Shanks (1974) [Cinématographe 4K Ultra HD + Blu-ray Promo Trailer]

#horror – #Trailers – #horrormovies – #Shanks – @VinegarSyndrome –

Malcolm Shanks (Marcel Marceau, Barbarella) is a deaf, mute, reclusive puppeteer who lives with his overbearing sister (Tsilla Chelton, Peppermint Soda) and her lush of a husband, Mr. Barton (Philippe Clay, French Cancan). The only source of joy in his harsh world is his puppets, which is noticed by a beguiling inventor named Dr. Baker (also played by Marceau), who promptly offers him a job as his assistant. Upon Dr. Baker’s sudden death, Shanks discovers that he can, with the aid of electrodes, reanimate the dead, bringing a new reality to their experiments.

The final film from gimmick-prone, American genre film icon William Castle (The Tingler, The House on Haunted Hill), SHANKS is a decidedly surrealist amalgamation of quirky fantasy and mid-70s character-driven horror. Anchored by a delectable dual performance from celebrated French actor Marcel Marcau, with potently eerie camera work by 13 Ghosts cinematographer Joseph F. Biroc and an atmospheric score by legendary composer Alex North (Spartacus, The Bad Seed), Cinématographe is proud to present William Castle’s often overlooked slice of mid-70s alienation in its 4K UHD debut from a brand new restoration from its original negative.

Shanks is available now on 4K UHD & Blu-ray from Cinématographe!
https://ift.tt/USoOK8G

directed by: William Castle
starring: Marcel Marceau, Tsilla Chelton, Philippe Clay, Cindy Eilbacher, Helena Kallianiotes, Larry Bishop
1974 / 93 min / 1.85:1 / English DTS-HD MA 1.0

Additional info:

2-Disc Set: 4K Ultra HD + Region Free Blu-ray
New audio commentary with film historians Kim Newman and Barry Forshaw

New interview with producer Steven North

No Words for the Dead: Reanimating William Castle, Visual Language and The Path to Shanks – a new video essay by Daniel Kremer

Marcel Marceau on Shanks – an archival interview with the actor 
Vintage radio spots 

New text essays by culture writer Heather Drain, film critic Alexandra Heller-Nicholas and film professor Murray Leeder, editor of ReFocus: The Films of William Castle
English SDH subtitles