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21. The Quick and the Dead
$12.95 $8.97
22. Avengers '67:From Venus/Fear Merchant
$12.95 $8.00
23. Avengers '67:Epic/Superlative
$12.95 $6.74
24. The Avengers '65, Vol. 2
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25. Corridors of Blood
$12.95 $5.99
26. Avengers '67:Birdwho Knew/Winged
$12.95 $5.74
27. Avengers '67:Death's Door/Return
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28. The Avengers '65, Vol. 1
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29. Avengers '65:Man-Eater of Surrey/Two'
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30. Avengers '65:Hour That Never Was/Dial
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31. Avengers '65:Murder Market/Surfeit
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32. Marshall of Madrid/Sam Cade
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33. Streets of San Francisco, The
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34. The Haunted Strangler
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35. Marshall of Madrid
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36. Your Place Or Mine
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37. Sam Cade
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38. Avengers '66 - What the Butler
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39. Streets of San Francisco, The
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40. Sam Cade

21. The Quick and the Dead
Director: Robert Day
list price: $14.95
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Asin: 6301651537
Catlog: Video
Sales Rank: 42394
Average Customer Review: 4 out of 5 stars
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Not to be confused with Sam Raimi's flamboyantly stylized Western of the same name, this made-for-cable adaptation of the Louis L'Amour novel is a lean, taut pioneer adventure set in the wilderness of the northern Midwest. Sam Elliott, sporting his trademark bushy mustache and eyebrows so thick they keep the rains off his face, stars as the mountain man and tracker Con Vallian. Tom Conti is Scottish storekeeper Duncan McKaskel bringing his wife Susanna (Kate Capshaw) and son from Pennsylvania to a homestead in Wyoming. When a scraggly gang (led by the wonderfully sleazy Matt Clark) marks the family as an easy target, Vallian makes himself their gruff guardian angel, partly out of attraction to Susanna ("You're a handsome woman," he likes to repeat). Pride, jealousy, and rivalry make Duncan and Vallian uneasy allies and Conti's musical lilt is a marvelous contrast to Elliot's gravely drawl. Capshaw is somewhat colorless but comes to life in a surprising explosion of angry violence. The beautiful landscape culminates in a stunning meadow where the homesteaders find their cabin, a location that must be the closest thing to heaven on Earth, but for the devils still on their trail. --Sean Axmaker ... Read more

Reviews (8)

5-0 out of 5 stars A Superior Horse Opera
The Western is arguably my favorite film genre and The Quick and the Dead is one of the best. Sam Elliot is superb as the slow talkin' stranger who befriends a family of settlers preyed upon by theiving killers. He takes special interest in Kate Capshaw, the beautful and faithful wife. Yes the plot is simple but simplicity is often a good thing. I think you will enjoy The Quick and the Dead as much as I. Just be sure not to confuse it with the poorly acted Sharon Stone/Leonardo DeCaprio film of the same name.

4-0 out of 5 stars Easy Movie to Enjoy - Over and over
Although the movie theme is somewhat simple, when you want to relax, things should be simple. The scenery is great with a great cast. The 'bad guys' are fun to watch mess up. The waterfall scene is nice and you can tell that there is real feeling between the lead characters. Enjoy it.

3-0 out of 5 stars Good but not like the book
the movie was pretty good overall. . .but it lacked plot and character development. . .if you really want to get the whole story. . .read the book. . its great

3-0 out of 5 stars The Quick and the Derivative
Ah, yes, the old indestructible stranger riding to help some greenhorns against a band of outlaws routine. This plot is old, and is only helped by Day's direction and Elliott's performance. On the other hand, the novel this is based on really was L'Amour's worst, so you will have to take this entire video experience with a grain of salt.

5-0 out of 5 stars The most under-rated western of all time.
This little movie was a quiet knockout. A subtly exquisite love story told against the background of hard pioneer life and a violent sub-plot. Sam Elliot at his absolute best, stunningly beautiful Kate Capshaw at hers, and Tom Conti just perfect. Elegantly cast, remarkably well performed, and the photography (by the way) was superb. My favorite "modern" western ever. ... Read more


22. Avengers '67:From Venus/Fear Merchant
Director: Peter Hammond, James Hill, Peter Graham Scott, Roger Jenkins, Leslie Norman, Don Leaver, John Krish, Robert Day, Kim Mills (II), Raymond Menmuir, Don Sharp, Robert Fuest, Peter Sykes, Sidney Hayers, Laurence Bourne, Gerry O'Hara, John Knight, Richmond Harding, Guy Verney, Robert Asher
list price: $12.95
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Asin: 076701099X
Catlog: Video
Sales Rank: 73135
Average Customer Review: 4.4 out of 5 stars
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Is Venus about to attack Earth? Several members of the British Venusian Society think so, while other BVS devotees are being killed in a rather unearthly manner: hit by some kind of bright light that leaves them shock-white from head to toe. Steed and Mrs. Peel investigate and find, naturally, a larger conspiracy than meets the eye. The enticing mystery (written by Philip Levene) is aided by a nifty sound effect (a high-pitched whine that grows stronger just before the burst of light), and Steed's infiltration of the eccentric BVS group is highly entertaining. The second episode on the tape is another Levene script, "The Fear Merchants," in which businessmen are being reduced to babbling psychiatric patients after being subjected to their worst fears: spiders, birds, fast cars, etc. Steed has to do some fancy footwork to avoid being buried by a bulldozer, and Mrs. Peel--who apparently has no phobias--is nearly subjected to nasty surgical tortures. The satirical element, in which captains of industry are made demented by anxieties, is great fun. --Tom Keogh ... Read more

Reviews (5)

5-0 out of 5 stars Steed and Mrs. Peel deal with Venusians and Fear Merchants
It took five years for "The Avengers" to make it from British television to the United States, but once it arrived the spy "drama" became one of the first British television cult hits. With Patrick Macnee as the dapper John Steed and Diana Rigg as the implacable Emma Peel, this was a James Bond clone that provided its own eccentric collection of diabolical geniuses, improbable gadgets, and absurd villains. The only thing we took seriously were the two main characters and each week we eagerly awaited for Steed to find a way of telling Emma, "Mrs. Peel, we're needed." This videotape offers up two adventures from 1967:

"From Venus With Love" (First aired January 14, 1967; Directed by Roy Baker and Written by Philip Levene) finds Steed and Emma trying to solve the mystery of bizarre deaths: several men, while taking photographs of Venus in the night sky, suddenly drop dead with their hair turned white. The common denominator are the bizarre characters who belong to the British Venusian Society, who plan to send a spaceship to the planet. Either the Venusians are doing a pre-emptive invasion and targeting the BVS's membership, or somebody has a more earthly reason for wanting the group dead. To solve the matter Emma is racing around the British countryside trying to track down a fleeing bright light. "From Venus With Love" is one of those episodes where eccentric characters abound: my favorite is the retired brigadier who is dictating his memoirs on the war using a series of victrolas to produce the requisite sound effects.

"The Fear Merchants" (First aired January 21, 1967; Directed by Gordon Flemying and Written by Philip Levene) offers another connect the dot mystery as our heroes are confronted with a strange series of businessmen who have suddenly gone insane. This time the common denominator is the wonderfully competitive world of ceramics. But what makes this one interesting are the titular characters, a trio of researchers who find a person's worst fear and use it against them, and then want to prove their theory of Mrs. Peel. I was happy to see "The Fear Merchants" again (it was the second episode of "The Avenger" (in color) broadcast in the U.S.) because a photograph from it was my favorite cover shot on one of paperback novels featuring "The Avengers." The attraction was not just Diana Rigg as Emma Peel, but also the costumes designed by Alun Hughes, which took every opportunity to reveal large expanses of flesh (not to be confused with the famous "Emmapeeler" in the previous episode). This was the episode that hooked me on the series.

However, Emma Peel was more than just good looks. She was smart, had a dry sense of humor, and could kung-fu anybody stupid enough to cross her. But even more fun that watching her take out the baddies was the wry expressions that flittered over Diana Rigg's face as she bantered with John Steed. Before Muldar and Scully, there was Steed and Mrs. Peel.

4-0 out of 5 stars Venus with Love definitely goes into orbit
From Venus with Love includes several delightful eccentrics. Steed and Emma are puzzled.What is killing young men and turning their hair white? Emma meets a charming, self-deprecating, elegant chimney sweep. "My name is Betram Fortescue Smythe,"he introduces himself to Emma. "Bert Smith," He can't use his aristocratic name because no one would hire him to sweep chimneys if he did. Unfortunately, the charming sweep, smitten with Emma, is zapped a few moments after they meet. Steed is given the most delightful eye examination ever. "Identify them!" orders his eye doctor. "Bowler, top hat..." In addition, a retired army general, a mock up of MOntgomery, is dictating his memoirs, using battle sounds, camouflage etc. until someone camouflages him! Fear Merchants uses irony to make amusing points about human fears. "The pound is sick so we're visiting the hospital," Diana Rigg's dry wit always delivers. A superhuman strong man smashes boards during his workout while a meek looking man struggles hopelessly to lift a barbell. Naturally "superman" is the one traumatized- by a mouse! The usual wit distinguishes this one. Emma and Steed are menaced by psychiatrists' henchmen who practice "deadly medicine." "Notice how fear makes him obey," says the villain coolly to Emma, pointing a gun at Steed, "his fear for you." Neat plot twists as Steed detects the cold blooded doctor's neurosis, and

Emma discovers Steed's secret fear in the tag scene. The first seven color episodes, with the exception of The See Through Man were a much stronger set of scripts than the final 7 of 1967. Viewing the weaknesses of such scripts as: 50,000 Breakfast, See Through Man one can understand why Diana Rigg left.

5-0 out of 5 stars Avengers-Campy Sixties Laughable Fun, Don't miss out
I am a twenty-something who saw the Avengers only in sindication, (I was born in the early seventies) and I have loved it ever since. Only then could you get away with the zaniness and sexiness that Steed(MacNee) and Mrs. Peel(Rigg) so masterfully displayed. I just bought these new sets they've put out through A&E and all I have to say is BRAVO! Now others can experience all of the fun those of us who've already seen it have everytime we watch Steed and Mrs. Peel.

4-0 out of 5 stars One of the greatest of the series
The new movie version doesn't come close to the original.I watched this show every week from the first episode to the last,without fail, And of all of them the "Fear Merchants" is the one that I remembered most. Diana Rigg is, without a doubt, The only Mrs. Peel. And Patrick MacNee will always be Steed.

4-0 out of 5 stars "Mrs. Peel... We're needed..."
Amongst those who have seen last summer's motion picture "The Avengers", and had no idea what it was about (I never saw the show beforehand, but had a lot of background info to start with) now's your chance. It's also the chance for many fans of the original "Avengers" to cash in on the suspense series' first run on the video market. But this is just Volume 1, Trilogy 1. So far eight other volumes have been released from 1967, and inevitably other seasons will come. For now though, this is the place to start! ... Read more


23. Avengers '67:Epic/Superlative Seven
Director: Peter Hammond, James Hill, Peter Graham Scott, Roger Jenkins, Leslie Norman, Don Leaver, John Krish, Robert Day, Kim Mills (II), Raymond Menmuir, Don Sharp, Robert Fuest, Peter Sykes, Sidney Hayers, Laurence Bourne, Gerry O'Hara, John Knight, Richmond Harding, Guy Verney, Robert Asher
list price: $12.95
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Asin: 0767011058
Catlog: Video
Sales Rank: 66128
Average Customer Review: 3.5 out of 5 stars
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"Epic" is a spooky Avengers installment in which Mrs. Peel is kidnapped by a mad director who holds her prisoner in a studio while filming The Destruction of Mrs. Peel. Series coproducer Brian Clemens wrote the inventive script, which finds poor Emma in a movie-cliché nightmare, being shot at in a Western saloon, in a World War I setting, and by Indians and Chicago gangsters. Clemens was also behind "The Superlative Seven," which features some familiar faces (Donald Sutherland, Brian Blessed, Charlotte Rampling) in an Agatha Christie-like tale of seven people brought to an island, where one of their numbers is killing off the others. The slightly conventional plot is spruced up by an international conspiracy element, a surprise ending, and the dramatic arrival of Emma Peel onto the island--by parachute! --Tom Keogh ... Read more

Reviews (2)

4-0 out of 5 stars Emma Takes A Screen Test - Steed Doubles Stunts
"Epic" is a love-it-or-hate-it high-camp series entry. Nothing in it is there to make sense - it's all just great fun. Emma is stalked by mad film director Z. Z. Von Schnark (portrayed a la Otto Preminger), who kidnaps her to an abandoned movie studio to film his greatest epic: "The Death of Mrs. Peele." Von Schnark is only half the fun - two out of work actors fanatically devoted to the director play the supporting roles, Peter Wyngarde particularly shining when he keeps replaying the same scene in different costumes and accents. Emma refuses to take any of it seriously, even when tied to a buzz-saw, and mocks them throughout.

"The Superlative Seven" is a well-done, atmospheric high melodrama, benefiting from stellar performances - including appearances from very young up-and-comers Donald Sutherland and Charlotte Rampling - and gorgeous costumes, sets, and color. It's Agatha Christie's "Ten Little Indians," with Steed one of the invited isolated party victims. The episode has only one great flaw, and that is that the game is revealed in the opening scene, ruining a great deal of the suspense. But it performs quite well, and is enjoyable even when you're a step or two ahead of what's coming.

These two make a nice pair on one tape, the former being an Emma-minus-Steed episode, the latter a Steed-minus-Emma one. Oh, the other half of the dynamic duo make their appearances, all right, in each one, giving them the chance to be each other's backup/bailout. That's all just part of the fun.

3-0 out of 5 stars Superlative Seven retains mystery and spooky atmosphere
Clemmens wrote his best script of 1967 when he penned superlative 7. According to Avengers Dossier it was a rewrite- he was running out of ideas. I enjoyed it when I saw it -ouch more than 30 years ago. It is a send up of Agatha Christie's Ten LIttle Indians mystery and the movie The magnificent 7. Usual charming opening teaser of Emma and Steed. Sadly, Diana Rigg then vanishes until the last 10 minutes. I didn't enjoy seeing it again half as much as I thought I would. This episode would have worked better for Diana Rigg if Emma had been the one on the island with a group of 6 men and the announcment that 1 of them was a killer. The 6 coffins was a nice touch! It has a good cast, atmospheric dark house on a deserted island with the door always open and leaves blowing in. Emmma's arrival on the island by parachute saves the episode for me and the day! Epic was dull and weird. Diana Rigg infuses an otherwise dull, dumb script with her wit. Bound to a table with a pendulum coming closer she quips "I am in danger of becoming a split personality." The ending is the best part of the story. Steed has rescued Emma from torture and death and they try to find a film to attend. She enthusiastically reads about a film that features "unbridled passion- that won awards." "It closed yesterday," she says sadly. "Unbridled passion," smiles Steed. "Let's stay home." Anyone naive enough to object to Steed kissing Emma in the film and their attraction to one another must have missed every innuendo in the show. I wasn't that naive even when I was an innocent teenager. I never mistook Steed and Mrs. Peel for a boy scout and a girl guide!

Clemmens should have switched his cliches and had Steed trapped in Murdersville or Epic and Emma rescue him. It would have been a change. ... Read more


24. The Avengers '65, Vol. 2
Director: Peter Hammond, James Hill, Peter Graham Scott, Roger Jenkins, Leslie Norman, Don Leaver, John Krish, Robert Day, Kim Mills (II), Raymond Menmuir, Don Sharp, Robert Fuest, Peter Sykes, Sidney Hayers, Laurence Bourne, Gerry O'Hara, John Knight, Richmond Harding, Guy Verney, Robert Asher
list price: $12.95
our price: $12.95
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Asin: 6305396256
Catlog: Video
Sales Rank: 54773
Average Customer Review: 5 out of 5 stars
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Amazon.com

If you are a new Avengers fan, these two classic black-and-white episodes are the perfect introduction to the beloved British series that combined espionage with science fiction. "The Cybernauts" was the first episode to air in the United States. Steed and Mrs. Peel are up against automated assassins made by an inventor who plots to create an electronic dictatorship. A highlight is an elegantly dressed Mrs. Peel's karate fight. In "Death at Bargain Prices," Steed and Mrs. Peel once again find extraordinary goings-on in the most ordinary places, in this case a department store that serves as a front for madman tycoon Horatio Kane's biggest takeover bid yet--of London (he has rigged the store with a nuclear device). Mrs. Peel works undercover as a clerk, prompting Steed's priceless line, "I asked where to find you and was told, 'Our Mrs. Peel is in ladies' underwear.' I rattled up the stairs three at a time." This episode was directed by Charles Crichton, who directed A Fish Called Wanda. Volumes 1, 2, and 3 are also available in The Avengers '65 Set 1. --Donald Liebenson ... Read more

Reviews (2)

5-0 out of 5 stars Steed Plays With Toys - Emma Tests Her Metal
"The Cybernauts" is the quintessential Avengers episode, the most famous of the series and deservedly so. If you're new to the series, this is the best story to start out on. It has all the elements the show became so famous for - science-fictional story, a flamboyantly bizarre evil mastermind, good suspense, and playful banter between the two principals. Michael Gough is an electronics whiz, who kills off his competition by means of one of his lesser inventions - a simple steel robot named "Roger," who he releases as a guided missile. How the robot homes in on its target is more the mystery than the fact that a robot is responsible for the killings. This episode works in every way, except that the early red-herring of trying to blame a karate expert isn't much of a red-herring, today - but even that gives Mrs. Peele an excuse to strut her stuff in the dojo. Gough is famous for playing evil English cads, and is at his best, here. The robots (yes, there is more than one) are brilliantly designed in minimalist fashion, making them all the creepier.

"Death At Bargain Prices" is also one of the better Avengers entries, with Steed and Mrs. Peele investigating a curious murder at a department store, which they suspect may have something to do with a missing atomic scientist - of course, they're right. Why is a missing atomic scientist connected to a department store murder? Well, that's the fun of finding out, then, isn't it? With special guest cameo appearances by Yogi Bear and Doctor Who's arch-enemies, the Daleks. A good time is to be had by all.

Rush to your local murdered agent missing atomic scientist department store, and buy this double-great tape, double-quick.

5-0 out of 5 stars Death at Bargain Prices is a bargain at any price!
Death at Bargain Prices is superbly directed by Charles Crichton. MacNee and Rigg deliver top notch performances. After Steed teases her "I was told 'Our Mrs. Peel is in lady's underwear' I rattled up the steps three at a time."

"Merry quips Department, 3rd floor," says an unruffled Emma. She retaliates by telling Steed that a retired industrialist lives on the top floor. "Department of discontinued lines, you should fit right in," she retorts, fingering the lapel of his less than stylish suit. The script is witty and Crichton builds the suspense of a department store with sinister goings on. The music helps build a sense of menace. One pricless scene involves Emma and Steed tracking a Sunday store receipt, a clue from a murdered agent (the store was closed Sunday) to the unnamed department. The saleslady in infant's assumes they are a married couple and that Emma is pregnant. "I can tell you're a proud father to be" she ringingly tells a nonplused Steed. Cybernauts is a 3 star script, overrated and not interesting. Emma has a great fight scene with a young female karate expert, and she and Steed tangle with killer Cybernauts and deranged, power mad scientists. This script has no red herrings or surprise villains. Far inferior to Town of No Return, Dial a Deadly Number, Brimstone, and HOney for the Prince.

Death at Bargain Prices is well worth the price of purchase. ... Read more


25. Corridors of Blood
Director: Robert Day
list price: $9.98
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Asin: 6305071497
Catlog: Video
Sales Rank: 64514
Average Customer Review: 4 out of 5 stars
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Description

Boris Karloff is a surgeon in search of a viable anesthetic, in the days when patients were strapped down with leather bands while fully conscious. The doctor soon becomes addicted to his newly-discovered gas. In his desperation to get the drug, Karloff must make a diabolical bargain with body snatchers to feed his growing habit. "A natural for horror addicts, if they can stand all that blood!"--Daily Cinema. ... Read more

Reviews (5)

5-0 out of 5 stars Medical History film a treasure among very few
this film is excellent from a Historical point of view, Times of events, ect are changed, but for detail, correct in everyway. I only have one complaint at the end of the film it says 1840 instead of 1846, but that is a personel fault of mine, !I'm too picky for Medical Historical correctness" Definately based On Horance Wells, (His attempt at painless surgery failed in 1844, too litle gas). there are not enougth Medical History films and this one I watch a lot, Never mind who is in it if you like History films, especially Medical ones add this to your collection.

3-0 out of 5 stars Boris Karloff and Christopher Lee in the same horror film
"Corridors of Blood" takes us back to the early 19th-Century, when operations were performed without anesthesia. Boris Karloff plays Dr. Bolton, a surgeon who wants to eliminate the pain and suffering patients endure during surgery. However, while experimenting on himself, Bolton becomes addicted to the drugs. Then, during a demonstration of his anesthetic gas, Bolton's patient revives and goes beserk. In disgrace, Bolton ends up in partnership with Black Ben (Francis De Wolff), the owner of the Seven Dials, a disreputable tavern. Black Ben and his hulking assistant Resurrection Joe (Christopher Lee), want to make money selling cadavers to hospitals, so they trade Bolton the drugs he wants in exchange for faked death certificates. This 1963 film was originally entitled "Doctor from Seven Dials" and was shot back-to-back with "The Haunted Stranger," both films directed by Robert Day. This is one of several films in which Karloff tries to do good things for the benefit of mankind but evil ends up as a sort of inevitable result. However, "Corridors of Blood" is one of the few films in which the actor's character does not end up going off on a killing spree. The film starts off well, showing the barbaric surgeries of the day, but once Karloff ends up at the Seven Dials it is just a question of waiting for the final killing spree to begin. A below average film despite Karloff's best efforts, today "Corridors of Blood" is remembered only because it has both Karloff and Christopher Lee.

3-0 out of 5 stars Boris Karloff and Christopher Lee in the same horror film
"Corridors of Blood" takes us back to the early 19th-Century, when operations were performed without anesthesia. Boris Karloff plays Dr. Bolton, a surgeon who wants to eliminate the pain and suffering patients endure during surgery. However, while experimenting on himself, Bolton becomes addicted to the drugs. Then, during a demonstration of his anesthetic gas, Bolton's patient revives and goes beserk. In disgrace, Bolton ends up in partnership with Black Ben (Francis De Wolff), the owner of the Seven Dials, a disreputable tavern. Black Ben and his hulking assistant Resurrection Joe (Christopher Lee), want to make money selling cadavers to hospitals, so they trade Bolton the drugs he wants in exchange for faked death certificates. This 1963 film was originally entitled "Doctor from Seven Dials" and was shot back-to-back with "The Haunted Stranger," both films directed by Robert Day. This is one of several films in which Karloff tries to do good things for the benefit of mankind but evil ends up as a sort of inevitable result. However, "Corridors of Blood" is one of the few films in which the actor's character does not end up going off on a killing spree. The film starts off well, showing the barbaric surgeries of the day, but once Karloff ends up at the Seven Dials it is just a question of waiting for the final killing spree to begin. A below average film despite Karloff's best efforts, today "Corridors of Blood" is remembered only because it has both Karloff and Christopher Lee.

4-0 out of 5 stars Karloff & Lee - together!
Poor Dr. Thomas Bolton (Karloff). He's a compassionate, elderly British surgeon in the days before anesthesia. Tired of seeing his patients undergo excruciating agonies on the operating table, Bolton is working doggedly to concoct a drug which will banish pain and allow his patients to feel nothing during surgery. A failed and humiliating demonstration of his new drug before his professional peers makes Bolton even more determined to prove them wrong when they insist, "Pain and the knife are one."

Alas, as Bolton conducts experiments upon himself in pursuit of his dream, he becomes addicted to his own formula. His hands - once known for their speed with a knife in the surgical theatre - shake and betray him. His memory fails him; he can't remember what happens to him while under the sway of his formula. He begins to deteriorate.

The hospital's executive committee denies Bolton another chance to prove his work's validity and puts him, more or less, on "informal leave", suspending his privileges at the hospital's dispensary - the only place he can get the drugs necessary for both his research and his addiction.

Bolton falls in with a reprehensible crowd of no-gooders, including the elegant but menacing Resurrection Joe (Christopher Lee), a soulless killer with a penchant for smothering his victims with pillows. In return for getting Dr. Bolton the drugs he now craves both for his experiments and for himself, these body snatchers, who have been murdering drunken alehouse customers and passing them off as natural deaths, manipulate Bolton into a Faustian bargain to sign the death certificates of their hapless victims so they might sell the bodies to the hospitals for teaching purposes and collect the money.

The reason I gave this DVD only 4 stars, rather than 5, had nothing whatsoever to do with my total enjoyment of this film. Indeed, the print is excellent and the sound quality clear and distinctive. The one complaint I have is that there is only one "extra" on the DVD - the film's original theatrical trailer. I would have liked to have seen at least an interactive cast listing and additional information on the film itself.

Other than that, it's great to see Karloff and Lee in the same production. They just ... belong together in a movie frame, I think. The violence is more implied than shown, making poor Bolton's situation even more tragic, and Karloff plays him sympathetically yet strongly.

I think anyone who is a fan of Boris Karloff, Christopher Lee or horror films in general will delight in seeing "Corridors of Blood".

5-0 out of 5 stars Best of the later Karloff's.
This is an old favorite of mine; it also happens to be one of Karloff's best later performances. He's perfect as the kind elderly doctor who gets involved with the wrong people, one of them being Christopher Lee as grave-robber Resurrection Joe (!). And the always good Francis Matthews is, well, good as always. (The film is actually close in tone to "The Body Snatcher", but Karloff's part here is a quite different one.) You really feel deeply for the poor doc, thanks to the great Boris. The b/w movie may look like a Hammer film, but I wouldn't call it a Horror movie. -Sure, it's got some "horrific" scenes, but overall it looks more like a nice period drama stuck with a misleading title. (-If they had to give it such an awful title; something like "Corridors Of Pain" might have been a better choice, considering there are more screams heard than blood seen.) It's not only the best of his last films, but among the very best of his massive and impressive body of work. ... Read more


26. Avengers '67:Birdwho Knew/Winged Aven
Director: Peter Hammond, James Hill, Peter Graham Scott, Roger Jenkins, Leslie Norman, Don Leaver, John Krish, Robert Day, Kim Mills (II), Raymond Menmuir, Don Sharp, Robert Fuest, Peter Sykes, Sidney Hayers, Laurence Bourne, Gerry O'Hara, John Knight, Richmond Harding, Guy Verney, Robert Asher
list price: $12.95
our price: $12.95
(price subject to change: see help)
Asin: 0767011015
Catlog: Video
Sales Rank: 66779
Average Customer Review: 5 out of 5 stars
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Amazon.com

"The Bird Who Knew Too Much" is a Brian Clemens story in which John Steed and Emma Peel find carrier pigeons equipped with tiny cameras used to photograph top-secret missile bases. The photography theme extends to some comic moments in which Steed and Emma both do a little posing for a fashion cameraman, but there is also some fun with a parrot named Captain Crusoe, who requests political asylum at one point. Also on this tape is "The Winged Avenger," a truly crafty piece of work by writer Richard Harris, with good tongue-in-cheek references to the influence of comic-book culture on '60s television. A number of ruthless men are being ripped apart and killed by an unknown assailant, the only clue being that their murders seem to have been predicted in recent comic strips featuring a Batman-like superhero named the Winged Avenger. The zippy climax finds Mrs. Peel and a killer each wearing magnetic boots that allows them to fight on a ceiling. --Tom Keogh ... Read more

Reviews (3)

5-0 out of 5 stars Steed Reads the Comics - Emma Gets the Bird
Of the episodes on this tape, "The Winged Avenger" is more famous and fun, though "The Bird Who Knew Too Much" is actually the better-made.

"Avenger" is flawed by the too-quick revelation that a bizarre series of high-rise locked room murders are being committed by a freaky man in a razor-taloned bird costume, which spoils the suspense (a mistake not repeated in the very similar later episode, "The Hidden Tiger"). But this one is still too much fun for words, featuring some of the more memorable English eccentrics the series was so famous for, and some of its best high camp. It's not spoiling anything to reveal that Steed discovers his quarry is in the comic book industry by finding recent murders perfectly depicted in a superhero monthly's pages, creating a fabulous sequence in the story where he races to Mrs. Peel's rescue because he sees her there about to be killed. The concluding scene pays homage to the then-current original Batman T.V. series, in humorous fashion.

Sticking with the feathered motif, "The Bird Who Knew Too Much" is - in theory - a more realistic story, though in many ways it's just as camp. Steed and Mrs. Peel find top secrets making their way out of the country via clever and unexpected avian means.

5-0 out of 5 stars Winged Avenger delightfully spoofs American show
The Winged Avenger is crisply directed. An unseen force makes scraping noises, scales multi-story buildings, and savagely destroys ruthless business men who "downsize" by throwing everyone out of work! Steed and Mrs. Peel consult books trying to find an animal that matches the description. When they realize it is a human predator.. "I have a theory, "Steed relates, "He uses a trampoline, bounces up,scales it with a pick.."

And your other theory? "He bribes the doorman!" Steed says in frustration. As the duo close in on a logical explanation Mrs. Peel meets a dashing explorer, "Nothing like authenticity" assures her as they scale a tiny replica of a mountain with fake snow and simulated high winds. The usual wit pervades Winged Avenger. Mrs. Peel meets an eccentric inventor of boots enabling a person to walk up the side of a house, a building, and on the ceiling. "It'll ruin the carpet trade," she sighs. The fight scene, Mrs. Peel and her insane assailant, in mortal combat upside down on the ceiling, is a delight. A frantic Steed is driving to the rescue. "How are we doing?" he asks the only sane one left alive. "Not good!" Emma's murderous fate is prefigured in huge cartoon drawings. The Bird who Knew too much also features delightful eccentrics. "Twitter" "I don't do bird impersonation," Mrs. Peelsays. "Edgar J. Twitter," he introduces himself. Mrs. Peel's sluthing leads her to a daffy, bird loving professor (recognize the actor from the previous season's HOney for the pRince as QQF Businessman: fantasies, imaginary assassinations!) who trains highly intelligent birds to communicate and memorize- leading to the bird being stolen and British agents being murdered.

5-0 out of 5 stars all around fun
well if your in the mood for a little james bond, meets austin powers, meets the batman tv series this is what you want to watch. all in all these are great episodes! :) ... Read more


27. Avengers '67:Death's Door/Return of
Director: Peter Hammond, James Hill, Peter Graham Scott, Roger Jenkins, Leslie Norman, Don Leaver, John Krish, Robert Day, Kim Mills (II), Raymond Menmuir, Don Sharp, Robert Fuest, Peter Sykes, Sidney Hayers, Laurence Bourne, Gerry O'Hara, John Knight, Richmond Harding, Guy Verney, Robert Asher
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Asin: 0767011554
Catlog: Video
Sales Rank: 86312
Average Customer Review: 5 out of 5 stars
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Description

The sublime chemistry between Diana Rigg (as Mrs. Emma Peel) andPatrick Macnee (as John Steed), along with the juxtaposition of Steed’s old worldgentlemanliness with Mrs. Emma Peel’s wealthy jet-set kinkiness, led many Americanviewers to ask the Big Question: Did they or didn’t they?Our lips are sealed. "Return Of The Cybernauts"First aired 15 June, 1967 The deadly Cybernauts -- self-aware robot assassins -- are back.More formidable thanever, they’re still no match for mere flesh-and-blood Avengers.Dr. Beresford (PeterCushing) exposes Steed’s jealous streak by playing Casanova to the "delectable" Mrs.Peel. Directed by Robert Day, Written by Philip Levene. "Death’s Door"First aired 7 June, 1967 Nightmares come true when an enemy agent uses dream-influencing drugs to disrupt adiplomatic conference.Emma and Steed soon bid their plans goodnight.Always readyto improvise, Steed outdoes himself in "Death’s Door" with a makeshift wood-and-stonefirearm. Directed by Sidney Hayers, Written by Philip Levene. ... Read more

Reviews (2)

5-0 out of 5 stars Emma Becomes A Puppet - Steed Cuts the Strings
"Return of the Cybernauts" is just what a sequel to a great success should be - exactly the same, but completely different. Emma is wooed by urbane sophisticate Paul Beresford, who, unbeknownst to anyone, is actually the brother of cybernaut creator Dr. Armstrong, who perished in an accident Beresford blames on Emma and Steed. Beresford utilizes one of Armstrong's cybernaut robots to abduct a small number of Britain's leading scientists, coercing them to create the most evil torture possible in order that Beresford might savor his revenge. One of them devises a wristwatch that commandeers its wearer's nervous system, in essence turning them into a remote-control robot, and Beresford - seething cad that he is - of course intends to use it on Emma.

This episode benefits tremendously from the casting of Hammer mainstay star Peter Cushing as Beresford, and some of the best wit in the series. Steed has his funniest-ever line, when the sadistic Beresford superiorly sneers about all the qualities of his soul-wresting watch, retorting with a smile, "But does it tell good time?" The story is quite clever, in the sense that the new cybernaut menace isn't the robots at all, but the threat of being able to take over the mind and body of people and make robots out of them - yet it retains the use of the actual mechanical man from the original story, for continuity. Gorgeous color photography, great performances (especially from Rigg and Cushing), and a brisk, witty script make this one of The Avengers' all-time best.

"Death's Door" may be considered merely a bonus, on this tape. It's a not-bad semi-rehash of the previous year's "Too Many Christmas Trees." A peace conference is being ruined by the primary delegates' seeming psychic foreknowledge of disasters to come - all of which are, of course, being stage-managed by nefarious outside parties. It's too contrived to be believable, but that doesn't mean it isn't fun.

5-0 out of 5 stars Return of cybernauts is a return to terror
(5 stars) Writer Philip Levene surpassed his original cybernauts story in this sequel. Peter Cushing is a charming businessman who has ingratiated himself with Steed and Emma while he secretly plots to destroy them. He is Armstrong's brother. Steed is jealous of Beresford's attentions to Emma. "We know nothing against Paul," Emma says mildly. "I'm sure I can think of something if I try," mutters a jealous Steed. Beresford kidnaps terrorized scientists. One would think that such brilliant men would quickly devise a way to foil a cyberanut or escape but only one tries. Cushing gives a memorable performance as a man who secretly hates Steed and Emma but finds her very attractive. "That," he tells his hostage scientists,"is the very delectable Emma Peel." The suspense builds as Beresford schemes to physically enslave them. Great final fight scene and Beresford succombs to the same fate as his ruthless brother. Death's door is a 3 star episode. British politicans are haunted by premonitions of death. Steed and Emma try to guard one nervous politician who later dies of fright. Far less suspenseful than Cybernauts because British diplomats are being menaced. Some of the 1967 scripts were flatter than the 1965-1966 episodes- they lacked mystery and complexity. One misses the variety of Tony Williamson (Too Many Christmas Trees), Roger Marshall (Dial a Deadly Number/girl from Auntie), Malcolm Hulke (The Gravediggers). This one had no humor. Viewing the Avengers it is understanable why Diana Rigg left in 1967. She wisely left while the series was still at the top. ... Read more


28. The Avengers '65, Vol. 1
Director: Peter Hammond, James Hill, Peter Graham Scott, Roger Jenkins, Leslie Norman, Don Leaver, John Krish, Robert Day, Kim Mills (II), Raymond Menmuir, Don Sharp, Robert Fuest, Peter Sykes, Sidney Hayers, Laurence Bourne, Gerry O'Hara, John Knight, Richmond Harding, Guy Verney, Robert Asher
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Asin: 6305396116
Catlog: Video
Sales Rank: 70364
Average Customer Review: 5 out of 5 stars
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Amazon.com essential video

With a provocative swat on her leather-clad bottom, John Steed (Patrick Macnee) first clashes swords with his new partner, Mrs. Emma Peel (Diana Rigg), in "The Town of No Return," the episode that launched the fourth season of The Avengers. "Town" begins on a characteristically surreal note as a figure emerges from the sea in what looks like a giant Hefty bag. Out pops an impeccably dressed gent who notes to a nonplussed fisherman, "Looks like rain," which brings us to Bazeley by the Sea, a quaint but odd village where four agents have disappeared. Will Steed and Mrs. Peel be numbers five and six? Like one of the treats Steed offers Peel on their Bazeley-bound train, this episode is "a marzipan delight." In "The Gravediggers," Steed and Mrs. Peel dig up a sinister plot to sabotage Britain's radar defense system. But this doesn't quite explain how Mrs. Peel finds herself tied to a train track with a miniature locomotive chugging toward her! Both episodes are in glorious black and white. Volumes 1, 2, and 3 are also available together in The Avengers '65 Set 1. --Donald Liebenson ... Read more

Reviews (2)

5-0 out of 5 stars Steed Takes A Train - Emma Rides the Rail
The first of the Diana Rigg episodes are among the best of the entire series.

"The Gravediggers" is a straightforward espionage story, marked by The Avengers' usual oddball elements and formula. The local cemetery is somehow being used to jam signals, and Steed and Emma have to sort it out. An eccentric old man who builds oversize train sets is in the middle of it, and Steed has to rescue a bound-to-the-tracks Emma in a humorously exciting finale.

"The Town Of No Return" is a great story, in which an isolated seaside town is being used by a foreign power to infiltrate Britain with fifth-column invaders. The setup is good, the payoff better. The Avengers find themselves going literally underground, to break it all up.

5-0 out of 5 stars Return with the Avengers to the Town of No Return!
Town of No Return is the Avegers at its best. The initial scene of a plastic bag emerging from the sea, a man popping out of it matter of factly directed to the town by a fisherman is priceless.

Emma fencing with Steed is delightful. He proceeds to criticize her fencing technique, she challenges him to a match...

Anyone who objected to Steed kissing Emma Peel once during the film must be extraordinarly innocent. In one scene in this episode Steed comes to Emma's bedroom at night. "Isn't it time you were in bed?" he asks her, separated from touching her only by the bottle he clutches. She nods.

The black and white episode mixes the supposedly normal- the pub, the church, the school with a tense sense of menace. A friendly man returns to look up his brother,the village blacksmith, and is stalked by locals bearing guns who track him with dogs! Delightful opening scene of Steed and Mrs. Peel and a nice contrast of the hiden menace beneath the seemingly peaceful small town where four agent mysteriously vanished.

The second episode is even more delightful -mixing a charming eccentric elderly man devoted to railroads who has his own miniature railroad that he rides, undertakers who rush about in a hearse, clad in black top hats and tails. In addition, they book their funerals four to six weeks in advance! The mock up of the operating scene is very funny. "Scapel!" calls the surgeon. "Blowtorch." Blowtorch? The climactic finale of Emma, tied to a train track, Steed battling two villains to the thumping piano accompaniment (spoofing silent films) is a pure delight. The second one contrasts with the grimmer mood of the first. Well worth returning to again and again! ... Read more


29. Avengers '65:Man-Eater of Surrey/Two'
Director: Peter Hammond, James Hill, Peter Graham Scott, Roger Jenkins, Leslie Norman, Don Leaver, John Krish, Robert Day, Kim Mills (II), Raymond Menmuir, Don Sharp, Robert Fuest, Peter Sykes, Sidney Hayers, Laurence Bourne, Gerry O'Hara, John Knight, Richmond Harding, Guy Verney, Robert Asher
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Asin: 6305396434
Catlog: Video
Sales Rank: 81404
Average Customer Review: 4.5 out of 5 stars
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Amazon.com

Worth the price of purchase alone is this volume's bonus episode, "Too Many Christmas Trees," which one Avengers-appreciation Web site ranks as the best Emma Peel episode of all time. This "fascinating exercise" (to quote one devilish character) concerns a psychic experiment that gives John Steed deadly nightmares that are coming true. Among the many highlights is the girl of our dreams, Mrs. Peel, helping Steed open his Christmas cards ("Who is Boofums?"). Listen for the in-joke reference to Rigg's predecessor, Honor Blackman, who left the series to star in Goldfinger. Regarding the card from Mrs. Gale, Blackman's character, Steed ponders, "What can she be doing in Fort Knox?" And the sight of Mrs. Peel costumed as Oliver Twist may also cause some sleepless nights!

This volume also contains "The Man-Eater of Surrey Green," a bit of straight-faced silliness about, yes, a man-eating plant from outer space.More down-to-earth is "Two's a Crowd," in which "king of the spies" Colonel Pesev (pronounced "Zev") comes to town. Patrick Macnee does extra duty as Steed and his double, a fashion model ("wearing slacks built for action") named Webster, who is recruited by the Russians to infiltrate a vital meeting of the defense chiefs. Will the unwitting Mrs. Peel be able to tell the difference between the two? --Donald Liebenson ... Read more

Reviews (2)

5-0 out of 5 stars Steed Vs. Santa Claus - Emma Gets the Dickens
Two of the best Avengers.

"Too Many Christmas Trees" is both an Avengers favorite and one of its classics. Steed is plagued by recurring nightmares of a colleague's death, which later happens exactly as he dreamed it. Emma invites him to lighten his grief at a friend's Charles Dickens-themed Christmas party, and Steed begins having more prescient dreams - this time, foretelling his own demise. A very nasty Santa Claus is in the middle of it all, and Steed ultimately squares off against the evil St. Nick in a hall of mirrors. This episode benefits from gorgeous photography and costumes, and even more impressive nightmarish surreal sets.

For some reason I've never been able to fathom, "The Man-Eater of Surrey Green" always gets short shrift from reviewers, when it's really a very well-done episode all round. The answer may simply be in the fact that some people don't like sci-fi in the series - though sci-fi is largely what made it popular. (Go figure.) "Man-Eater" is a dark and atmospheric story about a mind-controlling space plant that germinates on Earth after finding its way here via a crashed returning manned space vehicle. Steed battles the villainous vegetable - and Emma becomes one, as the plant gets its tendrils into her finely-muscled fighter's body, to combat Steed.

Both these episodes are fine examples of The Avengers at its black-and-white atmospheric best.

4-0 out of 5 stars Too Many Christmas Trees Can't Be Seen too often!
5 stars for Brian Clemons "Too Many Christmas Trees". Steed is having surreal nightmares- paper cutout forests, a bizarre present a picture of himself, a nasty Father Christmas- not only does he dream a fellow agent is found dead- the agent is found dead under mysterious circumstances that morning. The usual wit pervades. Emma and Steed attend a Christmas houseparty in the country. She admires Steed's four poster bed. "I've always fancied myself in one of these." "So have I," Steed says fervently! Clemons balances associations of Christmas: Christmas cards, Christmas trees and presents with a sense of menace. The Dickensian host immitates a reformed Ebenezer Scrooge, and costumed Dickens characters represent some nasty villains. Emma suspects Steed is about to be drugged. When she appeals to a psychiatrist for help he pulls a gun on her. Naturally Emma knocks him unconscious and proudly tells Steed that she knocked him out. "He's on our side!" "You might have told me!" Delightfully sinister battle in an eerie room of distorting mirrors: Emma saves Steed's life and he returns the favor. This episode is sublime. The other two are dreadful and mediocre. "ManEater of Surrey Green " concerns a man eating plant. It's wacky and strange but not funny. "Two's a crowd" is a weak script with Steed and a sleazy imposter. The only Avengers twist is that 4 sinister Russian agents, a secret agent whom no one knows what he looks like, use children's toy weapons to kill others- a toy submarine fires real bullets and a large model airplane drops mini bombs. "Trees" is first rate - mixing the charming and sinister- one of Clemons best scripts. "Maneater" and "Two's a Crowd" are dreadfully boring. The Avengers film with Ralph Fiennes and Uma Thurman, despite botched editing and a director obsessed with special effects instead of character and story, was far better than those bombs. Diana Rigg and Patrick MacNee always do their best. But why Crowd and ManEater were ever accepted for Avengers scripts is puzzling. The producers should have had writers Malcolm Hulke (toy train AVengers 1965) and Roger Marshall (Silent Dust, A Funny Thing Happened on the Way to the Station) write more scripts. ... Read more


30. Avengers '65:Hour That Never Was/Dial
Director: Peter Hammond, James Hill, Peter Graham Scott, Roger Jenkins, Leslie Norman, Don Leaver, John Krish, Robert Day, Kim Mills (II), Raymond Menmuir, Don Sharp, Robert Fuest, Peter Sykes, Sidney Hayers, Laurence Bourne, Gerry O'Hara, John Knight, Richmond Harding, Guy Verney, Robert Asher
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Asin: 630539637X
Catlog: Video
Sales Rank: 58182
Average Customer Review: 4.67 out of 5 stars
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Amazon.com

This volume contains two must-own episodes from the fourth, and arguably best, season of The Avengers. The unsettling first half of "The Hour That Never Was" plays like something out of The Twilight Zone. Royal Air Forces Camp 472 in Hamelin is splitting up, and John Steed may be cracking up. He and Mrs. Peel emerge from an auto wreck to find the air base deserted, all the clocks stopped at 11, an unconscious rabbit, and a dead milkman. When Steed returns to the air base, a reunion party with all the previously missing men is in full swing. Nitrous oxide gives the climactic fight with a diabolical dentist a goofy spin.

In "Dial a Deadly Number," six "dynamic, indispensable" company chairmen have suddenly keeled over. Who ya gonna call? Steed and Mrs. Peel, who make a connection between the untimely deaths, a "bleeper" (pager) pocket pen, and Fitch, a sinister "backroom boy" and mechanical genius. The umbrella-toting Steed actually fires a gun in this episode. The most taut suspense is reserved for the scene in which Steed engages in a duel of palates at a wine tasting. To paraphrase one character, do not deprive yourself of this video's company. --Donald Liebenson ... Read more

Reviews (3)

4-0 out of 5 stars Emma Visits the Dentist - Steed Drills Him
"Dial A Deadly Number" is usually considered one of the better Avengers stories - I would agree, if it were one of the preceding Honor Blackman series entries, but it's extremely atypical (and, to my thinking, static and unsatisfying) for the Diana Rigg years. Steed uses a gun, which was more common in the Blackman cycle and all but unheard of in the Rigg stories. This one is a simple melodrama, not memorable in most regards. It isn't so much that it's a bad story, rather that it just doesn't gel all that well with the rest of the Mrs. Peele series.

"The Hour That Never Was" is one of the more typical semi-science-fictional stories the Rigg years were more famous for, and a fairly satisfying one at that. Steed and Emma find themselves missing an hour of time, after he swerves to avoid a dog in the road while on his way to an RAF reunion. The base hosting the reunion is abandoned, though there are signs of recent habitation. When Steed manages to find the other guests, they seem to be suffering mental fugues - especially when an eerie, high-pitched whine occasionally sounds in the vicinity. It all has something to do with the dentist's office... "Hour" is rather like a Twilight Zone episode, with an espionage story payoff.

An uneven pair, but worth the price of admission.

5-0 out of 5 stars Dial a deadly number and order the video!
Roger Marshall, like Philip Levene, wrote the best Avengers scripts. Deadly Number has complex, intelligent characters, a red herring, a sinister, kinky killer who confronts Emma at gunpoint. Admiring her beauty, he tells her as his hand caresses her, that it "would be a sin to mar that skin (with a lethal injection, his current method of assassination)." He promises to kill her with "scientic tenderness" confessing that he has never killed a woman before. The script has a suspenseful wine-tasting party, an exciting attempt to kill Steed, and splendid final battle in the same wine cellar. Unlike Clemeons, Marshall saw women as intelligent, complex,independent and strong. He has a female villain, her counterpoint, the always resourceful Emma, and a nifty closer as Emma teases Steed by immitating his performance at the wine tasting party. Worth every penny, and well worth viewing again and again because of Marshall's research and witty dialogue!

Hour that Never Was has a great opening scene of Steed crashing his car to avoid a dog. He and Emma enter the airbase, about to close today, on foot. All the people are missing. They find a car with gasoline being put in, gasoline flooding the car and pavement, a deserted milk float, a room decorated for the party to commemorate the closing of the base. But all of Steed's frieds are missing. Where have the people gone? A terrified milkman runs away from the lookout box and is mercilessly gunned down. When Steed and Mrs. Peel separate, she too disappears. All Steed finds is her watch. Suspenseful, great final fight as Steed and Emma take on the baddies. The best Avengers episodes are from the 1965-1966 years. Although 1967 boasted some great scripts: Escape in Time, the Joker, Superlative Seven, winged Avenger later the best writers left the show: Roger Marshall and Philip Levene.Consequently, 1967 shows have flat characters, little plot and none of the complexity, humor or intelligence of Malcolm Hulke (the Gravediggers), Tony Willliamson (Too Many Christmas trees)Warshall or Levene's scripts. This cassette was a delight and well worth viewing again and again. Top notch acting, direction and writing. Well worth the price of purchase!

5-0 out of 5 stars One of the Best Avengers i have seen!
these two particular episodes are great, because the humor is wonderful and there is still the mystery in them. I enjoyed them very much and watch them often. If your an Avenger fan these two are a must buy. ... Read more


31. Avengers '65:Murder Market/Surfeit of H20
Director: Peter Hammond, James Hill, Peter Graham Scott, Roger Jenkins, Leslie Norman, Don Leaver, John Krish, Robert Day, Kim Mills (II), Raymond Menmuir, Don Sharp, Robert Fuest, Peter Sykes, Sidney Hayers, Laurence Bourne, Gerry O'Hara, John Knight, Richmond Harding, Guy Verney, Robert Asher
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Asin: 6305396329
Catlog: Video
Sales Rank: 57319
Average Customer Review: 4 out of 5 stars
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Amazon.com

"Now that you've seen me, what do you think?" a gentleman inquires of his blind date. She pulls out a gun and fires. This typically provocative prologue sets the stage for a killer episode from the fourth season of The Avengers. John Steed and Emma Peel become clients of Togetherness, an exclusive marriage bureau that also traffics in assassinations. This episode is of note for reportedly being the first in which Diana Rigg portrayed Mrs. Peel. Her character engages in some un-Emmalike behavior, such as when she argues angrily with Steed and later gets tipsy on a bottle of champagne. But all is forgiven with the scene in which she lists her criteria for a husband, among them "stamina." One intriguing question: Did the character of the fashion photographer ("Fabulous, baby, yeah") inspire Mike Myers's Austin Powers?

"A Surfeit of H20" has been ranked by one Avengers-appreciation Web site as among the top five of the Mrs. Peel era. This intoxicating episode really pours it on, with vintage witty dialogue, assorted crackpot characters, and, of course, a diabolical madman--a vintner who is flooding the countryside with his own manmade rain.--Donald Liebenson ... Read more

Reviews (1)

4-0 out of 5 stars Murder Market proves that marriage is murder!
Murder Market was the first Avengers episode Diana Rigg filmed. Emma is younger, more vulnerable, but displays confidence in her physical skills and knowledge which would become hallmarks of the character.

Emma's description of Steed's perfect mate: "Lucrezia Borgia with a bit of Joan of Arc!" The villain had a personal motive for dispatching one of the seven murdered men. Neat surprise on who is the director and the motive for Stone's murder.

Steed asks Emma:Isn't time you thought of marrying again?" She chokes on her drink. Humor wise this one gets two stars. Not as witty as Honey for the Prince or A touch of Brimstone.

A surfeit of water gets two stars. A white haired eccentric predicts the end of the world. "Build your arc!" This one has no plot twists or subtlty. Steed and Emma investigate Granny Gregson's glorious grogs. Best line, Emma, strapped to a wine press, has listened to the ravings of the demented scientist, "You diabolical mastermind you." Frankly, the movie, The Avengers, was better than the episode A surfeit of H2O or Murder Market. Some people remember the series through some kind of misty, romantic haze. Some episodes were great, others merely fair. ... Read more


32. Marshall of Madrid/Sam Cade
Director: Richard Donner, Michael O'Herlihy, Paul Stanley, Marvin J. Chomsky, David Lowell Rich, Robert Day, Lee Madden, Joseph Pevney, Lee Philips, Reza Badiyi, Alf Kjellin, George Marshall, Leo Penn, Irving J. Moore
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33. Streets of San Francisco, The - V. 2 : episodes: Legion of the Lost/Betrayed
Director: Richard Donner, Harry Falk, Don Medford, Arthur H. Nadel, Walter Grauman, Robert Day, William Wiard, Theodore J. Flicker, Nicholas Colasanto, Barry Shear, Allen Reisner, George McCowan, John Badham, William Hale (II), Virgil W. Vogel, Barry Crane, Michael Caffey, Richard Lang, Michael Preece, Dennis Donnelly
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34. The Haunted Strangler
Director: Robert Day
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Asin: 6305071489
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Sales Rank: 65707
Average Customer Review: 3.64 out of 5 stars
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Description

Boris Karloff stars in this terrifying story, reminiscent of the unsolved Jack the Ripper case. Set against the sinister background of London in the gaslight days, a man is driven by an inner compulsion to kill, becoming a human beast that strikes again and again, brutally murdering a number of young women. ... Read more

Reviews (11)

3-0 out of 5 stars Boris Karloff does Jekyll and Hyde with a twist
Boris Karloff plays two different characters in this minor 1958 horror film directed by Robert Day. In 1860 a sailor named Styles was executed for being the Haymarket Strangler, who killed five women in a series of brutal murders. Twenty years later philanthropist and novelist James Rankin (Karloff) suspects they hung the wrong man...This is really a minor effort from Karloff, who was still a few years away from being rediscovered in Roger Corman's horror comedies at this point in his long career. The most interesting part of this film is how this English film tries to be racy with all the prostitutes running around as Tenant's potential targets. "The Haunted Strangler" is one for Karloff fans who feel a need to watch everything he ever did. Not a bad film, just not a good one either.

5-0 out of 5 stars Karloff Masterpiece!
This is one of the best horror movies that Boris Karloff made and he really shows his acting talent.

5-0 out of 5 stars CAN-CAN
For can-can enthusiasts, this film contains two EXCEPTIONAL can-can numbers in full costume (including traditional suspender stockings and frilled underwear)....

4-0 out of 5 stars Why the bad rap?
I dont see why this movie gets such poor reviews. Boris does a great facial contortion with paralisis when possesed by a dead murderer. Great victorian costumes help set the stage for a pretty good mystery. I guess most of todays audience expect special effects to replace acting. No twisting heads or spewed pea soup here. While its not as good as Frankenstein, The Mummy or the afore mentioned Corridors of Blood, its still a pretty good Karloff movie.

3-0 out of 5 stars Boris Karloff does Jekyl and Hyde with a Columbo twist
Boris Karloff gets to play a pair of characters in this minor 1958 horror film directed by Robert Day. In 1860 a sailor named Styles was executed for being the Haymarket Strangler, who killed five women in a series of brutal murders. Twenty years later philanthropist and novelist James Rankin (Karloff) suspects they hung the wrong man. When Rankin discovers the missing murder weapon, a scalpel, in Styles' coffin, he has a fit and murders a music hall singer. Rankin blacks out and the next day does not remember anything. That is when his wife, Barbara (Elizabeth Allan), tells Rankin that his real name is Tenant, and that HE is the Haymarket Strangler. Twenty years earlier she helped him escape from an insane asylum when he developed amnesia. But now that he has his scalpel again, his murderous tendencies return. This is really a minor effort from Karloff, who was still a few years away from being rediscovered in Roger Corman's horror comedies. The most interesting part of "The Haunted Strangler" is how this English film tries to be racy with all the prostitutes running around as Tenant's potential targets. This is one for Karloff fans who feel a need to watch everything he ever did. Not a bad film, just not a good one either. ... Read more


35. Marshall of Madrid
Director: Richard Donner, Michael O'Herlihy, Paul Stanley, Marvin J. Chomsky, David Lowell Rich, Robert Day, Lee Madden, Joseph Pevney, Lee Philips, Reza Badiyi, Alf Kjellin, George Marshall, Leo Penn, Irving J. Moore
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Asin: 6305506515
Catlog: Video
Sales Rank: 86887
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36. Your Place Or Mine
Director: Robert Day
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Asin: B00000JL3L
Catlog: Video
Average Customer Review: 3 out of 5 stars
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Reviews (2)

2-0 out of 5 stars Subtitles are dreadful
This is probably quite a delightful little romantic comedy. However, the subtitles are just dreadful. And it isn't just the odd word. I found myself scratching my head to try and figure out what was really going on. I'd highly suggesting giving this DVD a wide berth.

4-0 out of 5 stars Charming Comedy
It's often difficult to translate comedy from one language to another. A joke in one language can become a boring story when told in another. Your Place or Mine does not fall into this trap. It's a charming comedy with a simple storyline. Even with subtitles, the humour is clear and understood.

If you need a two-hour break from life's daily stress, watch this film. ... Read more


37. Sam Cade
Director: Richard Donner, Michael O'Herlihy, Paul Stanley, Marvin J. Chomsky, David Lowell Rich, Robert Day, Lee Madden, Joseph Pevney, Lee Philips, Reza Badiyi, Alf Kjellin, George Marshall, Leo Penn, Irving J. Moore
list price: $5.99
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Asin: 6305507392
Catlog: Video
Sales Rank: 109222
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38. Avengers '66 - What the Butler Saw / The House That Jack Built
Director: Peter Hammond, James Hill, Peter Graham Scott, Roger Jenkins, Leslie Norman, Don Leaver, John Krish, Robert Day, Kim Mills (II), Raymond Menmuir, Don Sharp, Robert Fuest, Peter Sykes, Sidney Hayers, Laurence Bourne, Gerry O'Hara, John Knight, Richmond Harding, Guy Verney, Robert Asher
list price: $12.95
our price: $12.95
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Asin: 0767016416
Catlog: Video
Sales Rank: 58309
Average Customer Review: 4.75 out of 5 stars
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Amazon.com

In "What the Butler Saw," one of two black-and-white episodes from the fourth season of The Avengers, someone is leaking defense secrets to "the other side."While gentleman spy John Steed (Patrick Macnee) goes undercover as a butler to locate the culprit, Mrs. Emma Peel (Diana Rigg) launches "Operation Fascination" to attract the attention of the womanizing prime suspect, Captain Miles. About to meet him for drinks, she is memorably advised by Steed, "Don't do anything I would do." Two notable bits: for security purposes, three defense officials zip themselves up in a ridiculous giant plastic body bag that anticipates Get Smart's Cone of Silence; and Emma flees from a pursuer through a succession of doors used to train butlers, a scene echoed in Sam Raimi's Crimewave. "The House That Jack Built" is one of Rigg's finest hours, and a rare chance to see the usually nonplussed Mrs. Peel totally plussed. She is in for "the fright of [her] life" when she is held prisoner in a house rigged by a vengeful techno-obsessed madman bent on driving her insane. Rooms that move and labyrinthian mazes are mere prologue to "the exhibition dedicated to the late Emma Peel." This volume is also available in The Avengers '66, Set 2. --Donald Liebenson ... Read more

Reviews (4)

4-0 out of 5 stars Emma Inherits A Haunted House - Steed Butlers One
This is a very odd pair of episodes, "What the Butler Saw" being essentially a very British comedy and "The House That Jack Built" an intense sci-fi melodrama.

"Butler" is a deliberately more comedic re-telling of an earlier Honor Blackman story, in which very faithful military men appear to be leaking important state secrets. To get to the bottom of it, Emma becomes the seducer of a ladies' man, and Steed first impersonates top-ranking members of each armed service and then turns to butlering to keep a close eye on the suspects. The humor is English farce, not so amusing to American audiences. Probably the funniest thing in the episode is Steed's variety of facial hair disguises while cozying up to the Army, Navy, and Air Force officers. There's also a fairly amusing chase in the finale, with Emma pursued through a series of opening and shutting doors, one after another, all in a straight line and only a few feet apart from each other.

"House" is the better piece of the two, an often genuinely creepy and very atmospheric haunted house story of another color. A nonexistent dead uncle bequeathes Emma his house in the country - which turns out to be an eerie automated prison, designed to become her tomb by a madman with a grudge. Two things especially stand out in this one: the surrealistic sets of the mechanized haunted house, which are really unsettling, and Diana Rigg's virtual one-woman performance as the mouse caught in the trap.

5-0 out of 5 stars Can you take me now for a quick scrape and a hot towel ..?
Somebody is selling top British defense secrets to the enemy. The talented British agent Steed contacts the double-agent barber. They whisper, but not quiet enough. The barber is killed. The list of potential traitors includes three high ranking officers. They have weaknesses: drunkeness (leading to headaches), gambling (to the extent of neglecting official duties), and womanizing. They also have butlers. Steed decides to join a butling (gentlemen's) school. The action becomes more heated with Mrs. Peel joining the force as an officer's girlfriend. At the end Steed and Mrs. Peel are saved by a retired, senile, patriotic, but not really demented general.

5-0 out of 5 stars Best episode of the avengers
this is one of my favorite avengers episodes ever. I have seen almost all of them and out of them all this one is one of the most suspensful ones. I have liked this one since i was 9 years old. This movie...[is good] if u have to pick one take this one.

5-0 out of 5 stars House that jack built holds up better 33 years later.
I viewed the house that Jack built over 30 years ago. The commericals destroyed the unity and made it seem less interesting. On video the suspense builds and the menace of odd camera angles,and rooms that appear to move, make it sinister and fresh. What is appealing is the that the heroine, using her brain and skills, rescues herself ! ... Read more


39. Streets of San Francisco, The - V. 3 : episodes: Hall of Mirrors/Dead Air
Director: Richard Donner, Harry Falk, Don Medford, Arthur H. Nadel, Walter Grauman, Robert Day, William Wiard, Theodore J. Flicker, Nicholas Colasanto, Barry Shear, Allen Reisner, George McCowan, John Badham, William Hale (II), Virgil W. Vogel, Barry Crane, Michael Caffey, Richard Lang, Michael Preece, Dennis Donnelly
list price: $14.98
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Asin: 0782009530
Catlog: Video
Sales Rank: 62714
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40. Sam Cade
Director: Richard Donner, Michael O'Herlihy, Paul Stanley, Marvin J. Chomsky, David Lowell Rich, Robert Day, Lee Madden, Joseph Pevney, Lee Philips, Reza Badiyi, Alf Kjellin, George Marshall, Leo Penn, Irving J. Moore
list price: $3.99
our price: $3.99
(price subject to change: see help)
Asin: 6305507481
Catlog: Video
Sales Rank: 69644
Average Customer Review: 3 out of 5 stars
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Reviews (1)