In his memoirs, screenwriter Charles Bennett reflects upon writing the British horror film Night of the Demon (1957, Jacques Tourneur). He reveals his lack of fondness for the film’s executive producer, commenting ‘Hal Chester, if he walked up my driveway right now, I’d shoot him dead’. Chester rewrote elements of Bennett’s script to focus attention on the fire demon, and arranged additional filming after Tourneur had completed directing duties. This much of Night of the Demon’s production history is well documented. However, drawing upon extensive research at BFI Special Collections and the BBFC, this article offers an alternative reading of the film. Focusing on creative process, I utilize draft screenplays, reader reports and letters to ...
An examination of the relationship between theatre and film that focuses on the work of figures asso...
Hammer Film Productions’ move to colour in the 1950s has often been discussed in terms of their appl...
Rather than re-rehearsing familiar narratives about ‘Eurohorror’ erected around an established canon...
In his memoirs, screenwriter Charles Bennett reflects upon writing the British horror film Night of ...
This article examines the way in which sensational articles about the making of Ken Russell's The De...
Existing research on British censorship during the 1940s has often favoured the notion that a so-cal...
This article examines why it took 33 years before Mark of the Devil (1970) could be distributed in...
In bringing to the screen the life of murderer Robert Stroud in Birdman of Alcatraz (United Artists,...
This paper examines the responses to the 1954 BBC adaptation of Nineteen Eighty-Four, as held by the...
This article reveals how screenwriter Stephen Volk's idea for a sequel to The Innocents (1961, Jack ...
This thesis examines horror films through an application of cultural analysis (primarily the work of...
This article reveals how screenwriter Stephen Volk’s idea for a sequel to The Innocents (1961, Jack ...
The purpose of this paper—perhaps really more a set of somewhat informal notes, in the manner sugges...
In 1999, the London-based production company, Working Title Films, established a subsidiary called W...
Existing research on British cinema during the 1940s has often assumed an opposition between realism...
An examination of the relationship between theatre and film that focuses on the work of figures asso...
Hammer Film Productions’ move to colour in the 1950s has often been discussed in terms of their appl...
Rather than re-rehearsing familiar narratives about ‘Eurohorror’ erected around an established canon...
In his memoirs, screenwriter Charles Bennett reflects upon writing the British horror film Night of ...
This article examines the way in which sensational articles about the making of Ken Russell's The De...
Existing research on British censorship during the 1940s has often favoured the notion that a so-cal...
This article examines why it took 33 years before Mark of the Devil (1970) could be distributed in...
In bringing to the screen the life of murderer Robert Stroud in Birdman of Alcatraz (United Artists,...
This paper examines the responses to the 1954 BBC adaptation of Nineteen Eighty-Four, as held by the...
This article reveals how screenwriter Stephen Volk's idea for a sequel to The Innocents (1961, Jack ...
This thesis examines horror films through an application of cultural analysis (primarily the work of...
This article reveals how screenwriter Stephen Volk’s idea for a sequel to The Innocents (1961, Jack ...
The purpose of this paper—perhaps really more a set of somewhat informal notes, in the manner sugges...
In 1999, the London-based production company, Working Title Films, established a subsidiary called W...
Existing research on British cinema during the 1940s has often assumed an opposition between realism...
An examination of the relationship between theatre and film that focuses on the work of figures asso...
Hammer Film Productions’ move to colour in the 1950s has often been discussed in terms of their appl...
Rather than re-rehearsing familiar narratives about ‘Eurohorror’ erected around an established canon...