Do you believe in UFOs, astral projections, mental telepathy, ESP, clairvoyance, spirit photography, telekinetic movement, full trance mediums, the Loch Ness monster and the theory of Atlantis?
Tags:
1980s, bill murray, cartoons, egon spengler, ernie hudson
Faithful reproduction of the cover design from the famous 'Bungle…' book series for young readers* / Film study series – The Video Nasties.
(*Not real)
Tags:
british, geoffrey, children book, rainbow, george
Relive the panic and confusion of getting lost in the woods, and having to scream the name 'Josh' out loud over and over and over again. Available in straight-up typography and illustrated bodily-fluid-emitting Heather formats.
Relive the panic and confusion of getting lost in the woods, and having to scream the name 'Josh' out loud over and over and over again. Available in straight-up typography and illustrated bodily-fluid-emitting Heather formats.
Keep a handy reminder of all the banned and nearly-banned films of the Video Nasty Era, on your torso. Or bag. Or pillow. Or whatever. Tick them off as you watch them or leave it pristine – your choice.
Tags:
vhs, horror, bbfc, video nasties, horrormovies
Keep a handy reminder of all the banned and nearly-banned films of the Video Nasty Era, on your torso. Or bag. Or pillow. Or whatever. Tick them off as you watch them or leave it pristine – your choice.
Tags:
censored, posterart, video nasties, bbfc, typographic
The H certificate was introduced by the British Board of Film Censors in 1932 and was specifically designed to cover American horror films that followed in the wake of Dracula and Frankenstein. Painstakingly recreated and remastered.
The BBFC respects the right of adults to chose their own entertainment, within the law. It will therefore expect to intervene only rarely in relation to '18' rated cinema films. In the case of videos, which are more accessible to younger viewers, intervention may be more frequent. The classic design, painstakingly recreated and remastered.
The X certificate was introduced by the British Board of Film Censors in 1951. It replaced and extended the remit of the H certificate, which largely covered horror films. Painstakingly redrawn and remastered.