DVDs
DVD's are a great gift idea for the film buff check out the selection we have from top names why not click through to the vendors sites for even more ideas
The Hammer Collection Box Set (21 Discs)
21 of the greatest British films ever produced by the world renowned Hammer film studio! ; ; Includes: ; 1. Blood From The Mummy's Tomb (Dir. Seth Holt 1971) ; 2. Demons Of The Mind (Dir. Peter Sykes 1972) ; 3. The Devil Rides Out (Dir. Terence Fisher 1968) ; 4. Dracula Prince Of Darkness (Dir. Terence Fisher 1966) ; 5. Fear In The Night (Dir. Jimmy Sangster 1972) ; 6. Frankenstein Created Woman (Dir. Terence Fisher 1967) ; 7. The Horror Of Frankenstein (Dir. Jimmy Sangster 1970) ; 8. The Nanny (Dir. Seth Holt 1965) ; 9. One Million Years BC (Dir. Don Chaffey 1966) ; 10. Plague Of The Zombies (Dir. John Gilling 1966) ; 11. Slave Girls [aka: Prehistoic Women] (Dir. Michael Carreras 1967) ; 12. Quatermass And The Pit (Dir. Roy Ward Baker 1967) ; 13. Rasputin The Mad Monk (Dir. Don Sharp 1966) ; 14. The Reptile (Dir. John Gilling 1966) ; 15. The Scars of Dracula (Dir. Roy Ward Baker 1970) ; 16. SHE (Dir. Robert Day 1965) ; 17. Straight On Til Morning (Dir. Peter Collinson 1972) ; 18. To The Devil A Daughter (Dir. Peter Sykes 1967) ; 19. The Vengeance Of SHE (Dir. Cliff Owen 1968) ; 20. Viking Queen (Dir. Don Chaffey 1967) ; 21. The Witches (Dir. Cyril Frankel 1966)
Films Of The Year: The Queen / The Devil Wears Prada / The Last King Of Scotland / Little Miss Sunshine (4 Discs)
The Queen (Dir. Stephen Frears): Tradition prepared her. Change will define her. ; ; In the wake of the death of Princess Diana in 1997 Queen Elizabeth II (the outstanding Helen Mirren) must come to terms with a nation in mourning a new government under pressure to deliver an outpouring of grief and a Royal family in turmoil... ; ; The Devil Wears Prada (Dir. David Frankel): As assistant to the impossibly demanding New York fashion magazine editor Miranda Priestly (Streep) young Andy Sachs (Hathaway) has landed a job that "a million girls would die for." Unfortunately her heaven-sent appointment as Miranda's personal whipping girl just might be the death of her! ; ; The Last King Of Scotland (Dir. Kevin Macdonald): A Scottish doctor on a Ugandan medical mission becomes irreversibly entangled with one of the world's most barbaric figures: Idi Amin. Impressed by Dr. Garrigan's brazen attitude in a moment of crisis the newly self-appointed Ugandan President Amin hand picks him as his personal physician and closest confidante. Though Garrigan is at first flattered and fascinated by his new position he soon awakens to Amin's savagery - and his own complicity in it. Horror and betrayal ensue as Garrigan tries to right his wrongs and escape Uganda alive. ; ; Little Miss Sunshine (Dir. Jonathan Dayton & Valerie Faris): Brazenly satirical and yet deeply human this film introduces audiences to one of the most endearingly fractured families in recent cinema history: the Hoovers whose trip to a pre-pubescent beauty pageant results not only in comic mayhem but in death transformation and a moving look at the surprising rewards of being losers in a winning-crazed culture. ; ; A runaway hit at the Sundance Film Festival where it played to standing ovations the film strikes a nerve with everyone who's ever been awestruck by how their muddled families seem to make it after all.
A Town Like Alice: The Special Edition
Virginia McKenna and Peter Finch star in this moving story about a party of women compelled to trek through the Malayan jungle during World War II as no Japanese office will take responsibility for their care. Based on Nevil Shute's best selling novel the film tells how the women come to terms with their hardships and how they are befriended by a tough Australian prisoner of war who dreams of returning to his home town of Alice Springs...
Electric Edwardians: The Films Of Mitchell And Kenyon
Probably the most exciting film discovery of recent times the films of Mitchell & Kenyon were commissioned by travelling exhibitors at the dawn of the twentieth century for screening in town halls at village fetes or local fairs. Advertised as 'local films for local people ' the audience paid to see their neighbours children family and themselves on the screen glimpsed at local football matches leaving work marching in civic processions or enjoying the annual works holidays.The hugely successful BBC TV series The Lost World of Mitchell & Kenyon introduced audiences to these miraculous views of the past. For the first time there is now the opportunity to explore the Collection in greater depth.The material on this DVD is taken from 28 hours of footage of scenes of everyday life and represents a cross-section of the subjects covered in the Collection. From factory gates to football matches the leaving of Liverpool to the leaving of work the workers on holiday and at play this material provides an unparalleled opportunity to see the world through the eyes of the working communities of the time. The films of Sagar Mitchell and James Kenyon take us on a tour of everyday life in Edwardian Britain.This DVD features 35 items in five sections: Youth and Education The Anglo-Boer War Workers High Days and Holidays People and Places as well as five additional 'hidden' items. It also includes a specially commissioned score by the Sheffield-based duo In The Nursery.
Classic Sherlock Holmes Boxset: Volume 2 (9 Classic Films On 3 Discs)
Consisting of 9 Classic Sherlock Holmes films spread over 3 discs with performances from some of the best actors to have ever played the super sleuth. Titles included are: ; ; Disc 1: Sherlock Holmes And The Secret Weapon (Rathbone) / Terror By Night (Rathbone) / Dressed To Kill (Rathbone) ; ; Disc 2: Woman In Green (Rathbone) / The Speckled Band (Massey) / A Study In Scarlet (Owen) ; ; Disc 3: Silver Blaze (Wontner) / The Sign Of Four (Wontner) / The Triumph Of Sherlock Holmes (Wontner)
Classic Horror Box Set - Volume 1 Box Set (9 Classic Films On 3 Discs)
Nine classic horror movies of the Silver Screen era. ; ; The Corpse Vanishes (Dir. Wallace Fox 1942): Bela Lugosi plays a botanist who sends orchids to blushing brides on their wedding days. But they are not around to enjoy the reception as Bela kidnaps them to use their glandular fluids to rejuvenate his wife... ; ; Horror Hotel (Dir. John Llewellyn Moxey 1960): Young college student Nan Barlow (Stevenson) uses her winter vacation to research a paper on witchcraft in New England as her professor recommended that she spent her time in a small village called Whitewood. Once she gets to the village she notices some weird happenings but things begin to happen in earnest when she finds herself "marked" for sacrifice by the undead coven of witches! ; ; The Terror (Dir. Roger Corman 1963): A lieutenant in Napoleon's army (a young Jack Nicholson) traces a mysterious woman to a castle on the Baltic coast and finds himself trapped by a mad baron (Boris Karloff). This highly enjoyable atmospheric slice of low-budget horror from the great Roger Corman was also reportedly directed at points by future talents Francis Coppola and Peter Bogdanovich. ; ; Bucket Of Blood (Dir. Roger Corman 1959): Walter is a busboy overly impressed with the cool cats who hang out at the Yellow Door coffee house and he wonders how he can become "hip." When he accidentally kills his landlady's pet cat Walter panics and covers it with clay. His prayers are answered and before he knows it he's the "cat's meow" of the art world. His talents develop and--surprise!--he can sculpt humans the same way too. ; ; The House On Haunted Hill (Dir. William Castle 1959: Vincent Price has one of his juiciest roles in this haunted-house thriller as millionaire playboy Frederick Loren who invites five guests out to a genuine haunted house offering them each $10 000 if they spend the night. Elisha Cook Jr. plays one of the guests a nervous alcoholic who has been in this house before and witnessed some terrible things. Mr. Loren's beautiful but treacherous wife (Carol Ohmart) is also present - and might be out to kill Frederick during the course of the evening; then again he might be out to kill her. ; ; The Ghoul (Dir T. Hayes Hunter 1934): Boris Karloff's first British film. The story of Professor Morlant an eccentric Egyptologist who becomes obsessed with the mystical powers of the ancient Egyptian gods. On his deathbed he orders his servant to bind a sacred jewel called 'The Eternal Light' to his hand. He warns that if the jewel is stolen he will return from the grave looking for revenge. ; ; Little Shop Of Horrors (Dir. Roger Corman 1960): The original movie of this classic black comedy/horror about a rather dim-witted young man Seymour (Jonathan Haze) working for $10 a week in Mushnick's flower shop on skid row who develops an intelligent bloodthirsty plant. He names the plant "Audrey 2" and as it grows it demands human meat for sustenance and Seymour is forced to kill in order to feed it. Jack Nicholson has a notable cameo part as an undertaker Wilbur Force who is a masochistic dental patient and the film also features the writer Charles Griffith as the hold-up man and the voice of 'Audrey Jr'... ; ; The Bat (Dir. Crane Wilbur 1959): Based on the gothic novel by Mary Roberts Rinehart this haunted house mystery casts Moorehead as the owner of a house with a million dollars hidden in it. Bodies pile up as the mysterious "Bat" tries to find the money first. ; ; Bride Of The Monster (Dir. Edward D. Wood Jr. 1955): Bela Lugosi stars as Dr. Eric Vornoff who with Lobo (Tor Johnson) a crazed man-beast servant is conducting flesh-burning radiation experiments in an attempt to create a legion of atomic supermen.




