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Showing posts with label the mummy. Show all posts
Showing posts with label the mummy. Show all posts
Tuesday, 6 October 2015
GET SET FOR HALLOWEEN : WIN YOUR COPY OF WARNER BROS HORROR CLASSICS VOL ONE BLU RAY BOX SET
Labels:
blu ray,
box set,
competition,
dracula,
dracula has risen from the grave,
frankenstein must be destroyed,
halloween.,
hammer glamour,
hammer horror films,
prizes,
the mummy,
vampires,
win
Tuesday, 1 October 2013
HAMMER FILMS ARCHITECT ANTHONY HINDS DIES
We are very sad to hear of the passing of
Anthony Hinds yesterday. A writer and producer, who was not only the
backbone Hammer Films, but was the driving force behind the building of
Bray Studios. How painfully ironic then, that the bulldozers start their
work on the Bray Studios lot tomorrow...
Labels:
anthony hinds,
bray studios,
curse of frankenstein,
down place,
dracula,
gothic horror,
hammer films,
obituary.,
peter cushing,
producer,
script writer,
the mummy
Tuesday, 12 March 2013
'HE WHO ROBS THE GRAVES OF EGYPT DIES!' THE MUMMY HAMMER FILMS (1959)
Hammer
Films 'The Mummy' Starring Peter Cushing as John Banning, Christopher
Lee as Kharis and Yvonne Furneaux as Isobel. Directed by Terence Fisher
and produced at Bray Studios. Shooting Production: February 25th until April 16th 1959.
Hammer
Films 'The Mummy' Starring Peter Cushing as John Banning, Christopher
Lee as Kharis and Yvonne Furneaux as Isobel. Directed by Terence Fisher
and produced at Bray Studios. Shooting Production: February 25th until April 16th 1959.
Hammer Films 'The Mummy' Starring Peter Cushing as John Banning, Christopher Lee as Kharis and Yvonne Furneaux as Isobel. Directed by Terence Fisher and produced at Bray Studios. Shooting Production: February 25th until April 16th 1959.
Labels:
bray studios,
british cinema,
christopher lee,
egypt.,
hammer films,
hammer glamour,
jimmy sangster,
kharis,
lobby cards,
mummys curse,
peter cushing.,
terence fisher,
the mummy,
yvonne furneaux
Wednesday, 6 March 2013
LOBBY CARD: CHRISTOPHER LEE PORTRAIT FROM HAMMER FILMS 'THE MUMMY' (1959)
Labels:
hammer film productions.,
kharis,
lobby card,
peter wilton cushing,
the mummy,
yvonne furneaux
Saturday, 9 February 2013
RARE IMAGE: CHRISTOPHER LEE: HAMMER FILMS: THE MUMMY 1959: PUBLICITY PHOTOGRAPH.
Christopher Lee as Kharis looks on as the tomb
of Princess Ananka is sealed. Hammer Films THE MUMMY (1959) starring
Peter Cushing Christopher Lee and Yvonne Furneaux.
Labels:
hammer films rare image,
horror film,
kharis,
peter cushing,
rare image.,
the mummy,
yvonne furneaux
Sunday, 3 February 2013
THE MUMMY: HAMMER HORROR AUTOGRAPHED PHOTOGRAPH FEATURING PETER CUSHING AND CHRISTOPHER LEE: PCASUK CELEBRATES 5000
A great signed vintage photograph of Peter Cushing and Christopher Lee from Hammer Films 'THE MUMMY' part of the UK Peter Cushing Appreciation Society Facebook Fan Page celebration on reaching 5000 followers.
Labels:
autographed photographs,
christopher lee,
dr who,
egypt,
hammer horror,
peter cushing,
star wars,
tarkin.,
the mummy,
yvonne furneaux
Thursday, 27 December 2012
SIR CHRISTOPHER LEE CHRISTMAS MESSAGE: STILL WORKING AND ROCKING!
For anyone who has missed it. Here is Sir
Christopher Lee's Christmas message for this year. We think Peter would
have loved this. Still, working... and rocking. Happy Christmas, Sir. He
is and always shall be a national treasure and a legend.
Labels:
christmas message,
christopher lee,
frankenstein,
hammer films,
lord of the rings,
peter cushing,
star wars,
the hobbit,
the mummy,
tim burton.
Saturday, 8 December 2012
NORMA MARLA : THE MUMMY US PUBLICITY PHOTOGRAPHS.
Actress NORMA MARLA worked for Hammer Films on a publicity tour of the USA during 1959 for Hammer's THE MUMMY starring Peter Cushing and Christopher Lee. Norma made her way across the US accompanied by Ananka's coffin.
Monday, 15 October 2012
HAMMER FILMS: THE MUMMY'S SHROUD : OUT ON BLU RAY NEXT WEEK!
When a group of British archaeologists uncover the secret desert tomb of a child Pharaoh outside Cairo, they invoke an ancient curse and the murderous wrath of a mummy...
If the above synopsis sounds familiar, that's because it is. The Mummy's Shroud boasts a typical mummy movie narrative in which a group of stuffy British archaeologists go snooping around in a Pharaoh's tomb and one by one are violently killed by a mummy - in this case, the faithful servant of the child prince whose burial place they desecrate. It was the third mummy movie made by Hammer. Director Gilling and writer Anthony Hinds don't really bring anything different or unusual to the tale, as it unravels (sorry) in the most stringently conventional way. Gilling's prior Hammer titles The Reptile and Plague of the Zombies were much more interesting, offbeat and effective horror films that at least tampered with convention and expectations. While the predictability slightly hinders the plot, there are at least several effectively handled and atmospheric moments of tension throughout. The titular creature is relegated to the shadows for the most part, as are the various moments of violence.
It begins with a lengthy narration-heavy prologue depicting the early years of the child prince Kah-to-Bey, who flees into exile with his faithful servant Prem after his father is murdered in a bloody coup. When hiding in the desert, the prince's small band of followers eventually dies, including the prince himself who is buried by Prem. Throughout these scenes the film's low budget is obvious but not distracting. Once the story moves to the 1920s when the tomb of the prince is discovered, the action becomes somewhat sporadic and further diluted by the overly talky scenes that bookend it. Events shuffle along at a somnambulistic pace with scene after scene of characters standing around sweating in khaki suits, mopping their brows and uttering expository dialogue in an unmistakably British - re: stiff upper-lipped - manner. Despite this, the dialogue is as colourful and wryly humorous as what you'd expect from a Hammer production. The film also contains all the usual harbingers of doom you'd expect to find in a traditional mummy film, including crystal ball reading clairvoyant Haiti (Catherine Lacey, The Sorcerers) and her sinister son Hasmid (Roger Delgado), the guardian of the tomb. It is they who instigate the mummy's rampage by reciting text from a mystical burial shroud.
A number of strikingly lit scenes, such as those in the clairvoyant's creepy boudoir and Harry Newton's darkroom possess an infernal, Bava-esque atmosphere. Scenes play out in limited locations which heightens the sense of claustrophobia as the story progresses. By the time the archaeologists realise that they're in danger because of their involvement in the excavation of the tomb and their increasingly panicked attempts to buy their way out of the city become the driving force of the story, events hang heavy with a clipped and quietly sweltering desperation. After the majority of the group are murderlised by the mummy - which usually sneaks up behind its victims and crushes their skull/throws photo development solution in their face/flings them from a high window etc - the third act picks up the pace when the surviving characters finally take action and attempt to stop the killing spree.
The cast is populated by familiar Hammer faces such as Andre Morell (Hound of the Baskervilles, Plague of the Zombies, Camp on Blood Island) as the dignified but doomed leader of the expedition, Sir Basil Walden, and Michael Ripper (The Reptile, Plague of the Zombies, Curse of the Mummy's Tomb, Dracula Has Risen from the Grave) as the harassed and put-upon Longbarrow. Indeed, Longbarrow is the only character who evokes any kind of sympathy due to Ripper's effectively endearing performance. Other characters aren't given much to do, and the admittedly attractive hero and heroine (David Buck and Maggie Kimberly) are a little bland.
While The Mummy's Shroud sticks rigidly to convention, it still provides creepy entertainment with a touch of that unmistakable Hammer class; even if it is one of their lesser titles.
Review:HERE
Images: Marcus Brooks
Labels:
andre morell,
catherine lacey,
christopher lee. eddie fisher.,
hammer films productions,
lobby cards,
maggie kimberly,
michael ripper david buck,
roger delgado,
the mummy,
the mummys shroud,
vintage
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