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NEW UK/US/CA TITLE: Mill of the Stone Women (Limited Edition Blu-ray) Release date: November 29 Arrow RRP: £35:00 "Before Black Sabbath, before I Vampiri, director Giorgio Ferroni (The Lion of Thebes, Blood for a Silver Dollar) introduced audiences to period horror Italian-style with his chilling 1960 shocker Mill of the Stone Women – a classic tale of terror redolent with the atmosphere of vintage Hammer Horror. Young art student Hans von Arnam (Pierre Brice, Night of the Damned) arrives by barge at an old mill to write a monograph about its celebrated sculptures of women in the throes of death and torture, maintained and curated by the mill’s owner, the hermetic Professor Wahl (Herbert Böhme, Secret of the Red Orchid). But when Hans encounters the professor’s beautiful and mysterious daughter Elfi (Scilla Gabel, Modesty Blaise), his own fate becomes inexorably bound up with hers, and with the shocking secret that lies at the heart of the so-called Mill of the Stone Women. The first Italian horror film to be shot in color, Mill of the Stone Women prefigured a raft of other spaghetti nightmares, including the work of maestros Mario Bava and Dario Argento. Arrow Video is proud to present this brand-new restoration of one of the foundational titles of Italian horror." 2-DISC LIMITED EDITION CONTENTS
DISC 1 – THE ITALIAN AND ENGLISH EXPORT VERSIONS
DISC 2 – THE FRENCH AND US VERSIONS (LIMITED EDITION EXCLUSIVE)
__________________ People try to put us down Just because we get around Golly, Gee! it's wrong to be so guilty |
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__________________ " I have seen trees that look like tortured souls" |
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NEW UK/US/CA TITLE: Phantom of the Mall: Eric’s Revenge (Limited Edition Blu-ray) Release date: November 22 Arrow RRP: £25:00 "With numerous interpretations of Gaston Leroux’s classic novel The Phantom of the Opera having been turned out over the years, it was only a matter of time before the slasher genre decided to take a stab at the tale – step forward 1989’s Phantom of the Mall: Eric’s Revenge! High school sweethearts Eric Matthews and Melody Austin are so in love, but their youthful romance is cut tragically short when Eric apparently dies in a fire that engulfs his family home. One year later and Melody is trying to move on with her life, taking up a job at the newly built Midwood Mall along with her friends. But the mall, which stands on the very site of Eric’s former home, has an uninvited guest – a shadowy, scarred figure which haunts its airducts and subterranean passageways, hellbent on exacting vengeance on the mall’s crooked developers. Directed by Richard Friedman (Scared Stiff, Doom Asylum), and featuring star turns from Pauly Shore and Morgan Fairchild, Phantom of the Mall: Eric’s Revenge swoops onto Blu-ray™ in an extras-packed edition which proves that Arrow Video’s love for ’80s slasher fare never dies!" LIMITED EDITION 2-DISC BLU-RAY CONTENTS
DISC ONE – THE THEATRICAL CUT (BLU-RAY)
DISC TWO – THE TV & INTEGRAL FAN CUTS (BLU-RAY)
__________________ People try to put us down Just because we get around Golly, Gee! it's wrong to be so guilty |
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I'm guessing that Arrow are determined to stop any other distributor from releasing Battle Royale by releasing every version possible. Phantom Of The Mall is a Film, I would have been all over. However like (seemingly) 90% of retro releases (88, 101, Eureka included) it's not worth £25:00. Hopefully a standard version becomes available. Also was Eric's Revenge an alternate title because if it was, I'm assuming that the makers of Phantom Of The Opera may have had issues with it? |
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If on the other hand it was nicking songs from the Lloyd Webber version then there would be a case to answer as that will have it's own copyright due to the original material involved. |
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It is indeed impossible to copyright a title, which is why John Carpenter was able to release a film called The Fog a few years after the identically-titled James Herbert novel (much to Herbert's chagrin). However, you can trademark a title, which applies to the likes of Star Wars, Jurassic Park and anything with the names "Harry" and "Potter" in sufficiently close proximity. But trademarking requires proactive effort and expense, and is only granted where there's something obviously unique and lucrative about the property - so I suspect that if Andrew Lloyd Webber were to try to trademark the phrase "Phantom of the...", the relevant trademark registration bodies would basically go "ha ha ha ha ha no." Not least because, as you rightly say, Lloyd Webber wasn't even the originator. There was a very funny case circa 1993-4 when London Transport launched a campaign aimed at people who park in bus lanes with the slogan "Jurassic Parker" and the same font and roundel as in the film. Universal threatened to sue, as LT were blatantly imitating what as far as they were concerned was a trademarked property... only for LT (who clearly employed savvy lawyers) to say "fine, sue us, but if you do, we'll sue you for nicking the roundel with a bar through it that's demonstrably been identified with London Transport for decades before Michael Crichton and Steven Spielberg were even born. Oh, and there's no way that you're going to be able to demonstrate financial loss [the usual reason for a trademark-related lawsuit], because there obviously wouldn't have been any, so ner on you." (The original was a bit more legalistic, but that was broadly the gist. Anyway, Universal folded there and then, probably wisely because if it had gone to court the coverage would have been hilarious and they might well have lost.) |
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Both Arrow artworks have that title. |
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There was a DVD release with just Eric's Revenge as the title. Phantom Of The Mall is a better title. |
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