Brand new factory sealed 2-disc set of 7 horror films. All are full frame except for the two that are noted. Great for old school TVs as the image will fill your square frame.
NIGHT of the LIVING DEAD (B&W): Standard for all monster sets is this George Romero zombie classic. Space experiments set off a high level of radiation that makes the newly dead return to life, with a taste for human flesh. Handful of holdouts find shelter in a farmhouse. Claustrophobic, terrifying, grusome, extreme, and yes, humorous.
COUNT DRACULA and HIS VAMPIRE BRIDE (widescreen): Christopher Lee, playing Dracula for the last time, has a brief speaking role in this modern day take. Not content with his female vampire followers, he wants to control the entire world with the help of a scientist and black-death bacteria. As a descendant of Van Helsing, Peter Cushing stops Dracula, who ends up in a thornbush.
NIGHTMARE CASTLE (B&W): Barbara Steele plays two roles in one of her best horror films. When scientist Paul Muller discovers his wife (Barbara) with the gardner, he chains them up in the crypt (after disfiguring the man with a hot poker), cuts their hearts out, and hides them in an urn. He also uses their blood to rejuvenate his mistress and marries his wife's blond cousin (Barbara again) for her money. The dead couple return as ghosts and give the sadistic scientist the what-for.
DEVIL's NIGHTMARE (widescreen): Seven tourists (symbolizing the seven deadly sins) go to a remote European villa where they are seduced and killed by a succubus (Erika Blanc). The deaths are various and gruesome. Daniel Emilfork, whom you might recognize from some Fellini films, shows up as the Devil. It was released here in '74 in an attempt to cash in on the success of the 'Exorcist'.
SHE-BEAST: First feature by England's promising new director Michael Reeves (then 21) stars Barbara Steele as a tourist in Transylvania possessed by a vengeful ugly witch. Ian Ogilvy is her husband. Lots of odd gags about Communists in modern Eastern Europe make this a unique thriller.
SNOWBEAST: A 'Jaws' inspired abominable-snowman TV-movie. The beast terrorizes a ski resort where a winter carnival celebration is going on with some excellant ski sequences. Owner Sylvia Sydney tries to keep it hushed up, but panic prevails.
WEREWOLF vs VAMPIRE WOMAN: Waldemar Daninsky, El Hombre Lobo (Paul Naschy), returns to life after a silver bullet is removed during an autopsy. As the wolfman, he's a snarling vicious killer. As Waldemar, he joins two female students searching for the tomb of a witch. The revived vampire/witch turns one of the girls into a vampire, and the monsters of the title fight.