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Horror Films Codes and Conventions Media Studies @ KBA

Codes and conventions in horror films october 2012

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Page 1: Codes and conventions in horror films october 2012

Horror Films

Codes and Conventions

Media Studies @ KBA

Page 2: Codes and conventions in horror films october 2012

Codes

• Codes are systems of signs, which create meaning.

Media Studies @ KBA

Page 3: Codes and conventions in horror films october 2012

Conventions

• Conventions are the generally accepted ways of doing something.

• There are general conventions in any medium, such as the use of interviewee quotes in a print article, but conventions are also genre specific.

• All genres of film have certain conventions which the audience will expect to see.

Media Studies @ KBA

Page 4: Codes and conventions in horror films october 2012
Page 5: Codes and conventions in horror films october 2012

Why Are They Important? m

• You are being asked to produce the opening of a teen horror film.

• Therefore, you must understand the codes and conventions of teen horror films if you are to do this successfully.

Media Studies @ KBA

Page 7: Codes and conventions in horror films october 2012

Be Prepared

• You are going to be introduced to some of the more frequently used conventions of horror films – these are particularly relevant to the sub-genre of the teen-horror.

Media Studies @ KBA

Page 8: Codes and conventions in horror films october 2012

Secluded Location

• Generally, horror movies enjoy placing their characters in a locale where there's no one around to help them (i.e. the woods, a ghost town, a summer camp, a dormitory during the off season, an abandoned amusement park, a house out in the middle of nowhere), when the evil comes a callin'.

Media Studies @ KBA

Page 9: Codes and conventions in horror films october 2012

Characters Forget About Threat

• Many times, there is danger, death, a curse, or worse and people know about it, but they conveniently put it out of their mind.

• It is almost always a negative thing in a movie. "So, lots of campers have been disembowled here?" "Yeah, and they found Jimmy a few minutes ago. Someone had eaten his head." "Oh, that's too bad. Who wants to play Scrabble?"

Media Studies @ KBA

Page 10: Codes and conventions in horror films october 2012

Power Is Cut

• At the scariest moment possible, the lights suddenly go out! An ancient staple, probably leading back to a time BEFORE there was electricity.

• Note to would-be serial killers: make sure you cut the power before you begin your killing spree. Chances are, no one will think it's out of the ordinary.

Media Studies @ KBA

Page 11: Codes and conventions in horror films october 2012

Phone Lines Are Cut

• The killers always take out the phones, even in their own home (Misery -1990) so that no one will attract the attention of any pesky policemen, concerned civic leaders, or vampire hunters. Almost all horror films where a phone can be seen will have the phone lines cut. It's the law.

• In the recent age of mobile phones, things have changed - a phone's battery runs out, the mobile phone is damaged, or goes somewhere where there is no service.

Media Studies @ KBA

Page 12: Codes and conventions in horror films october 2012

Someone Investigates AStrange Noise

• This is one of the most unbelievable, yet most overused horror movie conventions.

• Let's look at this for a minute: All of your friends have been brutally butchered and eaten by an unseen maniac. You hear something odd coming from the woods. Is that the sound of someone dragging a dead teenaged body across a bridge with exposed nails in it? Now would you, even on a dare, walk into the woods alone to investigate? I wouldn't either, but it seems every movie character would.

Media Studies @ KBA

Page 13: Codes and conventions in horror films october 2012

Someone Runs Upstairs Instead of Outside

• Taken word-for-word from Scream, this is when . . . wait, I think you get this one.

• You will frequently see potential victims running past open doors to the outside world (and safety) in a desperate attempt to get upstairs where they can lock themselves in a ‘safe’ place.

Media Studies @ KBA

Page 14: Codes and conventions in horror films october 2012

Victim Cowers In Front Of A Window Or Door

• An old, easy scare in ‘slashers’ is to have someone hiding from the killer against a door/wall/window only to have the killer's hand break through the door/wall/window and grab them.

• Or the victim looks out the window (car windows too), sees nothing, and when they turn away, the killer jumps through.

• There are hundreds of possibilities, and this particular scare can certainly be done effectively. But usually, it just isn't.

Media Studies @ KBA

Page 15: Codes and conventions in horror films october 2012

Victim Inexplicably Falls Over

• Self-explanatory. Why do they do that?

Media Studies @ KBA

Page 16: Codes and conventions in horror films october 2012

Vehicle Won’t Start

• Do you really need an explanation here? • This can happen with any vehicle, from snowmobiles to

motorcycles to spaceships to the chain falling off a bicycle or a scooter not starting…

Media Studies @ KBA

Page 17: Codes and conventions in horror films october 2012

The Fake Scare

• A Fake Scare is one of the oldest and most over-used conventions in horror films. They can take on any shape and size, but in general, any scare in a film that is not connected to the threat (a friend jumps out, a door slams, someone looks into a mirror, someone new enters the room unnoticed, the phone rings, someone bumps into a department store mannequin, something falls, someone is tapped on the shoulder or grabbed, a policeman knocks on the car window, a balloon pops, a bird flies out of the trees, etc.) is a fake one.

• They are easy to do, and can be very effective or completely stupid.

Media Studies @ KBA

Page 18: Codes and conventions in horror films october 2012

Warning Goes Unheeded

• It is human nature to go where one is told not to go, and do what one is advised against.

• This can be achieved in many ways: someone has a dream that something nasty will befall all who go on that ski-trip (yet they go anyway), there is a rumoured curse regarding a discovered object (and they take it anyway), there is a sign which clearly states: "Portal to Hell nearby, NO SKINNY-DIPPING" (they do it anyway), etc. You get the point.

Media Studies @ KBA

Page 19: Codes and conventions in horror films october 2012

Someone Is Killed In The First 5 Minutes

• You know, this isn't really a BAD thing, it's just something that happens in some horror movies, and almost all ‘slashers’.

• When well done (ie Jaws, House, Halloween, or Scream), it's used to set the mood of the rest of the film and can be very effective.

Media Studies @ KBA

Page 20: Codes and conventions in horror films october 2012

X Years Before / Later

• This indicates either a prologue, setting up the events that happened before our story (such as the first couple minutes of Halloween or The Descent), or a film where we see the latter effects of an incident (like I Know What You Did Last Summer), or an extensive flashback used to explain things (why the boarding house is haunted, why Jimmy is in the mental institution, why Leslie can't remember her parents, what lurks in the crawlspace under the house, etc.).

• Many times (but it is not required), words like "15 Years Later" will be superimposed on the screen.

Media Studies @ KBA

Page 21: Codes and conventions in horror films october 2012

The Stormy Night

• Since the days of Victorian Horror, and even before, this has been one of the genre's most overused cliches.

• It may stem from the fact that we have a childhood fear of thunder, or that lightning and rain create atmosphere.

Media Studies @ KBA

Page 22: Codes and conventions in horror films october 2012

The Short Cut

• If you are driving somewhere, why not go off the beaten track and take a short-cut?

• Better still, go somewhere completely out of the way where there is absolutely no chance of being able to find anyone to help you.

• Even better still, take the advice of a creepy local and head down that deserted road. You’ll be alright.

Media Studies @ KBA

Page 23: Codes and conventions in horror films october 2012

Task 1

• Devise a questionnaire which gathers information about audience expectations of horror as a genre.

• This needs to illicit a mix of both quantitative and qualitative data and should be completed by a cross-section of ages and sexes.

• The questionnaire results need to be analysed and posted to your blog, together with some explanation of what you think your research tells you.

• Questions?

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Page 24: Codes and conventions in horror films october 2012

Quantitative

• Age – give ranges to select (12-18, 18-25, etc)• Sex – male or female• Do you enjoy horror? • What do you find most frightening in a horror film? – list• What is your favourite horror film?

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Page 25: Codes and conventions in horror films october 2012

Qualitative

• Why do you / don’t you enjoy watching horror films?• What things do you expect to see in a horror film?• Do you think your age has anything to do with your

opinion of horror films?

Media Studies @ KBA

Page 26: Codes and conventions in horror films october 2012

Deadline

Evidence available on your blog for Sunday 4th November

Media Studies @ KBA