The Creeping Flesh

DVD : The Creeping Flesh

The Creeping Flesh

starring: Christopher Lee, Peter Cushing, Lorna Heilbron, George Benson, Kenneth J. Warren
directed by: Freddie Francis



 : The Creeping Flesh
See Larger Image







Aspect Ratio: 1.85:1
Audience Rating: PG (Parental Guidance Suggested)
Binding: DVD
EAN: 9781404905931
Format: Closed-captioned, Color, DVD-Video, Subtitled, Widescreen, NTSC
ISBN: 1404905936
Label: Sony Pictures
Manufacturer: Sony Pictures
Number Of Items: 1
Publisher: Sony Pictures
Region Code: 99
Release Date: 2004-06-08
Studio: Sony Pictures
Theatrical Release Date: 1972



Editorial Review:

Amazon.comThe Hammeresque Creeping Flesh is a creepy thriller mixing one part Cain and Abel, a dash of Frankenstein, and a pinch of the Re-Animator with the best elements that '70s U.K. horror has to offer. Is evil a sickness that mankind can be cured of? Dr. Emmanuel Hildern (Peter Cushing) seems to think so. After returning from New Guinea with the ultimate skeletal specimen of evil it becomes his life's obsession. While Dr. Hildern closes in on the serum, James (Christopher Lee), his half-brother and rival, looks on with envy from behind the mental asylum he runs. He too is dabbling in science to find the cure of madness. However, with less of a success rate. After Dr. Hildern tests his evil serum on his daughter Penelope, she of course goes mad, goes on a killing spree, and ends up in Uncle James's asylum. Immediately recognizing his new inmate, Uncle James brings Penelope back home, only to find his brother's work and progress. In a fit of jealousy he steals the valuable skeleton which, unbeknownst to him, is slowly growing flesh and developing into an evil, uncontrollable monster. --Rob Bracco

















Related Items:
     see more

Related Items:



banned interdit verboden prohibido vietato proibido
  banned    interdit    verboden   vietato     prohibido    verboden  banned      vietato      interdit proibido   vietato       interdit      verboden      banned  prohibido   

Your IP has been blocked. Please perform the action below to regain access.

Code:  security image
Please enter the Code: 



Customer Reviews
Average Rating:  out of 5 stars

Rating: 4 out of 5 stars - Hard To Follow At Times
I agree with another reviewer that they could have explored the main theme of this movie more which is this ancient skeleton that is the embodiment of evil I guess.

Cushing believes that evil is a disease so he takes a blood sample from the skeleton to create a vaccine that he thinks will cure people from being evil.

I guess he feels there's something wrong with his daughter so he injects her with his new formula. But perhaps the only thing wrong with her was he kept her locked up in the house for her entire adult life.

That's when things get sad.

Somehow she inexplicably becomes possessed with the spirit of her dead mother who went insane.

She goes to a brothel and gets taken advantage of and finally slashes this guy's throat with a broken bottle.

Maybe I just took the whole thing too seriously.

Another reviewer also mentioned the strange painting that Cushing is working on at the beginning of the movie. I guess the painting sort of encapsulates the entire movie.

One good thing is apparently back then most of the women in London had gigantic breasts and they kept falling out of their dresses in the pubs.

I would recommend this movie to horror fans because it's got horror legends Peter Cushing and Christopher Lee.

Jeff Marzano

Recommended further viewing:

Brides Of Blood / Beast Of Blood
Horror Hotel
IT ! (The Terror From Beyond Space)
Invasion Of The Saucer Men
Not Of This Earth (original)
Phantasm
The Blob (with Steve McQueen)
The Brain That Wouldn't Die
The Flesh Eaters
The Fly / The Return Of The Fly / The Curse Of The Fly
The Four Skulls Of Jonathan Drake
The Hideous Sun Demon
The Hypnotic Eye
The Incredible Shrinking Man
The Indestructible Man
The Manster
The Thing (from another world)
The Thing That Couldn't Die
The Twilight Zone Collections




Rating: 3 out of 5 stars - One of Britain's Most Offbeat Horror Films
Freddie Francis' "The Creeping Flesh" is one of the oddest, most eccentric British horror films of the 1970s. I can't claim that it's one of Francis' best directed films, but it has a sincerity often lacking in horror films of the period, and it also has an excellent performance by Peter Cushing. It's definitely worth a look, and worth adding to your collection if you're a diehard fan of the great, underrated Peter Cushing.

Cushing portrays a Victorian-era gentleman paleontologist. In other words, he uses his family's own money to support his various world explorations and site digs. He's something of a dabbler, and the film quickly establishes that he's regarded by most as an eccentric lightweight and not a true scientist. As the film opens, Cushing's enthusiasm over his latest finding - an enormous humanoid skeleton - is quickly tempered by blunt reminders of his family's finances via his spinster daughter (who still lives with him), and his psychiatrist half-brother (ably played by Christopher Lee). Cushing's understanding of evolution is quite different from Charles Darwin's, and he comes to believe that the giant-sized fossil in his laboratory is actually the skeleton of an ancient evil.

"The Creeping Flesh" combines several different genre elements. The story is probably inspired by the real-life Cardiff Giant hoax in the US, or the Piltdown Man hoax in Britain, but Francis and the screenwriters take it far beyond that. At times, it's a tragedy of Victorian sexual repression when we learn some of Cushing's backstory and witness his daughter's actions when she is infected by serum extracted from the fossil. At other times, there are Lovecraftian references. At yet others, we have a good-old-fashioned tale of inmate abuse at Christopher Lee's asylum. There's even a little bit of typical creature-feature shenanigans towards the end. Thankfully, there's no tasteless gore or tedious tongue-in-cheek comedy.

The DVD transfer looks and sounds excellent, especially compared to the VHS version. There are minimal extras (mainly consisting of trailers for other films, subtitles, and a Japanese language track of all things). As I alluded to earlier, "The Creeping Flesh" also has a lot of negatives that keep me from rating it higher. The plot elements are as clumsily stitched together as the Frankenstein Monster, and despite Francis' brilliance as a director he can't overcome many of the period anachronisms inherent in the film. Hairstyles and topical references are often woefully inappropriate for a film supposedly taking place in the 1890s, for example. Furthermore, it's painfully obvious that no one even pretended to consult with a scientist regarding the accuracies of the script - the more you know about human biology, the more ridiculous the laboratory scenes are. Even Cushing's excellent delivery can't help distract me from such gaffes as the claim that Neanderthals had smaller cranial capacities than modern man (they actually had larger capacities, particularly relating to visual acuity).

If you already love Cushing or Francis, you'll want this one. Christopher Lee fans who'd like to see what the youthful Lee was like when he wasn't playing Dracula will also want to take a peek. Although the movie is flawed, it definitely has its charms if you're in the right frame of mind.



Rating: 4 out of 5 stars - Atmospheric Horror Tale Starring Legendary Horror Team Christopher Lee And Peter Cushing
This 1973 Tigon production starring horror veterans Christopher Lee and Peter Cushing in their 15th teaming on screen and directed by Freddie Francis, could be very easily confused with the much better known Hammer Studios productions from around the same time. All the familiar elements that made this acting team's early work at Hammer so poplar is present in this fascinating and highly atmospheric story dealing with the concept that evil is actually a living organism that can reproduce and affect individuals like any other contagious disease. Lee and Cushing had two of their best roles together here in "The Creeping Flesh", and both revel in interesting multi dimensional characters that are extensions of thei ralready established screen personas. Tigon studios, not renowned for elaborate productions went all out in this story providing a lavish looking production with rich Victorian atmophere, and a most interesting and sinister "creature", in the form of a huge prehistoric skelton which has the mysterious ability to rejuvenate itself into living flesh and which creates havoc on those who get in its way. The concept here is an original one and is extremely well handled to keep the attention making "The Creeping Flesh", one of the most interesting of the later Christopher Lee/Peter Cushing screen collaborations.



Rating: 5 out of 5 stars - Wonderful movie !!!!!!
This horror movie is so good, that is hard not to give it 5 stars!!!! Perfect to watch on a Halloween night!!!!



Rating: 5 out of 5 stars - I love this movie !!!!!!!!!
"The Creeping Flesh" is a very stilish horror movie, creepy, with
a very good atmosphere, an original plot, wonderful settings and
with Peter Cushing and Cristopher Lee at their very best!!!!!
I highly recommend this movie to everyone! As another reviewer wrote, worth owning, not only watching!!!!



read more customer reviews on The Creeping Flesh


 



Gift Shop


- widesceren tv
Digital Camera - Shop




Waiting patiently for the iPhone. The touch screen interests me but I have a huge music library and it only has a small amount of storage. Latest PC Laptops are too big to lug around if I want to quickly dash out for a meeting or a weekend trip. Apple eliminated the smaller of [...]

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - U.S. employers axed payrolls by 533,000 jobs in November, the most in 34 years and far more than expected, government data on Friday showed, as the year-old recession hammered every corner of the U.S. economy.

The ancient climate change on Mars was caused by regular variation in the planet's tilt, or obliquity, according to new research. On Earth, similar "astronomical forcing" of climate drives ice-age cycles.

Today (Dec 5th) is the last day to take advantage of the Early Bird special for Mobile, Media, and eMbedded Developer Days.






The Creeping Flesh

Shopping