Fulvue Drive-In.com
Current Reviews
In Stores Soon
 
In Stores Now
 
DVD Reviews, SACD Reviews Essays Interviews Contact Us Meet the Staff
An Explanation of Our Rating System Search  
Category:    Home > Reviews > Film Noir > Drama > Crime > British > Hammer Film Noir – Volumes 4 & 5 (VCI)

Hammer Film Noir – Volumes 4 & 5 (VCI)

 

Picture: C (C+ for Tomb)     Sound: C     Extras: C+     Films: C+

 

 

VCI continues mining the little-known or discussed British Film Noirs Hammer made with the fourth and fifth volumes of their Hammer Film Noir series.  Different from their Hollywood and U.S. cousins, the films were not always as dark visually here, yet that quintessentially British coldness mixes with the dark themes of the following:

 

Terror Street (1953 aka 36 Hours) has Dan Duryea as the American military pilot trying to reunite with his ex-wife, but she turns up murdered and he becomes the #1 suspect.  Not bad and not to be confused with the James Garner film of the alternate title 36 Hours, the soundtrack of which we have actually reviewed on the site.

 

Wings Of Danger (1952 aka Dead On Course) has ex-pilot Richard Van Ness (Zachary Scott) suffering blackouts as he discovers a former co-pilot is involved in a crazy smuggling scheme and has disappeared.  One wonders if the ending was changed at the last minute, but not a bad film.  Diane Cliento (Mrs. Sean Connery) also stars.

 

The Glass Tomb (1955 aka The Glass Cage) has no less than John Ireland, Honor Blackman (Goldfinger, The Avengers), Geoffrey Keen (Roger Moore James Bonds) and Eric Pohlmann (the original voice of the unseen Blofeld in the early Sean Connery James Bonds) as sudden murders and a kidnapping surround the circus freak show attraction of “The Starving Man” but better than it sounds.  The liveliest of the four films, you will find Blackman hard to recognize restricted by her clothes.

 

Paid To Kill (1954 aka Five Days) has Dane Clark as a guy who hires a hitman to kill him so his wife can get insurance money, then changes his mind.  Unfortunately, he is having trouble contacting the hitman to stop him.  Later used as a storyline for a good early episode of Moonlighting, Cecile Chevreau, Paul Carpenter and Anthony Forwood co-star in this decent and fun film that will remind one of the better aspects of D.O.A. and is a must-see for Noir and crime drama fans.

 

Montgomery Tully directed three of the four, with Terence Fisher helming Wings.  These were good, efficient thrillers and their absence from home video and film discussions is sad, but these DVDs make up for that.

 

Walter J. Harvey (later doing equally impressive work on Linda Thorson/Tara King color Avengers episodes) is the cinematographer on all four films by coincidence and they all look decent, especially the anamorphically enhanced 1.66 X 1 (a cheat at 1.78 X 1) transfer of Tomb.  The rest are 1.33 X 1 and all in decent black and white.  All are softer than one would like, but the Video Black often saves them from troubles including detail and depth.  He had a knack for shooting thriller material and he does not fail in any case here.

 

VCI has done their best with the materials available, extending to the old monophonic tracks here in Dolby Digital 2.0 Mono.  Extras on Volume 4 include stills, four Noir trailers, three commentary spots with stills by Alan K. Rode and text bios for both films.  Volume 5 has five trailers, stills for each film and a good feature length audio commentary by Richard M. Roberts on Tomb.

 

All in all, I enjoyed these as much if not more than the previous volumes and hope this series continues.  Volume Five’s titles are the first time they have ever been on video of any kind, which is unbelievable considering their historic importance.  All are worth a look and you can read more at the following links:

 

http://www.fulvuedrive-in.com/review/4186/Hammer+Film+Noir+Double+Feature

 

 

-   Nicholas Sheffo


Marketplace


 
 Copyright © MMIII through MMX fulvuedrive-in.com