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I love horror movies, so I don't become become pleased when I hear people knocking the genre I hold so dear to my heart. It seems to me that many have the wrong conception of horror-- it's not all about Freddy Kruger (He's just a character from a franchise belonging to a sub-genre of a larger genre. He and his films do not represent all of horror), it's not all about violence and gore (Where was the gratuitous blood in Nosferatu, Onibaba or The Innocents?) and it's not all about attractive and stupid teenagers being chased by a madman (Don't even get me started on this one. The sheer number of horror films that lack this theme is too high for my mind to compute.). Horror films and their themes vary in what they are accomplish, and I believe that is the beauty of the genre. The films can shock us, scare us, make us cry, make us laugh and change our way of thinking.

Yet many still regard horror as a trashy type of art. Why do you think this is?

2007-02-12 16:25:55 · 7 answers · asked by Anonymous in Entertainment & Music Movies

7 answers

Because they have no sense of humor.

2007-02-12 16:29:07 · answer #1 · answered by catrionn 6 · 0 0

I'm one of those who knocks horror movies and it's mainly because virtually all horror movies these days are nothing but splatter fests. They scare you by playing creepy music and having things jump out at you. The plots of these movies are usually paper thin and the acting is often horrible because they are made on the cheap with no-name actors. And Hollywood just keeps churning them out because they can make one for $10-$15 million and almost count on a $30-$40 million box office gross. I have walked out of more of these movies in the last 2 years than the total number of movies I've walked out of in my life time.

Now, I'm game for a horror movie that is about telling a good story that is scary. Movies like The Others and The Ring are probably the best examples of decent horror movies in recent years (granting that I don't like zombie movies or religious based horror like The Exorcist). Stanley Kubrick's The Shining still remains one of the scariest movies I have ever seen. I watched again about 3 years ago while sitting in my living room with the lights on. I had previously seen The Shining many years before and I had read the book, but I was still scared by the movie and came very close to turning it off.

Horror has developed a bad name because of the recent additions to the genre. And with every sequel of Saw or The Grudge and every remake of The Hills Have Eyes or The Texas Chainsaw Massacre, the genre is further diminished.

2007-02-12 20:24:48 · answer #2 · answered by Justin H 7 · 2 0

I appreciate horror movies as long as they have a good plot, preferrably some jump scenes, and overall, something that makes you wet your pants. I liked the Saw movies because as well as being scary they were very creative, you may not have been scared when you watched them but they made you check your closet before you got in bed. The Texas Chainsaw Massacre series was pretty good because it had a lot of jump scenes and it was fairly bloody, not much of a plot but it was pretty neat. The Ring was more like Saw except it wasn't scary, just though provoking. Many horror movies are just lame, such as Dark Water and the Messengers.

2007-02-12 16:40:48 · answer #3 · answered by ? 3 · 0 0

don't be embarrassed, maximum persons actual forget that extremely some the fairy thoughts we were informed as children were horror thoughts. What horror action picture fans do not tell extremely some human beings is that such storylines are training in survival. pay interest to what you obtain out of all those fairy thoughts you've been informed as a baby--how does the "smart" or significant personality live to inform the tale a devastating situation? If u nonetheless opt for some help, purely watch one or 2 of the unique Disney videos, you recognize those that did not sugar coat that someone become going to die (snow white, snoozing splendor). Then, pass on to the fellow stuff. commence off sluggish: misery, the shining, emptiness, pitch black, episodes of "supernatural", blade II then pass to the more beneficial efficient stuff: jeepers creepers a million & 2, 10 to hour of darkness, signs and indications, skeleton key then the crème of the crop: alien, the element, canine squaddies, no u . s . for old adult males, borderland, wolf creek, incorrect turn, 30 days of nighttime

2016-11-27 19:33:21 · answer #4 · answered by buckingham 4 · 0 0

I do not look down at them but I scare myself enough with out any help from a film.

2007-02-12 16:30:45 · answer #5 · answered by ascendent2 4 · 0 0

well this easy...scary movies are too predictable and they never have any good plots. why would i want to feel uncomfortable while watching a movie, and feel like im going to be eaten alive while going to the fridge late that night.

2007-02-12 21:18:13 · answer #6 · answered by brendon m 1 · 0 0

because they are not the same as back in the day

2007-02-12 16:32:06 · answer #7 · answered by :-) Lovely(-: 3 · 1 0

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