This budget DVD edition has been mastered from an older VHS videotape (always a guarantee of low resolution) with a substandard video transfer that is relatively in focus in the center of the picture but blurs slightly toward the left frame edges. We suspect that Alpha Home Entertainment staff nicked this transfer from a VHS copy of Sinister Cinema’s edition (noted above). While the source print, which appears to have been a 16mm reduction print, features a reasonable range of greytones, the presentation picture itself loses highlight details in a blast of smeary whites. New intertitles have been inserted, with digitally-added speckling to make them appear original to the print. Ridiculous. Also, the film does not run 83 minutes, as stated on the packaging, but rather a mere 54 minutes.
The presentation is accompanied by a music score by Skip Heller and Marc Kaplan performed on digital piano, which surprisingly is the best thing about the entire presentation.
The supplementary section includes Bela Luposi’s 27 July 1953 appearance on the You Asked for It television program (9 minutes). Poor quality.
This disc, a horrid viewing experience on HD systems, again reinforces our low opinion of budget disc producers who release product as cheaply as Scroogely possible, with little regard for quality nor the consumer. Why bother to add a custom music score and new intertitles when the video transfer itself is crap? Alpha Home Entertainment appears to be more concerned with turning over product than a new leaf.
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USA: Click the logomark to purchase this Region 0 NTSC DVD edition from Amazon.com. Your purchase supports Silent Era.
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Canada: Click the logomark to purchase this Region 0 NTSC DVD edition from Amazon.ca. Your purchase supports Silent Era.
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United Kingdom: Click the logomark to purchase this Region 0 NTSC DVD edition from Amazon.co.uk. Support Silent Era.
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