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Horror / Bizarre > Edgar Allan Poe Collection ® Vol. 1, The
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Edgar Allan Poe Collection ® Vol. 1, The
Annabel Lee & Other Tales of Mystery and Imagination MC-874, 2006
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Format: DVD, NTSC, Region 0 (All) |
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The first volume in The Edgar Allan Poe Collection contains some excellent adaptations of Poe's work including George Higham's award winning stop-motion animation short film inspired by the poem Annabel Lee.
Annabel Lee is quintessential Poe—a haunted soul, a lost love and the nocturnal grave-quest. The epic quality of this Orphic adventure includes expressionist visions of a lone figure on a journey through a nightmarish landscape in order to be re-united with his lost love... but first he must overcome the wrath of the "Envious Angels" that ruined his world.
The DVD also contains the short films The Raven by Peter Bradley, The Tell-Tale Heart by Alfonso S. Suarez featuring a performance by European horror legend Paul Naschy, an interview with Poe expert Paul Clemens, and making of featurettes.
| Catalog Number: MC-874 |
Type: Feature |
Genre: Horror / Bizarre |
| Copyright: 2006 |
Length: 100 minutes |
Format:
DVD Region: 0 (All) |
| TV System: NTSC |
ISBN: |
UPC: 0892586002109 |
| Label: Lurker Films, Inc. |
This title is available in Europe for Wholesale - List Prices: £13.99 / 19.95€
This is a microcinema exclusive title.
Wholesale Purchasing:
Program MC-874 is available for wholesale from Microcinema DVD. Contact info[at]microcinema.com or call at +1-415-447-9750
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Program MC-874 may be licensed for Exhibition.
Films In Compilation
Annabel Lee and Other Tales of Mystery and Imagination directed by
George
Higham
USA,
Science Fiction,
2005,
Color,
Magnetic Stereo,
01:40:00
Edgar Allan Poe... 150 years after the man's death, and his name still resonates with terror and insanity. His popularity is a constant in our culture, and Poe continues to fuel the arts even into ...
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2008-10-31 popmatters.com By Michael Barrett
The Poe disc centers on Annabel Lee, a 20-minute work of stop-motion animation from the Brooklyn studio of George Higham. Poe’s poem isn’t horror, although it has a certain morbidity. As in so much of his poetry, and even his stories, it’s about the narrator’s sense of loss for a dead woman. In this case, she died of a chill in a kingdom by the sea. The poem is quite short, and Higham interprets it as a ghastly, horrific nightmare with the narrator played by a marionette of Poe and all kinds of grisly creatures and phantasmagoric sadisms, a farrago or stew of Poe-vian elements that make the film more reminiscent of Hellraiser than any of the Roger Corman cycle. We can safely say that it seems like florid overkill, also admittedly a Poe-vian element. There’s even a moment where Poe kneels over a bloody gewgaw and screams “Nooooo!” at the sky. Higham actually calls this the Khan scene in reference to The Wrath of Khan and allows that it might be “a bit of a cliché”. Oh well!
While two commentaries on The Yellow Sign felt like one too many, this film justifies its two because Higham gives one track to detailed technical explanations of how the many, many effects were achieved, while the other track focuses exclusively on aesthetic influences--writers, painters, films. Kudos for nods to Bosch, Brueghel, Friedrich and Böcklin (Higham as Brooklyn Böcklin?). These tracks do what such things should: increase our appreciation of the work we’re watching. If that’s not enough, and it doesn’t seem to be, there’s a well-done interview with Higham which employs various angles and effects to liven his soliloquies.
The Raven is a much longer poem, though Peter Bradley makes it into a shorter film without all the visual padding. It’s in black and white (with color inserts) and its real star is the raven puppet, a wicked metallic-looking object who out-presences the clean young collegiate Poe-surrogate or the understated narrator who reads the poem. One nice element is the changing picture of pouting Lenore, whose multiple poses overlook the scene from her frame. Bradley doesn’t offer commentary but there’s a making-of on this item, and he also writes informatively about it in the booklet.
I’ve loved this poem since childhood, but seeing it enacted brought home for the first time a curious detail about the man’s behavior. Once it’s established that the raven will always answer with a single word, why does he insist on asking leading questions whose answer will enrage him rather than soothe him? He might just as well ask questions where the answer “Nevermore” would sound reassuring, like “Will I still be in this funk after next year?”
Alfonso S. Suárez’s black and white The Tell Tale Heart is a recent Spanish film starring Paul Naschy, who can justifiably be called, in today’s parlance, an icon of Spanish horror. (I suppose that means people worship his image, or at least it ought to mean that; I’m leery of how everyone suddenly went from being legends to being icons, often without even making a stop at being significant.) This film is more “inspired” by the story in question than a version of it. In fact, its characters and elements are entirely unrelated to the original. It also ends too quickly, just as its basic situation is being revealed and without any room for the title tale-telling.
Paul Day Clemens, who wrote a one-man show about Poe, provides a brief extra and also contributes to the booklet. Although few horror fans may feel that these collections are essential, they remain interesting enough to satisfy fans of the authors in question or to encourage aspiring genre filmmakers that there’s a DVD market for their exertions.
| 2008-10-24 DVD Talk By John Sinnott
Lurker Films has put out a great series DVDs showcasing films based on the work of H. P. Lovecraft. It seems only natural for them to also release films based on the works of Edgar Allen Poe, arguably the best American writer of short fiction. This volume of Poe inspired works, Annabel Lee & Other Tales of Mystery and Imagination is a good first effort, with the main problem being that the disc is a little short.
Annabel Lee (20 minutes): An amazingly creative and horrifically beautiful piece, this short tells Poe's poem with puppets and stop-motion animation. A very expressionist film, the creator tries to illustrate the narrator's feelings though the sets, props, and the design of the characters that are used and in doing so crafts a moving and forceful film.
This poem tells of a man who was in love with a beautiful woman, Annabel Lee. Their love was so strong, according to the man, that the angels themselves grew jealous and caused a cold wind to blow in from the sea. Annabel Lee became sick and died, but even death couldn't stop the man from loving his wife.
At first glance this is a rather odd poem to turn into a horror short. The poem itself doesn't concern itself with the supernatural or even anything horrific until the very last line, and even that is more pitiful than scary. The stroke of genius that director/designer George Higham had, and what makes this such a great film, is that the whole story is told through the narrator's eyes. The world is no longer beautiful and exciting to him, having lost the most precious thing he had.
Higham does an amazing job of designing the sets and characters. His angels aren't things of beauty and wonder, they're ugly, misshapen creatures that are capable of human flaws such as jealousy. The kingdom by the sea, where the story takes place, is a dark, rat infested, home to horrors, though in the flashbacks to when Annabel Lee was alive, it was a gorgeous beach, a bright and cheerful place to live.
It's easy to see why this film was chosen as the featured presentation on this disc. It is a truly remarkable short.
A/V: The full frame color image looks very good. The blacks are deep and the colors, mainly dark reds, are full. The image is a bit soft in places but that was a minor problem. There's a touch of aliasing here and there and some digital noise, but nothing significant. The narration by Jim Knipfel was clear, but he read the poem in a low booming voice like he was trying to impersonate a radio DJ, and I didn't think that worked quite as well as the rest of the film.
The Tell-Tale Heart (10 minutes): This Spanish made version of Poe's classic story features Paul Naschy, the "Spanish Lon Chaney." Made in 2003, Naschy was past his prime but still does a good job.
The only problem is that this short has only a passing resemblance to Poe's
story. In this version a man (Naschy) visits his brother after being released
from a psychiatric institution. They talk and after the man goes to bed, the
brother gets a call from the hospital where his brother was incarcerated. They
inform him that he wasn't released, but escaped. They're sending some one over
to retrieve him, but will they be in time?
This film basically took the best parts of Poe's story and threw them out. The vulture eye, the insistence that the narrator isn't mad, the eventual resolution, all of them are gone. In its place is a fairly standard film that works about as good as a bad installment of the Night Gallery. There are supposed to be some shocking moments, but none of them are, and the end just doesn't work very well since you know from the beginning that the main character is crazy. It's not too surprising that Poe is not given credit at the end of the movie. It's barely his story.
A/V: This black and white full frame image was pretty soft. Though it was filmed in 2003, it looked like it was a good 20 or 30 years older. There was a spot or two, and the contrast wasn't as stark as I would have liked, but overall it wasn't a bad picture.
The Raven (10:00): This is the poem that made Poe famous, and it is capably acted out while a narrator reads the work. A man, depressed at the loss of his love, hears a tapping at his door, and then his window. Opening the latter a raven flies in and perches upon a bust above his door. The poor man uses this as an excuse to vent his pain, frustration, and despair. (A pitiful synopsis, I know. If you've never read the poem, do so now. A Google search will turn it up.)
The film is competent and done well, but I've never felt that this poem, though simple in setting and events, led itself well to being adapted to the small screen. The archaic words work better on the printed page and I usually read it slower than the narrator did. Having said that, this is a fine adaptation and works fairly well. The raven itself was particularly nice looking.
A/V: The full frame black and white image is soft but the contrast is fine. There are a couple of spots but nothing major. The narration comes through clearly with no distortion or other common audio defects.
Extras:
There are two commentary tracks for Annabel Lee, both by George Higham. The first covers the technical aspects of filming the movie, how the puppets were crafted and how it piece was filmed. The second commentary deals with the aesthetics of the movie, where the odd scenery came from and what art influenced Higham. Both were very interesting.
There's also some video extras including a 24 minute interview with George Higham on the creation of Annabel Lee, Forgotten Lore (11 minutes) a series of interviews with the cast and crew of The Raven, a 13 minute interview with Poe expert Paul Day Clements, and finally a text biography of the author.
Final Thoughts:
While there is a lot of extra material, I thought the rest of the disc was a little scant. The three shorts total 40 minutes of time, and while the title piece is excellent, the Tell-Tale Heart is pretty lame. Poe fans will want to get this for Annabel Lee, but the rest will be better off renting it, especially due to the little replay value of the extras and the Naschy film.
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Horror / Bizarre > Edgar Allan Poe Collection ® Vol. 1, The
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