
#Salem lot movie blu ray skin#
Skin tones look lifelike and accurate and the image is free of any obvious noise reduction or edge enhancement. Colors are reproduced very naturally and look very good, while black levels stay nice and strong, avoiding crush and letting plenty of impressive shadow detail into some of the darker scenes. The transfer is quite strong on this 50GB disc.
#Salem lot movie blu ray archive#
Salem's Lot arrives on Blu-ray from Warner Archive framed at 1.33.1 fullframe, in keeping with the film's made for TV origins.
#Salem lot movie blu ray movie#
Note that this is the same cut of the movie that appeared on DVD and that it runs one hundred and eighty-three minutes in length. Murnau's 1922 film Nosferatu than with the more charming, humanized vampires played by the likes of Bela Lugosi, Christopher Lee or Frank Langella (who starred as Dracula in the 1979 movie of the same name directed by John Badham only a year prior to Salem's Lot). If Nalder, who is the most memorable part of the film, wasn't creepy looking enough on his own, his character's likeness in this movie is quite striking, having more in common (visually, at least) with Max Schreck's Count Orlok as seen in F.W. The makeup effects used to bring the vampiric characters to life is really well done and Reggie Nalder's character in particular really stands out. The fact that it was made for TV means that the violence and carnage some might hope to find in a horror film from the director of Texas Chain Saw Massacre is fairly tame, but the movie makes up for that with some great atmosphere and genuinely eerie atmosphere. Smaller parts for Lew Ayres, Elisha Cook Jr., and Julie Cobb are worth mentioning and Fred Willard is fun as the real estate agent. There are some scenes where you wish he had a bit more charisma and energy but for the most part he's good in the part, showing decent chemistry with Bedelia and handling the drama, action and horror inherent in the story well enough. David Soul has the most to do, and if this isn't the performance of a lifetime it is at least pretty decent. Ed Flanders and the lovely Bonnie Bonnie Bedelia are quite good here in their supporting roles as are both Ronnie Scribner and Brad Savage as the Glick brothers. James Mason is an interesting casting choice to play an emissary of Nalder's vampire lord, and he does quite well in the part. The performances in the film are, for the most part, pretty decent. However, this winds up making the last half of the film mean more and if sometimes the character development does suffer from some pacing issues, it pays off nicely by the time it's all over and done with. The movie does take a while to get going and it might put off those with a shorter attention span in its first half by spending a fair bit of time on the romance that develops between Ben and Susan. Salem's Lot was originally broadcast as a two part made for TV movie and it's quite well done. The crate is brought into the basement of the house for safe keeping and from there, a kid named Ralphie Glick (Ronnie Scribner) is abducted, Straker bound and determined to use the poor kid as blood offering to that which is hidden away inside the crate, the mysterious Kurt Barlow, a vampire lord! When he ‘turns' Ralphie, the kid goes home and takes on his older brother, Danny (Brad Savage) and from there, the vampiric curse starts to spread across the small town.Įventually, Mears starts to figure out what's going on and, along with a few other townspeople, has to figure out what to do about it… Everything changes in town once Straker takes delivery of a massive crate, delivered to him by a man named Mike Ryerson (Geoffrey Lewis). Soon enough, fast friendship blossoms into romance.

Before long, he's met pretty Susan Norton (Bonnie Bedelia), the daughter of Doctor Bill Norton (Ed Flanders), and they hit it off. With that plan dashed, Ben shacks up in a room he lets from Eva Miller (Marie Windsor). He and his business partner, Kurt Barlow (Reggie Nalder), plan to open up a new antique store in town. Ben gets in touch with Larry Crockett (Fred Willard), a local realtor, in hopes that he'll be able to rent the old place but soon learns that a British ex-pat/antiquities dealer named Richard Straker (James Mason) has taken up residence.

The inspiration for the book is Marsten House, a huge, creepy, old mansion that sits atop a hill in Salem's Lot and looks over the town the way that huge, creepy, old mansions tend to do in horror movies. Early in the film we see him return to the titular town in Maine, the very same town that he was born and raised in, hoping to find there enough inspiration to be able to start writing his latest novel. Based on the novel of the same name written by Stephen King, director Tober Hooper's 1979 adaptation of Salem's Lot stars David Soul as a writer named Ben Mears.
