1. Why are stories that
'aim to scare their audience' so popular?
Horror films are popular because they
play on our most deep seated fears and taboos, which can include things such as
murder, kidnap and the paranormal. ‘Jump Scares’ have also more recently become
very popular because of the excitement and the adrenaline rush after having
just been scared, and the tension waiting for the next
scare.
2. What insight can the
study of horror monsters give?
An analysis of horror monsters in the
light of their cultural contexts can give an insight into the anxieties and
concerns of the contemporary culture. Of course, not all people have the same
worries at any given time, but it is possible to identify general cultural and
contextual trends through the monsters created for horror texts.
3. What did Nosferatu (1922), one of the earliest horror films use the
vampire as a metaphor for?
In Nosferatu (Murnau, 1922) the vampire
is an invader; it comes from elsewhere and brings disease to the local
community. His method of attack involves penetration and the exchange of bodily
fluids, which could be read as a sexual metaphor, however the main outcome of a
vampire attack is death or infection. At the time of Nosferatu’s release,
4.Read to the end of
the article. Make notes on how there are different readings of horror based on
socio/cultural contexts of the decade.
Many horror texts between the wars
reflected the social changes in terms of power, authority and class that
followed the political upheaval of WW1. Nosferatu and Dracula (Browning, 1931) featured a corrupt and abusive aristocratic class who are the sources of horror.
Frankenstein has many other possible readings that relate to the context of the time. For example, the sympathetic representation of the monster could be read as a critical perspective on the racial tensions that were present in American culture at the time. The monster’s eventual death is represented as a mob lynching of an individual who cannot integrate into the dominant culture.
Post-WW2 films maintained the focus on monsters that invaded or infected, and the ‘science gone wrong’ motif expanded across both horror and science-fiction.
This could be due to horrors witnessed in the advances in military capabilities, culminating in the nuclear attacks on
The 1960s was a time of social change and this was mirrored in its horror monsters.
Psycho (Hitchcock, 1960) reflects the impact of Freudian theories on the culture’s understanding of the human psyche.
The mundane settings make the horror more effective than the distant, fantastical horror of the previous decades and the fact that the monsters now look like ‘us’ creates an unsettling realism.
The Texas Chainsaw Massacre showed the effect of social and economic isolation and on a rural family whilst The Last House on the Left bought the horror into small-town
The Exorcist depicted the secularisation of society that had occurred since World War 2 and dealt with the unease and uncertainty this was causing by using devils, demons and pagans as its monsters. The Exorcist was also a film that identified post-war changes in the structure of the family.
Ok Callum, this needs amending in terms of layout with visual evidence and highlighting of film names
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