Goth Week: 100 Years of Dracula: Small Screen Edition
by Tessa Swehla, Associate Editor
Tessa is back to talk about Dracula, but this time she turns her attention to the small screen!
by Tessa Swehla, Associate Editor
Tessa is back to talk about Dracula, but this time she turns her attention to the small screen!
by Rosalie Kicks, Old Sport & Editor in Chief
This two day event will showcase a variety of classic horror sequels from demonic possession to slashers to creature features and cult hits.
by Tessa Swehla, Staff Writer
I have returned this SpookyJawn with a second installment examining six more portrayals of the dark prince over his hundred years of gracing the screen.
by Liz Wiest, Contributor
Last month, as a part of their “Unspeakable: The Films of Tod Browning series,” Film at Lincoln Center unearthed 35mm footage of Dracula (1931) and Mark of the Vampire (1935) from the Library of Congress for a classic and campy double feature experience.
by Tessa Swehla, Staff Writer
The cinematic potential of the gothic prince has captured the imagination of filmmakers and audiences over the past century.
On this day in 1894, the first ever commercial motion picture house opened in New York City. If you could see any film in a theater the year it premiered, what would it be and why?