10 Horrorfilme, die das Genre verändert haben

Mar 05 2015
Geben Sie es zu: Sie denken an "Jaws", wenn Sie an den Strand gehen, und an "The Blair Witch Project", wenn Sie etwas zu weit in den Wald wandern. Diese Horrorfilme haben nicht nur das Verhalten verändert; Sie haben das Genre überarbeitet.
Horrorfilme sind so eng mit der Populärkultur verwoben, dass wir Tausende von Spinoff-Events haben, wie diesen Zombie-Walk von 2010.

Erinnern Sie sich an das erste Mal, als Sie King Kong vom Empire State Building aus auf Flugzeuge schlagen sahen ? Fühlen Sie sich bei einer Nacht im Wald wie in Ihrem ganz persönlichen „Blair Witch Project“? Diese Filme boten nicht nur Nervenkitzel und Schrecken – sie veränderten das Genre.

Horrorfilme fesseln Zuschauer, die nach einem guten Schrecken suchen, aber sie spielen auch eine viel größere Rolle in der Filmindustrie und in der Populärkultur. Filmkritiker zitieren "Jaws" als Ende einer Hollywood-Ära und als Startschuss für die Begeisterung für Sommer-Blockbuster [Quelle: Frontline ]. „Blair Witch Project“ startete das Found-Footage-Subgenre und war enorm erfolgreich, teilweise dank einer der ersten viralen Marketingkampagnen [Quelle: Bowles ]. Einige Horrorfilme zeigen dem Publikum Dinge, die es noch nie zuvor gesehen hat, wie das schockierende Blut von „Blood Feast“ oder die apokalyptischen Zombies von „Night of the Living Dead“.

Nicht jeder großartige Horrorfilm hatte einen tiefen und nachhaltigen Einfluss auf das Genre, auch wenn er einer unserer Favoriten ist. „The Texas Chainsaw Massacre“ war wohl Teil eines größeren Trends von Low-Budget-Grindhouse-Horror. „Alien“ und „Aliens“ zeigten unglaubliche Kreaturendesigns und eine perfekte Mischung aus Science-Fiction und Horror. Die reißerischen Hammer-Filme der 1960er und 1970er Jahre stellen wichtige Horror-Prüfsteine ​​dar, und „Ringu“ (und das US-Remake „Ring“) löste eine Welle des japanischen Horrors aus. Wenn dies eine Top-15-Liste wäre, wären sie sicher alle darauf.

Aber das ist es nicht, also schalten Sie das Licht aus und machen Sie sich bereit für 10 Horrorfilme (sortiert nach Erscheinungsdatum), die den Horror für immer verändert haben.

Inhalt
  1. "Das Kabinett des Dr. Caligari"
  2. 'Frankenstein'
  3. "König Kong"
  4. 'Blutfest'
  5. 'Nacht der lebenden Toten'
  6. 'Der Exorzist'
  7. 'Kiefer'
  8. 'Halloween'
  9. „Das Blair-Witch-Projekt“
  10. 'Schrei'

10: 'Das Kabinett des Dr. Caligari'

Von links nach rechts sehen Werner Krauss (Dr. Caligari), Conrad Veidt (Cesare) und Lil Dagover (Jane Olsen) in einer Szene aus Robert Wienes „Das Kabinett des Dr. Caligari“ gruselig aus.

Dieser deutsche Stummfilm aus dem Jahr 1920 gilt weithin als der erste echte Horrorfilm. Während sich einige frühere Filme mit übernatürlichen, ominösen Themen befassten, legte „Das Kabinett des Dr. Caligari“ den Grundstein des Genres [Quelle: Ebert ]. Die Spannung steigt und löst sich, ein ominöser Bösewicht pirscht sich durch die Szenen und die Umgebung fühlt sich mysteriös und beunruhigend an. Ein weiterer deutscher Horrorfilm, „Nosferatu“, folgte zwei Jahre später und wirft ebenfalls einen langen Schatten auf das Horror-Genre [Quelle: Feaster ].

„The Cabinet of Dr. Caligari“ beeinflusste nicht nur das Horror-Genre. Es spielte auch eine wichtige Rolle in der deutschen expressionistischen Bewegung, die versuchte, dunkle Emotionen wie Wahnsinn und Verwirrung darzustellen, indem sie übertriebene Handlungen und unrealistische Einstellungen verwendete. Dies funktionierte sehr gut für Horrorfilme – „Cabinet“ beinhaltet bizarr geformte Gebäude und Wände in seltsamen Winkeln, um beim Betrachter Unbehagen zu erzeugen. Diese Einflüsse zeigen sich in allen Epochen des Horrorfilmschaffens, vom Sci-Fi-Horror von „Metropolis“ aus den 1920er Jahren bis zum modernen stilisierten Schrecken von Tim Burton.

Sehen Sie sich „The Cabinet of Dr. Caligari“ kostenlos auf Archive.org an .

9: "Frankenstein"

Du würdest dieses Monster überall erkennen, oder?

Ermutigt durch den Erfolg seiner „ Dracula “-Adaption adaptierten die Universal Studios 1931 Mary Shelleys klassischen Gothic-Roman „ Frankenstein “. „Frankenstein“ wurde ein großer Hit für das Studio, und Boris Karloff mit seinem kantigen Monster-Make-up wurde es eine Horror-Ikone [Quelle: Allen ].

Karloffs spätere Rolle als Titelfigur in „The Mummy“ festigte den Ruf von Universal als Horrorstudio und schuf ein Team von Kreaturen (Dracula, Frankensteins Monster und die Mumie), die als Universal Monsters bekannt wurden. Sowohl Karloff als auch „Dracula“-Star Bela Lugosi spielten in den 1930er Jahren eine zentrale Rolle bei den Horror-Veröffentlichungen des Studios. In den 1940er Jahren fügte Lon Chaney Jr. den Wolfsmann dem Universal Monster-Team hinzu und entfachte den Horror-Erfolg des Studios neu. Der Gill-Man aus „Creature from the Black Lagoon“ von 1954 rundete die Liste der Universal Monster ab. Obwohl das Studio viele Horrorfilme drehte, die diese Monster nicht enthielten, bildeten die vielen Fortsetzungen, Remakes und Spin-Offs die Grundlage für Universals Horror-Ruf.

What was it about these monsters that changed the horror genre? They weren't just successful movies. The Universal Monsters became pop culture icons in a way no other horror characters had before. You could find them on lunchboxes, Halloween costumes, toys and more [source: Browne and Browne ]. Every child in America, and many around the world, knew and loved them. The pop culture success of creatures like Godzilla and Freddy Krueger belong to that same phenomenon.

8: 'King Kong'

The king of giant movie monsters gets some stage time in New York City in 1933.

"King Kong " is the giant monster standing astride the horror world. The 1933 tale of a giant gorilla brought to New York City by a greedy magnate touches on plenty of horrific elements that still resonate: the exploitation of the natural world, our fear of the unknown, and of course, of our cities being attacked by giant monsters.

Kong's influence starts with talented special effects designer Willis O'Brien. O'Brien used stop-motion animation to bring the gigantic gorilla to life, showing audiences something truly fantastic. This paved the way for stop-motion effects, which show up in movies like "Star Wars" and "ParaNorman," as well as many fantasy and horror creatures designed by Ray Harryhausen [source: Miller].

The success of "King Kong" opened up new possibilities in filmmaking. If you could effectively create a 24-foot (7-meter) gorilla climbing the Empire State Building, you could create anything. "King Kong" wasn't the first movie to use special effects, but after "Kong," special effects became an integral part in creating elaborate horror, science fiction and fantasy scenes on film.

We can't overlook our collective love of giant monsters either. Kong's ancestors include Godzilla, the "Cloverfield" creature and the monsters of "Pacific Rim." Japanese movie studios expanded on this idea so thoroughly and successfully in the 1960s and '70s that the giant monster subgenre got its own Japanese word: kaiju.

7: 'Blood Feast'

It took the film "Blood Feast" for some people to get in touch with their inner gore. These two bloody nurses appeared at the 2011 Comic-Con in San Diego.

Movies don't have to be good to be influential. Take "Blood Feast." Before its 1963 release, horror films showed brutality and violent murder with only occasional glimpses of blood, quickly looking away when the mayhem grew too graphic. Director Herschell Gordon Lewis and producer David F. Friedman changed all that in 1963 by making an ultracheap movie with virtually no script [source: Weber]. The entire point of the movie was to show as much gruesome gore and blood as possible. They knew that they could show audiences something they'd never seen before, and they hoped that would translate into profit (it certainly did, making at least $7 million on a budget that barely exceeded $20,000) [source: Abrams].

The stage tradition of grotesque violence known as Grand Guignol had always appealed to audiences looking for a thrill, but it had never been done on film. "Blood Feast" was the first splatter movie, a movie made specifically to show disgusting, bloody things on screen. Legs are chopped off, brains splashed on the floor and a woman's tongue is pulled from her mouth. Every scene is bathed in vibrant, red stage blood. It forced film censorship boards to redefine how they treated film violence while paving the way for graphic violence to leak into the mainstream.

Inspired by "Blood Feast," a generation of special effects fans devoted themselves to creating ever more realistic and bloody effects. There's an entire gore subgenre, mixed liberally with the slasher genre (which we'll talk about shortly).

6: 'Night of the Living Dead'

Watch out, Mr. Romero! That zombie's about to take a bite out of you at the 34th Toronto International Film Festival.

Director George Romero was sick of making TV commercials , so he and some friends decided to make a horror movie. It was 1968, and the success of exploitation movies like "Blood Feast" was apparent. But instead of a plotless gorefest, Romero created something original and terrifying, a movie that started a new subgenre and changed the direction of horror movies.

The Universal Monsters had gradually turned mainstream horror into a genre for kids. Horror movies were regularly shown as Saturday matinees [source: Ebert]. "Night of the Living Dead" depicts a group of strangers stranded in a farmhouse besieged by corpses that want to eat their flesh. It's brutal and unforgiving, and there's no happy ending. And it wasn't just a monster movie — Romero and writer John Russo touched on contemporary issues like the Vietnam War, the collapse of the traditional family and distrust of authority.

The shocking ending portrays the blithe, dehumanizing effects of racism. In fact, Romero's casting of a black actor (Duane Jones) in the lead role without altering the script to make the movie specifically about race was itself groundbreaking in American movies [source: Pedestrian Productions].

"Night of the Living Dead" is above all else a zombie movie, and it completely defines the way modern audiences see zombies. Earlier zombie films were based on black magic and mind control. Romero's vision of the walking dead led to two iconic sequels ("Dawn of the Dead" and "Day of the Dead"), multiple spinoffs ("Return of the Living Dead," "Zombi 2") and countless zombie movies, video games, comic books, horror novels and overall pop culture pervasiveness [source: Stein]. Zombies are everywhere, and that's probably most evident in the success of AMC's "The Walking Dead" TV series.

5: 'The Exorcist'

In this scene from "The Exorcist," mom Chris MacNeil (Ellen Burstyn) struggles to keep her demonic daughter (Linda Blair) in bed.

When a young girl is possessed by a demon, a pair of Catholic priests struggle to exorcise the evil spirit while suffering doubt in their own faith. Based on a 1971 novel by William Peter Blatty, this 1973 horror movie stunned audiences not with over-the-top gore or shocking violence but with a pervasive sense of dread, the corruption of innocence and a realistic style that hinted at true horrors lurking in our everyday lives.

It might seem strange to call "The Exorcist" a subtle horror film, since it does have scenes of a girl's head spinning around and projectile puking. But it wasn't the lurid shocks that left such a lasting impression. It was the way "The Exorcist" incorporated Judeo-Christian mythology of demonic spirits and a very literal battle between good and evil that made waves [source: Truitt]. Billy Graham proclaimed that the movie itself was possessed by a demon, and some towns in Britain banned the movie [source: Larnick]. "The Exorcist" was so dark that there's a persistent legend that production of the movie was cursed .

The movie's success created high demand for more horror focused on "Christians versus demons." A number of prequels and sequels followed, along with "The Omen" series and more modern possession flicks like "The Possession," "The Exorcism of Emily Rose" and "The Last Exorcism." Roman Polanski's "Rosemary's Baby" came out five years before "The Exorcist" and focuses on similar themes, but it was the astonishing box office success of "The Exorcist" that changed horror.

4: 'Jaws'

Get out of the water!

There's a massive shark . It has a taste for human blood. It must be stopped. That's the plot of "Jaws." It's not a complex movie, although it is an excellent one. The effect it had on the film industry is a much longer story.

In the early 1970s, directors had a lot of freedom in Hollywood. They could write and direct their own movies and pursue whatever projects interested them. Experimental, artistic films that examined controversial topics like war or race were made under major studio banners [source: Dirks]. Film marketing budgets were relatively small, and it was rare to advertise on television. "Jaws" devoured all the old rules on film budgets and marketing in 1975.

Universal spent millions of dollars marketing "Jaws," much of it on TV commercials featuring the iconic two-note musical score that is now synonymous with shark attacks. Where similar efforts had failed in the past, this one succeeded spectacularly — "Jaws" eventually made $260 million in the U.S. [source: Frontline]. This huge win completely changed Hollywood's approach, not just to marketing , but to what movies studios made and when they were released.

High-concept movies with lots of action and excitement, aimed at teen and young adult audiences, were released in the summer months, when those audiences went to more movies. Marketing budgets (and movie budgets in general) exploded, and TV ads for these summer blockbusters filled the airwaves [source: Stafford]. The summer success of "Jaws" paved the way for movies like "Star Wars," "Batman" and "Jurassic Park" and created the blockbuster culture that defines modern Hollywood.

3: 'Halloween'

Actor Tony Moran played the very first Michael Myers back in the 1978 slasher film "Halloween." He likely had no idea how many more slashers would walk in his scary footsteps.

The killer stalks you relentlessly. Faceless, mute and merciless, he attacks with terrifying strength and seems impervious to harm. This isn't your average nightmare ; it's the formula for the classic slasher film. One slasher movie stands above the rest as the original, the movie that both created and perfected the form: John Carpenter's "Halloween."

With "Halloween," Carpenter established the tropes that are reused, recycled and paid tribute to by hundreds of subsequent movies about relentless stalker/killers. But Carpenter arguably did it best. His victims are established as likable, three-dimensional people without bogging down the movie. The killer, Michael Myers, is mysterious behind his creepy, unsettling mask. The score, composed and performed by Carpenter himself, builds tension and then explodes with signature sounds that signify each attack. The movie's success immediately spawned a slasher craze in the 1980s — "Friday the 13th," "My Bloody Valentine," "Sleepaway Camp," "Sorority House Massacre" and dozens of others, not to mention the remakes of and the sequels to the original "Halloween."

Movies with slasher themes certainly predate "Halloween." Alfred Hitchcock's "Psycho" contained multiple elements of later slasher films, and many horror fans could argue that it deserves its own slot on this list. "Black Christmas" (1974) and "The Town That Dreaded Sundown" (1976) also are part of the slasher lineage. "Halloween," however, was the most successful.

2: 'The Blair Witch Project'

Michael Williams (whose real name is Michael C. Williams) loses control in front of the camera during “The Blair Witch Project.” The mock documentary thriller fueled the Hollywood appetite for found footage films.

Found footage movies do away with the artificiality of filmmaking by presenting every shot as a clip pulled from someone's video camera, cell phone or surveillance video. This is particularly effective in horror movies, since it gives the otherwise fantastic events a gritty, realistic feel. It worked perfectly for "The Blair Witch Project."

Made in 1998 for about $60,000, "Blair Witch" generated $140 million [source: Bowles]. Found footage movies are remarkably cheap to make since they use a small crew and often rely on natural lighting and actual locations instead of manufactured sets. Since the success of "Blair Witch," found footage has become a popular subgenre. Examples include the "Paranormal Activity" series, "V/H/S," "Grave Encounters," "Mockingbird" and many others.

"The Blair Witch Project" wasn't the first found footage movie — its oldest ancestor is probably "Mondo Cane," a 1962 movie that purported to show actual footage of bizarre events and started a whole craze of "Mondo" movies. 1980's "Cannibal Holocaust" faked realism so effectively that the producers were investigated for committing actual murders on film (they didn't) [source: Davis]. "The Last Broadcast" came out not long before "Blair Witch," but didn't achieve the same level of success.

How did "The Blair Witch Project" get so popular? Marketing. It was the first movie to use viral marketing, creating buzz with a website, fake documentaries and other clues about the Blair Witch mystery, a model that's been followed by dozens of horror movies since, such as "Cloverfield."

1: 'Scream'

Neve Campbell appears simultaneously scared and tough in Wes Craven’s “Scream 3.”

The "Scream" franchise is the most popular example of a strange subgenre called metahorror. A metahorror movie knows and understands the tropes and clichés of horror movies, folding them back on themselves, playing with audience expectations and even allowing the characters to understand that they're in a horror movie.

A typical masked killer stalks the usual teen victims in "Scream." The difference is that the killer and some of the victims realize the murders are following standard slasher movie protocol. While the movie addresses topics like disaffected youth and attitudes toward drugs and sex, it simultaneously comments on horror movies themselves.

"Scream" director Wes Craven experimented with self-aware horror before. "Wes Craven's New Nightmare" came out in 1994, two years before "Scream," and deals with the emergence of "Nightmare on Elm Street" villain Freddy Krueger into the real-world of actress Heather Langenkamp, who played Nancy in the original "Elm Street movie. Craven appears in "New Nightmare" as himself. But it was the runaway success of "Scream" that introduced audiences to metahorror, opening the door for self-aware horror movies like "Zombieland," "Seed of Chucky," "Jason X" and "Tucker and Dale Vs. Evil." 2012's "The Cabin in the Woods" might be the apex of the metahorror subgenre, with the characters trapped in a horror movie simulation and a plot that ties all horror movie tropes together into a single theory of ritual sacrifice.

Keep reading for more links to shocking horror movie stories.

Lots More Information

Author's Note: 10 Horror Films That Changed the Genre

I'm a huge horror fan, and it was a real pleasure to research and write this one. Horror fans have strong opinions about their favorite movies, and it was hard to trim this list down to 10, so I'm sure some readers are going to disagree with a few choices. It was interesting to see how the changes brought about by one horror film can pave the way for another horror film to come along and change things again. "Night of the Living Dead" probably doesn't happen without "Blood Feast" happening first. "Scream" makes no sense without two decades of slasher movies to play off of, starting with "Halloween."

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