| issue 68 |
ships from 19 July 1999 |
UK £3.25 / US $5.99 |
The Blair
Witch Project
How an independently-made film with no star actors was hailed as the hit
of the Sundance Film Festival, and is already being referred to as the
scariest film ever made. Plus: we reveal the history of the Blair
Witch
more...
The Abominable Dr. Phibes
Vincent Price has a ball as the deranged Doctor as we feature a
flashback to this Horror classic, also starring Joseph Cotten and
Terry-Thomas
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Talos the
Mummy
Scriptwriter Keith Williams explains how he created a new variation on
the Mummy legend, and its progress to the screen starring Christopher Lee. Plus
a Shivers review! |
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Hannibal Returns!
As Dr Lecter returns in Thomas Harris sequel to The Silence of
the Lambs we look back to Hannibal the Cannibals first screen
incarnation in Michael Manns Manhunter. Plus: Kim Newman on the
new book
Buffy Banned
Following the Columbine High School Massacre, two episodes of Buffy were
removed from the schedules, including the crucial season finale. What happened
next was almost stranger than fiction... Plus: a special
pull-out Graduation poster of the Scooby Gang!
Pumpkinhead
In 1987, effects maestro Stan Winston directed a chilling tale of
backwoods Horror, soon to be re-released on video
Stigmata
A preview of the new Frank Mancuso Jr.-produced psychological Horror
film starring Patricia Arquette (as a woman who develops Christ-like mystical
wounds) and Gabriel Byrne
CineXS
A cult Horror festival promises to bring some rare gems to deepest
Hertfordshire this September
Plus our regular sections:
- News including: Christopher Fowlers surreal and
sexy Horror novels are to be brought to the screen, plus Dimension Films go
Platinum
- eight pages of
reviews. On-line selections:
Herzog's Nosferatu on DVD, plus a new book on Lucio Fulci
- Writer and broadcaster Kim Newman isnt
impressed by Thomas Harris Hannibal in Opinion
- Ingrid Pitt looks forward to a Monster
convention and anticipates the wedding of the year in The
Pitt of Horror
- The Fright of Your
Life: Bela Lugosi plays a human monster in a British Horror movie from
the 1930s, Dark Eyes of London
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