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[personal profile] snurri
I think it's time that I admit to myself that I don't enjoy horror movies.

The problem with that statement, of course, is that "horror" is too imprecise a term. Is "Alien" horror? Is "Evil Dead 2," or "Scream"? Is "Silence of the Lambs," or even "The Talented Mr. Ripley"? I enjoy all of those films. But ED2 and "Scream" are really comedies, and the latter two lack the unpredictability of a supernatural or SF element. I'm not sure why "Alien" is an exception for me--maybe because I've seen it enough times now that I don't get tense watching it.

'Cause that's primarily the trouble. Scary movies make me tense and worried, and I don't enjoy that. That's more or less my default setting, anyway, and these films just make it worse. I like suspense, but I don't like going into a film knowing that people are going to get splattered and just waiting for it to happen. (And yet I'm not nearly as bothered by shoot-em-up flicks, so go figure.) There's also the fact that a lot of horror movies rely on slimy, oozy, dripping things, and I dislike those things enough that I'm always worried I'm going to puke. I haven't, to date--the closest I came was after the bit in "RoboCop" (not a horror movie) where the guy gets the barrel of toxic waste dumped over him and then splashes apart when the car hits him--but I'm always sitting there worrying that this is going to be the one that makes me hurl.

I watched "Slither" the other night, and it's a great movie, really funny, smart, excellent cast, really well done. But I didn't really enjoy it. I couldn't relax. Slugs, people. Ish. I spent the whole time clenched up on the edge of the couch. It was the same with "The Descent" (except for the slugs), which is objectively an incredible film, and one that I don't think I'd ever watch again. (The fact that I'm mildly claustrophobic may have something to do with this.) These are both good horror movies, I think, and I failed to get much enjoyment out of them. I think they're good, though, because they had me scared; the horror movies that don't scare me mostly feel like a waste of my time. That's how I felt about "The Ring" (the Japanese original), which I saw recently; I was intrigued, and mildly creeped out at the end, but ultimately felt like there wasn't much point to it. The only exception that's coming to mind right now is "Let the Right One In" (the original Swedish version), which was a well-made horror film that I really enjoyed and would definitely watch again. It's pretty up-front about what it is, though, and it's not gross (I guess movie blood doesn't bother me much). Again, I don't know how useful a term "horror" really is.

Maybe this is like Lovecraft; they say that if you read him at around age 14 you'll be a fan of his forever, and if you miss that window you'll never get it. I didn't read Lovecraft until my 20s, and I must have missed my window for horror flicks, too; I guess I was about 12 when I got too scared by "An American Werewolf in London" to watch the whole thing, and I kind of missed that whole '80s horror boom. I went back to watch some of them later--I sort of like "Halloween," because it's a really technically smart film--but most of them do nothing for me except wind me up and leave me wondering what the point is.

I guess the reason I care is that my experiences with "Slither" and "The Descent" are proof that there are really good horror movies of that type, but I don't know if I'll ever be able to enjoy them. Maybe if I got really drunk? That would seem to increase the danger of puking, though. Do y'all enjoy being scared by these things? Do I just need to medicate, or what?

(no subject)

Date: 2010-10-07 06:51 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] rarelylynne.livejournal.com
You're not alone. I don't do horror scarier than Sleepy Hollow, with the exception of the Evil Dead and Shaun of the Dead films, because they are comedy-horror.

I saw Alien once. Never again.
Ditto for The Shining.

(no subject)

Date: 2010-10-07 07:09 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] orbitalmechanic.livejournal.com
It took me three times to watch Alien! Finally I had to for a class I was teaching, and I watched it with a friend, in her brightly lit sewing room, in the middle of the afternoon on a sunny day, and we talked most of the time.

(no subject)

Date: 2010-10-07 08:21 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] 10yroldwhizkid.livejournal.com
I hate watching scary movies but I love reading the plot summaries on wikipedia, especially with the really crazy Asian horror films. I'm not sure why. I can't handle the visuals but I get sooooooo curious.

(no subject)

Date: 2010-10-07 11:03 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] mekkavandexter.livejournal.com
I watch a lot of horror movies and I have no idea why. And most of them are boring and mistake gore for suspense.

"Jaws" and "The Wizard of Oz", however, scare the pants off of me.



(no subject)

Date: 2010-10-07 11:07 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] mythusmage.livejournal.com
It's good that you're horrified by most horror flicks, you're supposed to be horrified by a horror flick. For a really disquieting time here's one I saw just last night, Let Me In about a 12 year old vampire and her search for a new Renfield when her old one starts falling apart.

"I'm 12, but I've been 12 for a really long time."

Not an urban fantasy vampire, or a romantic fantasy vampire, this lass is dangerous. But mostly the horror comes from the implications of the situation. It's a layered film with tons of nuance.

Just thought I'd help you become even more disturbed at what the world can pull on us. :)

(no subject)

Date: 2010-10-07 11:25 pm (UTC)
kingrat: (Default)
From: [personal profile] kingrat
Scary movies make me tense and worried, and I don't enjoy that.

I totally agree.

(no subject)

Date: 2010-10-08 01:26 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] elizabethth.livejournal.com
I'm a total wuss about scary stuff. I was creeped out by Coraline, a book that is loved by children the world over. I am still creeped out by a Lovecraft story I read in my teens. (If there is nameless dreadful horror, it should be thoroughly destroyed by the end of the story, not still lurking out there in the woods, dammit!) I have a friend who claimed permanent hearing loss after sitting next to me at Alien. Also, the chest-bursting scene replayed itself in technicolor every time I closed my eyes for the next two days.

Entertainment should be enjoyable. There's nothing wrong with skipping stuff that makes you uncomfortable. At the store, people sometimes try to convince me to read something scary. I just tell them nope, I find real life plenty scary, and I read to get away from that!

(no subject)

Date: 2010-10-08 03:30 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] shaolingrrl.livejournal.com
I don't think you're really missing out on too much by not liking horror movies. There are some really good horror movies (I think) but there are so many movies, you could watch all you want and never have time to see them all.

The one that typifies what I'm glad I saw but will never watch again is Oldboy.

(no subject)

Date: 2010-10-08 04:10 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] haddayr.livejournal.com
I always think I can handle 'em, and then for at least three months I wake up poor, long-suffering Jan and make him come with me when I have to pee in the middle of the night.

Because the blob might get me.

(no subject)

Date: 2010-10-08 06:25 am (UTC)
cofax7: climbing on an abbey wall  (Default)
From: [personal profile] cofax7
Oh, yes. I love apocalypses, but I could only watch 28 Days Later with some pretty serious use of the fastforward button, because the suspense plus the gore/violence was too much for me.

I've discovered that while I enjoy thrillers (Die Hard and so forth), I don't like suspense films, and horror movies tend to be suspense films rather than thrillers. The tension gets me all wound up, and then so often it's not released in a good way, but in a terrifying way. Makes me unhappy.

It took me years to realize that I could enjoy Terminator because it was a thriller rather than a horror flick.

(no subject)

Date: 2010-10-08 06:29 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] hecubot.livejournal.com
Emmett's like you; he doesn't enjoy the suspense in horror films. Just not pleasurable to him.

I'm writing a piece on early sixties horror movies, specifically The Haunting, The Innocents, Carnival of Souls, Night Tide & Eyes Without a Face. I'll also touch on several other key horror movies from '60-'63: Black Sunday (Bava), Brides of Dracula (Hammer), Psycho, Haunted Palace (Corman/Vincent Price), Fall of the House of Usher (Corman/Price/Poe) and Burn, Witch Burn (based on Fritz Leiber's Conjure Wife).

But the movies I'm focusing on constitute a different tradition. Stephen King specifically cites The Haunting as a movie which deals in Terror instead of Horror (which by his taxonomy involves something disquieting happening to the physical body) or Revulsion (aka, The Gross Out).

All of the movies I'm looking at derive from a combination of Val Lewton's RKO films (Cat People etc.), Cocteau's surreal dream films and the psychological ghost story of "The Turn of the Screw" (The Innocents is an adaptation of the Henry James.)

They're also very much about female identity, the fear (and also attraction) of losing one's self. (I'm thinking of titling it: "I, Without a Face.")

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