Stephen King, in his celebrated non fiction work Danse Macabre postulated that the Werewolf was one of the three major archetpyes of horror. The other two being The Thing With No Name and the Vampire. In the 36 years or so since he wrote that, horror changed a lot, but these archetypes – as broadly stated as King intended – still hold up more or less. In terms of recent horror movies I’ve reviewed, Eli Roth’s The Green Inferno is a Vampire movie, and Darling, by Mickey Keating is a Werewolf movie. I would add one to this list, however, and that is the Zombie. Sure, many Zombie movies are just that, but their proliferation as the most ubiquitous creature in horror fiction and movies (all you need to do is look at the sheer volume of books on Amazon – every new “writer” seems to produce nothing BUT zombie fiction – and the depressing array of low-budget movies on Netflix to see that) deserves a place at the table – it’s gone beyond being just a play on the Vampire archetype.
Tag: Werewolf
Movie Review: WHEN ANIMALS DREAM
I’m quite fond of foreign language horror movies. Mostly, they haven’t succumbed to the slick move toward PG-13 irrelevance, which isn’t to say an R (or 18) rated movie is full of blood and guts and everything that’s superficial about the genre. No, I’m mostly talking about the fact that character-driven stories are the keys to good horror. I know, I know, many people are all about the serial murders of a youthful cast within 120 minutes. Whatever floats your boat, I won’t judge. Especially because my own character-driven snobbery doesn’t necessarily produce great movies either.