UNFORTUNATELY, THIS ITEM IS NO LONGER AVAILABLE.Don't make a sound or turn around!
For more than four decades, Hammer Films' unique blend of horror, science fiction, thrills and comedy dominated countless drive-ins and movie theaters. Enjoy this impeccable collection from the darkest corners of the Hammer imagination!
The Revenge of Frankenstein (1958)
Starring: Peter Cushing, Eunice Gayson, Francis Matthews, and Michael Gwynn
Peter Cushing reprises his famous role as Baron Victor Frankenstein in this horror classic. Rescued from the guillotine by his devoted dwarf Fritz, the Baron relocates and becomes Dr. Stein. Under the guise of charity work, he continues his gruesome experiments, this time transplanting Fritz's brain into his latest creation: a normal, healthy body.
The Snorkel (1958)
Starring: Peter van Eyck, Betta St. John, Mandy Miller, and Grégoire Aslan
Paul Decker arranges the perfect murder of his wife. After drugging her into unconsciousness, he seals the room and fills it with gas while he hides beneath the floorboards (using a diving snorkel to breath air from the outside). But he didn't plan for the involvement of his suspicious stepdaughter in this kill or be killed thriller!
Never Take Candy From a Stranger (1960)
Starring: Gwen Watford, Patrick Allen, Felix Aylmer, and Niall MacGinnis
A serious and horrifying chiller about a small town terrorized by an elderly child molester luring young girls into his mansion with sweets.
Maniac (1963)
Starring: Kerwin Mathews, Nadia Gray, Donald Houston, and Liliane Brousse
While vacationing in France, an American artist becomes romantically involved with an older woman, Eve…but is also attracted to her teenage stepdaughter, Annette. Pulled between them, a plot is hatched to free Eve's husband from jail…but Eve has a different plan in mind.
Die! Die! My Darling! (1965)
Starring: Tallulah Bankhead, Stefanie Powers, Peter Vaughan, and Donald Sutherland
Young Pat Carroll goes to the home of her dead fiancé to meet his beloved mother, Mrs. Trefoile. There, she discovers that Mrs. Trefoile is not the loving mother that she had anticipated, but rather a grieving psychopath who blames Pat for the death of her son.
Creatures the World Forgot (1971)
Starring: Julie Ege, Tony Bonner, Brian O'Shaughnessy, and Robert John
Set in the Stone Age, this singular film has almost no dialogue - the people speak in grunts - but it is strangely effective. In a tribe of cavemen, twin brothers compete for leadership of the tribe following the impact of a devastating earthquake.