I’ve
talked about, “Why we watch horror movies” before.
But
instead of my (usual) previous long winded analysis, I had that answered more
directly recently.
My
daughter’s horror movie genes have finally kicked in full blast. Like her Dad, she came into this cinematic
genre through humor. As a fan of Tim Burton films (with half her wardrobe now Nightmare Before Christmas), Neil Gaimain’s Endless mythology,
and shows like Stranger Things and The Addams Family full conversion was
inevitable.
We
watched films where the humor overtakes the horror before, like Van Helsing, Miss Peregrin's, Ghostbusters, Evil Dead II and C.H.U.D. II, but she recently was ready
to move to something stronger.
Starting
out with Sleepy Hollow and the new Fright Night worked well. These were films with well-placed scares, but
with a great deal of humor throughout.
Fully graduating into the fandom after these, she asked to see a movie
that wasn’t funny, but was really scary.
Fortunately,
she lives with me.
I
was in the middle of some deep research into John Carpenter’s The Thing.
Thanks for this goes to Shout Factory, for finding the movies that
have limited but powerful appeal, charging a bit more, and packing in a
ridiculous amount of versions, extras and commentaries, both new and old.
Family
favorites Army of Darkness, Bud the
C.H.U.D., and Buckaroo Banzai got
similar treatment.
Opening
between E.T. and Wrath of Khan, The Thing, was criminally neglected and looked down
upon when first released. Over time, its
fantasticalness has become more appreciated, and it’s tough to find a “Top
Horror Films” list that doesn’t include it.
The
quality of the terror comes from two places.
The
first is the outstanding cast of character actors, led by Kurt Russell, Keith David and Wilford Brimley,
assembled, written for, and allowed to rehearse beforehand. Also, since there is no way to know who is
who, or more accurately who is what, or whether anyone makes it out alive in
this tale, the suspense is all genuine, no padding. Having Jed, the half wolf, awesomely
performing, super creepy on his own dog wandering around the set probably
helped with their method acting.
It
could have worked as a character driven, darkly spooky, highly suspenseful "who done it" play, with the unpleasantness all happening
off stage.
It
didn’t need to work as a play, because of the astonishing practical effects
employed. The words “Horrifically Beautiful” get tossed around a lot in the
commentaries and interviews. Along with the words, "I didn't know K-Y Jelly was available in oil drums."
As
a back up for time constraints, they called in Stan Winston to do the dog
effect.
Yes,
four time academy award winner, monster creator extraordinaire Stan freakin' Winston was
the backup effects guy.
A
majority of the work was done by Rob Bottin, who would eventually be known as an Oscar
winning and acclaimed makeup effects artist.
At
the time he was known as an insane genius in his early twenties who lived in
the studio for a year and five weeks.
While he was hospitalized for exhaustion at the end, there is no denying
the quality (and quantity) of his accomplishments.
The
tension isn’t only broken by each unexpected eruption of unspeakable,
biological malformations, it is exploded by it.
And
each time one of these eruptions occurred:
A
dog exploded into a tendril and chomper waving mass…
A heart attack patient developed jaws of death in its torso, and extra headed forms…
A
man’s head burst apart into the jaws that devoured his former friend…
Following
an initial shriek of surprise mixed with both fear and delight, my daughter absolutely HOWLED with gales
of unrestrained deep and honest laughter. Not because what was happening was funny in
the classic sense, but because of the massive release.
And
THAT…is why we watch horror movies.
To
let all the stress and tension of everyday life get wound a bit tighter by a
fictional story line while we remain in a safe environment, before releasing all
that artificial and real tension in creative, visceral, and coolly unearthly
ways, cutting a chunk of the real stress out of our systems.
Her horror movie genes primarily come from my side of the family...by the gore filled bucket full. My wife says she "doesn't like that kind of story."
Yet she watched all of Buffy, Angel, Charmed and The Ghost Whisperer on her own, some of them starting before she met me.
In addition, she recently watched the entire Alien franchise with me. She did scream from time to time, an understandable reaction as they are pretty much a collection of "Poppy Uppy Things- The Movie." However she paid attention to all of them, and, on a weekend my daughter was on a scout trip, before her genetic predisposition kicked in, we watched three of them in under twenty four hours because she, "wanted to know what happens next." (Happy anniversary, honey!)
Her horror movie genes primarily come from my side of the family...by the gore filled bucket full. My wife says she "doesn't like that kind of story."
Yet she watched all of Buffy, Angel, Charmed and The Ghost Whisperer on her own, some of them starting before she met me.
In addition, she recently watched the entire Alien franchise with me. She did scream from time to time, an understandable reaction as they are pretty much a collection of "Poppy Uppy Things- The Movie." However she paid attention to all of them, and, on a weekend my daughter was on a scout trip, before her genetic predisposition kicked in, we watched three of them in under twenty four hours because she, "wanted to know what happens next." (Happy anniversary, honey!)
Gotta
run now…
My daughter says she’s ready for Poltergeist next.
My daughter says she’s ready for Poltergeist next.
That’s
my girl!
If you're looking for horror movie fans, talk to my immediate or extended family, because...
If you're looking for horror movie fans, talk to my immediate or extended family, because...
They're heeee-eeeere!
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