Originally Posted by PrometheusFG
1. I can't tell whether your bashing these films or crediting them.
2. The term "Psychological Suspense" is not bulls**t at all, or modern. While you tell everyone not to hide behind the term and basically telling them they are blind, you are too blind to see that "Psychological Suspense" is not bulls**t at all, only now because it is lost in greed for money. Psychological Suspense used to be, atleast, a very real description for yester-year's old classic horror flicks that were so innovative for their time for involving psychological suspense. For a more recent film, look at Jacob's Ladder.
3. And yes, infact, the horror genre has changed, alot and for the worse. Decades and decades ago, the genre had lots of gems and little mediocre stuff interspersed with it. Now horror flicks are only made for money because crappy horror movies are what atrracts teenagers which attracts boatloads of cash.
Why waste lots of time and effort to make an innovative and brilliant horror film that won't gross as much money when you can just save your effort and time and make a crappy horror flick that will gross 3 more times the amount?
Do people even read the words I type?
1. I thought it was pretty clear that I was defending each and every one of those films as good genre flicks of the last few years. And were you to read the few posts prior, you would realize that each of those films was pulled from a list of good horror films from the last 10 years.
2. The words "Psychological Suspense" are most certainly marketing buzzword bull****. I've said time and time again that genres are not exhaustive and they are not mutually exclusive. Apparently that needs some explanation. Movies can have more than one defining attribute, and the presence of multiple attributes does not mean they can no longer fall under the horror genre.
The crux of a film's style and script may be psychologically damaging, or suspenseful, but how this doesn't make them horror films is beyond logic. The only reason I ever even fought these stupid words is because Karl was implying that any film that can be labelled by these words somehow is no longer a horror film - which is just plain stupid.
3. No. No. No. The horror genre has not changed one ****ing bit. Decades and decades ago it was still the same ****ing thing. Decades and Decades ago? I've already detailed how the trend happened rampantly in the 80s, and that was over two decades ago. Do you want me to go back even farther?
Let's go back three iterations to the '70s. Lemme know how many of these horror movies you've seen, you remember, or that you think are these golden era classics people keep eluding back to:
The House that Dripped Blood
The Wizard of Gore
The Wicker Man
Dr. Jekyll and Sister Hyde
I Drink Your Blood
Willard
Blacula
The Texas Chainsaw Massacre
Frogs
Jaws
The Last House on the Left
The Exorcist
Flesh for Frankenstein
Black Christmas
It's Alive!
Vampyres
Dawn of the Dead
Piranha
The Driller Killer
Jaws 2
When a Stranger Calls
Day of the Woman
The Car
Killdozer
I'm sure you can pick out the gems, like The Exorcist, Texas Chainsaw, Jaws, Black Christmas, Dawn of the Dead etc, but do you see how just from an almost entirely random sampling of films from the 70s, how many stand the test of time? How many are dreadfully campy or just plain bad? How many are exploitation shockers?
I'm the only person in this thread who actually bothers to cite films, so unless you want to prove me wrong by providing empirical evidence that there was some golden age of horror, decades and decades ago, in which no two productions were alike and that every other horror movie coming out was a thoughtful, innovative, briliant, impactful or long lasting production, you need to get over your selective memory and admit the genre doesn't change.