A secret society pledged to preserve the Golden Age of Horror, wielding a mythical skull relic that unveils lost reels & forgotten terrors. Creator: @JayskullJS
Forged in the era of Dracula and Frankenstein, a secret society that vows: to keep the spirit of Golden Age horror alive, using a mythical skull relic, which reveals glimpses of lost reels and forgotten frights, binding them to horror’s golden past.
A publicity still from the (1954) Universal horror film Creature from the Black Lagoon, which features actor Ben Chapman as the "Gill-man" abducting the character Kay Lawrence, played by actress Julie Adams.
Lon Chaney Jr's raised heels resurrect that ancient predator skeleton inside a man. The choice isn’t acting, it’s paleontology in motion. The audience watches a living fossil reassemble itself, the heel bones hovering like forgotten relics no longer needed by the emerging wolf.
Helen Chandler holds a copy of Bram Stoker’s book, while the rest of the Dracula (1931) film casts look on. Left to right; Bela Lugosi, David Manners, Dwight Frye, and Edward Van Sloan.
Hitchcock wanted the shower a silent slaughter. Herrmann snuck in the strings anyway, proving one bold cue could rattle the whole skeleton of the film into terror.
In remembrance of Noble Johnson, who's known for his appearances in such movies as the 1932 film The Mummy and the 1932 film King Kong.
(April 18, 1881 - Jan 9, 1978) 🕯
"Certainly, I was typecast. But what is typecasting? It is a trademark, a means by which the public recognizes you. Actors work all their lives to achieve that. I got mine with just one picture. It was a blessing." -- Boris Karloff