DR. JEKYLL & MR. HYDE (1920) with Live Music by The Invincible Czars October 20th at Webster University


“A man cannot destroy the savage in him by denying its impulses. They only way to get rid of a temptation is to yield to it.”


DR. JEKYLL & MR. HYDE (1920) will screen at Webster University’s Moore Auditorium Friday October 20th  at 7:30pm. Austin, Texas’ most adventurous band, The Invincible Czars, will provide live music.The band encourages fans and attendees to dress for the Halloween season at these shows.


Alongside Sherlock Holmes and James Bond, Robert Louis Stevenson’s novella The Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde is a work that has spawned many screen adaptations, yet predates both, the first of which dating as far back as 1908. Widely considered one of, if not the best of the bunch, director John S. Robertson’s seminal 1920 proto-horror classic DR. JEKYLL & MR. HYDE is mostly remembered for one thing above all others. Played by an endlessly captivating John Barrymore, the characters of Jekyll and more importantly Hyde, are brought into—or returned to—existence with contrasting shades of elegance and pure ham-fisted grotesque in a performance that many point to as Barrymore’s first 80 minutes of brilliance. Relying on little to no makeup for some of Hyde’s appearances, the actor merely uses his face as a means of creeping the hell out of you as he stares through the lens with eyes watering with madness and depravity. Simply put, it’s the stuff of nightmares and silent-horror gold. For this film,  The Invincible Czars created their most understated, minimal soundtrack to match the introspective, philosophical nature and incorporated music by Eric Satie and Claude Debussy.


Admission for this event is $10

Advance tickets are available from the cashier before each screening or contact the Film Series office (314-246-7525) for more options. The Film Series can only accept cash or check.

Winifred Moore Auditorium (470 E. Lockwood, Webster Groves, MO 63119) :

Directions: Taking Highway 44 East, exit left on Elm Ave. Make a right on East Lockwood Ave. Immediately after passing Plymouth Ave., there will be a parking lot entrance to your right (lot B). Winifred Moore Auditorium is behind Webster Hall (Building 2 on map).

NOSFERATU With Live Music by The Invincible Czars Saturday Night at Webster University

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St. Louis-area movie geeks will have two opportunities this week to see the 1922 silent vampire classic NOSFERATU accompanied by live music. The first is Thursday night, October 20th at Urban Chestnut Brewing Company’s Midtown Brewery & Biergarten (3229 Washington Ave, St. Louis 63103) with music by The Rats and People Motion Picture Orchestra (more details on that event HERE). And then if you can’t get enough of Count Orlock and his little rat-faced antics, head over to Webster University’s Moore Auditorium (470 East Lockwood) at 7:30 Saturday night October 22nd for a screening accompanied by the Austin, Texas-based group The Invincible Czars.
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The Invincible Czars

An unauthorized adaptation of Bram Stoker’s Dracula, Nosferatu is the quintessential silent vampire film. Rather than depicting Dracula as a shape-shifting monster or charming gentleman, director Murnau’s Graf Orlok (Max Schreck) is a nightmarish, spidery creature with a disfigured head and fierce looking claws. Nosferatu was filmed in villages and a castle located in the Carpathian Mountains capturing a more realistic and unnerving feel that was atypical of expressionist films at the time.

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Austin’s most adventurous band, The Invincible Czars, will bring their new tastefully modern score for the 1922 German silent film Nosferatu (1922 F.W. Murnau) to the South, Mid-Atlantic and Mid-West during the month of October. This tour follows a string of sold-out and full houses in the western and gulf coast states. Nosferatu is one of the most revered films in the history of cinema and certainly the most important horror film of the silent era though it was almost completely lost when the estate of Bram Stoker sued the filmmakers for copyright infringement and most of the prints of the movie were destroyed. Fans, theaters and media have praised The Invincible Czars for making the near century-old movie “actually scary” for modern day audiences with their cinematic sensibility and precise performances. But the group was reluctant to create a score for Nosferatu at first. “We didn’t think the world needed another score for this movie so we never seriously considered doing it,” says band leader Josh Robins, who founded the group in 2002 and set them down the path of scoring and accompanying silent films  2006. “But it was hard to deny all the requests we kept getting for it.”  So in 2015 they decided to try it.  “We checked out a ton of other scores by orchestras, metal bands, DJs and other silent film accompaniment groups and tried to make ours as stand apart.” Using a mix of acoustic and electric instruments helped but the real stand-out is wind player Leila Henley’s otherworldly vocal performance.  (She also makes much of the group’s stage wardrobe.) The band always borrows music from the classical realm in their scores. For Nosferatu, they chose Bela Bartok’s Romanian Folk Dances in a nod to the fictional Count Orlock’s home turf and because the pieces were composed around the same time as the movie was made. Nosferatu tells the story of Hutter and Ellen, a couple from the village of Wisborg.  Hutter travels to Transylvania to sell a piece of property in Wisborg to Count Orlok.  Hutter stays in Orlok’s castle only to learn that the Count is a vampire. Orlok purchases a house next to Hutter’s, locks Hutter in the castle and travels to Wisborg. On the way, he manages to possess Hutter’s employer and Ellen and strike the village with an outbreak of the plague. Hutter rushes home to stop him before it’s too late.

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The band encourages fans and attendees to dress for the Halloween season at these shows.

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Admission is $10

Advance tickets are available from the cashier before each screening or contact the Film Series office (314-246-7525) for more options. The Film Series can only accept cash or check.

The Webster University Film Series site can be found HERE

http://www.webster.edu/film-series/