Horror film

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    Emotions In Horror Films

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    I personally tend not to be a big fan of horror movies, although in the past I have watched some suspense films as occasional entertainment. Having witnessed difficult situations in real life does not bring me closer toward those movie genres which aim to terrorize audiences. Because of this, I cannot really handpick a particular scene or film which has caused the biggest fright. I will rather explain my point of view regarding this genre and our interactions with it. Most, if not all of us

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    Horror Film Analysis

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    Horror Essay Horror films are movies that aim to elicit a strong physiological reaction in the viewer, such as raised heartbeat and fear. Three horror films by the names of Psycho, Scream and The Messengers will be analysed and compared to an episode of the popular children’s show Shaun the Sheep. Five elements will be addressed in this analysis, those being camera techniques, Mise-en-scene, Editing, Lighting and Sound. In all of the previously mentioned films, there are a range of camera techniques

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    Horror Genre Films

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    Horror Genre Essay Horror Genre Films are unsettling films that are created to frighten and panic the audience. They are there to invoke our hidden worst fears yet entertaining the audience. They deal with our most undiscovered fears, our nightmares, and our vulnerability, our terror of the unknown, our fear of death or our loss of identity. Watching a horror film gives an opening into the scary world, into a passage for the essence of fear itself, but not really being in danger. Common story lines

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    Essay on Horror Films

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    Horror films Movies have been growing increasingly more explicit for years. Horror films are no longer based on a cleverly written script with lots of twists and turns, but rather how graphic and twisted the images are throughout the movie. Horror films are appealing to viewers for various reasons. In fact, according to some film critics, “good” horror films have particular characteristics. Maggie McCutcheon in “Too Disturbing, Too Shocking,” According to Olson, people particularly enjoy experiencing

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    Horror Film History

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    (2004), horror films today are more disturbing than those produced during the genres establishment. During the classical Hollywood era, horror films were located in distant places, in the woods or abandoned territories. The films would mostly show a group of people going to a camp where the horror would then take place, or while on a trip, the vehicle would stop halfway in an unknown place, and the horror would also begin. All scenes would then take place in that abandoned place chosen by the film. At

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    The Horror Film Genre

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    Horror films have been around for over 100 years, petrifying people and bringing their worst fears to life but still they can’t get enough of this sick and gory genre that is unbelievably entertaining and captivating to the audience. Horror comes with many sub-genres from your bloody slashers like Friday the 13th to your Supernatural-Horrors like The Exorcist, but in the end they all seem to do their job by scaring you and leaving you with nightmares for weeks on end. Usually Horror’s films have

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    1950s Horror Films

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    Horror films in the 1950s were very different from those in modern times, as 1960’s Psycho is often credited as the father of modern horror film. 50s horror films would often fit into the science fiction or thriller genres today. The 50s were known as the “Monster Movie decade”, as films often used aliens and monsters to reflect communism or fascism, fears reminiscent of the era (American Movie Classics Company LLC, 2017). The Creature from the Black Lagoon (1954) was released in 3-D and used a foam

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    Horror Film Analysis

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    civilized people enjoy horror movies because it shows that we are not afraid and it is a way to exercise our dark sides. Watching horror movies allows for use to face some of our greatest fears, and once conquered, we feel better about our abilities to face our fears. Every civilized person has a dark side to them and this can be feed by watching horror movies. The content in horror movies fuels our need to see death and other horrible parts of the human experience. In reality, horror movies keep some

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    TITLE As a society, there is a lot of excitement placed upon horror and horror films; ask anybody and they could recall what the first horror movie they saw was and when they saw it. In fact, there were 322 horror films release in 2015 alone. However, during the 1950s there were only approximately 117 or so horror films released throughout the whole decade. During the 1960s, that number double from 117 to 273 (IMDB). This sharp incline could be attributed to many different things, but it would

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    Women In Horror Film

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    In many horror films, women are presented as ‘the abject’ – as theorised by Julia Kristeva. This is described as the taboo, and is said to be rooted historically and subjectively in the reproductive female function. In Carrie, this representation of the abject is in direct conjunction with menstrual blood. In the shower scene, Carrie gets her first period at school, and is unaware of what is happening to her body. At the beginning of the scene, the camera tracks Carrie into the shower, cutting to

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