Editorial Works

Horror Cinema

pf_edi_horror_cover

Horror Cinema

Categories: #Editorial Works   #Project Management

Client/Publisher: TASCHEN

Date: November 2016 – March 2017

Film Frights

Get ready to quake in fear with this revised and expanded edition of our history of horror cinema. This chilling volume packs 640 pages full with the finest slashers, ghosts, zombies, cannibals, and more, curating the very creepiest screen creations from the flickering spooks of the 1920s to the special-effect terrors of the 21st century.

Across 10 illustrated chapters, the compendium gets under the skin of some of horror’s favorite figures and themes, whether the vampire, the haunted house, the female killer, or the werewolf. Each classic device is explored in aesthetic and historical terms, probing horror’s manipulation of archetypal human fears as much as socially and culturally specific anxieties.

A subsequent Top 50 movies section brings readers up close and trembling with 50 horror showpieces, from black-and-white classics like Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde and Godzilla to Rosemary’s Baby, The Wicker Man, The Shining, The Blair Witch Project, and much, much more. Throughout, the book’s featured images include movie posters, set designs, film stills, and on-set shots.

About the editors:
Paul Duncan is a film historian whose TASCHEN books include The James Bond Archives, The Charlie Chaplin Archives, The Godfather Family Album, Taxi Driver, Film Noir, and Horror Cinema, as well as publications on film directors, film genres, movie stars, and film posters.
Jürgen Müller has worked as an art critic, a curator, a visiting professor at various universities, and has published extensively on cinema and art history. Currently he holds the chair for art history at the University of Dresden. Müller is the series editor for TASCHEN’s Movies by Decade titles.

Take a look…

All illustrations © TASCHEN

Horror Cinema

  • Hardcover, 14 x 19.5 cm | 5.5 x 7.7 in., 640 pages
  • Editions in English, German, French, Spanish, and Italian
  • € 14.99 | $ 19.99 | £ 14.99

The ideal volume for every movie buff’s bookshelf.

The Art Journal, London

A good purchase, if you dare.

The Independent, London