GO BEHIND
THE SCENES
WITH THE
DIRECTORS
WHO HAVE
CREATED SOME
OF MOVIE
HISTORY’S
GREATEST
HORROR FILMS
THE
FEARMAKERS
COLLECTION
Three-Disc,
10 Episode
Set
Available
From Elite
Entertainment
May 8th for
$29.98
Scarborough,
ME – They
are
considered
the true
masters of
horror, with
directing
careers that
span nearly
a century.
From
“Dracula” to
“Cat
People,”
“The House
on Haunted
Hill” to
“The Texas
Chainsaw
Massacre,”
these
illustrious
luminaries
literally
created a
film genre.
Their
fascinating
careers and
iconic films
are
showcased in
“The
Fearmakers
Collection,”
a
three-disc,
10 episode
series
highlighting
some of the
world’s
greatest
makers of
classic
horror and
suspense
films. The
set will be
available
from Elite
Entertainment
on May 8th
at a
suggested
retail price
of $29.98.
“Never
before have
horror fans
had the
opportunity
to hear
stories of
the horror
genre’s
greatest
directors,
all in one
complete DVD
set,” said
Vini
Bancalari,
President,
Elite
Entertainment.
“From
interviews
with some of
the
directors
themselves,
to the
talent
featured
both in
front of and
behind the
camera, and
those that
were
inspired by
these
filmmaking
giants, ‘The
Fearmakers
Collection’
will
undoubtedly
become a
mainstay of
any horror
film
collection.”
Each disc in
“The
Fearmakers
Collection”
set
highlights
an array of
interviews
with
directors,
producers,
actors,
writers and
critics that
have made
their mark
in the
horror and
suspense
film field.
The half
hour
episodes
feature the
careers of:
Jack
Arnold—Known
for his
exotic
settings and
master of
the 3-D
shock
effect,
Arnold’s
resume
includes
such
classics as
“It Came
From Outer
Space,” “The
Creature
from the
Black
Lagoon” and
“The
Incredible
Shrinking
Man.”
Tod
Browning—Renowned
as the
director of
the original
“Dracula”
(1931),
Browning
also made
his mark in
the horror
world with
“Freaks,”
“Mark of the
Vampire” and
“London
After
Midnight.”
William
Castle—The
master of
the
promotional
“gimmick”
(such as
attaching
vibrating
devices to
theater
seats),
Castle
directed
such popular
‘50s films
as “The
House on
Haunted
Hill,” “The
Tingler” and
“Macabre.”
Roger Corman—Having
set a record
for the
shortest
amount of
time to
shoot a
professional
feature film
(two days,
one night to
film “Little
Shop of
Horrors,”
which
featured a
young,
unknown Jack
Nicholson)
Corman went
on to have
an
illustrious
career with
such films
as “It
Conquered
The World,”
“The Fall of
the House of
Usher,” “The
Pit and the
Pendulum”
and “The
Raven.”
Terence
Fisher—Fisher
got his big
break at the
age of 52
with “The
Curse of
Frankenstein,”
a shocker
that set a
new standard
for modern
horror
films. His
other works
include
“Horror of
Dracula,”
“The Hound
of the
Baskervilles”
and “The
Phantom of
the Opera.”
Tobe
Hooper—Perhaps
no
modern-day
director is
more
associated
with one
film than
Tobe Hooper
and the
original
“Texas
Chainsaw
Massacre.”
Roman
Polanski—Considered
a cinematic
master of
many film
genres,
Polanski set
a high-water
mark with
his riveting
work
directing
“Rosemary’s
Baby.” His
other
notable
horror-themed
projects
include
“Repulsion,”
“The Tenant”
and the
horror/vampire
spoof “The
Fearless
Vampire
Killers.”
Jacques
Tourneur—French
filmmaker
Tourneur got
his big
break in
1942, when
noted
producer Val
Lewton
started up
the new
horror unit
of RKO and
assigned
Tourneur to
direct its
first
picture,
“Cat
People.”
Other works
include “I
Walked with
a Zombie,”
“The Leopard
Man” and
“Curse of
the Demon.”
Roland
West—Though
his
directing
career was
short lived,
West was
known for
such
atmospheric,
moody horror
films as
“The Bat,”
“The Bat
Whispers”
and “The
Monster” and
remains even
better known
for a real
life murder
case in
which he was
a suspect!
Robert
Wise—While
he’s best
known for
directing
such movie
musical
classics as
“West Side
Story” and
“The Sound
of Music,”
Wise is
immortal to
horror fans
as the
architect of
such genre
classics as
“Curse of
the Cat
People,”
“The Body
Snatcher”
and “The
Haunting.”
Each episode
of “The
Fearmakers”
also
features
interviews
with a
variety of
talent
connected
with these
movie
masters and
the horror
film world,
including:
John Agar,
Samuel Z.
Arkoff,
Dario
Argento,
John
Carpenter,
Jeffrey
Combs, Joe
Dante,
Stuart
Gordon,
Richard
Matheson and
David J.
Skal.
The DVD set
is based on
the popular
book “The
Fearmakers,”
by John
McCarty, who
is
co-producer,
co-director,
co-writer,
co-editor
and narrator
of the
series. The
book
profiles
about 20
classic
horror and
suspense
film
directors
(including
the 10
featured in
the DVD
collection).
John McCarty
is the
author of
more than 20
non-fiction
books on the
film and
entertainment
industry,
including
his most
recent
title,
Bullets Over
Hollywood:
The American
Gangster
Picture from
the Silents
to The
Sopranos (Da
Capo Press).
McCarty
recently
completed a
documentary
about the
late
Oscar-winning
filmmaker
and AFI Life
Achievement
Award winner
Robert Wise,
whom McCarty
interviewed
in 1996.
Elite
Entertainment
was founded
in 1993. The
company is
currently
one of the
leaders in
the
restoration
and
distribution
of horror,
science
fiction and
cult DVD
titles,
including
“Night of
the Living
Dead,” “Evil
Dead,”
“Tower of
Evil” and “I
Spit On Your
Grave.”
Other titles
include the
cult
favorite
“Horror;” a
triple
feature on
the
Masterworks
of the
German
Horror
Cinema,
including
the original
silent films
“Nosferatu,”
“Der Golem”
and “The
Cabinet of
Dr. Caligari;”
the
“Drive-In
Discs”
series, and
the popular
Millennium
Edition
series,
including
“Night of
the Living
Dead,”
“Re-Animator”
and “I Spit
On Your
Grave.”
Visit
www.elitedisc.com.