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| 21. The Quick and the Dead Director: Robert Day | |
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Amazon.com Reviews (8)
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| 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 | |
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Amazon.com Reviews (5)
"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.
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.
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| 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 | |
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Amazon.com Reviews (2)
"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.
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 | |
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Amazon.com Reviews (2)
"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.
"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 | |
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Description Reviews (5)
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".
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| 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 | |
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Amazon.com Reviews (3)
"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.
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.
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| 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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Description Reviews (2)
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.
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| 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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Amazon.com essential video Reviews (2)
"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.
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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Amazon.com 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 Reviews (2)
"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.
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| 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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Amazon.com 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 Reviews (3)
"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.
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!
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| 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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Amazon.com "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 Reviews (1)
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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Description Reviews (11)
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| 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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| 36. Your Place Or Mine Director: Robert Day | |
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Reviews (2)
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 | |
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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 | |
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Amazon.com Reviews (4)
"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.
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| 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 | |
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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 | |
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Reviews (1)
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