Quantcast
Channel: PETERCUSHINGBLOG.BLOGSPOT.COM (PCASUK)
Viewing all 2106 articles
Browse latest View live

THE FINAL PIECE OF THE PUZZLE : THE DRACULA AD DAILY MIRROR PHOTO SESSION

$
0
0

ALSO NOT LINDA HAYDEN: #throwbackthursday You may have caught the little bit of detective work on finding the name behind the ..er..face of the actress who featured prominently in the 'Daily Mirror Dracula AD 1972' shots we posted on Tuesday..and her recentely being mistaken for Linda Hayden. I knew that wasn't the end of it, because there was another face that some, also thought was Linda Hayden too. So she too had to be identified.... And ironically, she also appeared briefly in #draculaad1972.

I must admit she wasn't that hard to find, but the work came in closely (!) examining those shots. So, I can reveal the 'other' in the Daily Mirror shots was.... the model popularly known then, and today as Flanagan. Maureen Flanagan was born in 1941, in Islington, London. She started work in a hairdressers at 15, and was spotted by a photographer when 18 at a 'hairdressers convention' where she'd been asked to model. The photographer showed the pics to an agent, who suggested she model on the catwalk. Maureen became a very much in demand model for all the top fashion houses & stores in the UK. In her 20's, she was known as the most photographed model in Britain and her legs were insured for £25,000.


Her connection also with the tabloid newspapers, kept her in the public eye...she was a known face., that was why Hammer films featured her in the film...and later in the publicity Daily Mirror pics. So the pics: 1) In this, Dracula AD 1972 lobby card image, Flanagan lets rip with her funky seventies strut on top of the party piano next to, Johnny Alucard himself, Christopher Neame. 2) Our originally posted contact pics from the Daily Mirror Newspaper session with Christopher Lee and Glenda Allen. 3) A close up of Flanagan..taken from the Daily Mirror shots.


Flanagan went to become good friends with footballer, George Best, Malcolm Allison, 'Carry On' actress, Barbara Windsor and went onto work with Tony Curtis, Roger Moore, Charlton Heston and featured in shows such as, The Benny Hill, Monty Python's Flying Circus, The Dave Allen Show, The Likely Lads and Only Fools & Horses...


She is currently an acknowledged expert on the lives of the Kray Twins and their family, having been a close friend to the Twins and their brother, George..and mother Violet's, hairdresser...!



OUR VERY BEST WISHES TO PETER CAPALDI AND JENNA COLEMAN AND ALL AT BBC WALES

$
0
0

The wait is ALMOST over! GOOD LUCK EVERYONE!

DOCTOR WHO: THE UNMASKING : DID YOU SPOT IT? *SPOLIER ALERT*

$
0
0

THIS SCENE MADE PETER CUSHING BUFFS JUMP UP AND SHOUT: 'IT'S CUSHING'S FRANKENSTEIN UMASKING SCENE FROM 'FRANKENSTEIN MUST BE DESTROYED'.....


A fantastic episode..an amazing kick off performance from Peter Capaldi as The Doctor...and I for one, can wait for more....

THE WOOING OF MRS PEEL : PETER CUSHING AND DIANA RIGG 'RETURN OF THE CYBERNAUTS'

$
0
0

Steed and Mrs. Peel go up against the charming but ruthless Paul Beresford, who holds the crime fighting pair responsible for the death of his brother…Oh, if you have not seen this episode, please do so before reading this little write-up.


Peter Cushing is renowned for many things on screen, but he is seldom thought of as a leading man, romantic type. He didn’t have the “manly” qualities that one typically associates with such actors. He was slight of build, a bit on the fussy side. As such, he seldom had an opportunity to really display much of a romantic quality on screen. Just think of the roles for which he was best known: Sherlock Holmes, Baron Victor Frankenstein and Dr. Van Helsing were all so single minded and obsessive, they never had much time for sex.


As such, Cushing’s performance as Paul Beresford in this season six episode of the hugely popular British TV show The Avengers is of great interest. True, Beresford is a sociopath and a villain, but he has some scenes with the delectable Mrs. Peel (played, as usual, by the stunning Diana Rigg) which hint at the Don Juan side of his personality. Cushing and Rigg absolutely sparkle in their scenes together; he is witty and charming and she responds with warmth and interest. The Avengers brought on a number of familiar faces as guest stars (Christopher Lee, Dennis Price, John Carson, Clifford Evans, Donald Sutherland, Michael Gough [whose character Cushing is looking to avenge in this episode, if you will pardon the expression], etc) but nobody quite displayed the on-screen chemistry with Diana Rigg that Peter Cushing did in this episode.


It’s a pity the character had to be disposed of at the end; it’s the type of character that could have been built up as a recurring villainous mastermind. But, no matter: at least we have this one, wonderful opportunity to see Cushing hawking his wares as a seductive cad, much to the delight of Mrs. Peel… and the audience.


Written By Troy Howarth The Haunted World of Mario Bava 
Images and Design: Marcus Brooks

Enjoyed this piece? Look up Troy Howarth 'The Haunted World of Mario Bava' and the soon to come, 'The Tome of Horror' on amazon and at www.midmar.com



INGRID PITT 'THE LADY WITH THE ZING' GALLERY PART ONE

$
0
0

ZING: energy, enthusiasm, or liveliness.
"She could always be expected to add some zing"
synonyms:enthusiasm, zest, zestfulness, appetite, relish, gusto, eagerness, keenness, avidity, zeal, fervour, ardour, passion, love, enjoyment, joy, delight, pleasure, excitement


Our Facebook Page : HERE

#SHERIDAN LE FANU 200TH BIRTHDAY : THE MAN WHO PUT THE CHILL INTO VICTORIAN GHOST STORIES

$
0
0

#tbt#throwbackthursday.... ok we're going back. BACK 200 years in fact! Because, today is the anniversary of the birth of one Joseph Thomas SHERIDAN Le Fanu...200 years ago this very day in 1814. Born at 45 Lower Dominick Street, Dublin, into a literary family of Huguenot origins, Le Fau would become a celebrated writer of Gothic tales and mystery novels, the leading ghost-story writer of the nineteenth century and central to the development of the genre in the Victorian era. We salute Mr Le Fanu today, for his vampire novella "Carmilla", which formed the framework for the 1970 Hammer film, 'The Vampire Lovers' starring Ingrid Pitt and Peter Cushing.. Please join us in wishing a Happy 200th Birthday to #SheridanLeFanu!


 Sheridan Le Fanu
The Vampire Lovers

#TBT HELEN KELLER : THE MIRACLE CONTINUES 1983

$
0
0

#tbt August 1983...and Peter Cushing his wrapping his cameo appearance as Professor Copeland in the 20th Century Fox television biopic, 'Helen Keller :The Miracle Continues' in Hollywood. PC plays Copeland with wry sense of humour, has some lovely lines and looks quite splendid in his academic gown. Alan Gibson directs, in this his fourth outing with PC. The film was marketed in the UK as 'Helen and the Teacher' and starred Blythe Danner and Mare Winningham.

*Trivia* : In 1949 the real Helen Keller attended a performance of Olivier's Richard III in which Peter Cushing played several small roles!


Peter Cushing as Prof Copeland

DRACULA RARE STAKE: HOW MANY TIMES WAS THE COUNT STAKED?

$
0
0

#LISTSTUESDAY : Earlier today,  over at our facebook fan page we asked you, how many times was DRACULA staked in the Hammer Dracula series... by stake we mean, in the tradition vampire mythology-sense, a short, sharp, pointy wooden stake! THEN...count how many times he was staked, pieced, impaled, cut or stabbed with other objects. These were the findings.... SO, How MANY?



NEWS: TWINS OF EVIL GETS UK BLU RAY RELEASE FROM NETWORK SEPTEMBER 8TH

$
0
0

British distributors Network have officially announced and detailed their upcoming Blu-ray releases of John Hough's Twins of Evil (1971) and Peter Sasdy's Countess Dracula (1971). The two releases will be available for purchase on September 8th.


TWINS OF EVIL:
Directed with characteristic style and energy by cult filmmaker John Hough (The Legend Of Hell House, The Watcher In The Woods) and starring horror legend Peter Cushing, Twins of Evil (15) combines the signature Hammer elements of supernatural horror, black humour and fabulously lurid sensuality.

Featuring an all-time classic score by Harry Robinson, Twins Of Evil also stars Kathleen Byron (Black Narcissus), Isobel Black (The Kiss of the Vampire) and Dennis Price (Kind Hearts and Coronets), and featuring Mary and the late Madeleine Collinson as the twins.
Glamorous identical orphaned twins Maria and Frieda move from Vienna to the village of Karnstein to take up a new life with their submissive aunt and grim uncle - a fanatical Puritan and leader of a witch-hunting religious sect who is determined to kill his nemesis, Count Karnstein: a devil-worshipping libertine who has been turned into a vampire.

Special Features:
  • Original theatrical trailers and TV spots
  • Deleted scene
  • Image gallery
  • PDF material
  • Commemorative booklet
  • Instant play facility

COUNTESS DRACULA:
One of Hammer's most enduringly popular films and a benchmark for 1970s horror, Countess Dracula stars Ingrid Pitt (The Wicker Man) in an iconic, career-defining role as the aged countess who must regularly bathe in virgins' blood to regain her fading youth.

Genre stalwart Peter Sasdy (Hands of the Ripper) directs arguably his best Hammer film, from a script by award-winning writer Jeremy Paul and showcasing a rousing score from composer Harry Robinson.

In medieval Hungary, Countess Elisabeth Nádasdy, an embittered, ageing widow, discovers by accident that virgin's blood causes her skin become youthful and smooth. Determined to retain her new youth at all costs, the Countess coerces her lover to abduct a string of young virgins to keep her supplied with the blood she now craves to stay beautiful...

Special Features:
  • Audio commentary with Ingrid Pitt and horror experts Kim Newman and Stephen Jones
  • Original theatrical trailer
  • Archive interview with Ingrid Pitt
  • 50 Years of Hammer - news feature
  • Thriller episode
  • Conceptions of Murder episode
  • Instant play facility

Twins Of Evil
Gets UK Blu Ray
Release

HOLD ON TIGHT! IT'S ALL CHANGE WITH HAMMER FILMS THE EVIL OF FRANKENSTEIN

$
0
0

CAST:
Peter Cushing : Baron Frankenstein, Peter Woodthorpe : Zoltan, Sandor Eles : Hans, Kiwi Kingston : The Monster, Katy Wild : Rena.

PRODUCTION:
Director : Freddie Francis, Screenplay : John Elder [Anthony Hinds], Producer : Anthony Hinds, Photography : John Wilcox, Music :  Don Banks, Special Effects :  Les Bowie, Makeup : Roy Ashton, Art Direction : Don Mingaye. Production Company - Hammer films.


SYNOPSIS:
Forced to leave town because of their experiments, Frankenstein and Hans return to Frankenstein’s hometown Karlstad and set up laboratory in the abandoned Frankenstein chateau. Frankenstein then finds his original creation frozen inside a glacier and restores it to life. However, it will not respond to his commands. Frankenstein comes up with the idea of obtaining the services of Zoltan, a disreputable carnival hypnotist, to hypnotise the monster into obeying him. Zoltan is successful but has less than scientific interests at heart. With the monster responding only to his commands, Zoltan uses it to rob and take revenge upon the town authorities.



COMMENTARY:
General opinion holds The Evil of Frankenstein, the third of Hammer’s Frankenstein films, to be one of the duds of the series. One is at a loss to understand why. To the contrary, I hold The Evil of Frankenstein to be one of the best of the series. With the preceding two entries, The Curse of Frankenstein (1957) and The Revenge of Frankenstein (1958), Hammer had kept the same essential creative team – director Terence Fisher, screenwriter Jimmy Sangster and star Peter Cushing – in place. For The Evil of Frankenstein, Hammer producer Anthony Hinds replaced Sangster on script, while Freddie Francis inherited the director’s chair. Freddie Francis was an up and coming director who had worked as an award-winning cinematographer in the previous decade, had made his genre debut with Vengeance/The Brain (1962), followed with a couple of Hammer’s psycho-thrillers, Paranoiac (1962) and Nightmare (1963), and then attained some success with the first of Hammer rival Amicus’s anthology films Dr Terror’s House of Horrors (1964) just prior to this. Francis, whose output to the Anglo-horror cycle has been underrated, would go on to become its next most prolific director to Fisher. (See below for Freddie Francis’s other films).


It is not clear why The Evil of Frankenstein is almost universally regarded as such a dog in the Hammer pantheon. Just look at the opening scenes that hit one with the fervid intensity of something out of a Hieronymous Bosch nightmare brought to life – a little girl sees a body being stolen from a hut in the forest in the middle of the night and calls a priest. The body is taken to Frankenstein who removes the heart before the paling body snatcher, dismissing his queasiness with a curt, “He won’t need it anymore,” before the priest bursts in, cursing Frankenstein’s abominable experiments as he smashes the lab equipment. It is a sequence lit with such a feverishly eerie intensity that it attains a nightmare atmosphere of dread chill. Nothing else in the film quite manages to match it.


Certainly, there are a number of images littered throughout that have a lingering memorability – the deaf-mute beggar girl and her strange relationship with the monster; the monster found buried in the side of the glacier; and one especially memorable scene where the monster gets up and begins to agonisingly shuffle around the lab while Frankenstein looks on, coldly clinically taking notes.



The Evil of Frankenstein presents some confusion to the continuity of the Hammer Frankenstein series. For some reason, Freddie Francis conducts a flashback that offers a potted retelling of the essentials of The Curse of Frankenstein anew. However, this makes changes to continuity – Frankenstein now appears to have merely been driven out of town, not executed. Where the events of The Revenge of Frankenstein fit in becomes somewhat confusing – the Hans character is carried over from Revenge, but Frankenstein’s new body and his escape from the gallows is forgotten about. It is a puzzle as to why the film creates the flashback – some of this is to set up plot points for later on – although without much rewriting this could all have been made to carry over from Revenge. What tended to lose many people was the addition of the Zoltan character, which takes the story considerably away from the Frankenstein mythos. Indeed, you could almost see this as Hammer’s attempt to craft their own variant on The Cabinet of Dr Caligari (1919).



With The Curse of Frankenstein, Hammer did not have the copyright to use the Jack Pierce designs for the Boris Karloff monster makeup from Frankenstein (1931) and so Phil Leakey came up with his own original designs. Apparently Universal has relaxed their copyright restrictions by the time of The Evil of Frankenstein and the makeup on Kiwi Kingston’s monster is closely modelled on the Pierce designs, the only time the Hammer Frankenstein’s came close to resembling the Universal originals. Production designer Don Mingaye and special effects man Les Bowie collaborate to come up with not one but two of the series very best creation sequences, with lightning bolts and generator coils crashing in the best Kenneth Strickfaden tradition. On the whole, The Evil of Frankenstein is a Hammer Frankenstein entry that is well worth re-evaluation.


The other Hammer Frankenstein films are:– The Curse of Frankenstein (1957), The Revenge of Frankenstein (1958), Frankenstein Created Woman (1967), Frankenstein Must Be Destroyed (1969), The Horror of Frankenstein (1970) and Frankenstein and the Monster from Hell (1973).


Freddie Francis’s other genre films are:- Vengeance/The Brain (1962), Paranoiac (1962), Nightmare (1963), Dr Terror’s House of Horrors (1964), Hysteria (1965), The Skull (1965), The Psychopath (1966), The Deadly Bees (1967), They Came from Beyond Space (1967), Torture Garden (1967), Dracula Has Risen from the Grave (1968), Mumsy, Nanny, Sonny and Girly (1969), Trog (1970), The Vampire Happening (1971), Tales from the Crypt (1972), Tales That Witness Madness (1972), Craze (1973), The Creeping Flesh (1973), Legend of the Werewolf (1974), Son of Dracula (1974), The Ghoul (1975), The Doctor and the Devils (1985) and Dark Tower (1987).

Feature written by:Richard Scheib
Images edited by Marcus Brooks


No way to treat the curtains!
The Evil of Frankenstein

MAYBE THE MOST CELEBRATED CHASE SCENE IN HAMMER FILMS' HISTORY

$
0
0

Maybe the most celebrated chase scene in Hammer film history... Peter Cushing as Van Helsing and Christopher Lee as Count Dracula in 'Dracula' / 'Horror of Dracula' (1958 Director Terence Fisher)

Chase to the death!
Dracula (1958)

HAPPY BIRTHDAY MARY SHELLEY BORN TODAY 30TH AUGUST 1797

$
0
0

Please join us in wishing A VERY Happy Birthday to MARY SHELLEY.. who was born today, 30th August 1797...

AVAILABLE FOR THE FIRST TIME ON BLU RAY! WIN HAMMER FILMS HOUND OF THE BASKERVILLES!

$
0
0

AVAILABLE FOR THE FIRST TIME ON BLU RAY!  COMPETITION! THIS WEEKEND! Don't Miss Out on the first of TWO competitions where you can WIN yourself a copy of Shock Entertainment's superb BLU RAY release of #hammerfilms THE HOUND OF THE BASKERVILLES starring #petercushing#christopherlee and #andremorell Look out for updates and how you can enter here on our pcasuk facebook fan page, Cinema Cult Facebook page, the Screenpop Facebook Page and petercushing.org.uk! .... #areyouassharpassherlockholmes



CLICK HERE to find out more at the SCREENPOP FACEBOOK PAGE

 

DON'T MISS A THING! JUST FOLLOW PETERCUSHINGORG ON TWITTER!

WIN HAMMER FILMS 'THE HOUND OF THE BASKERVILLES' BLU RAY DVD COMBO HERE!

$
0
0

The Hound Of The Baskervilles Blu Ray / DVD: During the month of September, The UK Peter Cushing Appreciation Society in association with Shock Entertainment, Cinema Cult and Screenpop are launching TWO competitions, offering TEN copies of Hammer films classic 'The Hound of the Baskervilles' starring Peter Cushing and Christopher Lee...for the very first time on Blu Ray...as prizes!


Here we present the first competition, with FIVE blu rays up for grabs! All you have to do is use your POWERS of OBSERVATION to win your copy!


OBSERVE ABOVE EXHIBIT A: A vintage photograph from 'The Hound of the Baskervilles' Featuring Peter Cushing as Sherlock Holmes and Andre Morell as Watson.

OBSERVE BELOW EXHIBIT B: The same photograph, but with TEN DIFFERENCES. Things moved, changed or missing!


To ENTER the competition, list ALL TEN DIFFERENCESand send your list to us, BY EMAIL TO : THEBLACKBOXCLUB@GMAIL.COM. ANY entries posted as comments will be deleted and not counted as an entry. ALL correct entries will be placed in a hat and FIVE winning names will be drawn.

Competition ENDS Saturday 27th SEPTEMBER 2014 at MIDNIGHT! Winners names will be posted here on the PCASUK blog / website on Sunday 28th SEPTEMBER 2014.

Have FUN and Good LUCK!



Join CINEMA CULT and SCREENPOP at FACEBOOK


Purchase Hammer films, The Hound of the Baskervilles starring Peter Cushing
and Christopher Lee : HERE 


THE POWER OF THE DALEKS : PHOTO OPS DURING DALEKMANIA OF THE 60'S.

$
0
0

Snaps shots of the Dalek invasion of the 60's and how newspapers, film promoters and toy shops created photo ops at the circus, on westminster bridge...and bus shops.

SHOCK RELEASES OUTSTANDING 'HOUND OF THE BASKERVILLES' FOR THE FIRST TIME ON BLU RAY: TROY HOWARTH REVIEWS

$
0
0


BLU RAY AND DVD REVIEW:
Hammer films 1959, The Hound of the Baskervilles makes its blu-ray debut courtesy of the Shock label in Australia. The blu-ray/DVD combo pack is region B for the blu-ray and region 4 for the DVD. The blu-ray offers a terrific transfer: the blacks are appropriately deep and inky, the primary colors truly do pop and the image retains a pleasing coating of natural film grain. Detail is very sharp throughout and the print is in excellent shape, even retaining the original United Artists distributing logo at the beginning. The mono English soundtrack is in very robust shape, too. Extras are sparse, but what is there is very good: the featurette on Andre Morell paints a warm and compelling portrait of a fiery but good natured individual.


Morell seldom seems to get the sort of love he deserves among fans; from my point of view, he’s every bit as good as Cushing and Lee, so it’s really nice seeing him paid tribute like this. A commentary by Jonathan Rigby and Marcus Hearn would have been gratefully received, but no matter… the film itself is presented in a more or less immaculate transfer and the featurette is most entertaining. The Christopher Lee interview included on the Region 1 MGM DVD release has not been included, so fans may want to hold on to that DVD if they are looking to upgrade.


Sherlock Holmes (Peter Cushing) and Dr. Watson (Andre Morell) are called upon to protect Sir Henry Baskerville (Christopher Lee) from the family curse…


Confession time: I used to be pretty unenthusiastic about this version of Sir Arthur Conan Doyle’s best known Sherlock Holmes adventure. Truth be told, I have been generally lukewarm on most of the screen versions. Part of the problem is the story itself: it’s not nearly as clever and surprising as the best of Doyle’s Holmes adventures, truth be told, and it is at an obvious disadvantage in one key area – namely, Holmes himself is off screen for a large chunk of the narrative. Most of the adaptations are further handicapped by another major problem: the hound itself. This version is certainly no exception in that particular area, but it outdoes much of the competition where atmosphere is concerned. As you have probably gathered by now, my feelings towards this Hammer adaptation have changed for the better.


It is almost certainly the best screen version of the story to date, though it has to be noted that a number of silent versions are lost to this day and a few more obscure adaptations have eluded me thus far. But put in a match against the Basil Rathbone and Jeremy Brett versions, it looks very smart indeed; we won’t drag in the Paul Morrissey-directed spoof with Peter Cook and Dudley Moore, since that is a very different kettle of fish, indeed.


The film opens with a bravura extended flashback sequence, in which the viewer bears witness to the nefarious misdeeds of Sir Hugo Baskerville (David Oxley) and his drunken cronies. Director Terence Fisher, production designer Bernard Robinson and cinematographer Jack Asher work in perfect harmony to create a tremendous sense of gloom and foreboding right from the opening frames. Oxley’s magnetic performance teeters on the edge of becoming over the top, but he emerges as a truly frightening presence – more frightening by far than the actual hound itself, when it is finally revealed. But more on that later.


From there, the viewer is introduced to Peter Cushing and Andre Morell as Holmes and Watson. Cushing’s performance looks forward to that of Jeremy Brett in some respects, but it manages to avoid the grotesque overacting which would mar Brett’s later performances. Cushing’s Holmes is wound as tight as a drum. He is rude, arrogant and condescending. He has no patience for ego beyond his own and he possesses a cutting sense of humor. It has been suggested that Cushing’s performance implies the character’s drug addiction, but this is overstating things in an effort to make the performance look more “modern.” Most of the screen versions of Doyle’s stories sidestepped the drug angle for the reasons of censorship, though the Rathbone Hound (released in 1939, that most golden year of the golden age of Hollywood) did manage to toss in a surprisingly explicit reference at the very end, when a weary Holmes snaps at Watson, “The needle!”  Cushing’s many interviews on the topic of the character never made much of the drug angle and it doesn’t seem likely that it was something that he was unduly keen to bring in to the picture. Inevitably, if one chooses to view his tics and mannerisms as indicative of a cocaine dependency, they are free to do so. From my point of view, however, his Holmes is less of a dope fiend than he is a volcano of the mind, always ready to spring into action when “the game is afoot.” 


As for Morell, he was in a tricky position in that the character of Watson had become popularized on film as a bumbling idiot, thanks to the performance of Nigel Bruce in the Rathbone series. Unlike many Doyle fans, I can’t really fault Bruce’s performance: he and Rathbone had great chemistry and it was his touches of humor that helped to make the films popular in a period when the world was at war and audiences were looking for a bit of escapism. Even so, he was far removed from Doyle’s intelligent man of medicine and Morell was determined to restore the character’s dignity. He was more than successful in this. Morell’s Watson is intelligent, reliable, fiercely loyal to Holmes but capable of being bruised by the detective’s rapier-like wit. Cushing and Morell were often paired as adversaries (c.f., Cash on Demand or 1984), but this film proved that they could play friends with equal facility.


Once Holmes accepts the challenge to investigate the mysterious Baskerville family curse, we are introduced to the imperiled Sir Henry, played by Christopher Lee.  Lee’s reserved screen presence is put to good use here. Sir Henry is a man who does not suffer fools gladly, but as the character is lured into falling for a femme fatale (played by Marla Landi, in the film’s only truly unsatisfactory performance) he is able to convey the character’s inner passion and desire for love… and sex. Sir Henry is typically a rather dull and colorless character, but screenwriter Peter Bryan and Lee manage to imbue him with a vulnerability that makes him endearing.




Like other Hammer films of the period, the film has an air of cozy familiarity in hindsight due to the casting of familiar character faces like Francis DeWolff, Miles Malleson and Ewan Solon, while the recycled sets (Baskerville Hall is Castle Dracula redressed) and James Bernard’s pounding soundtrack evoke the spirit of their more overt Gothic horrors.


Fisher directs with a sure and steady hand, building the mood and atmosphere to good effect. The climax is particularly exciting – but it has to be admitted that the hound itself is a let down. Fisher had toyed with the idea of using children to double for Lee, Cushing and Morell so that the dog would look appropriately imposing, but the rushes revealed that they looked very much like kids in suits and the effect was ludicrous. A mask was finally strapped onto the face of a large, rather friendly great dane – Lee does his best to wrestle convincingly with it (and with a puppet, as well) but, well, it’s not exactly ideal.



But let us not dwell on the negative. The film’s faults (including a lack of Baker Street exteriors) are relatively minor in context. What the film does offer is a richly atmospheric, occasionally spooky take on a familiar story – and a fine cast of British acting talent giving the material the treatment it deserves.





 
The Hound Of The Baskervilles Blu Ray / DVD Competition: During the month of September, The UK Peter Cushing Appreciation Society in association with Shock Entertainment, Cinema Cult and Screenpop are launching TWO competitions, offering TEN copies of Hammer films classic 'The Hound of the Baskervilles'starring Peter Cushing and Christopher Lee...for the very first time on Blu Ray...as prizes!

Here we present the first competition, with FIVE blu rays up for grabs! All you have to do is use your POWERS of OBSERVATION to win your copy! - See more at: http://petercushingblog.blogspot.co.uk/#sthash.Deej1Zaw.dpuf
Here we present the first competition, with FIVE BLU RAY DVD COMBO PACKS up for grabs! All you have to do is use your POWERS of OBSERVATION to win your copy!

OBSERVE EXHIBIT ONE: A vintage photograph from 'The Hound of the Baskervilles' Featuring Peter Cushing as Sherlock Holmes and Andre Morell as Watson.

OBSERVE EXHIBIT B: The same photograph, but with TEN DIFFERENCES. Things moved, changed or missing!. 

To ENTER the competition, list ALL TEN CORRECT DIFFERENCES and send your list to us, BY EMAIL TO THEBLACKBOXCLUB@GMAIL.COM. ANY entries posted onto the comments feed will be deleted and not counted as an entry. ALL correct entries will be placed in a hat and FIVE winning names will be drawn.

Competition ENDS Saturday 27th SEPTEMBER 2014 at MIDNIGHT! Winners names will be posted here on the PCASUK account news feed on Sunday 28th SEPTEMBER 2014.

Have FUN and Good LUCK!



Our thanks to Screenpop and Cinema Cult in making our pcasuk competition possible. Please show your support by visiting their website and following their facebook pages. http://www.screenpop.com.au/
The Hound Of The Baskervilles Blu Ray / DVD: During the month of September, The UK Peter Cushing Appreciation Society in association with Shock Entertainment, Cinema Cult and Screenpop are launching TWO competitions, offering TEN copies of Hammer films classic 'The Hound of the Baskervilles' starring Peter Cushing and Christopher Lee...for the very first time on Blu Ray...as prizes! - See more at: http://petercushingblog.blogspot.co.uk/#sthash.Deej1Zaw.dpuf
The Hound Of The Baskervilles Blu Ray / DVD: During the month of September, The UK Peter Cushing Appreciation Society in association with Shock Entertainment, Cinema Cult and Screenpop are launching TWO competitions, offering TEN copies of Hammer films classic 'The Hound of the Baskervilles' starring Peter Cushing and Christopher Lee...for the very first time on Blu Ray...as prizes! - See more at: http://petercushingblog.blogspot.co.uk/#sthash.Deej1Zaw.dpuf
The Hound Of The Baskervilles Blu Ray / DVD: During the month of September, The UK Peter Cushing Appreciation Society in association with Shock Entertainment, Cinema Cult and Screenpop are launching TWO competitions, offering TEN copies of Hammer films classic 'The Hound of the Baskervilles' starring Peter Cushing and Christopher Lee...for the very first time on Blu Ray...as prizes! - See more at: http://petercushingblog.blogspot.co.uk/#sthash.Deej1Zaw.dpuf

Banner and Feature Design: Marcus Brooks

GOING BACK 42 AGO YEARS THIS MONTH! THROWBACKTHURSDAYS!

$
0
0

During the month of SEPTEMBER we'll be celebrating #hammerfilms 'DRACULA AD 1972' with a series of galleries, featuring images, artwork and behind the scenes photographs, many in hi res and colour. It's over 42 years ago this month, that production started at Elstree film studios on the film that would bring Christopher Lee's Dracula and Cushing's Van Helsing back to the screen... together for the first time since they starred together in the box office breaking 'Dracula' in 1958.


Here are some samples of images and galleries that are also being shared with other images, at our uk Peter Cushing Appreciation Society Facebook Fan page... more next Thursday!


Director, Alan Gibson rehearses Christopher Lee and Peter Cushing during filming of the coach top - fight to the death, prologue. A behind-the-scenes image from Dracula A.D. 1972. ( #hammerfilms, 1972.)

HAPPY BIRTHDAY FREDDIE JONES!

$
0
0

#‎FRANKENSTEINFRIDAY‬ : We kick off today's ‪#‎ff‬ by marking the birthday of Freddie Jones! Born today, 12th September 1927 in Stoke-on-Trent, Staffordshire, England, We know him here for his quite outstanding performances in ‪#‎hammerfilms‬‪#‎frankensteinmustbedestroyed‬ as Professor Richter and as Prof. Julian Keeley in ‪#‎thesatanicritesofdracula‬. A truly, remarkable actor. Personally I've never seen him in performance, I didn't like. The Elephant Man, Young Sherlock Holmes, Inspector Baynes in Granada tv's The Return of Sherlock Holmes.. Dune, Zulu Dawn. There are many. Always entertaining and own's any scene he appears in! So, join us in wishing him...A Very Happy Birthday, Freddie! What's your favourite Freddie Jones performances?

 

HAPPY BIRTHDAY ANDREE MELLY !

$
0
0

A very Happy Birthday to ANDREE MELLY, who was born this day in 1932. As the 'pretty' Gina in Hammer films, 'The Brides of Dracula' she terrified audiences with her ability to transform into Baron Meinster's victim in 1960 under the direction of Terence Fisher. Three years later she worked with Fisher again in 'The Horror Of It All' as Natalia Marley alongside Anton Diffring and Hazel Court.


Viewing all 2106 articles
Browse latest View live


<script src="https://jsc.adskeeper.com/r/s/rssing.com.1596347.js" async> </script>