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  1. Dead of Night is a 1945 British anthology horror film, featuring stories of supernatural events and a haunted ventriloquist dummy. The film was influenced by H. G. Wells and Ealing Studios, and had a lasting impact on the genre.

  2. Learn the meaning, origins, and usage of the idiom "dead of night", which refers to the darkest hours of the night. Find out how to use it in different contexts, such as literature, film, and music, and avoid common mistakes.

  3. DEAD OF NIGHT definition: the middle of the night, when it is very dark: . Learn more.

  4. 4 It Was Supposed To Be a TV Show (Maybe) Curtis originally wrote a pilot for another TV show called Dead of Night, to follow up on the success of Dark Shadows. Only the pilot was ever produced ...

  5. Oct 30, 2020 · Dead of Night creeped audiences out 75 years ago. It does the same today. Here's why the film matters much more than most horror movies.

  6. The period of greatest intensity of something, such as darkness or cold. For example, I love looking at seed catalogs in the dead of winter, when it's below zero outside. The earliest recorded use of dead of night, for "darkest time of night," was in Edward Hall's Chronicle of 1548: "In the dead of the night ... he broke up his camp and fled."

  7. Dead of Night, British horror anthology film, released in 1945, that is considered a classic of the genre. Of the movie’s five segments, arguably the most notable is the episode featuring a tormented ventriloquist. Dead of Night opens with architect Walter Craig (played by Mervyn Johns) being.