Tag: Christopher Lee (Page 2 of 2)

Get ready for Top Chef Masters on Bravo this Wednesday June 10

If you’ve been jonesing for your “Top Chef” fix since Hosea was crowned Season 5 champ a few months back, you’re in for a summer treat–a new reality series called “Top Chef Masters.” Unlike the original series, “Masters” pits top-notch professional chefs against one another each week for charity, and then the winners of the first six rounds will square off the last few weeks of the season, with one chef being eliminated each week until someone is named Top Chef Master. That winner will receive $100,000 for their charity.

Guest stars and judges will include Neil Patrick Harris, Zooey Deschanel and Jeff Lewis, as well as “Top Chef” regulars Tom Colicchio, Padma Lakshmi and Gail Simmons.

The first episode airs this Wednesday, June 10 on Bravo at 10pm ET/PT and 9pm central and will feature chefs Hubert Keller, Christopher Lee, Tim Love, and Michael Schlow. Hosting the show is Kelly Choi, food journalist and creator/producer/host of “Eat Out NY.”

After watching a screener of the first episode, I can only say that I cannot wait to see more of this show and to see how it all unfolds over the course of the summer. It doesn’t matter if you’ve seen “Top Chef” before or not–if you’re a foodie, or if you just like good reality TV, you’ll want to watch this or season pass it on your TiVo. We’ll also be blogging the show each Thursday after Wednesday’s episode, so follow it all here on Premium Hollywood as well.

Icons of Horror

It’s a testament to the strength of the England’s famed Hammer Studios that, while the shock/fear factor of the studio’s “graphic violence” has definitely faded over the decades, three of the four films in this package of lesser known offerings still provide plenty of old fashioned horror/thriller fun. It’s just a shame the box art is so ugly. 1960’s “The Two Faces of Dr. Jekyll” eschews Hammer’s usual decapitations and hand-removals in favor of lots of implied sexuality and heavy use of the B-word in a silly but entertaining twist on the Robert Louis Stevenson tale. Here, the nutty professor…I mean repressed, cuckolded doctor (Paul Massie) becomes a suave, better looking (and suddenly beardless) version of himself who decides to do the obvious – go out and get laid, and also do something about his no good wife (hot Dawn Addams) and her ultra-suave louse of a lover (Christopher Lee, often hilarious in one of his best roles).

The Terrence Fisher-directed “The Curse of the Mummy’s Tomb” from 1964 is exactly what it sounds like and even more amusing, despite the absence of Lee, who played the mumster the first time around. Also directed by Fisher that year, “The Gorgon” is the only a stinker of the set, a leaden blend of 19th century horror and ancient Greek mythology that even Hammer stalwarts Lee and Peter Cushing cannot save. 1961’s “Scream of Fear” might have a lousy name, but it’s a more than fitting finale. A modern day black and white thriller featuring strong performances from Susan Strasberg, Ann Todd, and Christopher Lee (who else?) as an untrustworthy French medic, it starts out as a truly creepy spin on “Gaslight,” but turns out to be a nasty, clever treat from the team of writer-producer Jimmy Sangster and director Seth Holt (“The Nanny”). Modern day gorehounds can have their torture porn, I’ll take Hammer.

Click to buy “Icons of Horror”

Terry Pratchett’s Discworld Collection

After giving “Terry Pratchett’s Hogfather” a positive review earlier this year, I was eager to check out the latest release of video fodder from his Discworld universe. “Terry Pratchett’s Discworld Collection” encompasses two different tales from his oddball universe of magic and mysticism, only this time in animated form. “Wyrd Sisters” is the story of the orphan boy of a murdered king, and how the child comes to be in the care of a trio of witches (two of which are voiced by Jane Horrocks and June Whitfield of “Absolutely Fabulous”), all while the king’s ghost wanders around his castle, irate and perplexed by his offing. “Soul Music” tells the story of Buddy, who puts together a band to play a new type of sound – “music with rocks in.” (Get it – rock music?) As is often the case with Discworld, Death plays a pivotal role in both tales, voiced here by Christopher Lee. No doubt hardcore fans of Pratchett will be amused and delighted by these very faithful adaptations (the running times are 140 and 175 minutes respectively), but they may be the only ones. The animation is unfortunately something of a challenge to get through. Think of drawings a few steps below some of Ralph Bakshi’s older work and you can sort of guess what the style looks like – pretty but not fluid; colorful but lacking grace. However what these stories may lack in the visual department, they more than make up for in the realms of wit and imagination.

Click to buy “Terry Pratchett’s Discworld Collection “

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