Posted by Notcot on Dec 6, 2012 in
Gadgets
Ever worry that in your immaculately clean kitchen attire that your dinner guests may take for granted how hard you’ve been slaving away preparing a banquet for them? Well now you can make sure you are known as the ‘Butcher of Birmingham’ and with just a quick glance this Butchers Apron will get the point across. Fear not though, if you happen not to live in a town/city beginning with ‘B’ we’ve tried and it sounds just as menacing with any place name, especially when teamed with a maniacal grin and a brandished meat cleaver!
Price : £ 9.95
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Tags: 163, APRON, attire, butcher, Butchers, City, cleaver, Dinner, dinner guests, Fear, glance, grin, Kitchen, maniacal, meat cleaver, point, price, the
Posted by Notcot on Jan 13, 2011 in
Gadgets
Next time you are thinking about flipping some burgers or grilling some ribs, make sure you are properly attired in this fantastic Butchered Butchers Apron. Ideal for those BBQ fans who love to get their hands dirty!Features:-100% cotton apron with bloodied butcher print Made for meat eaters – not suitable for vegetarians Dimensions: 65cm x 85cm x 0.3cm.
- Ideal for those BBQ fans who love to get their hands dirty!
- Next time you are thinking about flipping some burgers or grilling some ribs
- Make sure you are properly attired in this fantastic Butchered Butchers Apron
- 100% cotton apron with bloodied butcher print
- Made for meat eaters – not suitable for vegetarians. Dimensions: 65cm x 85cm x 0.3cm
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Buy Now for [wpramaprice asin=”B002JE9SNU”] (Best Price)
Tags: APRON, BBQ, burgers, butcher, BUTCHERED, Butchers, cotton, Dimensions, Gadgets, Ideal, meat, meat eaters, Print, printMade, ribs, ribsMake, time, vegetarians
Posted by Notcot on May 29, 2010 in
Cult Film
Average Rating: 4.5 / 5 (13 Reviews)
Amazon.co.uk Review
One of the patients in an institution for the incurably insane was once its director, and a young psychiatrist (Robert Powell) has to figure out which one as they all tell him their stories. What better setting for a horror anthology? It’s an inspired framing device, making this one of the better examples of the genre, even if screenwriter Robert Bloch at times resorts to gimmicks rather than invention. The first two stories are less than brilliant (the first is highlighted by dismembered body parts neatly wrapped in butcher paper wriggling back to life for revenge), but Charlotte Rampling and Britt Ekland are marvellous in the third tale, about a mentally unbalanced young woman and her dangerous best friend. Herbert Lom is also excellent in the final story as a scientist who carves an army of dolls he claims he can bring to life by sheer willpower. Director Roy Ward Baker (Quatermas and the Pit) builds momentum with each story until the dark and deliciously bloody climax. This Amicus Studios production looks visually dull compared to Hammer’s gothic gloss, but it features a great British cast (including Patrick Magee and Hammer stalwart Peter Cushing), and ultimately Baker makes that gloomy look work for his increasingly creepy production. Amicus produced a series of horror anthologies, including the original 1972 Tales from the Crypt and The Torture Garden (also scripted by Bloch). –Sean Axmaker, Amazon.com
Asylum
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Tags: amazon co uk, Anthology, body, Britt, britt ekland, butcher, butcher paper, charlotte rampling, director roy, framing device, Genre, Hammer, herbert lom, horror anthologies, horror anthology, invention, paper, Patrick Magee, peter cushing, Pit, production, revenge, ReviewOne, robert bloch, roy ward baker, scientist, Studios, tales from the crypt, torture garden, Ward