When they arrive to spend the weekend in a large country villa, the guests are expecting a chance to unwind and make merry. Unfortunately, their host has neglected to mention that there are zombies in the basement. They're feeling peckish too... Boasting icky effects from Gino De Rossi (who arranged atrocities for Zombie Flesh Eaters), Burial Ground is a head-bashing, gut-muching, maggot infested classic from the gory glory days. 88 Films are proud to present this emetic extravaganza in a brand new and completely uncut 4K transfer. Extras High Definition (1080p) Blu-ray⢠presentation 2.0 English Mono 2.0 Italian Mono with English Subtitles Audio Commentary with Critics Nathaniel Thompson, Troy Howarth and Eugenio Ercolani [Archive] Audio Commentary with Italian Cinema Experts Calum Waddell and John Martin Return to the Burial Ground - An Interview with Peter Bark at Villa Parisi The Borders of the Extreme - An Interview with Eugenio Ercolani Zombie and Melodies - An Interview with Pierpaolo De Sanctis 'What the Fuck?: The Films of Andrea Bianchi' An Interview with critic Mikel Koven 35mm Blowup Print Grindhouse Version Deleted Scenes / Trims Trailer Italian Credits Sequence
When they arrive to spend the weekend in a large country villa, the guests are expecting a chance to unwind and make merry. Unfortunately, their host has neglected to mention that there are zombies in the basement. They're feeling peckish too... Boasting icky effects from Gino De Rossi (who arranged atrocities for Zombie Flesh Eaters), Burial Ground is a head-bashing, gut-muching, maggot infested classic from the gory glory days. 88 Films are proud to present this emetic extravaganza in a brand new and completely uncut 4K transfer. Extras 4K Restoration From the Best Surviving Element (35mm Blow-up Interpositive) 4K (2160p) UHD Blu-ray⢠presentation in Dolby Vision (HDR10 compatible) HD (1080p) Blu-ray⢠presentation 2.0 English Mono 2.0 Italian Mono with English Subtitles Audio Commentary with Critics Nathaniel Thompson, Troy Howarth and Eugenio Ercolani [Archive] Audio Commentary with Italian Cinema Experts Calum Waddell and John Martin Return to the Burial Ground - An Interview with Peter Bark at Villa Parisi The Borders of the Extreme - An Interview with Eugenio Ercolani Zombie and Melodies - An Interview with Pierpaolo De Sanctis 'What the Fuck?: The Films of Andrea Bianchi' An Interview with critic Mikel Koven 35mm Blowup Print Grindhouse Version Deleted Scenes / Trims Trailer Italian Credits Sequence
The film boasts the best of the Bond title songs (this one sung on a dreamy track by Nancy Sinatra), but the movie itself is one of the weaker ones of the Sean Connery phase of the 007 franchise. The story concerns an effort by the evil organisation SPECTRE to start a world war, but the not-so-super villain behind the plot is the awfully civilised Donald Pleasence. The thin script is by Roald Dahl (shouldn't we have expected a better Bond nemesis from the creator of mad genius Willy Wonka?), and direction is by British veteran Lewis Gilbert (Alfie). But the movie can't hold a candle to Dr. No, From Russia with Love, or Goldfinger. --Tom Keogh, Amazon.comOn the DVD: This was another troubled production according to the insightful "making of" documentary: director and producers luckily avoided boarding a plane out of Tokyo that crashed and killed everyone on board; the Japanese actresses couldn't speak English and one threatened suicide if she was dropped from the part; and the aerial cameraman filming the helicopter fight had his leg sliced off by a rotor blade. Maurice Binder's evocative main title designs are the subject of the second documentary, "Silhouettes", in which his colleagues voiceboth their admiration of his art and frustration at his chaotic working practices. The commentary is another edited selection of interviews with principal cast and crew. An animated storyboard sequence, trailers, radio spots and a handsome booklet add up to another winning entry in this series. --Mark Walker
You only live twiceOnce when you are bornand once When you look death in the face. The fifth film in the Bond series 'You Only Live Twice' unveils the sinister visage of Ernst Stavro Blofeld for the very first time! The film is also memorable for its incredible ''400 000 set of Blofeld's Volcano operational base complete with the rocket laucher helicopter landing pad monorail and massive shutter. Q's invention 'Little Nellie' - a one man miniature helicopter - also makes a big impact. An American space mission is interrupted when one of their capsules is literally swallowed up by what they suspect is a Russian spaceship. The Americans threaten to retaliate but the British think otherwise. Everything depends on Bond as he goes undercover in Japan and discovers that Blofeld is the creator of these interceptor rockets...
The carcasscrunching action comes thick and fast. A pack of ghoulish predators entrap some ridiculously ill-prepared locals in a moody, malevolent mansion. Suffice to say, a mammoth amount of stomach-turning, meat-munching mayhem ensues. Only the golden age of Italian horror could have delivered a movie-meal of such outstanding insanity
The Zombie Dead are unleashed when a professor's thirst for knowledge seals his own demise when he unwittingly unseals a cursed underground crypt in an ancient burial ground. The desecrated graveyard errupts with a ground swell of ravenous rotting flesh hungry zombies that shamble into the night in search of living human prey. On the adjoining grounds a group of clueless decadent socialites are enjoying a wild weekend retreat of debauchery. Among the eccentric guests are a nympho
The carcasscrunching action comes thick and fast. A pack of ghoulish predators entrap some ridiculously ill-prepared locals in a moody, malevolent mansion. Suffice to say, a mammoth amount of stomach-turning, meat-munching mayhem ensues. Only the golden age of Italian horror could have delivered a movie-meal of such outstanding insanity
Is It Magic? Or Wholesale Slaughter? Montag the Magnificent (Ray Sager) The Wizard of Gore is a seedy small time magician with a shocking stage act. Hypnotizing pretty young women from the audience to be his obedient volunteers Montag then proceeds to mutilate them in a series of Grand Guignol illusions. A woman is cut in half with a chainsaw another is drilled through the stomach with a giant punch press a metal spike is driven through one gal's head and two ladies are forced to swallow swords. Trouble is after the show the illusions become all too horribly real. Intrigued by Montag's act but unaware of his true powers television talk show hostess Sherry Carson (Judy Cler) invites Montag on her show. Montag promptly hypnotizes the viewing audience and leads Sherry toward a fiery new illusion... Blood guts and offbeat surrealism in another crackpot classick from The Wizard of Gore himself director Herschell Gordon Lewis.
An Astounding Walk Down the Bloody Corridors of the Occult! One of Herschell Gordon Lewis most extraordinary movies The Wizard of Gore takes a tongue-in-cheek look at the relationship between the gore-demanding audience and stomach-churning spectacle. With his unique stage show small-time illusionist Montag the Magnificent becomes an overnight success. As crowds flock to witness his incredible and fantastical act Montag recruits pretty ladies from his audience publicly d
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