Bloomsbury/
BFI
Paperback
217
pages
70
colour illustrations
ISBN:
9781839021466
RRP:
£19.99
Of
the millions of film books out there, it’s highly likely that horror covers by
far the largest percentage in terms of genre. Just what is it about the genre
that proves to be so endlessly fascinating to readers and audiences,
considering its disreputable reputation? This is something that Barry Keith
Grant addresses in his introduction to this excellent collection of essays on
100 classic (and occasionally forgotten) American horror films. As he points
out, horror has been with us throughout history, with its roots in Medieval
woodcuts, Grand Guignol theatre and the Gothic novel, with the first horror
film being produced by Georges Méliès in 1896. We are endlessly fascinated and
enthralled by the feelings of terror, fear, suspense, and revulsion that horror
inflicts on its willing audience.
The
book covers American horror from over 100 years, going back as far as D.W.
Griffith’s 1914 adaptation of Poe’s ‘The Raven’, The Avenging Conscience, or
‘Thou Shalt Not Kill’, right up to more recent hits such as American
Psycho (2000) Get Out (2017). Grant provides a two-page entry for
each film with an in-depth discussion of the importance of the film and its
place within cinema history, as well as a very useful Further Reading guide for
anyone who wants to dig deeper.
Despite
the relative brevity of each entry, the book provides insightful analysis and can
cause the reader to reassess some of the films under discussion as well as
discovering some for the first time: there are classics here, of course, such
as Carrie (1976), Creature From the Black Lagoon (1954), The
Masque of the Red Death (1964) and The Shining (1980, both
technically American films despite being shot in the UK with mostly British
crews), but it also covers some that one might not immediately think of when
compiling your own list of important American horror films, such as Two
Thousand Maniacs! (1964), Ganja and Hess (1973), Weird Woman
(1944) and John Carpenter’s box office bomb In the Mouth of Madness
(1994).
Writing
something like this must be a thankless task as there will always be people who
disagree with the selection of films, but as it covers such a broad range across
the entire history of American cinema, there ought to be plenty of titles here
for readers to enjoy discovering more about in this immensely readable and
highly recommended collection.
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