Sunday, April 24, 2011

Alexa's References

Paranormal Activity
1. Paranormal Activity box office stats:
2. Ebert, Roger. "Paranormal Activity." Roger Ebert. 7 oct. 2009. http://rogerebert.suntimes.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20091007/REVIEWS/910089996
3. Walsh, Martin. "The Future of Filmmaking: Seizing back the Six Pillars of Cinema." SPAA Conference Network. 23 Oct 2009.
4. Corliss, Richard. "Paranormal Activity: A Horror Phenomenon." TIME. 10 Oct. 2009.
5. Vasquez, Felix. "Paranormal Activity." Film Threat. 21 Sept. 2009.
6. Lally, Kevin. "Film Review: Paranormal Activity." Film Journal International. Oct 2009.

Saw
2. Ebert, Roger. "Saw." Roger Ebert. 29 Oct 2004
3. Corliss, Richard. "Saw Came and Conquered." TIME. 27 Oct 2006.
4. Feld, Bruce. "Saw." Film Journal International. Oct 2004.

References for my blog posts

Brevet, Brad. Rev. of Paranormal Activity. Dir. Oren Peli. Rope of Silicon. The Industry Insider. 12 Oct. 2009. Web. 24 Apr. 2011.

Edelstein, David. “Now Playing at your Local Multiplex: Torture Porn.” New York Movies. New York Movies, 28 Jan, 2006. Web. 24 Apr. 2011.

Harris, Mark H. “A Timeline History of Horror Movies.” About. About. Web 24 Apr. 2011.

Harris, Mark H. “Exploitation Films 101.” About. About. Web 24 Apr. 2011.

Rogers, Thomas. “The meaning of torture porn.” Salon. Salon, 7 Jun. 2010. Web. 24 Apr 2011.

Xu, Jennifer. Rev of Paranormal Activity. Dir. Oren Peli. The Michigan Daily. The Michigan Daily. 11 Oct. 2009. Web. 24 Apr. 2011

Friday, April 22, 2011

Blog References and Sources

Box Office Mojo. com. Paranormal Activity.

Box Office Mojo. com. Saw.


Corliss, Richard. 2006. "Saw Came and Conquered." Time, October 27.


Derry, Charles. 2009. Dark Dreams 2.0: A Psychological History of the Modern Horror Film from the 1950s to the 21st Century. Jefferson, NC: McFarland & Company, Inc., Publishers.

Eli Roth Interview Fox News [Video]. 2007. Retreived April 12 2011, from YouTube.com.


Gordon Devin. 2006. "Horror Show." Newsweek, 3 April, 60-62. Retrieved from Academic Search Premier

Hampp, Andrew. 2010. "Paranormal Activity" Wins by listening to "Fans Demands."Advertising Age 81 (8). Retrieved from Film and Television Literature Index.

Harris, Mark H. A Timeline History of Horror Movies. About.com.



Keegan, Rebecca Winters. 2006. "The Splat Pack." Time, 30 October, 66-70. Retrieved from Middle Search Plus



McLintock, Pamela. 2006. "Blood Brothers." Variety, 25-31 December, 1-2. Retrieved from the Film and Television Literature Index.

Murray, Gabrielle. 2007. Hostel II: Representations of the body in pain and the experience in torture-porn. Jump Cut: A Review of Contemporary media 50.http://http//www.ejumpcut.org/archive/jc50.2008/TortureHostel2/text.html


Peli, Oren. 2007. Paranormal Activity. San Diego: Paramount Pictures.




Schwartz, Missy. 2009a. 5 Things you should know about Paranormal Activity.Entertainment Weekly, 2 October. Retrieved from Film and Television Literature Index.

Scwartz, Missy. 2009b. A Shocking Hit. Entertainment Weekly, 6 November. Retrieved from Film and Television Literature Index.

Sharrett, Christopher. 2009. The Problem of Saw: "Torture Porn" and the Conservatism of Contemporary Horror Films. Cinataste 35 (1): 32-37. Retrieved from Film and Television Index.


Thursday, April 21, 2011

Outline for our Contemporary Horror web Project

The topic we want to focus on is horror films. Specifically, our sources will be two horror movies that symbolize the two categories or horror, psychological thriller and gore. While we may change our examples, we thought Paranormal Activity would be a good representation of the thriller while the Saw movies would represent the gore.

In researching these two movies, we will read what has been written about them from critics and scholars such as reviews and analyses. We will also look at precursor films throughout recent history that might have inspired these two examples. Some other aspects we will investigate from a historical perspective are the special effects, plot lines or themes, and audience reaction. For instance, what was scary then but might not be scary now? How has technology like special
effects, makeup, costuming, ect influenced the horror movie over time? What does society deem scary? Why might this be? We hope to answer these questions by analyzing these two horror movies.

For research, we will use magazine articles and reviews written about both of these movies. We will study the development of scary movies in recent history and give examples. For example, looking at why movies like The Blair Witch Project and The Exorcist were so influencial on pop culture. We’ll hopefully be able to dig up some studies on society and horror movies explaining what people’s fascination with fear is all about. We will also do some research on how the technology behind movies has made horror movies even more scary.

Guide to Horror Film In Contemporary America Blog

Hello. Welcome to our blog on Contemporary American Horror films. We hope you enjoy are exploration into Horror of the last decade as we give special focus to Saw and Paranormal Activity. This guide will show which order we would like you to read our blog in. Each post can be found on the side bar of the blog, under the month they were posted. Please feel free to make comments on a blog prior to our discussion as any thoughts you have may help us reframe our thinking and questions so that we can have more lively and fruitful discussion. Here is our guide and thank you for visiting our blog:

1. Outline for Web Blog
2. Questions we want to explore
3. Purpose of Choice of films
4. What is Horror to you?
5. Horror as a genre
-History of Horror
- History of Meaning
- Quotes regarding Horror genre
- Degredation of women in the genre
- Book on Horror Trends
- Power dynamics in Slasher films
- "Shockumentaries"
- What we like about Horror
6. Horror sources and analysis
Saw
-Saw Trailer
- Saw (2004): the first "Torture Porn" Movie
- Analysis of clips from Saw (2004)
-Eli Roth Interview with Fox News 2006
- Saw (2004) marketing
Paranormal Activity
-Paranormal Activity: Grassroots scaring
- Sherry Lansing Theatre Reactions
- Alternate ending
- Case study of Paranormal Activity
7. Reviews, Response and box office analysis
Saw
- Rotten tomatoes
- Roger Ebert review
- Film Journal International
- Time
- Box Office and Awards
Paranormal activity
- Rotten Tomatoes
- Roger Ebert
- Film Journal International
- Film Threat
- Bright Lights
- Another review relevant
- Time
- Box Office and Awards
- Budget
7. Blog References and Sources

Budget

http://boxofficemojo.com/movies/?id=paranormalactivity.htm

http://boxofficemojo.com/movies/?id=saw.htm


Saw

Paranormal Activity

Product Budget

$1,200,000

$15,000

Total Lifetime Grosses



Domestic

$55,185,045

$107,918,810

Foreign

$47,911,300

$85,436,990

Worldwide

$103,096,345

$193,355,800

Opening Weekend

$18,276,468

$19,617,650

Wednesday, April 20, 2011

What we like about horror

"A model emerged from structural equation analysis indicating that three important factors in the appeal of horror films are (a) the audience's desire to experience the satisfying resolutions usually provided in these films, (b) the audience's desire to see the destruction often found in these films, and (c) the sensation-seeking personality traits of audience members for these films. In addition, age and gender were important predictors. Horror films were enjoyed more by males and by younger viewers."

And First chapter of horror and need of it in everday life: http://books.google.com/books?hl=en&lr=&id=a-1bAo3fK0wC&oi=fnd&pg=PR6&dq=horror+film&ots=KBbmWT7Y8V&sig=vNnPQQW9vHr4i6ysdGb5-K09kfY#v=onepage&q&f=false

Book on Horror Trends

http://books.google.com/books?hl=en&lr=&id=x4fLaCLD11MC&oi=fnd&pg=PA3&dq=horror+film&ots=94r9xtV8bX&sig=gUfDzJWVnTOaX91rX2ZWDt4z6YA#v=onepage&q&f=false

Do we see gender as a theme in Saw or Paranormal?

Tuesday, April 19, 2011

Paranormal Activity - Sherry Lansing Theatre Reactions


This is a clip from youtube of typical reactions to Paranormal Activity from the Sherry Lansing Theatre in Hollywood, California. A lot was made about how strong the reactions were to this movie, which started a word of mouth that built the film's popularity about how scary it was. This clip exemplifies how the audience can engage with the film through expressing their emotions. Many are laughing in the clip and expressing expletives out of amazement of what they are seeing, many are closing their eyes to avoid witnessing the torment and even some girls are cowering into the arms of their brave, slightly scared boyfriend. It is understandable why people close their eyes in the clip because they are constantly bombarded with scary images that keep them at a high emotional state with no break from it. But why do these people go to this film?

Many of the people smiling in the clip could be seen as sensation seekers as Rickey (1982) argues that fear causes a rush of adrenaline and makes people more energetic, which was shown in the clip (as cited in Tamborini and Stiff 1987, 418). These people went to see Paranormal Activity because the subtle fear it displays arouses a strong, exhilarating emotion that can be pleasurable. The trailer as well as the clip creates a curiosity about whether the film is really that scary and leaves those who have not seen the film wondering why people are reacting in this way. This is another reason why people went to see the film because it is horror film that is a test of strength and the viewers challenge the film to scare them as argued by Werner (1980) (ibid., 416). But this is particularly the case for men, who can express their masculinity through withstanding fear, playing the role of the strong boyfriend allowing his girlfriend to cuddle up to him. There is certain logic then of couples as well as young people, who tend to enjoy more excitement as they are at an age of great vitality. In addition the typical response of people closing their eyes is down to a fight from fear, or simulated fear in addition to a quickened heart rate (Keisner 2008, 415). For them the film is way of expressing the emotional stress of whatever is going wrong in their life or from their subconscious and according to Goldsmith (1975) it allows them to displace it on screen, so simulated fear can be a form of psychic relief (as cited in Tamborini and Stiff 1987, 416).

As you can see the film does what other horror films came before it, allowing their audience to emotionally engage with it and making it one of the remaining genres and mediums that allow interaction with the cultural source. People saw this film as a test of strength out of curiosity of its degree of scariness and this clip does that for Paranormal Activity, encouraging more people to go see it for this reason. Clearly you can only really get it when you see it.

Can you vouch for these people's reactions personally? Was the film that frightening? Would watching this make you want to see the film? In that case would you see the film as a challenge to avoid being scared?

Reference







Paranormal Activity: Grassroots scaring through suspense











This is the trailer to the first Paranormal Activity film. It is a film that is very minimalist in terms of special effects with the blowing of the bed sheet to give the impression that someone is there, relying on the fear of the unknown at a time when you are most vulnerable, when you are sleeping (Schwartz 2009a). The film was marketed in a very unique way as it allowed people to request it to be shown in their hometown by voting on the paranormal activity website, which is shown at the end of the trailer (ibid.). The film was in fact made in October 2006 in seven days and had been shown at festivals for a couple of years including at Screamfest in LA in 2007 (Schwartz 2009b). Oren Peli, the director struggled to get distribution but did get help from Steven Spielberg, who infamous ly had to turn off the film at night and resume it the next day (ibid.). Their decision to conduct a grassroots effort to build popularity for the film and gain a national release showed how important it was to gain the affections of horror fans, particularly college students. This explains why the initial release was in limited to 13 college towns (ibid.)




This is a poster for Paranormal Activity. It shows how it engages with its audience by giving them the power to determine where the film is shown to build popularity and word of mouth. It also uses a still of the recording of Micah and Katie, the San Diego couple trying to sleep, showing how the fear of th unknown and suggestive actions are used to scare people. It also tackles the issue of surveillance in post 9/11 culture expressed earlier in the Saw post about how it can be used see to things you should not be able to see and giving the film a dose of realism rather than fantastical violence to scare.


This really shows how significant social media is recent popular culture, that through Twitter, Facebook and websites like the paranormal activity demand it site horror movie consumers are given a medium where they can express their desires and opinions. For the Horror film this helps engage the audience further, which has always been important for their success. By including horror fans in the process of the film becoming popular it shows the importance the cultural consumer has of determining what is popular, especially when the filmmakers give them that power (Hampp 2010).


In addition the film shows that you do not have to rely on violence and gore to scare and shows why we picked this film to represent the other end of the spectrum of horror movies. There is a sense that this is because audiences are now smarter, leading to a series of horror films that are now smarter and possibly spelling the end for torture porn (Hicks 2009). Tony Hicks of the Oakland Tribune argues that this is because people have become increasingly desensitized to gore and Winston Dixon, the author of "A History of Horror" arguably credits Paranormal activity with bringing an end to the popularity of torture movies (ibid.).


Do you agree that the new trend in horror movies is to make smart horror with suspense? Do you think torture porn is over? What do you think of the grassroots element of the film's popularity? Is this a new trend in horror movies?


References


Hampp, Andrew. 2010. "Paranormal Activity" Wins by listening to "Fans Demands." Advertising Age 81 (8). Retrieved from Film and Television Literature Index.






Peli, Oren. 2007. Paranormal Activity. San Diego: Paramount Pictures.


Schwartz, Missy. 2009a. 5 Things you should know about Paranormal Activity. Entertainment Weekly, 2 October. Retrieved from Film and Television Literature Index.


Scwartz, Missy. 2009b. A Shocking Hit. Entertainment Weekly, 6 November. Retrieved from Film and Television Literature Index.











Monday, April 18, 2011

Film Journal International Review- Paranormal Activity

This review by Kevin Lally, rehashes the incredible low-budget success of Paranormal Activity as well as its creative use of marketing to attract a bigger audience. Yet he also claims that Paranormal Activity successfully delivers "what the Blair Witch Project never did, but its achingly slow buildup is a test" of the audience's patience (Lally 2010).


Film Journal International Review- Saw

This review by Bruce Feld criticizes the believability of Saw, commenting that nothing from the makeup to the script seem genuine or real. Feld calls the script "cliche ridden" and the plot irrational and at times "ridiculous" (Feld 2010).

TIME article on Saw

"Saw came and conquered" by Richard Corliss of TIME magazine lends an interesting look into the audience of horror movies. Corliss explains that in the year 2006, 10 out of 18 horror film released were the weekends top grossers. And the main demographic for these movies? Teenage boys.

Corliss also mentions how horror films almost always cost less and make more in relation to their big-budget production counterparts. For instance, he notes that Final Destination 3, The Texas Chainsaw Massacre: The Beginning and The Hills Have Eyes all trumped Clint Eastwood's Flags of Our Fathers on the opening weekend.


Sunday, April 17, 2011

History of Meaning

http://www.salon.com/books/feature/2010/06/07/philosophy_of_horror_movies

Throughout the history of horror movies, the issues faced in these films are often reflections of the social context surrounding the creation of these movies. An example of this is movies with monsters that are a metaphor for communist threat in the 1950's; these movies can also represent how we feel about war, terrorism, or other problems (Rogers, 2010).

The appeal of "Paranormal Activity" is because of the "up close and personal" feel that it has to it. The viewer feels as if they are the ones experiencing the horror. Similar movies of this nature include, "Open Water," or even "District 9." The viewer feels more connected to the events in the film because of how the movies seem to incorporate everyday events and show the people living their lives like any other person.

Power Dynamics in Slasher Films

http://nymag.com/movies/features/15622/

"As potential victims, we fear serial killers, yet we also seek to identify with their power" (Edelstein, 2006). This is one perspective as to why movies like "Saw" are so popular. Viewers rarely get to deal with sadism or masochism on a daily basis nor do viewers ever get insight into criminal minds. The beauty of slasher films is that viewers get to put themselves in the position of the torturer and the tortured.



"Shockumentaries"

http://horror.about.com/od/horrormoviesubgenres/a/exploitation_2.htm

http://www.weirdwildrealm.com/f-ingagi.html

Paranormal Activity is definitely not the first movie of its' kind. This website brings to attention the first movie from the genre of "shockumentaries," Ingagi. Ingagi first came out in 1931 and was originally shown as what viewers thought was a documentary about explorers in the African Congo who researched human and animal sacrifice and bestiality between women and gorillas (Harris). The shock value was tremendous as people could not believe their eyes as to how authentic this looked on screen. However, it was later revealed as a hoax. As it turned out, the characters in the documentary were entirely fictional and the footage was a montage of borrowed footage from other movies and documentaries (Paghat).Due to the popularity of Ingagi, it sparked the creation of a multitude of other "shockumentaries" such as Mondo Cane and Faces of Death. It is often argued that the popularity of the these films is due to the high shock value.

It should also be noted that Ingagi reflected the anxieties of American society at the time. Since Ingagi debuted in 1931, it deals with issues about "savages" and people from foreign lands. During this time, novels such as "Tarzan of the Great Apes" were very popular because they dealt with the concept of man versus a savage beast (Paghat).

Wednesday, April 13, 2011

Roger Ebert Review of Saw

http://rogerebert.suntimes.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20041028/REVIEWS/40923005/1023

Roger Ebert gave Saw 2 out of 4 stars while users gave it 2.5. While Roger Ebert admits the film is "well made and acted," he deems it not "worth the ordeal it puts you through" (Ebert 2004).

Roger Ebert Review of Paranormal Activity

http://rogerebert.suntimes.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20091007/REVIEWS/910089996

Roger Ebert gave the film 3.5 out of 4 stars while users only gave it 2.5. Ebert raves that Paranormal Activity is an "ingenious little horror film so well made it's scary" (Ebert 2009). According to Ebert, the films pretense of being found after the fact and recorded with no special effects is flawless except for a few minor camera shots.

Box Office and Awards of Saw

Box office:
Domestic:$55,185,045
Foreign markets: $47,911,300
Total: $103,096,345

Awards
San Sebastian International Film Festival winner for Audience Award- Best Feature
Gerardmer Film Festival winner for Youth Jury Grand Prize and Special Jury Prize
Brussels International Festival of Fantasy Film winner for Pegasus Audience Award

Box Office and Awards of Paranormal Activity

Box Office
Domestic: $107,918,810
Foreign markets: $85,379,199 in foreign markets
Total: $193,298,009

Awards
Nominated for "best first feature" in Independent Spirit Awards 2009

Tuesday, April 12, 2011

Saw (2004) marketing

This is a poster for giving blood to tie in with the release of the first Saw in 2004, starting a series of blood drives that have coincided with the release of subsequent Saw films. This marketing ploy for selling the movie was reported by the New York Post's Sara Stewart before the film's release on Halloween. She writes that this was a nationwide blood drive and that they were stopping in New York outside at the AMC Loews Kips Bay to conduct a drive from 11am-6pm, in which the first 50 doners get free tickets to a sneak preview of the film (Stewart 2004). This poster illustrates well the appeal of torture horror movies as the loss of blood through a blood drive adminstered by a nurse is likened to a sexual release, suggesting that watching Saw and such-like movies is a way of releasing sadistic pleasures by seeing someone tortured. The tagline for the poster "How much blood will you SHED for her?" and the attractive nurse covered in blood suggests the loss of blood is pleasurable in this context because a Nurse is helping you lose blood. Perhaps this marketing poster may explain the popularity of the film and the torture genre.

How do you feel when you see this poster? Are you disgusted or attarcted by the prospect of losing blood?

Reference

Saturday, April 9, 2011

Eli Roth interview with Fox News in 2006


In this interview Eli Roth, the director of Hostel explains the popularity of torture horror films, showing that they have an intelligence to them and that they are not just about mindless, inappropriate violence. He relates these horror films to people's fears of terrorism and the politics of the Iraq war as well as the Bush Administration's policies and argues that they are part of a cycle of films that represent the fears and politics of the time. He argues that horror films continue to be an outlet for where people can confront these fears in a controlled setting.

Do you agree with Eli Roth that horror movies are most popular in a time of great danger in the world? Are Horror films a way for people to deal with their fears? Are Torture movies part of continuing trend in horror movies of representing politics? What do you make of Fox News Interviewer's reactions and framing of his questions?

Reference

Eli Roth Interview Fox News [Video]. 2007. Retreived April 12 2011, from YouTube.com.

Friday, April 8, 2011

What is Horror to You?

Why do you think that horror films have remained so popular and what emotions do they draw out in you?



Responses from various Horror aficionados: Read-ON

Quotes Regarding the Horror Genre

"We will always probe nothingness and mystery with our imagination; the result will be among other things horror. The tide will rise with the black beauty and perfection of the hag/s characterization an dark wisdom, and the teachings of the vampire's hopeless immortality. As the perfect love story tickles our fancy, perfect horror taunts our fears. Both inspire to new heights and depths. And the human psyche is dimensionless." ~ Fiona

"The oldest and strongest emotion of mankind is fear, and the oldest and strongest kind of fear is fear of the unknown." ~ H. P. Lovecraft

"This predilection for art that promises we will be frightened by it, shaken by it, at times repulsed by it seems to be as deeply imprinted in the human psyche as the counter-impulse toward daylight, rationality, scientific skepticism, truth and the "real." ... And this is the forbidden truth, the unspeakable taboo--that evil is not always repellent but frequently attractive; that it has the power to make of us not simply victims, as nature and accident do, but active accomplices." ~ Joyce Carol Oates

"Like sex, horror is seductive - enticing the reader to accept the forbidden; allowing a fascination with the carnal, the forbidden; titillating the mind as sex does both the mind and sense. Reading horror is an act of consensual masochism: you willingly submit to the pleasures of fear - scare me! Please?" ~ Paula Guran

"Can there be something tonic about pure active fear in these times of passive, confused oppression? It is nice to choose to be frightened, when one need not be." ~ Elizabeth Bowen

"The problem is that horror is not a genre, it is an emotion. Horror is not a kind of fiction. It's a progressive form of fiction that continually evolves to meet the fears and anxieties of its times." ~ Douglas E. Winter

Thursday, April 7, 2011

Saw (2004): the first "torture porn" horror movie

The very first movie in the Saw franchise, released in 2004 has now been seen as the first in a line of ultra-violent, exploitative, explicit, sadistic horror movies coined with the name "Torture Porn" by David Edelstein in New York magazine (Edelstein 2006). After Saw came its multiple sequels and Eli Roth's Hostel and Hostel II amongst others that created a dominant sub-genre in Horror movies in the mid to late 2000's. Known as the "Splat pack" they owed a huge debt to James Wan and Leigh Whannell, the team behind the first Saw who showed with their film that film goers seemed to enjoy the use of sadism in horror movies (Keegan 2006). The Poster for the original Saw. It sets out the nature of the film clearly, that it is about the explicit and exploitative cutting off of limbs, which either disgusts the viewer or appeals to their sadistic instincts.

Saw is about two, seemingly innocent strangers who have been chained to pipes in a dirty bathroom made into a makeshift torture chamber, where in between them lies a dead body with a gun in its hand. They have been put there by the sadistic jigsaw serial killer who places his victims in traps that involve torturing themselves or others in order to survive and escape. Dr Lawrence Gordon, a surgeon with a family is given a choice; He has to kill Adam Stanheight, a photographer chained to the other end of the room by 6pm or otherwise his family will die and he will rot in the room. His family are tied to the bed in their home and threatened by an orderly from Gordon's hospital, who is part of Jigsaw's trap as he is forced to carry out Jigsaw's plan. By playing along with the game Gordon finds bullets to kill Adam using the gun from the body's hand and each find a hacksaw that could be used cut their chains off, except it is not sharp enough to cut through metal but it is for flesh and bone. This is where the title and severed limb in the poster come from. (Wan 2004).

This Prisoner and torture narrative is interwoven with a detective narrative as Detective Tapp and the police are trying to catch the jigsaw killer and he becomes obsessesed in the process after Jigsaw kills his partner in a trap in his lair. Flashbacks used in the film reveal the jigsaw killer chooses victims who lead immoral lives or waste them and through his traps he tries to make them value life by forcing them to use torture to escape. In past traps it is revealed a man who cut himself is put in a barbed wire maze and has to escape before the trap door closes. Only one survives, Amanda, a drug addict because she killed a paralysed victim to obtain a key from his intestines that would take a trap off that would forcibly separate her jaw. It turns out Gordon is placed there for committing adultury although he does not go through with it. Saw essentially implicates all these characters into an intricate trap and forces them to use violence to escape. (Wan 2004).

This is another poster for Saw, which features the tag line "How much blood would you shed to stay alive?", which is the central question of the film as people are made to torture to live. This a key theme of the torture genre as ordinary people are given the means of torture.

The term "Torture porn", which is the genre that Saw has been put into, combines two representations of the body through sex and violence that exposes the privacy of these bodily acts for viewing (Tziallas 2010). It lets people watch explicit, exploitative acts on the body that people should not be allowed to see and this breaks down the boundary between the private and public and lets you know bluntly what is going underneath the surface of society and human nature. Saw is the first film that does not rely on feeding your imagination of the unknown neither does it use suspense or suprise to shock you, it lets you know you are going to see pain and violence and forces you to watch it. It scares by showing violent acts like cutting a foot of with a saw instead of the mystery of where the killer is or what he or she will do next.

It is the fear of the known that this genre plays on and it is argued that the use of surveillance adds the fear because it breaks down privacy and is a source of institutional power (ibid.). This genre is very much linked to 9/11 and the use of surveillance to catch terrorists that could be anybody meaning everybody is being watched (ibid.). In Saw Gordon and Adam are being watched by a camera viewing the torturous proceedings and Jigsaw's lair that Tapp discovers is full of surveillance equipment (Wan 2004). In addition the use of flashbacks asks the viewer to connect the dots to see what happens and so the intricate narrative is key aspect of these films and makes sense of the film's other tagline: "Every Puzzle has its pieces."

Part of the appeal then is not just the invasive nature of the violence but also the idea that they know where the violence is coming from and how it is applied, reducing its uncertainty. But as Wes Craven argued the popularity of the genre came out of the fact Americans were living in a "Horror Show" due to the increased fears of average americans being subject to violence (Gordon 2006). It is just reflective of what is going on in the world and that they are subversive of the immoral Iraq war politics of the Bush Administration as Eli Roth, director of Hostel argues (Keegan 2006;McLintock 2006, 34). This makes torture porn clever rather than mindless and suggests these films are undeserving of this title.

References

Edelstein, David. 2006. Now Playing at your Local Multiplex: Torture Porn. Why has America gone nuts for blood, guts and sadism. New York Magazine, 28 January. Retrieved from nymag.com.

Gordon, Devin. 2006. "Horror Show." Newsweek, 3 April, 60-62. Retrieved from Academic Search Premier

Keegan, Rebecca Winters. 2006. "The Splat Pack." Time, 30 October, 66-70. Retrieved from Middle Search Plus

McLintock, Pamela. 2006. "Blood Brothers." Variety, 25-31 December, 1-2. Retrieved from the Film and Television Literature Index

Tziallas, Evangelas. 2010. Torture Porn and Surveillance Culture. Jump Cut: A Review of Contemporary Media 52. http://www.ejumpcut.org/currentissue/evangelosTorturePorn/text.html.

Wan, James. 2004. Saw. DVD. Los Angeles, CA: Lionsgate Films.

Wednesday, April 6, 2011

Rotten Tomato Reviews of Saw Movies nad Paranormal Activity

For anyone who doesn't know... Rotten tomatoes is a site that compiles all critics reviews of film by stars 1-10. Anything above 6 is considered Ok or Fresh. Anything below is considered Rotten. Its bassicaly like school grades 50's and below are F's. Then they compile what percent of critics called it fresh to see what the consensus is. Below are a bunch of %'s i found.
Saw: 48: Rotten
Saw 2: 35: rotten
Saw 3:25 rotten
Saw 4 : 40 rotten
Saw 5: 13 rotten Consensus: If its plot were as interesting as its torture devices, or its violence less painful than its performances, perhaps Saw V might not feel like it was running on fumes.
Saw 6: 40 rotten
Saw 7: 13 rotten
These movies are clearly awful according to popular critics. So why do people love them?
Paranormal activity: 82: Using its low-budget effects and mockumentary method to great result, Paranormal Activity turns a simple haunted house story into 90 minutes of relentless suspense.
Paranormal activity 2: 60% : Paranormal Activity 2 doesn't cover any new ground, but its premise is still scary -- and in some respects, it's a better film than the original.

So what's this mean? Critics dont like gore? Gore is a cop out from plot? Who knows.

Purpose of choice of Films

These two films exemplify the two spectrums of modern horror. Classic horror films relied on build of suspense, quality writing and great directing (ex. Hitchcock).

Today, it can take much less money or much less quality producers or directors involved. The growth of special effects, especially in regards to gore, has made it a lot easier to please many horror movie goers with the hassle of a good script or any classic facets of good film. Saw is the epitome of this type of horror film. It relies almost all on it's violence and over the top gore in order to scare and attract film goes. We have chosen this movie as opposed to other gorey films due to its wide success and longevity in sequels.

On the other end of the spectrum we have Paranormal Activity which relies much heavier on the classic tools of suspense, buildup and crescendos for scares. It is much more similar to a classic horror film than to most that have come out over the past couple years. It was extremely low budget and highly successful in the box office and critically.

Degredation of women and the genre

Objectification of women and the degration of the genre has been going on for 20 or so years. On google, this is the link I found relating to that. I'm sure more scholarly sources can be found on the topic. Maybe this is why critical reception has gone down so much

Monday, April 4, 2011

Questions we're exploring

These are all questions we hope to gain an understanding of through our research and eventual class discussion of our blog.

1. What does society deem scary? Why or why not?
2. Has this changed over the years? How so?
-Possibly influenced by special effects, make-up, costuming, ect?
3. Horror movie plot lines are continually recycled, yet audiences continue to react to scary movies. Has society become desensitized to such movies? Why or why not?
4. What is it about fear that is so entertaining? The adrenaline rush? The shock factor? The fact that seeing movies is one of the only activities that can create this feeling?

Just some beginning questions to ponder as we continue our research.

Saturday, April 2, 2011

Film Threat Review - Paranormal Activity

The author challenges "if you think modern horror has nothing more to offer, try sitting through 'Paranormal Activity' and then thank the filmmakers for changing your mind." The author agrees that the failure of the makers of the movie to admit whether what the audience sees is fiction or not truly works for Paranormal Activity. He explains that whenever any film is compared to the famed Blair Witch Project there is a "collective groan," however, Paranormal Activity was successful in making this mock documentary style appeal to the masses.



Interesting Review from Bright Lights Film Journal on Paranormal Activity

Brian Grady analyzes the characters of Micah and Katie as well as their relationship with each other. Grady notes how the constant presence of the camera and its connection to the "demon" that haunts them and creates a steady void between the young couple. He concludes by posing interesting questions about relationships and commitments in relation to past experiences.

TIME article on Paranormal Activity

This article discusses Paranormal Activity's delayed road to widespread silver screens, the unique style of the film, and the communal effect it had on audiences. For instance, Paramount had to stage a campaign in which viewers went online to request more showings for the film in order for it to be released in as many theaters as it was.

Further, the author claims that because the entire film is only shot from the perspective of the camera on the couple's property, the "claustrophobia creates a bond between the couple and the audience," an experience not typically had during a horror movie (Corliss 2009). Corliss goes on to praises the film's emphasis on dread and suspense.

Corliss also highlights the importance that Paranormal Activity successfully scares audiences without employing the gore and blood and guts that have become typical of horror movies.


http://www.time.com/time/arts/article/0,8599,1929648,00.html

Case Study of Paranormal Activity

In this interesting case study done by Martin Walsh, studies the marketing and distributing of Paranormal Activity. Walsh attributes the film's success to its intelligent marketing campaigns. For instance, Walsh states that this low budget movie "went on to make over 100 million dollars" as a result of the creative digital marketing techniques like using social media to promote the movie.


http://yetanotherstrugglingwriter.blogspot.com/2010/04/paranormal-activity-case-study.html



Analysis of clips from Saw (2004)

The following clips because of their gory nature and unsettling images cannot be uploaded unto Blogger but can seen by following these links: Clip 1: Let the Game Begin and Clip 2: Reverse Bear Trap. WARNING!! The second clip shows stabbing and bloddy intestines. Stop at 3.08 and resume at 4.19 if you do not wish to see this.

The first clip is towards the beginning of the film where Dr Lawrence Gordon and Adam Stanheight learn why they have been placed in a dirty bathroom and why there is a dead, bloody body in between them. They play the tapes, which they find in their pockets in a tape recorder found in the hand of the body and learn that they are there because of what they do in their jobs. The game is set up in this clip as Gordon has to find away to kill Adam to prevent his family being killed and to escape from the bathroom. (Wan 2004)

This clip echoes the captivity of Iraqi prisoners in the US Military Prison of Abu Ghraib, a story that broke earlier in 2004 that showed US soldiers torturing Iraqi prisoners with pride. It was only a coincidence that Saw came out later in the year after this arose but the link was made at the time of release by New York Times reviewer Stephen Holden, saying the images bear an "Uncomfortable Resemblance" (Holden 2004). However this movie is rooted in the post 9/11 political fears of the time that anyone could be taken away and tortured and reflects on the lack of security and chaos of the time.

A Photo of Adam, held in captivity and chained to a pipe in a dirty bathroom. Reflective of the apalling photos of torture at Abu Ghraib released earlier in the year

While the set-up of 2 innocent people in a makeshift torture chapter represents the fear of increased terrorism of which anyone could be subject to via a commercial plane after 9/11 it also depicts the tough choices that people make under the threat of terroism. Derry (2009, 311) makes the link between the United 93 passengers deciding to crash the plane themselves or allow it to hit a target and Gordon's decision to kill Adam to save his family or rot in the room. The clip then shows a man who is charged with an impossible choice and raises the question politically relevant at the time as to whether torture is acceptable when traditional moral actions will not help (ibid.). By represnting the issue of the best way to deal with terroism in this clip Saw continues a trend in representing political fears of the time, similar to Invasion of the Body Snatchers and communism.

Gordon, the other prisoner is the one given the impossible choice that involves killing Adam which parallels the tough choices the United 93 passengers were faced with.

The second clip shows Amanda, a victim who survived her trap or test decribes her ordeal to police detectives while Dr Lawrence Gordon watches on. It is revealed she is put there because she is a drug addict and in the process of taking the trap off her head before it causes her head to explode she is supposed to value her life and be thankful for the trap, which she is. (Wan 2004)

This scene plays around with the morality of torture and asks whether it is justified to use immoral means to reach benevolent ends, so the victims go on to appreciate their life as they have to torture themselves or others to do so. This taps into the debate of the time as to whether using torture is justified in winning the Iraq war and bringing suspected terrorists to justice in Guantanamo Bay. It also looks at the fact that even decent people have the potential to torture which David Edelstein considered in his article in the New Yorker, 2 years after Saw came out but while similar torture films came out (Edelstein 2006). Amanda survives precisely because she is convinced to torture someone else and shows that everyone has the inherent ability to torture, like the soldiers at Abu Ghraib (Derry 2009, 312).

Furthermore the use of the bear trap ties in with the growing conservatism after 9/11 as the use of out-dated and rusted technologies is argued by Christopher Sharrett an attempt to restore the old industrialist society to bring order to the chaos, linked to a conservative response to dealing with terrorism (Sharrett 2009, 34). The killer, Jigsaw's use of such technology is a way of getting his victims to obey his rules and avoid death, reflecting on people's desire for authority and dicipline to recover America's strength from the vulnerability of 9/11 (Tziallas 2010).

Amanda in the reverse bear trap, a use of old, mechanical technology to torture in a post-industrial world, to bring order to the chaos according to Sharrett (2009, 34).

These clips both show some of the themes that continue in the rest of the movie and indeed the Saw franchise itself that torture is used for ultimately moral ends and part of a conservative response to bring order to the chaos of a dangerous, less secure society. Moreover they show that horror movies continue to play on the prevailing political fears, which in this case is terrorism and torture. The fact that anybody is capable of torturing others is probably the feature of these clips that made the film as well as other torture films popular because people identified with those doing the torturing and psychologically they can project their dark instincts onto the screen. It is the familiarity with graphic violence in the world through the media that leads to its representation through the torture horror movie as more people are receptive to violence because there is more violence in the world. Saw is a film that has to be more violent to shock its audience that is pervaded with images of violence like the Abu Ghraib photos.

References

Derry, Charles. 2009. Dark Dreams 2.0: A Psychological History of the Modern Horror Film from the 1950s to the 21st Century. Jefferson, NC: McFarland & Company, Inc., Publishers.

Edelstein, David. 2006. Now Playing at your Local Multiplex: Torture Porn. Why has America gone nuts for blood, guts and sadism. New York Magazine, 28 January. Retrieved from nymag.com.

Holden, Stephen. 2004. Movie Review "Saw": A Gore Fest with Overtones of Iraq and TV. New York Times, Oct. 29, 2004. Retrieved from nytimes.com.

Lionsgateshop. Saw-1. "Let the Game Begin" [video]. 2009. Retrieved April 2 2011, from YouTube.com.

Murray, Gabrielle. 2007. Hostel II: Representations of the body in pain and the experience in torture-porn. Jump Cut: A Review of Contemporary media 50. http://http//www.ejumpcut.org/archive/jc50.2008/TortureHostel2/text.html

Saw 1 Unrated: The Reverse Bear Trap [Video]. 2008. Retrieved April 2 2011, from YouTube.com.

Sharrett, Christopher. 2009. The Problem of Saw: "Torture Porn" and the Conservatism of Contemporary Horror Films. Cinataste 35 (1): 32-37. Retrieved from Film and Television Index.

Tziallas, Evangelos. 2010. Torture Porn and Suveillance Culture. Jump Cut: A Review of Contemporary Media 52. http://www.ejumpcut.org/currentissue/evangelosTorturePorn/text.html

Wan, James. 2004. Saw. DVD. Los Angeles: Lionsgate Films.