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Category:    Home > Reviews > Horror > Thriller > Science Fiction > The Creeping Flesh (Region Zero/DD Video PAL DVD Import)

The Creeping Flesh (Region Zero/PAL version)

 

PLEASE NOTE: This is a DVD that can only be operated on machines capable of playing back DVDs set for Region Zero and the PAL format, and can be ordered from our friends at Xploited Cinema through their website:

 

www.xploitedcinema.com

 

They have this and hundreds of other great, usually very hard to get titles that are often long overdo to his the U.S. DVD market.  Be sure to visit their site for more details on that as well.

 

 

Picture: B-     Sound: C+     Extras: B-     Film: B-

 

 

One of the more interesting Christopher Lee/Peter Cushing pairings did not happen at Hammer Studios, but for LMG/Tigon Films.  Freddie Francis, the legendary cinematographer in another one of his always-interesting directorial outings, bring them together for The Creeping Flesh (1973).  This tale has Cushing as a doctor who talks of his expedition that turns up a missing link with a larger skull than modern man.  Has he found a breakthrough?

 

Well, the fun part of this cycle of the genre is that the characters use very dated science and technology to achieve the impossible, which allows the viewer to suspend disbelief more than usual.  It is also something lost in Horror Cinema since the late 1970s, sadly.  The point is that you get good scary B-movie story-telling at its best and by people who did it best.  Lee shows up as a man who wants to steal Cushing’s discovery and just having their characters going at it alone is “worth the price of admission” as it were.  There is a monster, and we always have to ask if either of them are a monster.  This must-see for true Horror fans is worth a good look at for everyone else.

 

The anamorphically enhanced 1.85 X 1 image is very solid and holds up very well for an older film.  The print is in very good shape, and though the color is consistent, I had to wonder if cinematographer Norman Warwick (or Francis by way of his great camerawork in the field), B.S.C., intended the Rank Color to be this muted.  It looks really good otherwise, and was supposed to be in browns and grays to some extent.  DDF Video did a better job than expected either way.  The Dolby Digital 2.0 Mono is fine for its age, with a good music score by Paul Ferris.  Whether the basic Columbia TriStar Home Video DVD can compete with this is not likely considering PAL is usually clearer than NTSC, especially when it looks this good.  However, this version has extras, where that U.S. version (like too many genre DVDs from Columbia’s catalog) have none or next to none.

 

Extras include another winning, must-hear commentary by Christopher Lee, hosted by Marcus Hearn.  Lee has so many tales to tell that hardly anyone can compete with him when it comes to stars on commentary tracks.  You also get a stills section, a 1.33 X 1 trailer for this film, a trailer for The Abominable Snowman Of The Himalayas (1957) letterboxed for its scope aspect ratio, a 1.33 X 1 trailer for Captain Kronos – Vampire Hunter, an anamorphically enhanced 1.78 X 1 trailer for Frankenstein & The Monster From Hell (reviewed elsewhere on this site), and a terrific 24-page booklet with a long, outstanding essay by Hearn and Jonathan Rigby that includes some excellent illustrations and all the cast and crew information at the end.  Even Criterion does not do that enough.

 

 

-   Nicholas Sheffo


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