Saturday 17 October 2009

GCSE English : Search For My Tongue

This poem is about Sujata Bhatt being afraid that she was losing her identity as a Gujarati-speaking Indian. It comes from a time when she was in America studying English, and feared she was being ‘Americanised’, and forgetting her first language (her ‘mother tongue’)

The content of the poem consists of the poet writes about losing her tongue, by which she means forgetting how to speak her mother tongue because she had always to speak English (‘the foreign tongue’).
Then, however, as she dreams, her mother tongue re-asserts itself as her first language.
She writes first in Gujarati (e.g. ), then she gives us the pronunciation of the Gujarati (e.g. ‘munay hutoo’), then she translates it for us (meaning: ‘It grows back’).

The feelings of the poet are at first distress that she is losing her mother tongue.
At first she talks about the two languages as though they were at war, and is fearful the foreign tongue seemed to be winning. She seems to think that the foreign tongue is winning because she is not using it (she talks about how it will ‘rot and die’) or because she is consciously not using it (‘I thought I had spit it out’).
However, she finishes confidently, reasserting her knowledge of her Indian identity.
You can sense her happiness when she writes: ‘overnight while I dream … every time I think I've forgotten … it blossoms out of my mouth’.
The allusion to her ‘dreams’ has TWO meanings – one, that she speaks Gujarati literally in her dreams, but also, it is her ‘dream’ (her longing) to speak it always.

The Structure of the poem is that it is written as a single stanza, representing one long coherent assertion to the reader that it is her Gujarati language which is most important to her.
The poem starts in English – because the story starts with her worrying that English is taking over in her life.
But then the entire middle section is Gujarati, a visual assertion that, for her Gujarati is growing back/ re-asserting itself at the centre of her life, and that she is proud of it.
When she writes it phonetically, and then translates it, it is not because English is more important, but simply because she is doing the reader a favour. The result is that the reader reads the story of how Gujarati triumphed over English THREE times!

In her use of language, the poet writes in free verse, so that her poem feels just like a lecture, giving her thoughts as they come out of her head.
She writes in the first person – ‘I’ – to show that this is a personal battle, but also so other readers in the same situation will be able to read it as though it is their personal poem too.
She uses the word ‘tongue’ in three ways, firstly as the physical tongue in her mouth, secondly as her ‘mother tongue’ (her language), but also as a symbol of her personal identity and Indian culture.
The poem consists of an extended metaphor of her language as a plant. At first she is worried that it is going to ‘rot and die’ (that she is forgetting it), but then in lines 30-35: it ‘grows’, ‘shoots’, ‘buds’, ‘blossoms’, representing the poet growing in confidence , remembering Gujarati words, forming them on her lips, and finally speaking them full out fluently in Gujarati.
One a powerful image is of her tongue rotting in her mouth and her ‘spitting it out’, reflecting the horror and disgust she felt at losing her tongue and Indian identity.
The repetition: ‘the bud opens … the bud opens’ symbolises the unstoppableness of the process, but also her excitement that it is happening and that she is re-finding her Gujarati identity.

GCSE English : Presents From My Aunts In Pakistan


Poetry analysis: Presents from my aunts in Pakistan, by Moniza Alvi
by
Liz Allen


Moniza Alvi was born of mixed parentage, her father being Pakistani and her mother English. She was born in Pakistan but moved to England at a young age. This poem expresses her confusion in her search for her identity. The tradtional clothes that her aunts sent her from Pakistan are a symbol of a part of her, but only a part of her, and one that she does not feel entirely comfortable with.


The first stanza describes the clothes that were sent: two 'salwar kameez' outfits, which consist of a tunic dress and trousers. The beautiful vivid colours are described, the second one with the simile 'glistening like an orange split open'. Alvi tells us that the style of the salwar trousers changed, just as fashions in England change: they were 'broad and stiff, / then narrow.' The aunts also sent oriental pointed slippers, described as 'embossed', 'gold and black', as though they were very decorative. There were also bangles that were 'Candy-striped', but Alvi relates how these broke and 'drew blood'; this seems to be symbolic perhaps of the fact that her life in Pakistan was cut short. The first stanza ends with a description of a green, silver-bordered sari that the writer received as a teenager.


The second stanza relates how Alvi tried on these clothes 'each silken-satin top' - but felt 'alien' in her sitting-room. There is a definite sense here that the two cultures conflicted. Alvi seems to have felt a degree of inferiority when she says 'I could never be as lovely / as those clothes'. She wanted the 'denim and corduroy' that were typical of England. She describes how the Pakistani clothes 'clung' to her and uses the metaphor 'I was aflame', but, unlike the phoenix, she could not rise from the fire, and thus could not take on the Pakistani identity. She contrasts herself with one of her aunts, emphasising that she herself was 'half English, / unlike Aunt Jamila'.
The shorter third stanza focuses on a camel-skin lamp owned by her parents. Here again, there is a conflict of ideas: Alvi wanted the lamp, but looking at it in her room she simultaneously thought of the cruelty involved in making the lamp and admired its colours which she describes with the simile 'like stained glass'.


Stanza four switches to a comment on Alvi's English mother who 'cherished her jewellery'. The jewellery was Indian, and it was stolen from the family car; this perhaps symbolises the fact that the mother did not belong to the Asian culture. Alvi then alludes once more to the Pakistani clothes that were 'radiant' in her wardrobe. This stanza ends with the irony that the aunts who sent the traditional clothes themselves wanted 'cardigans / from Marks and Spencers'.
Alvi then relates how a visiting schoolfriend of hers did not appreciate the salwar kameez or sari when shown them. This leads into Alvi's expression of her admiration of the mirror-work in the Pakistani clothes. She tells us 'I / ... tried to glimpse myself / in the miniature / glass circles', but the fact that they were so small leads to our realization that Alvi would not have been able to see her whole reflection, just a fragment of herself, which underlines the idea of a split identity. She then tries to remember the journey she made from Pakistan to England at a very young age. 'Prickly heat had me screaming on the way' emphasises the idea of pain and the difficulty of being torn between two cultures. She recalls being in a cot in her English grandmother's home, and stresses being alone with a tin boat to play with after the long voyage.


Stanza six focuses on memories of Pakistan. Alvi looks at photographs taken in the 1950s to help her remember the country of her birth. Later, she read about the 'conflict' in Pakistan in newspapers, seeing it as 'a fractured land', which again reflects her own feeling of having a fractured identity. She can still picture her aunts in Lahore as they wrapped presents. They would have been hidden from 'male visitors' by a carved wooden screen this idea again adds to the sense of not being able to see clearly, of fragmentation.


The final stanza opens with memories linked with poverty: 'beggars, sweeper-girls'. As though it were a dream, Alvi pictures herself as part of the scene, saying 'I was there - / of no fixed nationality'. This phrase tells us exactly how feels, in that she does not belong wholly to any one country. Like her aunts, she is behind a screen, or 'fretwork', looking out at the Shalimar Gardens. This echoes the image of her trying to see herself in the mirror-work of the Pakistani clothes, as in both instances a complete picture would have been hard to see.
The language of the poem is quite informal, appearing to flow from the writer's mind as many of the lines are indented in an irregular pattern. The visual aspect of the poem adds to the sense of uncertainty. The lines seem to move backwards and forwards on the page, echoing the idea of going to and fro between two cultures. This is a creative way of underlining the theme of the poem, the feeling of not really belonging to any one particular place, of being unsure of one's identity.

Wednesday 14 October 2009

Tuesday 13 October 2009

GCSE Film Studies : Twilight Trailer

GCSE Film Studies : Representation Of Vampires



Vampires and Slayers - Representation and genre shifting
Initially and famously transferred to filmic format by Fredrick Murnau, the silent classic Nosferatu began the genre that went on to become one of the most iconic and recognised in cinematic history. With its roots firmly embedded in Germany, and the German Expressionism movement, the idea of the bloodsucking un-dead quickly emerged across the waters in a hybrid format; removing the animalistic and contorted features originally impressed upon the vampire, in favour of a dark, mysterious and sensual interpretation.
One of the first and most acknowledged Hollywood vampire movies is Tod Browning's 1931 Dracula (also based on Bram Stoker's original text), with Bela Lugosi taking the lead role. This re-imagining sticks closely to its famous predecessor, but with the all important shift in the protagonist's appearance; which set to shift the Hollywood vision of the vampire into an ethereal being we desire as much as we fear. And you can see how far this ideal has progressed over the last eighty years. You only have to Google Twilight to recognise its immediate cult status; the notion of impossible love between a young innocent woman, and creature of the night. The shift from the gruesome to the unfeasibly beautiful solidifies the idea of Western influences morphing a genre from the horrific into the romantic.
Important as it is for our dark, mysterious (usually male) vampire to a given film, we are also obsessed with his blonde counterpart; the virgin with whom he falls in love. Pre - 1990's, the beautiful helpless victim became the vision of purity. She wore white, was softly spoken and was commonly betrothed but not yet wed. So pure, in fact, she would not see the danger that lurked behind the vampire's demeanour ways. She would be lured away from her perfect innocence, and inevitably die because of it. The moral of the story, quite obviously being, that by giving into temptation and compromising your purity, you will definitely die. However, the idea of the feeble and vulnerable female in the vampire genre was dramatically changed through Joss Whedon's creation Buffy the Vampire Slayer. She embodied all of the characteristics attributed to the generic victim; but with the important distinction that, in fact, she is a superhero whose legacy is to kill vampires.
Buffy the Vampire Slayer was, of course, a rejuvenation of a genre that was swiftly becoming laughable, with Francis Ford Coppola's 1992 spoof-like remake of Dracula doing little but to solidify the fact that change was necessary to prevent the whole genre becoming obsolete. Although the 1992 feature film of Buffy was ridiculed and wholly unsuccessful, it provided a kitsch cult following that was massively amplified through Whedon's long running TV series of the same name. This sub-genre of vampire films concentrated upon the vampire hunter. It preserved the original moral principles attributed to vampire flicks, with punishment and redemption as common themes surfacing in almost every vampire based film from the west. The idea of the vampire that refuses to become the monster is a frequent plot feature; take for example the Blade films, where Wesley Snipes plays a half-vampire hero; we are given a protagonist who chooses to be protector, avenging man-kind by hunting evil vampires. Similarly, the character of Michael in The Lost Boys must find redemption by killing the head blood sucker - he gave into his temptation, was punished by the prospect of eternal damnation and only finds himself free through the killing off of the vampire gang.
Possibly the most recognised ‘vampire hunter' is another Bram Stoker creation, Van Helsing - Count Dracula's arch enemy. Although not nearly as close in popularity and filmic representation as Dracula, Van Helsing identifies a similar niche that Buffy did in the 1990's. The character is complex and involved, offering an alternative to the overtly sexual nature of the vampire. Whereas Dracula is led by his primary and bodily instincts (accounting for the overt link with sex), Van Helsing is led by books and learning, he is not tempted by lust or desire; explaining his eventual ability to defeat Dracula - Vampire morality still insists that those who give into their temptations are doomed. Of course, Van Helsing was never to be as popular as Dracula (or any other vampire protagonist), nor ever will be. Our obsession with the dark, sensual and mystical figure stems from just that; he is shrouded in mystery and intrigue, and we are emphatically drawn to him despite the mortal danger he is synonymous with. We are not as intrigued by Van Helsing in this way because there is no mystery. His abilities stem only from the books he reads.
Coming back to the whole concept of the vampire in film, conceptions and stereotypes will always be at the forefront of most viewers' minds. However, when looking at a non-Hollywood approach to the genre, a much more diverse, and to an extent, disturbing representation can be found. The most recent successful non-Hollywood vampire movie, the Swedish film Let the Right One In, an entirely unconventional camaraderie is built between a young female vampire and a boy tormented by bullies, based on a common desire for companionship. This departs entirely from the passionate Hollywood rendition of the vampire film; as the all important link between vampire and sex is absent, with a genuine, albeit highly atypical, friendship in its place. It also bemuses the Hollywood stereotype by avoiding the moral sensibilities set out so clearly. By becoming involved with Eli the vampire, Hollywood would expect Oskar to die. He doesn't, rather Eli saves him; the film is romantic and violent without being sexual or driven by morals and generic standards.
In a merging of cinemas, of sorts, it seems that Park Chan-wook's Thirst which recently premiered at Cannes, uses the same ‘vampires are not innately monstrous' theme adopted by teen obsession Twilight. When asked about what he had to offer to the genre, he replied."I thought I could add some changes to this old genre by approaching the subject - vampire-ism, so to speak - without the usual mystery or romanticism but from a realistic perspective - where being a vampire is sort of a disease." Yes, Chan-wook's film involves a killing spree on the part of his protagonist, but the principle remains in the Hollywood spectrum of both valorising and victimising the vampire. It seems, therefore, that for the vampire genre to rejuvenate, films must negotiate their way through past, current and prospective futures in how to represent the vampire, and those who hunt them.
With a remake of Buffy the Vampire Slayer currently in production, and another three instalments in the Twilight saga to go, there is a question mark as to where Hollywood, and cinemas from across the globe, will take the vampire genre. Will movie-makers revert to the grotesque and animalistic representation of the vampire, in preference of the sexual and mysterious depiction that has been popular for more than half a century? Or will the genre as a whole shift further still from its origins in horror, moving more into romance and comedy (as it currently seems to be), and edging its classical roots into the abyss of archives for good. Hopefully near future will bring us a new and exciting take on the vampire/slayer story; as the 2004 version of Van Helsing attempted to do .

GCSE Film Studies : Horror Movies Timeline 1


1890s-1920s Horror Movies

Lon Chaney and Mary Philbin in 'The Phantom of the Opera'.

It didn't take long after the advent of motion picture technology in the late 19th century for filmmakers to dabble in the horror genre, as witnessed by French director Georges Méliès' 1896 short The House of the Devil, often credited as being the first horror movie. Although America was home to the first Frankenstein and Jekyll and Hyde movie adaptations, the most influential horror films through the 1920s came from Germany's Expressionist movement, with films like The Cabinet of Dr. Caligari and Nosferatu influencing the next generation of American cinema. Actor Lon Chaney, meanwhile, almost singlehandedly kept American horror afloat, with The Hunchback of Notre Dame, The Phantom of the Opera and The Monster, which set the stage for the Universal dominance of the '30s.
1896: The House of the Devil
1910: Frankenstein
1913: The Student of Prague
1920: Cabinet of Dr. Caligari
1920: The Golem: Or How He Came into the World
1920: Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde
1922: Haxan
1922: Nosfertu
1923: The Hunchback of Notre Dame
1924: The Hands of Orlac
1924: Waxworks
1925: The Monster
1925: The Phantom of the Opera
1926: Faust
1927: The Cat and the Canary

GCSE Film Studies : Horror Movies Timeline 2


1930s Horror Movies

Olga Baclanova and Harry Earles in 'Freaks'.© Warner Bros.

Building upon the success of The Hunchback of Notre Dame and The Phantom of the Opera, Universal Studios entered a Golden Age of monster movies in the '30s, releasing a string of hit horror movies beginning with Dracula and Frankenstein in 1931 and including the controversial Freaks and a Spanish version of Dracula that is often thought to be superior to the English-language version. Germany continued its artistic streak in the early '30s, with Vampyr and the Fritz Lang thriller M, but Nazi rule forced much of the filmmaking talent to emigrate. The '30s also witnessed the first American werewolf film (The Werewolf of London), the first zombie movie (White Zombie) and the landmark special effects blockbuster King Kong.
1931: Dracula
1931: Drácula
1931: Frankenstein
1931: M
1931: Vampyr
1932: Freaks
1932: The Mask of Fu Manchu
1932: The Mummy
1932: The Old Dark House
1932: White Zombie
1933: The Invisible Man
1933: Island of Lost Souls
1933: King Kong
1934: The Black Cat
1935: The Bride of Frankenstein
1935: The Werewolf of London

GCSE Film Studies : Horror Movies Timeline 3


1940s Horror Movies

Frances Dee in 'I Walked with a Zombie'.© Warner Bros.

Despite the success of The Wolf Man early in the decade, by the 1940s, Universal's monster movie formula was growing stale, as evidenced by sequels like The Ghost of Frankenstein and desperate ensemble films with multiple monsters, beginning with Frankenstein Meets the Wolf Man. Eventually the studio even resorted to comedy-horror pairings, like Abbott and Costello Meet Frankenstein, which met with some success. Other studios stepped in to fill the horror void with more serious-minded fare, including RKO's brooding Val Lewton productions, most notably Cat People and I Walked with a Zombie. MGM, meanwhile, contributed The Picture of Dorian Gray, which won an Academy Award for cinematography, and a remake of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde, while Paramount released the highly regarded haunted house picture The Uninvited. Notable international entry Mahal marked India's first foray into horror.
1941: Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde
1941: King of the Zombies
1941: The Wolf Man
1942: Cat People
1943: Frankenstein Meets the Wolf Man
1943: I Walked with a Zombie
1944: The Uninvited
1945: Dead of Night
1945: The Picture of Dorian Gray
1948: Abbott and Costello Meet Frankenstein
1949: Mahal
1949: Mighty Joe Young

GCSE Film Studies : Horror Movies Timeline 4


1950s Horror Movies

'The Beast from 20,000 Fathoms'© Warner Bros.

Various cultural forces helped shape horror movies in the '50s. The Cold War fed fears of invasion (Invasion of the Body Snatchers, The Thing from Another World, The Blob), nuclear proliferation fed visions of rampaging mutants (Them!, The Beast from 20,000 Fathoms, Godzilla) and scientific breakthroughs led to mad scientist plots (The Fly). Competition for increasingly jaded audiences led filmmakers to resort to either gimmicks like 3-D (House of Wax, The Creature from the Black Lagoon) and the various stunts of William Castle productions (House on Haunted Hill, The Tingler) or, in the case of Great Britain's Hammer Films, explicit, vividly coloured violence. International efforts include the first full-length Japanese horror movie (Ugetsu), the first Italian horror movie in the sound era (I Vampiri) and the acclaimed French thriller Diabolique.
1951: The Thing from Another World
1953: The Beast from 20,000 Fathoms
1953: House of Wax
1953: Ugetsu
1954: The Creature from the Black Lagoon
1954: Godzilla
1954: Them!
1955: Diabolique
1955: The Night of the Hunter
1956: The Bad Seed
1956: I Vampiri
1956: Invasion of the Body Snatchers
1957: The Curse of Frankenstein
1957: I Was a Teen-age Werewolf
1957: The Incredible Shrinking Man
1958: The Blob
1958: The Fly
1958: Horror of Dracula
1959: House on Haunted Hill
1959: Plan 9 from Outer Space
1959: The Tingler

GCSE Film Studies : Horror Movies Timeline 5


1960s Horror Movies

'Night of the Living Dead'


Perhaps no decade had more seminal, acclaimed horror films than the '60s. Reflecting the social revolution of the era, the movies were more edgy, featuring controversial levels of violence (Blood Feast, Witchfinder General) and sexuality (Repulsion). Films like Peeping Tom and Psycho were precursors to the slasher movies of the coming decades, while George Romero's Night of the Living Dead changed the face of zombie movies forever. Horror luminaries of the time included Alfred Hitchcock (Psycho, The Birds), Vincent Price (13 Ghosts, The Fall of the House of Usher, Witchfinder General), Herschell Gordon Lewis (Blood Feast, Two Thousand Maniacs), Roman Polanski (Repulsion, Rosemary's Baby) and Mario Bava (Black Sunday, Black Sabbath).
1960: 13 Ghosts
1960: Black Sunday
1960: Eyes Without a Face
1960: The Fall of the House of Usher
1960: The Little Shop of Horrors
1960: Peeping Tom
1960: Psycho
1960: Village of the Damned
1961: The Innocents
1962: Carnival of Souls
1962: Mondo Cane
1962: What Ever Happened to Baby Jane
1963: At Midnight I'll Take Your Soul
1963: The Birds
1963: Black Sabbath
1963: Blood Feast
1963: The Haunting
1964: Hush, Hush, Sweet Charlotte
1964: Kwaidan
1964: Two Thousand Maniacs
1965: Dr Terror's House of Horrors
1965: Repulsion
1968: The Rape of the Vampire
1968: Night of the Living Dead
1968: Rosemary's Baby
1968: Spider Baby
1968: Witchfinder General

GCSE Film Studies : Horror Movies Timeline 6


1970s Horror Movies

'The Exorcist'© Warner Bros.

The '70s pushed the envelope even further than the '60s, reflecting a nihilism born of the Vietnam era. Social issues of the day were tackled, from sexism (The Stepford Wives) to consumerism (Dawn of the Dead) to religion (The Wicker Man) and war (Deathdream). Exploitation movies hit their stride in the decade, boldly flouting moral conventions with graphic sex (I Spit on Your Grave, Vampyros Lesbos) and violence (The Texas Chainsaw Massacre, The Hills Have Eyes), the latter reflected particularly in a spate of zombie movies (Dawn of the Dead) and cannibal films (The Man from Deep River). The shock factor even pushed films like The Exorcist and Jaws to blockbuster success. Amidst the chaos, the modern slasher film was born in Canada's Black Christmas and America's Halloween.
1971: The Abominable Dr. Phibes
1971: Twitch of the Death Nerve
1971: Vampyros Lesbos
1972: Blacula
1973: The Exorcist
1972: The Last House on the Left
1972: The Man from Deep River
1973: Sisters
1973: The Wicker Man
1974: Black Christmas
1974: Deathdream
1974: It's Alive
1974: Let Sleeping Corpses Lie
1974: The Texas Chainsaw Massacre
1975: Jaws
1975: The Rocky Horror Picture Show
1975: Shivers
1975: The Stepford Wives
1976: Carrie
1976: The Omen
1977: The Hills Have Eyes
1977: Suspiria
1978: Dawn of the Dead
1978: Faces of Death
1978: The Fury
1978: Halloween
1978: I Spit on Your Grave
1979: Alien
1979: The Amityville Horror
1979: Phantasm
1979: When a Stranger Calls

GCSE Film Studies : Horror Movies Timeline 7


1980s Horror Movies

Helen Udy and Peter Cowper in 'My Bloody Valentine'.© Lionsgate

Horror in the the first half of the '80s was defined by slashers like Friday the 13th, Prom Night and A Nightmare on Elm Street, while the latter half tended to take a more lighthearted look at the genre, mixing in comic elements in films like The Return of the Living Dead, Evil Dead 2, Re-Animator and House. Throughout the '80s, Stephen King's fingerprints were felt, as adaptations of his books littered the decade, from The Shining to Pet Sematary. Fatal Attraction, meanwhile, spawned a series of "stalker thrillers," but despite the efforts of newcomers like Sam Raimi (The Evil Dead), Stuart Gordon (Re-Animator), Joe Dante (The Howling, Gremlins) and Tom Holland (Fright Night, Child's Play), horror's box office might had subsided by the end of the '80s.
1980: Cannibal Holocaust
1980: Prom Night
1980: The Shining
1980: Friday the 13th
1981: An American Werewolf in London
1981: The Beyond
1981: The Evil Dead
1981: The Howling
1981: My Bloody Valentine
1981: Scanners
1982: Cat People
1982: Creepshow
1982: Poltergeist
1983: The Hunger
1984: Ghostbusters
1984: Gremlins
1984: A Nightmare on Elm Street
1984: Silent Night, Deadly Night
1985: Demons
1985: Fright Night
1985: Mr. Vampire
1985: Re-Animator
1985: The Return of the Living Dead
1985: The Toxic Avenger
1986: Aliens
1986: House
1986: Manhunter
1987: A Chinese Ghost Story
1987: Evil Dead 2
1987: Fatal Attraction
1987: Hellraiser
1987: The Lost Boys
1987: Near Dark
1987: Predator
1988: Child's Play
1988: Night of the Demons
1988: Pumpkinhead
1988: The Vanishing
1989: Pet Sematary

GCSE Film Studies : Horror Movies Timeline 8


1990s Horror Movies

Wesley Snipes in 'Blade'.© New Line

The early '90s brought unrivaled critical acclaim for the horror genre, with The Silence of the Lambs sweeping the major Academy awards in 1992, a year after Kathy Bates won the Oscar for Best Lead Actress for Misery and Whoopi Goldberg won for Best Supporting Actress for Ghost. Such success seemed to spur studios into funding large-scale horror-themed projects, such as Interview with the Vampire, Bram Stoker's Dracula and Wolf. In 1996, Scream's runaway success reignited the slasher flame, spawning similar films, such as I Know What You Did Last Summer and Urban Legend. At the end of the decade, Blade foreshadowed the coming flood of comic book adaptations, and Asian horror movies like Ringu and Audition signaled a new influence on American fright flicks. Meanwhile, 1999 witnessed two of the biggest surprise hits of the decade, regardless of genre, in The Sixth Sense and The Blair Witch Project.
1990: Arachnophobia
1990: Ghost
1990: Henry: Portrait of a Serial Killer
1990: Misery
1991: The Silence of the Lambs
1992: Bram Stoker's Dracula
1992: Candyman
1992: Dead Alive
1993: Cronos
1993: Jurassic Park
1993: Leprechaun
1994: Interview with the Vampire
1994: Wolf
1995: Se7en
1996: The Craft
1996: From Dusk Till Dawn
1996: Scream
1997: Funny Games
1997: I Know What You Did Last Summer
1998: Blade
1998: Fallen
1998: Ringu
1998: Urban Legend
1999: Audition
1999: The Blair Witch Project
1999: The Mummy
1999: The Sixth Sense
1999: Sleepy Hollow

GCSE Film Studies : Horror Movies Timeline 9



2000s Horror Movies
Julianna Guill and Derek Mears in 'Friday the 13th'.Photo: John P. Johnson © Warner Bros.

Twenty-first century horror in the US has been identified with remakes of both American (Friday the 13th, Halloween, Dawn of the Dead) and foreign films (The Ring, The Grudge), but there have been innovations within American horror -- most notably Saw and Hostel. Outside of the US, there is as great a variety of edgy and innovative material as there has ever been in the genre, from Canada (Ginger Snaps) to France (High Tension) to Spain (The Orphanage) to the UK (28 Days Later) and, of course, Asia, from Hong Kong (The Eye) to Japan (Ichi the Killer) to Korea (A Tale of Two Sisters) to Thailand (Shutter).
2000: Final Destination
2000: Ginger Snaps
2000: Scary Movie
2001: Ichi the Killer
2001: Joy Ride
2001: The Others
2002: 28 Days Later
2002: The Eye
2002: Resident Evil
2002: The Ring
2002: Signs
2003: Freddy vs. Jason
2003: High Tension
2003: House of 1000 Corpses
2003: Ju-on: The Grudge
2003: One Missed Call
2003: A Tale of Two Sisters
2003: The Texas Chainsaw Massacre
2004: Dawn of the Dead
2004: The Grudge
2004: Hellboy
2004: Night Watch
2004: Saw
2004: Shaun of the Dead
2004: Shutter
2005: The Descent
2005: Hostel
2006: The Host
2007: Halloween
2007: I Am Legend
2007: The Orphanage
2007: Sweeney Todd: The Demon Barber of Fleet Street
2008: Cloverfield
2008: Let the Right One In
2008: Prom Night
2008: The Strangers
2008: Twilight
2009: Friday the 13th

GCSE Film Studies : Horror Fiction


A brief history of horror fiction. Horror movies' literary background: ancient myths, gothic novels, Sir Arthur Conan Doyle, Robert Louis Stevenson, Mary Shelley, Herman Melville, Edgar Allen Poe, H G Wells


Roots of the Horror Genre
HORROR• noun 1) an intense feeling of fear, shock, or disgust. 2) a thing causing such a feeling. 3) intense dismay. 4) informal a bad or mischievous person, especially a child.— ORIGIN Latin, from horrere ‘shudder, (of hair) stand on end’.- Oxford English Dictionary

Although our studies are concerned with the horror film, no serious student of the genre should remain ignorant of the literary classics which have helped shape the paradigms over the last two centuries. This is a very brief overview - check the Further Reading links at the end for articles which explore this fascinating field.
As long as there have been stories, there have been stories about the Other, the unrealities we might categorise today as speculative fiction. Early creation myths in all cultures are populated by demons and darkness, and early Abrahamic and Egyptian mythology resounds with tales of a world beyond the physical, a realm of the spirits, to be revered and feared. Classical mythology is replete with monsters - Cereberus, the Minotaur, Medusa, the Hydra, the Sirens, Cyclops, Scylla and Charybdis to name but a few- and heroes must navigate safely through the land of the dead on frequent occasions. Ancestor worship and the veneration of the dead begins with the Zhou dynasty in China, 1500 years BC. The modern horror genre as we know it is only around 200 years old (it begins to have form and conventions towards the end of the eighteenth century) but it has distinguished antecedents. Every culture has a set of stories dealing with the unknown and unexplained, tales that chill, provoke and keep the listener wondering "what if..?" Horror films are the present-day version of the epic poems and ballads told round the fires of our ancestors.


The Gothic Tradition
The term 'horror' first comes into play with Horace Walpole's 1764 novel, The Castle of Otranto, full of supernatural shocks and mysterious melodrama. Although rather a stilted tale, it started a craze, spawning many imitators in what we today call the gothic mode of writing. Better writers than Walpole, such as Ann Radcliffe (The Mysteries of Udolpho) and Matthew Gregory Lewis (The Monk) took the form to new heights of thrills and suspense. For half a century, gothic novels reigned supreme. As the Age of Enlightenment gave way to the new thinking of the early nineteeth century, Romantic poets of the stature of Coleridge (The Rime of the Ancient Mariner, Christabel) and Goethe (The Erlking) reflected the strong emotions of the movement through a glass darkly, recognising that fear and awe aren't so very different sensations. The first great horror classic (Frankenstein 1818) was written by a Romantic at the heart of the movement - Mary Shelley.


Nineteenth Century Masters
Some of the greatest mid- nineteenth century novelists (on both sides of the Atlantic) tried their hand at horror fiction, paying tribute to the dying traditions of the gothic. Emily Bronte steeped her magnus opus, Wuthering Heights in gothic situations and sensibilities while Dickens wrote a number of ghost stories (the best perhaps being The Signalman, the best known A Christmas Carol). Herman Melville incorporated many supernatural elements into Moby Dick, as did Nathaniel Hawthorne with The Scarlet Letter and The House of the Seven Gables. As the century advanced, many writers turned to the short story or novella form to spook their readers - J S Le Fanu, Sir Arthur Conan Doyle, Wilkie Collins, Robert Louis Stevenson and of course, Edgar Allen Poe.
Edgar Allan Poe
Reviled for many years as an alcoholic hack, Poe is now gaining his rightful place in the literary canon; his terse yet suggestive prose style carries him through several volumes of startlingly original short stories and some heartbreaking poetry. He is credited with inventing the modern detective story (The Murders in The Rue Morgue -1841) and with being the first writer to explore psychoanalysis within a literary format. The funereal landscapes and grotesque characters he wove into his stories have become staple tropes of the horror genre. Reading him now, it is hard to imagine how innovative and creative his work was in the 1830s and 1840s. Sadly, he was ahead of his time, and struggled his whole life with poverty and lack of recognition. Much ink has been expended on the mysterious circumstances of his death - he was found badly beaten and raving in Baltimore, and died in hospital before recovering his faculties. No serious student of the genre should be without a Complete Stories and Poems of Edgar Allan Poe
The Poe Museum (Richmond, VA)


The End Of The Century
As a Viennese academic called Sigmund Freud was beginning his explorations into the recesses of the human consciousness, literature too took on a more psychological bent, with many writers trading freely in madness (building on the work of Poe), and the horror that lies beyond the boundary we call sanity. These stories deal not with events, but with the slow unravelling of minds; the reader is left to decide whether the causes are supernatural or psychological. Henry James played with the mind of a nanny in The Turn of The Screw in 1898, while Charlotte Perkins Gilman weaves a diatribe against patriarchy ('You see, he does not believe I am sick!") into The Yellow Wallpaper (1899). And of course Bram Stoker's Dracula (1897) spiced up the psychological with the sexual, creating an anti-hero in the Count whose appeal shows no sign of diminishing over a century later. H G Wells developed the concept speculative fiction further with his science themed novels The Island of Dr Moreau, The Invisible Man, The Time Machine and War of The Worlds, all of which utilise elements of horror as well as fantasy.
And then came the Great War, and with it horrors that not one of these literary minds could have conceived.


Classics You Should Read
It's always heartening to see well-thumbed copies of these on anyone's shelf. Nonetheless, this is the 21st century so here are the e-text URLS of all these genre-definining works, all of them now out of copyright and in public domain.
Frankenstein (1818) - Mary Shelley. Often imitated, never equalled.
Tales of the Grotesque and Arabesque (1840) Edgar Allen Poe - full of absolute gems from the mind of a dark genius. Set "View Text" to "Biggest" in your browser otherwise you too will end up in an insane asylum
The Strange Case of Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde (1886)- the seminal novella from Robert Louis Stevenson
Dracula (1897) - Bram Stoker, pulp fiction of the very best kind
The Yellow Wallpaper (1899 short story)- Charlotte Perkins Gilman charts female hysteria - or does she?
The Monkey's Paw (1902 short story) - W W Jacobs - the ultimate in "be careful what you wish for"