Yahoo Suche Web Suche

Suchergebnisse

  1. Suchergebnisse:
  1. Dead of Night shares similarities with the Amicus films. Typically a group of people gather in one place and then either tell or see a story relating to themselves. Each story ends on a darker ...

    • (44)
    • Horror
  2. March 29, 1977. ( 1977-03-29) Dead of Night is a 1977 American made-for-television anthology horror film starring Ed Begley Jr., Anjanette Comer, Patrick Macnee, Horst Buchholz and Joan Hackett. Directed by Dan Curtis, the film consists of three stories written by Richard Matheson [1] (although the first segment, "Second Chance", was adapted ...

  3. 24. Jan. 2011 · Ealing Studios' 1945 production of Dead of Night is a landmark film on two different levels. Its overall high quality, mind-bending wraparound story, and one legendary sequence solidify Dead of Night's reputation as one of the greatest examples of the horror anthology. Of equal significance, the film provides links to the future by introducing ...

  4. 29. Aug. 1974 · Dead of Night: Directed by Bob Clark. With John Marley, Lynn Carlin, Richard Backus, Henderson Forsythe. A young soldier killed in the Vietnam War inexplicably shows up at his family home on the night of his death.

    • 4 Min.
    • 115
  5. An architect, visting a country farmhouse to look for work, senses impending doom as his half-remembered recurring dream turns into reality. Dreading the end of the dream that he knows is coming, he is encouraged to stay and listen to all the assembled guests’ own bizarre tales.

  6. www.moriareviews.com › horror › dead-of-night-1945Dead of Night (1945) - Moria

    2. Sept. 2003 · Dead of Night ‘s influence over Amicus films during the 1960s, who made a series of horror anthologies beginning with Dr Terror’s House of Horrors (1965), is unmistakable. Dead of Night is regarded as one of the classics of the genre, while the ventriloquist’s doll segment is regarded as the authoritative treatment of the theme.

  7. Dead of Night is the best horror anthology film ever made. Sometimes called the “portmanteau” film, the subgenre has a long tradition beginning in Germany with the silent films Unheimliche ...