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Spain
- U.K.
| 1972
Directed by
Eugenio Martín
Starring
Christopher Lee
Peter Cushing
Telly
Savalas
Color |
88 Minutes |
PG
Blu-ray / DVD
Combo
(RA-HD / R0-NTSC |
2-disc set)
Severin Films
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Music
from the film
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Closing
Theme
MP3 -
4.2 MB
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Film Review by
Rod Barnett
BD
Review by
Brian Lindsey
Film:8
BD/DVD:8
|
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| SNEAK
PREVIEW |
BD/DVD
Release Date:
November 29, 2011 |
Replaces
EC's review of the 2000 Image edition
NOTE: Screenshots were taken from the DVD |
| Horror
Express
opens in the early 1900s with Sir Alexander Saxton (Christopher
Lee) discovering the fossilized remains of a "missing link" in
a cave in China. Sensing the importance of his find, Saxton has
it boxed up and loaded onto the Trans-Siberian Express for a return
to Europe. Trouble starts before the prize archeological discovery
has left the train station. A thief attempting to get into the
crate is found dead, his eyes as white as a boiled egg. On the
train Saxton is joined by his scientific rival, Dr. Wells (Peter
Cushing), and a multitude of other characters. There's Pujardov
(Alberto de Mendoza), a crazed monk who claims there is something
evil about the crated fossil; the monk's employer, Count Petrovski
(George Rigaud), a wealthy Polish nobleman; Irina (Silvia Tortosa),
the count's sexy wife; Inspector Mirov (Julio Peña), who tries
to puzzle out the series of strange deaths on the train; a chess
playing engineer (Ángel del Pozo) who is also a burgeoning rocket
scientist; and a beautiful female spy (Helga Liné, Horror
Rises from the Tomb) trying to purloin the secret
of a new type of steel from the Count! In short order the fossil
comes back to life and kills several people, leaving the victims
with white eyes and smoothed brains. From these anatomical clues
Wells and Saxton surmise that the creature must be able to absorb
the memories and experiences of its victims, killing them in the
process. |
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Just
when the film seems set to be a 'beast on the loose' movie, Inspector
Mirov shoots the monster dead and is possessed by the alien intelligence
that's hidden within the creature for two million years. Not suspecting
this turn of events, Wells and Saxton are surprised when a fresh
corpse turns up with telltale white eyes. Then a boorish Cossack
commander (Telly Savalas, On
Her Majesty's Secret Service) stops and boards the train,
intent on conducting his own military investigation. |
|
Horror
Express
is one of the most deliriously fun bits of sci-fi tinged horror
nonsense to ever come out of Europe. It was mostly overlooked
at the time of its original release and treated terribly afterwards,
which is a shame. With a game cast, a lively script and an interesting
setting, director Eugenio Martín creates a fast, effective fright-fest
that's just smart enough to know when to distract us with another
plot twist. Many critics have said that the film's script doesn't
hold up if examined closely, and that is true. But who cares?
Horror Express throws so many ideas
and characters at the audience that it's almost impossible to
nail down the logic lapses until well after the credits have run
and how often can you say that about a Euro-Cult genre piece.
Just as you have adjusted to one strange idea, another one pops
up which inevitably dovetails into another, etc. |
|
The film is exciting and interesting from beginning to end and
almost never shows its very modest budget. Most of the characters
are very well drawn with a minimum of exposition and a great deal
of smart acting giving just the right amount of nuance. With a
cast this large it would've been easy to lose track of one or
more people but the script gives each person at least one small
scene to establish themselves. Later, when the creature menaces
them we aren't just watching a simple stalk and kill sequence.
Since we've gotten to know a little about the characters, their
peril is that much more effective. This film is a fine example
of using a claustrophobic set to maximum atmospheric effect. The
cramped hallways and perpetually rocking train cars start to feel
smaller and more coffin-like as we speed along the tracks. By
the end, the darkness of the night has become such a natural state
that the sunlight on snow in the final scene brings a sigh of
relief. The escape from darkness into light is the perfect image
to close the film on. |
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Of course, any horror film that manages to cast both Cushing and
Lee has gotten off to the right start — this movie makes the rare
move of writing them as friends instead of enemies. It is one
of the better pleasures of the film to see the two great horror
stars as heroes working together trying to understand and stop
the murderous beast. Even though Lee and Cushing starred in over
twenty films together they were almost always antagonists, or
at least kept apart for much of the running time. Here they share
many scenes and take great advantage of the wit in the dialog,
playing off each other wonderfully. Cushing gets some great (intentionally)
funny lines which he delivers with relish; Lee becomes a bit of
an action hero near the movie's climax. The only role I can think
of that allowed Lee to be such a strong hero is the wonderful
The
Devil Rides Out and his performance here stands up very
well in comparison. These actors made better films both together
and separately, but few of them were as much fun as Horror
Express. - R.B. |
|
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| There
isn't a true Euro-Cult/Lee/Cushing fan alive who doesn't love
this movie, so it's a joyous occasion indeed that Severin has
released a brand new Blu-ray/DVD "combo" package. Taken
from the original camera negative, the transfer (anamorphic 1.66
on the DVD) looks terrific — especially in comparison to the multitude
of crappy public domain editions we've had to endure all these
years. It easily blows away the best previous version, the Image
edition from 2000. Significantly greater clarity and a much sharper
level of detail allow one to fully appreciate what terrific set
dressings and period detail the film managed on such a low budget.
Yes, there are some dings and blemishes that pop up from time
to time (notably during the opening credits, which, by the way,
are in Spanish), but it's doubtful Horror
Express will ever look better than it does here. Audio
is less impressive but more consistent. These are fairly basic
tracks — Dolby 2.0 Mono (English) and Dolby 2.0 Stereo (Spanish,
without accompanying subtitles) — which, while limited, are relatively
clean and clear. Dialog, music and sound effects are conveyed
satisfactorily, if lacking 'oomph'. |
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EXTRAS: Along with the theatrical trailer and a brief introduction
by Fangoria editor Chris Alexander (who waxes fanboy about
his love for the movie), three featurettes and an audio interview
are included. Murder on the Trans-Siberian Express (HD,
14 min.) is a recent sit-down with director/co-writer Eugenio
Martín, who speaks in heavily-accented English about his experience
helming the film (which utilized standing train car sets from
1972's Pancho Villa, also directed
by Martín) and working with Messrs. Lee, Cushing and Savalas.
Telly and Me (HD, 8 min.) offers anecdotes and fond remembrances
of Savalas by his friend/Horror Express
composer John Cacavas, who'd go on to do the music for Savalas'
hit U.S. TV series Kojak. The longest featurette is Notes
from the Blacklist (SD, 31 min.), an interview with producer
Bernard Gordon conducted in 2005. Gordon, who has since passed
away, recounts his struggles with the infamous anti-communist
Hollywood Blacklist in the decade after WWII. 1973 Audio Interview
with Peter Cushing (80 min.) is an absolute delight — the
beloved actor discusses his career before a live audience, covering
everything from his early work with Laurel and Hardy (1940's A
Chump at Oxford) to his emergence as a genre star for Hammer
and friendship with Christopher Lee. He proves quite the raconteur:
personable, witty and unfailingly polite. His legion of fans will
value this release all the more for its inclusion. (NOTE: Bonus
materials are replicated in full on the standard-def DVD. And
although it has nothing to do with Horror
Express, the Cushing interview is played over the film
like a commentary track.) |
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Some
reviews have slammed this edition for an anemic bitrate (on the
Blu-ray disc) and the lack of lossless audio but I feel that the
greatly improved source print quality and worthwhile extras balance
out such flaws. Severin's Horror Express
gives us the best print source extant, solid audio, enjoyable
supplements and both Blu-ray and DVD versions of the film
in a single package — all at a really nice price.
- B.L. 11/22/11 |
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