Utvidet returrett til 31. januar 2025

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  •  
    212,-

    Midnight Marquee magazine 40th Anniversary Issue, #69/70 contains articles: Sounds of Silents; Terror from 1963 and Beyond; The Spider; Things That Came: Significant Horror Movie Trends; Forum/Against 'Em: The Wicker Man; Return of the Ape Man; DVD Reviews

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    199,-

    Issue 71/72 of Midnight Marquee features articles on Mad Doctor Mania; 2001's Cinematic Relativity; Homicidal; D.W.Griffith's Avenging Conscience; So Good They're Bad; 105 Years of Women in Horror; DVD Reviews

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    212,-

    Issue 73/74 of Midmar contains: • The Ferociously Compelling Barbara Steele in Nightmare Castle by David J. Hogan • Frank Strayer: Poverty Row’s Dark Director by Kenny Strong • Forum/Against ’Em: The Devil Commands vs. The Man Who Changed His Mind edited by Anthony Ambrogio • Black Friday: Universal’s Horror Fraud by Nathalie Yafet • Bad Moon Rising: Ginger Snaps and Dog Soldiers by Gary J. Svehla • Monster That Challenged the World... and Jaws by Jeff Miller • DVD Reviews by Gary J. Svehla

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    212,-

    Issue #75 of Midnight Marquee magazine features Groundbreakers: The 13 Most Influential Horror Movies by Gary J. Svehla Lugosi vs. Karloff Eternally by Gary D. Rhodes Forum/Against Em-The Wolf Man Evelyn Moriarty Remembers Carl Laemmle, Jr. by Gregory Mank The Three Faces of Universal's Dracula by Brian Smith and over 35 pages of DVD reviews

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    199,-

    This issue, Midnight Marquee #77, offers two feature articles. One a “Forum/Against ’Em” analysis of the James Whale Universal classic The Invisible Man, with many arguing it remains the best film that Whale directed and features the best use of humor in classic horror cinema. Unfortunately, I argue that the film is the most overrated of the classic Universal canon and that its overuse of special effects and silly humor ruins what could have been the classic horror movie that many people consider it to be. And secondly, to add a contrasting 1950s touch, we feature a detailed analysis of The Deadly Mantis that makes the strong case that this generally disparaged or ignored giant bug epic is one of the finest examples of the genre. And yes, we have oodles of DVD and book reviews to fill out the remainder of the issue.

  • av Gary J Svehla
    187,-

    Includes a study of Alien and  A History of the Horror Film Portmanteau,Re: Aleien: Some of us find it hard to believe that 2011 marks the 32nd anniversary of Ridley Scott’s landmark science-fiction picture, Alien, which 20th Century Fox released on May 25, 1979 (exactly two years after the studio premièred George Lucas’s phenomenal Star Wars, although it’s hard to imagine two more different s.f. movies). This article was originally presented as a paper at the Fourth International Conference on the Fantastic (Boca Raton, Florida, March 26, 1981).. Since that time, there have been some major contributions to Alien studies, including David Thomson’s book-length study, The Alien Quartet (Bloomsbury Publishing Plc, 1999)—not to mention the commentary that can be found on the various DVD issues of the Alien films. But none has ever looked at the movie the way that “In Space, No One Can Hear Your Primal Scream” does. Thus, for the first-time publication of the complete text of this article, I have, for the most part, used as references those articles and interviews that came out shortly after the movie played theatrically, as they have the advantage of “freshness”—of being critics’ and filmmakers’ initial thoughts before the sequels and many imitations got in the way

  • av Gary J Svehla
    154,-

    Issue 76 of Midnight Marquee features Forum/Against Em - Psycho Halloween: Slicing and Dicing the Urban Legend by Daniel J. Graffeo Jamie Lee Curtis and the Virginity Myth by Mark Allan Gunnells Plan 9 From Outer Space: Why the Plan Worked by Carl Schultz and over 50 pages of DVd reviews

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    199,-

    Midnight Marquee now in it's 55th year offers issue number 80. Includes Seddok, Son of Satan: Atom Age Horror by Barry Atkinson Thriller's Classic Horror Episodes-Season 2 by Gary J. Svehla The Mummy's Shroud: Hammer's Dusty Secret by Nicholas Anez The Fearsome Foursome: Under-Appreciated Horror of the 1970s and 1980s by Ernie Magnotta A History of Planet Film Productions by Christopher Gullo A Cinematic Primer to Jess Franco by Troy Howarth The Medusa Touch: "I Have a Gift for Disaster" by Nicholas Anez "You Have 45 Seconds to Leave the Theater!" William Castle's Homicidal by Barry Atkinson Midnight Marquee-Book Review Midnight Marquee-DVD/Blu-Ray Review

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