Corridor of Blood – Artia13 est rémunéré par notre partenaire Amazon
DVD et Blu-ray > Films
Boîtier DVD avec fourreau
Rapport de forme : 1.33:1
Production interrompue par le fabricant : Non
Classé : 12 ans et plus
Réalisateur : Robert Day
Format : PAL
Durée : 1 heure et 27 minutes
Date de sortie : 28 février 2017
Acteurs : Boris Karloff, Christopher Lee, Betta St. John, Finlay Currie, Adrienne Corri
Doublé : : Anglais
Sous-titres : : Français
Langue : Anglais (Dolby Digital 2.0 Mono)
Studio : Movinside
ASIN : B01MU0D85G
Nombre de disques : 1
Prix : 9,49 €
(à partir de Jun 01, 2025 17:13:16 UTC – Details)
AJOUTER AU PANIER
Les acheteurs donnent la note de 4.5/5 à cet article
Avis sur le films
Reviewer: peter no
Rating: 5,0 sur 5 étoiles
Title: UNE RARETÉ de BORIS KARLOFF et CHRISTOPHER LEE
Review: UN FILM de 1958 en NOIR et BLANC , L,IMAGE SOMME TOUTES est TRÈS BIEN POUR L,ÉPOQUE . PETIT DÉFAUTS apparait à PEINE , le SON est TRÈS BIEN , VERSION ORIGINALE en ANGLAIS MAIS SOUS-TITRES en FRANCAIS qui se LIT TRÈS BIEN . BORIS KARLOFF TOUJOURS ÉGAL À LUI MÊME , et CHRISTOPHER LEE joue un TUEUR SADIQUE et SANS PITIÉ ADMIRABLEMENT BIEN JOUER . ET LE FILM A ÉTÉ TOURNÉ JUSTE AVANT SON CASTING POUR JOUER DANS LE FILM ; HORRORS of DRACULA en 1958 . BORIS KARLOFF et CHRISTOPHER LEE ONT FAIT 3 FILMS D,HORREURS INCLUANT CELUI -CI . QUE DU BONBON ,ce FILM AVEC UN SCÉNARIO TRÈS BIEN FICELÉ , LES DÉCORS et les COSTUMES GRANDIOSES pour un FILM de SÉRIE B . MAIS à ce QUI ME CONCERNE , C,EST une RARETÉ AVEC 2 GRANDS ACTEURS de FILMS D,HORREURS MONSTRUEUSEMENT CONNUES DANS les ANNÉES 1950 et 1960 . et BORIS KARLOFF DS LES ANNÉES 1930 POUR SON RÔLE INOUBLIABLE du MONSTRE de FRANKENSTEIN . CORRIDOR of BLOOD se passe dans les ANNÉES 1840 AVANT QUE L,ANESTHÉSIE SOIT DÉCOUVERTE , un sujet fort INTÉRESSANT , qui bascule dans L,HORREUR TRÈS BIEN FAIT . COURREZ L,ACHETER CA VAUT la PEINE POUR les AMATEURS du GENRE HORREURS . . . D,UN CANADIEN TRÈS CONTENT de L,AVOIR . . .
Reviewer: Llaurens Pierre
Rating: 4,0 sur 5 étoiles
Title: pas pour tous
Review: pour amateurs only
Reviewer: mitsou
Rating: 5,0 sur 5 étoiles
Title: Impeccable
Review: Impeccable
Reviewer: di falco
Rating: 5,0 sur 5 étoiles
Title: CORRIDOR OF BLOOD
Review: très bien et satisfait
Reviewer: wist
Rating: 3,0 sur 5 étoiles
Title: copie desastreuse mais enfin une édition la meilleure du lot
Review: d’après une histoire vraie sur la découverte de l’anesthésie.malheureusement le dvd est une suite de saccades d’images et de bruits d’images à certains moments, aurait-il été possible d’y remédier sur un bluray? il doit manquer des photogrammes tellement on a l’impression que çà va vite par endroits. si une nouvelle restauration est possible faites-là car c’est pour moi le meilleur titres de tous les films fantastiques édités par » MOVINSIDE »
Reviewer: guy v.
Rating: 2,0 sur 5 étoiles
Title: une copie désastreuse pour un film de série B bancal
Review: L’affiche de ce film est alléchante avec en vedette Boris Karloff et Christopher Lee. L’intérêt de ce film, jamais sorti en France est quasiment nul. La copie désastreuse proposée est de mauvaise qualité tant au niveau de l’image (qui part instant se dédouble) qu’au niveau du son (très faible).Le scénario part dans tous les sens et la réalisation signée Robert Day est bancale: les scènes se suivent de manière désordonnée et on sent les comédiennes et comédiens très peu à l’aise. A commencer par l’immense Boris Karloff qui certainement ne s’attendait pas à cela. Le seul véritable intérêt porte sur le personnage secondaire superbement interprété par le tout jeune Christopher Lee qui venait de tourner La revanche de Frankenstein.Au final un film que l’on a hâte d’oublier tant il est bâclé.
Reviewer: Michel Juvenet
Rating: 3,0 sur 5 étoiles
Title: Montage incomplet
Review: Attention, il s’agit du montage censuré! Il manque les scènes les plus gore. Dommage car scénario, acteurs et décors sont excellents.
Reviewer: S. Muzyka
Rating: 5,0 sur 5 étoiles
Title:
Review: Given some of the reviews already posted I wasn’t sure whether to purchase this UK release. The picture on the Amazon page shows a ‘PG’ Rating, the same as the Australian rating in the Boris Karloff box-set I previously bought.I know the VHS release had a higher rating but I took the chance and am happy to say that this ‘Horror Classics’ DVD is actually a ’15’ certificate and as such IS the uncut version. All the more contentious scenes are here in their full glory, unlike the Australian and US release which watered them down and so greatly reduced the impact.I’m not saying violence is the be-all and end-all, merely that we as buyers have the right to watch films the way the director wanted us to see them. So rest assured if you’re coming to the movie for the first time this release showcases ‘Corridors of Blood’ in its full UK theatrical version.Unreleased for four years due to problems at MGM,and with a title change in the interim (it was originally ‘The Doctor From Seven Dials’), the film benefits from an excellent cast and realistic period detail, particularly in the poor part of town (the Seven Dials area), which looks and feels extremely grim and filthy. In this respect it shares a similarity with the equally excellent ‘The Flesh & The Fiends’ (1959), which also boasted a genuine grimness that makes both movies feel far more gruesome than they actually are.Of course, Boris Karloff is the star but Christopher Lee makes an unforgettable impression as Resurrection Joe, with his soft voice and scarred cheeks and top hat, Lee simply oozes screen prescence without actually doing much – always the mark of a quality actor – and his final scene will remain long in the memory, being a brilliant example of how to utilise small editorial touches (a little bit of slow-motion, clever use of sound etc.), to enhance the horror and leave you feeling that you’ve seen more than you actually have.If you’re a fan of Karloff and/or Lee or indeed British horror in general, I have no hesitation in recommending this movie. The picture quality perhaps isn’t the best it could be, with a lot of marks and the old change-the-reel splodges in the top right hand corner still evident rather than digitally removed but the aspect ratio appears to be the correct one compared to other releases. The 50’s was a golden era for British horror and this is one of the many high points. Enjoy.
Reviewer: M. Joyce
Rating: 4,0 sur 5 étoiles
Title:
Review: Although nobody would pretend that this is a cinematic classic, “Corridors of Blood” is certainly7 a cut above (pun intended!) the usual British horror film of the time; indeed, whether it is a horror film at all is open to debate.It tells the tale of Dr Thomas Bolton, an idealistic surgeon who is determined to operate without pain and who falls into the unscrupulous hands of the graverobber Resurrection Joe and Black Ben, whose dive of a lodging house is beautifully brought to life by Anthony Masters’ terrific production design and Geoffrey Faithfull’s brilliant black and white cinematography, which is at times reminiscent of David Lean’s great Dickensian films of the 1940s.The three leading roles are taken by three iconic players of the macabre and grotesque. An aged Boris Karloff is suitably ravaged as the good doctor, while the young Christopher Lee and the splendidly imposing Francis de Wolff make an impressive pair of villains, abetted by a striking performance from the lovely Adrienne Corri. British film stalwarts Finlay Currie, Nigel Green and Frank Pettingell shine in supporting roles and the only really damp squib is the pallid leading lady of the American Betta St. John.As I say, this may not be high art, but it is not without its merits and it is eminently watchable from beginning to end. There is an excellent, informative 24-page booklet.
Reviewer: TubaMan
Rating: 5,0 sur 5 étoiles
Title:
Review: I first was exposed to this movie as the second act on my local Friday night horror movie special when I was a kid. I didn’t remember much of the plot or even the name of the movie (I probably was asleep for most of it), but the phrase, « Pain and the knife are inseparable! » stuck in my head.I wanted to see this movie again after recently undergoing a minor surgical procedure with only a bit of pain (a botched IV insertion). »Corridors of Blood » is an very good period tale that plays more like real medical history than a horror movie. There are no supernatural elements at all. The Dr. Bolton character (Boris Karloff) is based more than just loosely on the real-life Horace Wells, an American dentist associated with the discovery of anesthesia. There are many parallels between the two (faith in nitrous oxide as an anesthetic, a failed public demonstration with a robust male patient with nitrous oxide, addiction to the chemicals, throwing sulfuric acid on an antagonist, and a bad end).It is sad to see Dr. Bolton, who means so well, slide into his downward spiral. That is the real horror in this movie.The visuals are tame by modern standards, where we have « Hostel » and « Saw. » The actual violence of a pre-anesthesia amputation is not shown – you just hear the screams of the patient.
Reviewer: Amazon Customer
Rating: 5,0 sur 5 étoiles
Title:
Review: Great respect for Boris Karloff making a movie about drug addiction back in the day when it really was not discussed. It’s a scary movie first, but I felt the drug addiction aspect was more the more important theme. It’s very sad because Karloff plays this doctor who is a surgeon in the days when there was no anesthesia at all. So the only mercy a surgeon could show was his speed in cutting off or out whatever needed excising. Karloff tries his best to crest a gas that will knock people out during amputations and whatnot. Unfortunately he experiments on himself after a humiliating mishap in the operating theatre right in front of the best doctors around…and he gets addicted to his product. Then comes the downward spiral. But I found this movie extra moving because Boris Karloff was friends with Bela Lugosi who was a morphine addict. Doctors had prescribed it to Mr.Lugosi for pain from a old war wound so he could keep working. But when it was discovered he’d become an addict he was not allowed to work anymore. That’s Hollywood for ya.
Reviewer: Mocata
Rating: 5,0 sur 5 étoiles
Title:
Review: A great film for it’s time and still holds up very well today, a b/w classic with the rest of the cast performing well, A nice 24 page booklet included, if you like Karloff then you’ll love this little gem from yesteryear.