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Word: undead (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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...Lake of the Woods by Tim O'Brien (Houghton Mifflin). A boyish politician, spooked by an election defeat and by undead memories of Vietnam, retreats to a Minnesota lake to sort things out. He and his wife, who has spooks of her own, slip separately through the trapdoors of the mind into the subterranean world where morality, evil and reality itself are shifting phantoms. O'Brien, who served in Vietnam and in 1979 won the National Book Award for Going After Cacciato, once more displays his enormous talent...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Best Books of 1994 | 12/26/1994 | See Source »

...Radcliffe's programmatic agenda for the '90s will continue to put the energy of scholars, researchers and members of the government and the media into such public policy issues as women, work and economy, criminal justice and health care, it may be that we need to revisit those old, undead demons: misogyny and sexism...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Mathews Unfairly Bashes Radcliffe | 11/14/1994 | See Source »

...undead have stalked opera houses as disparate as San Francisco and Bayreuth, in both cases in Wagner's The Flying Dutchman. But Zambello goes further in her use of pop cultural references, particularly cinematic ones. The expressionistic sets recall Tod Browning's original 1931 film, Dracula (Bela Lugosi would have felt right at home at Ravenswood), while Martin Pakledinaz's costumes evoke David Lynch's sanguinary 1984 intergalactic flop, Dune. In the famous mad scene, Lucia's descent into insanity is symbolized by a steep staircase, down which the white-gowned murderess floats like her Nosferatu namesake, Lucy Westenra, Coppola...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Mad, Bad and Dangerous | 12/7/1992 | See Source »

...BOTTOM LINE: Coppola brings the old spook story alive -- well, undead -- as a luscious, infernal romance...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: A Vampire With Heart . . . | 11/23/1992 | See Source »

Dracula the screen role is more seductive, protean, and undead than the legendary Transylvanian himself. In Francis Ford Coppola's resurrection (exhumation?) of the character, we see Dracula in his most romantic incarnation to date. Gary Oldman plays Dracula as a Byronic hero, a Slavic warrior prince who slaughters Turks in holy war. When his wife, Elisabetha, hears a false report of his death, she commits suicide, and the Church pronounces her soul damned. In a fit of rage and sorrow, the prince vows to join her in damnation and becomes a vampire. Essentially, the torture of his vampirism derives...

Author: By J. C. Herz, | Title: New Movies | 11/19/1992 | See Source »

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