DVD 68 mins IMDB 6.3
NR
Sweeney Todd, The Demon Barber Of Fleet Street
Alpha Video (1936)
In Collection
#2726

Seen It:
No
Crime, Horror
UK  /  English

Tod Slaughter Sweeney Todd
Eve Lister Johanna Oakley
Stella Rho Mrs. Lovatt
John Singer Tobias Rag
Bruce Seton Mark Ingerstreet
D.J. Williams Stephen Oakley
Davina Craig Nan
Jerry Verno Pearley
Graham Soutten The Beadle
Billy Holland Parsons, the fence

Director George King
Writer H.F. Maltby; Frederick Hayward; George Dibdin-Pitt

Unsuspecting wealthy customers have their pockets picked and their throats slit in Sweeney Todd's barber chair. His accomplice, Mrs. Lovatt, grinds the victims into the meat pies she sells in her pastry shop. Meanwhile, the mad barber has a romantic eye on a beautiful daughter of a business partner whom he is threatening to ruin financially. She, however, is in love with a handsome seaman who has embarked on a trip to earn the money he will need to wed her. When he returns as a wealthy man to his bride-to-be, he first stops for a shave at Sweeney's chamber of horrors. The demented barber sharpens his razor to make the young man his next victim!

Edition Details
Barcode 089218454195
Region Any Region
Release Date 26-Oct-04
Screen Ratio Standard 1.33:1 B&W
Subtitles None
Audio Tracks Dolby AC3 Stereo
Layers Single Side, Single Layer
Nr of Disks/Tapes 1
Personal Details
Purchase Date January 2009
Store Torrent
Tags BT:AVI
Links DVD Empire
IMDB

Notes
Tod Slaughter's remarkable talent for playing over-the-top maniacs in macabre Victorian settings in films like Murder In The Red Barn reached a pinnacle with Sweeney Todd. His delightful grin and maniacal glee after "polishing off' his victims is a trademark of the actor, who never gained quite the fame of his counterparts of the era, Bela Lugosi and Boris Karloff. Directed with a smart tongue-in-cheek flair by George King, who helmed the best of Slaughter's films, Sweeney Todd features sharp performances and witty dialogue that transcends the age of the film. The bizarre and gruesome subject matter gained renewed interest nearly four decades later when Stephen Sondheim adapted the story into an unlikely smash Broadway musical.