The art-horror; horror writing Horror stories The nature of Horror, by Noel Carroll

Abraham "Bram" Stoker (November 8, 1847 – April 20, 1912) was an Irish novelist and short story writer, best known today for his 1897 Gothic novel Dracula. During his lifetime, he was better known as personal assistant of actor Henry Irving and business manager of the Lyceum Theatre in London, which Irving owned.

Katie Harse: Melodrama Hath Charms: Planché’s Theatrical Domestication of Polidori’s “The Vampyre”



Journal of Dracula Studies 3 (2001)


                        [Katie Harse is a doctoral student at the University of Indiana. Her work has appeared in Dracula: The Shade and the Shadow and the Journal of the Fantastic in the Arts.]


Walter Kendrick claims that “it is ... down among the rip-offs, that culture decides what to let live and what to embalm” (104). Indeed, just what is repeated, and what altered, from text to text, from source to adaptation, is often ideologically significant. Consequently, I propose to examine  J R Planché’s 1820 melodrama, The Vampire, or The Bride of the Isles, in the context of John William Polidori’s “The Vampyre” on which the play is based.
                        In an analysis using the same strategy, Ronald E McFarland, one of the few critics to discuss Planché’s adaptation, writes that Polidori’s tale consists more in “promising hints” than in “a vivid setting or ... a conventional Gothic atmosphere” (24). McFarland figures the ambiguities in Polidori’s text variously as “example[s] of his amateur status as a writer of fiction” (22), lack of credibility in his characters (24), “problems of motivation” (26), and “obscurity” (28). Noting that the melodrama “avoid[s] ambiguity or ambivalence at all costs” (25), he suggests that Planché’s play, like its French predecessors by Pierre Carmouche, Achille Jouffrey, and Charles Nodier, essentially fills in the gaps in Polidori’s tale, resulting in what McFarland implies is a clearer, more aesthetically sound, version of the story.
                        Jeffrey N Cox’s remarks on melodrama’s  “domestication” of the stage, which Cox sees as “a cultural reaction against the extremism and radicalism of the Gothic” (71), also apply to the relationship between Planché’s play and Polidori’s tale. While the latter contains elements of the domestic both in its view of “those who threaten order as monsters” (70) and in the “realism” which McFarland notes (24), it is much less sure of this social order, and much less optimistic about its eventual triumph over the forces of evil than is the stage adaptation. While discussing the rise of the domestic melodrama over the Gothic, Cox notes the tendency of “dramatic and theatrical histories” to view this as “an aesthetic matter” rather than a moral one (70).  I would suggest that McFarland, and other critics who see the ambiguities in Polidori as stylistic flaws, are, in fact, disguising a culturally-ingrained unease regarding ambiguity. Thus, I am less interested in judging Planché’s version for its fidelity, or lack thereof, than in using the changes the playwright has made, in the context of Cox’s statement, to reveal just how subversive Polidori’s little-analyzed text is. 
                        The first significant change occurs in Planché’s opening scene, in which the spirits of earth and air reveal Ruthven’s vampirism to the audience (15-16). By contrast, the Polidori text requires the reader to learn of the vampire’s nature gradually, as Aubrey, the human protagonist, does.  Polidori immediately establishes Ruthven as a stranger to London society (108), and as morally questionable (112), but not as a vampire; the very question of vampirism is literally unthinkable until Aubrey travels to Greece where the tradition is common knowledge. The play, then, demystifies the vampire for the audience, if not for the other characters, by preceding the action with an explanation of Ruthven’s nature and the possible manner of his demise: “total annihilation” if he does not, before the moon is full (16), “wed some fair and virtuous maiden” and afterwards drink her blood (15).

Afflicted (director: Derek Lee - Clif Prowse)

Afflicted, Derek Lee, Clif Prowse, Vampire films, Horror films, Vampire movies, Horror movies, blood movies, Dark movies, Scary movies, Ghost movies


Starring
Clif Prowse
Derek Lee
Zachary Gray
Edo Van Breemen



Two best friends see their trip of a lifetime take a dark turn when one of them is struck by a mysterious affliction. Now, in a foreign land, they race to uncover the source before it consumes him completely.

Maria Dahvana Headley: Queen of Kings

Maria Dahvana Headley, Queen of Kings, Vampire novels, Vampire books, Vampire Narrative, Gothic fiction, Gothic novels, Dark fiction, Dark novels, Horror fiction, Horror novels


The year is 30 BC. A messenger delivers word to Queen Cleopatra that her beloved husband, Antony, has died. Desperate to save her kingdom and resurrect her husband, Cleopatra summons the most fearsome warrior goddess, Sekhmet, and against the warnings of her scholars she strikes a mortal bargain. In exchange for Antony's soul, Cleopatra is transformed into a vampiric creature with superhuman strength and an insatiable hunger for human blood. Clashing against witches and monsters, gods and warriors, Cleopatra journeys from the tombs of Egypt to the great amphitheaters of Rome to the ancient underworld-where she will meet her love once again, and where the battle between man and beast will determine the fate of the world.

Jack Prelutsky: The Ghoul

Jack Prelutsky, Halloween poem, Vampire poetry, Vampire poems, Dark Poems, Dark Poetry, Gothic poetry, Goth poetry, Horror poetry, Horror poems


The Ghoul

The gruesome ghoul, the grisly ghoul,
without the slightest noise
waits patiently beside the school
to feast on girls and boys

He lunges fiercely though the air
as they com out to play,
and grabs a couple my the hair
and drags them far away.

He cracks their bones and snap their backs
and squeezes out their lungs,
he chew their thumbs like candy snacks
and pulls apart their tongues.

He slices their stomachs and bite their hearts
and tears their flash to shreds,
he swallows their toes like toasted tarts
and gobbles down their heads

Fingers, elbow, hands and knees
and arms and legs and feet-
he eats them with delight and ease,
for every part's a treat.

And when the gruesome grisly ghoul
has nothing left to chew,
he hurries to another school
and waits. . . perhaps for you.