I hate it when this happens.
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They broke the Internet!
Edgar Barrier, Mara Corday and Jeff Morrow contemplate the fiery collapse of their film careers in "The Giant Claw" (1957)
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The hideously disfigured Phantom (Herbert Lom) leaps to the stage to save Christine (Heather Sears) in Hammer's "The Phantom of the Opera" (1962)
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Frankenstein Unmasked: Peter Cushing in "Frankenstein Must be Destroyed" (1969)
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The Baroness Arrives. (Monique van Vooren, Udo Kier, Arno Juerging.) Paul Morrissey's "Flesh for Frankenstein" (1973)
"Flesh for Frankenstein" (1973): Dinner with the Baroness (Monique van Vooren)
Baron Frankenstein's "female zombie" (Dalila Di Lazzaro) in her holding tank.
The Baroness (Monique van Vooren) and the Children, Erik (Marco Liofredi) and Monica (Nicoletta Elmi) arriving at the Frankenstein estate.
The Aquarium in the children's room. "Flesh for Frankenstein" was shot in 3D, which accounts for the numerous closeups and tracking shots of of foreground objects.
The baron's son, Erik, has his own guillotine with which he decapitates one of his sister's dolls. "Flesh for Frankenstein" (1973).
A signature in-your-face shot (originally 3D) of the "Inspector Gadget"-like extending shears with which the diabolical Baron Frankenstein (Udo Kier) decapitates a local peasant in "Flesh for Frankenstein."
Sacha (Srdjan Zelenovic) loses his head and Frankenstein gets his "Serbian nose."
The remains of an involuntary organ donor lies on the slab in the Baron's "lavatory."
The Baron's demented laboratory assistant, Otto (Arno Juerging) extends the "seminal vesicles" toward the camera in one of many shots calculated to make maximum use of the 3D effect.
Frankenstein's depraved assitant, Otto (Arno Juerging), working the body hoist.
Arano Juerging committed suicide shortly after filming "Blood for Dracula" and "Flesh for Frankenstein," which were shot back-to-back in Italy. According to Udo Kier, Juerging became hopelessly distraught over the death of his mother and threw himself out a window.
R.I.P, Arno.
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From the crazed brain of Andy Milligan comes the most hysterical (and hysterically maladroit) "historical epic" ever conceived -- Torture Dungeon! Packed with gore, perversion, bad acting, and the most ridiculously cheap sets and costumes ever committed to film, Milligan's previously lost "classick" has been rediscovered and has been made available for FREE in all its execrable ineptitude on TUBI, the world's greatest public repository of cult horror and exploitation cinema. Check it out!
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