|
Posted on
02.16.06 by Widge @ 10:27 pm
I have a problem with most horror stories, movies, novels, what have you. I'm wondering if I'm the only one. The problem is this: most movies that you might think of, at first glance, as a "horror"movie, simply aren't of that genre. Most are thrillers, or, if you're lucky, thrillers with horror elements. Let me tell you where I'm coming from with this. When I first saw 28 Days Later, I found myself feeling horror for the first time in the cinema in a long while. Specifically, I'm thinking of the brief shot of the community message board that this structure had turned into, where people were leaving things like "Have you seen my daughter?" and "I'm infected, I'm so sorry…" and so forth. The entire thing was covered with these messages, and you only got the briefest of shots, but it was enough to let you know that the situation was truly horrific. That was a testament to the lives, in that film, that had been devastated by the outbreak. Horrifying. When dude goes to seek out his parents and what he finds…that's horror. That, and other moments within that film, reminded me what it was to get horrified at a horror movie. I realized that what I'd been mistaking for true horror was simply terror. Horror movies should horrify, thrillers thrill and terrify. There's a subtle difference. Let's get down to brass tacks for a minute. I looked up "horrify" and got "To cause feelings of horror." Great, thanks. But for horror, I got this: • An intense, painful feeling of repugnance and fear. Painful repugnance. Abhorrence. That works. Now, if I watch a Friday the 13th flick, I really don't feel that. Why? Because most slasher flicks are simply thrillers. There's seldom anything horrific–at least in a movie–about people being stalked and killed one at a time. But compare the feelings you get from watching a slasher flick to the feeling of watching John Hurt "hatch" in the middle of Alien. I can't imagine anybody who didn't twist and turn when they watched that scene unfold. You can even make the comparison inside a movie–let's take the recent House of Wax remake as an example. The movie was better than it had any right to be, frankly. And it had a lunatic final sequence which deserved a better film to be stitched on. But there's three things here. First, I don't count what are essentially torture sequences as horror. The heroine having to rip her lips open after they've been super glued together or losing part of a finger–to me, that's just the gross-out. Anybody can go for that. Sure, if you want to be technical, that's horrific. But there's nothing artful about that. But second, there are some truly horrific moments in the film. When dude smacks at the wax "dummy" of his friend and knocks part of the skin away, only to reveal the jaw underneath–when you think about being paralyzed, encased in wax, and you're still alive–that's messed up. That's horror, folks. However, most of the rest of the film is just "being chased by/avoiding the bad guys," which is just straight-up thriller stuff. The new spin on the serial killer is that they're brothers and one's disfigured. Whoopee. And that's the problem: a cheap "boo" has taken the place of real horror. A cat jumping out at the right moment is not horror, nor is the "turn around and be shocked by somebody standing there" schtick. We need more moments of horror in fiction and film. And it's hard to do. I was thinking Something Else #51 would be horrific in nature, though it wound up simply sad. Something Else #50 is probably the closest thing to what I'm talking about I was able to pull off–the idea that such a terrible ritual could be compared to the Christian ideal of communion I would think would be fairly horrific to any self-aware Christian. I honestly haven't written too many pure horror stories. Dark fantasy is where most of them fall, which I think is a convenient bucket for anything that simply doesn't want to be taken that far. For that matter, I honestly don't go into writing aiming for a genre of any sort…the things just sort of happen like they want to. Anybody else feel like this? Or should the shmoe shut up and sit down? Taggification: fiction, horror, movies Filed under: General BS
|

John Robinson is a writer of prose, poetry and comics who also writes under
the pseudonym of Widgett Walls.
This is my latest book. Short stories written especially for you, or at least someone who reminded me a lot of you at the time.
It could be that horror, like beauty, is in the eye of the beholder. What you find horrific, I might find just unconfortable. And we have been inundated with so many horrific images and concepts over the years, it takes someone who is really good to generate that horror.
Comment by ScottC — February 16, 2006 @ 11:03 pm
You're right. This probably explains why I have always been less than thrilled by slasher-type moives. (Or should I say, less than horrified?) Not sure how that explains why I love cheesy zombie movies, though…
Comment by Sunny Simmons Steincamp — February 17, 2006 @ 7:30 am
Sunny: I think it's because we have such a hardwired sense of things that are Just Plain Wrong, and the idea of walking around after you're dead plays to that. Throw the culturally hardwired taboo of cannibalism in there and it's a horror party in your head.
Comment by Widge — February 17, 2006 @ 11:33 am
Could another problem be that many writers feel the need to have a happy ending for their horror story?
Comment by ScottC — February 20, 2006 @ 8:01 am
Not really. Does the "happy ending" of 28 DAYS LATER make what I cited above less horrific? Does the "happy ending" of THE STAND negate the scene where the guy is standing on a balcony in Manhattan, smelling the bodily rot of an entire dead metropolis?
Comment by Widge — February 20, 2006 @ 9:00 am
Could another problem be that horror writers are trepped in the trappings of the genre. When I think of truly horror inducing scenes, there's the dead baby scene in TRAINSTOPPING and the home invasion scene in CLOCKWORK ORANGE. Neither movie are classified as 'horror', but they hit me harder than most of the 'horror' movies out there.
Comment by ScottC — February 24, 2006 @ 8:48 am