Archive for November, 2013

Xmas Sale

Posted on: November 19th, 2013 by Doug

The Finders Keepers Christmas sale is now on.

25% off orders over £25 (does not include postage)

Just use the code

fkrxmassale2013

During checkout on the Finders Keepers online shop.

Please note the final recommended postage dates. In order to receive your orders in time for Christmas we strongly recommend you get your orders in before these dates:

UK – Wednesday 18th December
Europe – Saturday 14th December
Rest Of The World – Monday 9th December

* Offer has now expired

Hocus Focus – Morgiana & The Cremator

Posted on: November 11th, 2013 by Doug

Finders Keepers’ Hocus Focus proudly presents two Films From the Czech New Wave master of macabre Juraj Herz.

Regarded as the final ever film of the Czech New Wave, Juraj Herz’s Morgiana (alongside Valerie And Her Week Of Wonders) was made after the Prague Spring during Czech cinema’s most scrutinised censorship era, deep in the throws of communism. Spearheading a micro-cosmic sub-genre of horror fantasy or scary/fairytales alongside Karel Kachyňa’s Malá Mořská Víla (The Little Mermaid), these directors built a handful of subversive, flamboyant and experimental new films based around classical communist approved surrealist literature; sidestepping creative compromise and uniting some of the leading lights of the FAMU founded film movement for the last time. Both musical scores courtesy of Luboš Fišer unite Valerie and Morgiana; sharing doppelgänger production and compositional ideas presented by Finders Keepers Records for the first time ever outside of the original context of the film.

As another late entry to the unparalleled creative cinematic unison known in Europe as “the Czech film miracle”, Juraj Herz’s 1969 feature film The Cremator was one of a clutch of certified cinematic literary adaptations that used the apolitical subjects of fantasy and surrealist horror to evade the communist censors’ abortive measures; dodging the overzealous cutting and burning process which poetically echoed the films own macabre and fantastical screenplay. Unifying a cast and crew of some of the Czech New Wave’s leading lights, Herz’s macabre depiction of Ladislav Fuks’ fictional account of a local crematorium boss whose hallucinogenic burning obsession with the afterlife is ignited by the Tibetan Book Of The Dead and intensifying manipulative Nazi propaganda is undeniably one of the greatest underexposed European horror films of all time.