but a lot of it is being recognized in hindsight.Headhunter wrote:By post-moralistic I mean there are not people trying to impose moral safeguards against the entertainment we consume anymore. At least not on a wide-scale level the way it used to be. In not having that, does horror lose some of its image? The cult-ness of horror WAS the image, but now it's all widely acknowledged as good respectable shit.zombie wrote:i mean if you're saying that it's harder to push buttons because people just don't care as much anymore, as a whole.. i don't know if i buy that. but i guess it's possible. if that's the case, then horror will die out, unless it can really jar people out of apathy or indifference. or something else does it, that horror can capitalize on. but i don't know if that's even what you're meaning to get at.Headhunter wrote:Does living in a post-moralistic world hurt the branding of horror, even while increasing its exposure to audiences?zombie wrote:horror should be like punk rock or metal. there should always be some element of rebellion against the mainstream. i think it loses some of the power if it goes completely mainstream. like the difference between texas chain saw massacre or saw and criminal minds or something. enh... i don't want it to become sanitized. but then i also want it to be more respected on it's own terms. i guess i can't have it both ways.
is bong joon ho's wins with parasite a game changer, or is it just jonathan demme with silence of the lambs again? i don't know. if it is a game changer, i hope that horror can still have teeth with it's films, even while being better respected as a genre.