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Fiend Without A Face (DVD)


 Fiend Without A Face (DVD) Movie DVD
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Fiend Without A Face (DVD)

 
Description: Genre: Science Fiction & Fantasy - Science Fiction / Theatrical Release: 1959 / Director: Arthur Crabtree / Actors: ... more
Fiend Without A Face (DVD) ... Marshall Thompson, Terry Kilburn ... / DVD released 30 June, 2003 at 2 Entertain Video / Features of the DVD: Black & White, PAL / Few 1950s creature features deliver in the way Fiend Without a Face does. The first hour is all build-up as tension grows between an Air Force research base and a small Canadian town (this is one of those British B films that pretends to be set overseas) as a series of mystery deaths are blamed by the superstitious on weird military experiments. It's not a spoiler to give away the big revelation, since every item of publicity material, including the DVD cover, blows the surprise: the initially invisible culprits turn out to be a killer swarm of disembodied brains with eyes on stalks and inchworm-like spinal cord tails. These creatures have a nasty habit of latching onto victims and sucking out their grey matter. The finale is a siege of a house by the fiends, which swarm en masse making unsettling brain-sucking sounds, and are bloodily done away with by the heroes. Using excellent stop-motion animation, this climax goes beyond silliness and manages to be genuinely nightmarish. The orgy of splattering brains stands proud among the cinema's first attempts at genuine horror-comic glee, setting a precedent for everything from The Evil Dead to Peter Jackson's Braindead. Marshall Thompson is a bland, stolid uniformed hero and most of the rest of the cast struggle with "anadian" accents, but Kynaston Reeves is fun as the decrepit lone researcher whose fault it all is. On the DVD: Fiend Without a Face on disc comes with a montage of scenes from other films in this batch of releases (The Day of the Triffids, The Stars Look Down) that plays automatically when the disc is inserted, but otherwise not even a trailer, much less the commentary track and other material found on the pricey but luxurious US Region 1 Criterion release. The print has nice contrasts but is pretty grainy. --Kim Newman

Newest Review: ... are open minded enough to try something different, and experience films from a more innocent age will find much to enjoy. ... more

 ... There are a great many gems out there, and 'Fiend Without a Face' is one such film, which is entertaining far beyond simple nostalgia. Whilst it is undeniably a slice of B-movie schlock, there's a lot of fun to be had, with some of the best monsters from the 1950s on show. The plot of 'Fiend Without a Face' is instantly recognisable as part of the 'Creature Feature' stable: set on an American airbase in Canada, a scientist experimenting with the effects of nuclear radiation on telekinesis cre...more

Price Comparison for Fiend Without A Face (DVD)

Fiend Without A Face [DVD] [1958]
Few 1950s creature features deliver in the way Fiend Without a Fa ...
Last Update 09.12.2009 06:11
£ 1.77


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Read Reviews for Fiend Without A Face (DVD)

Beggar+James
Premium Review Fiend Without A Face (DVD): FACE / OFF (834 words)
by - written on 15/01/02 (Very useful, 48 readings)
Rating:

In a way, it’s pretty pointless writing a review for 'Fiend Without a Face', for one simple fact: it’s a black and white film from the 1950s. Sad but true, this is enough to put off most potential viewers, even fans of the horror genre. It never ceases to amaze me the amount of people who resolutely refuse to watch pre-1970 films, which lack nothing but colour. The usual criticism I hear is that older films are boring or badly made. Being a horror fan, I am the first to hold up my hands and admit that there are a lot of bad genre films from the 60s, the 50s and even earlier. Being old does not automatically qualify a film as a classic. ...  Read the complete review

 
Fiend Without A Face (DVD)