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30 Classic Beauties
Barbara ShelleyCollinson sistersCaroline MunroKate O'maraBritt EklandMadeline SmithSuzanna LeighSusan DenbergLinda HaydenMartine BeswickBarbara BachAnita PallenbergJoan CollinsJenny HanleyJulie EgeElke SommerEdwige FenechIngrid PittJune WilkinsonRaquel WelchSharon TateJane SeymourSophia LorenBarbara SteeleStephanie BeachamUrsula AndressValerie LeonVeronica CarlsonVictoria VetriYvonne Romain
The Girls of Hammer Horror - Scream Queens
A tribute to Hammer horror films and the women who helped make them great. Featuring Veronica Carlson, Caroline Munro, Valerie Leon, Madeline Smith, Yvonne Romain, Linda Hayden, Valerie Gaunt, and many more hot Hammer horror babes. Clips from 'Curse Of Frankenstein', 'Dracula Has Risen From The Grave', 'Vampire Lovers', 'Blood From the Mummy's Tomb', 'Horror Of Dracula' and many more classic Hammer horror films. Song is 'Hammer Horror" by Kate Bush... not because I particularly like the song or the artist, but because I couldn't think of another song that would go with this clip quite as well.
Veronica
Jesper Carlson - Veronica. Skapad av Markus Kärnebro, Jonas Granberg(medverkande) och Jesper Carlson i norrköping hösten 2007. www.myspace.com/jespercarlsson
"Crossplot" trailer
A great action movie Roger Moore made just finishing "The Saint" series and before getting involved in the 007 saga. There already are some womenizing, car-chasing and running-for-his life in that thriller comedy also featuring Bernard (M) Lee, Alexis (The Prisoner) Kanner and Hammer veterans Francis Matthews, David Prowse and Veronica Carlson in smaller roles.
Dracula Has Risen From The Grave
http://uranium-cafe.comDracula Has Risen From The GraveAuthor: JoeKarlosi from U.S.A.One of the best of the Hammer Dracula series, with Christopher Lee in commanding form as the nefarious bloodsucker. Coming in directly on the heels of "Dracula, Prince of Darkness (1966)," the King of Vampires is accidentally resurrected by a young priest and then conveniently makes a servant out of him. Lee angrily seeks revenge on the monsignor of the church (a good job by Rupert Davies) and pursues the Man of God's attractive niece (Veronica Carlson in her first of a few Hammer parts) as a means of evening the score.Dracula's scripted motivation for his revenge in this chapter seems a bit forced, but what really sets this entry apart from some of the others for me is the visage of religion hovering over the battle between good and evil. Here, the story centers on a young man named Paul, who is romancing the monsignor's niece but who is himself an atheist, and as such has more of a struggle not only in appeasing his girl's fundamentalist uncle, but also falters when it comes to satisfactorily dealing with the threat of Dracula himself; in the film's best scene (and one of Hammer's all-time finest), Paul tries to put an end to the Count but is unable to finish the job due to his religious convictions.I must put in a good word for director Freddie Francis here, who usually gets overlooked in the shadow of the more acclaimed Terence Fisher. Francis does an exceptional job rendering his story, and one of his most effective tools is enhancing some scenes with an unearthly orange-ish hue. Very nice.Author: c150 from Chicago, IllinoisDracula has risen from the grave truly is the best hammer film ever made! I have seen every hammer film and this movie is #1. Where do I begin, well first let me say this is the best film Freddie Francis has ever directed. The editing along with the directing is excellent. The musical score is out of this world! By far the best music hammer has ever had in any of its movies, it really sets the tone throughout the movie. It also has the best storyline of any of the hammer films (believe me a lot of the hammer films have great plots but this baby takes the cake). Also, this movie has the most beautiful woman to ever appear in a hammer film and that Veronica Carlson! Just the fact that she is in this movie is reason alone to watch it! Christopher Lee does his great job playing dracula once again. I can't get over how well the movie moves along, not to fast, not to slow, just perfect. One of my favorite films ever made! You must see this masterpiece! 10 out 10 stars, an absolute A+ !!!
Horror of Frankenstein
http://uranium-cafe.comHorror of FrankensteinAuthor: frid2k4 (frid2k4@yahoo.com) from Los Angeles, Ca*** This comment may contain spoilers ***'The Horror of Frankenstein' is one of the best entries in Hammer's series.**SPOILERS**Growing bored in school, Victor Frankenstein (Ralph Bates) has a tendency to show up his teachers and wow the ladies with his charm. Wanting to go to medical school in Vienna, he concocts a scheme to kill his father (George Belbin) and ends up going anyway, upsetting his friends at school, Stephan (Steven Tyler) Maggie, (Glenys O'Brian) and Elizabeth (Veronica Carlson). There in Vienna, he gains a friend in anatomy classmate Wilhelm (Graham Jones) and they begin experimenting on regeneration. Both run into Elizabeth and they renew their friendship. Returning to his castle, Victor and Wilhelm begin to unload their medical equipment and continues his father's relationship with the maid, Alys (Kate O'Mara). As they continue their experiments, they realize they can bring dead objects back to life. Victor wants to push the boundaries of the experiments, which starts to offset Wilhelm from the whole thing. When he announces that he wants to bring a human back to life, Wilhelm's feelings about it are resurfaced even stronger than before. Collecting enough parts to build his dream creature (David Prowse). Spending all hours working on the project finally cracks Wilhelm, and he announces his wish to leave. Undeterred, Victor continues his work without Wilhelm, and is successful at raising the man-made creature from the dead. During these experiments, Elizabeth is evicted from her family's castle and comes to live with Victor. He frames Stephan for the murder his creature did, and Victor tries to tame the creature. After several close calls with the monster and the police, Victor decides it is best if he killed the monster.The Good News: Because this is a later film in the Hammer collection, this one can finally let loose with gore and nudity. Both here are in full abundance. There are ample deaths in this movie, both by Victor and the monster. Having a person immersed in acid, another is electrocuted, several are poisoned and another one has a rifle explode in his face. There is even more gore on the deceased, as a dead person is decapitated, one has his limbs dismembered, and others have other body parts hacked off and sowed together into the creature with massive amounts of blood lost in the process. True, other Hammer films did feature more variety in the deaths, but this one had bloodier deaths. Even the monster had a violent kill, hacking a man with an ax several times. Even the several sex scenes are an improvement in earlier films, as the sexuality of the scenes is now fully capable of being shown in detail. Several women are shown nude, but the best has to be Kate, as she is shown in several situations and is really nice to view. The castle is a really nice setpiece. The long, dark corridors, the large Gothic interiors are pretty creepy and impressive upon first viewing. It adds immensely to its creepiness and lends a bit more of the original Gothic tones in the original novel.The Bad News: The depiction of Victor as a womanizing, lying thief is pretty much the main fault I can grant the movie. I don't feel like it was in good taste to do so, as he was perhaps more villainous than the monster. It didn't serve the movie that well with them doing so, although he does play the part well. Also, the monster design looks terrible and he himself is not very imposing. David is a pretty threatening-looking person, but the makeup was a disaster, simply applying scars on the body at various places to look as if he was in fact put together fairly quickly. Maybe a large FX budget could've supplies a more grotesque-looking creature.The Final Verdict: The gore and the nudity help push this one up to one of the better entries in the Frankenstein series. Not the best, but this is still a very entertaining entry that all fans of Hammer films and the series will enjoy.Today's Rating; R: Nudity, Graphic Violence, Adult Language, and several short sex scenesAuthor: The movie did not move well, but it did allow those Star Wars fans a chance to see the man behind the mask. Darth Vader's mask that is. Yes, the monster is none other than the man in black.Apart from this interesting piece of trivia, the movie was a total disappointment as a horror movie and a bore as a hopeful cult classic.Dear Dr. Frankenstein could only be considered a lustful egocentric jerk.The supporting cast seemed better suited for TV commercials.However, I did enjoy the pleasant banter of the grave digger and his grave digging wife.
Veronica Carlson
Veronica Carlson
Peter Cushing :Frankenstein Must Be Destroyed Trailer (1970)
Peter Cushing delivers his most cold-blooded portrayal of the mad Baron in his fifth turn as Dr. Frankenstein. Abandoning his latest experiment after a drunk stumbles into his secret lab (upsetting a severed head) he hurriedly finds new lodgings with a sweet young thing (Hammer glamour babe Veronica Carlson) whose boyfriend (Simon Ward, in his film debut) works in the local sanitarium. Frankenstein blackmails the lovers into complicity with his latest experiment, resorts to kidnapping and murder for his subjects, turns accomplice Ward into a killer, and even rapes Carlson in a coldly brutal scene. The goriest film of the series kicks off with a flamboyant beheading with a scythe (seen only as a spray of blood across a window) and is full of bloody brain surgery, conveniently offscreen but vividly suggested in the slurping sound effects of surgical saws and drills and the gallons of blood left in their wake. Freddie Jones is heartbreaking as Frankenstein's latest creature, a once-insane scientist who awakens to find himself cured but trapped in a grotesque, alien body. When he attempts to communicate with his wife, half hiding in a dark corner while she peers around and sees only a monster, director Terence Fisher offers the most affecting moment of pathos in the entire series. Cushing and Fisher reunited for one more film together, the seventh and final film in the series, Frankenstein and the Monster from Hell.Actors: Peter Cushing, Veronica Carlson, Freddie Jones, Simon Ward, Thorley Walters Directors: Terence Fisher
The Women Of Hammer - Barbara Shelley & Veronica Carlson
The first part in a continuing series of tributes to the beautiful and talented ladies of Britian's Hammer Studios. Part One: Barbara Shelley (DRACULA-PRINCE OF DARKNESS, RASPUTIN-THE MAD MONK, QUATERMASS & THE PIT) and Veronica Carlson (DRACULA HAS RISEN FROM THE GRAVE, FRANKENSTEIN MUST BE DESTROYED).
Veronica Carlson
Veronica Carlson



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