Stories by @next792
219 stories

Emily Brontë's Wuthering Heights
Based on Emily Bronte's classic novel about the doomed romance between a poor orphan and the daughter of an aristocrat.

Good Savage
Tired of the monotony of New York, Jesse and Maggie decide to move to a small town in northern Mexico in search of artistic inspiration. In their new home, they meet Melitón, a local con man who becomes their creative muse. However, when Don Chelo appears with a strange request, the couple's fictions become dangerously intertwined with reality.[5]

Poppy Playtime
A former employee searching for his colleagues who disappeared a decade ago, discovers that the factory conducted human experiments on orphans.

Oscar Wilde's The Picture of Dorian Gray
A hedonistic aristocrat keeps himself young and handsome while a hidden portrait reflects his horrible soul.

Wake Up Dead Man: A Knives Out Mystery (British Version)
Detective Benoit Blanc investigates an "impossible crime" that occurred in a Gothic church in a small town in the state of Yorkshire, which mixes faith and murder.

Dracula (Spanish Version)
Dracula travels to Queretaro, aided by his servant, R. Delfín. There he notices Marina and sets out to make her his eternal companion, but Marina's fiancé and Professor Van Helsing will try to destroy the vampire and save the beautiful Marina.

Weapons (Mexican Version)
All the children in the class, except one, mysteriously disappear on the same night and at exactly the same time. The community wonders who or what is behind the disappearance.

Barbarian (Mexican Version)
Tess rents a house for the night during a visit to Detroit. When she arrives, she discovers a man already living there, but decides to stay anyway. She'll soon discover that the stranger isn't the only thing she fears.

Bring Her Back (Mexican Version)
Two siblings discover a terrifying secret in their new adoptive mother's remote home.

Talk To Me (Mexican Version)
Mia thinks every day about her mother's death, which occurred under unclear circumstances. One day, she and her group of friends find an embalmed hand that allows them to summon spirits, but there are doors that, once opened, cannot be closed.

Silvia Moreno-Garcia's Mexican Gothic
Mexican Gothic follows Noemí Taboada, a glamorous 1950s socialite, who travels to the remote Doyle mansion, High Place, to check on her cousin Catalina, who fears her husband and believes the house is haunted. Noemí discovers the Doyle family's sinister secrets, rooted in a history of eugenics and colonialism, and must confront the house itself, which seems to be alive and controlled by an ancient fungal entity.

Charlotte Brontë's Jane Eyre
Jane Eyre is hired by Edward Rochester to work as a governess for a young girl. The master's initial coldness tests the young woman's strength, but she gradually begins to fall in love with him.

Alexandre Dumas's The Count of Monte Cristo
Edmond Dantès, a sailor unjustly accused of treason, is imprisoned without trial in the Château d'If, off the coast of Marseille. After escaping and assuming the identity of the Count of Monte Cristo, he plots revenge on those who condemned him.

Bram Stoker's Dracula
A real estate agent visits a castle in Transylvania, owned by the mysterious Count Dracula, who is looking to move to a castle in London

Conclave
After the Pope's death, Cardinal Lawrence participates in the conclave in which his successor is elected, and discovers a secret that will endanger the foundations of the Catholic Church.

We Will Rock You
the story follows two young rebels, Galileo and Scaramouche, as they fight to restore rock and roll to the world. They join a group of rebels called the Bohemians, who believe in a prophecy about a "Dreamer" who will lead them to the "sacred place" where musical instruments are hidden. Together, they challenge the oppressive Globalsoft corporation, led by the Killer Queen, and strive to bring back freedom of expression and individuality.

Clive Baker's Books of Blood
A series of horror stories written by Clive Barker, published in several volumes. These stories are known for their graphic and brutal nature, introducing elements of violence and explicitly into the horror genre.

The Tragedy of Titus Andronicus
Roman war hero Titus Andronicus returns victorious in his wars against the Goths. He kills one of the sons of the Queens of the Goths in a revenge ritual, despite her pleadings. When the queen becomes the Empress of Rome, she takes revenge on the house of Andronici for her son's blood. She has her sons rape and mutilate Titus' daughter, Lavinia, over her husband's murdered corpse, then frames Titus' own sons for the murder. Lavinia, however, manages to communicate to her father who the true murderers were, and Andronicus takes revenge, killing the queen and her two sons, but being killed in the act.

The Tragedy of Hamlet
A story of revenge, betrayal, and moral reflection, where Prince Hamlet faces the death of his father and his mother's quick marriage to his uncle Claudius. Hamlet, plagued by doubt and searching for proof, feigns madness and plots to avenge his father's death.

Longlegs (Mexican Version)
FBI agent Lee Harker investigates several cases with a common denominator: a man killed his family, committed suicide and left a note with satanic symbols. Harker discovers another series of seemingly impossible coincidences among the killings.