fundamental drives in vexed relationship between and Gothic modes symbolic discourse in late 18th and early 19th centuries, I want to argue here, has survived, surprisingly intact, in fictions and especially films 21st century. Romanticism as I view it, just to be clear, includes a wide range work across several genres characterized by what Wordsworth makes his and Coleridge's Lyrical Ballads in an 1802 revision his Preface to Second Edition: throwing over common--or already extraordinary--situations a certain coloring by which initial focus perception acquires an unusual aspect because the manner in which we associate ideas in a state excitement and proceed to infuse and alter initial focus with those associations (Wordsworth, Prose, 281-82). This is very combination echoed in Biographia Literaria (1817) when Coleridge values both exciting sympathy reader by a perceived adherence to truth as it is perceived and yet lending the interest novelty provided by the modifying colors reminiscent heightening earthly to suggest supernatural in old romances medieval and even Shakespearean times that had been revived in later 18th century (Coleridge, Biographia, 168). Although this attempt at bridging perceived reality and a quasi-mythic exaltation it. by has been (I think rightly) viewed by Forest Pyle as an ideological construct that addresses [extreme] fissures social at time by trying to compose a coherence that strives to heal, or at least cover, those fissures, even though reality as perceived is already ideologically and thus socially inflected (Pyle, 3), no scholar, 1 think, would deny that Romantic aspiration works towards abolishing 'immeasurable gulf between true and good while simultaneously articulating link between world and mind by striving to sublimate former by way latter (Pyle, (5), even if that means, as in Byron, revealing irony distance that still yawns between one pole and other. In Wordsworth's The Thorn, for example (Lyrical, 103-10), published in first Lyrical Ballads 1798 and only somewhat revised thereafter, juxtaposition a petrified old plant and grieving and guilt-ridden Ray point to abandonment and debasement rural people because a changing economy, supposedly revolutionary wars that have turned into renewed oppression, and inequities class structure, all now in question, as they deserve to be. Yet this poem ultimately turns its litany losses into object an act sympathy that both embraces and rises above it all in a transubstantiation horror and pain that makes both Martha and thorn, in poet's monumentalizing their recurring appearances and stories about them, what Slavoj Zizek has called a sublime object, albeit of ideology. If such claims and writings can be deemed quintessentially Romantic, there seems little distinction between that mode and Gothic--or rather neo-Gothic launched most influentially by Horace Walpole's novella Castle Otranto, especially its Second Edition 1765 with a new Preface that bore a subtitle (A Gothic Story) never used as a generic label before but printed bigger than its title in subsequent editions (Walpole, Castle, 3). That Preface defines this new literary species as a crossgeneric blend two kinds romance, ancient and modern, whereby latter, in which nature is sometimes ... copied with success, Walpole admits, is conjoined with imagination and improbability former, so much so that the powers fancy, as in old romances, have liberty to expatiate through boundless realm invention while the mortal agents' in story behave according to rules probability in more realistic middle-class novels, even when they face stupendous phenomena ghosts and other supernatural hauntings recollective old Catholic fantasies now disbelieved in more enlightened times (Walpole, Castle, 9-10). …