Tags / gothic

"gothic"

17 BuzzVerdicts across TV Shows (6), Books (6), Movies (1), PC Games (3), Board Games (1)

Interview with the Vampire

4.5

2022 · 3 Seasons · AMC · Horror / Drama

AMC's Interview with the Vampire reinvents Anne Rice's novel with a boldness that honors the source material while making it entirely its own, anchored by Jacob Anderson and Sam Reid's extraordinary performances as Louis and Lestat. The show explores race, identity, and the horror of eternal life through a gothic lens that's both lavish and emotionally devastating. The unreliable narrator framework adds layers of complexity that reward attentive viewing, though the timeline shifts can occasionally feel disorienting.

Jane Eyre

4.5

1847 · Charlotte Bronte · 624 pages · Literary Fiction

Charlotte Bronte's 1847 novel remains one of the most emotionally gripping reading experiences in English literature. Jane's voice is so direct, so insistent on her own worth, that it still feels radical almost two centuries later. The gothic atmosphere, the central romance, and the moral backbone of the story all hold up, even if some plot elements strain modern credulity. This is a novel that people don't just read but feel strongly about, and that emotional connection is exactly what Bronte intended. It asks what a person is worth when they have nothing, and it answers with conviction.

Rebecca

4.4

1938 · Daphne du Maurier · 380 pages · Gothic Fiction

Daphne du Maurier's 1938 gothic masterpiece still casts a long shadow over psychological fiction. The unnamed narrator's insecurity, the oppressive grandeur of Manderley, and the unseen presence of the first Mrs. de Winter create an atmosphere of dread that few novels have matched. The pacing is deliberate, the twist is devastating, and the final act reframes everything that came before. Some modern readers find the narrator's passivity frustrating, but that frustration is part of du Maurier's design. Rebecca is a book about the tyranny of comparison, and it hasn't aged a day.

Rebecca

4.3

1940 · Alfred Hitchcock · 130 min · Gothic Romance / Thriller

Hitchcock's first American film won Best Picture for a reason. The unseen title character haunts every frame through Judith Anderson's terrifying Mrs. Danvers and Joan Fontaine's achingly vulnerable bride, creating a gothic atmosphere that modern horror films still chase. The pacing tests modern patience and the Production Code softened a crucial plot point, but Manderley's shadow stretches just as far today as it did in 1940.

Interview with the Vampire (TV Series)

4.3

2022 · 2 Seasons · AMC · Horror, Drama, Romance

Interview with the Vampire is the Anne Rice adaptation that fans waited decades for, a lush and emotionally devastating reimagining that honors the source material while making bold creative choices. The performances from Jacob Anderson and Sam Reid anchor a love story that spans centuries, and the show's willingness to explore race, identity, and power through its vampire lens gives the material a weight that transcends the genre. The narrative structure can be demanding, with its layers of unreliable narration and timeline jumping, and some viewers find the pacing of certain episodes uneven. But this is gothic television at its most ambitious and beautiful, the rare literary adaptation that justifies its own existence.

The Picture of Dorian Gray

4.3

1890 · Oscar Wilde · 272 pages · Gothic Fiction

Oscar Wilde's only novel remains one of the most quotable, provocative, and thematically rich works of the Victorian era. Its exploration of vanity, moral corruption, and the cost of living without consequence still resonates more than a century later. The prose sparkles with Wilde's legendary wit, and the central premise is as creepy and compelling now as it was in 1890. Some readers find the philosophical passages heavy and the middle section slow, but those willing to sit with Wilde's ideas will find a book that rewards every page.

Castlevania

4.2

2017 · 4 Seasons · Netflix · Animation / Action / Dark Fantasy / Horror

Castlevania did something the entire entertainment industry had spent decades failing at: it turned a video game into a great television show. Four seasons of gorgeous animation, morally complex characters, and action choreography that set a new standard for the medium. The pacing stumbles in the back half, particularly once Dracula exits the stage, and some storylines in seasons three and four feel stretched thin. But the highs are extraordinary, the character work is far deeper than anyone expected from a Konami adaptation, and the fight sequences alone are worth the price of entry. This is the show that proved video game stories could work on screen.

Darkest Dungeon

4.2

2016 · Turn-Based RPG · PC / Steam

Darkest Dungeon is a game that wants you to feel the cost of every decision, and its stress system, atmospheric art, and punishing combat deliver on that promise completely. Red Hook Studios built something that feels fundamentally different from other dungeon crawlers, where managing your heroes' mental state matters as much as their hit points. The grind through the mid-game and the occasional run-ending RNG streak are real weaknesses that test player patience. But the atmosphere is unmatched, the narrator alone is worth experiencing, and the moments where a desperate gamble pays off create the kind of stories that keep players talking about this game years after release.

Wuthering Heights

4.0

1847 · Emily Brontë · 416 pages · Gothic Fiction

Wuthering Heights is a wild, uncomfortable, brilliantly constructed novel that refuses to behave like the love story people expect it to be. Emily Brontë wrote one book and it turned out to be one of the most original novels in the English language. The characters are frequently terrible people doing terrible things, and the prose has an energy that most Victorian fiction can't touch. It rewards patience and punishes anyone looking for a simple romance. Nearly two centuries after publication, it still has the power to unsettle.

Frankenstein

4.0

1818 · Mary Shelley · 352 pages · Gothic Fiction

Mary Shelley wrote Frankenstein at eighteen and accidentally invented science fiction. The novel that most people think they know from movies and pop culture is far stranger, sadder, and more philosophically ambitious than any adaptation has captured. Victor Frankenstein is not a cackling mad scientist. His creature is not a mindless monster. The real horror lives in the space between creator and creation, in the responsibilities we owe to the things we bring into the world. It's a short book that asks enormous questions, and over two hundred years later, those questions have only gotten more relevant.

Lies of P

4.0

2023 · Action RPG · PC / Steam

Lies of P is the strongest non-FromSoftware entry in the soulslike genre, and it earns that distinction through sheer commitment to its own identity. The Belle Epoque steampunk setting is gorgeous, the weapon assembly system adds real creativity to builds, and the boss fights will test even experienced players. Some of those bosses push past challenging into frustrating, and the story doesn't quite stick the landing on every thread it weaves. But Round8 Studio built something that stands next to the games it draws inspiration from without looking like a shadow, and that's an achievement very few studios have managed.

Fury of Dracula

3.8

2015 · 2-5 Players · 120-180 min · Competitive / Hidden Movement / Deduction

Fury of Dracula is one of the most atmospheric hidden movement games ever made, capturing the cat-and-mouse tension of hunting a vampire across Victorian Europe better than almost any other design. The theme, the gradual build of dread, and the dramatic confrontations when hunters finally corner the Count produce moments that few board games can match. Pacing issues and a lengthy playtime mean those moments are separated by stretches where not much happens, and the game demands the right group and the right mood to land. But when it works, Fury of Dracula delivers an experience that its many imitators have never quite replicated.

Wednesday

3.8

2022 · 2 Seasons · Netflix · Supernatural Mystery / Comedy

Wednesday takes a beloved character and drops her into a teen mystery format that works better than it probably should. Jenna Ortega's deadpan performance carries the show through weaker plotting and some casting choices that don't quite land. The gothic visuals are gorgeous, the humor hits more often than it misses, and Ortega's chemistry with Emma Myers gives the show a genuine emotional core. The mysteries themselves are the weakest link, often predictable and occasionally convoluted, and the Addams Family elements beyond Wednesday herself feel undercooked. It's a fun, stylish show that knows what it does best and mostly sticks to it.

Taboo

3.6

2017 · 1 Season · BBC One / FX · Drama / Thriller

Taboo is a dark, atmospheric period thriller that lives and dies by Tom Hardy's commanding performance as a man who terrifies empires. The Regency-era London setting is rendered with grimy beauty, and the show builds tension through mood and mystery rather than action. It demands patience and rewards it inconsistently, with some episodes delivering genuinely gripping drama and others losing momentum in murky plotting. The dialogue can be hard to follow, literally and figuratively, and the pacing tests even devoted viewers. But when Hardy is on screen, fully inhabiting a character who seems to operate by rules no one else understands, the show generates a pull that's hard to shake.

Dracula

3.5

1897 · Bram Stoker · 512 pages · Gothic Horror

Bram Stoker's 1897 novel created the modern vampire and launched an entire genre that shows no signs of slowing down. The book itself is a mixed experience. Its opening section in Castle Dracula is atmospheric horror at its finest, and the epistolary format creates genuine tension when it works. But the middle sags badly, the heroes are bland compared to their villain, and Victorian attitudes toward women date the novel in ways that can be hard to ignore. Dracula endures because its central figure is one of the great creations in horror fiction. The novel around him doesn't always live up to the character it invented.

Darkest Dungeon II

3.5

2023 · Roguelike RPG · PC / Steam

Darkest Dungeon II is a bold, polarizing sequel that trades the base-building loop of its predecessor for a tighter roguelike structure built around doomed road trips. The turn-based combat is excellent, the atmosphere is oppressive in all the right ways, and the relationship system adds a layer of strategy that can make or break a run. But the shift away from persistent progression alienates as many players as it attracts, and the run length can test patience when things spiral. If you can accept it as its own thing rather than measuring it against the original, there's a deeply rewarding tactical game here.