A Nightmare On Elm Street Essay

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When most people think of a “slasher film” (Clover 1992) they tend to think of movies such as Friday the 13th, Halloween, and The Texas Chainsaw Massacre. These movies align with the basic necessities for a slasher film ,but at the same time, are repetitive. In 1984 A Nightmare on Elm Street was created and completely changed what was looked at as a “slasher villain”. In A Nightmare on Elm Street the viewer is introduced the evil omnipresent being known as Freddy Krueger. Freddy Krueger is a nightmareous malicious monster whose only purpose is to kill. He is the embodiment of fear and evil with immense power and abilities that some would dub as “Godlike.” In James Kendrick’s Razors in the Dreamscape: Revisiting A Nightmare on Elm Street and the Slasher Film Kendrick discusses A Nightmare on Elm Street’s originality as compared to other slasher films such as Friday the 13th, Halloween, etc. Kendrick presents an understanding of how A Nightmare on Elm Street fights common archetypes and tropes associated with the slasher genre by discussing the amalgamation of Krueger and his victims and how it ultimately emasculates Krueger and leads to his demise. Kendrick begins his paper by …show more content…

In most slashers the Final Girl is a virgin and pure, but at the same time still helpless and powerless to the killer. However, while in A Nightmare on Elm Street the Final Girl, Nancy, is a virgin; She combats the power of Krueger herself. By drawing Krueger into reality ,“where he is less powerful” (Kendrick), Nancy is able to combat and weaken Krueger, and thus emasculates him, while empowering herself. Krueger retreats to the dream world where he retains the power, but Nancy emasculates Krueger once again by abandoning her fear of him and “denies Freddy the status of object within her own gaze while also denying her own status as object within

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