Slasher film
I came across the term ‘slasher film’ only recently, so had to investigate a little. I found this:
‘’Slasher films are a subgenre of horror centred on a killer who stalks and murders a group of victims, typically using bladed or close‑range weapons. They emphasize suspense, escalating body counts, and the fear of being hunted.”
Blood and gore, suspense, physical and psychological horror, endless unrealistic ‘fights,’ at least two riveting chases across unlikely terrain, like rooftops (why do perpetrators always attempt to escape upwards?)
Many people enjoy watching horror films, for the thrill of almost being involved and having the associated adrenaline rush in the safety of a cinema or their home. The desire to watch participants fighting and enduring terrible injuries dates back at least to Ancient Rome.
Gladiatorial performances were conducted from 264 BC for almost one thousand years. They were not always ‘fights to the death,’ as films have suggested, but were refereed. Gladiators might fight two or three times a year, and have a career of several years.
Slasher films might be portrayed as modern fairy stories, showing the victory of good over evil. Some films have seemed to glory in the deeds of their villains, with sequential films showing the evil-doer as the main focus, an anti-hero as hero, maybe.
The most affecting and effective horror is that which is suggested rather than shown.
I do not like horror films at all. There are enough terrible things happening in the world without seeking them as entertainment.
How about you?
Not my thing. I get terrible nightmares if I watch them!
ReplyDeleteI just can't watch or listen to them.
DeleteNope.
ReplyDelete👍
DeleteSame as you, Janice.
ReplyDeleteSuspense can be created without any physical injury at all.
Words are more powerful than actions.
DeleteI cannot imagine how people can actually enjoy watching that stuff.
ReplyDeleteAgreed.
DeleteLike JayCee I can't understand how anyone would enjoy such violence, sadly they seam do popular. Glad to read puppy and Jellicoe are both improving.
ReplyDeleteI worry that people can become desensitised to horror and violence if they watch too much of it, particularly young people. without it being tempered with common sense and reality.
DeleteI scared myself silly when I was a child, reading old books of horror. Then my brother and I watched Quatermass (from behind the settee) and I think that cured me of horror films.
ReplyDeleteQuatermass was excellent, as far as I remember, but it was a long time ago.
DeleteI know horror films are popular but they are not for me. Suspense yes, horror no! If I ever try to watch one, I cover my eyes most of the time!
ReplyDeleteSuspense and psychology are food for thought.
DeleteI watched them as a teen but I just can't any more. They're awful.
ReplyDeleteNot for me, either.
DeleteI have never been an avid fan of movies, and the only horror film I can remember seeing was “Dracula.” There is enough real horror in the world without inventing more for “entertainment.”
ReplyDeleteI agree wholeheartedly.
DeleteNo slashers or thrillers or horror or dim lighting for me!
ReplyDelete👍
DeleteI can’t stand horror films and quite a lot of telly is too violent for my taste these days.
ReplyDeleteAlison in Devon x
Too much violence and foul language these days - it's supposed to indicate 'reality' . . .
DeleteI don't seek them out, but I can watch a horror film. I had forgotten about slasher films. I think it is a different genre to horror movies, being rather more realistic.
ReplyDeleteI think if I could deal with The Exorcist at eh age of 15, nothing much can phase me.
DeleteSome realism is too much to broadcast.
DeleteI love horror films but I differentiate them from slasher films which are blood and guts and gore. Horror films are frights and jumps and scares without the blood.
ReplyDeleteThrillers I enjoy, sometimes, but cannot bear oceans of blood.
DeleteI don't like gratuitous gore. I prefer a thriller, more like Hitchcock where you fill in the horror with your imagination
ReplyDeleteI agree. Hitchcock was a master of suspense.
DeleteI agree with you...I do not like horror films at all, and there seem to be a lot of them available on streaming channels or in theaters. To me they don't seem at all like 'fairy stories.' I don't like to be scared either in real life OR in films!
ReplyDeleteLife is scary enough, without seeking further terrors.
DeleteI despise them. I don't need to carry those images in my mind.
ReplyDeleteQuite so.
DeleteI agree with you. There's enough horror in the real world without watching it on tv or at the movies. I like to be entertained and at the finish have a smile on my face
ReplyDeleteI like suspense and true crime documentaries, but prefer 'light' entertainment, mainly.
DeleteIf it were the last functioning picture theatre in the world, I would still not go. I would never sleep properly again.
ReplyDeleteExactly, Entertainment should make us feel better, and sometimes make us think a little harder.
ReplyDeleteI can't do horror films as a general rule, and slasher types are the worst. They're just stressful and upsetting to me and I don't get the enjoyment part. I know some people love the adrenaline rush. I guess that's why some folks like skydiving and bungee jumping and such....I could never. It's a mystery to me that people LIKE being scared!
ReplyDeleteTo some extent I can see the attraction of skydiving, but gore and blood I cannot cope with.
DeleteI am not a fan. Strangely though, I can watch true crime documentaries. I think it might be the desire to ID the bad guys. It doesn't make sense. My husband won't watch horror but he does awful war movies. I flee. So...on one had you have the person who can't stand the fake blood and guts. The other does not like the real stuff. The thing is, true crime is not usually graphic. So...I can't explain it.
ReplyDeleteWe watch true crime , and war, documentaries, though they are often records of heinous crimes. The 'Boys Own' stuff I leave for my husband to watch!
DeleteI am with you!
ReplyDelete👍
DeleteI wasn't familiar with the term "slasher" film but am definitely no fan of those. I may enjoy a good mystery, but I prefer the kind that focus on "whodunit" rather than gory details, mass murder and horror. (Crime series spending a lot of time in the forensics room not my thing either.)
ReplyDeleteForensic science is so good now that I often wonder how criminals can ever hope to get away with their nefarious deeds.
DeleteI'm with you. No horror films for me and I have to wonder about those who do enjoy them...
ReplyDeleteIt fills some need , I suppose . . . I dread to think what that might be, though.
DeleteSecond your opinion -- or more than that as others seem to feel the same. I dislike violence in any form. For the same reason, I do not read crime fiction or scary books. Nightmare inducing. As you say, there are enough gruesome things in the news (though I don't watch television at all--so I'm actually talking about news articles) without using it for entertainment. At least for me.
ReplyDeleteDaily life is often trying enough without adding extra tribulation.
DeleteMy daughter played Slasher in a gr. seven production. I wonder if your talking the same thing.
ReplyDelete🤣😂
DeleteI am not a fan of horror films, yet I do love watching crime series. I don't know why... sometimes I wonder.
ReplyDeleteCrime is often horrific, but it is not perpetrated for entertainment.
DeleteI do NOT care for gore or excessive violence in movies.
ReplyDeleteNor do I.
DeleteNo. I want music, dancing and good dialogue.
ReplyDeleteYes, entertainment to make us feel good.
DeleteNot for me, thanks!
ReplyDelete👍
DeleteYikes!!! Definitely not for me!!!
ReplyDeleteAll the best Jan
There seem to be more against than for . . .
DeleteIf you have been to my blog you know I LOVE horror films. Since I was a little kid. However, I do not like slasher films. Those are a sub genre, as you write, of real horror films and not to be confused with that.
ReplyDeleteYes, there is definitely a difference.
DeleteSlasher film can also be defined as a movie Janie Junebug absolutely will not watch. I can't deal with scary stuff.
ReplyDeleteLove,
Janie
😃
DeleteNo, I don't like them either. They scare me too much. One movie I watched years ago with a friend, it scared me so much I had to keep the lights on all night. I think I was referred to as a 'daft bat' by my father. That's how long it's been, I was still living at home way before marriage.
ReplyDelete'daft bat' - I like it.
DeleteI adore horror films, books, series, etc. They can be quite sophisticated, great metaphors for various political absurdities, etc. My recent most favourite was Send Help which is arguably a smart feminist comedy disguised as horror.
ReplyDeleteThat's an analytical response.
DeleteI agree...I intensely dislike "slasher" films...the fictional blood, gore and guts ones that border on absurdity. (In fact, a few years back, there was an advertisement parodying a horror film that was quite humorous and highlighted the ridiculousness of them.) However, I think the majority of people are conflating "slasher" films with horror films. While not "horror" films, I do enjoy thrillers, true crime documentary type shows, and the forensic end of things. A side effect of a degree in anthropology I suppose.
ReplyDeleteI agree. Horror per se is not for me, but I am fascinated by forensic sciences.
DeleteIn the past I have watched slasher/horror films while knowing it is just a story with plenty of "special effects" and my kids sometimes watched with me and even pointed out things that couldn't possibly be real, they had learned to "see behind the scenes". These days we just read murder mysteries since TV and film seems to have moved on to Disney or Marvel Comics animation films, which are aimed at children and teenagers mostly though many adults also are fans.
ReplyDeleteWatching and analysing 'in the cold light of day' can be very informative.
DeleteThe quiet dread of what is implied is far more unsettling than endless gore, and real life already provides enough darkness without paying for extra nightmares on a screen.
ReplyDeleteI think we could celebrate the kinder side of life more than we do.
DeleteI’m with you--slasher films don’t appeal to me at all.
ReplyDeleteSuspense and atmosphere can be powerful, but once it turns into gore I find it more numbing than thrilling.
Real life already has enough darkness without adding more for “fun.”
Too much of anything leads to desensitisation.
DeleteI totally agree.
DeleteNope I do not like slasher films. I've seen any but have heard about them. I do watch true crime - in the end they catch the bad guy by using DNA coupled with good detective work.
ReplyDeleteCrime documentaries are interesting. It's incredible to see how detectives can tease out the truth from unpromising beginnings.
DeleteI despise slasher/horror films and never watch them, they don't scare me, the make me sick that humans like to watch bloody stuff.
ReplyDeleteI liked movies when it was a war picture, we saw and heard but not really saw what what going on. now movies are realistic and who need that, we see enough of that on the news
I quite agree.
ReplyDeleteI don't do horror films, for the same reason you mention in your last passage.
ReplyDeleteThe peace of the night.
Quite so.
DeleteNope. Not my genre of films at all. I don't want to have nightmares!
ReplyDeleteI just think they're horrible!
Delete