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Slasher film

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The slasher film (also known as slashers or stalk n slash) is a sub-genre of the horror film genre. Typically, a masked, psychotic person stalks and graphically kills teenagers or young adults who are away from adult supervision (and typically involved in sex, drug use, or other illicit activity). There is often a backstory that explains how the killer developed their sociopathic and violent mental state. Often, the attacker is able to withstand most or all of the victims' attempts to defend themselves. Even after being stabbed, burned, or drowned, the attacker is able to continue to stalk the victims. The films are often followed by multiple sequels which typically decline in quality and fan interest.

Origins

The genre has its origins in the early 1960s: Herschell Gordon Lewis' Blood Feast (1963) and Alfred Hitchcock's Psycho (1960) all bear the hallmarks of the genre, which could even be traced to the 1940s, like Agatha Christie's And Then There Were None.

Other early examples are Mario Bava's Blood and Black Lace (1964) and Reazione a catena (1971) (known by a dozen titles in English, including Bay of Blood, Carnage and Twitch of the Death Nerve), Tobe Hooper's 1974 classic The Texas Chain Saw Massacre and Bob Clark's Black Christmas (1974).

\"Golden age\"

Michael Myers, masked serial killer from Halloween
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Michael Myers, masked serial killer from Halloween

The two films that ignited the slasher film cycle were John Carpenter's Halloween (1978) and Sean S. Cunningham's Friday the 13th (1980), both of which spawned numerous sequels and even more imitators, including Wes Craven's A Nightmare on Elm Street (1984), which itself became a financially successful franchise.

During the height of slasher films' popularity, since slasher filmmakers continued to use the stock characters and plots, audience interest was maintained by developing new, unusual ways for the victims to be killed, and by developing increasingly gory special effect techniques. Another device used by filmmakers was the "false ending," in which the killer seems to have been dispatched-often in a particularly spectacular fashion-but in fact the killer lives, and is able to continue to attack the victims.

The simple, formulaic plots, minimal special effects (at least until the Nightmare on Elm Street films), and use of low-light shooting conditions that hid set or production flaws made the Slasher genre a natural choice for low-budget filmmakers in the 1980s. As well, the films' potent combination of sex and violence gave Slasher films a large audience in the burgeoning home video market. Nevertheless, by the end of the 1980s audiences were tiring of "unstoppable" psychotic killers and predictable plots, and the slasher market dwindled.

Revival

The slasher genre resurfaced into the mainstream in the mid 1990s, after being successfully deconstructed in Wes Craven's Scream (1996). The film was both a critical and commercial success which attracted a new generation to the genre. Two sequels followed, and the series was even parodied in Keenen Ivory Wayans' Scary Movie (2000), and its three sequels.

It kicked off a new slasher cycle that still followed the basic conventions of the 1980s films, but managed to draw in a more demographically varied audience with increased production values, reduced levels of on-screen gore, more character development, and better-known actors and actresses (often from popular television shows).

Critical analysis

Critic Roger Ebert has taken to calling this genre the "Dead Teenager Movie", the principal cliché of which is that the only teenager to survive is always the virginal girl who declines all of the vices (sexual exploration, pot smoking, etc.) indulged in by those who end up murdered. And some other films in this genre have explored the sexual morality question from the other angle, drawing metaphorical parallels between sexual repression and the acts of the killer (as in William Lustig's Maniac (1980)).

Carol J. Clover, in her book Men, Women and Chain Saws: Gender in the Modern Horror Film, identified what she called the "final girl" trope; the heroic young woman who ultimately survives and defeats the killer (at least until the sequel). The history of the slasher film has also been explored by Mikita Brottman in her book Offensive Films : Toward an Anthropology of Cinema Vomitif.

Notable slasher movies

Movie poster for Freddy vs. Jason (2003)
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Movie poster for Freddy vs. Jason (2003)

See also

External links

 


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