Horror Films Essay

Sort By:
Page 6 of 50 - About 500 essays
  • Decent Essays

    The horror film is known to use numerous tropes and conventions throughout its history. Formulas such as monsters and killers lurking in the shadows, legends of homes with morbid and haunted histories, and an abundance of violence all work together in creating the genre that is known as horror. Another aspect that is widely seen in the horror film in particular is extreme violence against female victims. When looking at this superficially, feminism does not appear to be one of the conventions of

    • 252 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Decent Essays
  • Decent Essays

    As a child, Burton was engrossed with the classic horror films of Roger Corman, many of which featured quintessential screen villain Vincent Price. Because of his isolation as a child, he was seeing himself in those films and on the face of the actor. Burton himself states that horror movies, especially the ones starring Price, spoke to him (Hanke). “Vincent Price was somebody I could identify with. When you’re younger things look bigger, you find your own mythology, you find what psychologically

    • 456 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Decent Essays
  • Decent Essays

    In the horror film House, many new age sounds were experimented with. This avant-garde style combined a mix of classical melodies with new age pop scores as well as electric sounds, that opened up the film and applied new ways of scoring a film. These pop songs and the electric new age styles worked together so as to form an ongoing principle with the film; one that was equal with the film and opened up the experience of horror. The film’s soundtrack allowed the visual atheistic to reach their peak

    • 655 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Decent Essays
  • Good Essays

    Horror is part of our lives and can be hidden in the simplest ways. Alfred Hitchcock showed us in his film, Psycho (1960), how even the most innocent of people can withhold their own horror. Stephen King has become our Norman Bates. Looking so simple and quiet on the inside but watching the world with a twisted point of view truly shows how much horror can lurk around the shadows of our lives. From the abandonment of his father, to the inspirational love of his mother, and struggle with drug addiction

    • 1071 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Decent Essays

    With multiple competing traits that make up a horror film, the most comparable trait is the setting. This trait appears in a supernatural horror film through where the movie takes place like a small town, older/historic home, or moving to a new, unfamiliar house. The importance of the setting is to set the overall feel for the movie. For example, a creepy, creaky older home gives off an eerie feeling to the viewers that will make their stomach drop to see someone enter the forbidden home. A new home

    • 282 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Decent Essays
  • Good Essays

    In the recent year, new subgenres of movies has been created due to the exploration of new technologies and total reconstruction of the genre. One such genre that has been gaining a lot of popularity is “Observational Horror”. “Observational horror films are those that appropriate the aesthetic of observational documentary cinema’s handheld camerawork” (Raimondo, 2014, p. 66). This aesthetic of the camera playing a big part in the movie and the movie being shot by a character mimics how a video would

    • 1712 Words
    • 7 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Decent Essays

    ever it was, I'm pleased at the outcome. Exeter does a fantastic job of establishing a tone and sticking with it. As Exeter is a straight up horror film, well technically its a Supernatural Horror film. Though the exact nature of whats going down was a little confusing and a couple of the actors were a tad inconstant with their deliveries, overall I liked this film. Probably more than I should have if I'm to be completely honest. Than again, I never claimed to have refined tastes. Exeter opens with

    • 764 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Decent Essays
  • Decent Essays

    Comedic relief is an aspect films add when there is too much serious, blood, and gore in a movie. It’s to give the audience a break from all the intense scenes. This film was a good example of having this quality inside of it. The scenes kept going back and forth from the cabin to the office with all the people controlling everything. Those characters would crack jokes making light of the situation. The fool was also some comedic relief by bringing attention on how weird the rest of his friends were

    • 522 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Decent Essays
  • Better Essays

    Gender Depiction in Horror Films Essay

    • 2371 Words
    • 10 Pages
    • 7 Works Cited

    Gender Depiction in Horror Films There has been a large variety of horror films produced throughout the last fifty years. People are always going to be frightened and scared by different types of horror films. But, what type of horror film scares more people, and were men or women more frightened by these horror films? Each one of the horror films had its own agenda to frighten its audience using several different methods of horror. Some of these methods were more so directed at the female

    • 2371 Words
    • 10 Pages
    • 7 Works Cited
    Better Essays
  • Good Essays

    are of different genre, they will have to have different editing styles to create the specific emotion that is necessary for the story and the idea behind the movies. The 2 Films I choose are: SAW1 (horror film) and Karate kid (coming of age drama comedy). Whenever someone asks a horror fan what are your favorite horror films you are sure to expect that one of them will be the SAW series. 7 movies illustrating human kinds evil nature on the survival of the fittest. These movies are smart, psychologically

    • 1820 Words
    • 8 Pages
    Good Essays