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b movie  british  exploitation  horror  witches  

Explotation Cinema: Satan's Slave / Terror

Explotation Cinema: Satan's Slave / Terror

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Director: James Garrick;norman J. Warren
Actors: Michael Gough, John Nolan
Studio: Navarre Corporation
Category: DVD

List Price: $12.98
Buy New: $5.91
You Save: $7.07 (54%)



New (35) Used (7) from $5.91

Rating: 3.5 out of 5 stars 3 reviews
Sales Rank: 44060

Format: Color, Dvd-video, Widescreen, Ntsc
Language: English (Original Language)
Rating: R (Restricted)
Region: 1
Aspect Ratio: 1.78:1
Number Of Discs: 1
Running Time: 173 Minutes
Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.2
Dimensions (in): 7.5 x 5.3 x 0.6

MPN: Carton Qty 30
UPC: 787364812295
EAN: 0787364812295
ASIN: B001ATO9HK

Release Date: September 16, 2008
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
Shipping: International shipping available
Condition: BRAND NEW sealed shipped daily. International Shipping via Air Mail.

Similar Items:

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  • Beyond The Door
  • Icons of Horror: Hammer Films (2-disc) (The Curse of the Mummy's Tomb / The Two Faces of Dr. Jekyll / Scream of Fear / The Gorgon)
  • Pieces

Editorial Reviews:

Product Description
Satan s SlaveA young girl moves in with her Uncle Alexander after her parents car mysteriously explodes. After being taken in by her cousins she soon begins suffering strange visions. But what she doesn t know is that her planned role in the house is more sinister than she could have expected.TerrorBritish director James Garrick throws a party in celebration of his latest horror movie. Three hundred years earlier the diabolical witch Mad Molly placed a curse on his family after they burned her at the stake. The descendants and party-goers soon begin dying in brutally inventive fashion.System Requirements:Running Time: 173 minutesFormat: DVD MOVIE Genre: HORROR/DEMONIC POSSESSION Rating: R UPC: 787364812295 Manufacturer No: Carton Qty 30


Customer Reviews:

4 out of 5 stars Bloody British Exploitation Double Feature   January 3, 2009
Michael R Gates (Nampa, ID United States)
This double-feature DVD includes two 1970s exploitation flicks from British director Norman J. Warren: SATAN'S SLAVE (1976) and TERROR (1978). Both films were penned by David McGillivray, who also scripted two excellent films--HOUSE OF WHIPCORD (1974) and FRIGHTMARE (1974)--from the better-known director of British horror and exploitation, Pete Walker.

SATAN'S SLAVE, the weaker of these two films, stars beautiful Candace Glendenning as a young woman who is the descendant of a powerful and evil witch. After her parents are killed in a suspicious accident, she goes to live with an uncle and his son, and soon after she discovers that her relatives plan to sacrifice her during a ritual that will resurrect her infamous ancestor.

While the acting is okay and the directing adequate, the script for SATAN'S SLAVE is rather uneven and the plot is overly convoluted and hard to follow. As an exploitation horror flick, however, this film delivers the goods with plenty of gratuitous nudity and numerous gore shots that include a smashed head, a bloody suicide, and a gruesome eyeball stabbing.

The second film, TERROR, is the actual highlight of this double feature. It opens as a mob of medieval villagers capture a fleeing witch and attempt to burn her at the stake. The witch calls upon satanic forces to rescue her from her the flames, and as she escapes, she places a curse upon the descendants of the noblewoman who incited the villagers to rise up against her. This entire scene is then revealed to be the ending of a horror film, and the filmmaker claims that the story is based upon true events from his own family history. He and his female cousin, he says, are the last descendants of the noblewoman whose family was cursed by the witch. Naturally, there is skepticism among the audience for whom he has just screened the film. But at a wrap party later that evening, the filmmaker's cousin falls into a trance and attacks him with a sword...and he and his cousin begin to worry that the family curse just might be real after all.

Like the other film on this DVD, TERROR has a fair amount of female nudity--the stripper in the nightclub scene is especially eye-popping--and lots of outré gore. But this film also has a logical, comprehensible story line that is bolstered by strong performances and able directing, and the exceptional production design and cinematography create an ambiance that is exponentially eerier than that of SATAN'S SLAVE. Indeed, hardcore horror fans will recognize the distinct influence of giallo master Dario Argento on this film, especially in regards to atmosphere and gore.

This double-feature DVD offers both films at their original theatrical aspect ratios (enhanced for 16x9 TVs), and though the prints used for the transfers aren't in perfect condition, the images are very good and the soundtracks are fairly crisp and clear. Bonus materials on the DVD include a handful of trailers for other 1970s-era grindhouse and exploitation films, as well as a "grindhouse experience" option that allows you to watch both films back-to-back with concession-stand adverts and trailers inserted therein. It's almost like being in one of Manhattan's 42nd Street theaters back in the grindhouse heyday.



3 out of 5 stars the terror saves the day.   December 6, 2008
Michael P. Dobey
The terror is the reason to pick this up. It's a good low budget horror movie from the uk. The plot is straightforward and easy to understand.
And there are some gruesome deaths and a interesting rock score. A great strip scene taking place at a bar is memorable too. It's a good drive in low budget movie in which a curse takes out many victims who stand in the way of a final 300 year old curse. "THe terror" has some excellent effects for it's day too like having filmstrips attack a man, they almost engulf the man even as he is attacked by the rest of the studios equipment. the acting is good for a low budget flick too. "Satans slave" is a much poorer film but you do get two movies here for the price of one. It is confusing and you the print isn't in as good as shape as the one used in the terror either. This set is for fans of seventies horror and you may find enough fun in the terror to make you just look at 'satans slave" as a little bonus flick.



3 out of 5 stars Terror   August 4, 2008
Bartok Kinski (Prague)
3 out of 4 found this review helpful

Satan's Slave

Satan's Slave completely lacks the edgy, tense, paranoid atmosphere of foreboding doom that marked Warren's later work and the lighthearted nastiness, and the result is a tedious experience indeed, with a sub-standard Michael Gough performance, several sequences that make little sense and a central premise that just seems corny to our modern sensibilities. The opening credits should give you your first warning that something's astray, because no fewer than FIVE directors of photography are credited, which is probably why the overall look of the film is so muddled - for every sequence that assembles a degree of low-budget atmosphere, there are several that have the over-lit, barrel-scraping feel of a cheap public information film. In all, a mournful disappointment and a missed opportunity.

Terror

Terror delivers the wares. It's not for all tastes, but the effective atmosphere (Warren had obviously seen a few Dario Argento films, which helps) and the well-staged scenes of death and paranormal mayhem in the last half of the film are worth the price of admission alone. It's certainly beyond comparison above the 'typical' British horror films of the day and the wide screen photography, coupled with fittingly garish colors courtesy of (one assumes) outmoded film stock, looks superb. There's also a glorious cameo from Milton Reid, one of those "I know his face, but what's his name?" actors if ever there was one, and a decapitation set-piece that curiously plays like a low-budget homage to David Warner's grisly death in THE OMEN, whilst pointing the way forward to the lift-shaft carnage in that film's sequel. This is a solid-gold champion example of the kind of film that would never get made nowadays, anywhere, and will undoubtedly bring back fond memories of late night horror double features down at the local flick pit for Horror viewers of a certain age.


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