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Death Stranding Collectors Edition is rated 4.2 out of 5 by 1423. Rated 5 out of 5 by Reddit Person from I enjoyed it. Many people will hate it because its mostly you running around for people but the story and social aspect really outweighs the redundancy in my book. 10/10 would play again and again.

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Poltergeist II: The Other Side [Collector's Edition] (SOLD OUT)

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Released: January 31, 2017 • Available in US & Canada
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As others have mentioned, it's a great item for a collector. I bought it when it was 50% off so at that price it's a steal. For the most part, the full price (at the time of writing) of $150 is just a tad steep if you already have the game but given the price of Collectors Edition in general, it's 'reasonable'. Download Grim Tales: The Bride Collector's Edition for Mac to after your sister vanishes on her wedding day no one has knows what happened to her.

List Price: $22.97 USD
SOLD OUT
Product Note: As of April 27, 2020, this title is OUT OF PRINT. The limited edition poster has SOLD OUT.

Synopsis

'… there are some effective shocks, genuinely scary scenes and a truly creepy villain in Kane.' – Moviehole.net

In this thrilling follow-up to the smash hit Poltergeist, the Freeling family (JoBeth Williams, Craig T. Nelson, Heather O'Rourke, Oliver Robins) settles into a new home following the annihilation of their former residence by terrifying visitors from the netherworld. But the spirits of the dead are still hell-bent on luring the family's clairvoyant daughter Carol Anne to 'the other side.' This chilling sequel, directed by Brian Gibson (Breaking Glass) also stars Will Sampson (One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest), Julian Beck (The Cotton Club) and Zelda Rubinstein (Anguish) returns as Tangina.

Why We Love It

'Scream Factory's Collector's Edition Blu-Ray of Poltergeist II features a great new transfer highlighting a saturated color scheme along with some great extra features. This is a nice package for the Poltergeist II fan as well as those looking to own this on Blu-Ray in a better package than the previous MGM release.' – Ryne Barber, The Moon is a Dead

'Scream keeps dong a fine job with their Collector Editions and we see a clear upgrade over the previous Blu-ray release here. We also get some nice interviews and such in the extras to make people double dip with this one without having to feel bad about it.' – Chuck Conry, Zombies Don’t Run

'Even if you bought MGM's barebones 2011 Blu-ray release of Poltergeist II: The Other Side, it is safe to say you're going to need to repurchase based on Scream Factory's stupendous, remastered, features-packed Collector's Edition. This is a pretty standard sequel to a phenomenally successful, much-loved haunted-house movie.' – Dustin Putman, TheBluFile.com

'Scream Factory’s Blu-ray presentation is guaranteed to bring the film into a new light, especially for those fans who may have overlooked or dismissed it before. A fantastic video presentation and a bounty of extras make this a Blu-ray release worthy of your time and money.' – Tim Salmons, The Digital Bits

Trailer

Bonus Features

  • NEW 2K Scan Of The Interpositive
  • NEW Audio Commentary With Writer/Producer Michael Grais
  • NEW Audio Commentary With Poltergeist II Webmaster David Furtney
  • NEW Robbie's Return – An Interview With Oliver Robins
  • NEW The Spirit World – An Interview With Special Effects Designers Richard Edlund, Steve Johnson And Screaming Mad George
  • NEW Ghosts Of Giger – A Look At The Contributions Of Artist H.R. Giger Featuring Rare Photos And Illustrations And An Interview With Giger's Friend And Agent Les Barany And Special Effects Designer Steve Johnson, Richard Edlund And Screaming Mad George
  • Vintage Featurettes: They're Back: The Making Of Poltergeist II, Monster Shop And Ghostmakers: The Magic Of Poltergeist II
  • Theatrical Trailer
  • TV Spots
  • Still Galleries (Behind-The-Scenes Photos, Stills, Posters, And Script Pages)

Product Information

DiscsRun-time
90 min
Aspect Ratio ?Color
Color
Language
Region
A
RatingProduction Date
1986
Closed-Captioned ?Subtitles ?
English

Poltergeist II: The Other Side [Collector's Edition]

NAMEROLE
Brian GibsonDirector
Craig T. NelsonActor
Freddie FieldsProducer
Geraldine FitzgeraldActor
Heather O'RourkeActor
JoBeth WilliamsActor
Julian BeckActor
Mark VictorWriter
Mark VictorProducer
Michael GraisWriter
Michael GraisProducer
Oliver RobinsActor
Will SampsonActor
Zelda RubinsteinActor
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In the U.S., either you get the appeal of the grating, social-climbing, oblivious-to-all-but-herself Hyacinth Bucket (pronounced “bouquet”), or you don’t. Few Americans I know who’ve seen the 1990s British sitcom Keeping Up Appearances, starring the one-of-a-kind Patricia Routledge, find themselves indifferent to its comically overdrawn characters, its broad and endlessly repeating jokes and slapstick, above all its monstrous central personality of Hyacinth. Love or hate – those are the two common reactions.

The brilliance of Keeping Up Appearances derives in large part from the way its stellar cast brings to exceedingly colorful life their cleverly written characters, created by reclusive writer Roy Clarke, who, I learned from watching the interviews included in the new 10-disc box set from BBC Home Entertainment, visited the set only once during the show’s entire run. I also learned that there was considerable friction between Clarke and producer-director Harold Snoad during the run, but I’d never have guessed that from the creatively consistent (if not entirely consistently creative) final product.

Routledge decided to move on with the show at the height of its popularity, a wise move in retrospect, as hints of self-parody and bits of wan plotting were starting to crop up in the later episodes. Watch in one go the unbrokenly brilliant five half-hours of the first series, try to stop laughing, then pop in one of the last discs and you might note a bit of a droop.

What I’ve always loved about the show, besides the merits noted above, is its comfortably self-contained world, the kind of creation that can take the viewer entirely away from the stresses of real life. Hyacinth and her long-suffering, henpecked husband Richard live in a modest house in a bland if pleasant suburb somewhere in England, where Hyacinth constantly talks to anyone in earshot about her prized Royal Doulton china “with hand-painted periwinkles” and her “white slim-line telephone with last-number redial.” (In a late episode she does some very funny business with a newly acquired mobile phone too.)

In a down-and-out neighborhood across town live the banes of Hyacinth’s existence, her slovenly sister and brother-in-law Daisy and Onslow and trampy sister Rose. These folks, a British version of what Americans might disparage as “white trash,” constantly intrude on Hyacinth’s snobbish aura of gracious living and ruin her attempts to insinuate herself further into higher society.

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As Hyacinth is constantly reminding her nervous next-door neighbor Elizabeth (played by the wonderful comic actress Josephine Tewson), she does have relatives who make her proud. Her sister Violet, who married a successful businessman (alas for Hyacinth’s pretensions, he’s also a cross-dresser), lives in a large house with a “Mercedes, sauna, and room for a pony.” There’s also her fey son Sheridan, away at University and clearly (to anyone but his adoring mother) gay. We encounter Sheridan only through Hyacinth’s side of their phone conversations, in which he inevitably asks for money. And there’s the sisters’ elderly and senile but randy father, who lives with Daisy, Onslow, and Rose when he’s not running away and getting into all sorts of comical and embarrassing trouble.

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“Everyone knows a Hyacinth,” says Tewson in one of the informative if repetitious interviews collected on one of the Extras discs. I certainly did. Hyacinth is just an exaggerated version. “She’s larger than life,” says Routledge of her most famous role, “she’s overwhelming, and I think people who are overpowering and overwhelming and see life only on their own terms are monsters, minor or major.”

Edition

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“Monster” isn’t a word we usually associate with comedy, but think about it. Take your own traits, your own foibles and flaws, to their extremes, and wouldn’t you be monstrous? Wasn’t Al Bundy a bit of a monster? Even Archie Bunker had his monstrous side.

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Keeping Up Appearances ran for five seasons (five “series” in British TV terminology) during the first half of the 1990s for a total of 45 episodes. They’re all included on this 10-DVD set, including the four Christmas specials, one of those an extended-length installment in which Hyacinth and Richard set off for a cruise aboard the QE2, miss the boat at Southampton, and catch up with it in Copenhagen, only to find Onslow has one-upped them by winning first-class accommodations for Daisy and himself on the very same cruise. The final scene, in which Hyacinth dances with Onslow, cutting loose yet magically not breaking character, is one of the great comic moments of the series, Hyacinth finally finding herself in a gracious milieu to which she’s dreamed of becoming accustomed, but forced to resign herself to sharing the dance floor with the oafish Onslow in order to truly fit in.

“Pretension is the very stuff of comedy,” says Routledge in one of the included interviews, “pretension that doesn’t achieve what it sets out to do.” She mentions characters from classic theater like Shakespeare’s Malvolio and Sheridan’s Mrs. Malaprop as antecedents of Hycacinth. “They’re all over the world.” Modern American audiences might see a descendant of Hyacinth in some of the characters on the currently popular Portlandia. (A character on that show wanted to know if the chicken on the menu was happy on its farm. Hyacinth wanted to know that her milkman is delivering a product deriving from cows who graze on a stately farm.) Or they might see Hyacinths in the real-life hipsters walking the streets of places like Williamsburg, Brooklyn. Maybe the Hyacinth in your life is your aunt or your mother-in-law.

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The first of the two Extras discs has two long and gimmicky clip shows you won’t need to see if you’ve watched the series lately. The second disc includes a batch of interviews, a Funny Women profile of Routledge, and a set of her “Kitty Monologues” from the 1980s sketch comedy series Victoria Wood As Seen On TV. The latter confirm the observation that some British comedy, Keeping Up Appearances being a fine example, translates well for Americans, while other British comedy remains well-nigh incomprehensible. Fortunately, there’s nothing hard to understand about Hyacinth and her world, as two generations of public television fans have found out. Now you can too.