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Nabaza.net-The MarketPlace - House of Wax

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List Price: $14.98
Our Price: $9.49
Your Save: $ 5.49 ( 37% )
Availability: Usually ships in 24 hours
Manufacturer: Warner Home Video Starring: Vincent Price, Frank Lovejoy, Phyllis Kirk, Carolyn Jones, Paul Picerni Directed By: André De Toth, Michael Curtiz
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Average Customer Rating:     

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Aspect Ratio: 1.33:1 Audience Rating: Unrated Binding: DVD Brand: Warner Brothers EAN: 9780790765389 Format: Closed-captioned ISBN: 0790765381 Label: Warner Home Video Manufacturer: Warner Home Video Number Of Items: 1 Publisher: Warner Home Video Region Code: 1 Release Date: 2003-08-05 Running Time: 165 Studio: Warner Home Video Theatrical Release Date: 1953-04-25
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Editorial Reviews:
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Museum fire turns handsome man into human monster who steals bodies from morgue to create lifelike images in wax.
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Spotlight customer reviews:
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Customer Rating:      Summary: Awesome vendor! Comment: Very quick delivery. Well packaged. I'm very pleased with my order and will order again from this vendor. Thank you!
Customer Rating:      Summary: Tepid Remake of the l932 Original Comment: Once you've seen the gloriously depraved and wicked l932 original--Mystery of the Wax Museum--this remake is terribly anemic and vanilla. In Mystery of the Wax Museum, you had a horror masterpiece made during those notorious pre-code days. Themes of necrophilia, drug addiction, prostitution are all crucial elements of the story in this fascinating tale of a sculptor who is hideously disfigured by a fire. Yet, he survives to rebuilt his wax museum by encasing corpses in wax and transforming them into historical figures. Lionel Atwill made a terrifying monster and he had the gorgeous Fay Wray as his terrified heroine. Better yet, it was filmed in a beautiful early Technicolor process, with the pastel shades of blue, red, gold and green giving it an eerie dream-like effect.
Switch to the House of Wax and you see a movie that's been squeezed dry of everything colorful. The heroine does all the stupid horror heroine things and everyone seems to move in slow motion. When the heroine wakes up to find the monster hovering over her, she shrieks, yet remains in bed after he flees. Her next door neighbor enters the room slowly and pipes: "Are you having another bad dream, dear?" and casually sits down beside the heroine who says nothing about her ghastly intruder. She doesn't even try to jump up and lock the French doors where the monster entered. None of the characters are colorful or memorable as found in the l932 original. If you've never seen the original, then by all means do so and then compare it to this remake--which was remade in 2007 starring Paris Hilton.
Customer Rating:      Summary: Grab Your 3-D Glasses for This One! Comment: Vincent Price's "House of Wax" (1953) is a striking 3-Dementional movie adaptation of Lionel Atwell's classic "Mystery at the Wax Museum" (1933)- the '33 flick is on the reverse side of the 2003 DVD. As an emergent technological wonder, the 1953 version used interlocking 35mm camera filming on mirrors from 45-degree angles to make the movie. At the theater, the dual projection system showed its startling effects to 3-D glasses wearing viewers.
This macabre tale of beauty, death, and evil psychosis features spears thrown towards you, paddle balls slapped at you, doors open upon you, blood flung on to you, and (just before the closing credits) a young Charles Bronson's wax head thrust at you... all in frightening 3-D. Phyllis Kirk, the beautiful heroine, is chased through the rainy midnight streets of 1902 New York City by the murderer madman (Price) his sliding gape always close behind her- clip-clop. Her first visit through the dark and fearsome museum, featuring cadavers waxed into history's evil people, is equally gripping. As the wax begins to pour towards her you will feel her fear.
You'll want to grab your 3-D eyewear for this horror classic. If you don't have 3-D glasses red and blue, or green, cellophane will suffice (one color for each eye).
There is no foul language and only implied nudity is this fun flick. This 2003 DVD version is very clear and well presented.
The House of Wax's demented mad man, still in love with beauty, who is willing to kill any to make his wax displays is very frightening and will be entertaining for all horror film aficionados. This is a movie you will want to show, particularly to the new generations of horror fans, at Halloween parties.
Customer Rating:      Summary: would buy from them again Comment: i do not like your new rating system at all, the last one was much better, and i will not fill out the new ones because they take too long, very disappointed you changed the rating system
Customer Rating:      Summary: Arguably the best 3-D movie--ever! (Even without 3D) Comment: The fact that this is one of the few 3-D movies that plays just as well WITHOUT 3-D, says something. A great, grisly story (based upon the 1933 "Mystery of the Wax Museum" which is found, coincidentally, on the other side of this DVD), and a magnificently oily performance by Vincent Price make this a great ride. Andre de Toth, the director, was blind in one eye, so was probably not interested in doing a lot of 3D gimmick shots. In fact, the only scene that really gives away the film's 3D heritage is the paddle-ball sequence at the beginning of Act Two. Rumor has it that Warner Bros. is considering a digital 3D re-release of "House of Wax" for Halloween 2008. I've got my glasses ready!!
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