Actors & Directors
- Chelsea Brown
- Lee Frost
- Kathy Baumann
- Jerry Butler
- Richard James Baker
- John Bliss
Release date: 2001-06-05 Run time: 91 min. Creator: Robert O. Ragland Price: £5.08
Review The Thing With Two Heads [1972] (REGION 1) (NTSC) / MGM:
Actors & Directors
- Lorenzo Doumani
- Bernie Kopell
- Katherine Heigl
- Meredith Salenger
- James Doohan
- Randy Quaid
Release date: 2007-02-13 Run time: 93 min. Creator: Sidney James Price: £4.81
Review Bug Buster: Sci-Fi Comedy [1998] (REGION 1) (NTSC) / Entertainment Studios:
Actors & Directors
- Arnold Vosloo
- Rachel Weisz
- Kevin J. O'Connor
- John Hannah
- Brendan Fraser
- Stephen Sommers
Release date: 1999-09-28 Run time: 125 min. Price: £7.75
Review The Mummy [1999] (REGION 1) (NTSC) / Universal Studios:For his breakthrough into the blockbuster big time, director Stephen Sommers (Deep Rising) was determined to avoid the hackneyed Hollywood Mummy clichés of flailing bandages, somnambulant zombies and wooden acting. If you're happy to settle for two out of three then the finished film could be your cup of Egyptian tea, fully delivering on its visual promise, but occasionally mired in a quicksand of stilted dialogue and plot contrivance. When disgraced high priest Imhotep (Arnold Vosloo) is awoken from his ancient prison, he unleashes his vengeful wrath in a whirl of computer-generated pestilence and plagues, all devised by the effects wizards at George Lucas' Industrial Light and Magic. No gory detail is spared as the mummy sets about rebuilding his decayed body and reviving his forbidden lover, aided by hordes of swarming, flesh-eating scarabs and an army of the dead. Among the more human cast, Brendan Fraser (Blast from the Past, George of the Jungle) brings an infectious Boys' Own enthusiasm to his Indiana-Jones-style adventurer, while such supporting players as Rachel Weisz and John Hannah are mostly eclipsed by the spectacle on offer. Ultimately, The Mummy is great fun and offers digital thrills ideally suited to the DVD format which will wow even the most CGI-sated viewer. On the DVD: commendably, the extras on this DVD are on a par with the Region One offering, including deleted scenes and director's commentary, and both picture and sound quality are excellent. Most interestingly, veteran ILM effects supervisor John Berton presents step-by-step guides to some of the film's most extraordinary CGI shots, from early animatics to 3-D modelling and compositing. There's also the obligatory "making of" programme, in which everyone insists their primary concern was to ensure the effects never superseded the story. Unfortunately, this only makes you more aware of the script's shortcomings. [+]
-Steve Napleton The modestly titled Ultimate Mummy Collection is an extravagant four-disc package that contains both The Mummy Ultimate Edition and The Mummy Returns Special Edition two-disc sets. For his breakthrough into the blockbuster big time, director Stephen Sommers was determined to avoid the hackneyed Hollywood Mummy clichés of flailing bandages, somnambulant zombies and wooden acting. If you're happy to settle for two out of three then the finished film could be your cup of Egyptian tea, fully delivering on its visual promise but occasionally mired in a quicksand of stilted dialogue and plot contrivance. Anrold Vosloo is disgraced high priest Imhotep, awoken from his ancient prison to unleash his vengeful wrath in a whirl of computer generated pestilence and plagues; Brendan Fraser brings an infectious boyish enthusiasm to his Indiana Jones-style adventurer, while supporting players Rachel Weisz and John Hannah are mostly eclipsed by the spectacle on offer. The lavish DVD extras include deleted scenes, a director's commentary and, most interestingly, veteran effects supervisor John Berton presenting a step-by-step guide to some of the film's most extraordinary computer generated shots. There's also the obligatory "making of" programme in which everyone insists their primary concern was to ensure the effects never superseded the story. Unfortunately, this only makes you more aware of the script's shortcomings. -Steve Napleton The Mummy Returns has an even more relentless pace and hammer headed tone than the first film-more explosions, more action and more mind-numbingly endless computer generated effects, set to a headache inducing surround soundtrack. The original cast are reunited and joined by WWF star The Rock (in a cameo role designed to plug his spin-off vehicle The Scorpion King) and young actor Freddie Boath who plays an English eight-year-old in the 1930s whose dialogue borrows from Bart Simpson. Still, despite the wearying relentlessness of its computer generated effects, endless chases and fights, this is undeniably fun popcorn fodder and provides some memorable scenes along the way, notably Rachel Weisz and Patricia Velasquez battling it out for the affections of nasty old Imhotep. Extras in this generous two-disc set include a decent commentary from the director and producer, DVD-ROM features, a 20-minute "making-of" documentary and a five-minute interview with the Rock. Best of all are the detailed special effects breakdowns of key sequences. -Mark Walker.
Actors & Directors
- Leon Askin
- Lou Cutell
- Oscar Beregi
- Liam Dunn
- John Dennis
Release date: 1998-11-03 Run time: 106 min. Creator: John Morris Price: £33.30
Review Young Frankenstein [1975] (REGION 1) (NTSC) / 20th Century Fox:If you were to argue Mel Brooks' Young Frankenstein ranks among the top-10 funniest movies of all time, nobody could reasonably dispute the claim. Spoofing classic horror in the way that Brooks' previous film Blazing Saddles sent up classic Westerns, the movie is both a loving tribute and a raucous, irreverent parody of Universal's classic horror films Frankenstein (1931) and Bride of Frankenstein (1935). Filming in glorious black and white, Brooks recreated the Frankenstein laboratory using the equipment from the original Frankenstein (courtesy of designer Kenneth Strickfaden), and this loving attention to physical and stylistic detail creates a solid foundation for non-stop comedy. The story, of course, involves Frederick Frankenstein (Gene Wilder) and his effort to resume experiments in re-animation pioneered by his late father. (He's got some help, since dad left behind a book titled How I Did It. ) Assisting him is the hapless hunchback Igor (Marty Feldman) and the buxom but none-too-bright maiden Inga (Teri Garr), and when Frankenstein succeeds in creating his monster (Peter Boyle), the stage is set for an outrageous revision of the Frankenstein legend. With comedy highlights too numerous to mention, Brooks guides his brilliant cast (also including Cloris Leachman, Madeline Kahn, Kenneth Mars and Gene Hackman in a classic cameo role) through scene after scene of inspired hilarity. Indeed, Young Frankenstein is a charmed film, nothing less than a comedy classic, representing the finest work from everyone involved. Not one joke has lost its payoff, and none of the countless gags have lost their zany appeal. From a career that includes some of the best comedies ever made, this is the film for which Mel Brooks will be most fondly remembered. [+]
No video library should be without a copy of Young Frankenstein. And just remember-it's pronounced "Fronkensteen". -Jeff Shannon.
Actors & Directors
- Andy Signore
- Rachel Bennett
- Andy Signore
- Larry Butler
- John Carreon
- Bruce Cronander
Release date: 2005-09-06 Run time: 93 min. Creator: Adrian Burka Price: £3.12
Review The Janitor [2003] (REGION 1) (NTSC) / Elite:
Actors & Directors
- Toni Wynne
- J.P. Delahoussaye
- John McConnell
- Herschell Gordon Lewis
- Mark McLachlan
- Melissa Morgan
Release date: 2003-07-29 Run time: 98 min. Price: £9.16
Review Blood Feast 2: All U Can Eat [2002] (REGION 1) (NTSC) / Shriek Show:
Actors & Directors
- Rhonda Shear
- Travis Willingham
- Laurie Walton
- Mary Woronov
- Barak Epstein
- Lloyd Kaufman
Release date: 2005-07-26 Run time: 60 min. Creator: Michael Fleetwood Price: £8.75
Review Prison-A-Go-Go! [2004] (REGION 1) (NTSC) / E.I. Independent:
Actors & Directors
- Bill Paxton
- Jay Chandrasekhar
- Jay Chandrasekhar
- Michael Weaver
- Tony Amendola
- M.C. Gainey
Release date: 2004-05-25 Run time: 104 min. Creator: Nathan Barr Price: £4.18
Review Club Dread [2004] (REGION 1) (NTSC) / 20th Century Fox:
Actors & Directors
- Rip Torn
- Will Smith
- Tommy Lee Jones
- Barry Sonnenfeld
- Linda Fiorentino
- Vincent D'Onofrio
Release date: 2002-05-21 Run time: 98 min. Price: £5.55
Review Men in Black [1997] (REGION 1) (NTSC) / Columbia TriStar:This imaginative comedy from director Barry Sonnenfeld (Get Shorty) is a lot of fun, largely on the strength of Will Smith's engaging performance as the rookie partner of a secret agent (Tommy Lee Jones) assigned to keep tabs on Earth-dwelling extra-terrestrials. There's lots of comedy to spare in this bright film, some of the funniest stuff found in the margins of the major action (a scene with Smith's character being trounced in the distance by a huge alien while Jones questions a witness is a riot. ) The inventiveness never lets up, and the cast-including Vincent D'Onofrio doing frighteningly convincing work as an alien occupying a decaying human-hold up their end splendidly. -Tom Keogh, Amazon. com On the DVD: This Collector's Edition disc contains a "Visual Commentary" that features director Barry Sonenfeld and actor Tommy Lee Jones in an anecdotal conversation, but with the unique twist that they are displayed as silhouettes on your TV screen (imagine you're sitting in the back row of the cinema and they are up front) using a pointer to highlight particular events on screen. If you have a widescreen TV, the menu prompts you to switch to 4:3 mode to see this. There is also a "Visual Effects Scene Deconstruction" in which the tunnel scene and the Edgar Bug fight scene are dissected into their constituent parts; an in-depth documentary, "Metamorphosis of MIB", which charts the progress of the concept from comic book to screen; five "Extended and Alternate" scenes; trailers, including a teaser for MIB II; and Will Smith's "Men in Black" music video. -Mark Walker.
Actors & Directors
- John Hoyt
- June Kenney
- Bert I. Gordon
- Michael Mark
- Jack Kosslyn
- John Agar
Release date: 2001-02-20 Run time: 79 min. Price: £4.97
Review Attack of the Puppet People [1958] (REGION 1) (NTSC) / MGM:
Actors & Directors
- Bob Dahlin
- Denise DuBarry
- Howard Duff
- Claude Akins
- Henry Gibson
- Donald Grant
Release date: 1998-11-10 Run time: 87 min. Price: £3.23
Review Monster in the Closet [1986] (NTSC) / Troma:
Actors & Directors
- Joji Iida
- Pappara Kawai
- Akira Enomoto
- Kaoru Okunuki
Release date: 2004-02-23 Run time: 93 min. RRP: £19.99 Price: £6.79
Review Battle Heater / Eastern Cult Cinema:
Actors & Directors
- Greg Freeman
- Angel Martin
- Garo Nigoghossian
- Lily Walker
- Jay Ingle
Release date: 2005-05-31 Run time: 90 min. Creator: Ola Sjoberg Price: £11.95
Review Actress Apocalypse [2005] (REGION 1) (NTSC) / Crash Cinema:
Release date: 2002-02-05 Run time: 215 min. Price: £31.48
Review Ghostbusters/Ghostbusters 2 [1989] (REGION 1) (NTSC) / Ghostbusters 1 & 2:
Actors & Directors
- David Cross (II)
- James DeBello
- Keenen Ivory Wayans
- Anna Faris
- Marlon Wayans
- Shawn Wayans
Release date: 2001-12-18 Run time: 82 min. Price: £3.69
Review Scary Movie 2 [2001] (REGION 1) (NTSC) / Dimension:
Actors & Directors
- Reggie Bannister
- William Mills
- Paul Bunnell
- Andi Wenning
- Melissa Baum
- Forrest J. Ackerman
Release date: 2002-07-30 Run time: 56 min. Creator: Jerry Danielson Price: £1.75
Review That Little Monster [1994] (REGION 1) (NTSC) / Elite:
Actors & Directors
- C. Ernst Harth
- Adam West
- Jack Perez
- Mary Elizabeth Winstead
- Nick Carter
- Carmen Electra
Release date: 2004-11-02 Run time: 92 min. Creator: Michael Richard Plowman Price: £5.79
Review Monster Island [2003] (REGION 1) (NTSC) / DEJ Productions:
Actors & Directors
- Terry Norton
- Bruce Campbell
- Scott Spiegel
- Raymond Cruz
- James Parks
- Tiffani-Amber Thiessen
Release date: 1999-09-28 Run time: 88 min. Price: £4.96
Review From Dusk Till Dawn 2: Texas Blood Money [2000] (REGION 1) (NTSC) / Dimension:B-movie mavens turned A-list genre fiends Robert Rodriguez and Quentin Tarantino teamed up in 1996 to take vampire gothic south of the border into spaghetti Western territory for the gory cult film From Dusk Till Dawn. The high-concept mix of southwestern criminals versus supernatural nasties proved too irresistible for either of the video-hound creators to allow it to remain dead (or undead, as the case may be), so they plotted and produced a pair of direct-to-video sequels. Tarantino takes a story credit on the first, a heist film coscripted and directed by Scott Speigel. A Mexican bank robbery helmed by drawling criminal Robert Patrick (Terminator 2) turns into a literal bloodbath when his crew are turned into hungry bloodsuckers. Speigel, a buddy of Sam Raimi, tops both Tarantino and Rodriguez for sheer cinematic acrobatics, putting his camera in the most absurd places (even from inside the mouth of a vampire chomping down on a victim) and driving the film with adrenaline-charged overkill, but despite some clever scenes and a hilarious Psycho spoof, From Dusk Till Dawn 2-Texas Blood Money turns into another aggressively trashy latex-mask and rubber-bat gorefest as cops and robbers team up against the fanged gang. Bo Hopkins costars as the police detective dogging Patrick's trail. Bruce Campbell and Tiffani-Amber Thiessen make cameos in the jokey opening sequence and Speigel and fellow director Kevin Smith briefly appear as vampire bait. Bartender Danny Trejo is the only returning cast member. -Sean Axmaker A direct-to-video sequel, From Dusk Till Dawn 2: Texas Blood Money begins as another cowboy noir, with ex-con Robert Patrick playing cat and mouse with Texas Ranger Bo Hopkins. It segues into horror as heist man Duane Whitaker runs into a bat on the highway and proceeds to turn his gang into vampires who engage during a total eclipse in a Wild Bunch-style bank raid-cum-shootout. [+]
The players add a little Tex-Mex grit to Tarantino-style dialogue (a debate about whether porno movies need plots), but a busy, bloody climax doesn't disguise the very thin storyline. On the DVD: Texas Blood Money comes to DVD in a great-looking 1. 85:1 widescreen print which shows off the attempt made by director Scott Spiegel to add visual quality to a rerun of the original's plot. There are no extra features. -Kim Newman.
Actors & Directors
- Rudy Poe
- Robert Lind
- David Marriott
- Diana Frank
- Dean Iandoli
- Sean Haines (II)
Release date: 2005-10-04 Run time: 84 min. Price: £4.94
Review Monster High [1989] (REGION 1) (NTSC) / Columbia TriStar:
Actors & Directors
- Diedrich Bader
- Jeffrey Dean Morgan
- Matthew Leutwyler
- Portia de Rossi
- Jeremy Sisto
- David Carradine
Release date: 2005-09-06 Run time: 87 min. Creator: David Scardina Price: £7.44
Review Dead and Breakfast [2004] (REGION 1) (NTSC) / Anchor Bay:
| Models & Brands: The Thing With Two Heads [1972] (REGION 1) (NTSC), Bug Buster: Sci-Fi Comedy [1998] (REGION 1) (NTSC), The Mummy [1999] (REGION 1) (NTSC), Young Frankenstein [1975] (REGION 1) (NTSC), The Janitor [2003] (REGION 1) (NTSC), Blood Feast 2: All U Can Eat [2002] (REGION 1) (NTSC), Prison-A-Go-Go! [2004] (REGION 1) (NTSC), Club Dread [2004] (REGION 1) (NTSC), Men in Black [1997] (REGION 1) (NTSC), Attack of the Puppet People [1958] (REGION 1) (NTSC), Monster in the Closet [1986] (NTSC), Battle Heater, Actress Apocalypse [2005] (REGION 1) (NTSC), Ghostbusters/Ghostbusters 2 [1989] (REGION 1) (NTSC), Scary Movie 2 [2001] (REGION 1) (NTSC), That Little Monster [1994] (REGION 1) (NTSC), Monster Island [2003] (REGION 1) (NTSC), From Dusk Till Dawn 2: Texas Blood Money [2000] (REGION 1) (NTSC), Monster High [1989] (REGION 1) (NTSC), Dead and Breakfast [2004] (REGION 1) (NTSC) |