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Deathmaster on DVD, Horror, Robert Quarry, Bill Ewing

Deathmaster on DVD, Horror, Robert Quarry, Bill Ewing

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Quarry is a mysterious, articulate stranger who draws a cult like following of local hippies. Rather than showing them peace and love, he has more sinister plans for them, as he is a vampire.

Actors: Robert Quarry, Bill Ewing, Brenda Dickson

Year Of Release : 1972

Running Time: 84minutes   Color

Language : English

(Manufactured On Demand , Region 0.)

This DVD will play in DVD players worldwide 

POSTAGE : Free In Australia. Rest Of The World at Table Rate

Australia : All Orders Of Two Or More Dvds Are Upgraded To Tracked Shipping.

Rest Of The World : All orders shipped with Tracking

Delivery times for tracked shipping are halved compared to untracked shipping

Australia 7 to 15 days : Overseas 18 to 22 days

COMBINED POSTAGE : ONLY CHARGED FOR FIRST DVD ALL OTHERS IN A MULTIPLE ORDER ARE POST FREE

All Dvds Come In A Dvd Case With Color Artwork And Printed Disc.

ALL DVDs ARE AVAILABLE ON Mpeg4 DOWNLOAD FILE

Good Horror Flick

Good horror flick. No movie can be overlooked that has wimpy John Fielder as a fearless vampire stalker. Seems a hippie clan up LA's Topanga Canyon is enticed by ethereal stranger (Quarry) into coming to his canyon mansion. Of course, he has dire motives for enticing them. But he's a smooth talker, with what sounds like a profound message about life and eternity. I couldn't help thinking Charles Manson given the general context of hippies following a charismatic leader. But the mansion turns out to be something of a labyrinth of horror, as the care-free kids soon find out.

I like the way Pico (Ewing) is shown early on as possessing what was then an unusual knowledge of Asian martial arts. That way, we know he's more than his rather slight appearance. He'll need that when he defies the imperious Khorda. Then too, the exotic looking Barbado (Hilton) makes a scary zombie-like enforcer. That opening scene with him at the beach amounts to a real grabber. Also, there're a couple of good twists that break with genre clichés.

Anyway, pitting hippies against a vampire is an imaginative premise that plays out in pretty effective fashion. So ignore establishment critic Roger Ebert who hated the movie (IMDB), probably because the title smacked of lowly drive-in fare. And kudos to leading-man actor Ray Danton who shows talent in his first directorial outing. Meanwhile, as an LA resident, I guess I won't be going up Topanga Canyon any time soon.



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