"Actor: Edgar Barrier"

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  • The Phantom Of The Opera [1943]The Phantom Of The Opera | DVD | (14/10/2002) from £N/A   |  Saving you £N/A (N/A%)   |  RRP £9.99

    This spectacular retelling of Gaston Leroux's immortal horror tale stars Claude Rains as the masked phantom of the Paris opera house - a crazed composer who schemes to make a beautiful young soprano the star of the opera company and wreak revenge on those who stole his music.

  • Orson Welles' Macbeth [1951]Orson Welles' Macbeth | DVD | (17/07/2000) from £17.46   |  Saving you £2.53 (14.49%)   |  RRP £19.99

    Orson Welles' Macbeth is an expressionist masterpiece about a doomed man of ordinary ambition who believes an evil prophecy that he will become King. The shortest of Shakespeare's tragedies, Welles long considered Macbeth to be the most filmable of the Bard's work. Produced on a slim budget over a mere 32 days, the results are consistently impressive. As depicted by Welles, the title character is not a warrior king or conscience-stricken, poetic soul on a par with Hamlet; rather, he is revealed to be a facile, superstitious man consigned to fate even as the character does not trust to fate. For her part, Lady Macbeth (Jeanette Nolan) is merely obsessed with the unimpeded exercise of her will to power, viewing her husband's life as a tale told by an idiot (she is particularly effective during the "out, damned spot" scene from Act V). Welles has also created some new scenes here, conflating several characters into a "Holy Father" (Alan Napier) while eliciting strong supporting turns from actors such as Dan O'Herlihy (Macduff) and Roddy McDowall (Malcolm). All of this unfolds within a highly disordered state in which nature itself is on the rant ("Fair is foul and foul is fair"). Though the technically poor soundtrack and the occasional indecipherable Scottish brogue make the film seem a trifle compromised at times, each moment feels preternaturally alive. There is an almost Brechtian quality here, with Welles giving us splendid pieces then leaving it to us to fit them into a theatrically coherent puzzle. Refusing to believe that Birnham Wood could ever travel to Dunsinane, Macbeth is finally exposed as a man of insufficient character. As such, some might suggest that this Macbeth is more accurately described as the story of how Malcolm became King. --Kevin Mulhall

  • Arabian Nights [DVD]Arabian Nights | DVD | (10/06/2013) from £5.40   |  Saving you £4.59 (85.00%)   |  RRP £9.99

    Filmed in glorious Technicolor and nominated for four Academy Awards Arabian Nights is an action-packed adventure classic. Starring Jon Hall and Maria Montez Arabian Nights is a grand tale of intrigue and romance. Haroun-Al-Raschid the Caliph of Bagdad and his half-brother Kamar are in an epic battle competing for the throne and for the affections of a beautiful dancer Scheherazade. Lavish sets beautiful costumes and the first-ever pairing of the romantic adventure team of Hall and Montez Arabian Nights is a film not to be missed!

  • Too Much Johnson [Blu-ray]Too Much Johnson | Blu Ray | (29/06/2015) from £11.59   |  Saving you £6.40 (55.22%)   |  RRP £17.99

    Shot in 1938 Too Much Johnson was Welles’ first feature the film that helped him hone his craft and led him to create to the masterpiece that is Citizen Kane. The footage was presumed destroyed in a fire in Welles’ home in 1971 but was recently rediscovered in Italy and the restored 66 mins version makes its UK DVD debut. Too Much Johnson is an elaborate 1890s farce of mistaken identity. Cuckolded husband Dathis (Edgar Barrier) is on the tale of a man named Billings (Joseph Cotten) who has been having an affair with Dathis’s wife (Arlene Francis). Billings flees by ship to Cuba where now also hiding from his own wife (Ruth Ford) and mother-in-law (Mary) he adopts the identity of a plantation owner named Johnson who is expecting a mail-order bride. Orson Welles plays a Keystone Kop.

  • Too Much Johnson [DVD]Too Much Johnson | DVD | (29/06/2015) from £9.98   |  Saving you £5.00 (62.58%)   |  RRP £12.99

    Shot in 1938 Too Much Johnson was Welles’ first feature the film that helped him hone his craft and led him to create to the masterpiece that is Citizen Kane. The footage was presumed destroyed in a fire in Welles’ home in 1971 but was recently rediscovered in Italy and the restored 66 mins version makes its UK DVD debut. Too Much Johnson is an elaborate 1890s farce of mistaken identity. Cuckolded husband Dathis (Edgar Barrier) is on the tale of a man named Billings (Joseph Cotten) who has been having an affair with Dathis’s wife (Arlene Francis). Billings flees by ship to Cuba where now also hiding from his own wife (Ruth Ford) and mother-in-law (Mary) he adopts the identity of a plantation owner named Johnson who is expecting a mail-order bride. Orson Welles plays a Keystone Kop.

  • Pirates Of Tortuga [1961]Pirates Of Tortuga | DVD | (03/07/2006) from £3.96   |  Saving you £9.03 (228.03%)   |  RRP £12.99

    In this high-seas adventure set in the 1600s a British sea captain must go undercover join a pirate band and capture the notorious Captain Henry Morgan. But Morgan is on to the ruse and is well prepared when the sea captain makes his move. As the two engage in mortal combat they are knocked unconscious and dragged to the governor of Tortuga who prepares to hang them both as pirates. Fortunately a stowaway aboard the pirate vessel steps forward and reveals their true identities...

  • Cyrano De Bergerac [1950]Cyrano De Bergerac | DVD | (20/09/2004) from £4.99   |  Saving you £10.00 (200.40%)   |  RRP £14.99

    This classic romantic tragedy comes alive with a stunning performance by Jose Ferrer as the dashing hero whose large nose standsiin the way of love. The audacious Cyrano is quick to defend himself against mockery but is weak and timid in love. When he falls for the beautiful Roxanne (Mala Powers) he is frozen with fear. The tongue-twisted Christian (William Prince) also pursuing Roxanne commissions Cyrano to write love letters that will win her affection. Not until long married

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