
Classics Of Gothic Horror Cinema
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Goth-ic
adj 1) of or in a style of building common in Western Europe
between the 12th and 16th centuries, with pointed arches, tall pillars, and tall thin
pointed windows often with coloured glass in them: Notre Dame in Paris is a Gothic
catedral.
2) of or like a style of writing popular in the late 18th century which
produced stories set in lonely frightening places: Gothic novels | Gothic horror
films, with ruined castles, haunted graveyards, and eerie noises.
- Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English
The genre of Gothic horror film has
existed almost as long as the cinema itself, and it has always fascinated people. As the
definition above suggests, the word can be loosely used to define any horror story with
suitable settings, but such themes as disturbing dreams, desperate, undying love and
melancholic romanticisation of death are also usually important in Gothic cinema.
The following is a brief and
superficial overview on the history of Gothic horror film and some classics of the genre.
Note that this is by no means an objective review and the selections are strongly affected
by the writer's personal preferences.
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![[Das Kabinett des Doktor Caligari, 8k JPEG]](goth1.jpg)
Directed by Robert Wiene
in 1919,Das
Kabinett des Doktor Caligari was one of the first Gothic horror films. Although
the more usual Gothic environment was replaced by disturbingly surreal sets, this
incredibly inventive story of dream, madness, love and evil is thematically more truly
Gothic than any of your average graveyards-castles-and-living-dead spook flicks. Being
also the film that first introduced the character of a mad doctor to a horror audience, The
Cabinet remains an unrivalled masterpiece nearly eighty years after its original
release.
It is quite obvious that there are few things more Gothic than vampires. This was to be
noticed by the world in 1922, when the German expressionist F.W. Murnau
made the first ever film adaptation of Bram Stoker's novel Dracula. Although the Count was
called Orlok, and the story was set in Bremen instead of London, Nosferatu,
eine Symphonie des Grauens was so identical to Stoker's story that major legal
trouble for Murnau followed right after the release. The Count was portrayed by Max Schreck (whose last name
is actually German for 'terror')as an undead bestial bloodsucker. In the story, the
vampire can only be brought to rest by a virtuous woman who shall willingly give her blood
to the beast until the sun rises, and the vampire turns to dust in a legendary scene. Many
scholars describe Nosferatu as the best film ever made in the vampire genre.
![[Dracula (?), 8k JPEG]](goth3.jpg)
Released ten years later, Tod
Browning's Dracula
gave the character of the Count a remarkably different treatment - the one that we now
call 'the classic Dracula'. Bela
Lugosi's Dracula dressed in an elegant Victorian suit and a black and red satin cloak,
and was closer to a mysterious, charmant aristocrat than a blood-thirsty monster. Despite
the fact that neither the film nor its sequel
Dracula's Daughter were cinematic masterpieces, Lugosi's immortal portrayal of
Dracula would be copied by many, but never quite duplicated. The maestro himself was
extremely dedicated to his work, and actually lived the last years of his life in the
fantasy world of his films - he was finally even buried in his Dracula cloak.
![[Bride of Frankenstein, 7k JPEG]](goth4.jpg)
Shortly after Browning's Dracula, another classic Gothic novel was made into
a film. James Whale's 1931
film Frankenstein
was a simple and popularised version of Mary Shelley's philosophically very complex novel,
but nevertheless stands out as a prime example of traditional Gothic cinema. The immortal
surrection sequence must be one of the best remembered scenes in the history of horror.
Throughout the film, Boris
Karloff manages to squeeze a considerable amount of dumb emotion through the monster's
deformed face-particularly in the (partly cut-out) scene where he has thrown the young
girl to a lake, thinking that she will float like the other flowers. The sequel Bride of
Frankenstein was even more impressive, and has subsequently become one of the
most respected films in the genre.
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The 60's and the 70's were, in many ways, the golden age of horror cinema. In Great
Britain, the legendary Hammer Films produced countless re-made classics, often based on
classic stories about Dracula, Frankenstein, the Werewolf and the Mummy. Usually starring Christopher Lee as the
monster and Peter Cushing
as the pure-hearted hero, some of these films were based on traditional Gothic themes and
some of them were set in traditional Gothic surroundings. Vast majority of them, however,
were both.
![[Dracula - Prince of Darkness (?), 5k JPEG]](goth5.jpg)
Hammer's stunning series of Dracula films, starting with Terence Fisher's seminal
Horror of
Dracula, laid the basis for a whole new vampire renaissance in cinema. Lee's
masterful portrayl of the vampire count was based on Lugosi's stylish gentleman
bloodsucker, with some additional sophisticated decadence. Whether it was Lee or Lugosi
who was the true Dracula shall always be argued, but Hammer's films were definitely
scarier, more seriously Gothic, and generally less B-like than Lugosi's Draculas. (The
writer has felt a certain religious awe towards Lee since his childhood, and is
rumoured to have built an altar to him in his bedroom, so his opinions are not to be taken
too seriously. -Ed.)
![[La Maschera del Demonio, 7k JPEG]](goth6.jpg)
It wasn't just the British directors who were making European Gothic film in the sixties.
After the genre was finally popularised by Hammer during the '60s,European auteurs
(particularly Italian and Spanish) were free to make their own versions without having to
worry about their success. Although these movies had to copy some of their style from the
British classics in order to remain popular, some directors showed genuine talent and made
classics of their own. These included the Italian Mario Bava, a talented
visualist, whose films were filled with beautiful Gothic imagery. Many of those films,
including La
Maschera del Demonio which is regarded as one of the genre's cornerstones,
starred Barbara Steele
who soon became known as The Queen of European Horror.
Although the Victorian morality strictly prevented the publication of graphic erotica, J.
Sheridan Le Fanu's vampire novel Carmilla was clearly a veiled story about
lesbian love. The story had already been filmed in 1932 by Carl Dreyer - even
if his artistic, dreamy and disturbing Vampyre
was only very loosely based on Le Fanu's novel. Lots of remakes and versions of Carmilla
would appear on the silver screen during the sixties and the seventies, more often than
not emphasising the erotic elements of the story and the thrilling presence of the female
vampire.
![[The Vampire Lovers, 8k JPEG]](goth7.jpg)
The trend was born in the early sixties with Roger Vadim's
for a Vampire and Twins of Evil
were of traditional Hammer quality. The trilogy was a success, and played a great part in
popularising the sub-genre.
![[The Masque of the Red Death, 7k JPEG]](goth8.jpg)
On the other side of the Pond, Roger
Corman was independently writing, producing, directing and shooting cheap exploitation
films at an astonishing rate. He concentrated mostly on best- selling subjects: science
fiction, monster movies and - of course - spooky Gothic horror. In 1960, Corman started
his series of Edgar Allan Poe film adaptations with The Fall of the House
of Usher. Most of these quickies starred Vincent Price as a paranoid
nobleman, obsessed with either ancient family curses or the idea of getting buried alive.
Stories took place in old,spooky castles and dungeons with rusty torturing equipment
(often the same sets, just a bit differently arranged and lighted).
Although the series was made with a
shoestring budget, and some of the stories were almost indistinguishable from each other,
even critics had to agree that there is a surprisingly small amount of unintentional
comedy in the films. Usually they didn't even look cheap. Corman was no Ed Wood Jr. - his
unique vision and Price's brilliant aristocratic anxiety lifted
Pit and the Pendulum,
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In can be argued whether the genre finally died with the coming of splatter in the 80's or
not, but the state of the Gothic film scene today is hardly impressive. Of course, there
are some exceptions.
![[The Crow, 10k JPEG]](goth9.jpg)
Some of Tim Burton's films -
most notablyBatman
and Batman
Returns - have really impressive Gothic settings in a modern city instead of
medieval castles, even if some of the traditional spirit might be lacking. It is this
style of magnificent "post-Gothic" visuality that seems to be the spine of
modern Gothic films - The Crow for an
excellent example.
Most of the traditional Gothic tales have also been re-remade again in the 90's - this
time by respected directors and with big budgets. Both Bram Stoker's
Dracula by Francis Ford Coppola
and Mary
Shelley's Frankenstein by Kenneth Branagh claimed to
be 'the film adaptations on this novel to end all film adaptations on this novel'.
Granted, they are technically excellent, remain loyal to the original stories (although
Coppola's film emphasises the theme of undying love just a tiny bit too much) and have
very impressive Gothic settings. At least they are not starring Tom Cruise as the Anne Rice
adaptation Interview
With the Vampire did. The reader might disagree, but some of the feeling and
honesty of the classics is no more present in the genre today.
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(In order of appearance)
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