PRODUCT INFORMATION
Street Date 11/11/25
All pre-orders will be shipped as soon as they are in stock. Sometimes this is 1-2 weeks early, sometimes this might be a few days after the street date.
If other in-stock items are ordered at the same time, all items will ship together. If you want your in-stock items shipped immediately, please place pre-orders separately.
All dates, artwork and features are subject to change.
Pre-orders will be charged when you place the order.
No cancellations on pre-orders.
Throughout his career, director Pete Walker (House of Whipcord) was no stranger to controversy, but his 1974 film Frightmare sparked a firestome of criticism from the protectors of public morals, who deemed it “despicable” (London Observer), “horrendous” (Evening News), and “a moral obscenity” (Daily Telegraph). In spite of the condemnation—or more likely, because of it—Frightmare has achieved an almost legendary status in British horror history. Sheila Keith (House of the Long Shadows) stars as a former patient of a mental institution, who has settled down in a remote farmhouse, where she tells fortunes in her spare time. But the kind, maternal exterior conceals a dreadful monster, which the asylum, it seems, was unable to cure.
FEATURES:
Audio Commentary by Stephen R. Bissette, author of We Are Going to Eat You: Cannibal Movies
Audio Commentary by Director Pete Walker and Cinematographer Peter Jessop, with Steve Chibnall, author of Making Mischief: The Cult Films of Pete Walker
For the Sake of Cannibalism, an interview with Pete Walker, by Elijah Drenner
Sheila Keith: A Nice Old Lady?, a Profile Including Interviews With Former Collaborators
Interview with editor Robert C. Dearberg
Interview with actor Paul Greenwood
Theatrical Trailer