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What we can learn from horror films

By Bill Holsinger-Robinson posted 1 year ago
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For part four of our series, our regular SpoutBlog writer Bill brings us this very creepily delicious Halloween day post.

This Halloween my 10-year-old son hit a milestone in his life. He was finally old enough to wander through his first haunted corn maze. Yeah, a haunted corn maze…not a haunted house. We live in a small town surrounded by big fields, so this is what we get (and we get excited for it and are very happy with it).

So, Saturday evening I loaded up the family roadster with my wife, son, and two of his friends, and we drove to the maze. Although typically mild-mannered boys, the trip to the maze dripped with male vibrato:

“I’m not going to be scared.” “We’re going to run ahead and try to scare other people.” “Dad, maybe you should get the pink glow stick.” (This is what they give people who are weak at heart or a complete sissy.) “I’m going to ditch everyone and go by myself?”

Although my wife and I did our best to build up the suspense and general sense of impending doom, the boys would have none of it. They were unbreakable.

And then we got to the maze…

By the time we arrived a short line had already formed, so we had a bit of a wait. Allowing no opportunity for scaring to go to waste, the purveyors of the maze projected horror movies onto a large screen for those of us waiting in line. The were the usuals, including the original Halloween, The Texas Chainsaw Massacre, The Ring, I Know What You Did Last Summer, and Jeepers Creepers.

Cutting to the chase (literally?), they showed only the most horrific and terrifying scenes from these films. Heads severed. Running damsels caught…and mutilated. Intestines exposed. Although showing just these short clips didn’t give these films a chance to build suspense, they certainly primed the adrenaline pumps of three 10-year-old boys.

By the time we entered the maze, all the boys needed to see were the characters–in a dark corn field, wielding whatever power they used to create mayhem in the films we had seen snippets of–and they were terrified. There was certainly no going by themselves. And they all wished aloud that they had received the pink glow sticks themselves. We spent the next 45 minutes with my wife leading the way (sure, why not sacrifice her first?), boys in the middle, and me at the end, left to whatever creature might sneak up from behind.

I gotta tell you, it was GREAT! Although Paul might argue otherwise (see his recent post), being terrified–and not just being a little scared by watiching a film–is a good thing. It provides a release that can come from no other source in our lives. But not only that, being terrified also provides some perspective. The conversation on the drive home that night was no longer about male vibrato. It was all about camaraderie. And isn’t that a lesson to be learned from ALL horror films? Don’t split up! Stick together! Help each other! And for goodness sake, don’t EVER turn around while running away from something creepy.

Horror off

Paul Moore
By Paul Moore posted 1 year ago
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Ah. Fear.

The sudden sensation of having my gut gripped in a vice and lurched up into my throat as I sit in a dark theater. Slowly unclenching my muscles as the credits roll after spending 90 minutes suppressing the most primal of my instincts: fight or flight. Waiting weeks for the tingly tremors going up my spine every time I go into the basement to subside. Waking up in the middle of the night to two teenagers talking outside on the sidewalk and thinking they’re a duo of escaped convicts in my living room. These are just a few of the side effects I get from watching a 90-minute horror flick.

As a boy, I once overheard some kids at the back of the bus talking about A Nightmare on Elm Street. For months afterward I sang “Jesus Loves Me” every time I made the walk from my bed to the bathroom. Herein lies the real lasting effect of horror. It’s simply not a 90-minute “roller coaster ride,” as so many people might say. Your imagination never conjures up a roller coaster jumping out of the closet with a knife while you’re babysitting. Horror sticks with you like an ice pick in your consciousness. Forever.

Ever notice most horror movies only need 90 minutes to mess you up, while most dramas need over two hours to engage you? There’s something unhealthy about that. To people who say horror fulfills a natural desire to get spooked, I say, “Sure, and Red Bull is a natural source of vitamins.” And how old the movie–or the viewer–is has no bearing on whether or not it’s scary. In The Innocents (1961), when the ghost of the butler suddenly glides into the window behind a little boy standing in a dark greenhouse, I popped. I’m thirty freaking years old and later that night, as I tried to go to sleep, I couldn’t convince my adult brain the butler was not gliding up next to my bed.

For all the squeamish whose horror-loving buddies always talk you into midnight shows, quit cold turkey. It’s the Great Pumpkin, Charlie Brown is plenty enough for your spook supplement. Want more? Agree to a TBS showing of the original Halloween with all the freaky parts cut out. Dying in a car accident, catching the West Nile virus from a mosquito, finding Mercury behind the furnace, these are all legitimate fears we endure every day without having to lose sleep over whether or not a butler will be floating over me when I open my eyes.

Boycott horror. For the children.