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Upcoming Mill Creek Blu-ray Releases
Posted October 25, 2022 05:44 AM by
Mill Creek Entertainment will release on Blu-ray Sci-Fi from the Vault: 4 Classic Films and Thrillers from the Vault: 8 Classic Horror Films. The two releases will be available for purchase on December 13.
In Tirol in the late 19th century, when twins are born to the ruling Baron de Berghman, the youngest, Anton, is sent away due to a family legend that the youngest twin will kill the oldest. Two decades later, the elder twin, Gregor (Boris Karloff) arranges for Anton's (also Karloff) return so that the brothers may rule their country jointly. Upon Anton's arrival, mysterious disappearances and murders occur -- and when the local peasants accuse Gregor, he assumes his more popular twin's identity.
The Man They Could Not Hang (1939)
Scientist Dr Savaard creates a life-saving artificial heart, but his experiment is interrupted and he is sentenced to hang when the authorities intervene following the death of one his subjects. Savaard promises revenge if he can escape the gallows.
Before I Hang (1940)
Imprisoned for euthanizing a patient, Dr. John Garth (Boris Karloff) spends his time on death row trying to concoct a serum that will reverse the aging process. He injects himself with his potion and miraculously becomes younger, but, unbeknown to him, he is also tainted by the blood of a homicidal maniac that was used in the formula. After his sentence is commuted, Garth returns home to his loving daughter, Martha (Evelyn Keyes), but is soon compelled to go on a murderous rampage.
The Man with Nine Lives (1940)
Missing for ten years, Dr Leon Kravaal has been found. Frozen solid in a block of ice, Kravaal was conducting forbidden experiments in human cryogenics when he became trapped within his own freezer. Thawed out by Tim Morgan and Judy Blair, Kravaal vows to continue his research, using his enemies as guinea pigs.
The Devil Commands (1941)
Overcome by grief after the accidental death of his wife, respected university professor Dr. Julian Blair (Boris Karloff) becomes obsessed with using his experiments to communicate with her. Having captured her brain waves on a machine, Blair must find a receptor for them, and tries using a single live subject. After several failures, Blair quits his university job and hides out in a small New England town, where he adds more unsuspecting subjects -- both alive and dead -- to his experiments.
The Boogie Man Will Get You (1942)
Winnie Slade, a young divorcee, buys an old historic house from nutty Professor Billings (Boris Karloff), who lives there with his daffy housekeeper and bizarre neighbors, in order to convert it into a hotel. She allows them to continue to live on the property - unaware that the Professor continues to experiment unsuccessfully on traveling salesmen, the bodies of whom have filled the cellar. They are joined by a variety of eccentric characters including a quack doctor who doubles as the town's sheriff, Winnie's frenetic ex-husband, an oddball choreographer, a punchdrunk traveling salesman, and a lunatic escapee from the Italian army...
The Return of the Vampire (1943)
In 1918 London, Hungarian vampire Armand Tesla (Bela Lugosi) uses his servant, werewolf Andreas Obry (Matt Willis), to assist in procuring victims. When a friend of Lady Jane Ainsley (Frieda Inescort) becomes Tesla's next victim, Jane and an acquaintance stalk the vampire and kill him by driving a stake through his heart. But 23 years later, a German bomb disturbs Tesla's grave, and cemetery workers restoring the site pull the stake from his corpse, bringing him back to life to seek revenge.
Five (1951)
The world is destroyed in a nuclear holocaust. Only five Americans survive, including a pregnant woman, a neo-Nazi, a black man and a bank clerk.
Several years earlier gangster Frank Buchanan was deported to his native Italy through the efforts of law enforcement authorities and rival gangsters who inform on him. While in Europe he meets scientist Wilhelm Steigg, who has perfected a method of reanimating dead people and controlling their behavior with oral commands. Buchanan underwrites Steigg's experiments and uses his technology to wreak revenge on his enemies. Unfortunately radioactive poisoning is a by-product of the process, and authorities use radiation detecting devices like Geiger counters to pinpoint the source of the sinister plot...
It Came From Beneath the Sea (1955)
While on a routine mission, Cmdr. Pete Mathews (Kenneth Tobey) runs into trouble when his submarine is nearly sunk by an unknown creature. Back at base in Pearl Harbor, Dr. John Carter (Donald Curtis) and Professor Lesley Joyce (Faith Domergue) identify the beast as a giant octopus from the nether reaches of Mindanao Deep, which has been awakened by nearby nuclear testing. Radioactive and monstrously huge, the rampaging leviathan is heading toward the North American Pacific Coast.
20 Million Miles to Earth (1957)
A manned space flight from Venus crash lands in the Mediterranean, losing its most precious cargo: reptilian eggs from the planet's surface. They come into the possession of an Italian zoologist (Frank Puglia), who watches as one hatches to reveal a rapidly-growing monster. His American granddaughter, Marisa (Joan Taylor), and returned astronaut Calder (William Hopper) must battle with the American and Italian military to corral the creature before it destroys everything in its path.
The 30 Foot Bride of Candy Rock (1959)
In this satire of 1950s sci-fi matinees, Lou Costello plays an amateur scientist who invents a time machine that also has a way of changing people into strange things as it moves them through time.
I know Mill Creeks awfully spotty record, but if these are all Sony titles, which I'm guessing they are, then there's a good chance they'll look as good as most of the titles in the Film Noir archive series they did. Fingers crossed
so for the Thrillers From the Vault collection, it adds The Return Of the Vampire and Five to what was previously released in Eureka's Karloff At Columbia, if my math is correct.
fingers crossed as well. two B&W films per Blu-ray, hopefully not pushed on to a single layer. also hopeful we're getting subtitles with these...
@stevenpaulalejandro - Mill Creek only distributed the Noir Archive series. Kit Parker did all the work. Probably the more accurate comparison would be the Mill Creek Hammer Films: The Ultimate Collection to the Powerhouse Indicator Hammer Volume releases. Those were both Sony collections.
@yogiyahooeys, thanks for the clarification. I never picked up the MC Hammer Box, but did buy a handful of the twofers they had with mediocre picture quality. I was overall happy with their Rita Hayworth box, but sorely dissapointed in the below sub par MC Randolph Scott set
Down for Thrillers but are they really putting out that Sci-Fi set when three of the four films have already gotten single-disc releases? You're just upcharging for Candy Rock at that point.
It was careless to release titles like "20 Million Miles to Earth" and "IT came from beneath the sea" in this set since both of these have been widely available for some time. Only "The 30 Foot Bride of Candy Rock" is the one new title to Blu Ray of interest to me. Another poorly planned release.
Don't forget guys, Like Father Like Son, The Freshman, and Side Out are all Sony titles too. Sony is definitely the best of the Big Six, but MC is just licensing old transfers, doing a gauntlet they call a remaster, jamming it on a BD-25 (BD-50 if there's more than three movies), and calling it a day. We're honestly lucky they aren't using the VHS and laserdisc transfers on their Blu-rays, none of you can honestly tell me MC wouldn't stoop that low.