45 of 45 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars
Caution if ordering this "DVD" edition of "Dead of Night"..., April 16, 2010
This review is from: Dead of Night (DVD)
Just in case you thought you finally found a reasonably priced DVD of the classic 1945 chiller "Dead of Night", be advised, if you order the single disc edition with the b/w cover and "CV" logo in the upper left corner, as pictured for this listing, this is what you'll end up getting:
The "DVD" is actually a DVD-R, with a transfer that looks like it originated from a fair quality VHS, but with occassional freeze-frames and digital noise due to a spotty render. No extras, no subtitles, and only a basic chapter-selection menu.
It is advertised as "new"... and I supposed that may be technically true, to the extent that it isn't "used". "New" in the sense that after the disc emerged from the DVD-burner, it got put it in a case and shrink-wrapped without anyone watching it first, even in the interest of basic quality control. Not usually what one thinks of when buying a "new" DVD.
The black and white sleeve art appears to be a scan of a 1989 Congress Video Group VHS edition (hence that "CV" logo on the front). There is even a customer service number of "1-800-VHS-TAPE" on the rear of this "new" "DVD" sleeve...
SO... if you really MUST have a copy of this film, don't want to spring for the pricier, out-of-print Dead of Night/Queen of Spades double-feature, and don't mind a dodgy transfer on a DVD-R, go for it.
UPDATE: Looks like they've modified the sleeve art from the description I posted above (perhaps trying to disguise the crappy product...?)
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9 of 10 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
A Delightful Confection Of Genteel Horror, August 3, 2009
This review is from: Dead of Night (DVD)
Released by Britain's legendary cinematic power-house, Ealing Studios, in 1945, 'Dead Of Night' is one of the earliest - and still most accomplished - portmanteau horror films ever to be released on an unsuspecting public.
Prefiguring the likes of
Twilight Zone - The Movie by nearly forty years or so, each tale within the film is the work of a different director (Alfredo Cavalcanti, Basil Dearden, Charles Crichton and Robert Hamer), is adapted from an original short story (by luminaries such as H.G. Wells, Angus McPhail, John Baines and E.F. Benson) and is linked together by a very nicely unfurled bridging-tale which compels the audience to keep watching.
Architect Walter Craig (Mervyn Johns) arrives at the Kentish farmhouse of the affable Eliot Foley (Roland Culver) in order to measure up the specifications of a remodelling job. But Craig is gripped by an awful sense of foreboding - he's sure he's been to the house before and his sense of deja-vu is compounded upon being introduced to the other guests staying at the house: society wife, Joan Cortland (the stunningly beautiful, if implausibly named, Googie Withers); psychiatrist, Dr. Van Straaten (Frederick Valk); racing driver, Hugh Grainger (Anthony Baird); youthful neighbour, Sally O'Hara (Sally Ann Howes) and Foley's mother (Judy Kelly).
Craig informs his fellow guests that he has dreamed the events that are unfolding and Van Straaten, ever the rationalist, attempts to palliate his sense of unease. However, Foley, Cortland, Grainger and O'Hara are less than convinced. You see, they've all had run-ins with the bizarre themselves and, as the film progresses, they recount their stories one by one...
And what stories they are - we are treated to tales of ominous hearse drivers; eerie mirrors; haunted houses; spectral golfers and demented ventriloquists.
'Dead Of Night' is very much a film of it's time. It's production values, although excellent by rationed British post-war standards, may seem dated and rickety to younger audiences and it's incorporation of a musical number may seem antiquated by today's sensibilities, but its elevated above what may be perceived by some as these shortcomings by an excellent script, earnest performances (Johns, Withers, Falk and Michael Redgrave, as a tortured ventriloquist, are particularly good), and a brilliantly demented streak of black humour which is overt not only in the deeply amusing tale of spectral golfers - which satirises the British middle-class obsession with golf and 'fair-play' - but in subtler instances (upon being informed, by her daughter, that Craig has suffered a premonition in which he will hit the child savagely, the deeply horsey O'Hara matriarch responds with an indulgent grin and a rebuff of "Oh well, I'm sure he can hit somebody else instead!")
Whether you're a fan of British cinema, portmanteau horror films in general, or just a more genteel era of film-making, consider 'Dead Of Night' a must-see.
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4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars
Sad News for Classic Movie Buffs, December 19, 2010
This review is from: Dead of Night (DVD)
This "CV" version, alas and alack, is the same one being sold on the website of a well-loved three-letter cable network whose genial host, Robert Osborne, introduces most of the films. However, same network shows this gem from time to time, so one might be just as well off making a home copy next time it airs.
Sad, sad, sad.
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