ABOUT TEST PATTERN

Don't touch that dial: Test Pattern tunes into television, movie, music and pop culture links, as well as gossip and idle chat from around the Web.

Every week, msnbc.com entertainment producers Gael Fashingbauer Cooper, Denise Hazlick, Paige Newman, Kurt Schlosser and Anna Chan weigh in on topics ranging from TV commercials to movie hype to the latest celebrity blunder. We're not ashamed to admit our love for bad TV or reveal what's on our iPods, and invite you to join the conversation via your comments.



Horror movies get personal

Posted: Thursday, October 09, 2008 6:00 AM by Gael Fashingbauer Cooper
Filed Under:

I'm a horror-movie fan, and I know admitting this in certain circles is not cool. Scary movies are considered the Twinkies of cinema, it seems, cheap and bad for you, shunned by many in favor of subtitled black-and-white classics or complex art films.

Well, I love a good art film as much as the next person, but that doesn't mean I'm not in favor of a good scare. It's October now, Halloween month, and the horror flick that's giving me the creeps based solely on its trailer is "Quarantine," opening this Friday. (Possible spoilers ahead.)


Sony

I mean, have you seen the trailer? (It's embedded at the bottom of this post.) A journalist and her cameraman tailing a fire crew end up at an L.A. apartment building for what seems like a routine call. A woman in an apartment is sick. Or is she? From the preview, she's either turned cannibal, or zombie, or vampire, or been infected with some other movie-monster virus. The clips of her are only all the creepier for being seen through the ghostly green camera light flickering through the dark.

Apparently the building gets -- duh -- quarantined, and now our heroine and her pals are trapped inside the infected building. The final scene of the trailer actually made me jump, although as an old-school horror fan I really should have known what was coming.

Apparently "Quarantine" is a remake of the Spanish horror film "[Rec]," whose trailer is even creepier for its lack of dialogue. [Rec] is from the abbreviation for "record" or "recording," as found on cameras. "Quarantine" and "[Rec]" join a host of other horror flicks (helloooo "Blair Witch Project") that use the old "victim records his or her own demise/descent into madness" trick.

And that trick works for me, every time. Once you accept that fact that any normal person would have dropped the camera after the first monster attack (I'm looking at you, "Cloverfield"), the concept is chilling.

I firmly believe that the scene in "Aliens" where the Colonial Marines, with cameras on their helmets, go creeping through the seemingly abandoned colony, is one of the most chilling scenes in moviedom. We watch their footage as they explore, crack jokes, start to figure things out, are attacked, and eventually, we watch as their cameras, one by one, start to fizzle out. Few scenes build suspense and sheer horror like that one does, and the fact that we watch it through the Marines' own footage just puts the fear right over the top.

We're used to watching camera footage, but we're used to having it edited and packaged for us. Seeing the victims' raw footage gets me. I buy it. I suppose a bad movie could turn the concept into nothing more than a fake snuff film, but generally, the movies I've seen in this genre are enthralling. (Rent "The Last Broadcast" if you haven't seen it -- it came before "Blair Witch" and many say it's the superior film.)

These are my last moments, the camera footage in these movies seems to say. Here is how I got here, and maybe you would have made different choices than I did, but now you can see how I did what I did, and how I ended up dead.

Will you see "Quarantine"? What are your thoughts on fake camera footage in horror movies? Were you one of those who got sick at the shaky footage in "Blair Witch" or "Cloverfield," or does this horror-movie concept work for you?

MAIN PAGE

Email this EMAIL THIS

Comments

Two movies that I did not notice mentioned are "The Changeling" with George C Scott, and "Stir of Echoes", Kevin Bacon. Both way scary, at least in my opinion
I enjoyed Cloverfield a great deal.

Me and my fiance will be seeing this just to support Jennifer Carpenter who plays Deb on Dexter. She's a very fine actress. We both enjoy the horror genre anyways.

All in all, the whole shaky cam thing is 'ok'. It's even used in movies that aren't 'point of view' films. The Bourne Ultimatium used shaky cam ALOT as did Transformers.
I really enjoyed reading into Cloverfield a lot... if you read more into it online, they talk about the story of where the monster came from and it started to creep me out. they say it was awaken from the deep sea, and i had just watched the BBC series "Blue Planet" where it talked about all the crazy fish they find in the deep sea and how most of the deep hasnt even been explored!!! so its like, what if something crazy like that was down there... no one knows. so i rewatched cloverfield after that and was a lot more disturbed by it. hahaha. i personally enjoyed it a lot (partly because my favorite character was the only one who MAY have lived). but i dont think it compares to some of the classic horror movies.
  Movies trying to replace rollercoaster’s are getting old.

I loved Blair Witch, but it was scary and unique for it’s time.

I saw Quarantine last night and it was bad, too long to start and you couldn't wait for it to finish, not scary just laughable, the audience was rolling.

It might have been scary ( not good though) if I had seen it in my own home, without the audience and the blasts of laughter at every high tension bit
I've been a fan of horror/thriller/gore fan since I was 10. I read every Nancy Drew published (brilliant in their atmosopheric tension) and own a encyclopedia (18 volumes) of True Crime.

I began watching 'double features' for 50 cents in 1967. These were the great post Hitchcock, pre slasher flicks that were more 'scary' than most today. Of course, I was more easily frightened then by classics like Dario Argento's (can't wait for his new one Giallo) Bird with the Crystal Plummage.

Others that impressed me are Sudden Terror; See No Evil (my personal favorite); and of course Wait Until Dark and the ultimate, The Exorcist. Later, I was freaked out by Dressed to Kill as well as When a Stranger Calls but they are fairly bloodless.

Recent stabs at the genre (Blair Witch, The Strangers, yawn) are more hype than substance but for PG 13, The Others was pretty eerie.

I did like Texas Chainsaw and the first Saw but have no use for kitch, those who are identified more with their characters (Freddy, Jason, Mikey) than character (half naked kids run from shiny sharp objects.)

Love me a good zombie flick; loved Night/Day/Dawn, hated Shaun. Personally, I don't want to mix genres (no laughing allowed save for Abbott and Costello Meets anyone).

For total creep factor: Magic; The Thing; Hostel and most recently: Transsiberian. Puppets and gloomy locations make me shudder...

Truthfully, you can be creeped out on TV (PG14 no less) at the Discovery Channel from the very ominous 'based on a true story' "A Haunting".

I saw Quarantine over the weekend and that had to one of the creepiest movies I've seen in a long time. The camera movements really weren't that bad. Not as bad as Cloverfield (which I'm one of the few people in my circle that actually liked that flick).

I was one of the people who got into the viral hype of The Blair Witch Project long before the movie came out. What had intrigued me with that film was what you couldn't see. The camera movement never bothered me.

I like the idea of hand held cameras capturing the action. It's like the original reality TV without the annoying hosts and video confessionals.
I drove my wife crazy to see Blair Witch Project and when I finished watching I looked at my wife and said to her that I felt like the biggest ass in America for watching that movie.  What a waste of time. For that reason, I will wait to rent the movie, rather then pay a premium price for it. They probably should have let it go straight to video.
The Last Broadcast was a great movie, I thought it was way better than the Blair Witch Project. Although the ending was a little cheesy and I kinda felt ripped-off. IFC used to show it all the time.
Hmm, I'm surprised noone's mentioned Even Horizon. That movie was trippy. Aliens was amazing. The other's I have only seen parts of.
Blair Witch freaked me out. However, I watched it when I was 13 and I have a really good imagination. I watched the end of that movie about 20 times trying to catch a glimps of something.

Cloverfield didn't necessarily scare me, but it did leave me with a weird feeling at the end. It is also an interesting movie if you do research on the back story to it. There are plenty of viral websites that pertain to the story and do somewhat explain what happened.

I think this type of filming lends itself to great movies for those with great imaginations. You have to somewhat believe that these things could happen. No horror movie alone is really scarey unless there is that little bit of fear that it could happen. The good thing about the "shockumentary" is that the footage seems to be real, so it makes one believe a bit more that the story is or could be real.
I love horror movies, but I can't stand the shakey camera work on these new movies(Cloverfield...) it's hard to watch and very distracting.
The Last Broadcast was great up until the last 10 minutes. Then it totally sucked.
I hated the Blar Witch we walked out of the middle of it and we wont see this movie .
I hate that technique, CLoverfield was probably one of the worst and predictable horror films I have seen in a long time. Not only was the acting HORRIBLE it was so freaking boring until you see the actual monster for like 2 seconds near the end. Seriously what was up with the 45 minutes of pointless party shots int he beginning?
Diary of the Dead wasn't bad at all which total surprised me. Personally, i can't stand those camcorder movies.  Quarantine doesn't hold much interest for me but [REC] definitely does.
Copycat films just annoy me. Like the Ring series & the grudge, the originals were awesome.
I am waiting for a time when the big studios don't feel the need to rip off story lines from the independents.
Sorry but I could not stand Blair Witch.  The film, itself, was great.  I just couldn't stand the annoying girl.  I would have left her butt alone in those woods.

Cloverfield, however, WAS excellent. It started out as just an ordinary day.  That's what made it scary: it just looked like real life.  And I, too, can't wait until Quarantine comes out!  My favorite genre is horror!  


SEND A COMMENT

PLEASE READ: All comments must be approved before appearing in the thread; time and space constraints prevent all comments from appearing. We will only approve comments that are directly related to the blog, use appropriate language and are not attacking the comments of others.

Message (please, no HTML tags. Web addresses will be hyperlinked):

TRACKBACKS

Trackbacks are links to weblogs that reference this post. Like comments, trackbacks do not appear until approved by us. The trackback URL for this post is: http://testpattern.msnbc.msn.com/trackback.aspx?PostID=1472663

Syndicate This Site

Add Test Pattern to your news reader:
live.com xml
myyahoo msn
bloglines newsgator
google