However, just as you can’t keep a good revenant down, so Hammer staged its own resurrection in 2008, with the reborn studio specialising in producing mid-to-low budget horror films. The first ...
HORROR fans can immerse themselves in the history of Hammer Films this Halloween with the premiere of a highly anticipated documentary. Narrated by celebrated actor Charles Dance OBE, Hammer: ...
Terrifier 3 is topping the box office, bringing its grisly delights to audiences that couldn't be bothered to see another goddamn Joker movie ... pleasures of Hammer horror, to the works of ...
Hammer's Dracula was released in the USA (where it was known as Horror of Dracula) on 8 May, 1958, and in the UK a few weeks later, on 16 June, 1958, with an 'X' certificate, signifying 'For ...
Few brand names loom larger over horror movie history than Hammer Films. Founded in 1934 by William Hinds (better known by his stage name Will Hammer), the British production company became ...
As with Mark Twain and Count Dracula, rumours of horror specialist Hammer’s demise have been greatly exaggerated. The British film company, which first shook up cinema in the late 50s with its ...
It emphasised the early decision by Hammer to make colour horror films before anyone else, before its descent into gratuitous nudity with the likes of The Vampire Lovers and Lust For A Vampire in ...
Artificial intelligence recreates one of the most recognizable faces of the Hammer horror films in the 1950s, ‘60s and ‘70s in a new documentary.
Hammer has become a synonym for horror, a name known even by people who haven’t seen a single one of its movies, and Heroes, Legends and Monsters charts its hair-raising history. It's an ...
If you say the words “Hammer Horror”, film lovers of a certain age will feel an immediate Proustian rush, thinking immediately of the appearances of Christopher Lee, Peter Cushing and Ingrid ...