Showing posts with label horror. Show all posts
Showing posts with label horror. Show all posts

Saturday, July 9, 2016

The Mummy's Curse (1944)

Recently screened the French blu-ray of The Mummy's Curse with Lon Chaney Jr. I'm glad I got it, but it isn't quite up to the standards of the other titles in the Elephant Films Universal Horror series. The problem isn't the video transfer... that is top notch. The problem is the film element. Image quality is all over the place.

Most of the film looks fine, but a good number of scenes have a snowstorm of negative dirt. Interestingly enough, the dirt seems to not continue through the intercutting. It's isolated to particular camera angles. That tends to make me think it might be a problem the film had on original release... perhaps some of the negative was mishandled during editing. It doesn't ruin my enjoyment of the film, but it is something to note.

That isn't the only problem... whenever there is an optical effect like a cross fade, the image gets a bit fuzzy. The stock footage reused from the original Mummy film as a flashback looks really bad. But the inserts of the stand in for Karloff and the narrator dissolved in over the top look fine, so again I think it is just sloppy editing.

The film itself is more like a low budget serial than an elaborate gothic horror film. The acting (aside from Chaney's pantomime performance) is abysmal and setting the action in a swamp in the deep South is pretty absurd. Add to that a cringe worthy performance by a black worker who calls people "Massuh" and the most unconvincing gypsies ever put on film, and you have a recipe for something destined to sit on the shelf unwatched.

If you love Universal horrors the way I do, you should probably pick this up for completeness's sake. But I seriously doubt this will ever be fully restored for release in the US. The blu-ray is region free and the French subtitles are removable using your remote control.








Tuesday, November 10, 2015

Hong Kong Ghost Stories (2011)


Hong Kong Ghost Stories (2011)

It's been a while since Hong Kong horror has been a mainstream genre in Chinese film making, but that seems to be changing. This film is a pair of unrelated ghost stories bridged by linking material... Kind of like the old Hammer and Amacus "trilogy" films. I've always liked this format because it compacts the interest and scares because of the shorter amount of time. It works really well within the Hong Kong school of horror.


The first story involves a young teacher taking on a job at a school and facing an unruly class of students. Slowly she begins to realize that the job wasn't exactly the one she was hired for. The ghostly elements aren't really anything new, but they are well done and when it involves a lot of pretty young actresses, who can complain? The second story is a lot more interesting, even though it starts out with over the top buffoonery. But pretty soon there are grisly murders and horrible retribution from the spirit world to make up for the silliness.


Image quality and sound are top notch. The surround content in particular is very good. Subtitles are mostly grammatically correct, but sometimes the dialogue goes so fast, it's hard to keep up.


The time gap between when movies like Mr Vampire were made and today is huge. Hong Kong in 1985 was a lot different than in 2011. It's interesting to see ghostly stuff inhabiting cell phones, and caricatured performances that resemble the Chinese equivalent of Valley Girls. The contrast between old ideas and new ones are stark, and it makes this a very interesting movie for Westerners. I'd recommend this one.


Link to order this blu-ray at YesAsia.com

Friday, September 4, 2015

BritTV: Marchlands and Lightfields

Marchlands: 2 DVD Set at Amazon UK (Region 2 / PAL) http://www.amazon.co.uk/Marchlands-DVD-Jodie-Whittaker/dp/B004HARLAG/

Happenings in the same house over three separate generations... the sixties, the eighties and today... are all strangely related. And it all goes back to the mysterious drowning of a young girl named Alice. This mini-series is a quintessential British ghost story told through deft transitions from decade to decade with cleverly planned wipes. The characters cross over and interact, and the ghost of Alice keeps her secret to the very last few minutes.
I really don't know why the British crime shows have made it across the Atlantic to PBS, but the ghost stories haven't. This one should be seen here. It's engaging, well directed and acted, and most of all scary. The DVD set is PAL Region 2, so you need a region free player, but you should have one anyway. There are too many great things in the world that haven't made it to the US.

Lightfields: 2 DVD Set at Amazon UK (Region 2 / PAL) http://www.amazon.co.uk/gp/product/B00AB22P1Y

It's rare for the followup to a successful TV series to be just as good as the original. But in this case it is. The reason for that is that they didn't just do a sequel or prequel using the same characters... they were smart enough to know that their story had already been told. Instead, they created *another* house and three more generations of families. It's the story of a teenage farmer's daughter who gets seduced and taken advantage of in a barn by an American airman during WWII. The barn bursts into flames and the girl is burned up with it. But who lit the match?
This time, the mystery is a little more pronounced than the chills, but there's still a couple of really good flaming ghost shots to make your skin crawl. The way the story plays out is gripping, and the acting of the older man returning to the house for the first time since the "accident" occurred when he was a boy is subtle and layered. Again, PAL Region 2.

Monday, August 31, 2015

BritTV: Ghostwatch (1992)


I've been on a British TV ghost story binge lately. This one, "Ghostwatch" was a real winner. Like Orson Welles' "War of the Worlds", it was aired on Halloween night and it pretended to be a live broadcast. When the BBC originally aired it, the phone lines lit up with people terrified, because they thought it was real. In the show, there is a call in segment and scripted callers claim to see things in the footage that the anchors didn't see, so it must have been pretty frightening for folks with a tendency towards being media gullible.

It's said to be one of the primary influences on "Blair Witch" and "Paranormal Activity" and I can totally see it. "Ghostwatch" has never been aired on TV again after its first broadcast, but it is available on DVD from Amazon.co.uk It's only in PAL format only, so you need a region free DVD player. The DVD comes paired with another ghost story called "The Stone Tape". It's more gothic than scary, but it's still fun.

http://www.amazon.co.uk/Haunted-Double-Feature-Ghostwatch-Stone/dp/B00EF1I8IQ/