Recently, I watched The Man Who Saw Frankenstein Cry, a swiftly-paced documentary on ham-fisted yet sincere monster-loving actor/writer/director Paul Naschy's life and career, with
plenty of comment on the
prolific King of Spanish Horror Cinema from the likes of his wife and brood, as
well as director-turned-commentator John Landis, Mick Garris, the unflappable
Jack Taylor (a somnolent chap who squeezed many cult/exploitation/horror
film roles in between international vacations), Living Dead at the Manchester
Morgue director Jorge Grau, and many more, plus behind-the-scenes photos and
footage, film clips, etc. Highly recommended to the Naschy fan and general
Eurotrash scholars.
I've also recently caught the Brian Clemens' Thriller episode, "Screamer," featuring Legend of Hell House and The Innocents actress Pamela Franklin as an imperiled American (!) in backwoods Britain (sadly, the winsome Franklin suppressed her lovely British accent for the part and was saddled with an unflattering 'do). Clemens was known for his clever scripting of The Avengers and sundry twilight-era Hammer horrors but his 1970s UK Thriller anthology show, which I've never previously seen, has taken plenty of heat over the years. Clemens previously co-wrote and produced the suspenseful original version of And Soon the Darkness, which also starred Franklin.
from The Man Who Saw Frankenstein Cry |
I've also recently caught the Brian Clemens' Thriller episode, "Screamer," featuring Legend of Hell House and The Innocents actress Pamela Franklin as an imperiled American (!) in backwoods Britain (sadly, the winsome Franklin suppressed her lovely British accent for the part and was saddled with an unflattering 'do). Clemens was known for his clever scripting of The Avengers and sundry twilight-era Hammer horrors but his 1970s UK Thriller anthology show, which I've never previously seen, has taken plenty of heat over the years. Clemens previously co-wrote and produced the suspenseful original version of And Soon the Darkness, which also starred Franklin.
from Rewind This! |
I borrowed, rented and traded videotapes through the 1980s and much of the '90s and only began purchasing them new late in that decade, at a time when the writing on their wall was "Goodbye obsolete format, signed, DVD." During the first decade of the 21st century, I began picking among flea market vendors for a few videotape-only rarities and even ordered VHS titles from online vendors, for those films not yet on DVD....
5 comments:
Concerning VHS tapes, all my friends have thrown away their tapes and video players. I'm one of the few that still buys and plays video tapes, usually because the film is not on dvd. I see you also still play video tapes. I didn't know there was anyone else!
Our throw away society, blah, blah, etc, etc.
Jeff does or did, and I do at times...though I have so much stacked up on my dvr that I often don't get to my dvds/bluray dvds quickly...it's pretty sad what still isn't available on dvd, at least "legitimately"...
I still have a few hundred VHS tapes, along with a couple of hundred Laser Discs but I can;t pretend I've played them much of late ... The Brian Clemens series, made on tape in the studio as was the custom in the UK at the time (the 35mm THE AVENGERS and the action adventure shows from ITC like THE SAINT being a real exception) can be a bit slow at times and not all are good but there are some real gems there too and the cast lists are amazing. Beware of the US syndication versions which were horribly re-edited to pad them out for a longer time-slot. The title sequence should have the distinctive 'fish-eye lens' loons and last under 60 seconds - if it's longer than that it's the syndication version and you may as well switch it off! I wrote about the show in a bit more detail here: http://www.screenonline.org.uk/tv/id/1396589/index.html
I'll have to check to see if this YT video is the bloated US offer, or the original. It's an odd running time, either way...thanks for the pointers! (My brother still has a set of 12" laserdiscs and a player, as well.)(My cousin is the only person I know to have bought the insane RCA stylus video system, some thirty-plus years ago, now.)
Just checked the YT here, which does have a rather 'filmised' look which is not original to the show:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ptq7FPQMUi4
And it is the UK broadcast version - the 70-minute running time is more or less correct actually. In the UK at the time the slots were less rigid and many of the episodes are between 65 and 72 minutes for a 75 to 85 minute slot.
I quite enjoy the style myself but I completely understand why this might not be everyone's cup of tea :)
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