Eureka are releasing a four disc set of German krimis made by Artur Brauner's CCC (Central Cinema Company) in the 1960s. Playing off the huge success of the German Edgar Wallace adaptations made by CCC's counterpart Rialto Film, by the time Brauner got involved there weren't many Wallace properties left for him to acquire the rights to, so instead he went to Wallace's son, Bryan Edgar Wallace, and bought up some of his novels instead. (The name 'Bryan' was sometimes very small on the posters). All the films in the set apart from one are in 1080p HD from 2K restorations of the original film elements. So let's take a look at what we get:
Disc One
We kick off with a 6 minute introduction for the uninitiated from Tim Lucas. 'What is a Krimi?' discusses the crime genre, the giallo, and contextualises the krimi within these, as well as noting some of the krimi's most celebrated directors. It's a very helpful introduction for those who know nothing about the genre, and provides what is very much an overview, as each of the films here gets its own a more detailed introduction.
The Curse of the Yellow Snake (1963)
The one true Edgar Wallace property Artur Brauner was able to acquire is the tale of feuding stepbrothers (played by Rialto regulars Joachim Fuchsberger and Pinkas Braun) who are both after a fabulous golden snake which will give them unlimited power should they decide to go to war. Braun's Fing Su has a secret army all ready to go, hidden in a secret temple in a disused factory, but can Fuchsberger's Cliff stop him?
Easily confused with the Rialto film series, this entry possesses many of the same features (cast, colour titles over black and white footage, even Alfred Vohrer's voice introducing it as 'Edgar Wallace') and is just as entertaining, with secret rooms, dastardly villains, and a ludicrous plot.
Extras include a 13 minute introduction by Tim Lucas where he explains the relationship between Rialto Film and CCC, and a commentary track by Kim Newman and Barry Forshaw which, understandably, covers much of the same material as the Lucas introduction at the beginning before striding off on its own.
The Strangler of Blackmoor Castle (1963)
Director Harald Reinl was a master of this kind of movie and he doesn't disappoint here, delivering one of the best krimis from any studio. We've got a gothic castle with secret passages, a masked and gloved killer bumping people off and leaving an 'M' carved on their heads, and Karin Dor as the heiress who finds herself in the middle of it all. Composer Oskar Sala provides another of his experimental music scores which works pretty well except perhaps for a scene in an 'English' pub. Still, this is cracking stuff, with a couple of decapitations (one head turns up in a box), so many dodgy characters you're spoilt for who to suspect, and a tense, well shot and atmospheric climax.
Tim Lucas provides a ten minute introduction to this one, and we also get a lively and informative commentary by the always reliable Jonathan Rigby and Kevin Lyons.
The two films also have English dubs should you want them, and there's a trailer for The Curse of the Yellow Snake.
Disc Two
The Mad Executioners (1963)
One of the best krimis of the lot (Rialto Film productions included) begins with the machinations of a secret court which tries criminals who have escaped the gallows, finds them guilty, and then hangs them. Who are these masked men? And do they have any connection with a series of gruesome decapitations of young blonde women that have been occurring over the last couple of weeks? Inspector John Hillier (Hansjörg Felmy) is on both cases and there are plenty of suspects.
Despite the subject matter, this one has a lighter touch than many of the krimis, and at points almost veers into comedy, suffice to say if you're a fan of the witty deaths of THE ABOMINABLE DR PHIBES and indeed CARRY ON SCREAMING's fun send up of the horror genre you'll find a lot to enjoy here. The reason for the decapitations is all kinds of crazy wonderful and the reveal at the end is a cracker. Fantastic stuff.
Tim Lucas provides us with another introduction (11 minutes) detailing the Bryan Edgar Wallace projects that were considered but weren't filmed before Artur Brauner decided to go for this one, inspired by an 'idea' by Wallace the younger. Jonathan Rigby and Kevin Lyons perform commentary duties and get especially stuck in to all the glorious mad science stuff towards the end.
The Phantom of Soho (1964)
Presented as an 'extra' because it's in SD rather than HD (a good enough master couldn't be found), it's still a delight to finally have available a film immortalised for many by the appearance of the above still in Denis Gifford's Pictorial History of Horror Movies. And the print quality isn't bad at all, so don't let that put you off this, another superior krimi in which men are being stabbed through the heart by a golden-gloved mask-wearing killer who leaves an envelope on each victim. Dieter Borsche gets a rare 'good guy' krimi role as the police inspector and director Franz Joseph Gottlieb wrings every bit of gothic atmosphere he can out of CCC's Soho, a gloomy foggy place filled with prostitutes and grotesques. Another cracking krimi.

Extras include a Tim Lucas introduction (9 minutes) in which he talks about how the film claims it's based on a Bryan Edgar Wallace novel but no actual book can be found that saw publication. Kim Newman and Barry Forshaw return for commentary duties which is up to their usual excellent standard.
Both films on here have English dubs (with PHANTOM having to resort to German with subtitles in a few spots). There's also a ten minute interview with Alice Brauner, daughter of Artur, and current managing director of CCC
Disc Three
The Monster of London City (1964)
A modern-day Jack the Ripper is slashing prostitutes to death in London, and the killings mirror a Grand Guignol-style play that's currently on at the 'Edgar Allan Poe' theatre in the West End. Needless to say the star, Robert Sand (Hansjörg Felmy) quickly becomes the police's number one suspect, but there are plenty of others vying for the role. Robert's girlfriend Ann is played by Marianne Koch (A FISTFUL OF DOLLARS) and her uncle has a habit of creeping out at night dressed just like the killer. Then there's the play's director who's keen to drum up publicity. The identity of the actual killer is pretty easy to work out but that doesn't stop this from being a lot of fun, partly filmed on sets from THE PHANTOM OF SOHO and featuring a climax in that good old krimi standby, the local asylum.

Tim Lucas gives us another very helpful introduction (8 minutes) while Kim Newman and Stephen Jones provide a boisterous commentary track. Also on this disc is an 18 minute piece from Alexandra Heller-Nicholas which looks at the connection between the krimi and the slasher movie. It discusses all the films in the set so it's advisable to watch them all first before taking a look at this. There's also an English dub track and the German trailer.
Disc Four
The Racetrack Murders (1964)
Also known as THE SEVENTH VICTIM and retitled in English speaking countries for obvious reasons. After a couple of movies ostensibly based on the works of Bryan Edgar Wallace but not actually, for a change here's a movie actually taken from a BEW novel (Murder is not Enough). Death surrounds top racehorse 'Satan', tipped to win a forthcoming derby, but not if various nefarious characters can help it. Meanwhile those involved with Satan's care are being bumped off, and it may all be connected to the conviction and hanging of a man that took place 15 years ago.
THE RACETRACK MURDERS isn't quite as good as the rest of the films in the set. The identity of the killer is satisfying but is almost immediately scuppered by a bewildering ending that you'll probably need to watch twice to verify that you saw it.
Extras here include a final Tim Lucas introduction (8 minutes), a Jonathan Rigby and Kevin Lyons commentary (they confess to being equally bewildered by that ending), and an additional commentary track that plays along with the film but is actually Tim Lucas and Stephen R Bissette discussing all the films in the set, how they first came to watch them, and contextualising them with the other crime thrillers released at the time. It provides a fine end to an excellent set of films.
Finally, Eureka's set comes with a 60 page book featuring new writing on the films from Howard Hughes, Barry Forshaw and Holger Hasse.
TERROR IN THE FOG: THE WALLACE KRIMI AT CCC is out in a four disc Blu-ray set from Eureka Entertainment on Monday 26th May 2025