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Outstanding instances of macabre themes in English literature include the works of John Webster, Robert Louis Stevenson, Mervyn Peake, Charles Dickens, Roald Dahl, Thomas Hardy, and Cyril Tourneur. [3] In American literature, authors whose work feature this quality include Edgar Allan Poe, H. P. Lovecraft, and Stephen King.
Ginger Snaps is a 2000 Canadian supernatural horror film directed by John Fawcett and written by Karen Walton, from a story they jointly developed.The film stars Emily Perkins and Katharine Isabelle as Brigitte and Ginger Fitzgerald, two morbid teenage sisters whose relationship is tested when Ginger (who has started her period for the first time) is attacked and bitten by an unknown animal ...
The film cuts between scenes of a hospitalized woman who was discovered with severe facial lacerations, speaking only the word "kolobos", as well as a group of young adults who have answered a personal ad seeking people to participate in a Big Brother-esque film.
Rubber is a 2010 English-language French independent horror comedy film written and directed by Quentin Dupieux.The film is about a tire that comes to life and kills people with psychokinetic powers.
Bodies Bodies Bodies. This is your classic teens-in-the-woods horror flick—but with a twist. Bodies Bodies Bodies follows a group of friends (and exes) who reunite at a remote cabin.It’s all ...
Horror and terror, two concepts in Gothic literature and film; Horror Channel, a former name of the British television channel Legend "The horror! The horror!", a line uttered by Kurtz in Joseph Conrad's 1899 novella Heart of Darkness and its 1979 film adaptation Apocalypse Now
Gary Crawford (1986) "Criticism" in J. Sullivan (ed) The Penguin Encyclopedia of Horror and the Supernatural. Ann Radcliffe (1826) "On the Supernatural in Poetry" in The New Monthly Magazine 7, 1826, pp 145–52. Devendra Varma (1966) The Gothic Flame. New York: Russell and Russell. Gina Wisker (2005) Horror Fiction: An Introduction. New York ...
Published in English 1890 " The Horla " (French: "Le Horla") is an 1887 short horror story written in the style of a journal by the French writer Guy de Maupassant , after an initial (much shorter) version published in the newspaper Gil Blas , October 26, 1886.