Carnival of Souls (1962)

Directed by: Herk Harvey

Stars: Candace Hilligoss, Frances Feist, Sidney Berger

Language: English + (Commentaries Rifftrax + Directors  (3 tracks) | Subtitles: English (embed)

Country: Usa | Imdb Info | Ar: 4:3 | Dvdrip (colorized)

DescriptionAfter a traumatic accident, a woman becomes drawn to a mysterious abandoned carnival.


Preview

 

1.84GB | 84:07mins | 712×480 | mkv
http://tezfiles.com/file/a1bb9eac7735a/cr6ni2sls.rar

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8 Responses to Carnival of Souls (1962)

  1. Peter says:

    This movie deserves to be treated like the classic it is.

    Rarelust should have the definitive Criterion version of this and not this version.

    Thanks

    • Chuck Turner says:

      I understand your desire for the restored upgraded Criterion edition of Carnival of Souls. However, Mr Rarelust’s reasons for choosing this version are absolutely sound. It is rare; as in ‘Rarelust’. And it includes an interview with the writer John Clifford and director Herk Harvey, things I previously didn’t know existed. And the Criterion edition is most likely too spruced-up. The original, which I saw when first released in the UK by Tony Tenser (later producer of Witchfinder General and many more Tigon films) was grainy and speckled. Which made it more eerie and disconcerting. We can all go out and buy the Criterion edition; but this version is a true rarity, and – like most everything on the Rarelust site – to be welcomed and treasured.

  2. Phaota says:

    Commentaries are with (1) screenwriter John Clifford and late director Herk Harvey, and (2) former Mystery Science Theater 3000 host Michael J. Nelson.

  3. Nathanrlds says:

    Any possibility of putting up a high-quality version of the original black and white version? Awesome.

  4. Donnie says:

    Many thanks for letting us know about this great low budget classic horror and for sharing it with us!.

  5. phillip king says:

    I can’t believe someone colorized this. The black and white is so essential to the effectiveness of this film. A nightmare film that clearly influenced the likes of David Lynch and Wes Craven. It doesn’t make much sense but nightmares don’t have to. They have to make you believe they are real when you are experiencing them. Same goes for a film like VERTIGO. The plot makes no logical sense but as you watch you don’t question it. Only after you look back when it’s over do the gaps in logic stand out.

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