tv Arts.21 Deutsche Welle October 30, 2022 11:30pm-12:00am CET
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how documentary series will show you how people, companies and countries are we thinking everything fund lacking later changes 0 revealed starts november 3rd on d, w. ah, is dose, you know, are so inspiring for me because they are not smiling actually. they are pretty serious or even sad. i always been last night. a boy boy, especially cuz felice the food for me post li epitomizes dracula. me to proceed. i've always been more interested in suffering than eternal happiness even delicious.
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oh lou, life and death and the transition from one to the other. the beauty of the ephemeral, always a big topic in the world of art. what makes us really alive to vampires actually exist. searching for traces in the realm between we start on the north east coast of england at the birthday party for the most famous member of the living dead. 125 years ago, bram stoker's novel dracula was published. the vampire story became a classic around the world and founded a successful genre. bloodsuckers became a cult. but where that this huge fascination for vampire tales really begin. irish rights at bram stoker got inspiration for his classic story whilst holidaying in whitby on england's north east coast in the 1890s in his novel. this is why
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count dracula lands in the western world. and in our nightmares today the town is the price of pilgrimage for horror fans. why the donor will never die. reason number one obsessive fans. it's a very good story. the romance of its old knutson, you know, and the consequences of, of lovin deception. i suppose they have this, the, the, the fight i have a good over evil to bus flew. we saw the bus against the room with a heavy metal. i know exactly how his imagination, what because he was in same fig because it's spooky. there was a bright full moon with heavy black driving clouds, which through the whole scene into a fleeting di rama of light and shade. bram stoker's novel dracula was published
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on may 26 1897. it's presented as a true story. brief. number 2 for the genre is enduring success. mixing fact and fiction. professor catherine when has studied the elements that the irish writer took from whitby. mm. the also did his research in whitby library, and it was there, of course, that he discovered the name dracula. and he changes the name of his vampire from count one pier, which would never have worked strictly. it's very melodramatic to contract. ha stoked to read about bland dracula, or flat, the impaler, a 15th century ruler of for lakia and the national hero in romania. he was almost certainly not a vampire, but did have a reputation for brutality in particular for impaling prisoners. although
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historians say the stories may well have been exaggerated or even invented stoke, he took the name for draculas, 1st british victim from a grave stone in the cemetery of saint mary's church. swales, great name those and us her yes, he finds, finds this name here, and sites to use is immortalized. this figure in his, in his novel, particularly introduces lucy and mina to, to all the tales of whitfield and is the 1st victim on british soil of the vampire chris, their victims, on the boat in real life that boat was the russian schooner, the de meet tree, and was wrecked in a storm in 18. 85 on the beach below saint mary's church. this true story. oh, so finds its way into the novel in slightly changed form. it changes the name of the boat. he doesn't do very much. he just changed the name of
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the both from the demetrius, the diameter, the only living thing. the bangs of this boat is a black dog, a huge. how many bombs up the steps here this huge hound is dracula. stoker picked up on the local legend of the bog, asked the black dog ghost and skilfully wove it into his elaborate tale foot. strangest of all, the very instant the shore was touched, an immense dog sprang upon the deck from below. as if shot up by the can cushion and running forward, jumped from the bough onto the sand. vampire law is much older than stokers. novel belief in vampires was widespread in southern and eastern europe. in the 17th century. such that pope benedict the 14th had to declare that vampires were fallacious. fictions of human fantasy by the early 18th century vampires were beginning to colonize western european novels like john polly dories, the vampire,
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originally attributed to lord byron. ah, doctor clare nelly says bram stoker was clearly inspired by these earlier works. there are so many other vampire novels. polly dories, the vampire predates stokers novel. we've also got camilla by sheridan, left you is that quite a few examples camilla by sheridan lesson you is really interesting because even though it's written in quite coded turns for the period. uh, camilla is a lesbian vampire. and obviously that links to an awful lot of the queer agenda that you tend to find in gothic, texas. again, the fact that gothic texts are about me being conscious about, about arguably the taboo. which brings us to reason number 3 for the genres
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enduring appeal, sex and sexuality. them high tech, always on one level, about forbidden desires. also, the descriptions in the novel are very overly sexualized. there's lots of references to sort of blood and her lips dripping with blood, but she's wearing this white dress. so there's all these kind of reflections on innocence of virginity and all of those kinds of yes, broader ideas that will have been in the in kind of discourse in victorian society. ah, in 1922, the novel dracula celebrated its 25th anniversary. interest in the novel was waning,
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but it was about to get a major boost through reinvention for the silver screen. knots for our 2 directed by legend re, german director f. w mar. now is ground 0 for the vampire film? reason full for the vampire genres rising from the grave. reinventing dracula at the movies? ah! after you were nose enough for our 2 was the 1st vampire movie and it did set a template for a lot of those to come even though it's quite distinct. i mean his vampire, his, his count or lock is very different from the draculas that will come later. but various elements in terms of the, the way the sunlight can kill a vampire, ah,
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the way that count or lock life after young women and seizes them at night coming into their bedroom windows of those elements we see play in a lot of other vampire movies it visually so striking. i mean it's standard is high german expressionist style with extremely sharply contrasting shadows and light and all of course done in a silent film. so everything the sort of visual elements play much stronger role. unfortunately, the makers of this historic horror film didn't bother obtaining the rights they just changed the names dracula became all on. for example, stokers, widow, florence, successfully sued, and in 1925,
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a court ordered the destruction of or copies. fortunately for us, some survived the 1st us film adaptation came in 1931. actor. lagossi was a hungry and immigrant who had played the role in an authorized stage fashion. his acting and delivery may seem wooden to us to day, but his chilling and hunching quality only added menace for audiences in the 19 thirty's. ah! i am not. you won't believe those see brought to dracula. the character of dracula was eastern europeans sophistication. yeah, he, this is a guy who was able to speak in beautiful, long, complicated sentences and incredibly charming and with an amazing hungarian accent
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of. i am gone called raoul. i want to lock your blood. this was no longer just a monster who wanted to kill innocent women. this was a sophisticated aristocrat who also wanted to kill innocent women. and that image of dracula became a template for basically all the vampires to fall dracula slept through the 19 forties and most of the 1950s. but on the cost of the 906 days a franchise was born british actor christopher lee played the count for the 1st time, both the marketing and lease mesmerizing and simmering performance used sexuality. this is the story of dr. creature who destroys all who we touch. what crisper we brought to the character of dracula was sex. he filled this character with erotic tension and lost all these women. a bosom women toppling
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over and fainting in front of dracula as he consumes them. um, and that sort of a sexual energy was something we saw in vampires from then on a in cinema. ah, reason 5 for vampires genres. recent revitalization, the female perspective in android says, interview with the vampire, the blood suckers aren't driven by their nature to find new victims. but some have developed a conscience and feel quite bad about it. anne rice wrote interview with a vampire after the death of a child and this was her way of coming to terms with loss. and of course, i suppose the vampire had that type of appeal for her. initially, the sense of,
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of living forever, which is one of the vampires at grace appeals. rice is no. those have many fans in the l g b t q plus community to create a family of 2 mel vampires and a young girl, a child vampire. so what she creates for us in this a quite radically in the 19 seventy's and later found, of course by neil jordan in the 19 ninety's is the gay family. in stephanie miles, twilight books and the films that followed vampires are young and beautiful. maya writes from a christian perspective, she is working within a very at, within a mormon context as well. that's about daughter sex before marriage. if the human female and the comes to the vampire. if edward cullen lets us defense this down and, and take, there is a victim at then she is, you know, she's going to become a vampire and it's not what she looks like. that's fascinating, frederick collin,
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is how she smells. the sensation is so overwhelming for edward when they 1st meet, that bella clearly believes she has a body odor. problem. reason 6 for the success of the genre is it's basis in the dark arts. not for our to was co produced. i graphic designer, albin, growl, a student of their coats and lifelong member of fraternities sir tourney. under the name master, proceed. yes. crowd influenced the look of the film and was responsible for the inclusion of alchemical symbols in a key scene. or long term match shrinks, depiction was so terrifying to 19 twenties audience is that here to rumors abound. some people have claimed that he actually was a vampire that he can't be buried here because he's, he's one of the on dead. but there's no way that could be an ordinary bad. and also
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i be backtrack. combine that sounds like a made up name, right. max max fright. come on now, capua. real act, right? i mean, come on. do vampires really exist? back in whitby bay, some fans of the genre would only agree to meet us after dark. my name is the countess stretcher. and on account, my name's gary, but unnoticed, and lucifer. lucifer drank, you know, we believe that plan toys all room. i mean, we don't sit around drinking blood one day long. are there other other means of satisfying our, our needs. there's nothing different really about us. there's lots of empires in whitby. well, we're not sure about that, but 125 years after the publication of bram stoker's novel dracula has millions of fans all over the world. the vampire genre has revitalized itself feeding on the
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blood of th june generation, bram stoker died in 191210 years before the 1st film. what would he have made of the enduring success of his creation? i think this is a one to the celebration of france stoker's legacy and the legacy of of dracula. because stoker was a man of theater. he spent his whole life looking at costumes, seeing productions gothic productions at the lifestyle here. sure. and what a celebration their faith, this performance, these costumes people living out there found to face the novel is had real traction in wide popular culture. and you can certainly see that around whitby with over tourist attractions with shops that are inspired by dracula, by bram stoker. and it's all that really, that makes it so popular. any theater manager and the right mind would be very, very proud of
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a 125 year rod of something that he created. and when you also think of being an artist how he's inspired thousands of writers and stage directors. and of course, places like the whitby goth festival, that of profited from this and is a ticket gathering of people who love to come and celebrate the goth life things that bram stoker really introduced to the world way back in 18. 97. i'm feeling quite mirror a mirror on the wall, who was the great to screen dracula. of them all. very well, bram stoker's idea that vampires have no reflection seemed taylor made for gripping scenes in countless films acre lot. but we can't ask the mirror. let's ask the fans who their favorite dracula was. lagossi is the, is the, in my opinion, the act ankle dracula, or because it is perth relationship to the character. it was unique. the fact he was a hungarian sylvania, an actor,
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a political refugee. i will know what the goals is. marlins were in the cold and the koberson the in the accent. i've always been fascinated, boy, boy, especially christopher lee, of the for good for me post li epitomizes dracula. backtrack and thus brought home . i will stand as really one of the greatest or films of all time. and i would say one of the greatest films of they could well pass for dracula. sisters, are they about to open their eyes? japanese dolls. staged disturbingly, hulu. they appear angry, feeling and of dying. i may be to $80.00, collector, photographer, those photographer. so be $20.00. are my passion so cold
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a bowl joined? dolls with their movable ball joints are particularly popular and south korea and japan. the dolls, facial features and outfits are inspired by manga japanese comic art, the crack of based artist to creates a unique personality for each of her dolls. so you can exchange to eyes sas so that she can look, you know, aside oh, in front. so you can change the call or a voice size of eisen song. so again, it would be a like a different face and then different and different character. she especially like stressing her dolls in a gothic style, ankle strap, sandals, and least of shoes. i necked colors, lace, everything in white or black. the collector now owns almost 30 of these dolls. his doors, you know, are so inspiring for me because they are not smiling. actually. they are pretty,
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an a serious or even 3rd old crying. yes. so it has some possible to canada, a more serious stories, not about toys, but actually about the people. yeah. about the humans emotions. even though one knows that these are only dolls. the images frightened and soothed the perfect illusion of death and of life. ah. ready lou. ready ready ready ready ready i was real living beings, his work so low as a glimpse into the soul of others people, but also animals the p u t,
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which is like us, unique, unfathomable, full of dignity. the animal is our mythical companion, says valdez. she is, we are alike. originally animal meant breathing being it contains the latin word anima, the breath, the soul. ms. hobbs, go to the game. delicious. rather than the newspaper again. or the big question to you. i do animals have a so you're not, you're to come this of course they have a so you we are the only ones. conf about the so loosely see our soul as glorified in a sense. so we should see what we know that cells that was recent. beautiful basil it. an animal rarely pretends it just is that's what mountie shells likes about them. these creatures are nothing but themselves. big, black and white and without smiling. that's how vanity shales 80 thinks,
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portrays people and all kinds of animals. only the pan, the band was not willing to lot of golden and pop google. so i was lying on the ground just waiting for him to finally stop eating bamboo often. because for me that wasn't a portraits on english. and then he finally stopped at bonham to each doctor he and then i was going to leave the enclosure with hobby alban, but i didn't realize it in place. so suddenly, the panda bear pounces on me and soon as possible. now that's how it happened to the actual delay, far back, but the finger was gone, so drew caught the hot tub. unluckily, his clothes did this, scratch my face, if diminished it. ah, it hath merely vanished in wilting, flowers back thing we call life. but want jails asks, is living anyway? how is it inside us? what shapes us in time?
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and what is predetermined? births are a frequent subject of his photography. that's very 1st look emerging into the world. one vice, these 2 are subtle, so you never know how it will turn out. so we bostic, it's a matter of destiny and genetics. brownfields class in the $23.00 chromosomes, each from father mother, which shapers my former face for gift. foreman. few more for melissa conception, her lines the perm, hold the big woodson or rather he pronounced not to come get oh, of course. and we can also change for the wise, we would be zombie some bits. although the possibilities we have come from within hauled him from what's invested in his cousin, all spoons of a 1000000 households. no one starts from nothing. there is a talent character and origin. he grew up in lands hoot during the war
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after a bombing raid. he had to identify his dead neighbors. he was 9 men, and it wounded his so deeply. at 15, he has his 1st camera, lynn to frame the world in launching it to will make it small all through. and then as soon as he could, he left to land suit, emigrated, and then 1916 became a photographer in new york. need to see the light dimension may of always be more interested and suffering than eternal happiness. so incredible the everlasting smile. too soon. goldish this even delicious. if mercy meets all, i don't mean to say that there aren't happy people that will be just as wrong. little good also for of course there are truth good to stick over. but how short is
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that of the feeling of happiness, the strict and pin them. in hospice, he accompanied the dying with his camera in for months until life had departed to weigh in. there is nothing that comfort or explain us. it just happens. oh, can you no medications you had no schooling help. i had none of this and to for not for this, i would be a damaged person, tells me fear, bus done via each photography, was my salvation. you full to go fees, money with, oh, and disdain. make sure to make the most of your lives. good bye and see you next
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a way that's as environmentally friendly as possible to us. americans take up the challenge with all its pitfalls. what's the experience in their e camper? their travel blog is our series across europe in an event. so yeah. you romance? 60 minutes on d. w. o, a pre klein, aol ready news with hackers, paralyzing the tire societies, computers that out. sure. you and governments that go crazy for your data. we explain how these technologies work, how they can only go in for,
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and that's how they can also era. watch it now on youtube. vibrant habitat ended glistening plates of morning. the mediterranean sea. it's waters connect people of many cultures. seen of almost rock enter far, bill, korea drift along with exploring modern lifestyles and mediterranean where it has history left its traces, meeting people hearing their dreams ready to meet this week on d. w with
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