Actors & Directors
- Dagmar Lassander
- Philippe Leroy
- Piero Schivazappa
Release date: 2008-04-14 Run time: 86 min. RRP: £12.99 Price: £7.49
Review The Frightened Woman [1969] / Shameless:
Actors & Directors
- Michael Rosenbaum
- Alicia Witt
- Jared Leto
- Loretta Devine
- Jamie Blanks
- Rebecca Gayheart
Release date: 2004-04-12 Run time: 96 min. RRP: £5.99 Price: £7.73
Review Urban Legend [1999] / Uca:An attractive young woman is driving her car on a dark country road and singing along to the radio. She's running out of gas and so she pulls into a gas station (run by a jittery, stuttering Brad Dourif) but then flees what seems to be an attack, only to find the real threat in her backseat: a hooded killer with an axe who takes her head off with a well-aimed swing. You've heard the story before? Not surprising, given that it's one of the more famous urban legends borrowed for Urban Legend, a post-Scream exercise in self-referential horror. The students at an ivy-covered New England college are turning up dead, the victims of a serial killer who murders in the fashion of the "apocryphal" modern myths. It's all for the benefit of good girl with a dark secret Alicia Witt, the sole witness to most of the killings. Doe-eyed Rebecca Gayheart, as her gullible best friend, and Jared Leto, the ambitious campus journalist who tracks down the secret that hangs over the school, lead a cast of pretty young women, hunky guys and campus characters, notably the suspicious professor Robert Englund, a genre legend in his own right as the star of seven Nightmare on Elm Street films. Take away the cheeky remarks and self-awareness and it's a throwback to the 1970s' rash of teen slasher movies, where sexually active teens are sliced, diced and otherwise slaughtered in elaborate and ingenious ways. The increasingly preposterous film is no Scream but the modestly stylish production has its moments. -Sean Axmaker.
Actors & Directors
- Morgan Freeman|Damian Lewis|Thomas Jane|Jason Lee
- Lawrence Kasdan
Release date: 2004-02-02 Run time: 128 min. RRP: £13.99 Price: £1.37
Review Dreamcatcher [2003] / Warner Home Video:One of Stephen King's most shapeless, all-but-the-kitchen-sink novels, Dreamcatcher is wrestled by overqualified director-writer Lawrence Kasdan and cowriter William Goldman into an equally shapeless, slightly more entertaining big-budget schlock movie. Mind-reading psychiatrist Thomas Jane, back-from-the-dead road accident victim Damian Lewis, slacker toothpick-chewer Jason Lee and psychic car salesman Timothy Olyphant are King-style thirtysomething buddies who might also evoke Kasdan's The Big Chill, bonded forever by a flashback psychic experience that logically took place in 1983 but with the Stand By Me haircuts, music and milieu of King's own childhood. On a weekend retreat in the snowy Maine woods, the quartet run into an alien incursion that begins ominously, with animals fleeing the forest but then throws in enough phenomena for a whole season of The X-Files with leftovers that could kit out a video nasty, notably toothy worm parasites memorably named "shit weasels" and a giant ET that turns to red powder and possesses Lewis. Mad militarist Morgan Freeman shows up and claustrophobic lost-in-the-woods business is diluted by a helicopter attack on a downed flying saucer and an internment camp for red-blotched infectees, while the plot boils down to something as simple as a race to prevent a worm from being dropped in a reservoir (which will end the world). On a scene-by-scene basis, it's entertaining and creepy so long as you don't think too hard about details, like why someone charged with trapping an alien by sitting clamped on the toilet lid would risk reaching down onto a bloody floor to get a toothpick or why the aliens didn't just land by the reservoir in the first place. -Kim Newman.
Actors & Directors
- Luana Anders
- Roger Corman
- Barbara Steele
- Vincent Price
- John Kerr
Release date: 2004-10-04 Run time: 77 min. RRP: £15.99 Price: £3.97
Review The Pit And The Pendulum [1961] / MGM Entertainment:The success of The Fall of the House of Usher in 1960 spurred American International Pictures to quickly launch another production based on an Edgar Allan Poe story. While producer-director Roger Corman had hoped to next adapt "The Masque of the Red Death" (which wasn't produced until 1964), Pit and the Pendulum (the on-screen title) became the second in AIP's long-running Poe series. Set in post-Inquisition Spain, the film stars John Kerr as a young Englishman who travels to the seaside castle of his brother-in-law (Vincent Price) to uncover the circumstances behind the death of his sister (a dubbed Barbara Steele). Price is tormented by memories of his mother's premature burial by his inquisitor father (also Price) and fears that this sadistic legacy has contributed to Steele's demise. Furthermore, he believes that Steele was also buried alive-a belief compounded by the mysterious destruction of her room, and the sound of her harpsichord playing in the night. Structured almost identically to Usher, Richard Matheson's script fleshes out the brief original text with a fast-paced and twist-filled plot that never loses sight of the psychological themes of Poe's work. It also provides Price with the richest of his many AIP/Poe roles, a sympathetic, deeply emotional man who is unhinged by the sins of his father. Corman's direction is equally driven and fluid, and features some impressive quasi-psychedelic visuals in the tense climax. [+]
Also noteworthy is art director's Daniel Haller's impressive design of the title set piece. -Paul Gaita, amazon. com.
Actors & Directors
- Kenji Matsuda
- Yuichiro Arai
- Tak Sakaguchi
- Ryuhei Kitamura
- Chieko Misaka
- Hideo Sakaki
Release date: 2003-06-30 Run time: 120 min. RRP: £14.99 Price: £12.49
Review Versus [2000] / Tartan Video:
Actors & Directors
- Cabral Ibaka
- David Elliot
- Ashleigh Rains
- Cain Manoli
- Tomm Coker
- Shannyn Sossamon
- Pink
Release date: 2008-03-03 Run time: 88 min. RRP: £15.99 Price: £5.39
Review Catacombs [2006] / Lions Gate Home Entertainment:
Actors & Directors
- Annabeth Gish
- Charles Durning
- Mick Garris
- Steven Weber
- Ron Perlman
- Tom Skerritt
Release date: 2007-10-22 Run time: 126 min. RRP: £17.99 Price: £8.98
Review Stephen King's Desperation [2006] / Warner Home Video:Director Mick Garris (Sleepwalkers), also recruited by Stephen King to remake The Shining, knows how to capture King's horror aesthetic on film. Desperation, based on a more recent King novel, is a pastiche of earlier King novelties, such as the psycho in uniform, this time Sheriff Collie Entragian (Ron Perlman), and dogs summoned by the devil, this time by TAK, an ancient Chinese demon. A town called Desperation in Nevada has a collapsed mine full of Chinese immigrant ghosts, whose spirits are trapped with TAK until they're accidentally unleashed. The TAK-possessed local sheriff is killing everyone, save a few travelers who stumble through on road trips. In the opening scene, Mary (Annabeth Gish) and her beau are pulled over by Sheriff Entragian, framed by his placing of marijuana in their trunk, then read their rights with a Satanic "I will kill you" thrown in. Later, Steve (Steven Weber), Cynthia (Kelly Overton), and Vietnam vet John Marinville (Tom Skerrit), ride into town, and they too encounter the evil policeman's wrath. They all meet a brave, imprisoned boy, David (Shane Haboucha), with whom they team up to end the mayhem. Desperation uses blue and green lighting to embrace the funhouse look, and camera shots highlighting the Sheriff's deranged face make the film occasionally spooky. But the rehashed plot detracts from the fear-factor, leaving one to pine for earlier King story adaptations, such as Misery or Cujo. -Trinie Dalton.
Release date: 2006-10-23 Run time: 110 min. RRP: £15.99 Price: £3.72
Review Wilderness / Momentum Pictures Home Ent:
Actors & Directors
- Brendan Fraser
- Kevin J. O'Connor
- John Hannah
- Rachel Weisz
- Arnold Vosloo
- Stephen Sommers
Release date: 2000-01-31 Run time: 120 min. RRP: £12.99 Price: £3.34
Review The Mummy [1999] / Sony Pictures Home Entertainment: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
- Ashley Laurence
- Andrew Robinson
- Clare Higgins
- Alan Randolph
- Anthony Hickox
- Sean Chapman
- Doug Bradley
- Clive Barker
Release date: 2004-09-27 Run time: 284 min. RRP: £34.99 Price: £24.40
Review Hellraiser Puzzle Box [1987] / Starz Home Entertainment:
Actors & Directors
- Grant Piro
- Emma Caulfield
- Jonathan Liebesman
- Sullivan Stapleton
- Lee Cormie
- Chaney Kley
Release date: 2005-09-05 Run time: 82 min. RRP: £9.99 Price: £2.29
Review Darkness Falls [2003] / Uca Catalogue:Humanity's fear of the dark provides Darkness Falls with some anxiety and fuels some jolts of fear from things popping out of nowhere. A kindly woman, who used to give children gold coins in exchange for their lost baby teeth, was hanged for a murder she didn't commit; in her last moments she laid a curse on the town (which has the unlikely name of Darkness Falls). So over the years the ghost of this woman has murdered various children because they saw her when she came to collect their teeth. In the present day, a boy who evaded her clutches returns to town as an adult in order to help the young brother of his childhood sweetheart-and from there this incoherent, inane movie is one long chase sequence without a glimmer of imagination or intelligence. -Bret Fetzer.
Actors & Directors
- Tilda Swinton
- Shia LaBeouf
- Rachel Weisz
- Djimon Hounsou
- Francis Lawrence
- Keanu Reeves
Release date: 2005-07-11 Run time: 116 min. RRP: £16.99 Price: £2.99
Review Constantine (Two Disc Edition) [2005] / Warner Home Video:In the grand scheme of theological thrillers, Constantine aspires for the greatness of The Exorcist but ranks more closely with The Order. Based on the popular Hellblazer comic book series, and directed with nary a shred of intelligence by music video veteran Francis Lawrence, it's basically The Matrix with swarming demons instead of swarming machines. Keanu Reeves slightly modifies his Matrix persona as John Constantine, who roams the dark-spots of Los Angeles looking for good-evil, angel-devil half-breeds to ensure that "the balance" between God and Satan is properly maintained. An ancient artifact and the detective twin of a woman who committed evil-induced suicide (Rachel Weisz) factor into the plot, which is taken so seriously that you'll want to stand up and cheer when Tilda Swinton swoops down as the cross-dressing angel Gabriel and turns this silliness into the camp-fest it really is. The digital effects are way cool (dig those hellspawn with the tops of their heads lopped off!), so if you don't mind a juvenile lesson in pseudo-Catholic salvation, Constantine is just the movie for you! -Jeff Shannon, Amazon. com.
Actors & Directors
- Sarah Michelle Gellar
- Michelle Trachtenberg
- James Marsters
- Emma Caulfield
- Joss Whedon
- Nicholas Brendon
Release date: 2003-04-14 Run time: 48 min. RRP: £15.99 Price: £10.84
Review Buffy the Vampire Slayer: Once More, With Feeling (2001) / 20th Century Fox Home Entertainment:"Once More With Feeling", a much needed shaft of lightness in Buffy the Vampire Slayer's dark sixth series, demonstrates that a "special" episode can be genuinely special. It preserves the show's continuity for its regular watchers and also delights people who have never experienced it before. This is creator Joss Whedon's tribute to all the masters of the stage musical whom he admires-most obviously Stephen Sondheim-and a chance for his talented cast to display their usual tight ensemble and sing and dance while doing it. The premise is typical Buffy both in its whimsy and its emotional truth-a demon forces the inhabitants of Sunnydale to express their emotions truthfully and uncovers a variety of embarrassing secrets. The actual musical ability of the Buffy cast is variable-Amber Benson as Tara and Anthony Stewart Head as Giles are perhaps the only ones with enough musical talent to carry purely lyrical tunes, but Sarah Michelle Gellar as Buffy is a game little trooper who delivers her various patter songs with her usual efficiency and charm. Emma Caulfield as the ex-demon Anya is the big surprise, her short paranoid riff on the subject of that ultimate evil, bunny rabbits is quite extraordinary; Broadway hoofer Hinton Battle is fabulous as Sweet: "I can bring whole cities to ruin and find time to get some soft shoe in. " -Roz Kaveney.
Actors & Directors
- Susumu Terajima
- Shinya Tsukamoto
- Nao Omori
- Paulyn Sun
- Takashi Miike
- Tadanobu Asano
Release date: 2008-10-20 Run time: 120 min. RRP: £9.99 Price: £2.98
Review Ichi The Killer [2003] / Contender Entertainment Group:
Actors & Directors
- Anthony Michael Hall
- John L. Adams
- Chris Bruno
Release date: 2008-06-03 Run time: 546 min. Creator: Nicole Deboer Price: £15.18
Review Dead Zone: The Final Season (REGION 1) (NTSC) / Lionsgate:
Release date: 2006-10-23 Run time: 90 min. RRP: £15.99 Price: £2.99
Review Boo [2005] / Momentum Pictures:
Actors & Directors
- Dennis Waterman
- Jenny Hanley
- Christopher Lee
- Roy Ward Baker
- Christopher Matthews
Release date: 2007-01-08 Run time: 91 min. RRP: £12.99 Price: £4.98
Review Scars Of Dracula [1970] / Optimum Home Entertainment:
Release date: 2008-06-30 Run time: 80 min. RRP: £14.99 Price: £7.35
Review Gruesome [2006] / Danger After Dark:
Actors & Directors
- Kurt Russell
- John Carpenter
- T.K. Carter
- Richard Masur
- Richard Dysart
Release date: 2008-10-06 Run time: 108 min. RRP: £19.99 Price: £14.99
Review The Thing [Blu-ray] [1982] / Universal Pictures UK:Director John Carpenter and special makeup effects master Rob Bottin teamed up for this 1982 remake of the 1951 science fiction classic The Thing from Another World, and the result is a mixed blessing. It's got moments of highly effective terror and spine-tingling suspense, but it's mostly a showcase for some of the goriest and most horrifically grotesque makeup effects ever created for a movie. With such highlights as a dog that splits open and blossoms into something indescribably gruesome, this is the kind of movie for die-hard horror fans and anyone who slows down to stare at fatal traffic accidents. On those terms, however, it's hard not to be impressed by the movie's wild and wacky freak show. It all begins when scientists at an arctic research station discover an alien spacecraft under the thick ice, and thaw out the alien body found aboard. What they don't know is that the alien can assume any human form, and before long the scientists can't tell who's real and who's a deadly alien threat. Kurt Russell leads the battle against the terrifying intruder, and the supporting cast includes Richard Masur, Richard Dysart, Donald Moffat, and Wilford Brimley. They're all playing standard characters who are neglected by the mechanistic screenplay (based on the classic sci-fi story "Who Goes There?" by John W. Campbell), but Carpenter's emphasis is clearly on the gross-out effects and escalating tension. If you've got the stomach for it (and let's face it, there's a big audience for eerie gore), this is a thrill ride you won't want to miss. [+]
-Jeff Shannon.
Actors & Directors
- Ailsa Marshall
- John Suits
- Michael McLafferty
- Gabriel Cowan
Release date: 2008-08-25 Run time: 92 min. RRP: £15.99 Price: £8.98
Review Breathing Room / Dnc Entertainment:
| Browse Horror:
Models & Brands: The Frightened Woman [1969], Urban Legend [1999], Dreamcatcher [2003], The Pit And The Pendulum [1961], Versus [2000], Catacombs [2006], Stephen King's Desperation [2006], Wilderness, The Mummy [1999], Hellraiser Puzzle Box [1987], Darkness Falls [2003], Constantine (Two Disc Edition) [2005], Buffy the Vampire Slayer: Once More, With Feeling (2001), Ichi The Killer [2003], Dead Zone: The Final Season (REGION 1) (NTSC), Boo [2005], Scars Of Dracula [1970], Gruesome [2006], The Thing [Blu-ray] [1982], Breathing Room |