Revision with unchanged content. Gothic as a dark genre has a natural
affinity with cinema. Some of the earliest movies were based on Gothic
fiction already. Over the century, Gothic elements have crept into all
filmic genres, including anything dealing with the supernatural or
nightmares. Gothic films create a threatening fantasy world, which
mirrors ours in a distorted manner and subversively reacts to
contemporary concerns. War, sexuality, science, government, economics,
racism - all these topics find their expression through the monstrous
images of Gothic films, giving us a snapshot of some of our worlds
dilemmas. Three films are being investigated in this book, which contain
all different kinds of interpersonal relationships, may they be
intellectual, sexual or even bloody love relationships, between monsters
or human beings. What do the protagonists of "The Silence of the Lambs",
"The Ninth Gate" and "Interview with the Vampire" have in common, and in
what way is their character altered by the Gothic elements of the story?
A short overview over the history of Gothic film completes this book,
and its accessible style will ensure that it appeals to enthusiasts as
much as it does to a more academic audience.