SCREAM
Both of us might designate Webspinna as the most challenging
assignment of this class. This is, in large part, because it demanded
performance on some level. But the nature of the project also required time and
meticulousness. I think that the best performances were the most obviously
strategized, and intricate. The project asks for a broad sense of meaning. Some
sort of conflict must take place. But these broader strokes are comprised of
sonic intricacies that take time and effort to shape, like with pointillism or
mosaic art. The most enabling thing for us was to have a subject that we not
only love, but are well versed in. Hopefully our project made it clear that
this subject is horror movies, something we have both loved since a young age.
It is also a subject that has inspired us to make small horror films as well as
continues to affect our work as well as what we enjoy watching. In The
Ecstasy of Influence Lethem said, “one’s voice isn’t just an emptying and
purifying oneself of the words of others but an adopting and embracing of
filiations, communities, and discourses.” This makes horror very significant to
us as we adopt as well as embrace it in our own lives.
The specific tension that informed our battle is the
struggle for supremacy between slasher films, or otherwise non-fantastical
horror, and horror of fantasy. The latter consists of ghost stories, some urban
legends (think of It Follows), fairy tales, most science fiction, and the
horror of folktale beasts like the vampire. Basically, it is The Shining and
The Exorcist vs. Halloween and The Texas Chainsaw Massacre. Due to our shared
genre affinity, there was a mutual feeling of vast material to draw from. Thus,
the challenge was to filter. Filtering consisted of choosing what might add to
a larger statement. We used The Goblins soundtrack from Dario Argento’s
Suspiria, because the eerie breathing captured the profound eeriness of that
which is supernatural. The other major source for the supernatural side was
Disasterpiece’s main theme for David Mitchell’s aforementioned It Follows. This
song was meant to express a sense of beauty and adventure that can be found in
horror films, as opposed to the horrors of life. This was meant to underscore
the idea of horror film as inherent fantasy. Art is a simulation of true
emotions (I hope that is not read disparagingly, it is not meant that way), and
the idea of horror based on things most people do not believe in is an
important part of that conversation.
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