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I only watched a third of these before giving up, so I will do a blanket comment.
This is many hours of stuff stretched out possibly three times as long as it deserved. Interviews are reused in multiple weeks. There is lots of footage from the films they are talking about, but almost exclusively from trailers. The host is a nitwit who blathers on, partly in character. The people interviewed have almost nothing to say.
But its such a rich topic with so many, many opportunities for reward that I kept hoping.
Their definition of horror excludes Giallo. There's no mention of sleaze horror. Omitting these is like not mentioning whiskey in a history of the US. There's an episode on girl monsters and another on scream queen victims, but no mention of sex. No discussion of redheads.
There's no examination of racially based horror. How could that be?
The omissions are not as crazy as the way things are grouped. There's an episode about freaks. Now there are enough of those to fill a couple episodes. But they are crammed in with the maimed and scarred. Does anyone on the planet believe these work the same way?
I found only one mildly interesting thing: the episode on sorcerers has some pretty good background on Crowley and the actor who played Caligari's ghoul (who in turn influenced Christopher Lee). And then talks about Svengali. This seems to have been written by someone who knew the history and knew how the device is used: evil hypnotizes.
But other than that (episode 19), you really should look at any horror film closely. You'll get more than you'll get here.
Ted's Evaluation -- 1 of 3: You can find something better to do with this part of your life.
This is many hours of stuff stretched out possibly three times as long as it deserved. Interviews are reused in multiple weeks. There is lots of footage from the films they are talking about, but almost exclusively from trailers. The host is a nitwit who blathers on, partly in character. The people interviewed have almost nothing to say.
But its such a rich topic with so many, many opportunities for reward that I kept hoping.
Their definition of horror excludes Giallo. There's no mention of sleaze horror. Omitting these is like not mentioning whiskey in a history of the US. There's an episode on girl monsters and another on scream queen victims, but no mention of sex. No discussion of redheads.
There's no examination of racially based horror. How could that be?
The omissions are not as crazy as the way things are grouped. There's an episode about freaks. Now there are enough of those to fill a couple episodes. But they are crammed in with the maimed and scarred. Does anyone on the planet believe these work the same way?
I found only one mildly interesting thing: the episode on sorcerers has some pretty good background on Crowley and the actor who played Caligari's ghoul (who in turn influenced Christopher Lee). And then talks about Svengali. This seems to have been written by someone who knew the history and knew how the device is used: evil hypnotizes.
But other than that (episode 19), you really should look at any horror film closely. You'll get more than you'll get here.
Ted's Evaluation -- 1 of 3: You can find something better to do with this part of your life.
I thoroughly enjoyed seeing the birth of horror and how it has grown up to 1996. Listening to the actors like Vincent Price, Robert De Niro and Brinke Stevens, directors like Herschell Gordon Lewis, companies like Hammer Films, and others involved in the business was entertaining and informative.
It was fascinating to see how well known characters like Frankenstein changes over the years. I didn't even know that Robert De Niro did the character in 1994. From Frankenstein and the Wolf-man, we move to Hellraiser and Michael Myers, discovering along the way how some films were meant to be a one-time deal and ended up a franchise, and why we are so fascinated with demons. And, then there are dinosaurs, from 1 Million Years BC to Jurrasic park. I love a good Godzilla movie!
Christopher Lee does a great job of narrating.
It was fascinating to see how well known characters like Frankenstein changes over the years. I didn't even know that Robert De Niro did the character in 1994. From Frankenstein and the Wolf-man, we move to Hellraiser and Michael Myers, discovering along the way how some films were meant to be a one-time deal and ended up a franchise, and why we are so fascinated with demons. And, then there are dinosaurs, from 1 Million Years BC to Jurrasic park. I love a good Godzilla movie!
Christopher Lee does a great job of narrating.
I would have given this series a higher rating except for the audio quality inconsistencies, granted they're dealing with a lot of older movies so the sound quality isn't going to be the greatest by today's (or in this case, the late '90s) standards, I'm not talking about those clips, what I mean are the interview bits and Christopher Lee's bits, sometimes he'd sound fine, then other times his voice would be louder and way too heavy in the low end... and the interviews often were too quiet and/or muffled. Otherwise a great show.
Just saw the DVD, which only contains the two general episodes of this series and enjoyed it immensely. And since I'm a HUGE Abbott&Costello fan I was pleasantly surprised to see some outtakes from 'Abbott&Costello meets Frankenstein', one of their best films for sure.
But aside from that, Lee guides us through the history of horror movies using the trailers of the movies themselves. Not bad, all the exciting shots are there, but also the the very misplaced music and captions that accompanies the trailers. Silencing the music and removing the captions would have earned this otherwise wellmade documentary a 8/10, but now I think a 7 will be quite enough.
But aside from that, Lee guides us through the history of horror movies using the trailers of the movies themselves. Not bad, all the exciting shots are there, but also the the very misplaced music and captions that accompanies the trailers. Silencing the music and removing the captions would have earned this otherwise wellmade documentary a 8/10, but now I think a 7 will be quite enough.
This is an interesting (1996) series broken down into 26 episodes. It has been reorganized into a shorter number of episodes.
In this Ted Newson documentary, it is divided into subjects that overlap as you find out when you try to shelve the DVDs. Such as Dracula and His Disciples, Frankenstein's Friends, Girl Ghouls, etc...
Narrated by Sir Christopher Frank Carandini Lee (1922-2015) you may remember him in Les Stupides (1996) as Evil Sender as mail is posted return to Sender.
I learned a lot about missing and overlooked films from the clips and interviewees. I will not go through a list as that is why you will be watching this. However, in one of the first episodes they showed a clip of Drácula (1931) the Spanish version with Carlos Villarías(1892-1976); Carlos looks just like Nicolas Cage in Renfield (2023).
If you stick with this presentation, you will notice that many of the clips are repeated. You may also notice that the movies are selective and may not include your favorites. Still, you cannot have everything in the limited time available. They did take the time to mention many of the TV shows and not just movies.
Hopefully someone will pick up the gauntlet and make an UpToDate version.
In this Ted Newson documentary, it is divided into subjects that overlap as you find out when you try to shelve the DVDs. Such as Dracula and His Disciples, Frankenstein's Friends, Girl Ghouls, etc...
Narrated by Sir Christopher Frank Carandini Lee (1922-2015) you may remember him in Les Stupides (1996) as Evil Sender as mail is posted return to Sender.
I learned a lot about missing and overlooked films from the clips and interviewees. I will not go through a list as that is why you will be watching this. However, in one of the first episodes they showed a clip of Drácula (1931) the Spanish version with Carlos Villarías(1892-1976); Carlos looks just like Nicolas Cage in Renfield (2023).
If you stick with this presentation, you will notice that many of the clips are repeated. You may also notice that the movies are selective and may not include your favorites. Still, you cannot have everything in the limited time available. They did take the time to mention many of the TV shows and not just movies.
Hopefully someone will pick up the gauntlet and make an UpToDate version.
Did you know
- ConnectionsFeatured in The Many Faces of Dracula (2000)
Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
- Language
- Also known as
- 100 Años de terror
- Production company
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
- Runtime5 hours 43 minutes
- Color
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 1.33 : 1
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