Thanks TempestOftempo in this video i analyzed more the genre or not genre of horror movies set in nice remote locations, with creepy villains( i don't know is this the slasher or a bit different genre), yeah i think these type of movies is since 70's or even earlier. Torture porn movies has it's own type of brainwashing and agendas, and i think sooner or later i will make a video about them. I think my very next video will be about horror movies where villain or even good guy has multiple personalities. Thanks for watching and commentingThis is an EXCELLENT post! I think the agenda being pushed with these films is pretty clear going back to the 70's and the slasher film genre. But in the 2000's "torture porn" became a genre as well, so the agenda steams down its track at full speed for the moment.....
WOW! You did the video?! Keep up the good work and Im excited to see your next project!Thanks TempestOftempo in this video i analyzed more the genre or not genre of horror movies set in nice remote locations, with creepy villains( i don't know is this the slasher or a bit different genre), yeah i think these type of movies is since 70's or even earlier. Torture porn movies has it's own type of brainwashing and agendas, and i think sooner or later i will make a video about them. I think my very next video will be about horror movies where villain or even good guy has multiple personalities. Thanks for watching and commenting
Thanks for commenting Mr. Anderson, I think there is no one leader in horror movie trends, slashers has it's own agendas and brainwashing and torture porn has it's own agendas, and both genres are useful for the elites, sometimes same programing tricks used in both genres. And i think Jaws is third different genre of horror movies, but the Saw is clearly torture porn, and saw has no agenda to make you go to live in big cities, this movie has a bit different agendas, i think i will make video about sawWhat is the horror genre trend of the moment? Slasher movies seems to be down while ghost movies seem to be up.
Oh I remember the torture porn fad, it all started with Saw.
I'd like to add the impact of the movie Jaws. It scared everyone out the beaches.
Thanks TempestOfTempo my english is not very good, so i'm trying to do videos without my voice, just as slideshowsWOW! You did the video?! Keep up the good work and Im excited to see your next project!
It is working, because I totally got the points you were making!Thanks TempestOfTempo my english is not very good, so i'm trying to do videos without my voice, just as slideshows
Interesting points.
Remember hereditary? It was a movie about King Paimon.Interesting points.
And yes, the horror trend does seem to be more on ghosts and demons these days...
i think horror movies as we know them really started in the '60s. Starting in the '30s and into the '40s you had your classics like Dracula, Frankenstein, Wolf Man, etc., which were good, but implied a lot more than they showed and left a lot to the imagination. And the '50s were when giant monsters, giant animals, and aliens were huge. The '60s were when horror movies really began to go places they never had before.This is an EXCELLENT post! I think the agenda being pushed with these films is pretty clear going back to the 70's and the slasher film genre. But in the 2000's "torture porn" became a genre as well, so the agenda steams down its track at full speed for the moment.....
I would say the huge success of Paranormal Activity 10 years ago inspired two horror subgenres at once; "found footage" and supernatural. Sure, you had movies like The Blair Witch Project before that, but I guess 10 years was enough time so it felt fresh to people again. Found footage has died down, but supernatural horror is still going strong with the Conjuring/Insidious franchises still pumping out sequels.What is the horror genre trend of the moment? Slasher movies seems to be down while ghost movies seem to be up.
Oh I remember the torture porn fad, it all started with Saw.
I'd like to add the impact of the movie Jaws. It scared everyone out the beaches.
Dracula, werewolf, frakenstein were all classical monsters. The giant insects from the 60's were results of the fear of radiation. Slasher became a thing in the 70's because well, the 70's were the most influential decade to the US in the XX century. The serial killers were on an all time high along with cults. Gangs also became rampant and so on.i think horror movies as we know them really started in the '60s. Starting in the '30s and into the '40s you had your classics like Dracula, Frankenstein, Wolf Man, etc., which were good, but implied a lot more than they showed and left a lot to the imagination. And the '50s were when giant monsters, giant animals, and aliens were huge. The '60s were when horror movies really began to go places they never had before.
Movies like Psycho, Peeping Tom, Blood Feast, Night of the Living Dead, Rosemary's Baby, really helped paved the way and there was no turning back from there.
Horror from the late 80s to early 2000 was crazy. If I reckon the movies there were a lot more "practical" and "visceral". Hellraiser, wishmaster, phantasms...I would say the huge success of Paranormal Activity 10 years ago inspired two horror subgenres at once; "found footage" and supernatural. Sure, you had movies like The Blair Witch Project before that, but I guess 10 years was enough time so it felt fresh to people again. Found footage has died down, but supernatural horror is still going strong with the Conjuring/Insidious franchises still pumping out sequels.
In addition to the torture porn there was also the remake craze for a while. Practically every month they were pushing out some sort of remake of an older horror movie. It didn't matter whether it was a remake of a huge classic everybody loved or something relatively obscure. There are still some occasionally like Stephen King's It, and remakes of Child's Play, Pet Sematary, and Candyman are all coming up soon, but there aren't nearly as many as there were.
It is anybody's guess what the next trend will be. With huge successes like A Quiet Place, Halloween (2018), Get Out, etc., which are all so completely different, it seems to be a free-for-all at the moment.
Yes, and I think ugly and brutal events like the Vietnam War, the assassinations of John F. Kennedy and Martin Luther King, Jr., the Manson murders, etc. probably had a lot to do with why horror was becoming so violent in the 60s/early '70s as well. That is A LOT of violence and bloodshed for people to see and in such a short time.Dracula, werewolf, frakenstein were all classical monsters. The giant insects from the 60's were results of the fear of radiation. Slasher became a thing in the 70's because well, the 70's were the most influential decade to the US in the XX century. The serial killers were on an all time high along with cults. Gangs also became rampant and so on.
My answers:"
My first criticism of the video is that for someone who claims the elite are training to brainwash people, he’s doing an awfully good job at trying to manipulate emotions by scoring the video with an eerie, mostly ambient.
Beyond that, he doesn’t really understand horror as a genre from a critical or scholarly perspective. I’m not going to defend all of it, since a lot of it is trash, but the conclusions the person came to are flawed at best and outright dangerous and counter productive at worst.
:”Horror movies discourage you to stay in nature.”
Some might. But just as many show horror in an urbanized setting. Furthermore, fear of nature isn’t exactly something new and isn’t inclusive to the horror genre. The cyclops lived on an isolated island, faeries lived in the deep forest and in the real world we had to deal with wild animals and bandits on rural roads.
“Makes good guys look dumb and feel no empathy about their death.”
This would be a poorly written horror movie. Not that there’s not plenty, mind you. The video also ignores that despite their sociopolitical status, most of the characters in horror movies are still “elite” in the context of their setting; high school or college. Jocks, popular girls, etc.
“Makes bad guys look not so bad by having their own rules to avoid bad karma.”
Main characters in stories are often immune to karma and the killer in horror movies is almost always the main character.
“Police have no power over the elite.”
This is far less problematic than movies having heroic police officers that defeat a bad guy that’s comically evil.
Police, and all law enforcement, are tools of the elite. After all corporations and the wealthy elite state the law, politicians canonize their decrees, and police enforce their rulings. Police have no power of the elite because police are the elite.
"Elite bad guy always survives."
Because sequels.
"White muscluar men neve survive..."
Bringing race into it is silly. The black dude is almost always the first to die in horror movies to the point it's become a joke used by black stand up comedians. And if there is a survivor at the end of a horror movie, it's almost always a white (almost always virginal) woman.