
Valentine VHS
1 OF 1 · NO RESTOCK
"Valentine" on VHS, Warner Home Video, 2001. This is the theatrical slasher that hit the post-"Scream" boom at full speed and gave the holiday its most menacing mascot: a Cupid mask cracked down the center, eyes dead, nosebleed dripping. The cover tagline does the heavy lifting before you even flip the case. "Remember that kid everyone ignored on Valentine's Day? He remembers you." That line lands harder than most horror trailers from the period.
The late-1990s into early-2000s slasher revival had a release schedule dense enough to sustain two or three entries a year, and studios were betting on the post-"Scream" audience that had proven it would show up for self-aware, casting-forward horror. "Valentine" came out in February 2001 with a cast built for marquee value: David Boreanaz was mid-run on "Angel" and moving into leading-man territory, Denise Richards was coming off "Wild Things" and "The World Is Not Enough," Katherine Heigl was pre-"Grey's Anatomy" and working steadily in genre work. Director Jamie Blanks had already delivered "Urban Legend" in 1998, so the studio had reason to bet on the formula again. The film pulled a wide release, made back its budget in the opening weekend, and then largely disappeared from conversation. That quiet exit is part of why the VHS presses are finite.
This copy is the standard clamshell Warner Home Video release, red-dominant cover art, the cracked mask centered, tagline printed below. Condition on the case and the tape itself should be read in hand before any firm grading note goes on paper, but the piece is here, physical, and accounted for. The VHS window for this one closed before any definitive collector edition materialized on disc, so the tape format is the primary release most fans ever handled. Run your thumb across the spine label and check for any label lift or surface fade before you commit.
OWNER VERIFY: Confirm tape condition and case seam integrity match the grade listed at point of sale.
The Rental Counter
Before streaming flattened the difference between movies, VHS was a physical act. Rentals, buybacks, Blockbuster sleeves, promo tapes, ex-rentals with security stickers still on the side. y2k tapes outlived the stores they came from. We keep them in their original cases where possible and note every sticker, sun-fade, and sleeve crease in the photography.
INSPECTED IN STORE / 707 E FREMONT, LAS VEGAS
Inspected in Las Vegas on June 2026. Each piece is a single unit, sold as inspected.
KEEP IT CLASSIC
This valentine vhs originates from the y2k era[01], represents Warner Home Video[02]'s output, . Each piece in the shop is a single unit, inspected by hand in Las Vegas before listing. The data manifest to the right records the fields on file for this lot; where a field is empty it has been omitted rather than guessed.
INSPECTED IN STORE / 707 E FREMONT, LAS VEGAS
- VENDOR
- Warner Home Video
- ERA
- y2k
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