (1950); "Abbott and Costello Meet Frankenstein" (1948) while trying to dodge Bela Lugosi (as Dracula); it takes a doctor's invisibility serum to help catch a crook in "Abbott and Costello Meet the Invisible Man... |
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Georges Melies: First Wizard of Cinema 1896-1913 $52.41 The most dazzling, innovative films of French "cinemagician" Georges Melies are featured in this collection. Beginning with his very first work, "Playing Cards" (1896), the set includes such astonishing, effects-filled shorts as the famous "A Trip to the Moon" (1902), "The Merry Frolics of Satan" (1906), "The Conquest of the Pole" (1912), and 169 others. The five-disc set also includes the tribute... |
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Best New Werewolf Tales (Vol. 1) ***NOW ON SALE!***Want the Greatest Werewolf Stories Ever Written?BEST NEW WEREWOLF TALES (Vol. 1)Over 100,000 wordsFrom the people that brought you the Best New Zombie Tales, and the Best New Vampire Tales!TABLE OF CONTENTS:LIKE PART OF THE FAMILY ~ JONATHAN MABERRYBABY ~ JAMES ROY DALEYANNIVERSARY ~ JOHN EVERSONTHE VIRGIN Oâ FULL MOON FALLS ~ JAMES NEWMANTHE TROJAN PLUSHY ~ DAVID BERNSTEIN ... |
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Horror Classics, Vol. 9 - $4.99 Includes:Dead Men Walk (1943) The Terror (1963), MPAA Rating: R Count Dracula and His Vampire Bride (1973), MPAA Rating: R Mutant (1983), MPAA Rating: R Dead Men Walk This painfully cheap but wildly entertaining PRC production stars a hammy George Zucco in a dual role as the Clayton Twins -- both doctors, one good, one evil. Elwyn Clayton, a practitioner of the black arts, is murdered by his brother Lloyd and returns from the dead as a vampire to seek revenge with the aid of his leering, hunchbacked assistant (Dwight Frye -- who else?). He exacts his vengeance by brutally murdering Elwyn's associates, with all evidence pointing to the only living twin. Jungle Siren director Sam Newfield makes the most of the paltry budget, helped greatly by Zucco's typically flamboyant performance -- which threatens to out-camp even that of legendary eye-roller Frye (who would die of a heart attack some months after this film's completion). ~ Cavett Binion, Rovi The Terror In this horror chiller, an intriguing, beautiful woman (Sandra Knight) keeps re-appearing to early 19th-century Lt. Duvalier (Jack Nicholson), and he is led to a castle where he finds an imposter of Baron Von Leppe (Boris Karloff). He becomes trapped in the ancient castle and tries to make sense of the eerie situation. Director Roger Corman (with the help of a few other directors, including Francis Ford Coppola) shot most of this within a few days after finishing The Raven--utilizing the same set. ~ Kristie Hassen, Rovi Count Dracula and His Vampire Bride The final installment in Hammer Studios' Dracula series is also the least interesting of the lot. A fairly direct follow-up to Dracula A.D. 1972, this sequel finds the Count (Christopher Lee) developing a potent strain of bubonic plague which he and his devil-worshipping disciples plan to release from 1970's London to wipe out nearly all life on earth. His efforts are challenged once again by the dedicated Dr. Van Helsing (Peter Cushing), leading to a rather uninvolving climax. Despite the always-welcome presence of Lee and Cushing, this installment plays too flagrantly with the time-honored Hammer Gothic formula, giving Dracula actual dialogue and surrounding the leads with a dull, amateurish supporting cast -- with the possible exception of Joanna Lumley (later of BBC-TV's Absolutely Fabulous). This also marked Lee's final performance as the Count and signaled the beginning of the end for Hammer's horror heyday. Also known as Satanic Rites of Dracula and Dracula is Dead and Well and Living in London. ~ Cavett Binion, Rovi Mutant A muscular pair of Yankee brothers visit a backwater Georgia town and end up involved with rednecked mutant zombies. The campy horror begins when brother Mike suddenly disappears. Puzzled brother Josh, with the help of Sheriff Will Stewart and schoolmarm Holly begin a desperate search. Unfortunately more trouble ensues when they find that toxic waste has transformed their normally peaceable neighbors into scary monst |
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Horror Classics, Vol. 5 - $3.99 Includes:Scared to Death (1947), MPAA Rating: NR Silent Night, Bloody Night (1973), MPAA Rating: R Good Against Evil (1977), MPAA Rating: NR Just Before Dawn (1980), MPAA Rating: R Scared to Death Completed several years before its 1947 release, Scared to Death is historically important as Bela Lugosi's only color film (outside of his brief unbilled appearance in 1931's Fifty Million Frenchmen, which today exists only in black & white). Other than that, it's a dreary story of how a beautiful but treacherous young woman (Molly Lamont) literally dies of fright. Anticipating Sunset Boulevard by at least five years, the film is narrated by the deceased "heroine", meaning that suspense and surprise are hardly considerations here. It's a toss-up as to who's funnier: the film's official comedy relief, dumb detective Nat Pendleton and dumber blonde Joyce Compton, or the "odd couple" team of the caped-and-cloaked Bela Lugosi and his dress-alike dwarf companion Angelo Rossitto. For the record, Lugosi plays a sinister hypnotist named Leonide, yet another of his myriad of "red herring" roles in the 1940s. ~ Hal Erickson, Rovi Silent Night, Bloody Night The secrets of a small New England town are violently exposed on Christmas Eve in this proto-slasher shocker. The owner of the long-abandoned Butler estate is desperate to sell, and dispatches his lawyer from New York to negotiate its purchase by the town council. Meanwhile, an inmate from a nearby insane asylum breaks loose and makes his way to the old mansion to take bloody revenge for a crime kept hidden for 35 years. The maniac makes mysterious phone calls to various prominent citizens, telling them that "Marianne" has returned, and lures each to the Butler house to meet their doom. The mayor's daughter, Diane, receives a visit from a man who claims to be Jeremy Butler, the mansion's owner, in town to investigate his lawyer's disappearance. Together they attempt to unravel the sinister mystery of the Butler house, which turns out to be a harrowing tale of incest, insanity and mass murder. Cult favorites Mary Woronov and John Carradine are featured in the cast of this eerie thriller, which also includes cameos from Warhol Factory legends Candy Darling and Ondine. ~ Fred Beldin, Rovi Good Against Evil The made-for-TV Good Against Evil might not have existed had not The Exorcist shown the way three years earlier. Dack Rambo and Elyssa Davalos star as sweethearts Andy Stuart and Jessica Gordon. The course of true love is messed up when Satan claims Jessica as his own personal property. Desperately, Andy turns to a pair of priests, Fathers Kemschler (Dan O'Herlihy) and Wheatley (John Harkins), for spiritual guidance, not to mention a bit of brute force in purging poor Jessica of her demons. Jimmy Sangster's screenplay doesn't miss a trick, nor does the spooky direction by Paul Wendkos. When first telecast on May 22, 1977, Good Against Evil ran 72 minutes; syndicated prints have been expanded to 97 minutes. ~ Ha |
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Horror Classics, Vol. 13 - B&W $3.99 Includes:Condemned to Live (1935) Bowery at Midnight (1942) Beast From Haunted Cave (1960) Creature from the Haunted Sea (1961) Condemned to Live In Condemned to Live, Ralph Morgan stars as Professor Paul Kriston, the kindly and generous doctor of a tiny European village. So well-liked is Kriston that the beautiful Marguerite Mane (Maxine Doyle) is willing to marry him, even though she loves another man, young David (Russell Gleason). Things take a sinister turn when a series of murders occur in the village, apparently committed by a vampiric beast. David makes himself quite unpopular when he suggests that the killer may be a human being. Meanwhile, Professor Kriston turns to an old family friend, Dr. Anders Bizet (Pedro de Cordoba), for a possible solution to the murder spree, but Bizet is strangely secretive. Condemned to Live was filmed on standing sets at Universal City and on location at Bronson Canyon. ~ Hal Erickson, Rovi Bowery at Midnight Bowery at Midnight casts Bela Lugosi as Professor Brenner, a psychology instructor at New York University (which looks a lot like Berkeley in the exterior shots!). When not enlightening his students -- most of them buxom Monogram starlets -- Brenner is engaged in charitable work, running a mission in the Bowery. In truth, however, the kindly professor is a fiend in human form, who uses his mission as a front for a vast criminal empire. When Judy (Wanda McKay), one of Brenner's students, stumbles onto the truth, she's targeted for extermination by the Dr. Jekyll-and-Mr. Hyde prof. ~ Hal Erickson, Rovi Beast From Haunted Cave Director Monte Hellman (who would later direct a young Jack Nicholson on two low-budget westerns) earned his low-budget wings on Filmgroup's bizarre fusion of hostage/crime thriller and big-rubber-monster flick -- a quirky juxtaposition employed to similar effect 35 years later in From Dusk Till Dawn. The story begins with a team of gold thieves hiding out in a ski resort cabin after a heist, taking two people hostage as they prepare to smuggle their loot across the Canadian border -- unaware of the giant, icky-looking spider-monster lurking in a nearby cave, which preys on anyone unlucky enough to stumble near its lair. The film's woodland exteriors add a richness lacking in the typical dusty desert settings of this film's genre contemporaries. The cobwebby monster is played by Chris Robinson, later the star of General Hospital. ~ Cavett Binion, Rovi Creature from the Haunted Sea This early bit of "B"-movie fluff from Roger Corman and company is a hastily slapped-together melange of crime thriller and monster flick, laced with enough ham-fisted satire to make the entire mess enjoyable. The plot centers on a two-bit crook (Antony Carbone) who offers to transport a band of exiles from a war-torn Caribbean country -- along with a coffer of cash, which he intends to keep for himself. After killing his charges and dumping their bodies in the ocean, he blames their deaths on a sea monster |
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Horror Classics 5 (4 Disc) - $12.99 Horror Classics 5 (4 Disc) - |
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Horror Classics (Unabridged) $1.69 Horror Classics presents two classic stories of the supernatural.... |
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Horror Classics, Vol. 4 [2 Discs] - $6.99 Includes:The Sphinx (1933) House on Haunted Hill (1958), MPAA Rating: PG Werewolf in a Girls' Dormitory (1961) The Ghost (1963) Night of the Living Dead (1968), MPAA Rating: NR Isle of the Snake People (1971) Don't Look In The Basement! (1973), MPAA Rating: R Christmas Evil (1980), MPAA Rating: R The Sphinx A brutal murder has been committed, and an eyewitness has placed wealthy philanthropist Jerome Breen (Lionel Atwill) at the scene of the crime. The prosecution's case hinges on the ... |
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Soul Classics, Vol. 10 $10.99 Soul Classics, Vol. 10 |
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Broadway Classics, Vol. 5 $19.99 Broadway Classics, Vol. 5 |
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Classics of Horror $24.03 This book is in Like New condition |
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Horror Classics $7.46 This book is in New - Excellent condition |
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Fox Horror Classics Collection $17.99 Format: DVD Rating: Not Rated Genre: Horror Year: 2007 Release Date: 2007-10-09 |
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Karloff & Lugosi Horror Classics $17.99 Format: DVD Rating: Not Rated Genre: Horror Runtime: 327 Year: 2009 Release Date: 2009-10-06 |
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Fox Horror Classics, Vol. 2 [3 Discs] - Box Pan & Scan $14.99 Includes:Chandu the Magician (1932) Dr. Renault's Secret (1942) Dragonwyck (1946) Chandu the Magician Based on the radio serial of the same name, Chandu the Magician is a veritable rollercoaster ride of thrills and terror, boasting some of the best special effects of its period. Edmund Lowe stars as suave Frank Chandler, better known to his enemies as Chandu the Magician. Though he tries to keep his supernatural powers a secret from his beloved sister Dorothy (Virginia Hammond), niece ... |
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Dance Classics, Vol. 45 & 46 $24.99 Dance Classics, Vol. 45 & 46 |
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Greatest Salsa Classics, Vol. 3 $11.99 Greatest Salsa Classics, Vol. 3 |
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Country Gospel Classics, Vol. 1 $11.99 Country Gospel Classics, Vol. 1 |
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Universal Horror Classics Movie Archive $13 Format: DVD Rating: Not Rated Genre: Horror Year: 2009 Release Date: 2009-09-15 |
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On Writing Horror $16.99 The masters of horror have united to teach you the secrets of success in the scariest genre of all! In On Writing Horror, Second Edition, Stephen King, Joyce Carol Oates, Harlan Ellison, David Morrell, Jack Ketchum, and many others tell you everything you need to know to successfully write and publish horror novels and short stories. Edited by the Horror Writers Association (HWA), a worldwide organization of writers and publishing professionals dedicated to promoting dark literature, On Writing Horror includes exclusive information and guidance from 58 of the biggest names in horror writing to give you the inspiration you need to start scaring and exciting readers and editors. You'll discover comprehensive instruction such as: The art of crafting visceral violence, from Jack Ketchum Why horror classics like Dracula, The Exorcist, and Hell House are as scary as ever, from Robert Weinberg Tips for avoiding one of the biggest death knells in horror writingpredicable clichsfrom Ramsey Campbell How to use character and setting to stretch the limits of credibility, from Mort Castle With On Writing Horror, you can unlock the mystery surrounding classic horror traditions, revel in the art and craft of writing horror, and find out exactly where the genre is going next. Learn from the best, and you could be the next best-selling author keeping readers up all night long. |
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Horror Classics 4 - $12.99 Includes:The Ape (1940) British Intelligence (1940) The Ape This painfully-bad Monogram feature wastes the talents of two of horrordom's finest -- star Boris Karloff and co-writer Curt Siodmak (who would write the horror classic The Wolf Man for Universal the same year). The goofy plot involves the efforts of one Dr. Adrian (Karloff) to procure human spinal fluid for his polio-vaccine research by donning the pelt of a slain circus ape and slaughtering innocent people. The fact that he's snapping spines in the interest of medicine doesn't really help to clear the moral waters (he never does find a cure, anyway). Filmed during a particularly grueling year for Karloff, this marks the end of his lengthy stir with Monogram (after a tedious string of Mr. Wong potboilers). Without Karloff to kick around, the studio concentrated their humiliating efforts on Bela Lugosi, who appeared in a virtual remake, The Ape Man, three years later. ~ Cavett Binion, Rovi British Intelligence Though set during WW1, British Intelligence was obviously thrown together to capitalize on the outbreak of WW2. A remake of the 1930 espionager Three Faces East, the film stars Boris Karloff as Valder, the sinister butler of a British cabinet minister. It is quite possible that Valder is a German spy, and equally likely that the mysterious Helene von Lorbeer (Margaret Lindsay) is likewise working for the enemy. In fact, the audience is never quite certain who the good guys and bad guys really are until the climax, which takes place during a German zeppelin raid of London. As a balm to 1940 audiences, the film includes an early comedy scene in which German military protocol is upset by a clumsy corporal (Willy Kaufman) who bears a startling resemblance to a certain Nazi dictator. ~ Hal Erickson, Rovi |
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Horror Classics 5 - $12.99 Includes:Revolt of the Zombies (1936) King of the Zombies (1941) Revolt of the Zombies Designed as a follow-up to the Halperin Brothers' phenomenally successful White Zombie, Revolt of the Zombies unfortunately isn't nearly as good. The story is set in Cambodia in the years following WWI. Evil Count Mazovia (Roy D'Arcy) has come into possession of the secret methods by which dead men can be transformed into walking zombies and uses these unholy powers to create a race of slave laborers. An expedition is sent to the ruins of Angkor Wat, in hopes of ending Mazovia's activities once and for all. Unfortunately, Armand (Dean Jagger), one of the members of the expedition, has his own agenda. Stealing a set of secret tablets, he sets about to create his own army of zombies, targeting those whom he considers to be enemies. But Armand is hoist on his own petard when the zombies rebel and turn against him. The anachronistic moviemaking techniques which contributed so much to the atmosphere and entertainment value of White Zombie are totally out of place in Revolt of the Zombies; also, Dean Jagger's performance lacks the conviction necessary for this sort of horror fare. ~ Hal Erickson, Rovi King of the Zombies Set in the Caribbean shortly before the U.S. was drawn into WWII, this zombie chiller tells the tale of an American special agent who, along with his butler and a pilot, is sent out to find a missing American Admiral, whose plane crashed on one of the islands. Unfortunately, the hero's plane also crashes. Fortunately, a suave but sinister German doctor with a very strange wife is there to help them. The doctor explains that his spouse is in a strange trance and he is trying to find a cure. The butler soon discovers that she is not the only one; the island is teeming with zombies. When the butler tries to tell his employer, the employer refuses to believe in "voodoo hocus pocus." The butler and the pilot find themselves entranced. Fortunately, the agent is still around to solve the mystery of the zombies and to confront the culprit, an enemy spy. ~ Sandra Brennan, Rovi |
