Showing posts with label Ingrid Pitt. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Ingrid Pitt. Show all posts

Thursday, December 26, 2019

THE HOUSE THAT DRIPPED BLOOD (1971) (Second Sight Blu-ray Review)

THE HOUSE THAT DRIPPED BLOOD (1971) 

Label: Second Sight Films
Region Code: B
Duration: 102 Minutes
Rating: Cert.12
Audio: English DTS-HD MA Mono 1.0 with Optional English Subtitles
Video: 1080p HD Widescreen (1.85:1)
Director: Peter Duffell
Cast: Christopher Lee, Peter Cushing, Nyree Dawn Porter, Denholm Elliott, Jon Pertwee, Joanna Dunham, Joss Ackland, John Bennett, John Bryans, Wolfe Morris, Tom Adams, Ingrid Pitt




The House That Dripped Blood (1971) was the third anthology horror film from Hammer Film's arch rivals Amicus Films, a delightfully macabre and fun set of stories based on the writings of Robert Bloch (Psycho) with a wrap around story featuring Scotland Yard Inspector Holloway (John Bennett, Split Second) investigating the disappearance of an actor living in the area. The inspector speaks to a local cop who in turn spins a yarn of the peculiar property the actor was living in at the time of his disappearance, a spooky mansion whose past tenants have all met with mysterious ends, and thus begins our story proper. 



The first segment 'Method For Murder' is the tale of a horror writer named Charles Hillyer (Denholm Elliott, Trading Places) who as he types away in his study on his latest murderous opus is haunted by one of the characters from his story, a sadistic killer named Dominic (Tom Adams) whom has seemingly manifested from the written page into mind-bending reality. As Dominic lurks in the shadows the writer's sanity begins to slip away, slowly losing his grip on reality as the threat looms ever larger. It turns out that Charles is the only one who sees the phantom, but is it a figment of the writer's disturbed mind or is there something supernatural afoot, or possibly something more reality-based? The truth is a mix of all three and it's a deliciously tasty EC Comics inspired bit of comeuppance at the end, a great start to one of the all-time great horror anthologies. 



The next unfortunate renter is Philip Grayson (Peter Cushing, Corruption) in the vignette 'Waxworks', Cushing plays a lonely older man who one day visits a creepy (is there any other kind?) wax museum and is struck by how one of the figures bares an uncanny resemblance to a former flame. The  mysterious caretaker of the wax museum (Wolfe Morris) informs him the figure's likeness is based on his own deceased wife, a murderess whom was executed by the authorities. 
Even after leaving the establishment Grayson is all-consumed by the likeness and has a surreal nightmare of visiting the figure at the museum, only to be awoken by an estranged friend named Neville (Joss Ackland, 
Lethal Weapon 2) who's unexpectedly come calling. Grayson shares his waxy nostalgic  encounter with the man, who it turns out also has a flame burning for the same woman, leading to an investigative trip to the wax museum with dire consequences for both men. Peter Cushing is typically great here, with an shocker finale at the wax museum that will leave your head rolling. 



In 'Sweets to the Sweet' we have the other Hammer horror legend, Christopher Lee (Dracula - Prince of Darkness), appearing as a seemingly cruel father and widow named John Reid who leases the house of horror with his adolescent daughter Jane (Chloe Franks, Who Slew Auntie Roo?). He comes off as unnecessarily strict in regard to his daughter's upbringing, refusing to allow her to attend school or have friends, to that end he hires a nanny named Ann (Nyree Dawn Porter, From Beyond the Grave), who home schools the girl. We learn that Jane fears fire and is not allowed to play with dolls or candles, which seems odd at first, but when it is revealed that her mum was a suspected witch things begin to come into focus, but is it all unfounded fear on the part of her father or does the young girl have the dark magic of the occult within her? Lee is in fine form as the harsh father, and young Chloe Franks is pretty great as the fresh-faced and mischievous little girl who is none to pleased with her father's restrictive ways, with a wonderfully twisted finale.



The fourth and final story as told to the inspector is the case of the missing person's report that brought the attention of Scotland Yard in the first place, the disappearance of a veteran horror star obviously modeled after Vincent Price in 'The Cloak'. Price was the first choice of the director for the role but whom for contractual reasons with AIP was not available to play fictional horror star Paul Henderson, instead we have Jon Pertwee of TV's Doctor Who in a wonderfully fun performance as an aging actor who is very unhappy, even bitchy, about the state of modern horror films with their cheap sets and lack of imagination. Striving for authenticity on the set of his latest vampire picture the actor refuses to wear the cheap-looking cloak supplied by the production and goes to a local vintage store to find something more sinister and vampyric looking. Sure enough, with the help of a strange shop keeper (Geoffrey Bayldon, Asylum), he finds a cloak that not only makes him look like a vampire, it turns him into one! Ingrid Pitt (Countess Dracula) plays against him as his voluptuous co-star who has her own secret to share with the difficult star. This one is so much fun and well-done, with tongue planted firmly in cheek it's a nice send-up, complete with a jab against Christopher Lee's Hammer bloodsucker! The scenes of Pitt and Pertwee flying around on strings is also a goofy delight, coming to an end with the inspector finally visiting the storied house to dispel any notion of it being evil or cursed, which of course does not end well for him!  



Audio/Video: The House That Dripped Blood (1971) arrives on region-B locked Blu-ray from Second Sight Films in 1080p HD framed in 1.85:1 widescreen. This appears to be the same HD master used by Scream Factory for their U.S. Blu-ray. The image looks solid, though never reference quality, though there is a pleasing layer of grain throughout. Colors look accurate and saturated for the most part, though there's some inherent softness and the shadow detail suffers a bit with anemic blacks that can be a bit grainy.  Check out the Scream Factory versus Second Sight Blu-ray image comparison at the bottom of this review. Audio on the disc comes by way of an English DTS-HD MA Mono 1.0 with optional English subtitles, the score from Michael Dress (The Mind of Mr. Soames) comes through with some good depth when called upon, and the dialogue is clean if a bit thin sounding at times, owing more to the original source limitations than anything.  



Like the HD master we also get the same set of extras as the Scream Factory release, this these include a pair of commentaries, the first being a vintage track with with director Peter Duffell and author Jonathan Rigby, the other a more recent contribution from the always great film historian/author Troy Howarth, detailing some great insights into the production and the cast and crew.



There's also a 9-min interview with second assistant director Mike Higgins who mentions that this was hist first film for Amicus, going into a story about actress Nyree Dawn Porter regarding her almost leaving the production, and speaking fondly of director Peter Duffell. We also get a vintage 2003 VisArt featurette, the 17-min 'A-Rated Horror Film' – featuring interviews with director Peter Duffell, actors Geoffrey Bayldon, Ingrid Pitt and Chloe Franks, it's vintage but quite good, and one I hadn't seen before. 



We also get a full-frame English theatrical trailer plus a widescreen Spanish-language trailer, plus an image gallery with stills, promotional images, lobby cards and various movie posters, newspaper ads, and home video releases. 
One of my favorite inclusions on the disc are 14-min of vintage Amicus radio spots that play along to images of stills and movie posters from all the films. 



The single disc release comes housed in oversized black Blu-ray keepcase with a reversible sleeve of artwork, the a-side featuring new artwork from by artist Graham Humphreys, the b-side featuring the original illustrated artwork for the film, without the blemish of the ratings logo obscuring the front cover and the spine, with the Humphrey's artwork option also being featured on the disc itself. 

The film was previously issued by Second Sight Films as a limited edition release with a rigid slipcase along with a 40-page booklet with new essays by Allan Bryce, Jon Towlson and Kat Ellinger. While that edition is now out-of-print the film has kindly been reissued by Second Sight as this attractive standard release. 

Special Features:

- Audio Commentary with director Peter Duffell and Jonathan Rigby, author of 'English Gothic'

- Audio Commentary by film historian/author Troy Howarth
- Interview with second assistant director Mike Higgins (9 min)
- Vintage Featurette: A-Rated Horror Film – featuring interviews with director Peter Duffell, actors Geoffrey Bayldon, Ingrid Pitt and Chloe Franks (17 min)
- Theatrical Trailers (English and Spanish) (4 min)
- Radio Spots (3 min)
- The Amicus Radio Spots Collection: 

Asylum (1 min), At The Earth's Core (1 min), From Beyond the Grave (1 min), Madhouse (1 min), Scream And Scream Again (2 min), Tales from the Crypt (1 min), The Beast Must Die (1 min), The Land That Time Forgot (1 min), The Mind of Mr. Soames (1 min), The People That Time Forgot (1 min), Vault Of Horror (2 min)
- Still Gallery (5 min) 




The House That Dripped Blood (1971) is an anthology that wonderfully mixes the macabre with a darkly comedic touches, in my opinion there's not a bad apple in the bunch, what's not to love?  Sure, some of the special effects, a faulty looking severed head vampires flying around on wires among them, are a bit hokey looking, but this is one horror anthology that remains a high point of the British portmanteau movies. Very pleased to see it get a solid release in the U.K. with great-looking artwork and an excellent set of extras from Second Sight Films.

Top: Second Sight Films Blu-ray (2019)
Bottom: Scream Factory Blu-ray (2018) 




 

Friday, May 11, 2018

THE HOUSE THAT DRIPPED BLOOD (1971) (Scream Factory Blu-ray)

THE HOUSE THAT DRIPPED BLOOD (1971) 

Label: Scream Factory
Region Code: A
Duration: 102 Minutes
Rating: PG
Audio: English DTS-HD MA Mono 2.0 with Optional English Subtitles
Video: 1080p HD Widescreen (1.85:1)
Director: Peter Duffell
Cast: Christopher Lee, Peter Cushing, Nyree Dawn Porter, Denholm Elliott, Jon Pertwee, Joanna Dunham, Joss Ackland, John Bennett, John Bryans, Wolfe Morris, Tom Adams, Ingrid Pitt


The House That Dripped Blood (1971) was the third portmanteau film from arch Hammer rivals Amicus Films, a delightfully macabre and fun anthology with a wrap around story featuring Scotland Yard's Inspector Holloway (John Bennett, Split Second) investigating the disappearance of an actor living in the area, he speaks to a local cop who in turn spins a yarn of the peculiar property the actor was living in at the time of the disappearance, a mansion whose past tenants have met with mysterious ends, and thus begins our story proper. 

The first segment 'Method For Murder' is the tale of a horror writer named Charles Hillyer (Denholm Elliott, Trading Places) who as he types away in his study on his latest murderous opus is haunted by one of the characters from his story, a sadistic killer named Dominic (Tom Adams) whom has seemingly manifested from the written page to mind-bending reality. As Domonic lurks in the shadows the writer's sanity begins to slip, slowly losing his grip on reality as the threat grows. It turns out that Charles is the only one who sees the phantom, but is it a figment of the writer's disturbed mind or is there something supernatural afoot, or possibly something more reality-based? The truth is a mix of all three and it's a deliciously tasty EC Comics inspired bit of comeuppance at the end, a great start to one of the all-time great horror anthologies. 

The next unfortunate renter is Philip Grayson (Peter Cushing, Corruption) in the vignette 'Waxworks', Cushing plays a lonely old man who one day visits a creepy (is there any other kind?) wax museum and is struck by how one of the figures bares an uncanny resemblance to a former flame of his. The  mysterious caretaker of the wax museum (Wolfe Morris) informs him the figure is based on his own deceased wife, a murderess executed by the authorities. Even after leaving the establishment Grayson is all-consumed by the likeness and has a surreal nightmare of visiting the figure at the museum, only to be awoken by an estranged friend named Neville (Joss Ackland, Lethal Weapon 2) who's unexpectedly come calling. Grayson shares his waxy nostalgic  encounter with the man, who it turns out also had a unrequited flame for the same woman, leading to an investigative trip to the wax museum with dire consequences for both men. Peter Cushing is typically great here, with an shocker finale at the wax museum that will leave your head rolling. 

In 'Sweets to the Sweet' we have another Hammer horror legend, Christopher Lee (Dracula - Prince of Darkness), appearing as a seemingly cruel father and widow named John Reid who leases the horror-house with his adolescent daughter Jane (Chloe Franks, Who Slew Auntie Roo?). He seems unnecessarily strict in regard to his daughter's upbringing, refusing to allow her to attend school or have friends, to that end he hires a nanny named Ann (Nyree Dawn Porter, From Beyond the Grave), who home schools the girl. We learn that Jane fears fire and is not allowed to play with dolls or candles, which seems odd at first, but when it is revealed that her mum was a suspected witch things begin to come into focus, but is it all unfounded fear on the part of her father or does the young girl have the dark magic of the occult within her? Lee is in fine form as the harsh father, and young Chloe Franks is pretty great as the fresh-faced and mischievous little girl who is none to pleased with her father's restrictive ways, with a wonderfully twisted finale.

The fourth and final story as told to the inspector is the case of the missing person's report that brought the attention of Scotland Yard in the first place, the disappearance of a veteran horror star obviously modeled after Vincent Price in 'The Cloak'. Price was the first choice of the director for the role but whom for contractual reasons with AIP was not available to play fictional horror star Paul Henderson, instead we have Jon Pertwee of TV's Doctor Who in a wonderfully fun performance as an aging actor who is very unhappy, even bitchy, about the state of modern horror films with their cheap sets and lack of imagination. Striving for authenticity on the set of his latest vampire picture the actor refuses to wear the cheap-looking cloak supplied by the production and goes to a local vintage store to find something more sinister and vampyric looking. Sure enough, with the help of a strange shop keeper (Geoffrey Bayldon, Asylum), he finds a cloak that not only makes him look like a vampire, it turns him into one! Ingrid Pitt (Countess Dracula) plays against him as his voluptuous co-star who has her own secret to share with the difficult star. This one is so much fun and well-done, with tongue planted firmly in cheek it's a nice send-up, complete with a jab against Christopher Lee's Hammer bloodsucker! The scenes of Pitt and Pertwee flying around on strings is also a goofy delight, coming to an end with the inspector finally visiting the storied house to dispel any notion of it being evil or cursed, which of course does not end well for him!  

Audio/Video: The House That Dripped Blood (1971) finally arrives on Blu-ray from Scream Factory in 1080p HD framed in 1.85:1 widescreen, the image looks solid, never reference quality, but there's a pleasing layer of grain throughout, never too obtrusive, and colors look accurate and saturated for the most part. The film has some inherent softness and shadow detail suffers bit with some creeping black crush. Print damage is rare with only some minor white speckling throughout, overall a solid image with only a few small niggles. Audio comes by way of an English DTS-HD MA Mono 2.0 with optional English subtitles, the score comes through with some good depth when called upon, the dialogue is clean but a bit thin sounding at times, owing to the original source, but otherwise well presented.   

Onto the extras we get a handful of good one, two audio commentaries, a vintage one with with director Peter Duffell and author Jonathan Rigby and a new one with the always great film historian/author Troy Howarth, who is my go-to guy for Paul Naschy films but he's in fine form here speaking about Amicus anthology film and detailing some great insights into the production and cast/crew. 

There's also an interview with second assistant director Mike Higgins who reveals that this was hist first film for Amicus, it's a bit dry, he goes into a story about actress Nyree Dawn Porter regarding her almost leaving the production, and speaking fondly of director Peter Duffell. We also get a vintage 2003 VisArt featurette, the 17-min 'A-Rated Horror Film' – featuring interviews with director Peter Duffell, actors Geoffrey Bayldon, Ingrid Pitt and Chloe Franks, it's vintage but quite good, and one I hadn't seen before. 

Then we have a full-frame English theatrical trailer plus a widescreen Spanish-language trailer, some fun radio spots with a simple but fun animated graphic, and an image gallery with stills, promotional images, lobby cards and various movie posters, newspaper ads, and home video releases. Perhaps my favorite of all the extras - with the exception of that fantastic Troy Howarth commentary - is the inclusion of a treasure trove of Amicus radio spots, 14 minutes of radio spots that play along to images of stills and movie posters from the films. 


The single disc release comes housed in a standard Blu-ray keepcase with a sleeve of artwork, the a-side featuring the iconic keyart for the film with the b-side featuring a rather ugly (blown out/poorly contrasted) image of Peter Cushing from the 'Waxworks' segment. It  has a nice looking spine featuring red lettering on a black background, the disc itself features an excerpt of the same key art as the sleeve. 

Special Features:

- NEW Audio Commentary by film historian/author Troy Howarth
- NEW interview with second assistant director Mike Higgins (9 min) HD
- Audio Commentary with director Peter Duffell and Jonathan Rigby , author of 'English Gothic'
- Vintage Featurette - A-Rated Horror Film – featuring interviews with director Peter Duffell, actors Geoffrey Bayldon, Ingrid Pitt and Chloe Franks (17 min) SD
- Theatrical Trailers (English and Spanish) (4 min) HD
- Radio Spots (3 min) HD
- The Amicus Radio Spots Collection: Asylum (1 min), At The Earth's Core (1 min), From Beyond the Grace (1 min), Madhouse (1 min), Scream And Scream Again (2 min), Tales from the Crypt (1 min), The Beast Must Die (1 min), The Land That Time Forgot (1 min), The Mind of Mr. Soames (1 min), The People That Time Forgot (1 min), Vault Of Horror (2 min) (14 min) SD
- Still Gallery (5 min) HD 


The House That Dripped Blood (1971) is an anthology that wonderfully mixes the macabre with a darklky comedic touch, there's not a bad apple in the bunch, what's not to love?  Sure, some of the special effects (faulty looking severed heads and silly vamps on wires) are a bit hokey but this is one horror anthology that remains a high point of the British portmanteau movies, glad to see Scream Factory add this one to their HD library following their Vault of Horror/Tales from the Crypt double-feature Blu-ray a few years back, this is a no-brainer, essential stuff.

  

Wednesday, March 21, 2018

SCREAM FACTORY PRESENTS THE HOUSE THAT DRIPPED BLOOD IN ITS BLU-RAY DEBUT ARRIVING MAY 8th, 2018

THE HOUSE THAT DRIPPED BLOOD (1971) 

Label: Scream Factory 
Region Code: A
Duration: 102 Minutes 
Rating: PG
Audio: English DTS-H DMA
Video: 1080p HD Widescreen (1.85:1)

Director: Peter Duffell
Cast: Christopher Lee, Peter Cushing, Nyree Dawn Porter, Denholm Elliott, Jon Pertwee, Joanna Dunham, Joss Ackland, John Bennett, John Bryans, Wolfe Morris, Tom Adams, Ingrid Pitt

Vampires! Voodoo! Vixens! Victims! Terror waits for you in every room. A quartet of frightening fables is presented in The House That Dripped Blood, which comes to Blu-ray for the first time on May 8, 2018.

A Scotland Yard inspector’s search for a missing film star leads him to a haunted house. The house sets the framework for four separate tales of terror written by the author of Psycho, Robert Bloch, and starring horror icons Peter Cushing, Christopher Lee and Ingrid Pitt. All four stories center on the mysterious fates of tenants who have leased the mansion over the years.

Special Features:
- NEW Audio Commentary by film historian/author Troy Howarth
- NEW interview with second assistant director Mike Higgins
- Audio Commentary with director Peter Duffell and author Jonathan Rigby
- Vintage Featurette - A-Rated Horror Film – featuring interviews with director Peter Duffell, actors Geoffrey Bayldon, Ingrid Pitt and Chloe Franks
- Theatrical Trailers (English and Spanish)
- Radio Spots
- The Amicus Radio Spots Collection
- Still Gallery

  

Monday, May 12, 2014

Blu-ray Review: COUNTESS DRACULA (1971)

COUNTESS DRACULA (1971) 
Blu-ray+DVD Combo Pack
Label: Synapse Films
Region Code: A/1
Rating: PG
Duration: 93 Minutes
Video: 1080p Widescreen (1.66:1)

Audio: DTS-HD Master Audio 2.0 Mono with Optional English Subtitles 
Director: Peter Sasdy
Cast: Ingrid Pitt, Nigel Green, Sandor Eles, Maurice Denhem, Lesley-Anne Down, Patience Collier


COUNTESS DRACULA (1971) stars the voluptuous Ingrid Pitt (THE VAMPIRE LOVERS) as 17th century Hungarian Countess Elisabeth Nádasdy, based on the true story of Elizabeth Báthory. The Countess is a cruel and withered old woman who has just recently been widowed. While punishing her chambermaid for drawing too hot of a bath she discovers that the blood of the virgin girl temporarily rejuvenates her to her former gorgeous self - and Ingrid Pitt is most definitely a gorgeous woman - when she's not layered in warty old age make-up that is.

To continue to enjoy the age-defying benefits of virgin's blood the Countess conspires with her former lover Captain Dobi (Nigel Green, ZULU) and her nanny (Patience Collier) to procure young virgins. To conceal the truth of her youthful appearance she assumes the identity of her own daughter to carry on a love affair with the younger Lt. Imre Toth (Sandor Elès).

Only Grand Master Fabio (Maurice Denham) the resident scholar seems to take notice of the fact that the Countess and her daughter of never in the same place at the same time, it's only when the demand for more virgin blood gets a bit out of control that it draws the attention the local authorities and things start to crumble for the Countess and her conspirators with jealousy and torn loyalties.

We have many of the Hammer Horror tropes are on display here with the Gothic Pinewood Studios back lot locations and the plunging necklines and heaving bosoms you'd come to expect. The story itself is a bit on the slow side and the deliberate pace doesn't necessarily build up to the most exciting of finales but it does have a certain charm... Ingrid Pitt in all her voluptuous beauty in 1080p. Based on the legend of the blood thirsty Elizabeth Bathory we don't see any fang-baring here but we do get a fair amount of bosom-baring so sit back and enjoy this vintage slice of Hammer Horror on Blu-ray.


Blu-ray: This is the last of the announced Hammer horrors from Synapse Films and it's a winner - way to cap of the series. The remastered image looks quite nice with a fair amount of crispness and fine detail. Colors are robust and skin tones are natural in appearance. It's a bit on the grainy side but I do love a pure grain-present presentation over a smeared plasticine scrubbed image. Audio wise we get a very pure DTS-HD Master Audio comes through strong and the score from composer Harry Robertson (TWINS OF EVIL) sounds quite nice even if it's not the most memorable score.

Special features are a bit on the light side compared to the other Hammer entries from Synapse. We begin with an audio commentary with actress Ingrid Pitt, director Peter Sasdy, screenwriter Jeremy Paul and author Jonathan Sothcott. It's a bit dry and appears to have been recorded separately and stitched together so it feels somewhat disjointed. Director Peter Sasdy gets the bulk of the spotlight here with the others chiming in from time to time, there's not a lot of Ingrid Pitt throughout but her moments peppered throughout are quite nice. 

There's also a 11-minute featurette Immortal Countess: The Cinematic Life of Ingrid Pitt with a brief overview of her early life and film career and legacy. We also get a vintage audio interview with Pitt, a theatrical trailer and a more risque reversible sleeve of artwork. It's a bit saddening that this is the last of the Hammer titles from Synapse, let's hope they announce a few more in the near future because they've done a fantastic job.

Special Features:
- Audio commentary with actress Ingrid Pitt, director Peter Sasdy, screenwriter Jeremy Paul and author Jonathan Sothcott
- Immortal Countess: The Cinematic Life of Ingrid Pitt – Featurette (10:47)
- Archival Audio Interview with Ingrid Pitt (8:30)
- Still Gallery (7:10)
- Theatrical Trailer (3:06)
- Reversible Sleeve of Artwork

Verdict: This recent spate of Hammer Horror on Blu-ray has me excited and while COUNTESS DRACULA (1971) may be my least favored of the Synapse Hammer Blu-rays it is a top-notch transfer with some very decent extras and is a pleasing watch thanks in no small part to the unearthly charm of the voluptuous Ingrid Pitt. Not as visceral as Peter Sasdy's other film from the same year HANDS OF THE RIPPER (1971) or as delightfully weird as VAMPIRE CIRCUS (1972) but this one deserves a space on your Hammer Horror shelf.  (3 Outta 5)