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| British Cinema Classic B Film Collection, Vol. 1 (Tread Softly Stranger / The Siege of Sidney Street / The Frightened Man / Crimes at the Dark House / The Hooded Terror / Girl in the News) | 
enlarge | Directors: Robert S. Baker, John Gilling, George King, Carol Reed, Gordon Perry Actors: Donald Sinden, Dermot Walsh, Tod Slaughter, George Curzon, Margaret Lockwood Studio: VCI Entertainment Category: DVD
List Price: $29.99 Buy New: $14.88 You Save: $15.11 (50%)
New (31) Used (7) from $14.88
Avg. Customer Rating: 6 reviews Sales Rank: 20312
Format: Anamorphic, Box Set, Black & White, Dolby, Dvd-video, Full Screen, Hifi Sound, Surround Sound, Thx, Widescreen, Ntsc Language: English (Original Language) Rating: Unrated Number Of Items: 3 Running Time: 465 Aspect Ratio: 1.33:1 Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.3 Dimensions (in): 7.5 x 5.3 x 0.4
MPN: UTED8538D UPC: 089859853821 EAN: 0089859853821 ASIN: B001CR4970
Release Date: September 16, 2008 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days Condition: Five Star Seller!!! New, factory sealed US Region 1 DVD. Item is 100% guaranteed not to be a bootleg or import. Item is shipped directly from our warehouse. Easy exchange if item defective or damaged in shipped.
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Product Description Studio: Video Communications Inc. Release Date: 09/16/2008 Run time: 465 minutes Rating: Nr
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| Customer Reviews: Read 1 more reviews...
Four stars for The Girl in the News. The rest really are B movies, and the video transfer quality is not good for any of them November 6, 2008 1 out of 2 found this review helpful
Unless you're a glutton for B movies (and I usually am), the reason for buying this set is The Girl in the News. I have no idea why VCI would label this Carol Reed film a B movie. I can well understand why they don't fess up and let us know that the video quality of all the films in the set ranges from abysmal to just poor. VCI seems to have taken whatever old, tired VHS tapes they could find and slapped them onto the DVD format. However, the only real quality turkey in the lot is Tread Softly Stranger. The most amusing has Tod Slaughter camping it up as a chortling murderer in Crimes at the Dark House.
But The Girl in the News is an A effort. If it doesn't reach the classic status of the films Carol Reed directed in his great Forties and early Fifties years (Night Train to Munich, 1940; Odd Man Out, 1947; The Fallen Idol - Criterion Collection, 1948; The Third Man - Criterion Collection (2-Disc Edition), 1949; Outcast of the Islands, 1952), still it is a fine example of that satisfying genre, the well mannered British murder thriller peopled with attractive and accomplished actors, and with a clever script.
"Nurse required to attend invalid in quiet Surrey village; 22-26; hospital trained but experience in private nursing essential. Apply sending details and photograph to Mrs. Bentley, Camthorpe House, Camthorpe, Surrey." The advertisement might have added, "Also essential: Nurse must be thought guilty, even though she was acquitted at trial, of murdering a previous invalid in her care."
Anne Graham (Margaret Lockwood) had gone on trial for murdering the self-centered, sick woman she had been caring for. Sleeping pills were the means; a small legacy was the motive. Everyone assumed Anne had done it. A resourceful young barrister, Stephen Farringdon (Barry K. Barnes), was able to plant enough seeds of doubt in the jury's mind to get her off. Even he thinks she might have done it. She now finds she's unemployable. Who wants a suspected murderer for a nurse? Fortuitously, she receives in the mail a newspaper with an advertisement for a nurse. The location is in Surrey, some way from London. She applies, is interviewed, and is hired. She is to take care of a wealthy older man, Mr. Bentley, who is confined to a wheelchair. The man's attractive wife, Mrs. Bentley, is most solicitous. Tracy the butler (Emlyn Williams) watches it all. And then we realize that the butler had been present at Anne's trial.
As you might suppose, it's not long before Mr. Bentley has died from an overdose of sleeping pills. A codicil to his will gives a small legacy to Anne. And now the police are convinced Anne killed both of her patients. Fortunately, Stephen Farringdon has cast aside his original doubt. He finds himself falling in love with Anne, and he is shrewd enough to think this second murder is a clever plot to make Anne look guilty while the real killers, who now will be wealthy, move on.
There are no plot surprises. This is a "How's she going to get out of this" mystery. For the first 35 minutes, we have the set up. For the last 45 minutes, the extrication. Much depends on the appeal of Margaret Lockwood. In the Forties she became one of Britain's greatest stars. It was hard to beat her as a plucky, intelligent heroine or as a manipulating villain. Either way, she was an immensely likeable personality. Others in the cast speak to the great depth of acting Britain could put in its films when it chose to. Roger Livesey plays a detective, Farringdon's friend, and he brings a lot of charm to the film. He has that inimitable voice, husky, friendly, and a little skeptical. In small parts, often unbilled, are such fine actors as Roland Culver, Leo Genn, Mervyn Johns, Felix Aylmer and Basil Radford. Unfortunately, the movie suffers because neither the male lead nor the villain strikes many sparks. It's particularly unlikely that Tracy, small, smug and supercilious, would be any woman's hetero heartthrob. And Farringdon is one of those lean, polite, cultured types who seem to think a second glass of sherry might be too exciting for their girl friends. The movie would benefit, in my view, by having two strong, attractive actors dealing with Margaret Lockwood.
Carol Reed gives us a clever murder thriller with some nice touches, from a black kitten tugging at the hem of a night dress while a petulant, sick woman slowly creeps her way to the medicine chest, to a humorous bit of misdirection involving a detective and a crook. Reed and screenwriter Sidney Gilliat know how to create characters that have enough detail to be interesting. Gilliat, who with his partner, Frank Launder, either together or separately, either working as writer, director or producer, or in any combination, were responsible for some great Forties movies, too: Green for Danger - Criterion Collection, The Belles Of St. Trinian's, I See a Dark Stranger, The Rake's Progress, The Lady Vanishes - Criterion Collection, Night Train to Munich, among others.
The Girl in the News, as good as it is, is not worth by itself the price of this set. Better rent this disc (which comes with Tread Softly Stranger) before making up your mind.
Low-Quality Transfers October 31, 2008 6 out of 6 found this review helpful
The quality of the picture and sound in "British Cinema Classic B Film Collection, Vol. 1" is mediocre. The picture is generally blurry, the sound fuzzy. Most of the films carry the logo of a TV distributor. One of them, "The Siege of Sidney Street," was filmed in a widescreen process called Dyaliscope (2.35:1), but on this disc the picture is cropped to the old TV ratio (1.33:1). The right and left sides are cut off.
Good films, good transfers. Pricey at $26.99 October 25, 2008 1 out of 2 found this review helpful
SIX GOOD VINTAGE BRITISH FILMS. TRANSFER QUALITY IT GOOD. MANY OF THESE ARE AVAILABLE IN OTHER SETS. A BIT PRICEY AT $26.99 FOR 6 PUBLIC DOMAIN FILMS.
Glad I took a chance on this. October 7, 2008 1 out of 1 found this review helpful
This would have been a 5 star item if not for the inclusion of "The Hooded Terror", which is not in the same class by the other films. The remainder are unique in that they're based on literate story telling and their focus is on their capable acting. A valued addition to my collection at an excellent price.
"British Cinema Classics ... B Film Collection Vol. 1 ... VCI Ent. (2008)" August 29, 2008 6 out of 10 found this review helpful
VCI Entertainment presents "BRITISH CINEMA CLASSIC B FILM COLLECTION VOL.1" --- (1938-1960) (465 mins/B&W) (Dolby digitally remastered) --- The titles included in the set are: The Siege of Sidney Street (1960), The Frightened Man (1952), Crimes at the Dark House (1940), The Hooded Terror (1938), Girl in the News (1940) and Tread Softly Stranger (1958) ------- A standout is "Crimes at the Dark House" (1940) is a British film starring Tod Slaughter, Sylvia Marriott and Hilary Eaves and was directed by George King. It is loosely based on the novel The Woman in White by Wilkie Collins --- In this lurid melodrama Tod Slaughter plays a villain who murders the wealthy Sir Percival Glyde in the gold fields of Australia and assumes his identity in order to inherit his estate in England --- On arriving in England he schemes to marry an heiress for her money and, with the connivance of the enigmatic Count Fosco, embarks on a killing spree of all who suspect him to be an impostor and get in the way of his plans to be the Lord the Manor --- Outstanding performance by the legendary Tod Slaughter, who always gave us his best in every film.
My fellow reviewer Annie Van Auken has given the synopses on each film on this page --- Listed below are some of the cast and release dates from the six British Cinema Classics from VCI. Films with Titles, Date Released, Time, Directors & Some of the Cast members:
First up we have - "SIEGE OF SIDNEY STREET" (11 October 1960) (93 mins/B&W) - Robert S. Baker & Monty Berman (Directors)
Cast includes: Donald Sinden ... Mannering Nicole Berger ... Sara Kieron Moore ... Toska Peter Wyngarde ... Peter Godfrey Quigley ... Blakey Tutte Lemkow ... Dmitrieff Bart Bastable ... Sgt. Tucker George Pastell ... Brodsky Angela Newman ... Nina
Second we have - "THE FRIGHTENED MAN" (March 1952) (69 mins/B&W) - John Gilling (Director)
Cast includes: Dermot Walsh ... Julius Roselli Barbara Murray ... Amanda Charles Victor ... Mr. Roselli John Blythe ... Maxie Michael Ward ... Cornelius Thora Hird ... Vera John Horsley ... Harry Annette D. Simmonds ... Marcella
Third we have - "CRIMES AT THE DARK HOUSE" (March 1940) (69 mins/B&W) - George King (Director) . Cast includes: Tod Slaughter ... The False Percival Glyde Sylvia Marriott ... Laurie Fairlie / Anne Catherick Hilary Eaves ... Marion Fairlie Geoffrey Wardwell ... Paul Hartwright Hay Petrie ... Dr. Isidor Fosco Margaret Yarde ... Mrs. Bullen Rita Grant ... Jessica, the Maid David Horne ... Frederick Fairlie Elsie Wagstaff ... Mrs. Catherick David Keir ... Lawyer Merriman
Fourth feature - "HOODED TERROR" (1938) (70 mins/B&W) - George King (Director)
Cast includes: George Curzon ... Sexton Blake Tod Slaughter ... Michael Larron Greta Gynt ... Madamoiselle Julie Tony Sympson ... Tinker Charles Oliver ... Max Fleming Marie Wright ... Mrs. Bardell David Farrar ... Granite Grant Norman Pierce ... Inspector Bramley H.B. Hallam ... Monsieur Bertrand Bradley Watts ... Paul Duvall
Fifth feature - "GIRL IN THE NEWS" (31 January 1941) (78 mins/B&W) - Carol Reed (Director)
Cast includes: Margaret Lockwood ... Anne Graham Barry K. Barnes ... Stephen Farringdon Emlyn Williams ... Tracy Roger Livesey ... Bill Mather Margaretta Scott ... Judith Bentley Wyndham Goldie ... Edward Bentley Basil Radford ... Doctor Threadgrove Irene Handl ... Gertrude Mary Blaker Mervyn Johns ... James Fetherwood Betty Jardine ... Elsie Kathleen Harrison ... Cook Felix Aylmer ... Prosecuting Counsel
Sixth feature - "TREAD SOFTLY STRANGER" (August 1958) (90 mins/B&W) Gordon Parry (Director)
Cast includes: Diana Dors ... Calico George Baker ... Johnny Mansell Terence Morgan ... Dave Mansell Patrick Allen ... Paddy Ryan Jane Griffiths ... Sylvia Maureen Delaney ... Mrs. Finnegan Betty Warren ... Flo Thomas Heathcote ... Sgt. Lamb Russell Napier ... Potter Norman Macowan ... Danny Wilfrid Lawson ... Holroyd William Kerwin ... Michael
Hats off and thanks to Robert Blair and his staff at VCI Entertainment --- VCI was named in Variety and Hollywood Reporter as the first company to produce and release motion pictures directly to the home marketplace --- order your copy now from Amazon or VCI Entertainment where there are plenty of copies available on DVD, stay tuned once again for top notch releases --- VCI are experts in releasing long forgotten films and treasures to the collector -- looking forward to more Nostalgic Collections.
Total Time: 465 mins on DVD ~ VCI Home Video 8535 ~ (9/16/2008)
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