The Vincent Price Collection, from Shout Factory, is officially released today!
Not only does the set contain six classic movies from the horror icon's career, it also features some introductions and final comments from Mr. Price himself, shot in my hometown. Not only that, but I'm proud to have played a role in introducing these intros to a wider public!
Many of you who have already seen a preview of this disc set have written nice comments about the intros, both on discussion boards devoted to home media, and in the blu-ray reviews.
Vincent Price sets the stage in the Iowa Public Television twelve-part film series The Vincent Price Gothic Horrors |
I am really thrilled to have collaborated with Scream Factory and Iowa Public Television to present the vintage Price intros and outros on this blu-ray release. I also produced and edited the bonus feature "Introductory Price: Undertaking The Vincent Price Gothic Horrors," and conducted the interview with the writer of the original intros.
It's funny how it all happened. As a young kid in the 1980s, I was a completely loyal viewer of a 12-episode film series produced by my local public television station in Iowa. It impressed me that Vincent Price would come to my hometown to shoot movie wraps, and this was my first time seeing any (and all) of the Corman-Poe-Price films.
When MGM released their Midnite Movie DVDs of the Price films more than 10 years ago, I enjoyed them, but always felt those intros were missing. On the very night I heard Shout Factory was going to release five of the Poe-related films, I wrote Cliff MacMillan in productions and acquisitions at Shout, and asked if I could connect him with Iowa Public Television. What concerned me, however, was that I had no idea whether IPTV even still had those old intros in their possession. Knowing how things go at a TV station, I suspected they would not simply throw away an important piece of their legacy. Iowa Pubic Television connected me with the writer of the introductions, Duane Huey. He left me in suspense a bit, admitting no one was sure where those intros were. Luckily, he found them rather quickly. He added he was in the process of retiring, and said it was a good thing I'd contacted him when I did. Then he informed me the intros existed only as raw footage, instead of nicely packaged pieces. Huey sent me the raw footage after I'd volunteered to edit it into the intros and outros I'd remembered as a kid. Finally I decided to interview Huey, because I imagined fans of Vincent Price might enjoy the intros and would want to know the story of their origin.
I'm paying my respects at the Tomb of Ligeia, where the film was shot in Norfolk, England. Photo from 2004. |
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