Wheaties-Of-Doom
Space Core
- Joined
- Mar 27, 2014
- Messages
- 161
- Reaction score
- 46
Prologue: I've been thinking a lot on the horror genre (In part because a lot of "Let's Play"s have been focusing on people screaming into a microphone over slender man, but mainly thanks to a recent episode of Doctor Who). So here are my thoughts. Perhaps we could have a pseudo-intellectual discussion on the matter?
There is a subtle difference between something that is truly Horrifying and that which is referred to as a jump-scare. You see, in the moments leading up to a jump-scare, there is the opposite of action - a void, if you will. The empty space unnerves us. Something must, eventually fill it. That's what makes a jump-scare, well, a scare. We don't know when or how that void will be filled. It could happen at any moment and, when it does, it is always unexpected.
But now it's done. The tension, the unease, is lifted. The suspense is dead; there is nothing horrifying about that.
Horror, though, Horror does the opposite. There is no void, not at first. Horror takes that ease, that filled space, and makes a hole in it. True horror takes what we know and says, "Where if there is a flaw? What if what you thought was there really isn't?" It doesn't fill a void, it MAKES one. The void follows us. We want as human beings, we NEED, for it to be filled. For the jigsaw to fit. For it to be made whole.
And when it isn't, we are Horrified.
There is a subtle difference between something that is truly Horrifying and that which is referred to as a jump-scare. You see, in the moments leading up to a jump-scare, there is the opposite of action - a void, if you will. The empty space unnerves us. Something must, eventually fill it. That's what makes a jump-scare, well, a scare. We don't know when or how that void will be filled. It could happen at any moment and, when it does, it is always unexpected.
But now it's done. The tension, the unease, is lifted. The suspense is dead; there is nothing horrifying about that.
Horror, though, Horror does the opposite. There is no void, not at first. Horror takes that ease, that filled space, and makes a hole in it. True horror takes what we know and says, "Where if there is a flaw? What if what you thought was there really isn't?" It doesn't fill a void, it MAKES one. The void follows us. We want as human beings, we NEED, for it to be filled. For the jigsaw to fit. For it to be made whole.
And when it isn't, we are Horrified.