Tanita, I think you'll find that practically all recent (i. e. since the Seventies) academic criticism of the horror film genre has something to do with sexuality since most of it draws heavily on psychoanalysis. A good place to start might be Robin Wood's chapter "The American Nightmare" in his Hollywood from Vietnam to Reagan. He gives a solid introduction to some basic psychoanalytic concepts in horror film crit, and offers a great disc. of another 30s horror film, Murders in the Rue Morgue. For a little more sophistication in this vein (*ahem*), you might want to look at some of the criticism from the Screen school of film theory. Roger Dadoun has a great piece on the Universal version of Dracula (sorry, I can't find the exact ref.) which has been reprinted, I believe, in the BFI publication, Fantasy and Cinema. Barbara Creed was also writing a lot on horror around this time, and her very insightful essays have been collected in her book, The Monstrous Feminine. For more recent, (post?)feminist, less directly psychoanalytic treatments of sexuality in horror films, look at Carol Clover's Men, Women and Chainsaws - perhaps not directly relevant for you since it's on the slasher film, but a milestone work for horror film criticism. More apropos might be Rhona Berenstein's recent book, Attack of the Leading Ladies, which concentrates almost exclusively on classic horror from the Thirties. Also very interesting is Judith Halberstam's Skin Shows, which tries to offer a different paradigm for the study of sexuality in the horror film and other gothic forms. Finally, if you really want to go off the theory deep-end, Slavoj Zizek does a fascinating neo-Lacanian reading of The Phantom of the Opera (though he concentrates on the novel) in his "Grimaces of the Real" chapter of Enjoy Your Symptom! Hope this helps, and sorry in advance for any repetition. David Conner UCSC, History of Consciousness ---- To signoff SCREEN-L, e-mail [log in to unmask] and put SIGNOFF SCREEN-L in the message. Problems? Contact [log in to unmask]