Pride and Prejudice and Zombies (2016).
Could this finally be the jump the shark moment for horror as a genre. I can only hope.
Final Toll for Horror?
- dardan
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Re: Final Toll for Horror?
Reminds me of Navy Seals vs. Zombies: http://www.criticker.com/film/Navy_SEALs_vs_Zombies/
Re: Final Toll for Horror?
Dardan wrote:Reminds me of Navy Seals vs. Zombies: http://www.criticker.com/film/Navy_SEALs_vs_Zombies/
That obviously didn't take, but then SEALs aren't exactly a treasured bit of English Literature which has existed up until now in a different dimension in space and time. But you're right, probably not--yet hope springs eternal, what.
- mattorama12
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Re: Final Toll for Horror?
I saw a preview for it before The Revenant. Almost my entire theater burst out into laughter when they showed the title. From the previews, it seems they're going to play it totally straight, which is a travesty. Honestly though, this seems less ridiculous than that Abraham Lincoln: Vampire Hunter movie that came out a few years ago.
- TheDenizen
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Re: Final Toll for Horror?
1) Horror has always been largely populated by schlock and garbage. Horror as a genre will never die, and even if it could, it would take a hell of a lot more than inserting zombie mayhem into a literary classic to do it.
2) The movie is an adaptation of the book, which came out in 2009. If anyone is likely to be really disappointed in this, they're people who are book lovers and hence have already had a few years to get over it.
2) The movie is an adaptation of the book, which came out in 2009. If anyone is likely to be really disappointed in this, they're people who are book lovers and hence have already had a few years to get over it.
- joseywales
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Re: Final Toll for Horror?
Well said, Denizen.
Horror, as a genre, will never die out -- people LOVE to be scared. It makes a lot of us feel alive. If this is truly the way you feel about the genre, Stewball, stop watching them. Your opinion is not needed.
Horror, as a genre, will never die out -- people LOVE to be scared. It makes a lot of us feel alive. If this is truly the way you feel about the genre, Stewball, stop watching them. Your opinion is not needed.
- VinegarBob
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Re: Final Toll for Horror?
joseywales wrote: -- people LOVE to be scared. It makes a lot of us feel alive.
Man, I wish I could be scared at a horror film, but it's never happened since my early teens. I really wish I could find one - just one - that I find scary. I gave up looking years ago, but if anyone has a recommendation I'm listening...
Re: Final Toll for Horror?
joseywales wrote:Well said, Denizen.
Horror, as a genre, will never die out -- people LOVE to be scared. It makes a lot of us feel alive. If this is truly the way you feel about the genre, Stewball, stop watching them. Your opinion is not needed.
Sorry your feel threatened, but I don't understand why you get to express your opinion and I don't. And even if I could get scared at a movie, I don't know why I'd want to. Besides, that's sort of the point, most modern horror is low budget (the cheapest genre there is), and they have to use underhanded volume BOO-blasts as monsters jumping off the edge of the screen to make us think being zapped is horror. Or do horror fans get so immersed they forget they're in a theater and think it's really happening? Almost all of it is LCD stuff.
And, btw, I have stopped watching them, except for what's usually an annual exception where I pick what might be a promising one and go see it. So far, my disparaging boycott continues ever more justified. But of course that's just MNTBHO.
Re: Final Toll for Horror?
Rumplesink wrote:joseywales wrote: -- people LOVE to be scared. It makes a lot of us feel alive.
Man, I wish I could be scared at a horror film, but it's never happened since my early teens. I really wish I could find one - just one - that I find scary. I gave up looking years ago, but if anyone has a recommendation I'm listening...
I recommend not watching them in a theater. Ever. I'm rarely scared myself. It does take allowing yourself to be immersed, which is why iI won't watch them in theaters...being surrounded by people screaming at cat scares is only going to make you cynically laugh at the whole thing. The last time I was scared by a movie was The Woman in Black, which actually is full of what should have been cheap scares but I love the gothic Hammer asthetic and found that immersion. My wife still makes fun of me for it.
Re: Final Toll for Horror?
ribcage wrote:I recommend not watching them in a theater. Ever. I'm rarely scared myself. It does take allowing yourself to be immersed, which is why iI won't watch them in theaters...being surrounded by people screaming at cat scares is only going to make you cynically laugh at the whole thing.
Bingo, you need go no further. And sooner or later, that cynicism is going to carry over to your home theater. Sorry. Sounds like you have a sensible wife.
And something else about horror, it sucks up too much oxygen. Hollywood has enough smog as it is.
Carry on.