An examination of the relationship between theatre and film that focuses on the work of figures associated with the post-war British theatre but whose film work was often understood in terms of horror. In particular, it examines the ways in which their work was understood as shocking audiences through a confrontation with repressed materials and as narratively staging conflicts between protagonists that represent conflicting ideas. In other words, these stories were often understood as staging battles between characters that sought to assert domination and control over their adversaries, battles that often featured psychological cruelty and destructiveness
Upon its release in 1968, George Romero's Night of the Living Dead was attacked by many critics as a...
This paper offers a broad historical overview of the ideology and cultural roots of horror films. Th...
Diverse depictions of zombies, vampires, ghosts and other manifestations of the dead permeate late p...
An examination of the relationship between theatre and film that focuses on the work of figures asso...
George Romero's 1968 film Night of the Living Dead introduced radical new changes to the figure of t...
Horror films often play with shadows, darkness and nightscapes. One need only to think of Nosferatu'...
Analyzing George A. Romero\u27s Night of the Living Dead (1968) and Dawn of the Dead (1978) in relat...
Horror cinema is a hugely successful, but at the same time culturally illicit genre that spans the h...
British realist drama after the Second World War tests the “rhetoric of ineffability” of the horror ...
Within this document I examine personal accounts and relevant research surrounding social inadequacy...
This work is concentrated on the period of ?Theatre of Cruelty? and following theatre experiments in...
Existing research on British cinema during the 1940s has often assumed an opposition between realism...
Representations of violence have been at the heart of some key movements in post-war British theatre...
This is an essay synthesizing the sociohistorical Gothic theory of Jose Monleon and a theory of the ...
The classical Hollywood cinema had a strange relationship with the representation of the body in pai...
Upon its release in 1968, George Romero's Night of the Living Dead was attacked by many critics as a...
This paper offers a broad historical overview of the ideology and cultural roots of horror films. Th...
Diverse depictions of zombies, vampires, ghosts and other manifestations of the dead permeate late p...
An examination of the relationship between theatre and film that focuses on the work of figures asso...
George Romero's 1968 film Night of the Living Dead introduced radical new changes to the figure of t...
Horror films often play with shadows, darkness and nightscapes. One need only to think of Nosferatu'...
Analyzing George A. Romero\u27s Night of the Living Dead (1968) and Dawn of the Dead (1978) in relat...
Horror cinema is a hugely successful, but at the same time culturally illicit genre that spans the h...
British realist drama after the Second World War tests the “rhetoric of ineffability” of the horror ...
Within this document I examine personal accounts and relevant research surrounding social inadequacy...
This work is concentrated on the period of ?Theatre of Cruelty? and following theatre experiments in...
Existing research on British cinema during the 1940s has often assumed an opposition between realism...
Representations of violence have been at the heart of some key movements in post-war British theatre...
This is an essay synthesizing the sociohistorical Gothic theory of Jose Monleon and a theory of the ...
The classical Hollywood cinema had a strange relationship with the representation of the body in pai...
Upon its release in 1968, George Romero's Night of the Living Dead was attacked by many critics as a...
This paper offers a broad historical overview of the ideology and cultural roots of horror films. Th...
Diverse depictions of zombies, vampires, ghosts and other manifestations of the dead permeate late p...