Release Date: Sep 19, 2000 Region: 1 Runtime: 93 mins Studio: Anchor Bay Audio:
ENGLISH: Dolby Digital 5.1 [CC]
Video:
Widescreen 1.85:1 Color (Anamorphic) Standard 1.33:1 Color
Subtitles: [None] Packaging: Keep Case Rating: R Features:
Audio Commentary with Writer/Director Clive Barker and Star Ashley Laurence. Moderated by Writer Pete Atkins Featurette:Resurrection Theatrical Trailer Still Gallery THX Certified
Release Date: Sep 19, 2000 Region: 1 Runtime: 202 mins Studio: Anchor Bay Audio:
ENGLISH: Dolby Digital 5.1 [CC]
Video:
Widescreen 1.85:1 Color (Anamorphic) Standard 1.33:1 Color
Subtitles: [None] Packaging: Custom Case Rating: NR Features:
Hellraiser: THX Approved Audio Commentary with Writer/Director Clive Barker and Star Ashley Laurence. Moderated by Writer Pete Atkins Featurette: Resurrection. Produced by Clive Barker Still Gallery 48 Page Booklet with Color and B&W Behind-the-Scenes Photos Still Gallery 5"x7" Theatrical Poster Replica Hellbound: Hellraiser II: Audio Commentary with Director Tony Randel, Star Ashley Laurence and Writer Pete Atkins Featurette: Lost In The Labyrinth. Produced by Clive Barker Theatrical Trailer Still Gallery 5"x7" Theatrical Poster Replica
The first three entries in the Clive Barker-originated series are presented in Hellraiser: The Collector's Edition, a box set which includes Barker's 1986 original, and the first two sequels, Tony Randel's Hellbound and Anthony Hickox's Hell on Earth. Watching the films run together, you can see the process whereby a twisted original vision from the British writer-director is gradually hammered out into the stuff of an American direct-to-video franchise. Even the first film suffers slightly as a story written to take place in London is rendered puzzling by the decision to dub minor players with American accents, and by the time of the third film there is only the odd flash of s&m imagery to distinguish the series from the Elm Street or any other franchise.
Along the way, there are a few great and many good things: the nasty little family drama of the first film, played by Andrew Robinson and Clare Higgins, as a marriage is literally torn apart by the bloody, skinless brother-lover in the attic, and the still-striking look of the series' major demons, the Cenobites. Part II is a mess, but has a certain grand dementia and Part III at least gives the films' poster boy, Doug Bradley's Pinhead, centre screen as he bids to become the Freddy Krueger of the body-piercing set.
On the DVD:Hellraiser: The Collector's Edition presents parts I and II in anamorphic widescreen, while III is cramped at 4:3 full-screen: the transfers are okay if not sumptuous, a little soft if aptly gloomy. Region 1 releases have director and crew commentaries and retrospective documentaries that are sadly not included here--though completists note: this edition boasts on-set cast and director interviews (five minutes apiece for I and II) which are not on the American set. I and II also have trailers (and II has a printable stills gallery and a pointless extra which consists of extracts from the film grouped together as "sub-plots"), but III is strictly no-frills. --Kim Newman
Directors Commentaries Featurettes Interviews Trailers TV Spots Storyboards Stills Gallery Behind The Scenes Early Clive Barker Short Films Early Clive Barker Short Film Discussions