jueves, 25 de octubre de 2012
Ideas for a Scary Movie
Some might consider creating a movie for your viewer as backwards, but it is not dissimilar to painting a portrait to go on your wall.
Use the viewer's natural surroundings to create your movie. If you know that your audience will view your movie in quiet living rooms, then create a movie that plays on the horror of silence; for example, a movie where the hero (and ultimately the audience) is deaf. If you plan on showing your movie in a drive-in, then create a horror where monsters hide outside of the hero's car.
Some horror movies (grind-house cinema style or B movies) do not use fear as their main audience reaction, but instead anger. Although these movies make effective use of gore, they do not create in the audience the same emotional reaction. While fear produces an overestimation of risk in the person who is afraid, anger does the opposite, creating an underestimation of risk. Therefore, a viewer made to feel angry won't find his surroundings very scary. Additionally, an attempt to make a viewer angry before making him scared ends with the fear not quite setting in.
The victim is a person who is outplayed or surprised by the "bad guy" killer. As the victim, you want the audience to feel for you, try to help you avoid your deadly situation and ultimately mourn your death. The victim is usually a common everyday person, so the character should be played as any other, with distinctive personality traits and interests that make him or her unique. As the death scene approaches, allow your character to become more apprehensive, unsure and tense (if your character thinks the killer might be after her). Your death scene is your big movie moment, so make the most of it by really "selling" the death and making it memorable. Screams are a big key to playing a memorable victim, so perfecting your screech is recommended.
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