There’s a name for you ladies. But it isn’t used in high society, outside of a kennel. So long, ladies!
The Women (1939) dir. George Cukor
They’ve committed a murder. And it’s not like taking a trolley ride together where they can get off at different stops. They’re stuck with each other and they’ve got to ride all the way to the end of the line and it’s a one-way trip and the last stop is the cemetery.
Double Indemnity (1944) dir. Billy Wilder
Be thou exorcised oh Dracula, and thy body long undead find destruction throughout eternity in the name of thy dark unholy Master. In the name of the oh holiest and through this cross be the evil spirit cast out until the end of time.
Dracula’s Daughter (1936) dir. Lambert Hillyer
The Black Cat does not die. Those same books, if I’m not mistaken, teach that the Black Cat is deathless. Deathless as Evil. It is the origin of the common superstition. You know, the cat with nine lives.
The Black Cat (1934) dir. Edgar G. Ulmer
Sometimes, I have wondered whether life wouldn’t be much more amusing if we were all devils, no nonsense about angels and being good.
Bride of Frankenstein (1935) dir. James Whale
Have you never wanted to look beyond the clouds and the stars, or to know what causes the trees to bud? And what changes the darkness into light? But if you talk like that, people call you crazy.
Frankenstein (1931) dir. James Whale
To die, to be really dead, that must be glorious!
Dracula (1931) dir. Tod Browning & Karl Freund
Don’t you find respectable people terribly… dull?
Marlene Dietrich as Shanghai Lily in Shanghai Express (1932)
It was worth it to be near you.
The Cameraman (1928) dir. Buster Keaton & Edward Sedgwick
It’s a Wonderful Life
1946, dir. Frank Capra