
- 240 pages
- English
- ePUB (mobile friendly)
- Available on iOS & Android
About this book
After Dracula tells of films set in London music halls and Yorkshire coal mines, South Sea Islands and Hungarian modernist houses of horror, with narrators that survey the outskirts of contemporary Paris and travel back in time to ancient Egypt. Alison Peirse argues that Dracula (1931) has been canonised to the detriment of other innovative and original 1930s horror films in Europe and America. By casting out the deified vampire, she reveals a cycle of films made over the 1930s that straddle both the pre- and post-regulatory era of the Hays Production Code an stringent censorship from the British Board of Film Censors. These films are indepenedent and studio productions, literary adaptations, folktales and original screenplays, and include Werewolf of London, The Man Who Changed His Mind, Island of Lost Souls and Vampyr. The book considers the horror genre's international evolution during this period, engaging with a number of European horror films that have hitherto received cursory attention. It focuses on the interplay between Continental, British and transatlantic contexts, and particularly on the intriguing, the obscure and the underrated.
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Information
Table of contents
- Cover
- About the Author
- Title Page
- Copyright
- Contents
- List of Illustrations
- Acknowledgements
- Introduction: When the Coffin Creaks
- 1 Remembering Horror in The Mummy
- 2 ‘Stubborn Beast Flesh’: The Panther Woman and Island of Lost Souls
- 3 White Zombie and the Emergence of Zombie Cinema
- 4 Vampyr and the European Avant-Garde
- 5 Bauhaus of Horror: Film Architecture and The Black Cat
- 6 The 1930s British Horror Film
- 7 Werewolf of London and the Origins of Werewolf Cinema
- Conclusion: (Re)making Film Histories
- Notes
- Filmography
- Selected Bibliography