Wednesday, October 31, 2012

What Makes a Great Horror

Opinions differ, but what makes a great horror? Let me try to formulate this into several segments. Each of them should be considered as my perspectives and ideas surrounding the theme of making an effective attempt at the genre.

And before you object to me, this list is meant mostly for horror movies that could be considered serious, so horror comedies do not apply today.

Originality

Without a doubt, the hardest thing to obtain is originality these days, and horror is no exception. Be it by the setting, an engaging plot, a creature almost unthinkable, weapons, characters, scenes, music and certainly not in the least, sound.

Sound

This is so important for the genre because it goes along with any haunting scenery, any creepy figure, any foreboding moment, any shrieking character, the list goes on. While visuals are the core definition of any movie, sound is arguably more important in horror. 

That doesn't mean that you need cat-scares(which are either false scares or loud scares) to make the lasting appeal all the time. A simple breathing process of a person during a suspenseful scene is enough already to make it effective.
    
Fear of the unknown

This doesn't necessarily have to do with originality, because sometimes, letting the wind gust through a scene with dark objects and a black sky beyond an old window, or hearing strange movements coming from the pipeworks inside the walls might be enough to set us up for something called fear of the unknown.

Sure, you could think that it's just the wind or the pipeworks making the sound, but what if there is someone else present? What if hypothetically, it's your little brother messing around, or it's someone blowing air in the next room?

The greatest horrors don't need visual or audible scares, they just need to mess with your mind and your fragile imagination.

Inspiration
 
And with this, I mostly mean real life situations. Current taboos or large incidents could serve as sources for future inspirations for horror media. If it successfully can drag some of the insanity of real life back into the horror, then that adds another positive aspect for it.

Believable graphics

I think that most people that actually care about this are the same ones that condemn CGI for many awkward and unbelievable moments these days. Good CGI exists, but the majority of them creates huge damage towards the overall experience.

How many times have you heard people say that a certain horror movie was interesting until the "CGI monster" came up? Sure, back in the last century, things weren't necessary great either with costumes and masks, but what I am trying to say here is that I would like to see believable graphics.

It doesn't have to be realistic all the time, just believable so that you could fear it.

High quality
 
Honestly, most horror movies are crap, it's embarrassing. High quality means that the director and it's team has taken care of qualified acting, editing, cinematography, special effects and any other technical effects I might have missed, aside from the elements that usually let the people see a horror in the first place.

Combine all of the above, and you have made a great horror for me. You have also made a great horror if:

-It offends
-It scares
-It's disgusting
-It makes you think that it's creepy insane

Sunday, October 28, 2012

What Do I Fear?

Here's a little bonus post about things I personally currently fear:

Wasps


Moreso than hornets or bees, wasps have frightened me since I was stung by one of them on my left middlefinger during my elementary education years. The mere sound of them passing me by my ears is a provocative tactic in my perspective to back the fuck off for the otherwise harmless insects.

Most people are more afraid of spiders, but I don't happen to be. Mostly because of their lesser mobility movements to catch up with us silly humans. There are exceptions in certain kind of species that I believe are able to jump, but I am of course talking more generally about urban living insects.

Rollercoasters


Laugh all you want, but despite knowing very well that these attractions are safe to ride, it's an exclusive feeling for me. It's not that I ever have been nautious about them, but it's more the feeling of thinking that I am about to fall into the hole of terror, especially during those fast drops from high above.

Either that, or it is the feeling that I am not falling downwards, but rather thinking that I will fly upwards from my seat if this speed keeps up. And then there's also those rollercoasters where you are hanging instead or those sections where there are corkscrews, loops, twists or whatever variations there are.

Death?


Do I fear death? It depends upon when you ask me, as I have mixed thoughts about that. Not that I constantly think about it, but there are moments in life, random ones, that these thoughts can pop up. Sometimes I do fear it, thinking that there is nothing left and knowing that I must enjoy my ride at the very best during life.

Sometimes, I don't fear it, thinking that it will not only bring complete closure, it will give you the ultimate retirement as well, and you will hopefully be able to look back at a great life, given that you have reached an admirable old age.

I suppose that all three of these phobias are psychological related. I know of the first two that other people rather enjoy them instead, and about the third one, well, I think that most people struggle with it during those moments of thoughts as well, like me.

Saturday, October 20, 2012

Retro Blog: Resident Evil

Amidst the mixed reviews of part 6, let's celebrate that there was a time when the franchise was untouchable; enter REmake. Praised with global critical acclaim, even if you started out with the original PSX version, or happened to play it for the first time on the DS, most of us will agree that the GameCube version is the definite one.

As my first horror game as a young teenager, I believe it's this game that brought me into all the horror media really good, including films, books, myths and stories. I remember the really scary parts with Lisa Trevor and the zombies/hunters breaking the doors just to fly in.

I was definitely frozen in terror by this. Not to mention that extremely haunting soundtrack, Resident Evil´s scenery seen in here remains beautifully scary. The hanging man from the residence area is one event I´d like to remind everyone that this game knows what it represents.

Fear of the unknown, of horrible creatures and of survival horror. Unless you play on Easy, the game´s amount of supplies is just about right, given the circumstances. You simply cannot attempt to kill every creature encountered, because that goes against the nature of the game.

Resident Evil has graphics which will probaply never look old enough to view, especially the backgrounds. After a decade, I replayed this, and I managed to beat it again, with tension and enjoyment for the eighth time. It´s my most beaten one out of anything else.


The plot, the characters, the mansion, I will probably remember them forever. This is a masterpiece and a classic comprised of two discs. Capcom managed to remake Resident Evil with such stunning results, that the impact can still be felt by me.

Gone are pretty much any cheesy lines from the original, in comes professional voice acting. Combine that with new areas to explore, new enemies, several changes and more bonus content plus a challenging difficulty on almost every mode, and you get REmake. 

It still is one of the scariest games I have ever played, but most importantly, it´s such a joy to have played through all of the different modes. Invisible Enemy, Real Survival, One Dangerous Zombie and Hard modes, combined with two characters.

Even if everything was crafted extremely well with this, I still applaud Capcom for making the decision to go revolutionary with Resident Evil 4, changing the course of the franchise dramatically. And while Resident Evil 5 and most likely 6 as well aren´t entirely true towards the horrific nature of the earlier games, at least the gameplay remains terrific.

Whatever the course of future titles will be, Capcom will always be able to look back at this and be able to remember that REmake is a great example to follow with inspiration. Revelations was a great direction, let´s see what´s coming up next.



Rating: 9.4

Wednesday, October 10, 2012

The Tall Man


Not to be confused with the villain from the Phantasm films, this is a new title from Pascal Laugier, the French director who brought us Martyrs(2008), one of my favorite modern horrors.

As my most anticipated title for this year, because of the director's potential, it was time to watch this during October, which by the way will have more horror related posts on the way. Not that this post is essentially all the way horror, but more of a mixed bag.

Children are being abducted in a small town, disappearing completely. The town folks are angered, worried and hopeless as it all happens so sudden and unexpected. Rumors have been generated as to the presence of The Tall Man being responsible for this, but there are no eye witnesses.

Jessica Biel from the first remake of The Texas Chainsaw Massacre(another reboot has been shown a couple weeks back) stars as the protagonist Julia. Amidst the folks of the town as a nurse, she is aware of the myth, but doesn't give it much thought.


Until her own child is abducted mysteriously, which she desperately goes after, but after a struggle in the kidnapper's car, she loses track of them and goes back to the town's local pub. There, something doesn't seem right despite her current shocked state and the help being given.

Suddenly, she must escape from the folks who notice that she has fleed the pub. Taking a secret hike, Julia reunites with the child. Midway through, a twist is revealed, turning the suspicion towards someone else. As Julia returns with the child at home, more insights are revealed.

I'm being obviously vague here, not showing you all details of the spoilers in order to protect the impact. But I can tell you this, the ending will eventually be recognizable mere moments after the quarrel near the caravan. And the mood of the film will have changed by then.

While The Tall Man is not a great horror or thriller, it does end with some food for throught. Thus, it ends up being alright, nothing too special, but as a standalone title, it stands out amongst the many similar ones who often have lame reasons for the vanished.

Rating: 6.5