Posted by demonik on August 21, 2007
Stephen Volk – Gothic (Grafton, 1987)

`CONJURE UP YOUR DEEPEST, DARKEST FEAR.
THEN CALL THAT FEAR TO FORM . .
They joined hands around the seance table.
The lightning-obsessed Shelley, his timid 19-year-old mistress Mary Godwin, Mary’s-neurotic half-sister Claire, her lover the Satanic Lord Byron, and his strange companion Dr Polidori.
It began with ghost stories while the storm raged outside – and inside their fevered minds.
GOTHIC
June 16th 1816 at the Villa Diodati. The famous night of inspired imaginations that created monsters.
Or was something real created that night?
Something born out of electricity and laudanum-formed from their most horrible secrets, congealed in jealousy, obscene lust, guilt and visceral terror.
Some all-powerful creature that vowed revenge on its creators.
Perhaps by morning they would escape the nightmare. If they were all alive by morning. If they were sane.
‘TO CREATE A GHOST STORY, WHAT IS THAT?’ SAID BYRON.
‘BUT TO CREATE A GHOST …’
Virgin Vision presents A KEN RUSSELL FILM
GOTHIC
starring GABRIEL BYRNE • JULIAN SANDS
NATASHA RICHARDSON • MYRIAM CYR and TIMOTHY SPALL
Music composed by THOMAS DOLBY
Screenplay by STEPHEN VOLK
Executive producers
AL CLARK and ROBERT DEVEREUX
Produced by PENNY CORKS Directed by KEN RUSSELL
Posted in Film, Frankenstein, Gothic, Vampire | 1 Comment »
Posted by demonik on August 21, 2007
E. K. Leyton – Dracula’s Daughter (Star, 1980)

As she sprinkled salt on the flames and watched him burn, she hoped that the curse of her dreadful father had finally been overcome. But still she could not account for the
irresistible urges that sent her gliding out into the London night. Only Van Helsing could possibly stop her – and he was on trial for the murder of a man who never lived. She was beautiful and she longed to be human… but when night fell, she was still her father’s daughter!
Posted in Dracula, E. K. Leyton, Film, Ramsey Campbell | Leave a Comment »
Posted by demonik on August 21, 2007
E. K. Leyton – The Creature From The Black Lagoon (Star, 1980)

Hidden, it watched her swimming in the lagoon…
It was hideous, bizarre, perhaps a throwback to the age of reptiles, perhaps an awful promise of things to come. Suddenly into its steaming domain came the expedition, intrusive, inquisitive, hostile.
Afraid but undaunted, the creature tried again and again to destroy the invaders. Nothing stood in its way-except its own inexplicable fascination with Kay Lawrence, the only woman aboard the riverboat Rita.
What primitive emotion had caused the monster to spare Kay when others had perished so horribly? And now it had her in its grip, what did the monster want from her…?
Posted in Creature From The Black Lagoon, E. K. Leyton, Film, Ramsey Campbell | Leave a Comment »