Difference between revisions of "Category:Film:SurrealHorror"

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Though they are almost never based on any Lovecraft stories, and almost never contain any of the usual trappings of a stereotypical Lovecraft story (eldritch tomes, weird monsters, gruesome and shocking Gothic secrets, rituals and chants invoking weird alien gods with unpronounceable names), some viewers get a "Lovecraftian" vibe off of films like these, as almost any list of "Lovecraftian" films, allowed enough reader suggestions, will eventually include a handful of them.
 
Though they are almost never based on any Lovecraft stories, and almost never contain any of the usual trappings of a stereotypical Lovecraft story (eldritch tomes, weird monsters, gruesome and shocking Gothic secrets, rituals and chants invoking weird alien gods with unpronounceable names), some viewers get a "Lovecraftian" vibe off of films like these, as almost any list of "Lovecraftian" films, allowed enough reader suggestions, will eventually include a handful of them.
  
Analysis:  I'd suspect that many of these sorts of films ape Stanley Kubrick's style as seen in ''The Shining'' or ''2001: A Space Odyssey'', with ''The Shining'' perhaps being the earliest example.  At least a handful seem to have been period war films, perhaps playing follow-the-leader for each other.  [[User:Ywhateley|I]] have some difficulty in making a connection between many of these films and Lovecraft, but if you accept the most stereotypical (though not necessarily faithful) "Lovecraftian" plot to be "reclusive and curious main character finds a creepy book, reads it, goes mad from the revelation, and gets his face eaten by a Cthulhu", then many of these "Eldritch Location" films follow a similar (and thus "Lovecraftian") format, except that a weird setting is substituted for the book ("reclusive and curious main characters find themselves in a creepy landscape or building, explore it, go mad from the revelation, and get their faces eaten by something off-camera....")
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Analysis by [[User:Ywhateley|Y.Whateley]]:  I would suspect that many of these sorts of films ape ''Picnic at Hanging Rock'' and Stanley Kubrick's ''The Shining'', with those films perhaps being the earliest examples of this sort of film.  At least a handful of the films I've diverted into this list seem to have been period war films made at roughly the same time as each other, perhaps playing follow-the-leader for each other.  I have some difficulty in making a connection between many of these films and Lovecraft, but if you accept the most stereotypical (though not necessarily faithful) "Lovecraftian" plot to be "reclusive and curious main character finds a creepy book, reads it, goes mad from the revelation, and gets his face eaten by a Cthulhu", then perhaps many of these "Eldritch Location" films follow a similar (and thus "Lovecraftian") format, except that a weird setting is substituted for the book ("reclusive and curious main characters find themselves in a creepy landscape or building, explore it, go mad from the revelation, and get their faces eaten by something off-camera....") I've sometimes seen films like these compared to [[Robert W. Chambers]]' ''The King in Yellow'', with references to [[Hastur]], which seems to be a currently fashionable short-hand for "surreal horror", based on some current surrealist reinterpretations and adaptations of that source material; I'm assuming at least a little of this comparison might perhaps be drawn from the vaguely surreal/dreamlike and sometimes Chambers-inspired content from ''True Detective''.
  
  
 
[[Category:Film:General]]
 
[[Category:Film:General]]

Revision as of 02:31, 24 October 2016

Eldritch Location: The Motion Picture - starring Eerie Scenery, as itself!

In general, what these films tend to share in common (besides tending toward being "indie art horror" vanity projects written by their directors) is one or more broken or frail characters who end up stepping into a bizarre landscape, where sinister, unexplainable (and usually unexplained) things begin happening. Is it a real location, tainted by some unexplained supernatural or Mythos weirdness, or a scientific experiment gone wrong? Is it a hallucinatory reflection of the characters' shattered minds? Is it a strange Dream World? Is it just a case of True Art Is Incomprehensible, or Everyone Is Jesus in Purgatory? Don't expect any easy answers....

Though they are almost never based on any Lovecraft stories, and almost never contain any of the usual trappings of a stereotypical Lovecraft story (eldritch tomes, weird monsters, gruesome and shocking Gothic secrets, rituals and chants invoking weird alien gods with unpronounceable names), some viewers get a "Lovecraftian" vibe off of films like these, as almost any list of "Lovecraftian" films, allowed enough reader suggestions, will eventually include a handful of them.

Analysis by Y.Whateley: I would suspect that many of these sorts of films ape Picnic at Hanging Rock and Stanley Kubrick's The Shining, with those films perhaps being the earliest examples of this sort of film. At least a handful of the films I've diverted into this list seem to have been period war films made at roughly the same time as each other, perhaps playing follow-the-leader for each other. I have some difficulty in making a connection between many of these films and Lovecraft, but if you accept the most stereotypical (though not necessarily faithful) "Lovecraftian" plot to be "reclusive and curious main character finds a creepy book, reads it, goes mad from the revelation, and gets his face eaten by a Cthulhu", then perhaps many of these "Eldritch Location" films follow a similar (and thus "Lovecraftian") format, except that a weird setting is substituted for the book ("reclusive and curious main characters find themselves in a creepy landscape or building, explore it, go mad from the revelation, and get their faces eaten by something off-camera....") I've sometimes seen films like these compared to Robert W. Chambers' The King in Yellow, with references to Hastur, which seems to be a currently fashionable short-hand for "surreal horror", based on some current surrealist reinterpretations and adaptations of that source material; I'm assuming at least a little of this comparison might perhaps be drawn from the vaguely surreal/dreamlike and sometimes Chambers-inspired content from True Detective.

Pages in category "Film:SurrealHorror"

The following 142 pages are in this category, out of 142 total.