The corpse of reporter Gregory Moore (Jean Sorel) is found in a Prague plaza and brought to the local morgue. But Moore is actually alive, trapped inside his dead body and desperately recalling how the mysterious disappearance of his beautiful girlfriend (Barbara Bach) led to a terrifying conspiracy of depravity. Can a reporter with no visible signs of life solve this perverse puzzle before he meets his ultimate deadline?
When the body of American journalist Gregory Moore (Jean Sorel, Perversion Story) is discovered in the beautiful Malá Strana area of Prague, the body is moved to the morgue for an autopsy. Only thing is, Gregory is still alive and has been paralyzed in a death-like state. As the ultimate deadline draws near, Gregory's mind races to recall why this happened to him and who is behind a spat of kidnappings of gorgeous local women, including his girlfriend Mira (Barbara Bach, The Unseen). Aldo Lado's remarkable film is an atmospheric delight that boasts an incredible score from the maestro himself, Ennio Morricone (The Good, The Bad & The Ugly), and more than deserves it's reputation as one of the finest examples of the giallo genre. 88 Films are proud to present this stone cold classic of Italian cinema, in pristine HD, for the first time in the UK! SPECIAL FEATURES New 2K Restoration from the Original Camera Negative Restored English Soundtrack Restored Italian soundtrack with English subtitles English Trailer Italian Trailer TECHNICAL SPECS Region Code: 2 Picture Format: 2.35:1 Audio Format: Mono Language: English / Italian Certification: 18 Running Time: 97 Mins Approx
The mists that wreathe the eerie city of Venice become the hunting ground for a faceless child killer that seemingly cannot be stopped in the taut and brilliant thriller Who Saw Her Die? directed by Aldo Lado (Night Train Murders). When Franco (in a career-best performance by George Lazenby) loses his daughter to this shadowy elusive murderer he sets off on an unnerving journey of retribution that will bring him to the very edge of his sanity and quite possibly his life too. Rigid with tense atmospheric style this film bears an uncanny resemblance in mood to the classic Dont Look Now but was actually made a year before. Boasting starkly evocative cinematography by Franco Di Giacomo (Il Postino) and a score by Ennio Morricone Who Say Her Die haunts the mind long after viewing it.
Originally banned in the UK as a 'video nasty' under its VHS-era title of Don't Ride on Late Night Trains this tense thriller is a malevolent mix of hair-raising Hitchcockian suspense and contemporary splatter movie shocks. Released in 1975 to a suitably disorientated audience Night Train Murders tells of two young female travellers including Irene Miracle from Inferno who are kidnapped and tormented by a gang of thugs (led by an older matriarch with murderous desires). Indeed the horror and humiliation which takes place during their journey is the stuff of nightmares... But a final twist leads the criminals into the hands of one girl's pistol-packing parents! Also inspired by Wes Craven's legendary masterpiece The Last House on the Left and directed by giallo expert Aldo Lado (The Short Night of the Glass Dolls) this gritty and garish stomach-churner - which includes an iconic Ennio Morricone soundtrack - is finally unleashed in the UK in all of its fully uncut HD gory glory! Bonus Features: English language track Italian language track with English subtitles Strangers on a (Late Night) Train - an exclusive new interview with star Irene Miracle Trailers Easter Egg Booklet by Dr. Calum Waddell
Please mind the half-dead girls between the platform edge and the train as you board a cinematic ride into terror that was refused a certificate in 1976 and has since never been dared an official release in the UK... Two street punks one cold-as-ice sex-crazed vicious bitch and two young virgins converge on a train ride to hell that will see the most unspeakable horrors committed in the name of kinky kicks. Imagine the worst and you're unlikely to come close to what actually unfolds on screen but comfort yourself with the thought that once Daddy discovers what's been done to his daughters revenge will be merciless. Conceived as a response to The Last House on the Left this chillingly well-made claustrophobic thriller from director Aldo Lado (and scored by Ennio Morricone) sears the brains of those who dare watch it!
A collection of slasher movies from Shameless Screen Entertainment (Torso, Night Train Murders & Killer Nun)Night Train Murders & Killer Nun are both part of the DPP list of 'video nasties'. Video nasty was a term coined in the United Kingdom in the 1980s that originally applied to a number of films distributed on video cassette that were criticized for their violent content by various religious organizations, in the press and by commentators.
Originally banned in the UK as a video nasty', this tense thriller is a malevolent mix of hair-raising Hitchcockian suspense and contemporary splatter movie shocks. Released in 1975 to a suitably disorientated audience, it tells of two young female travellers who are kidnapped and tormented by a gang of thugs. Indeed, the horror and humiliation which takes place during their journey is the stuff of nightmares... but a final twist leads the criminals into the hands of one girl's pistol-packing parents! A gritty and garish stomach-churner - which includes an iconic Ennio Morricone soundtrack - is finally unleashed in the UK in all of its fully uncut HD gory glory!
When Franco (in a career-best performance by George Lazenby) loses his daughter to this shadowy elusive murderer he sets off on an unnerving journey of retribution that will bring him to the very edge of his sanity and quite possibly his life too.
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