New Heritage of Horror: The English Gothic Cinema

New Heritage of Horror: The English Gothic Cinema

by David Pirie
New Heritage of Horror: The English Gothic Cinema

New Heritage of Horror: The English Gothic Cinema

by David Pirie

Hardcover(Revised)

$120.00 
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Overview

David Pirie's acclaimed history of British gothic film and television has long been regarded as a foundational study of the roots of British horror, identifying it as 'the only staple cinematic myth which Britain can properly claim as its own.'

This edition has been revised and updated to include discussion of films and TV dramas that have been newly discovered, restored or released since publication of the previous edition in 2007, as well as addressing newly-emergent screenwriters, directors and genres.

Drawing on insider accounts and archival sources, David Pirie investigates the notion of horror versus realism in popular fiction, and analyses the horror boom that developed around films including The Others and 28 Days Later. He chronicles British horror cinema from its origins in Gothic literature traces the rise of Hammer Films, its key directors and films as well as its battles with the censors, explores major horror sub genres including comedy horror and sci-fi, and brings the story up to the present day, where horror is flourishing in new ways, with films such as Shaun of the Dead, Under the Skin and Censor; the rise of genres such as folk horror and films that tackle questions of race and gender, and the emergence of a new generation of writers and directors including Prano Bailey-Bond, Ben Wheatley and Edgar Wright.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781845114817
Publisher: I. B.Tauris & Company, Limited
Publication date: 03/04/2008
Edition description: Revised
Pages: 352
Product dimensions: 6.94(w) x 9.69(h) x 1.11(d)

About the Author

David Pirie is a screenwriter, film producer, film critic, and novelist. A former Film Editor of Time Out, Pirie has written for publications including Sight and Sound, Monthly Film Bulletin, The Times, the Guardian and the Daily Telegraph. As a screenwriter, Pirie has achieved a reputation for his noirish original thrillers, classic adaptations and period gothic pieces including the hit ITV series Murderland starring Robbie Coltrane (2009). Pirie was nominated for a BAFTA for his adaptation of Wilkie Collins's The Woman in White (BBC, 1997), and in 2018 he co-executive produced the BBC's five hour production of the same novel, starring Jessie Buckley.Pirie is the creator of the Murder Rooms novels and BBC TV dramas inspired by the Sherlock Holmes stories. His work for TV and film includes the New York TV Festival award-winning Rainy Day Women (1984); Element of Doubt (1996), Natural Lies (1992); Ashenden (1991), and Black Easter (1995) and he also worked (uncredited) on the screenplay for Lars von Trier's Oscar-nominated Breaking the Waves (1996).

Table of Contents

Acknowledgements     vii
Note on the New Edition     viii
Introduction (2007)     x
Introduction to First Edition     xiv
The Characteristics of English Gothic Literature     1
'The Tempestuous Loveliness of Terror'     1
Surrealism and the Gothic Tradition     7
Horror and the Tyranny of 'Realism'     9
The Identification of Hammer     14
Hammer's Origins     19
The Press Reaction     35
Hammer and Censorship     37
Hammer and UK Horror after Frankenstein     45
The Personalities of Hammer     48
James Carreras and the American Dimension     56
Bray Studios     64
The World of Terence Fisher     66
Post-script 2007     78
Approaches to Frankenstein: Fisher, Francis and Sangster     79
The Frankenstein Television Series     86
The Last Hammer Frankenstein Movies     88
Approaches to Dracula     95
Other Approaches to Horror     113
Sadian Movies     113
The British Sadian Movie and the Censor     119
The Aftermath     129
The Amicus Factor     131
Three Satellite Directors     137
Don Sharp     137
John Gilling     141
Vernon Sewell     144
Science Fiction, Exoticism and Psychosis     150
Science Fiction     150
Exoticism     158
Psychosis     161
A Note on Comedy-Horror     165
A Renaissance of Themes and Ideas?     167
Michael Reeves     167
After Witchfinder     175
Hammer's Last Period     179
Hammer Versus Warner Brothers     183
Hammer's Final Days     185
Towards a New Horror Mythology     192
Later UK Horror     194
Stephen Volk     203
Stephen Woolley     204
Clive Barker     205
The 1990s     207
Paul Anderson     211
The New Century, The New Boom     212
The Television Factor     219
The Future?     221
The Urban Legends of Hammer     225
Two Checklists     227
Filmography   Alice Pirie     229
Select Bibliography     247
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