THE EUROCRYPT OF CHRISTOPHER LEE COLLECTION 3
(1963-2024) 7-Disc UHD & Blu-ray Box Set
Severin's deep-dive into The Eurocrypt of Christopher Lee continues with Collection 3, another curiously diverse exploration of the beloved Sir Christopher Lee! The half-dozen flicks include the North American Blu-ray debuts of Beat Girl (1960), The Hands of Orlac (1960), A Feast At Midnight (1994), and the innovative The Life and Deaths of Christopher Lee (2024) documentary, as well as the worldwide UHD/Blu-ray debut of the long sought-after Gothic gem The Virgin of Nuremberg (1963)! So strap in and hold on, we are about to explore the curious depths of the Eurocrypt of Christopher Lee Collection 3!
BEAT GIRL (1960)
Label: Severin Films
Region Code: Region Free
Rating: Unrated
Duration: 87 Minutes 45 Seconds (Theatrical Cut) / 93 Minutes 49 Seconds (Extended Cut)
Audio: English DTS-HD MA 2.0 Dual-Mono with Optional English Subtitles
Video: B&W 1080p HD Widescreen (1.66:1)
Director: Edmond T. Gréville
Cast: Christopher Lee, Adam Faith, Peter McEnery, Shirley Ann Field, Oliver Reed
The set starts off with Beat Girl (1960) aka Wild For Kicks, a slice of beatnik teen-delinquency directed by Edmond T. Gréville (The Hands of Orlac) wherein middle-aged father Paul (David Farrar, The 300 Spartans), a recently divorced Englishman marries a younger French woman named Nichole (Noelle Adam, Woman In Chains), who is not much older than his daughter, which does not sit well with his teen daughter Jenny (Gillian Hills, A Clockwork Orange). Jenny. Jenny hangs out with other teen beatniks in the swinging London scene at the Off-Beat Café in Soho, these include musician Peter McEnery (Entertaining Mr. Sloane), Shirley Ann Field (Peeping Tom) and brooding trouble-maker Oliver Reed (Burnt Offerings), wild teens who are always looking for some strange new way to satisfy their cravings for teenage kicks, which often involves playing chicken at high speed and placing their necks on the railroad toes as an oncoming train approaches. Once day while at the Off==Beat Jenny encounters a stripper named Greta (Delphi Lawrence, The Man Who Could Cheat Death) who works at a nearby strip club, whom informs her that her new step-mom may have been a stripper back in Paris, and now Jenny is obsessed with digging up some dirt to derail her father's marriage, but hanging out at the strip club puts her in close proximity to the sleazebag proprietor Kenny King (Christopher Lee, Sherlock Holmes and the Deadly Necklace), who threatens to pull her into the seedy lifestyle she is looking to expose. The flicks is a bit comical in how over-the-top the beatnik's get, but seeing Lee in this sleazy role is quite delightful, plus we get a fun 60s rock/surf guitar score by The John Barry Seven, and I find the beatniks versus squares pretty out-there and this delinquent rock n' roll teen flick is pretty fun!
This release from Severin marks the film's North American Blu-ray debut, and it includes both the Original Theatrical cut and Extended UK cut of the film, now scanned in 4K by The British Film Institute in 1080p HD widescreen (1.66:1), and the black and white image looks terrific with deep black and crisp white, pleasing contrast and grayscale, and the source looks wonderful. We also get uncompressed English mono audio.
Extras for Beat Girl include an Audio Commentary With Christopher Lee Biographer Jonathan Rigby And Barry Forshaw, Author Of Brit Noir for the Extended Cut, plus a 25-min Interview With Actress Gillian Hills who looks back at reading the script, liking the angry teen character, and recalling that director Edmond T. Gréville was kind but distant. She considers the film a godsend at this time in her career, she remembers getting along with the cast, and how Oliver Reed sort of stuck out among the cast. Musician Adam Faith being quite talented, more than just a singer, he had business aspirations, and how she was slapped in the face multiple times by Noelle! Of course she speaks of Christopher Lee being rather impressive in person, how teen rebel movies were new in the UK for the era, and noting the terrific John Barry music. Next is the 44-min London After Dark: The Sinful Soho Of The Sixties – An Exploration By David Flint, Author Of Babylon Blue: An Illustrated History Of Adult Cinema which delves into the seedy neighborhood where the film is set, noting the sex trade and colorful characters from the era. The last of the extras is a 2-min Trailer.
Special Features:
- Audio Commentary With Christopher Lee Biographer Jonathan Rigby And Barry Forshaw, Author Of Brit Noir (Extended Cut Only)
- Interview With Actress Gillian Hills (25 min)
- London After Dark: The Sinful Soho Of The Sixties – An Exploration By David Flint, Author Of Babylon Blue: An Illustrated History Of Adult Cinema (44 min)
- Trailer
THE HANDS OF ORLAC (1960)
Label: Severin Films
Region Code: Region Free
Rating: Unrated
Duration: 103 Minutes 24 Seconds (French Cut) / 95 Minutes 5 Seconds (UK Cut)
Audio: English (UK Cut Only) DTS-HD MA 2.0 Dual-Mono with Optional English (French Cut Only),
French (French Cut Only) DTS-HD MA 2.0 Dual-Mono with Optional English Subtitles
Video: 1080p HD Widescreen (1.66:1)
Director: Edmond T. Gréville
Cast: Mel Ferrer, Christopher Lee. Felix Aylmer, Sir Donald Pleasence, Dany Carrel, Donald Pleasence
The Hands of Orlac (1960) is also directed by Beat Girl's Edmond T. Gréville, and it is the third film adaptation of the Maurice Renard novel, from a script by John Baines (Dead Of Night). In it a world famous concert pianist Stephen Orlac (Mel Ferrer, Wait Until Dark) is involved in a horrific plane crash which he miraculously survives but it mangles his ivory-tinkling hands. With the support of his devoted wife Louise (Lucile Saint-Simon, The Virgin of Nuremberg) they seek out an experimental surgery to repair his hands, which is performed by Dr. Volchett (Donald Wolfit, Blood of the Vampire). It's a miracle-surgery, but a ethically dubious procedure, with the surgeon grafting the hands of a recently executed serial-killer/strangler onto the wrists of Orlac! After recovering he is once again able to resume his concert pianist career, however, upon discovering that his hands formerly belonged to a killer he becomes nerve-wracked by guilt, once more derailing his career, experiencing murderous impulses of strangling women, including his wife, and acting oddly short-fused. Looking to conceal his murderous impulses he checks into a hotel alone, where encounters a crooked illusionist named Nero (Christopher Lee, City of the Living Dead), who can tell he's hiding something, and the illusionist sets out to find out what it is, and to extort him, having his attractive assistant Li-Lang (Dany Carrel, Mill of the Stone Women) cozy up to him to find out what he seems so secretive about. It's a solid psychological-thriller, exploiting the psychological and horror elements rather wonderfully with some nice use of mirrors to convey a potentially fractured psyche. Ferrer is a bit stiff in spots but is both sympathetic and decently twisted in the mind when called upon, but it's Lee as the sleazy and ultimately murderous Nero that steals the show, 'natch. Mad Love (1935) with Peter Lorre is still my favorite film adaptation of the story, but this is a damn close second. Also be on the lookout for a very young and slim looking Donald Pleasance (Raw Meat) as, what else a detectible looking into the recent spate of murders!
This Blu-ray edition is the film's North American debut, and it includes the shorter 95-min the UK Cut scanned in 4K from the original camera negative by The British Film Institute and restored by Severin Films, plus the longer 103-min French Cut supplied by René Chateau Productions. Both versions are presented in 1080p HD framed in 1.66:1 widescreen. The French/UK co-production was filmed in two separate versions by different cinematographers with alternate supporting casts. Audio comes by way of English DTS-HD MA 2.0 Dual-Mono for the English cut, and French DTS-HD MA 2.0 Dual-Mono for the French version, both with optional English subtitles.
Extras include an Audio Commentary With Christopher Lee Biographer Jonathan Rigby And Hammer Historian Kevin Lyons (French Cut Only), 28-min Hand Scare: A Portrait Of French Writer Maurice Renard – Interview With Merveilleux-Scientifique Specialist Fleur Hopkins-Loféron, a 7-min Locations Of Orlac featurette exploring locations and set seen in the film then versus now, and the 2-min Trailer.
Special Features:
- Audio Commentary With Christopher Lee Biographer Jonathan Rigby And Hammer Historian Kevin Lyons (French Cut Only)
- Hand Scare: A Portrait Of French Writer Maurice Renard – Interview With Merveilleux-Scientifique Specialist Fleur Hopkins-Loféron (28:15)
- Locations Of Orlac (6:55)
- Trailer (2:15)
THE VIRGIN OF NUREMBERG (1963)
Label: Severin Films
Region Code: Region Free (4K UHD), A (Blu-ray)
Rating: Unrated
Duration: 84 Minutes 1 Second
Audio: Italian or English DTS-HD MA 2.0 Dual-Mono with Optional English Subtitles
Video: HDR10 2160p Ultra HD Widescreen (1.85:1), 1080p HD Widescreen (1.85:1)
Director: Antonio Margheriti
Cast: Christopher Lee, Georges Rivière, Rossana Podestà
Antonio Margheriti's Gothic tale The Virgin of Nuremburg (1963) might be the most infamous and sought-after flick on this set, having been long out-of-print and never before released on Blu-ray, let alone on 4K UHD, that is until now, thanks to the years-long dogged-diligence of the Eurocrypt explorers Severin! In it American newlywed Mary Hunter (Rossana Podestà, Helen of Troy) has moved into the ancestral castle belonging of her German husband, Max Hunter (Georges Rivière, Castle of Blood), but she is finding the spooky old house rather an unnerving experience, especially when she hears a scream in the night and wanders it's darkened corridors and stumbles upon a room chock full of horrific torture devices, including the titular Virgin of Nuremberg. Noticing blood pouring from it she discovers a woman with here eyes gouged out inside by the torture devices interior spikes. When she alerts her husband there is no body to be found, and he tells her that she must have had a nightmare. This does little to ease her anxiety, nor does the presence of a facially scarred caretaker named Erich (Christopher Lee, Dracula - Prince of Darkness), who mere presence channels fright, and the legend of a sinister crimson-hooded killer/torturer dubbed The Punisher who is said to stalk the castle grounds. Dead bodies continue to turn up and disappear, but Max continues to gaslight his new wife, leading her to team-up with an FBI Agent Selby (Jim Dolen, Battle of the Worlds) who is hanging around the property to get to the bottom of things. The fiery finale is fantastic, a Gothic tale with WWII connections, it's nutso, and we even get some patented Antonio Margheriti miniature work, which is always a plus. While not my favorite Margherita Gothic tale, but still a terrific slice of Gothic macabre, oozing with atmosphere and with a lush Riz Ortolani (Goodbye Uncle Tom) score make this a real gem of of gothic horror variety, and it's status a Christopher lee rarity is worth the price of admission all onit's own.
The film makes it's worldwide 4K UHD and Blu-ray premiere on this 2-disc set framed in 1.85:1 widescreen, scanned uncut in 4K from the original camera negative, looking lush and wonderful with filmic grain and warm colors throughout, the 4K UHD presentation particularly shines with the HDR color-grade with deeper blacks and superior contrast. Audio options come by way of Italian or English DTS-HD MA 2.0 dual-mono with optional English subtitles
Extras start off with a typically top-notch Audio Commentary With Mondo Digital's Nathaniel Thompson And Troy Howarth, Author Of So Deadly, So Perverse. We also get the 4-min Margheriti's Horror Castle – Interview With Director Antonio Margheriti who speaks about the difficulty plotting the opening, figuring out the best way to start it, the score, and how it was shot in three weeks, and that included the time for the special effects. The director also
fondly remembering actress Rossana Podesta who was the producers wife, and working with Christopher Lee. Next is the 22-min In The Iron Maiden – Interview With Film Historian Fabio Melelli And Screenwriter Ernesto Gastaldi With Audio Excerpts From Antonio Margheriti, that delves into Gothic Italian cinema, the cast and crew, the influence of Edgar Allen Poe, plus the 3-min Trailer.
Special Features:
Disc 1: UHD (Film + Special Features)
- Audio Commentary With Mondo Digital's Nathaniel Thompson And Troy Howarth, Author Of So Deadly, So Perverse
- Trailer (3:08)
Disc 2: Blu-ray (Film + Special Features)
- Audio Commentary With Mondo Digital's Nathaniel Thompson And Troy Howarth, Author Of So Deadly, So Perverse
- Margheriti's Horror Castle – Interview With Director Antonio Margheriti (4:06)
- In The Iron Maiden – Interview With Film Historian Fabio Melelli And Screenwriter Ernesto Gastaldi With Audio Excerpts From Antonio Margheriti
- Trailer (3:08)
ARABIAN ADVENTURE (1979)
Label: Severin Films
Region Code: A
Rating: Unrated
Duration: 98 Minutes 11 Seconds
Audio: English DTS-HD MA 2.0 Dual-Mono with Optional English Subtitles
Video: 1080p HD Widescreen (1.78:1)
Director: Kevin Connor
Cast: Christopher Lee, Emma Samms, Milo O’Shea, Oliver Tobias, Puneet Sira, John Wyman, John Ratzenberger, Art Malik, Mickey Rooney, Capucine, Peter Cushing
Okay, The Virgin of Nuremberg might be the most infamous and arguably sought-after of the flicks on this set, but the one that won me over and stole my heart is this fantasy-adventure gem from 1979, the Kevin Connor (The Land That Time Forgot) directed Arabian Adventure. Christopher Lee is front and center in this one as the dastardly sorcerer Caliph Alquazar, a evil wizard who has usurped the throne in the city of Jadur, but he craves even greater power, and to that end he needs to obtain the fabled Sacred Rose of Elil which is located far away and said to be guarded by fire-beathing beasts. When a travelling Prince Hasan (Oliver Tobias, Cobra Mission) arrives in Jadur and seeks the affection of Alquazar's beautiful daughter Princess Zuleira (Emma Samms, TV's Dynasty), heroically battling his way into the heavily fortified castle to meet her, the sorcerer schemes to have the prince obtain the Sacred Rose of Elil in order to gain the princess's hand in marriage. The Prince's journey sees him team-up with a street-wise street kid named Majeed (Puneet Sira) and his pet capuchin monkey to brave the evils of the far away lands and find the magical artifact. This is family fun at it's finest, a big budget and handsomely mounted fantasy-adventure extravaganza that was once dubbed "Star War with flying carpets", which is both totally inaccurate, but also not altogether untrue! The flicks has gorgeous set pieces and some terrific old school special effects, including tons of miniatures, matte paintings, and forced perspective and some visually dazzling optical effects. The supporting cast is also a bit nuts, we have John Ratzenberger (TV's Cheers) as a cutthroat thief, Mickey Rooney (Silent Night, Deadly Night 5: The Toy Maker) shows up, and even Peter Cushing (Corruption) appears as a spiritual advisor. The Middle East fantasy adventure is certainly a product of it's time, and racially and culturally problematic at times, but putting that aside, it still works, it's a banger, and the old school effects wizardry, while somewhat dated, are still quite appealing to me as a kid who grew up watching Harryhausen flicks on WPIX. I also love that this disc is branded with the Severin Kids logo, so you know it's good family fun!
The Blu-ray offers up an attractive 1080p image scanned in 2K from the original camera negative, framed in 1.78:1 widescreen, some of the optical effects shots are a tad soft, but generally the colors pop and are absolutely dazzling, and the uncompressed English 2.0 mono audio is solid throughout.
Bonus features kick-off with a Audio Commentary With Director Kevin Connor moderated by Severin Films' David Gregory, then into the 9-min The Princess Adventure – Interview With Actress Emma Samms, who was an aspiring ballet turned model, then she got into acting starting with Arabian Adventure. She fondly recalls her screen test, having been unaware of the Arabian myths, and offering an appreciation of director Kenneth Connors, the sets, locations, and costuming, the special effects, celebrating 18th birthday on set, her interactions with the cast, including Lee, whom she refers to as "the smartest Man in the room", and Mickey Rooney who was not on set long, plus a chance encounter meeting Christopher Reeve in full Superman costume after walking onto the wrong set, as the disappointment of someone else doing her characters ADR after her disastrous ADR session with producer John Dark was deemed unusable.
The 19-min Arabian Adventurer – Interview With Actor Puneet Sira features the actor who played Majeed, recalling the audition process which included his brother, his close relationship with the monkey (three actually), and how he got to spend three months before shooting bonding with them at his home. He says his mother was a huge horror fan, and how he got to work with Christopher Lee again years later as a costume designer on the film Jinnah (1998), and what it was like working with Mickey Rooney, Oliver Tobias, whom he says was warm and protective, Milo O’Shea, Emma Samms who was so sweet, the always smiling John Dark, as well as memories of shooting at Pinewood and at a stone quarry for the genie sequence, as well as the miniatures of the monsters, and how the flying carpets worked,
The last of teh disc extras is the 7-min Arabian Zoom – Virtual Reunion Between Kevin Connor, Emma Samms And Puneet Sira, with the actor reunited in London, video conferencing with director Kevin Connor from his home in Italy. She notes that Connor gave her her British break with Arabian Nights and her Break with the mini-series Goliath Awaits, while Sira talks about spending time with Connor prior to the shooting the film to bond, while Connor notes how Ratzenberger is one of the few actors other than Sira and Samms still alive. Also included is The Many Faces of Christopher Lee, an archival 1996 documentary covering lee's career, running an hour long we get some terrific interview footage of Lee recalling his long career, plus we get a pair of Trailers.
Special Features:
- Audio Commentary With Director Kevin Connor Moderated By Severin Films' David Gregory
- The Princess Adventure – Interview With Actress Emma Samms (9:24)
- Arabian Adventurer – Interview With Actor Puneet Sira (18:40)
- Arabian Zoom – Virtual Reunion Between Kevin Connor, Emma Samms And Puneet Sira (7:22)
- THE MANY FACES OF CHRISTOPHER LEE – 1996 Documentary (59:52)
- Trailer 1 (1:39)
- Trailer 2 (2:54)
A FEAST AT MIDNIGHT (1994)
Label: Severin Films
Region Code: Region Free
Rating: Unrated
Duration: 106 Minutes 26 Minutes
Audio: English DTS-HD MA 2.0 with Optional English Subtitles
Video: 1080p HD Widescreen (1.85:1)
Director: Justin Hardy
Cast: Christopher Lee, Robert Hardy, Samuel West, Edward Fox, Julie Dreyfus
A Feast at Midnight (1994) is directed by Justin Hardy, the son of Robin Hardy (Wicker Man), and it centers on a ten year-old boy named Magnus (Freddie Findlay, TV movie Rasputin) who is sent off to the British boarding school Dryden Park, operated by a strict headmaster (Robert Hardy, Harry Potter and the Chamber of Secrets), there he runs afoul of the even stricter Latin teacher Major Victor "Raptor" Longfellow (Christopher Lee, The Castle of Fu Manchu), who is also the school's Physical Education teacher. Magnus quickly becomes an outcast, he's bullied relentlessly by snobby jock Bathurst (Stuart Hawley), but manages to form a bond with a couple of other outcasts kids, and Raptor's shy teen daughter Charlotte (Lisa Faulkner, TV's Eastenders). The kids form a secret club that convenes in the school's kitchen after lights-out to prepare gourmet meals, a sort of midnight supper club they dub "The Scoffers", where they indulge in forbidden sweet treats denied to them by the school staff, all of whom who indulge in their own forbidden sweets to some degree. The backstory to this is that Magnus is the son of a renowned chef (Edward Fox, Day of the Jackal) and Magnus has inherited hos passion for gourmet treats himself. This is another Severin Kids branded release, and is good fun for the whole family, a wonderfully offbeat and quirky boarding school bit of fun, and a cool Christopher lee curio as well.
The Blu-ray is sourced from a 4K scan of the original 35mm camera negative, presented in 1080p HD framed in 1.78:1 widescreen, and it looks terrific, solid colors, the source looks flawless, and the uncompressed 2.0 stereo audio sounds great. A wonderful presentation for the film's North American Blu-ray debut.
Not a ton of extras for this Brit boarding school curio, but we do get a excellent Audio Commentary With Co-Writer/Director Justin Hardy And Co-Writer/Producer Yoshi Nishio, plus the 2-min Trailer.
Special Features:
- Audio Commentary With Co-Writer/Director Justin Hardy And Co-Writer/Producer Yoshi Nishio
- Trailer (2:29)
THE LIFE AND DEATHS OF CHRISTOPHER LEE (2024)
Label: Severin Films
Region Code: Region Free
Rating: Unrated
Duration: 102 Minutes
Audio: English DTS-HD MA 2.0 Stereo, 5.1 Surround with Optional English Subtitles
Video: 1080p HD Widescreen (1.78:1)
Director: Jon Spira
Cast: Peter Serafinowicz, Peter Jackson, Joe Dante, John Landis, Caroline Munro, Harriet Walter, Jonathan Rigby, Paul Maslansky
The Life and Deaths of Christopher lee (2024), directed by Jon Spira (Anyone Can Play Guitar), is a wonderful documentary celebrating the life and career of Christopher Lee, told in an unconventional way. Sure, we get talking heads galore from the likes of Peter Jackson, Joe Dante (Gremlins 2), John Landis (An American Werewolf in London), Caroline Munro (Dracula AD 1972), Harriet Walter (Succession), Lee biographer Jonathan Rigby, and Paul Maslansky (Castle of the Living Dead), but we also get a marionette of Christopher Lee, voiced by actor Peter Serafinowicz (The Tick), which looks and sounds uncanny in the best sort of way the end result is not only a documentary that delves deep into t he life and times of Lee, but feels like it's being told from his perspective, which adds layers of depth it would not have otherwise. Having Landis and Dante on board is always gonna be a good time, both are wonderful story tellers and Hollywood gossips who knew the man not only from working with him, but having been his friend. We also hear from his niece Harriet Walter and family members offering personal insights, which is a bit deeper than anything I've seen on previous docs about the legendary actor. It covers his time with the RAF during the Second World War where he received as arse full of shrapnel, breaking into acting, his success with Hammer, his struggle to not be typecast, and his late-era success after being cast in Lord of the Rings and Star Wars. It's a terrific doc that has a unique attack to it, utilizing archival clips, animation, marionette puppetry, and talking heads to offer something more than just the usual tribute, its's quite wonderful.
The inclusion on this set marks the doc's North American debut on Blu-ray, presented in 1080p HD widescreen (1.78:1), the digital shot doc looks solid throughout, the mix of archival, animated and interviews is handsomely assembled with uncompressed 2.0 and 5.1 sound with optional English subtitles.
Extras include an Audio Commentary With Director Jon Spira And Producer Hank Starrs, the 20-min BFI Q&A With Jon Spira, Hank Starrs And Christopher Lee Biographer Jonathan Rigbyin which the director discusses how the doc came to be, with Rigby noting the doc captured Lee rather beautifully, his humor and pomposity, and enjoying the 'in his own words' style. The best extras are the over an hours worth of Extended Interviews with Juan Aneiros, Gary Curtis, Joe Dante, Peter Jackson, John Landis, Paul Maslansky and Harriet Walter, plus the 3-min Trailer.
Special Features:
- Audio Commentary With Director Jon Spira And Producer Hank Starrs
- BFI Q&A With Jon Spira, Hank Starrs And Christopher Lee Biographer Jonathan Rigby (20:04) - how the doc came to be, Rigby notingbthe dic captured Lee rather beautifully, his humor and pomposity, the in his own words style,
- Extended Interviews With Juan Aneiros (12:26), Gary Curtis (13:31), Joe Dante (16:50), Peter Jackson (18:07), John Landis (16:02), Paul Maslansky (12:57) and Harriet Walter (12:56)
- Trailer (2:39)
The six-film and set arrives in a handsome top-loading hardbox case with a striking Blue/Yellow motif with a couple of cool illustrations of Lee's characters from the set adorning the front and back, the sides panels showcasing the movie titles on the set. Inside the box the films are presented in Viva Elite black keepcases with a single-sided sleeves of artwork featuring the original movie poster artworks, which look quite fetching, and the 7-discs more or less feature the same key artwork as the wraps. Also tucked away inside is an all-new 142-page book, Christopher Lee: Eight Decades Of A Dark Horse by Jonathan Rigby. The dense square-bound book is loaded with stills, publicity images and movie posters and source notes, it's pretty friggin' massive.
The Eurocrypt of Christopher Lee Collection 3 is in my estimation the best of the Christopher Lee compendiums from Severin yet. This carefully curated set is chock full of bizarre kiddie-friendly oddities, culty curios and a couple of straight-up gems - especially The Virgin of Nuremberg on 4K UHD, that have been near impossible to see in any format previously. They're all scanned from superior vault elements and looking better than ever with oodles of tasty disc and book extras to sink your teeth into - it is a thing of beauty, and highly recommended.
Buy it!
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Screenshots from the Severin Films Blu-rays;
THE HANDS OF ORLAC
BEAT GIRL













































































































































































