


Product Description Classic horror starring Peter Cushing. A young teacher on her way to a position in Transylvania helps a young man escape the shackles his mother has put on him. In doing so she innocently unleashes the horrors of the undead once again on the populace, including those at her school for ladies. Luckily for some, Dr Van Helsing (Cushing) is already on his way.SPECIAL FEATURES Introduction to Brides of Dracula The Making of The Brides of Dracula Narrated by Edward de Souza and featuring interviews with Yvonne Monlaur, Jimmy Sangster, Hugh Harlow, Pauline Harlow, Don Mingaye, Margaret Robinson and Tony Hinds The Brides of Dracula Stills Gallery The Brides of Dracula Theatrical Trailer Review Top class Hammer movie. Peter Cushing's second outing as Van Helsing and David Peel's only vampire role. One of the most beautifully photographed movies ever - Jack Asher at his best and director Terence Fisher in top form. If the bat is a little clunky by modern effects standards, no worry for there is plenty to enjoy here. Great performances from Cushing and Peel, as mentioned, but also watch out for the acting duel between vetrans Freda Jackson and Martita Hunt; each gives a ripe performance and both are highly memorable. Other performances to look out for are from scene- stealing Miles Malleson as the hypochondriac Dr Tobler and Andree Melly who gave one of the 60's classic vampire images to the screen. Michael Ripper is also there for fans, this time as the scared coach driver. Cushing's authoratative Van Helsing carries the movie and David Peel's Baron Meinster is an excellent vampire foe - clipped Oxford English, red eyes and hissing vampire attacks. The burning windmill finale was lifted to conclude Tim Burton's SLEEPY HOLLOW which was a tribute to Hammer Films. Pure escapism - enjoy! --maxgol Review: Hammer gem - Great hammer film brilliant cast with Peter Cushing and the lovely yvonne monlaur and David peel plays a great vampire the blu ray picture is sharp and clear has if it was made yesterday well recommended Review: Only God has no fear... - Hammer's The Brides of Dracula (1960) was the first sequel their 1958 classic Horror of Dracula, and again stars Peter Cushing as ace vampire hunter Dr. Van Helsing. Christopher Lee's Count Dracula is absent this time, for reasons nobody has ever really confirmed; depending on which rumours you believe, he asked for too much money, turned the film down to avoid typecasting, or might not have been asked to appear at all. However, Lee isn't really missed in a movie that instead features the little-known actor David Peel as Baron Meinster, a blood-sucking mummy's boy with a taste for farm girls and French schoolteachers... One of the few Hammer horror movies to divide the opinion of fans, The Brides of Dracula has in its favour some really magnificent set designs, great photography, an unusual score from Malcolm Williamson, and top-notch performances from Cushing, Peel, and veteran actresses Martita Hunt and Freda Jackson. However, many commentators (amongst them one of the credited screenwriters, Jimmy Sangster) have drawn attention to the film's choppy narrative and various plot inconsistencies and contrivances, and the somewhat weak performance of the female lead, Yvonne Monlaur. Those criticisms do hold water, but they are scarcely noticeable once you are actually watching the movie; this is a dream-like, gothic fairytale, and one of director Terence Fisher's very best films.
| ASIN | B0114I08DU |
| Actors | David Peel, Freda Jackson, Martita Hunt, Peter Cushing, Yvonne Monlaur |
| Customer reviews | 4.5 4.5 out of 5 stars (876) |
| Director | Terence Fisher |
| Is discontinued by manufacturer | No |
| Manufacturer reference | 5060057211106 |
| Media Format | PAL |
| Number of discs | 1 |
| Producers | Anthony Hinds |
| Product Dimensions | 1.7 x 11.9 x 16.1 cm; 83.16 g |
| Rated | Suitable for 12 years and over |
| Release date | 21 Sept. 2015 |
| Run time | 1 hour and 25 minutes |
| Studio | Final Cut Entertainment |
| Writers | Edward Percy, Jimmy Sangster, Peter Bryan |
K**N
Hammer gem
Great hammer film brilliant cast with Peter Cushing and the lovely yvonne monlaur and David peel plays a great vampire the blu ray picture is sharp and clear has if it was made yesterday well recommended
M**Y
Only God has no fear...
Hammer's The Brides of Dracula (1960) was the first sequel their 1958 classic Horror of Dracula, and again stars Peter Cushing as ace vampire hunter Dr. Van Helsing. Christopher Lee's Count Dracula is absent this time, for reasons nobody has ever really confirmed; depending on which rumours you believe, he asked for too much money, turned the film down to avoid typecasting, or might not have been asked to appear at all. However, Lee isn't really missed in a movie that instead features the little-known actor David Peel as Baron Meinster, a blood-sucking mummy's boy with a taste for farm girls and French schoolteachers... One of the few Hammer horror movies to divide the opinion of fans, The Brides of Dracula has in its favour some really magnificent set designs, great photography, an unusual score from Malcolm Williamson, and top-notch performances from Cushing, Peel, and veteran actresses Martita Hunt and Freda Jackson. However, many commentators (amongst them one of the credited screenwriters, Jimmy Sangster) have drawn attention to the film's choppy narrative and various plot inconsistencies and contrivances, and the somewhat weak performance of the female lead, Yvonne Monlaur. Those criticisms do hold water, but they are scarcely noticeable once you are actually watching the movie; this is a dream-like, gothic fairytale, and one of director Terence Fisher's very best films.
T**R
One of Hammer's finest achievements - but not a great DVD and a problemtic Blu-Ray
Brides of Dracula was the first of Hammer's many sequels to their breakthrough hit, and it's not just the best of the series but one of their very best pictures. There's no Christopher Lee this time round - in fact, there's no Dracula at all - but there's a lot of imagination at play here in a beautifully plotted story that sees Peter Cushing's Van Helsing coming up against David Peel's Baron Meinster, a follower of Dracula's vampire cult, after Yvonne Monlaur's schoolteacher ill-advisedly releases him from the shackles his not-as-mad-as-she-looks mother keeps him in. There's a lot going on beneath the stylish surface here - a psychiatrist could probably have a field day with the curious relationship between Peel and Martita Hunt ("We pray for death, both of us. At least, I hope he prays"), not to mention Van Helsing's visible discomfort in the company of women - but it never overwhelms the plot, and there's no shortage of memorable scenes, from the professor treating a rather nasty bite he just got to the servant silently offering pointers to a newly created vampire on its first outing as one of the undead. Reuniting most of the behind-the-cameras talent from their first Dracula film and throwing in a rather splendid climax in a burning windmill, this is definitely one of Hammer's finest hours. Sadly, though one of their best looking pictures, like Warner Home Video's overcopped release of the first Hammer Dracula, the UK DVD of Brides is also a bit of a disappointment - no extras and in the wrong ratio. It's a problem that's carried over in Final Cut's UK Blu-ray, which uses Universal's 2:1 widescreen transfer from their Hammer Horror Series [DVD] [1964] [Region 1] [US Import] [NTSC ], marring an otherwise decent release that also includes a new 31-minute making of documentary, stills gallery and trailer.
J**R
one of the best, but for some reason not quite as familiar ...
one of the first Hammer Dracula film's, one of the best, but for some reason not quite as familiar as Christopher Lee, but it is a well worthwhile classic, a vintage great that had become quite a rare title, but fortunately it has become available again for a reasonable price, it's got the brilliant Peter Cushing and also a hypnotising performance from David Peel as Baron Meinster, why he never played the vampire role again, i'll never understand?!....it's a veritable Hammer classic at it's best, a vintage gothic masterpiece, when horror was an art, everything that horror should be today, but isn't sadly, nowaday's it seem's to be just violence, sadistic and vicious, gratuitous for the sake of it, apart from the Brit's & Europe, they seem to have forgotten the art of the horror film...long live Hammer, Amicus, Kobalt, Tigon and all the other classic's!
V**R
Masterpiece!!
This was the first Hammer film I ever saw. I'd been trying to find it on DVD for ages after seeing it on numerous occasions on Sky and well worth the wait!! This is British cinema at it's creepiest and atmospheric, an absolute masterpiece with a fantastic pace. It's all too easy in this day and age to be cynical and laugh at these films but it says something when nearly 50 years on this film is given the recognition it deserves and is finally released to buy. If you love vintage old horror films, it really doesn't get much better than this. All the characters are great but one man has to be singled out and that is the legend which is Peter Cushing, one of this country's greatest actors, as the formiddable Van Helsing. As another reviewer quoted, 'Who is it who is not afraid?' , 'Only God has no fear!' Genius!!
J**N
Un des bons films des productions de la Hammer Horror Movie la seule chose le titre est en français sur la pochette mais le film est en anglais avec des sous-titres en français. Mais c'est un film a possédé pour sa collection de films personnelle. De plus la nouvelle édition de 2017 les dvd est pal mais le blu-ray est toute région.
M**T
Looks terrific in high definition
R**R
BEELDKWALITEIT SUPER SCHERP !!!!!
T**.
Conte onirique des ténèbres aux images resplendissantes de beauté, aux couleurs éclatantes, bariolées mais chaudes,aux décors somptueux,à la mise en scène maîtrisée par la main d'un des chefs de file pour la Hammer: comme dans "Le cauchemar de Dracula'' Terence Fisher se révèle encore une fois être un grand magicien poète. Ici pas d'affreux Dracula mais un beau jeune homme pour charmer ces dames. Et ce même jeune homme est retenu prisonnier dans un château fastueux par sa mère qui craint donc le pire avec un fils vampire! Mais la belle Yvonne Monlaur,invitée au château par la mère,tombera sous le charme de celui qui était retenu prisonnier par une chaîne scellée au mur et dont l'extrémité était un gros anneau fermé à clé à sa cheville. Car la belle aura dérobé la clé pour délivrer son charmeur lequel charmeur sera allé par la suite jusqu'à sucer le sang de sa propre mère qui aura élevé son fils d'une manière bien trop laxiste! On ne peut penser évidemment qu'à ces théories célèbres d'un Freud. La fin du film est remarquable lorsque le jeune vampire dans un moulin verra son visage détruit par de l'eau bénite puis, quand il bondira hors de ce moulin en flammes , le Dr. Van Helsing actionnera les ailes du moulin de manière à ce qu'elles forment par leurs ombres une croix sous la lumière de la pleine lune, à la nuit tombée , sur ce vampire. L'interprétation (d'un homme froid et déterminé) de Peter Cushing est encore et toujours des plus brillantes et tout le reste de la distribution est à la hauteur. Ce film a plus de cinquante ans mais il reflète , par sa poésie , une certaine société qui espérait en un monde meilleur et au bonheur (autant en emporte le vent?...) VOST ici avec des bonus dont un entretien avec Jean-François RAUGER. Billy.
E**G
This particular release, Brides of Dracula, is a Region 2 (or "B") edition, released in Europe, and is a "Double Play" package containing both a Blu-Ray and a DVD. I am a U.S. customer and I use either my Sony Playstation 3 or Playstation 4 to watch Blu-Ray movies because they play Blu-Rays from all regions, and this Region 2 Blu-Ray is no exception. However, other U.S. Blu-Ray players (even those made by Sony!) likely will NOT play this disc. Also, while the Region 2 Blu-Ray plays perfectly in my U.S. Playstations, the included Region 2 DVD does NOT work. I don't know if that is a universal problem with region-locked DVDs, or what, but be warned that if you were thinking of buying this 2-pack for the DVD, and you are in the U.S., you may not be able to actually play the DVD. I won't bother reviewing the picture - you either love it or you don't. It happens to be my favorite Hammer picture of them all. (Sorry, and RIP, Chris Lee.) That said, I grew up watching Brides of Dracula on TV, in 4:3 with washed out colors (as everything was back then), and the first time I saw this on DVD in a previous release, I thought it was nice and it did the job, but this Blu-Ray absolutely takes the cake. This re-mastered version is bar-none the best looking I have ever seen, and I recommend it above all other releases. While it is true that there is noticeable "grain" (I am not a videophile so I don't know if that is technically the correct term for what I am trying to describe...) in some shots (mostly in the actor's faces...), this is still, overall, the best-looking I have ever seen this movie. Other reviews of this release mentioned cropping at the top of the picture, but I didn't notice anything wrong while watching it. I think it is important to remember that this picture (like all old movies) cannot compete with a modern movie shot on modern equipment in full high definition from the get go, and even considering that Hammer apparently shot this picture on half-frames of film to save money (thus worsening the quality of the source material even further), I am still satisfied with how it looks compared to other releases of this picture in other formats. Finally, this release also includes a (apparently British) documentary I had never seen, "The Making of The Brides of Dracula", featuring interesting interviews with many of the persons involved with Hammer Studios and Brides, as well as the actress who played Marianne, Yvonne Montaur. The documentary is excellent! If you are a Brides of Dracula, or Hammer, fan this should definitely be in your collection!
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