Brand new factory sealed vhs tape is full screen and perfect for old school televisions as the image will fill your square frame. Pop-n-go retro video also has no pesky menus to navigate. Filmed in glorious Black & White.

Special feature before the show is the original theatrical trailer.

A prologue (set in 1917) establishes child star Baby Jane as a spoiled brat, demanding and receiving adulation while her elder sister Blanche looks on with helpless jealousy.

A second prologue (1935) reveals that while Jane's career languished, Blanche became a star until crippled in a car accident involving both sisters in deliberately unspecified roles.

The action proper (dated 'Yesterday') sees Blanche (Joan Crawford), confined to a wheelchair, looked after with a grudging devotion by Jane (Bette Davis), who comes to see her sister as an obstacle in her grotesque plan to stage a comeback in her Baby Jane persona, and begins to mete out Cold Comfort punishments.

There is more to the theme than just gothic fireworks, especially given the catalytic prescence of Victor Buono -- a third monster, the grotesquely obese, ill-humored infantile pianist hired as accompinist for Jane's comeback -- who should (but doesn't quite) focus the tangle of perverted maternal/sexual jealousies that have encrusted around the sisters since childhood. Even so, there is an ingenius plot twist at the end.