#nicholas van ryn
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ilovemesomevincentprice · 1 month ago
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Vincent Price dress rehearsal for Dragonwyck (1946)
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vincentpriceonline · 2 years ago
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Vincent Price as Nicholas Van Ryn in Dragonwyck // 1946 // slouchy
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twistedtummies2 · 2 years ago
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The Price May Be Right - Number 16
Welcome to “The Price May Be Right!” I’m counting down My Top 31 Favorite Vincent Price Performances & Appearances! The countdown will cover movies, TV productions, and many more forms of media. We’ve officially reached the halfway point for this countdown! Today we focus on Number 16: Nicholas Van Ryn, from Dragonwyck.
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Honestly, it’s very fitting this performance lands smack-dab in the middle of this countdown. In many ways, this film could almost be perceived as a crossroads in Vincent Price’s career. I say “almost” because…well…chronologically speaking, it really wasn’t. But the SPIRIT of the film, to put in the most pretentious terms imaginable, feels like a crossroads between Vincent’s earliest endeavors on the screen, and the kind of work he’d be most known for by the time his career hit its greatest stride. “Dragonwyck” came out in 1946. At this time in Vincent’s career, the actor was only starting to make his name well-known as a portrayer of dignified and complex villains, and while he’d done a couple of spook shows, it would be some time before he became well known for his work in Gothic horror movies. In the 30s and 40s, Price was best known as a character actor in period pieces, and that is essentially the reason he was picked for the role of the main antagonist in the film. The plot of “Dragonwyck” focuses on a young lady, Miranda Wells: a country-grown, God-fearing girl wo has many optimistic ideals and far-flung dreams for her future. Her dreams seem to find a possibility for reality when she meets a wealthy New England landowner by the name of Nicholas Van Ryn. Nicholas is an elegant, eloquent gentleman, and Miranda is soon smitten; he, too, ends up falling in love with her…even though he’s already married. Hiring Miranda as a servant at his estate, Nicholas brings her to his family manor house, known as Dragonwyck. From that point on, various strange and unfortunate events befall the pair, as their relationship goes from a dream to a total nightmare. While not by any means a horror film, this movie has many elements that certainly feel reminiscent of the kinds of movies Vincent would be most well known for later on. The story involves murder, ancient curses, supposed ghostly occurrences, and all takes place in an old mansion on a lonely hilltop. The way the film is lit and shot often evokes feelings of unease, as well; it may not BE a Gothic chiller, but it often FEELS like one. I guess the best way to describe it is that it’s neither a horror thriller, nor a period drama, but something in-between: a “period thriller,” if you will. The character Vincent plays is similarly fashioned: Nicholas is both the love interest and the main antagonist, and as such, he’s a character we are always finding ourselves second-guessing. He flip-flops constantly from being someone we care about and even feel sorry for, to someone we utterly despise and fear. He and Miranda’s twin arcs mirror each other, as both have any aspirations and ideals they long to hold onto, and both are forced to realize that, as the song goes, “there are dreams that cannot be, and storms we cannot weather.” What separates the pair is ultimately how they react to these things. Price plays the character absolutely beautifully, making his pain just as palpable as his perversions, and thus creates one of the most sympathetic yet still shadowy villains he ever portrayed in his entire career. Tomorrow, the countdown continues, as we move into the Top 15!
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peggy-elise · 1 year ago
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Vincent Price as Nicholas Van Ryn in Dragonwyck 1946 🌓
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funkymbtifiction · 3 months ago
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Dragonwyck: Nicholas Van Ryn [INTJ 5w4]
MBTI Type: INTJ Nicholas is a dreamer at heart, who sometimes refuses to accept the reality of the situation in favor of his ideal; the doctor accuses him of being someone who won’t believe anything unless he wants to, and who can’t face the fact that his son isn’t going to live very long. He is often morose and lost in his intellectual thoughts, wondering if pla­­nts have thoughts and are…
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ddarker-dreams · 2 years ago
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Hello dearest! Do you have more books/lits to recommend? Related to your past book recommendations. Thank you dearest and do rest well. ♥
hello hello!! i've been reading a lot these past few weeks actually, so this is good timing.
(here are my past book recommends if anyone is curious)
demons by fyodor dostoevsky (he's back, unsurprisingly. i'm sure anyone who has followed me for two seconds is used to seeing this fella's name. this was such a distinct experience compared to his other works... it definitely felt like a tragedy. it's also wickedly funny. it's kinda crazy to me that a book from almost two centuries ago can still make me laugh).
dragonwyck by anya seton (a dizzying ride that really picks up halfway, although i found the first half enjoyable nonetheless. nicholas van ryn was such an interesting character... i never knew what to expect from him. i loved the gothic elements as well).
the stranger by albert camus (this was my first exposure to camus' writing style, so i was a bit put off by it at first, but it quickly grew on me. i especially enjoyed the final conversation between the protagonist and the chaplain at the end).
the metamorphosis by franz kafka (i read this bad boy in school like i'm sure most of us did. i decided to go ahead and reread it as an adult to see what my perspective on it now is. i'm glad i did — i definitely appreciate it more than when i was like. 15).
discipline and punish by michel foucault (the french are taking over this list. i find history and criminology fascinating so a combination of the two is a match made in heaven to me. i guess this is to be expected of a criminal psychology major. i will say that this is the most difficult book i've ever read, my brain felt like it was making the windows shutdown noise frequently because of how dense the subject matter is. probably a niche read. very fascinating if you're into the subjects i mentioned though).
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byneddiedingo · 1 year ago
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Gene Tierney and Vincent Price in Dragonwyck (Joseph L. Mankiewicz, 1946)
Cast: Gene Tierney, Vincent Price, Walter Huston, Glenn Langan, Anne Revere, Spring Byington, Connie Marshall, Harry Morgan, Jessica Tandy. Screenplay: Joseph L. Mankiewicz, based on a novel by Anya Seton. Cinematography: Arthur C. Miller. Art direction: J. Russell Spencer, Lyle R. Wheeler. Film editing: Dorothy Spencer. Music: Alfred Newman. 
Dragonwyck both courts and suffers from comparison to those other paradigmatic gloomy old house movies of the 1940s, Alfred Hitchcock's Rebecca (1941) and Robert Stevenson's Jane Eyre (1943). As the imperious master of the titular gloomy old house, Vincent Price can hardly compete with Laurence Olivier in the former or Orson Welles in the latter. Price had an aura of camp, present not only today after his many horror movies, but apparent even then, after playing Shelby Carpenter in Laura (Otto Preminger, 1944). Gene Tierney, on the other hand, holds up well in a comparison with Joan Fontaine, the heroine of both of the other two movies. There's also some distinguished supporting work from first-rate actors like Walter Huston, Anne Revere, and Jessica Tandy, and solid contributions by familiar character actors Spring Byington and Harry Morgan. So Dragonwyck isn't a total loss. Where it falls apart is in adapting Any Seton's hefty novel, which concentrates as much on history as on gothic romance. The historical element in both novel and film centers on the overthrow of the semi-feudal patroon system that was established in the Hudson River Valley by the Dutch in the 17th century and persisted through the mid-1840s. In adapting the novel, even the gifted screenwriter Joseph L. Mankiewicz can't do much to stuff the history into the confines of his movie, which was also his debut as a director. But I got the feeling that he was stymied by the demands of the characters as well: We get only an outline of the backstory of his heroine, Miranda Wells (Tierney), in an opening scene with her stern, puritanical father (Huston) and her more understanding mother (Revere), before she is carried off to Dragonwyck to serve as governess to Katrine Van Ryn (Connie Marshall) and companion to the invalid Mrs. Van Ryn (Vivienne Osborne). The mystery of how and why Miranda's distant cousin-by-marriage, Nicholas Van Ryn (Price), decided to hire Miranda is never explained. The faithful Van Ryn housekeeper (Byington) shows her the house and tells her its creepy history, and then warns her, "One day you'll wish with all your heart you'd never come to Dragonwyck." But there's also a handsome young doctor (the forgettable Glenn Langan) to suggest alternative possibilities. The spook factor consists of a portrait of an ill-fated ancestor and her harpsichord, whose ghost can be heard singing and playing at ominous moments, such as the death of Mrs. Van Ryn. Mankiewicz has some trouble putting all of these pieces into play: For example, little Katrine disappears from the story entirely in mid-film, even after Miranda nominally becomes Katrine's stepmother. The best way to watch a movie like Dragonwyck is to disengage all expectations of logical character development and plot structure and just go with the mood supplied by the sets and Arthur C. Miller's cinematography.  
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forthegothicheroine · 2 years ago
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In the book Dragonwyck there’s actually a bit where Nicholas Van Ryn gets caught up in the riots over the Macready/Forrest Macbeth feud (a snob, he’s Team Macready.) It’s a shame this wasn’t in the movie, if only because I would have loved to see Vincent Price play that!
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tybaltsjuliet · 2 years ago
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i plan to watch the video tonight but my current theories on the confederate vampire phenomenon are that it has to do with Lost Cause-style romanticization of a genteel past and a lost way of life (that never existed), outsized southern gothic influence on modern american gothic fiction, and how no one wants their sexy gothic love interest to be, like, a boston brahmin or a patroon (blows a kiss to nicholas van ryn)
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teganstable · 3 months ago
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rwby studios hc pt 9
Blacksmith
Just the way Imogene heap creates music literally gives blacksmith
Dee
Fitting for his 8 seconds of screen time
Brawnz Ni
Him too
May zedong
She would be a big chase girlie
Roy Stallion
I imagine him singing with this much intensity
Fria
Ngl she’d ask them to play some shit like this in the home
Nicholas Schnee
Badass I mean what can I say
Saphron Cotta-Arc
I imagine she’d have a voice like this but only sing drunk
Leonardo lionheart
Young Leo would constantly play this older Leo would reminisce but if the two met young Leo would be so disappointed bcc homie is a traitor :(
Corsac Albain
They give church boy vibes
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ilovemesomevincentprice · 3 months ago
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Vincent Price and Glenn Langon ///
Dragonwyck (1946) dir. Joseph L. Mankiewitcz
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vincentpriceonline · 3 years ago
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Vincent Price as Nicholas Van Ryn in a promo for Dragonwyck // 1946 // colour edit
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angstystoryteller · 4 years ago
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Do you hear it?
VINCENT PRICE as NICHOLAS VAN RYN in DRAGONWYCK (1946)
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sewerfight · 3 years ago
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Nicholas Van Ryn//Trauma bond
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cry-bastion · 4 years ago
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The sharp tongue of Nicholas Van Ryn, Dragonwyck (1946)
I suppose I must regard what you did as an effort to save my life, Dr. Turner. And whether or not I regard you as a meddling trespasser, I suppose I must thank you.
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janewaykove · 6 years ago
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Vincent Price as Nicholas Van Ryn in Dragonwyck / tormented
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