Product Description A young family moves from their cramped New York City apartment to a spacious new home in New England. But this is no ordinary house in the country: the previous owner was the deranged Dr. Freudstein, whose monstrous human experiments have left a legacy of bloody mayhem. Now, someone - or something - is alive in the basement, and home sweet home is about to become a horrific hell on earth.Catriona MacColl (THE BEYOND), Paolo Malco (THE NEW YORK RIPPER), Ania Pieroni (TENEBRE), Carlo de Mejo (CITY OF THE LIVING DEAD), and Dagmar Lassander (HATCHET FOR THE HONEYMOON) star in this outrageous Italian shocker from 'The Godfather of Gore,' Lucio Fulci (ZOMBIE). Blue Underground's acclaimed restoration of THE HOUSE BY THE CEMETERY, scanned in 4K 16-bit from the original 35mm 2-perf camera negative, is now presented with Dolby Vision HDR and a new Dolby Atmos audio mix, fully loaded with hours of Extras! Review A Truly Frightening Horror Film... Any Fan Of Italian Horror Should See It! --Bloody DisgustingHorror Exploitation At Its Best Plenty Of Blood, Gore, Impalements, Decapitations, And Maggots! --Classic-HorrorNasty, Lurid And Surprisingly Scary Arguably Fulci s Strongest Movie! --Total Sci-Fi Online
R**R
Good, fun ,and bloody horror from Italy's gu golden age
An amazing package!!Blue underground has outdid themselves again with this Lucio Fulci release.The cd soundtrack is a great addition to my music library and the extras are very good indeed.The new 4k scan is incredible and so much more to see now that the negative is cleaned up.
S**P
Stunning 4K Fulci film
The movie has never been more beautiful. The color hues are outstanding and picture is crisp and clearer than ever. The special features are plenty on the second Blu ray disc. A must add for Fulci fans that are wanting the best audio and video of one of his classic gems.
D**N
Worth every oenny
I love this movie, all 3 are great. But I truly hate Bob.
M**R
FULL ON FULCI
Fans of horror are well acquainted with the name Lucio Fulci. While the Italian director made movies in numerous genres it was his horror films near the end of his career that have brought him more fame than the rest. Almost everyone who has enjoyed a horror film has seen ZOMBIE, but his other films didn’t get near the attention until the video boom.I was fortunate enough to see his CITY OF THE LIVING DEAD/GATES OF HELL when it played in theaters. But finding the rest never seemed to happen. With video I was able to catch a few more but still, not most. It wasn’t until his films began popping up on disc that they were more accessible and more affordable. One of those titles was HOUSE BY THE CEMETERY. I still hadn’t seen it until this release but Blue Underground has gone above and beyond to make adding this one to your collection a must have.The film has a quick opening of a young couple having just had sex in an abandoned old house. When the girl goes looking for her boyfriend she finds his body mutilated and is killed herself, a knife shoved through her head from behind. As her body is dragged off we change scenes.Young Bob (Giovanni Frezza) in New York City is looking at a picture of that same old house, talking to a girl named Mae (Silvia Collatina) who he sees in the window. He tells his mother Lucy Boyle (Catriona MacColl) who sees nothing and tells him to get ready. Along with his father Norman (Paolo Malco) they are moving to New Whitby, Massachusetts. They’re moving into the house once owned by Norman’s mentor, Dr. Peterson, who murdered his mistress and then committed suicide there.The realtor Mrs. Gittleson (Dagmar Lassander) refers to the place as Old Mansion while her employee calls it the “Freudstein house”. She finds the keys and takes the family there, leaving as they begin to unpack. She also sends along a young woman named Anna (Ania Pieroni) to help as a baby sitter. One night Norman finds Anna opening the locked door to the basement.While his parents were inside the realtors earlier, Bob saw the girl he found in the picture and talked to her. She warned him again not to go to the house but he has no way of stopping it from happening. She also watched as a mannequin had its head severed, a mannequin that looked much like Anna.Strange things begin to happen in the house. A rather large bat attacks Lucy and bites Norman. Sounds come out of nowhere. Shadows appear and disappear. Murders take place without the family being aware. And eventually Norman discovers new evidence of what transpired in the house, an evil no one suspected and experiments that were not discussed before. Whether or not the family can survive in the house isn’t revealed until the final moments of the film.Many view Fulci’s works as nothing more than gore fest fueled by the effects people in demand at the time his films were made. Granted they do include the gore that horror films of the period required but they also offer much more. His films also told stories, created new horrific worlds or toppled old concepts on their heads to make something original. This film alone takes the haunted house concept and alters it into something different and yet familiar at the same time.Fulci was also known not to be all that friendly with his actors and yet he pulls some great performances out of those involved here including the two children, Frezza and Collatina, who could have brought down the entire film. Much has been said about the dubbing of Frezza’s voice over the years but that doesn’t harm the film. Both make their characters believable as does the rest of the cast. This was the last film MacColl did with Fulci and she gives him exactly what her part needed.Back to the gore effects here for some they seem crude but I wonder if that doesn’t involve looking at the film from the time period it was made in. In recent years we’ve seen a crippling use of CGI blood in films that looks as fake as you would expect. This was a time when practical effects were still in use. It was also a team that while good lacked a certain amount of authenticity in films that I have seen but at the same time did make those effects believable enough. And some of them here can be fairly gruesome to those who aren’t used to them in Italian horror films.So the next question is why bother buying this new edition? I mean by now you probably own a copy of the film so what makes this one worth investing in? There are many reasons so let’s start with the biggest one. The presentation here. Blue Underground is offering the film for the first time ever in a new 4K Restoration from the uncensored original camera negative. What that means is that the film looks like it never has before with a spectacular sharper image that alone makes this worth picking up.But they’ve done a lot more with tons of extras to enjoy. There is a new audio commentary track by Troy Howarth (author of “Splintered Visions: Lucio Fulci and His Films”), deleted scenes, theatrical trailers, TV spots, poster & still galleries, “Meet the Boyles” interviews with Catriona MacColl and Paolo Malco, “Children of the Night” interviews with Giovanni Frezza and Silvia Collatina, “Tales of Laura Gittleson” and interview with Dagmar Lassander, “My Time With Terror” an interview with star Carlo De Mejo, “A Haunted House Story” interviews with co-writer Dardano Sacchetti and Elisa Briganti, “To Build a Better Death Trap” interviews with cinematographer Sergio Salvati, special make-up effects artist Maurizio Trani, special effects artist Gino De Rossi and actor Giovanni De Nava, “House Quake” a new interview with co-writer Giorgio Mariuzzo, a Q&A session with Catriona MacColl that’s new, “Calling Dr. Freudstein” a new interview with Stephen Thrower (author of “Beyond Terror The Films of Lucio Fulci”) and a collectable booklet with a new essay by Michael Gingold.As the sales pitch goes “wait, there’s more!” This release also includes the original motion picture soundtrack on CD by Walter Rizzati. That alone makes up for the costs of buying this new edition of the film.If you love the films of Fulci, if you love collecting soundtracks to the horror films of Italy, if you’re a horror fan in general then you’ll want to pick up this new edition of the film. Or perhaps like me you never got the chance to see it before. Then by all means pick this one up and add it to your collection. It’s worth the investment. Sell off the old copy and keep this one on your shelf.
P**S
House by the cemetery rules Patrick woods 🍕
House by the cemetery is the best Lucio fulchi film I òrderd the 3 dìsc blu.saw this ìn 1984 I will update after I watch the 4k bluray. It looks really good 🍿
P**Z
Best transfer ever!
Great new master!
M**E
Sets the standard for horror restorations in 2020
Lucio Fulci was on fire in the early '80s with a string of stylish gore films like The Beyond and City of the Living Dead. You can follow that trail of blood right on into The House by the Cemetery (1981), which was released just a year after The Shining, and lifts many of the same spook house ingredients: blank-faced kid with psychic visions, creepy ghost girls, and (due to budgetary constraints, I’m sure) a small stream of blood rather than an entire service elevator.Italian horror pays about as much attention to plot as a five-year-old in advanced algebra class, and House is no exception. It’s not that narrative logic was beyond him, but Fulci seemed to be competing toe-to-toe with rival Dario Argento (Suspiria) to see who could make the most non-sensical horror film. House comes awful close to winning the prize; blending ghosts, zombies and mad-scientists with several set-piece gross out effects. An over-the-top bat attack shows exactly why the director's boundary-busting approach to filmmaking has aged so well in today's era of predictable scares.Blue Underground’s new Blu-ray edition is their much-anticipated follow-up to Fulci's The New York Ripper, which pretty much set the standard for horror restorations in 2019. And if House is any indication, 2020 is looking even better! With a 4K derived transfer from the original and uncut camera negative, there's absolutely no room for complaints. All the extras from the previous edition are ported over along with a new commentary from author Troy Howarth, Q & A with actress Catriona MacColl, interviews with co-writer Giorgio Mariuzzo and author Stephen Thrower, plus the original motion picture soundtrack on a separate CD. The packaging includes a lenticular 3D cover and collectable booklet.
F**L
Careful: 4K Version Doesn't Include Blu-ray Version of Movie
Be aware that the 4K version doesn't include a Blu-ray version of the movie. It says 4K and Blu-Ray in the Amazon listing but ONLY the extras disc is Blu-ray as near I can tell, not the movie I stopped my 4K order and ordered the new updated version of it on Blu-ray. If you are like me and don't have 4K abilities on all your TVs and equipment (say in other rooms) and always want a blu-ray with your 4K (as is often done for this very reason), you could be disappointed. Usually, when Amazon says 4K and blu-ray, it means you get the movie in both formats, but that doesn't appear to be the case for this movie.I didn't realize this until I read the print more closely. Luckily, I stopped the order. Of course, if you don['t want a blu-ray version with the 4K, then ordering the 4K is fine. Hard to give a rating but had to give one to let everyone know. I won't actually get to viewing it for a while. Most people know the movie and from what I've seen most like the restoration.
Trustpilot
3 days ago
3 weeks ago