Tales of Unease: The Complete Series [DVD]

£9.9
FREE Shipping

Tales of Unease: The Complete Series [DVD]

Tales of Unease: The Complete Series [DVD]

RRP: £99
Price: £9.9
£9.9 FREE Shipping

In stock

We accept the following payment methods

Description

Image and sound are solid for a series such as this made on combination of 16mm film and PAL 625 line videotape. An author meets big fans of his most controversial work and a couple try to abandon their old car across London. Admittedly, Superstitious Ignorance is unlike The Wicker Man and The Exorcist in that it’s a PG – Tales of Unease was not about to repeat the mistakes of Late Night Horror. material suffers from being transferred at the time to PAL broadcast videotape so there's slightly washed out colours, lack of detail and moments of crush as befitting the standards of film to tape transfer of the era. It’s a story of mystery and disorientation that relies on a shock ending over explanation and almost gets away with it.

Tales of Unease on DVD - Networkonair

Starring James Bate as an isolated teenage boy who undergoes a disturbing loss of identity and Milton Johns as his unlikely nemesis, The Intruderis featured here as a brand-new high definition remaster from original film elements in its original fullscreen aspect ratio.Tales of Unease was described by TV Times (24 October 1970) as “ based on black humour, savage irony and matter of fact menace. Please contact us if any details are missing and where possible we will add the information to our listing. A few have a direct supernatural element, a couple some vaguer form of otherworldliness and a couple don't have anything like that and are pure human stories.

Tales Of Unease (1970) DVD reviewed » We Are Cult Tales Of Unease (1970) DVD reviewed » We Are Cult

The data collected including the number visitors, the source where they have come from, and the pages visted in an anonymous form. Note: Our refurbished grades - Pristine, Very Good and Good - are solely based on the cosmetic condition of the phone. He is a sand pilot and, like a sea pilot, must know his way about; he must have a strong sense of both locality and identity. British series adapted from a trio of horror-story anthologies which were edited by John Burke and published between 1960 and 1969.Frightened, yet amused by her first positive action in 20 years of marriage, she wonders what she will do when he realises his predicament. What the series overall did lack though was some sort of underlying theme or uniting premise behind the decision to tell these particular stories. If you’re familiar with 1970s British character actors, every single episode of Tales of Unease will draw a hearty “oh, it’s that guy! Disc extras are limited to a single fine still gallery but another Andrew Pixley viewing notes booklet is also included, although not provided for review. Though it doesn't quite have the guest stars that some of its contemporary series do, the performances are generally really good and in one case, Rachel Kempson in the "It's too late now" episode, truly exceptional.

Tales of Unease: The Complete Series (DVD) Michael Culver Tales of Unease: The Complete Series (DVD) Michael Culver

Filmed almost entirely on location during the spring of 1969 and broadcast during the winter of 1969-1970, this remarkable adaptation of Alan Garner’s award-winning novel was a radical production that raised the bar for what viewers could expect from a teenage drama – and which was a significant influence on children’s television throughout the 1970s. In the attic of her cousins’ old Victorian house she is confronted by Alice, a girl from the past, and discovers that time has rolled back a hundred years. This article includes a list of references, related reading, or external links, but its sources remain unclear because it lacks inline citations. A rarely-seen anthology drama series featuring stories full of menace and black humour, Tales of Unease avoids overt horror for a subtler and altogether more unsettling sense of the uncanny.There is the touch on the shoulder that comes when you are walking quickly homewards in the dark hours, full of anticipation of the warm room and bright fire, and when you pull up, startled, what face or no-face do you see? Two ruthless business executives are trapped in a highly automated building by an unseen, disgruntled employee. During lockdown, I started to spend some of my time watching 70's horror anthology shows that I could find on free streaming services.

Tales of Unease (TV Series 1970) - IMDb

But what is the connection between this owl service, the strange gardener, the angry housekeeper and the mysterious local legend? Ride, Ride is a ghostly tale concerning an art student who struggles to get a panicked girl home on the back of his motorcycle.The present becomes strangely entangled with the past when Lucy’s aunt dies and she must leave the peaceful countryside to live with trendy relatives in London. Roy Dotrice, looking alarmingly like Noel Edmonds, plays an arrogant comic book creator whose signature creation Jo Jo is a vigilante who makes Dirty Harry look like a socialist polytechnic lecturer. It's perhaps interesting that, whilst I wouldn't describe any of these episodes as being particularly scary, it's the outcome of one of the "human" ones (Bad Bad Jo Jo) that has stayed with me the longest. Two business executives – Harker (John Stratton) and Johnson (Michael Culver) – are trapped for the night on a deserted office floor by a disgruntled employee who has hacked the building management system. has sublimely proved, half an hour is more than enough to contain a self-contained story which ticks every narrative box as well as chilling your bones.



  • Fruugo ID: 258392218-563234582
  • EAN: 764486781913
  • Sold by: Fruugo

Delivery & Returns

Fruugo

Address: UK
All products: Visit Fruugo Shop