Description: Good Viewing. Hard to Find Rare Video Collectible with good playback capability. Original VIDCREST art sleeve COMPLETE & UNCUT. A very rare label. From the earliest days of the home video entertainment industry. FAST & SAFE Delivery.1974. Directed by JACK CARDIFF. TAGLINE : "It's not nice to fool with Mother Nature...... it can be HORRIFYING! EVEN TO THEM!"- A scientist experiments with crossing humans and plants, for which he uses his students. Students have been going missing from the local college, and the one person who knows what's happened to them is Dr. Noller, a rogue biologist. Not satisfied with the pace of natural selection in driving evolution, Noller wants to push things further by creating his own genetically engineered creations. Having already created some amazing specimins by mixing the DNA of plants and animals, the doctor has now set his sights higher, and want to work on modifying humans, as well. Also known as THE MUTATIONS. BEHIND THE SCENES TRIVIA : Michael Dunn died in London during production, but had completed all his scenes. He was just 39. Several actual freaks were brought in from America to be featured in this film. At about halfway through the movie the circus performers taunt Lynch by saying "we accept you... He's one of us ". This seems to be a reference to similar lines from Tod Browning's 1932 movie Freaks (1932). According to Tom Baker, while filming he and Willie Ingram, who went by the stage name "Popeye" for his strange ability to make his eyes pop far out of their sockets, used to frequent a bar across the street between shooting scenes. During one such outing a waitress made it clear through her attitude that she didn't approve of Baker, who is white, being friends with Ingram who is black. So to get back at her Ingram would make his eyes pop out when she would pass the table causing her to completely freak out, and then go back to normal while he and Baker would pretend nothing happened as she tried to point it out to other waitresses and patrons.MINI BIO - JACK CARDIFF Born : September 18, 1914 in Great Yarmouth, Norfolk, England, UKDied: April 22, 2009 in Ely, Cambridgeshire, England, UK Almost universally considered one of the greatest cinematographers of all time, Jack Cardiff was also a notable director. He described his childhood as very happy and his parents as quite loving. They performed in music hall as comedians, so he grew up with the fun that came with their theatrical life in pantomime and vaudeville. His father once worked with Charles Chaplin. His parents did occasional film appearances, and young Jack appeared in some of their films, such as My Son, My Son (1918), at the age of four. He had the lead in Billy's Rose (1922) with his parents playing his character's parents in the film. Jack was a production runner, or what he would call a "general gopher", for The Informer (1929) in which his father appeared. For one scene he was asked by the first assistant cameraman to "follow focus", which he said was his first real brush with photography of any kind, but he claimed that it was the lure of travel that led to him joining a camera department making films in a studio. He had, however, become impressed with the use of light and color in paintings by the age of seven or eight, and described how he watched art directors in theaters painting backdrops setting lights. His friend Ted Moore was also a camera assistant in this period when both worked in a camera department run by Freddie Young, who would also become a legendary cinematographer. He worked for Alfred Hitchcock during the filming of The Skin Game (1931). By 1936 Cardiff had risen to being a camera operator at Denham Studios when the Technicolor Company hired him on the basis of what he told them in interview about the use of light by master painters. This led to his operating camera for the first Technicolor film shot in Britain, Wings of the Morning (1937). He finally was offered the full position of director of photography by Michael Powell for Stairway to Heaven (1946), ironically working in B&W for the first time in some sequences. His next assignment was on Black Narcissus (1947), where he acknowledged the influence of painters Vermeer and Caravaggio and their use of shadow. He won the Academy Award for best color cinematography for this film. Jack certainly got to travel when it was decided to shoot The African Queen (1951) on location in the Congo. Errol Flynn offered Jack the chance to direct The Story of William Tell (1953) that would star Flynn. It would have been the second film made in CinemaScope had it been completed, but the production ran out of money part way through filming in Switzerland. It has been said that Marilyn Monroe requested that Jack photograph The Prince and the Showgirl (1957). Although he had already directed some small productions, he had a critical breakthrough with Sons and Lovers (1960). He continued directing other films through the 1960s, including the commercial hit Dark of the Sun (1968), but for the most part returned to working for other directors as a very sought-after cinematographer in the 1970s and beyond. He continued to work into the new century, almost until his death. He was made an OBE in 2000 and received a lifetime achievement award at the 73rd Academy Awards. A library of 20,000 to 30,000 video items from 1978 forward, including multiples, is being offered for the first time to the eBay community. ALL inventory is OFFSITE from eBay listing center, so singular items may not be described individually, but in general to the collection. Some images may be representative. The quality of playback and visual presentation is GOOD to VERY GOOD to FINE. Some items may be Brand New Factory Sealed, while a few may slip through in a lesser quality. These items are inspected but individual items slip through occasionally, and we apologize for this inconsistency. Please, ask questions before purchase, we will do our best to oblige you.
Price: 199.95 USD
Location: Wake Forest, North Carolina
End Time: 2025-02-04T17:55:35.000Z
Shipping Cost: 5.95 USD
Product Images
Item Specifics
All returns accepted: ReturnsNotAccepted
Modified Item: No
Director: Jack Cardiff
Country/Region of Manufacture: United States
Studio: Vidcrest
Actor: Donald Pleasence, Tom Baker, Brad Harris
Language: English
Movie/TV Title: The Freakmaker (1974) aka The Mutations
Edition: Rare Hard To Find Video Collectible, Full Screen
Special Features: Art/Indie Film, B-Movie, Cult, Deleted Title
Genre: Horror
Leading Role: Julie Ege, Michael Dunn, Jill Haworth
Signal Standard: NTSC
Sub-Genre: Creatures/Monsters, Cult, Gore, Sci-Fi, Mad Scientists, Thriller, Tech Noir