Horror Film Essays

  • History of Horror Films

    1340 Words  | 3 Pages

    Nosferatu is a widely inspirational horror, originally made in 1922 it can be interpreted as a stepping stone for cinema not only horror. The story is based loosely on a Dracula theme and in its day it was truly terrifying. As horrors have adapted this production no longer has the same effect in evoking terror within an audience however it has created an outline of which other successful horrors have followed on from. It uses the key element of fantasy characters, ghouls and ghosts aren’t real yet

  • The Evolution of Horror Films

    1580 Words  | 4 Pages

    terror are all just a few things to expect when watching a modern day horror film. What is horror? Horror can be defined as an intense feeling of fear, shock, or disgust. (Wilson) The description of horror is not very pleasant, but for some reason horror films are extremely popular. Why is this so? People are addicted to the synthetic feeling of being terrified. Modern day horror films are very different from the first horror films which date back to the late nineteenth century, but the goal of shocking

  • Japanese Horror Film Culture

    768 Words  | 2 Pages

    03/31/2014 Horror as a Window into Cultural Taboo, Attitudes, and History. From the classic America-made Texas Chainsaw Massacre that our parents sat down to into the seventies, to the Japanese horror hit Ju-On: The Curse, horror has become an important genre in film culture. Horror films and their contents have changed with the generations, a constant ebb and flow and reflections of the deep-seated fears and underlying attitudes still prevalent in global societies. American films have often been

  • Horror Film: The Appeal Of Horror Films

    1598 Words  | 4 Pages

    The Appeal of Horror Film The appeal of horror films is prompted less by entertainment value than by peculiarities of the human mind. While admirers of these graphic films leave a theater having enjoyed a positive experience, the negative nature of the content presented points to the existence of underlying factors stimulating their enjoyment. Looking at psychological concepts for answers, how an individual processes emotional arousal, identifies with issues that they consider relevant, and perceives

  • Horror Films: The Key Aspects Of A Horror Film

    1680 Words  | 4 Pages

    Horror films got their start in 1896 with the two-minute short, Le manoir du diable (The Haunted Castle), shown on Christmas Eve, in Paris. But it was not until 1906, with the remake of Notre-Dame de Paris, Esmeralda, did the genre spilt into subgenres. Esmeralda refined the ‘freak shows’ that previous horror films had begun to resemble. Films like these paved the way for people like Brian De Palma, Alfred Hitchcock, Stephen King, John Carpenter, Steven Spielberg, and his composer, John Williams

  • Horror Film Analysis

    983 Words  | 2 Pages

    Almost everyone has a favorite genre of film, but how everyone defines their favorite genre can differ greatly. Horror is one of the genres where its definition can be perceived differently by many people. Like all other genres, horror does have rules and traditions that must be included in order for a film to be considered a horror film. These rules and traditions include a protagonist, an antagonist, an escape or escape attempt of some sort, and very influential audio and visual effects. To begin

  • Horror Films and Teens

    744 Words  | 2 Pages

    fun of the girl in the horror film that yells “Hello, is somebody in here”, the viewer’s general reaction is come on sweetheart do you really think that the psychotic murder is going to be like “Yeah, I’m coming up the stairs to kill you so be prepared”. Everybody who watches horror films hates these clichés, so why do film directors still put these horrible played out clichés in their films. Are the directors and writers’ clueless to the countless number of parody horror films and internet memes, or

  • Horror Film Analysis

    2800 Words  | 6 Pages

    The horror film as a genre is distinctly defined by its recurring elements such as ghosts and bloody violence and by its attitudes toward those elements. One popular example of a recurring element is monsters in horror films that act as material to differentiate horror films from other genres. For example, what appears to distinguish the horror story from fairy tales is the attitude of characters in the story to the monsters they chance upon. In fairy tales, monsters are part of the everyday furniture

  • The Art of Horror Films

    1210 Words  | 3 Pages

    Horror movies generally are all the same. They all have been based off of something that has already happened or a previous movie. Society has paid to be entertained by these gruesome stories that we all truly fear. Before movies, people would purchase books of similar tramatic events to read in their spare time for amusement. Writters such as Bram Stoker created graphic novels that grabbed peoples attention for years to come. But the horror movie, The House Of The Devil(1896), was noted as being

  • Horror Film: The Conjuring

    658 Words  | 2 Pages

    The Conjuring is a “real” Hollywood horror film based on possession of the human kind by demonic figures. There's a dog that ends up doing the usual thing dogs do in horror films (they act scared and bark constantly or end up dying unknowingly). There's a doll that end up doing what dolls usually do in horror films (taunt the human body). There's some doors banging, some ghost hunters with motion detectors and UV lights, eerie TV static, and some creepy ghosts who appear out of the blue when you

  • Women In Horror Films

    1377 Words  | 3 Pages

    No Man Should Have All That Power What are the main roles that female actresses typically portray in horror films? Maggie Freleng, an editor of VitaminW, a website that contributes toward the female empowerment movement, expresses her belief that women are cast in “poor and stereotypical representation of women in the horror genre.” Some roles that many women portray that are seen as stereotypical is the sexually promiscuous women and the saved virgin, evil demon seductress, the overly liberated

  • The Influence Of Horror Film

    1614 Words  | 4 Pages

    The appeal of horror film is effective due to the traits of the human mind. Filmgoers of horror leave theaters with a positive train of thought, yet the negative nature of the content presented points to psychological factors which cause their enjoyment. Answers are found by looking at the psychological factors, how an individual processes emotional arousal, identifies with issues that they consider relevant, and perceives reality, help to explain why films presenting such horrific imagery excites

  • Horror Films In The 1930s

    905 Words  | 2 Pages

    How did this change in the genre come about? Horror movies were reborn in the 1930s. Unlike the dreamlike imagery of the 1920s, the films were peopled by ghostly wraiths floating about silently, horror films in the 1930s were replaced with monsters that grunted and groaned and howled. Horror films in the 1930s were all about monsters. The 30s monsters were exotic and were non-human. Many of the films from the 30s were based on literary classics of the 19th century, often set in far off lands with

  • Horror Film Phobias

    979 Words  | 2 Pages

    loves a good scare? Are horror movies your favorite thing to watch? Well, then your just like me. I’ve always been a fan of horror movies, but I’ve never realized that they can affect you more than just a jump scare. I love that most horror films are predictable in a way that still scares you even though you know it’s coming or when you think the main character is going to die and, yet they figure their way out just to die in the end. According to Encyclopedia Britannica horror movies are defined as

  • Stephen King and Horror Films

    974 Words  | 2 Pages

    As the main topic suggests, what are the types of horrors associated with media? First off, you might want to think about what your definition of fear is, what unsettles you, and what rubs you the wrong way. Well according to Stephen King, this can be broken down into three types; which is the gross-out, horror, and terror. The gross-out in this case is what it is. It’s things we as humans find disgusting, morbid, or diseased. To provide an example; picture yourself waking up in your bed, all seems

  • Social Critique versus Sadism in Horror Films

    1416 Words  | 3 Pages

    The horror genre’s representation of women is often criticized and evaluated as being belittling and merciless. It is true that by perpetuating imagery of women in distress, horror films tend to provide no alternative to the subordination of these women and even take advantage of and capitalize on realistic concerns of women. Still, one might argue that, like the concepts present in many other genres, the prevailing themes of femininity in horror film are complex, contradictory, and fluctuating.

  • Psycho as a Horror Film

    768 Words  | 2 Pages

    Psycho as a Horror Film 'Psycho' could be described as either a horror or a thriller. To be a horror, films should be scary, gruesome and generally be about what you see, like violence and a lot of bloodshed. Thrillers are mainly more about what you think, because they mainly make you think about the plot and who the killer is and their motive. There is more suspense to make you think about the storyline in depth aswell as watching it. One of the reasons that this film made the top ten

  • Women Directors of Horror Films

    1654 Words  | 4 Pages

    King the master of horror once said people love watching horror films simply because it keeps their sanity. “It may be that horror movies provide psychic relief on this level because this invitation to lapse into simplicity, irrationality and even outright madness is extended so rarely” (King). When people see a slasher film it gives them a chance to kill off “Annoying Bob” from the office in their heads. Horror films also tell the story about the culture watching them.“Horror films are to an observer

  • Bipolar Divided In Horror Film

    1209 Words  | 3 Pages

    A Mood Changing Experience Why do films contain characters with a mental illness? Horror movies are notorious for having characters with mental illnesses. Bipolar disorder is commonly exemplified in horror films because most characters are known for their mood swings. According to Mayo Clinic, “Bipolar disorder, formerly called manic depression, is a mental health condition that causes extreme mood swings that include emotional highs (mania or hypomania) and lows (depression)” (par. 1)

  • Horror Films in Popular Culture

    849 Words  | 2 Pages

    senses heightened? Perhaps you are even intrigued as to what will happen next. Horror film is a popular genre, but shouldn’t seem to have any real appeal. Horror lures its audience by lingering on the fears of man, manipulating emotions, affecting one’s mind. Those creepy-crawlies on the big screen usually reflect the common fears of the times. These societal fears can be described as the ‘Horrors.’ In the 1960’s, the horror of personality was shown the cult classic Psycho (1960). Norman Bates is the