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31 of 32 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
The first Color Horror classics, October 3, 2007
This review is from: The Hammer Story (Hardcover)
It's hard to believe that 50 years ago the small English film studio Hammer began the reincarnation of classic horror. It's even more odd that the studio which transformed horror and paved the way for more modern films rarely gets credit for saving and transforming the genre. Ask most horror fans today what Hammer studios was and you'll likely get a blank stare if they even look up from the 18th incarnation of SAW or another wretched remake of a psycho killer bloodfest. Hammer studios launched the careers of Oliver Reed, Peter Cushing, Christopher Lee, and Raquel Welch just to name a few. Many books and periodicals have come and gone about the "Studio that dripped blood". Notably the book English Gothic and the U.S. periodical "Little Shoppe Of Horrors" by Richard Klemensen have done a fine job of looking in depth at Hammer's output and personalities. And now we have a fine visual reference in the form of this book. The design and printing of this volume is top notch. Chris Lee is fittingly on the cover as Dracula. Hammer's cycle of films did more to sensualize the vampire myth than anything before them. It's fair to say that vampires just were not the same after Hammer and Chris Lee. There is a forward by Mr. Lee in the beginning, first written in 1997 for the first edition of this book. It's too bad they did not have Mr. Lee update that forward for this important revised edition. But the casual Hammer fan will not be disappointed by the contents of this book. I dare say even the more knowledgable will find some photographs never before seen. The wonderful backstage shots alone make this worth owning. My favorite section is the Filmography with a plot synposis of every film made under the Hammer banner along with color repros of many of the original film posters. There are some tantalizing posters of films never made, such as "Savage Jackboot" starring Peter Cushing as an SS commander in WWII! This book could easily have been twice as large, but it will still give you many evenings of enjoyment looking at rarely seen (and sometimes risque) photographs of your favorite Hammer films. The format allows one to flip casually through a section or two and then return later without missing a beat. There are some gems in the text as well, such as the admission that semi-nude scenes were indeed shot for many early hammer classics such as the Mummy. These were made for distribution in Japan and never seen in the west. This book would also be a great introduction to Hammer and it's atmospheric imagery to someone not acquainted with the studio and its importance to the history and evolution of the horror film genre. Let's hope that this book helps Hammer and it's hard working stars and crews finally get the credit they deserve for redeeming the horror genre from a swarm of giant bugs and drive-in cheapies made in the 50's. The US release of this book is timed perfectly for the Halloween season. So sneak some Halloween candy, put on your favorite hammer film, and read this one by candlelight on some dark October evening.
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16 of 17 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Greatness on every page, October 13, 2007
This review is from: The Hammer Story (Hardcover)
I am a Hammer Film fan who actually watched all the horror and sci-fi movies they put out originally...This book is a must have for Hammer Fans..I have most of their catalog of older movies too..this book talks at length about then and has some great photos i had never seen.Buy It Now!
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9 of 9 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
The Haunted House That Hammer Built, November 18, 2008
This review is from: The Hammer Story (Hardcover)
Alan Barnes and Marcus Hearn's THE HAMMER STORY is an exhaustive historical study of the horror films produced by Britain's Hammer Studios from the 1950s to the 1970s. For each film, the book offers a story synopsis, production history, and a discussion of critical and popular reaction. Also, the book includes a short history of the studio itself and information on those who helmed and shaped it over the years, and short biographies of some of the stars, screenwriters, and directors of various films are scattered throughout. All in all, THE HAMMER STORY is an outstanding scholarly look at the studio and its most well-known output, yet the writing style avoids the common stuffiness of scholarship and is accessible to both casual horror fans and serious students of horror cinema alike. The only real weakness of the book is that it focuses primarily on the gothic horror films produced by Hammer but skims over some of studio's other notable output. Indeed, even the studio's horror-themed TV shows, HAMMER HOUSE OF HORROR and HAMMER HOUSE OF MYSTERY AND SUSPENSE, receive only cursory attention. Yet in spite of its minor shortcomings, THE HAMMER STORY is, to date, the best published study of the studio that was almost single-handedly responsible for reviving the horror genre in the latter half of the 20th century, and anyone interested in horror cinema will find it both informative and enjoyable reading.
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