Show results for
Explore
In Stock
Artists
Actors
Authors
Format
Theme
Genre
Rated
Studio
Specialty
Decades
Size
Color
Deals
- Blu-ray Outlet
- New Release 4K
- New Release Blu-ray
- New Release DVD
- New Release Gifts
- New Release Music
- New Release Vinyl
- Top Seller 4K
- Top Seller Blu ray
- Top Seller DVD
- Top Seller Vinyl
- top sellers all movies
- top sellers all music
- Top Selling Gifts
- TV Outlet
- Top Seller Music
- DVD Outlet
- In Stock Outlet
- Music Outlet

The Strangler
- (Manufactured on Demand, NTSC Format)
- Format: DVD
- Rated: NR
- Release Date: 10/11/2015

The Strangler
(Manufactured on Demand, NTSC Format)
- Starring: Victor Buono, David McLean, Diane Sayer, Davey Davison, Baynes Barron, Ellen Corby, Michael Ryan, Russ Bender, Jeanne Bates, Wally Campo
- Director: Burt Topper
- Genre: Horror
- Original Language: ENG
- Run Time: 89 minutes
- Year of Release: 1964
- UPC: 888574330293
-
Please be advised. Unless otherwise stated, all BLU-RAY are REGION A and all DVD are REGION 1 encoding. Before purchasing, please ensure that your equipment can playback these regions. For more information on region encoding, please click the link below:
Product Notes
Ripped somewhat from the headlines, this dark and gripping study of a serial killer capitalized on the then-current (then-unsolved) Boston Strangler murders. The Strangler grips you forcefully by the throat via the skin-crawling performance of Victor Buono, fresh off his Oscar -nominated turn as Jane Hudsons would-be comeback partner in the macabre What Ever Happened to Baby Jane? Buonos schizophrenic hospital lab technician is (shades of Baby Jane) fixated on dolls, which he eerily equates with his victims. But when he breaks his pattern and slays a ninth victim out of rage, that very fetish could prove his undoing. Ramping up the creepiness factor, Ellen Corby, later immortalized as warm, wise Grandma Walton, plays Buonos harridan invalid mother, whose constant carping could make anybody homicidal. Two years later, Buono would play Batman villain King Tut, enshrining him as a camp icon afterward. Tautly directed by Burt Topper, The Strangler is a bracing reminder of a powerful actor who could render moviegoers breathless.