| Title | : | The Romance of Dracula: A personal journey of the Count on celluloid |
| Author | : | |
| Rating | : | 4.67 (692 Votes) |
| Asin | : | 1463736630 |
| Format Type | : | Paperback |
| Number of Pages | : | 330 Pages |
| Publish Date | : | 2011-08-02 |
| Genre | : |
A review of the fourteen Major film adaptations of Bram Stoker's novel Dracula. Complete with illustrations of the fourteen major Counts. From Max Schreck to Marc Warren, The Romance of Dracula is the most concise account of the Count on screen. The Epilogue concentrates on the Count's further/major appearances in fantasy horror films and the book takes interesting side-roads into the exploration of the myth through The Fearless Vampire Killers (1967), the original Fright Night (1985) and The Shadow of the Vampire (2000). An engrossing must-have read for the casual onlooker and the ardent aficionado.
Editorial : About the Author Charles E Butler was born and raised in the Yorkshire town of Leeds in the UK. He is a writer, actor and artist of independent comic books. He quickly developed a taste for the fantastic through comicbooks and the movies. His own short films under his Su asti banner are submitted to festivals and have been viewed as far afield as New Orleans. He has written vampire essays for various sites on the Internet and his special tribute Dracula and Werewolf pages can be found on Facebook. The Romance of Dracula is his first book and a sequel, Vampires Everywhere, The Rise of the Movie UnDead is in preparation.
I'm going to take a break now. Lexi owns a candy store in a historic area, and rallies the public against a new shopping center that Evan wants to build there; meanwhile, her sanity comes from online chats with "Nick."
Best bits: These are two very opinionated people who aren't afraid to be loud and forceful about what they think is right, and since they meet on opposite sides of an issue, they start as de facto enemies. This wasn't what I expected: I've tended to find Kierkegaard's ideas engrossing and inspiring. "think tanks" that would be forbidden to exist in Saudi Arabia, and other institutions including the Middle East Institute, Harvard, Yale, the Clinton Foundation, the Carter Center, etc.
For a further 275 Saudi Pages try Robert Vitalis's America's Kingdom: Mythmaking on the Saudi Oil Frontier. This book comes from a nondenominational view in my opinion. So, please accept my apology in advance for any recurring statements or phrases used when describing t
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