But there are instances that show the writers' literacy knowledge too -- e.g., Bramwell was named after the real life Bramwell Bronte, brother to Emily, Charlotte, and Anne.
And perhaps how fuzzy their knowledge was since the Brontes' brother's name was actually Branwell, not Bramwell.
Hey new cousins...we've discussed movie correlations & DS before...can you name a few more movies TCM could've run that correspond to DS?As long as you don't list the cross-plot to DS, I don't think it's 'spoilage'.Have fun and WELCOME
Hey, btw, Patti, shouldn't this thread be called "A Dark Shadows kind of Mourning? Apologies, couldn't resist.
Hitchcock's "Spellbound" (with Ingrid Bergman playing the "woman" psychiatrist ), "Vertigo" (great cinematography; the storyline parallels the Barnabas-Josette obsession in many ways)
Food for thought, cousins; while the Barnabas/Willie characters may be loosely based on Dracula characters, the actual Barnabas/Josette plot (as near as I can tell) was lifted from Universal's 1932 version of The Mummy, starring Boris Karloff. Imhotep is awoken after x number of years and meets a woman that is the reincarnation of his lost love. The plot then follows Imhoteps attempts to bring said lost love back to him.
Nelson Collins -- interesting about "The Mummy." I tend to look for more "literary" sources, no doubt overlooking some more popular (and less highbrow) ones.
Funny you should mention "Spellbound". That movie haunted me and intrigued me for years, as I had seen only the first half of it while in high school, and never knew the explanation for Gregory Peck's strange fears or the Dali-dream sequence until someone told me about it years later. Then it was years later before I actually saw the ending -- I waited in vain for years and years for it to be shown on TV, then finally bought it on VHS a few years ago. Recently watched it again, three times in obsession (oops -- I mean "succession"). I still love it, but the characters are really cardboard cutouts and don't impress much with repeated viewings beyond the "this is what the explanation" gimmick. "Vertigo" I think has more depth in characterization and holds up better. Not sure if either one is really a direct influence on DS, but there are some interesting parallels at least.
P.S. When I was researching a project in high school, I stumbled across a reference to a Sandor Petofi, whom IIRC, was also an artist. 1897 had just begun airing, and I thought it was a funny coincidence.
On the other end of the spectrum, however, we have Coppola's Bram Stoker's Dracula, which shamelessly cribbed the Barnabas/Josette plot (IMHO) as backstory/flashback material for the film, with Dracula's wife believing him dead and committing suicide, and Dracula meeting Mina Harker 5 centuries later and believing her to the the spirit of his lost Elizabetha reincarnated.