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Chiller Theatre Features (DVD)

 

Description: Genre: Crime & Thriller - Thriller / Theatrical Release: 1923 / Director: Herk Harvey, Wallace Worsley / Actors: Lon ... more
Chiller Theatre Features (DVD) ... Chaney, Patsy Ruth Miller ... / DVD released 03 February, 2003 at Siren DVD / Features of the DVD: Box set, Black & White, Full Screen, PAL / It's difficult sometimes to fathom how compilers think. This Chiller Theatre threesome consists of two classic silent horror films, plus a low-budget B-movie from the early 1960s. The connection? You decide! Yet these are films that belong in any self-respecting collection, and this package is a good way of acquiring them. Of those featuring Lon Chaney, it's the original 1923 The Hunchback of Notre Dame that comes across best. Chaney's grotesquerie is shot-through with pathos, and Patsy Ruth Miller's Esmeralda has enduring freshness. Wallace Worsley handles crowd scenes and cathedral stunts with aplomb, and there's an atmospheric "posthumous" soundtrack, though anyone looking for accuracy in the depiction of medieval French society is in for a shock. 1925's The Phantom of the Opera is slow-moving and uneventful by comparison, with Rupert Julian's direction never escaping the narrow Gothic trappings of the novel. Chaney cranks (or is that camps?) up his range of gestures to the limit, and Mary Philbin is an eye-catching heroine, but the denouement in the Paris sewers seems endless--with looped extracts of Schubert and Brahms as a hardly appropriate soundtrack. Cut to 1962, and The Carnival of Souls--made in Kansas for under $100,000--is an undeniable cult classic. Herk Harvey sustains the increasingly surreal narrative with ease, Candace Hilligoss is striking (if a tad gauche) as the young organist caught on the cusp of this world and the next, and Gene Moore's organ soundtrack is a masterly backdrop for the motley assemblage of ghouls who pursue her around the seaside pier in a memorable closing sequence. On the DVD: Chiller Theatre is very acceptably remastered--with 1.33:1 aspect ratio and 12 chapter headings per film--and decently if minimally packaged. --Richard Whitehouse

Newest Review: ... aspect to it, with wildly exaggerated gestures and facial expressions. The cast all do decent enough work within ... more

 ... well-defined silent acting parameters. The only real standout, inevitably, is Chaney himself, ultimately the only real reason the film is worth watching. Bent almost double by the weight of his hump, he shambles around like an ape, or scurries up and down the walls of the cathedral like a grotesque beetle. Despite his heavy make-up, he does manage to register a convincing range of emotions, from taunting spite to heartbroken pathos. The sets of the film are unbelievably lavish, the centrepiece being...more

hogsflesh
Crowned Review Chiller Theatre Features (DVD): Phantoms and hunchbacks and ghosts - oh my (1643 words)
by hogsflesh - written on 08/09/04 (Very useful, 99 readings)
Rating:

Another week, another obscure DVD review. This is a very cheap ?box set? (although it doesn?t come in a box, it?s actually a fold-out sleeve thing containing three disks). The sparse white packaging looks quite nice, although was likely designed more with an eye on printing costs than anything else. As the name ?Chiller Theatre? implies, it?s a collection of old horror films. Two are silent films from the 20s, the other is a very low budget offering from 1962. The fact that the third film bears no relation whatsoever to the other two (apart from being horror, and in black and white) leads me to suspect that the ...

 
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Chiller Theatre Features (DVD)