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Dead of Night is a 1945 British supernatural horror anthology film directed by Alberto Cavalcanti, Charles Crichton, Basil Dearden, and Robert Hamer. It stars Mervyn Johns , Googie Withers , Sally Ann Howes , and Michael Redgrave .
The magazine also referred to films such as Alfred Hitchcock's Spellbound and a few foreign films such as The Girl and the Devil (1944) and Dead of Night (1945) under the term. [58] In 1946, Curt Siodmak , the screenwriter of films like The Wolf Man (1941) stated that "When horror enters the gilded gate of top production, it is glorified as a ...
Night Train to Munich (1940) Crook's Tour (1941) Millions Like Us (1943) Following are the rest of Radford and Wayne's film appearances together. Most of these movies arguably utilised Charters and Caldicott's characteristics and certainly capitalised on the popularity of the actors' partnership. The characters' names are listed with Radford's ...
Dermot Mulroney has joined the cast of the upcoming indie horror-thriller “Dead of Night.” At the same time, it was announced that Scott Grimes (“Ted,” “Oppenheimer,” “Robin Hood ...
The script began as an unmade television series in 1948 during the time when Dead of Night was a recent release. Subotsky wrote the original stories in 1948 when he was employed as a scriptwriter for NBC's Lights Out series. [2]
Dead of Night, a number of comic series from Marvel MAX; The Dead of Night, a novel in the Tomorrow series by John Marsden; The Dead of Night, a book in the Cahills vs. Vespers series by Peter Lerangis; Dead of Night, the eighth book in the Survivors novel series by Erin Hunter; Dead of Night, the 80th book in the Hardy Boys Casefiles series
Hamer was born at 24 Chester Road, Kidderminster, along with his twin Barbara, the son of Owen Dyke Hamer, a bank clerk, and his wife, Annie Grace Brickell. [1] He was educated at Rossall School, an independent school for boys near the town of Fleetwood in Lancashire, and won a scholarship to Corpus Christi College, Cambridge, where he read the Economics tripos.
Another programme made by the Dead of Night production team under Innes Lloyd, The Stone Tape, running to 90 minutes and intended to be the eighth episode, also survives in the BBC Archives, but this was broadcast as a stand-alone story and not shown under the Dead of Night banner. BBC Four re-broadcast "The Exorcism" on 22 December 2007.