Arrow Video Five Dolls for an August Moon

Zavvi Price Was $20.49 $26.99 STORE HOMEPAGE First seen in Jan 2017
Price Tracked On This Product
Highest price was seen $20.31 on Feb 08, 2017
Lowest price was seen $19.99 on Jan 18, 2019
Average price is $19.99 base on 2 price changes
Most recent price is $20.49
Description
ISLAND OF TERROR! A weekend retreat on a private island should be a recipe for rest and relaxation – unless you’re appearing in a giallo by the master of the macabre, Mario Bava (Black Sunday, Blood and Black Lace)… Wealthy industrialist George Stark (Teodora Corrà, Django the Bastard) has gathered a group of friends – played by a who’s who of Italian genre cinema including William Berger (Faccia a faccia), Ira von Fürstenberg (The Fifth Cord), Edwige Fenech (Your Vice is a Locked Room and Only I Have the Key) and Howard Ross (The New York Ripper) – to his island retreat. He hopes to entice them into investing in a new project, but soon the sunbathing and cocktails parties give way to murder, as the corpses begin to pile up one by one. Paying homage to Agatha Christie’s Ten Little Indians, Five Dolls for an August Moon turns the style up to ten. Surrounded by beautiful women, stunning locations and flamboyant fashions – and abetted by Piero Umiliani’s equally exotic score – Bava creates one of his most eye-catching movies, a visual tour de force. SPECIAL EDITION CONTENTS High Definition Blu-ray (1080p) and Standard Definition DVD presentations Optional English and Italian soundtracks presented in original uncompressed mono PCM audio Optional isolated Music and Effects track Optional English subtitles for the Italian audio and English subtitles for the deaf and hard of hearing for the English audio Audio commentary by Mario Bava’s biographer Tim Lucas Mario Bava: Maestro of the Macabre – a documentary profile of the director, hosted by Mark Kermode and featuring interviews with Joe Dante, John Carpenter and Tim Burton Theatrical trailer Reversible sleeve featuring original and newly commissioned artwork by Graham Humphreys Illustrated collector’s booklet featuring new writing on the film by Glenn Kenny and a new essay by Adrian Smith on the Fancey family and their efforts to bring international exploitation titles, including Five Dolls for an August Moon, to a UK audience during the 60s, 70s and 80s
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